Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, March 15, 1917, Image 2
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"PAGE TWO
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BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
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1 MM Mi >1•t 1
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And ffiere was'a new eie
had thought, at first, that he cotijd fight . . JBI „ JBUjl x< ^ ^ ^ ^
duwathfs love for Sidney. But It-wua J<$arty was asleep. I wpnt to aav I «»/the mjuZZ lfTrTg nVgh?-‘^Bhe had
5 r Rpven ’ '^en^ttlur- W»N rtgfit. The dawn, wlun », M tiNI one *f. two
■n^Hcfne ,tray was just as It should bel awjft revelation* that somqtrines cpmd
Increasingly hard. The lhtiol’enTtouch
of her hand oa his arm, the Tnoment
when he had hpld her In hls nrms after
her mother’s death; tlie thousand small
contacts of her returns to tly little
house—all these set bis blood on Are.
And) it Vo* fighting blood.
Under- his quiet exterior "1C. fought jdlxectly Into Carlotta's. Just fo'r a mo-
gOodmight / to him >■ and hre—he. was
asleep., I didn’t give him‘anything but
what was on the. tray,” she^ finished
piteously. “I looked at the label; 1 ai*
ways look.” ^ v •,
By a shifting of the group around
the bed, K.’s eyes looked for a moment
Mary Roberta Rinehart
•Vr
••Hill Mil 11IIMI»»»
it Ions,
(Copyright, by McClure Publications, Inc.)
SIDNEY JS MADE THE-VIC
TIM OF FOUL R EVEN Gil*
AND LITTLE JOHNNY
ROSENFELD ’■"■. NEARLY .
DIES AT A MURDER-
, ER’8 HANDS.
1
t
K. LeMoyne, . a mysterious
stranger, takes a -room ut the
Page hom», presided over by
Sidney, her mother Anna and
her Aunt 'Harriet, a fashionable
dressmaker? Through. the .in
fluence of Dr. Max Wilson, a
. hrilliant young surgeon smitten
with her charm, Sidney becomes
a hospital nurse. K. loves her
from a distance; go does Joe
Drummond, an old high-school
ehuuh At' the hospital Sidney
inakt 4 ^ the acquaintance of
Carlbtxh Harrison,* who has.
been over-intimate with -Doctor
Wilson, and who is jealous of
the innocent lieweoim-r. Sid
ney’s cjrnrn, Christine Lorenz,
marries Palmer Howe-, a society
rake, und they take rooms vyith
the Pages. Howe Is untrue to
his bride. His■ urn is broken in'
a Joy-riding acHdent, and John .
• ny Kosenfeldj his-ohii tiff cue. -is-
roortaliy injured. All these
people are neighbors, so' there
is a sort of common interest
among them. TTbcfor* Wilson
discovers that LeMoyne is a fa
mous Doctor Edwardes firing in
cognito, and keeps the secret-.
m'any conflicts those winter days--over
Hls-desk and ledger at the office, in his
room alone, with Harriet planning fresh
friumphiTbeyond the partition, even by
Christine^ Are, wirh Christine Just
ac
his grave profile and steady; eyes.
He bad a little picture of Sidney—a
snap-shot that lie had taken himself,
her hair blowing about Her, eyes look
ing out, tender lips smiling. When she
wNs not at home, it sat, on K.’s dresser,
propped against his coHar-oox. - When
she 'wa£ in the house,, it lay‘^hder the
pin-cushion.- t .
T^vo o'clock in the morning. then,
and K, in his dressing gowjv with the
picture propped, not - against the col
lar-box, biiiragalnst.hls iiobp, where he
could see it.
He-sat forward in .hi*, chair, his
ToideTT
inent; then the crowd closed up again.
It. was weij for Carlotta that'it did.
closed her eyes, even reeled.,
‘Miss' Hnrrison is worn out," Doctor
?eeri herself as she was. . The boy was
veir low, hargly breathing. Her past
stretched before her, a series of small
reyenges and passionate outbursts,
swift .yielding*, slow remorse. She
dared notjook ahead. She would haVe
given everyhopesho'had in the world, j
just then, fot- Sidney’s stainless past.
She hated herself with that deadlt-.
est loathing that comes with complete
'ion.—-'“v-—-—-
one to take her piqce.”
