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1 / X BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA Xia. PAGE THREE / . x •/ t I • h4 - r* F.X'GUNNER AND CHIEF PETT^OFFfCERrUrS-NAVY MEMBER. OF THE FOREIGN LEGION CAPTAIN GUN TURRET, FRENCH BATTLESHIP CASSAFkD WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUERRE CopyngK 1918. by Reilly end Bruron Co.. Through Specie! Arrengemcni With the George Meohew Adena Seme* DEPEW IS. CAUGHT IN ZEPPELIN RAID AND HAS EXCITING EXPERIENCE Synopsis.—Albert N. Depew.yauthor of the story, tells of his service in.the United States navy, during which he attained the rank of chief petty .officer, lirst-eluss. gunner. The wor^l war starts soon after he receives his honorable .discharge from the navy, and lie leaves for France with a determination to enlist. He joins the Foreign Legion and is assigned to the dreadnaught Oassard, where ids marksmanship wins him high honors. Later he is transferred to the land forces and sent to the Flanders/ront. lie gets his first experience in affront line trench at Dixmude. He goes “over the top” and gets his first German in a bay onet fight. ■ ■ ' ■ CHAPTER VII—Continued. I surety wished' I \Vas~tTTe gunner ifficer. -I would have enjoyed *it more if—I errohl haw--got l*ack at Fritz (ometiow ~ were gray uniforms,'with tipeups and were about to start when the burgo-. master himself came running out. He ordered us to leave the car there and said he would direct .us where to go. He insisted that we. go on foot, but- I pould not understand whpn he tried to explain why. We soon saw ■■‘the probable reason fop. the burgomaster's refusal to.ride in the car. All around for about- a mile the rbads were heavily ndnWHand small red flags on iron .staves were stuck 'between' the cobblestones, as warnings not to put in much time around those places. Also, there were notices Stuck up all around warning people of the mines and forbidding heavy carts to pass. -When we got off/the road I breathed again! After, a great deal of questioning we finally reached our destination-^ml made our . report to the local eOpfmnnd- ant. We told him all we could and in turn ,received various 'in'fornfaflon from him. We were then tnjten over to the fiotel. Here we read a few I’aris newspapers, that ware several weeks old, until about eight, when we ^ * i f Irtid dinner, and a fine dinner it was, t op. ' After We had eaten all w'e could, and wished for more room in the hqld, we went out into the garden and yarned a while with T some,7gendarmes, anti then went to bed. We had a big room on the'third floor front. We had just turned im and were all set for a good night’s rest, when there was an explo sion- of a different kind from any I had heard before, and we and the bed rocked about, like a canoe in the wake of a stern-wheeler. . jS- . . ‘ • There were seven more explosions, and then they stopped, though we could hear .the rattle <»f a machine gun at some, distance away: HarteLaaid it must be the fprts, amFaftcr some argu- tnry commandant, rigid under a big glass'dome skylight. Tills house wuA now a very pretty ruin, and it was Just As wcll/thnt we left when. We did.' You could not even find a splinter of the big round table. The next 1 time I sit under a ^lnss skylight In "Dixnwde, I want a lad w ith a Uve. eye. fotuZappe- INP80YED UNIF01M INTERNATIONAL WylUl I Ins X // lfns on guard outside —Something about die,'"branch lieu* quarters riptis made us think of breas- fifst, widen we had forgotten, so Lack to tin- hotel. Then-wWsfftrted hack to our iin.es. .We were rird|cTed' to keep to tlie main.road aJUthe way hack, or we would lie shot on siglit, and to re port to headquarters immediately on our return. I thought if the sight of | me was so distasteful to anybody, I w.Ould not take the chance of offend ing. being, anxious to be, polite, in such casjes. So we stuck to the main rnadv-e Fritz. did not give us any trouble nii<r” we were baCK by-Jlve, with all hands but to greet us when-W’e llovf in sight,' Lesson y. Rev. I\-K TuTZWATER, D. D , Teacher of English HI tiles in the Moody, Itlhle Institute of ettfcafO.) ' \ (Copyrigia’. 1918. . by Wentrrn NVwsptprr Tnlotl l ASTHMADOR AVERTS * RELIEVES HAY FEVER ASTHMA Bfjin Tre*tm?nt NOW All Dru||l»« *e*»f«ntee LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 1 SOME LAWS OF THE KINGDOM OF malIria Chills *nd Fever. Biliousness. Constipation and ailments reejuiring a TONIC treatment' GOD. _ / LKSS.ON TEXTS Luke 6-20-38; 21:1-4. < R)I ,t >EN/TEXT R-'riH-mher . the words of the Ldfd JeSus; ho>v he said. It Is -more t'lcs-ed/to give than to rei ' lve.