But Cartotta rallied. After all, the
presence .of this man in this room at
surh-a time ajeaiit , B<piIfii;7 - tt^waif
'Sidney’s friend, that was all. ‘
But her nerve w as shaken. The thing
hod gone beyond her. ?. She had not
mi*nht to kip. *It was the boy’s weuk*
ened condition that was' turning her
revenge into tragedy.
“I nhi nil "right-” sho pieuded across
the bed to the Head. “Let roe stay,
please. He’s from my ward. 1—-I am
responsible.”
Wilson
(By. B. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of
Sunday School Course* of Moody Hlble
tswtituteJ_ „ ‘
. rnauiixUh coirrui t-rh Xe.«jpaptfq:iaon,l
/1
0 WOMEN
That’s What Mount P|easan\
Lady Says Cardui Is ana
Tells What It Did for Her.
*
LESSON FOR MARCH* T8
,LV/
JESUS ^AVES FROM SIN.
f And she carried to her room the
knowledge, thnt tlie night’s struggle
uet some- had been tn yaln—that, mthough John
ny Itos’enfeld would live, she had
gained nothing, by what lie hap suf-
fereth The whole might hud shown
her the hopelessness of ^iny stratagem,^
io wtarv^ison from his new .allegiance,-.: sitmn^iake yoi^ee, V yi- ’phan
She had surprised him in the hallway, deed.—John 8:36,
watching Sidney’s slender figure as she Teachers shoubi sketch rapidly in a
^ ,.-A
t^KRgiriN text- John R:13,
'Read .enUre chapter».
ODLJ)EN TEXT -If the -Son
-27, J»6-"<S
I .
therefore
he fr#e‘ in-
w«s at his wits’ end.
hands folded around his knee, and
looked at-lt.. He was tr.ving to picture
the Sidney tif the photograph in his
-old life—frying to find a. place, for ht*r.
But, it was dillicuTt. There hatl been
few women in his old*life. His mother
had done everything lie knew without
Jieiailt. The. hoy,.musing for.'an instant',
wVmld lapse again into stupor. .With a
lieaitlty .nian they could linve tried
more vigorous meusiH'es—rcotild have
foreed liim ta his feet and walked liiiu
ulsdit, could Have beaten him 'with
l;notted;~towels, dipped Nu ice water.
But t he wrecked hody^Sn tin*, bod cnuM 1
stand no such heroic tn-iKpicnt.
It was I 4 e Moyne, after all, who saved
.lolmny. Itosenfebi'tjl^life. I-’or, wfien^
staff and nurses had, exhausted all,
their- resources, he stepped forward
\.itb a qTiiej word that brought’the in-
• ternes to their"fe*'t-<ts'tT»nished.
Tliere was a new treatment for such
He
Mt. Pleasapt. Tenn.—“As a girl I
was , always well and Hearty.’’ says ;
Mrs. M. E. R&jl, of this place. ”1
have always been accounted healthy. I
never felt any trouble like . . . weak
ness until I came td. the change oMife:
I was -Vib'out forty-five when, that be
gan. I think I would have died had I
larmony) not foimd °fft what a good friend to
and xliow-. that t-ltl* fesstjin hethimv txr| "’(mn'n Cardui is, ■ * >T TT -
ftie pe»tod_of the (lalileau ministry of “I suffered a great deal. I had a
Jesus when he had gone up to Jenivu^< nundter of fainting spells, and.. , .
Icm to attend tin* feast ot the tuber- would be obliged to lie in bed*a week
v , K . t , , - - naele tJohn 7:1*2). Let us be sure ' (>r tw0 , at n time.
of tlurty aheys—suspension came as a to load-our gpns-wuh temperance am- ^
'blow. K. broke the news .to her’ that v num*?ibn, be famBiar with facts, take m , .
' , * work. The swimming n my head was
all we imv»» — r -j, —,—- - —
continuous:
- V.-r-VS ■
made her way up*'airs to her- room.j chrdnologb-al way the.everifs in thy life
Never, In all His pa | overtures' to her, of our Lord, (See. any-gooils-liu
had she seen ‘hat took in his eyes,.
CH« "i.-ER XVI.
x I larri etKemwly. Sidney’s sentence
I never liked to lie
L
CHAPTER XIV—Continued.
- -- . —12—l 1 .