-- Acts 20:, di/Tvof lV)NA L REA DINQ—II Corin thians 9:6-13. . • ' ATFBEFfPHXAI. T MATERIAL TEACHERS-Luke IRS; Romans 12II 35 GUARANTEED and mode bq Behrens Drag Co VriUb. Jfc*. p, »» Sold bij h| } All DruJjiMs tFJf Our stretrher- bearers were busy, Hut I was not the gunner carrying the wounded back to first-aid / ^officer and I told bln* so. T had to shout at him quite a while before he would belleve~- v me. . Then he wanted me to fino the gunner officer, hut 1 did not know where to find htm. If-1 could have got to our guns I guess I would have had another medal for .working overtime, but I missed the chuni'e there. v "About this time another bomb came over and clouted out the best friend U had in my company. Before th* 1 'war be had been one of the finest sing ers in the Baris opera houses. When lie was with us he used to say that tlie only difference’ between him and Caruso was $2.f>00 a night. A poilu and I dragged him Into a dugout, but it was too late. One side of hlfTTace was blown off; the whole dressing station, for, of course, we had suffered too. From there the blesses were shipped to (lie clearing station. ; The dead lay in the trenches all day and at night, they were carried out by working parties to “Stiff park," r.) I called it. • A man with anything on his mind ought not to go to tlie front-line trenches. He w ill he crazy inside of u month. Tlie best wav is not to (Tire whether it rains or snows: there are plenty of important things to worry about. and a Regular prodigal son welcome tin Corlntbtan.s'9 615; Hebrews 13:16; Ezra 1: flip, for -we wore later than they had 2 ~* ; 1 GhroniHes 29:1-5. expected us. and -tlmy 'Imd tirade up their tiiiitds tliat some accident had happened. . •’ While I was around Dixmude, I saw many living men and women and Vhil- / Tlie principles of ,ethics which shall prevail Jn .the earth when Jesus Christ shall lie king -are entirely* different from those of the world. The worldly Maybe He D.d, at Tl.ct! M;.ii}’ e\<'u-e-i are off' r*->* for the wavward husband. and th-A-wife of si>< b a bu'-baiid toll! a lu-tUie. said t bat and'- that recently, he she bad to 11 tt 11 I la lik it vg. over.” lliislfand , , ... ...... spirit alwavs inquires as to whaf gain*., , . . . , . . . , , ... jlrqn.w ho luo been mutilated bv t ie , , ~~.* had just ndurned from a tn > to. l^iibs . k.x- - - . * ./ "ill accrue from an action or service. 1 The othefs-liad bean. Germans, but most of, tln-ni w ere wom en ynd^rhildreh.-^AImost every one of the mutilated un'n' w ? a> too -old for military service. killed, I guess. ..... . ,, * doni. do gooil becausi , But the Belgians ware not the only-* ones x w ho had suffered from Geniiirti kultur. Many French wotlndetiwere tortured by tlie Huns, and* we were constantly frtidkig tlie mutilated hodi«*s of qur troops. It was thought that tin* Germans often mutilated a dead body as an example to tin- living! ’ The Germans had absolutely no re- nccouternients that belonged to the merit I agreed with-him. He said that spect whatever for the Bed Gross. For . ‘ ' ‘ 'Geriiiafis before our urtlltery and ma- ti )e Germans must have tried an ad- instance, they captured a wagon load- s ,.)tishiiess^* ^Dftent'lnies ffie^rorrt chine guns got .tq them. • vance under cover of a bbmt.ardnient, ed with forty French wounded,- and , ’ 1 * CHAPTER VIII. and that as soon as tlie forts got into action tilt Germans Iweezed. We were not worried much, so we did not get out of bed. • •*, . A few minutes later we beard foot steps on tlie roof, and then a woman in a window across the street, asking a gendarme whether it whs safe to go back to bed. Then I got up t.nd took a look into tlie street. There were a lot of people standing around talking, but it was not interesting enough to keep a tired man up, so back Into, the hay. It seemed about the middle of the night when Bartel called me, but he said it waf time to get out and get to work. We found he had made a poor Its policy is doing good for -the sake of getting good. Those who have been inade partaki-rs of tlie divine nature, who are really subjects of tlie king- tliey have the ^nature and spirit of God. not because they expect something' in return. I. Give to Every Man That Asketh of Thee. (V. .*?