4-
“I believe it is.” Wilson smiled at her.
“And-yet, you continue to tejnpt me
and expect me to yield,” Sidney-rep|ied.
“One of the most delightful things
about temptation is yielding now and
then.” ‘ —
After aH. the situation s£em«»d ab
surd. Here was her old friend and
neighbor nskiug tQ. tako her out for a
daylight ride. The swift rebellion of
youth against authority Surged up in
Sidney. ,
“Very well; I’ll go.”
Carlotta had gone by that time—
gone with hate in her heart and black
despair. She knew very*well what the
Issue would be. i Sidney would drive
with bhn, and he would tell her how
lovely she looked with the air on her
face and the snow about her. 1 The
jerky motion of the little sleigh would
throw them close together, flow well
she knew it all! lie would touch Sid
ney’s hand daringly and smile In her
eyes. That was his meUb'd : to play at
love-making like an audacious hoy, un
til quite suddenly tjhb cloak dropped
and the danger was there.
had died inaiiy 1 years before. There
had been, women w hh had cured for
f hlm< imf fie ]‘tft' Jthem impatiently,out
'of his mind. , -.
’-I'fThen the.beN rang. - j ■
; Christine was moving about below.
He coujd hi’ar her, quj.Ckgj.teps. Almost
before He bad Heaved his long legs out
of the chair, she \\as tapping nr his
doof outside.
“It's Mrs. Rosenfeld. She says she
wants to see you. ’ i rases- it .had been tfied.-abroad.-
He went down the stairs. Mrs. Ko- | looked at Mux : —— .
ser.febl was standing in the lower hall, j ^lax had never heard of qt.
a shawl about her shwui<ler«. Her fuce < ‘ tkre^«»ut his hands,
was white and drawn above it.
”I’ve had* word^o brnie hospital^
she said. “J. thought maylie ^vou’d go
with‘me. It seems as if I can’t stand it
alone. Oh, Johnny,- Johnny !” *
” Where’s' Paljner?” K. demanded of
t’ludstim’. . r "*
“He’s not in yet.”
, “A re'you afraid to stay in the house
alone?”
‘•No; please gp.” 1 ‘* ■
* He fan up the staircase to hts'nomu
anil flung on some clothing. Jo*, tjio
lower hall, Mrs. ltosenfeld•§ spljlSj imd
become low moans. Christ!m) stood
helplesslyjffver her. :
*T iim terribly sorry," she said—
"terribly sorry! When I think whose
.fault all this Is!” •:' ■ '
Rds?
1 evening before the time Tor Sidney*3 refui aim, <•
arrival. ., -
’I he Tittle household was sharing in
Harriet’s prosperity. Katie had a
liolper now, a little ''Austrian - girl
I named Mind, And Harriot lord esta'o-
put out a work-hard-
>Ti‘*(l Hand ami caught Christine’s tin-
g‘Tf. v .. •
“N^ver mind; that,” she said. “You
didn’t Mo it; 1 guess you andj under
stand eaeh other. Only pray|God y6u
never have afhihi.” r ?
K, never forgot the scene in the small
emergency ward to which Johnny had
been taken. Under the white lights his
boyish figure looked .strangely 4ongr
There was a group around the bed^r-
Max Wilson, two or three internes, the
•night nurse on duty, and (he Head.
Sitting just inside the door on a
straight chair was Sidney—such a Sid
ney as he never had *secn before,Tier
face colorless, her eyes wide and un
seeing, heivJtiinds el cached In her lap.
When he stood beside her, she did.not.
move or look up. The group around
H 1 *
P3!S?j*RW»efla»J
hospital, It would simplify things. She
surmised shrewdjy thnt on the* Street
their Interests were wide apart. It was
here that they met on common ground.
Carl ( »tta_gnve the five-o'clock medi
cines. TheiCshe sat down at the table
near Hie door, with the tray tyi front of
her. There are certain thoughts that
ore at first functions of thcT»rain;
after a long time-the spinal cord takes
them up and converts them into nets
almost automatically. Perhaps tn-cause
for. the last month she had 'done the
V . • • •
thing so often in her mind, its actual
performance was almost without com
sol mis" thought:'
Carlotta ■'took a -buttle from tier
medicine eupl^ard. audr wiiting a new!
label for it. pasted it. over (he old*ope.T
Then she exelmnged it for one of the j
same size on the medicine tray.
Tliidin tiout flic- dining room hitsy
and competent young >vouien came amC
ate, hastily or leisiindv tis their oppor
tunity was, and went uu their (jay
again, hi their hands 'they, held (In':
Keys, rioT al\v7i \ sjTTJt* :FfiT <> -afn p« r-
haps. hut of ease' l-gofu. pa it},? of paider-'
n»*Ss, <if stin'iotir pillows, .and nips of
I water, to thirsty lips.. In their eyes,
as in Sidney’s, Inin>d the light of ser\-
Ice. ThC supper room was filled with
their soft voices, the rustle Pf their
skirts, tlie gleam of their sFifl’ -white
caps. —
Whru Cnrlhttii (uiilf
,SP 1 ‘ hf-them. -They .did not, like her
Befitre hfr, instead of the tidy sup
per table, she wits seeing the medidtie
tray as she had left it. '
“I.guess I’ve fixed her,” she said to
herself. ■ , \
Her very soul was sick with fear of
tyhat she had done.
* "Try if. for heqVen’s sake," he said.
“f’ni iTtt'tir" : ^-4-r— —
The nppnratus was not in the house
—must he, extemporised. inde« : d. at
lush iif-mdUs-aud t-mlsPrym-the <q-»ornt-—
Jug room. K. did tile'’work, his long
fingers deft and skillfull-while Mrs.
Kosenfeldj knelt by fhe-hed with>her-
face buried ; while Sidney sat. dazed
und ^eyvildered, on bee. little clniir in-
stfliethe ?io«r; while night liursPs tip- \
toed_til«>iig-.the cm-ridpr, and t he bight u
■.^a^bnwt'a--st-areci->nereduh>us from nut
side thy. door. - - ;
"\Tli.*u, the tvCO great rectangles that
w (‘te the emergency ward w indows had
turned from .mirrors reflecting the
room to gray rectangles in th^ morn-
rng^ligUL- Jidtnny-Itosenfeld opened his
eyes and spoke tlie first words that
marked his return from the dark val
ley. . 1 . . -
‘(lee, this is.the life!” he said, and
smile(hinto. f Iv ’s watchful, face.
When it was clear that the hoy
would live, K, rose stlflly jrom (he bed*,
side and weht over to Sidney's chair.
“He’s all right now,” he said—"as
all right as he can-be, poor,lad !"
—~T77Tr dldTt—-you ! How strange that
you should know such a thing. How
am 1 to thunk you?”
The internes, talking among tirCm-
seJ.yes, had wandered down* to tlTe din-
iiig riKiui for early coffee. Wilson was
giving a few last instructions as to the
hoy’s care. Quite unexpectedly, Sid
ney caught K.’s hand arid held it to
her lips. The iron repression of the
night, of months indeed; fell away be-
to say upon one definite aim, and then
ptill tlie trigger e . g. be sure to shoot
a temperance charge and niAke-u. tnn-
peram-e application.
I. The Slavery to Sin. Jesus’-previ
ous references to water'((;hs. jlfud 7)
and to bread fell* d) were oeeasioned
by outw'ard oci urrenees ; so 'with lliis
refjhreiice to light, ill tlie tfeasurtv (\-.
Pb) near-to Jesus mn hv spake wetv two
.colossal, gmjdcn .lump stands around
-which when li^ht'ul •’the; 'people gath-
cr-'-l witIr-ivjoiein
illumiu'atioii.
J
nearly. continuons . I could not stoop
(Wwn it would inako me so dizzy. I
think I used Cardui off and <m for two
or three years, using in tbaj time
about 8 or 10 bottles. I begun tlefech
the iiiiprovement In Health before I
fiad-tpHetTotte' bottle, but kept on t;ik
lug it until I got l« Y»erfect healtii.
‘*II:ul. It npt been for Cardui I know
I Avould haVobeeh dead. . . .. Now I am.
6-2 years old.-and weigh .about 1*5, and
-Atnid the lihlz.e of -am in the most perfect, health.'’
Give ’ Cardui • a . trial for \’-ur
troubles...It should do for Vou whas ft
- . * • • »
has done for. thousunds of: others —.