(*). This does not mean that any request that may be made by tlie Idle, greedy and selfish should bo^granted. Only evil would result from such indiscrimi-' hate nnd unregulated giving. Such yvifie' Olid had laid ulit-iii-T—sm.il :lu_V>e priw-rTt .Going through Tlm.pockeN ..The wif«■ found ; sli-fi of piper whii-h . road: ‘‘Majihkk K., niauiciniktT’' She laid it mi tile dre--er, ajid ’husb.iiid soon noticed .it: “Where did rAo(l get. ibis V dic n-\i d “In yoiir coat pqeket” fiqiti* *J’wife. ‘‘.Who is she?" * " “<di, 1 re.un'mlier now, M itiida" Iv. and-MimLoin i>t. Those are tir-'-names— of two Ijf^rse. 1 giq a good t_l]i on whjle lit the races in IvonisvTlle^LnrH;map olis News. / On Runner Service. One nlglit a man named Bartel and I were detailed for runner service und right side 'of him, was stripped off were Instructed to go to Dlxnmde and and four fingers of the rlgWt hand deliver certain dispatches to a man ^vere gone. I stuck my head out of the dugouT r.nd* there was the captain discussing whom I will call ti e burgomaster and report to the branch staff headquar ters that Jiad been secretly located in x - tin* matter with himself, cursing the . another jmrt of town. We were to, Germans from here to Helgoland andxtrnvel in an automobile and keep a • V putting in a word for-the bombs every once in a while. All up and down tlie trendies you could hear our men cursing the Germans in all kinds of languages. Believe ine, 1 did my hit and 1 could hear sorfiehody else using good old United States cuss words, too. It-certainly did not make me feel any better, but It gave me something to do. I think that was why all of pis cursed so much then., though we w ere preTFy 'handy with language at any time. But when you are under heavy fire like that and cannot give it back as good as you get, you go cru'zy unless you have something to do. Bussing is the tiest thing vVe -could thinkof. Up the trench the third bny was simply smashed In and tlie Germans sharp wa,tch as we went, for Dixmude was being contested hotly at that time and German pot rots were in the neigh: liorhood. No one knew exactly where they would break out next. * So we started out from the,third- line trenches, but very shortly one of our outposts stopped us. Bartel car ried the, dispatches and drove the car too. so" it was up to me to explain tilings to the sentries. They were convinced after a bit of arguing. Just as we were leaving a message came over the phone from our commander, telling them to hold us when we came. It was lucky they stopped us, for oth erwise we would have been out of reavh by the time his message came. The commander told me, over tlie tele phone, that i? a French flag flew over snot every .one of them. I saw tin deyd bodies. jf “ When Jlie Germans came to Dix- nnule they got all the men and women and cluldren and made tlienr march before them jnitli their liand.s in The air. Those who did not wieiiv knocked down. After u wlqlc some of. ilium saw what they were going to get. and being as game sports as I ever heard of, tril'd to fight. They were finished off at once, of course.! •The former burgomaster Tiid been shot and - -finished—off—with - an - l nx. J though in* had not resisted, because he wanted to save tlie lives of his citi zens. They told me of one case, in Ibx- mude, where a man came out of ills house, trying to carry his father-, a man of eighty, to the- square, where they were ordered to report. The old man could not raise his bandit, so they dragged his son away fnan him, knocked tlie old man in the head'w ith an ax, and left hiiq there to die. Ttirfse who were spared were made to dig tlie graves for tlie others. _- t . There was a doctor there in I>ix- mude, who certainly deserves a mili tary cross if any man ever did. He was called from his house by the Ger mans at ft ::U> one morning. He left his- wife, who lntd had a hahy two days before, in tlie house. He was taken to tlie square, lined up against a Wall with three other big men of tlie town.' Then lie saw ids wife andbab^ bejng carried to tlie square 6n n mattress by four Germans.' He begged to lie al lowed \ to kiss his wife good-by, and they granted him permission. As lie stepped away, there wds.a rattle and -thing- you eim do for a man Is to give him 'money.. Tbo drunkard will only spend it for more drink; the gambler will continue his dissipation. The meaning then is, give to the one ask ing the thing which he needs. Th* man fn’fpoverty needs to be given a way to" earn.Ris living, rather than to be given money wTtTioiit the necessity’of labor. There‘is that in the human heart which refuses charity, and cries nut for a means to honestly gain a livelihood. IL^-Qf Him That Taketh Away Thy /' Goods, Ask Them .Not Again (v. .'l<> “Ask” here means demand. It doubt less forbids the forcible demanding of -the return , of .that which lips been takdn from onu III. Do to Other Men a^/Vou Would That They Should Do Unto You (vv. Tills ethic puts Hfc’s activities on the highest possible grdhjid. He does not sav, refrain from doing that which- you would not like to be dohe to you, as even CWifucifis taught; but to ’pos itively make ttie rule of* your life the doing/fo others as'you would wish thepi to do unto you. Loving those who love us, doing good to those whn. do good, to us, and lending to those from whoih we hope to receive, is Just what all the sinners of the world are doing. The child of tho kingdom of Christ is to he different. IV. Love Your Enemies (v. .V»). • That which is natural to tlie human heart Is to hate the enemy. To love in the real sense means to sincerely desire the good of even one’s enemy nnd willingness to do anything pos- stble^o lirijig-tbat good. Such action LEMON JUICE TAKES OF -TAN Girls! MaJCe bleaching lotion if sktn is stinburned, [/ ... '/ Ytanned or freckled i I I !• t t ♦ * X Squeeze tlie juice of two lemons Info o ' bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and yoq have a quarter i>lnt of tn.. best.freckle,* sunburn and tan Jot ion, and emupb-xion beautltier, at very, very* small cost. Your grocer has die lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage thi)5 sweetly frn- grant lotion Into the face, neck, arms and hands eucIT du.y and see how* freck les, sunburn, wlndhurn and Hfn disap pear hml how clear, soft ami white tp# skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless.— Adv. were placing liomb afti*r tionib right j jj),. town tin* coast would lie clear; if a' in it and in mirs. The captain yylled Belgian, that our forces were either out that he was going up t<|> the next j n control or were altout to take over hay• to examine‘It, hut no*'more had he got_ tliere Tlinn he had iiis head takenVlean off his shoulders. AFTTa \break our trendies were all pounded in and most of onr djugouts were filled up. Tiien Fritz opened up with ids artillery fire rigid on us. We tlfought tlie} were going to charge and w'e figured tlieir, barrage -woubl lift andrwe could see them come over. We received orders to stiuid to W’tth fixed bayonets. TJieh the man at tjie jieriscope shouted, “Tli**y come!” A* battery directly behind ils went Into action first nnd theiythey all ^Joined in and Inside of five minutes about eight hundred guns were raising Gain with Fritz. Tlie Bodies.were , (aqgld square in No Man’s Land ami our riiles and machine guns simply mowed them down. .Many of them came half way ‘across, ttyen dropped tlieir guns and ran'for our-trenches’ to.give themselves up. They could not have got back to their own trenches. It was a shame to waste a shell on these poor fish. If they had been civ vies the law would prevent you frpm . hitting them—you know the kind. They could hardly drag themselves along. * ‘ That is the way.they look when you have got them. ^Rut when they have g< t you—kicks, cuffs, bayonet Jabs— tliere is nothing , they will net do to add to your misery. They eeenj to fi;ink that it boosts tlieir own courage. An artillery fire like ours was great fun for the gunners, hut it was not much fun for Fritz or* for us ip the trenches. We got under cover.almost iiif much as Fritz and field thumbs for the gunners to get through In u hurry. Then . the fire died down and it .was so quiet it made you jump. We thought our parapet was busted up a good deni, hut when we looked througlf the periscope we flaw wfiat htd hnppened to Fritz*^ trenches nnd. German patrols started , the place but that i were near. ‘After trus we again. • _ When we had passed the last post we^ kept a sharp lookout for.the flag on the pole of tin' old-fish market, for by this wo would get bur bearings— and perhaps, if it should be a German flag, a timely warning. But after we were down the road a bit and had got clear we saw a Belgian flag whipping around-In a good, strong breeze. But while that showed that our troops or the British were about to take over the place it also indicated, that tin* 9 Germans were somewhere near by. Which was not so cheerful. As we went, through the suburbs along the canal which runs on the edge of the town we, found that all the houses were, battered