Adv. ' . *
m
exclaims: VI
am/tlic Tight of the \»oHd: v What is-
iilore hcru’ficent than Irglu qs it re-
\eals„ cheers atVl brings life; health
and happiness to inauLiiidV \Vit-lioiit
igriff t royo is.no vision. ^ Without Jesrus
tliere is no. spiritual Wi’sdom,. Without
dl^fiUwe know n«'f. whitl'ier wm*TTre go :
ing.- WUlitm.p Jp'siis we grope, in jl-n-
darkness, livery ray of.-tight . (>( t rut If
of b(»litfi a fid love 'Yshifbs’ fi-oTn 'liim'.
-'-frrr-fi-nd is light, and. in hhn is no dark
ness at all (I Joliti 1 jbmnc think
~that these words weie- (H-onsLiHiV-ti dcr
the onlookers, seeing what Jc^us pad
wj-itten in jlie sand (vv. 1-11). PThe
first step in tito s"hev*u:y-of sin is hfimt- -1
ness; 'tlie -second.^.is' habit; and tin-
-g.hii.-il isthat 4>f. i ( l,L.,4nf-o sin-very (t'rov —
5:22). Jesus.was the 'incarnation of.
the light of God. \\ie— cannot . eo'n-
cei v*e of Jcsri s-^11 i tk 111 g suel 1 Tin a^fi-"
tioti as this.* ;tnd being merelv a goo<f
man.
'*• The' P^TBTbry 'o^TrcTd^^^ tlVs of Cuticura ointment for all skin
• * 1 -•»**.) I lies, 1 ivoflls were spoken t.ol.
■‘ttios*’ -which' h:f»H»eIieve(,i on Him/’ and
the
*HlgKt "Hear a Fewr“T
"Henry.*.’ sal(| Tvvolihbv "‘I hopo
you wbh't tell any T.isque-"st<*Tfe' v ecX
the. master \plumbers’ ' lianquht. *«>-,
night." ■- - - -
‘W .eom se I-ew oti’t my .dear."
, '“That’s rigli^ Ibn jiroud of y, a; .
Henry."* . * ■ \, >.
- "Btit 1-dure n>iy 4mill he able ttf t• • '
sotne corkers tifter, I attend that I rn- •
quet." .
r T
YOU MAY TRY CUTICURA FREE
That's the Rule-^Free Sarnples to Any.
’—' 'fine Aaywhere.
We have so much ‘confidence in ' he
Wonderful soet-llcOT- mh.1,1^, ■liiiji.pr.^^. i.
”JL Seems to
Me I’d Better
Back.” \
Not
“My dear, my dear," he said huskily.
“Anything I cap’do—for you—at any
time—” ^
It was after Sidney had crept like*a
broken thing to her room that Carlotta
Harrison 'and K! came face tp faceC
Johnny vvas quite conscious by that i
time; a little blue arountldliv lips, but
.valitfntly ehef rftil.
"More thTngs-ean lmpia-n to a fellow
ilmn.T -eVe^^kiicw. there’ w'as :*’ In 1 said-,
to his .mother, and submitted- rather
ns me result they werv’to know tlie
truth, and the truth‘should make them,
free. Knowledge and liberty eomeJ'roJu>
a continuance (abiding) iti the yvord (if
God (John ,14:15: 16:.12-Ifi). Many men.
reject Jesus Christ because they claim
they w isli to have Their liberty, and by
so doing they lose their liberty. A dis
'+ple is n i(>arner ;.Jesus is tile tetlcher ;
the cm raphe examinations "to the
..school of Christ arc tin*’ simple and
neeessaj-y condition of heijevihg or ac-
eepting him as Lord mid teacher. 'Wie
scholars j»Ve all the disciples-who con-
‘Not ill,'although she Is not quite Gntje .under His ^instruction.. The oh-
w - etl. There was u mistake about the Of the schooling is to make j»er-
UJLedrcine,.aud she was blamed; that’s feet-men.- "unto the measure of the
ulL” V . ♦ .. stature of the fulness of Christ" (Kph.
“She’d better coino hhme and stay J —’2; Col. 4 :12). Clirrst’s-.sehoor is' not
home," said Harriet shortly. "I hope ; W “J- V In the church and in the Sunday
troubles supplemented by hot
with Cuticura Soap that ue :ir>‘ realty
hallo
tFi
to send samples on request. Tli'ey ; re
Ideal for the toilet.
Free sample each by mail with Bo
Address postcard. Cutictira, Dept, 1,-
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. '
listed qu the street the innovation of
uffer-dinner coffee. It was over the
after-dinner coffee that K. inpde big
announcement.' • \
’’What do you mean by saying she Is
coning home for thirty dTtysT Is the
eh*Id ill?”’ : -T*' *
Trw'iWBT' gprnrme'’ papers-?
This
dressmaking business is a funny sort
of thing. One Word against you or
any of your family, and the crowd’s
off somewhere else." V l -
“There's nothing against Sidney.” J£.
reniindetl her. "Niithing iu .the world.
I saw' the stqTertntendent my-self this
afternoon.. It seems it's, a mere mat
ter of'discipline. Somebody nuwh’ a
mistake, and they eaiiiy>t let such a.
thiyg go by.. But ho believes,, as I do,
.Where It Could-n^t'fie Seen,.—
It was a hot humn.u x r day—withyi,. f
peculiar kitid of-heat common to-t le-
Atlantic slope. Five big, stout genth r-
tuen were going to the top of a New
York building. The sweat vvas-pour-
■ Ing froui their foreheads, and tin r ■
handkerchiefs looketljihe t’oney Islajci
bathing-soils -hung out to dry. "I v^isl
thefewas a b«‘er salooti in this elev.:i
tor,” * remarked one fat gentlenifin.
“Yes, boy. you ought ro have a. keg *d •
beer aboard this.'elevator,” chimed iu
Tbe -b«*v looked ' ar-thc^r** 1 -
_s)rei‘J»isli|y—to li-» : r tears ;i
oil vv < i t* iilW:.ys a good boy John*
ny,” she sank- ".fust you get well
jtt-enoOgh to 'etum*' home.. I’ll fake care
ji.juI yoil the'rf^t of my life. W<* will ge(
whechcliair- w hen you "(•an he
about, 'anti I can 'aj<e y^u. dhp
park, whenT eorrie from vvork.'* A “* ■■
be. passenger! ’ and ■you'll. He;
j chatufeui - , tnth’--- 1 - c- ;
- "Mr. LpMoyne is going- to g--
f(H h<T sent JiJ^iigain. )V : it)i '• v
vu.
md vvhai llnakc
' n - -
• ;>o i r
-f-Ti-vc
get
that it. w'qs" not Sidney." ;
I low pver-I l.it-ri(d bail. Ha rdened tier-'
‘ self against the girl’s arrival; alLshe
Imd ipeaut to say lied When she sa v
Sidney’s circled eyes, and pathetic
mouth. —=>--y- -r-W;—— -,
^—“You‘child-!" she said. “You poor
lift le girl?’’ , Audr took kur to-her -cor-
- j.A . - - • ' • ■. ••• •
seted bosotp. '
• ' '*J N —,—. - . — ... _—* —
For’ the time at least.. Sii^uey's worhl
had gone t<> pieces aiiou-t lier. All her
■brave vi.unt of -Hen'ice faded before
' her. disgrace.-
it is everywhere, ip the hhrne. in 1 the ! fat-men and'then remarked, tiolemnk
office, at work and play; wherever .one .. “Oh, I guess', theru’s. aver a keg of te-r
is trying truly to live according to In this.elevator now.” ? 3—• *
Christ’s vvflL he is in his school,^ hnd. - ' .. —
that school is rboth day and nighfl’’
there are tinyyaclLLi<>iis anti mi bk-ess^W.— -e-
The .text hook is the Book qf ho'dks.
We need not 'argue as To the Tp-v-essity
of sin. ImT n'iilize.the fact that*all are *
under sin (Kotp^.f»Tjf2),"Tijif.peing un
der siti does riof necessitate our ahid- _ •
ing there,nrfr is sfn"nec'es^iry. to our
being. This freedom- here is .from sin
ajid the love of sip and .the curse 1 and
tin* penalty of sin ami the Pondage ami
corroding can 1 of sin.. Ii is. also mental
treedom, free>h^| - fv»r’ ( ln.-;<thni . ac
tivity, cA kt.(
3*= ■
m
<rf' rfho «Ivu^lish
.1.
For sick headache, bad breath,,
Saur Stomach and :
constipation,^—
‘ You hrr-vve w ill !"
“Oh, J "him y. if I c.. uld s«'(* you cotn-
-iog in. tiu; -. door agaht ttud ycilii'g
‘ mdliet - ’. ami ‘sfijiper’, in .otic KreaJh : ’
ri r i T n
('arlotta
at it
The meeting I
i.e Moyne w as Vej-y,- ,qjU.ie.L. Sin- ji-' 1 * 1
been hulking a sort of subeqn.M ious iij,-
pressioii on t lie' retiiia jof his mind (,.:r-.
ieg -afl -the .night:—It ‘\\ iruhi M»c -diHVWV
actuaHy' knew ht-r.
Ou
r ."S;ry 'f~ Gave TtiffFtlie; Wi Cnqtin hiiTXVard
Medicine." :aade, the- otln r /furses left tin
* ‘ r-XH‘ ' and (.’arhittu and tin* hov W(>re - to-
senfehl, and closed again. Only-Sid- gertiTT. K. sp.pped her .ar hi-r wav
•‘K. remaihr^’ - “ ’
Get a 10-cent h(?x jpdw. \ ~" _t
No odds how had,your liverv : «fimaeli_
.or bowels: Ju»w—nm a -vour l.had
When (’lifistine would ha...
sTie'k(".pt In ■ r (u "ir 1 dek ei I arid asked for
Jnst that one evening niohu. But hiftct
li’niTiot had r.-tfr-oX Si(mrr~Unhnlte(l
Ittu* (toot* and lisletn-d in the little up;
per hall. .Harriet, her headin'a towel,
her ’face carefully cold-creamed, had-
gone to -beti r-btit K.'s light,’ as .usual.
Was .shining oyer the- transom. Sid;
noy tiptoed to the door. r ~~~
MC.
Almost i-inmediptely he-^opened
Sid-
the door, i.M»-
CHAPTVER xv.
ney.uur
luted, alone. .
“You pmst not take it like that,
dear. It’s Nad,-of course, . But, after
*11. in that condition—”
It was her first knowledge that he
wps there. But sne did not turn.’
A . “‘They say I |w»isoned him ; ” ffer
1 JiSjiiiiMH -voice wasfafi^etionieas.
Tfilw-rffW-iw*
tened. He had not been able to sleep
•Ince midnight. Tn his dressing gowu
he had sat by the srnull fire, thinking.
The content of his first few months on
the htreet was rapidly giving way to
unre»t. He who hod meant to cuUhiin*
Sfiif off from life (found hilnself again
ila close touch with it; hi* eddy was
flaw with U. » i , ~
n>u—what ' »
"1 Hey say I—gave hini 'the wrong
medlej-ne,; that he’s,dying; that I mur
dered him." iihe shivered.
ihOlt-YJ
4->> the doffri. _ - . .. .. -w»
"Miss Harrison!”
“Yes. Doctor'Hdvvardes.”
“I am not I>octor Fdwardes Irere;
niy name is Le Moyne." /
“Ah!” •'■"" _ r - -CV
Tr l have not seefhyou since you left-
St. John’s.” ^
‘y-oTi-i-rr’iirr r nr
une’in ard' .tqik TpL-you?** t *nt frot
lit* turmld. took a quick survey"Pn f he
..Id H,,. .1 . lb;! 1 "
I/ibit* \Kgi- liberal ediiehtioft; apd brings
tru(*-1iiMTty-'T*J‘.111(i-»• w ho nt'e thus' edu-
cnieyh- - ; As eoiittv!s-ted *tu that- we- btivi*
the slavery of sin .(vy. JU.TML^lTiq
-druykiinl is a sln-vi- lyyeause hc.Js ry- aches, how- miserable and jUtn omfort^'
st mined fro fir d“in_ r evlnit lie knows lie able you are from 'constipation,’ indices
ought fh(i(V.He enmot even do Hi(ltoinh
—you always get the ( "desired results
with Cascarets. ’ *• — , . 1 *
Don’t let yotir stoma'eh, liver and
bowels make you misemDIe^ Take-
(’ascarets. to nighf: put an pud to tjee
he a darhe, btliPusTreBs. ,di ^iness, n *r v-
* ousness.y Sick, sour, gassy stomach,
backache and all other distress;
cleanse your inside, organs of ail the
bile., gases and constipated JtpaGer
which is producing the 'misefy?"^-^^*^
A KLeent box means- he»d*h drapfrt-
swrkr
l
I
■frntr
-■oriM i.'iice. cpiistantly lip-,
braids' liitn, lie is-.a slave because in*
Ysr-eompellc-d to toa-r tin* consequences
of sin against hi< will?. Tin* way of
■escape (v. fid) is through tin* son:—'“If
tin* son therefore >haii n'uike you free,
yo' •sbaii he
jiiMix,mtggcBgw»ai>>jgA‘setmMW
56, *Sb)
'. i’he
free indued.”
■-.•Ills-The Authority (vv
•i«‘VVS took exception to “tlie words of
Jesus (.’id -:Vi), Whet r iti it Ahrahain see
'•■——2 Jesii?? K-eai’f |Ti*‘ ]s r th and lBth.chapters
-t-Hff—hnicsj-
•4km
rrmP wo find
4*
4:n(i,,U]im)iniw
a tin
the room, and held the door*witle. Sid
uey came in Hi/1 sat dovyn by the lire.
“I’ve been‘thinking things over,” she
said. “It seems to me I’d better not
go back.” * ? ■ ■
die had left the door carefully open.
Men are always more conventional
.than women. —
<»tliur two. itnd renwkicil
hind while two went on to Sodom.
The iotpyytjm remained was the .Lord
Jesus. Jehovah appearing—In human
form before his later inearngtiou ^as
Jesus ( .f Naz.jfreth.
‘T Am" is the name of Jehovah.
Jesus here takes that flame toi himself.
PBpji ftfl d' g m 1 he.YdTBy*nmrsir
vNo more days of glootn and distress
ff-yiffurwill take a Cascaret now and
then. All stores sell CasrareTs Don't
fbrgef the children—their , little in-
“sTd^ need a cleansing, too. Adv.
- Jesus
i.There
They were
Iv. touched 1 Tier hands.
Ice-cold.
"Tell me about it”..
"Thera la nothing to nsil. I came bn
duty at alx o’clock and gave the medl-
“I suppose Jthey do. not know that
you were-rihat you have had any pre-
vlpus ’hospitai experience.’* > i' ’
“No. Are you goirig^ to tell them?”
"I Nhall not tel! them,-of course.”
And thua, by simple mutual consent,
It was arranged that each should re
spect the^other’a confidence.
had a Juat baton
"^^HJaT^T'ycMutrinkif^
secret about K. LeMoyne? Why
has he given up his promising
career? ^ What f does Carlotta
Harrison know about him that
Is damaging? Seme Interesting
developments wil( be recorded
la Ota next Installment -
(TO BE CONTINUED f
was a time when Aiiraham came
to bp or was (v. 58), hut there was
Do time when our Lord ever cahie- to
Ij^t h,- I. (hi. nf^nnl "I K.-ln..
1 tius one with-God, ne lias the power
to .set inert free. •
We have in this chapter* the picture
which Jesus-draws of the character of
the devil as the enemy of mankind un-
dbr "two aspects: First, he is a mur
derer (v. 44). v A
^No war has slain what intemperance
(ope of his favorite instrumental haa
slain. ’’Second, he is u li»»*
Not Far to Go. , -.
."Do ,yoti •suppose this Whole couir-
fry .witl. bo mobilized in case of war"'-
?. .’WVfilv pot? It Is already autonio-
hilized."
RI.IXIR BABEK A OOOI>. TONIC
And Ilrivn Auiirla Out of the Hyatem.
- • “Your ‘Babek*ecu like maple; J have gWen
ft to ndmeroua people in my parlHh who were
aufferlng with chills, malariaand-ferer. ,1 rec
ommend it- to thoee who are sufferers and In
ntedofa good tonic.’’—Rev. 8. Szymanowski.
Bt. Stephen’s Church, Perth Amber, TT J.
Elixir Babek, 60 cent*, all dru«irists or Ty
Paroels Poet, prepaid, from Kloczewski a Co.,
Wasltlngton, Li. d . ■ .-■* *. j —•
“v-:
4
Cupid makoa >j Brtatako wh.-n fie
grafts a bud on ga old abrub.
jK.
i.V
’ \4emmr14r~ .-y*