up. We tried to hail several heads that stuck themselves out of the spaces between buildings and stuck themselves back Juntas quickly, but we could not*get an answer. Finally we got hold of a man who came out from a little cafe. He told us that the Germans had been.through .the town and had shot it up considerably., killing and wound ing a few inhabitants, but that shortly afterward a small forde of Belgian cavalry had‘arrived and driven tfie Bnehes out. Th«' Germans wjre ex- pected either to return or begin a boin- bard!fieot at any moment and all the inhabitants who sported cellars were hiding in thorn. The’rest were trying to get out of town with their’ belong ing* as best they,’could, % On reaching out objective we made straight for the Hotel d« 'VJll.e, where we were admttted~and after a short wait taken to the burgomaster. We questioned him as to news, for we hud been instructed to pick up any Infor mation he might have as to conditions. the other men went West. They shot , , . , . , , , i . .. I, . . . is onlv possible to those who have him. too. hut though he was riddled „. .■ 1 ^ , We Were Constantly Finding the Muti lated Bodies of Our Troops. guess, for when we were half dressed he looked at his watch and,it was only a quarter past seven, hut we decided to stay up, since we were that far along, and then go down and cruise for a breakfast. When we got downstairs and found some of tlie hotel people it took them with bullets In* lived, somehow, mid begged tliq German officer to let him accompany his w : ife to tlit*' prison Where they were taking her.” This was granted too, but on -tly* way, they heard the sound of firing. The soldh-'rs yelled, “Die 1-TapeztFsen !” und dropped the inattress^rtml ran. Rut it was only"' somvjif Jjreir own butchers at work. Doctrir Laurent carried his wife und ■ to an old aqueduct that was being ebuilt by tfie creek. There-they: lived for three < |.vs and three ntglits, on the few le-rhs itmTlhe Water that. Doctor r Laurent s*tenketkq.Ut and got at night.* Doctor Laurent says that when tlie been born again. GhrKt loved those who hated him. lie was willing even bins at Dixmude. they first robbed them of their watches, poekethooks, rings and other things. There was a Madame T^iuan.s'Thefe, wTio hiid bad three tho*4rind francs stolen from her and was .misused besides. These were just a very few of the tilings that happened at just one place where tlie Germ* ns got to work with fhejr, “kuIPur." So you can picture the Belgbrfts* agreeing <in a German pence, .while tliere. is n Belgian alive to argu< about* IT. They will remember the Gor- mans a long time; I think. But they need not worry; there are a lot of us who will 11(»t forget, either. i a long time to get it through our heads ; g, rmans killed and crucified the civil- flint tliere hud been some real -excite- rij.cnt during the night. The explosions were those of bombs dropped i>y a Zeppelin, which had sailed over the city. The first bomb'had fallen less than two hundred yards from where we slept. No wonder the bed rocked ! • It had struck a narrow three-story house around the corner from the hotel, and had blown it. to bits. Ten people had been killed outright, and a number died later. Tlie bomb tore a fine lade and hurled*pieces of itself several hun dred yards. \The street itself was filled, with rocks-, -and a number of houses were down, and others wreck ed. When we got out into the street" and talked with some, army men we* found that even they were-surprised •fiy the force of the explosion. " We learned that the Zepp had saifled .npt more'than five"hundred feet above the town. Its motor had been .stopped just before the first bomb let go, and it had slid along’perfectly silent and with ail ligli.s out.I- The purr that We had thought was machine guns, after the eighth explosion, was the starting of thv motor, gs the Zepp got 5 but of range of the guns that were be 1 ing set for file utTuTir. { J The last bomb bud struck in a large ‘square. It tore a hole in the cobble stone pavement about thirty feet square and five feet de<$*. Every win dow on the square was smashed. The fronts of the houses were riddled with various stzofl holes. All the crockery and china and mirrors yi. the house Dspew is wounded in a brush w th Germans. See next install* ment. <• ' / T . ' X (TO BF CONTINUED.) V But we did not get much, for lie could beMeve--toe, they were practlcalfy uot get about because of the Germans,* yvere in fragments, rt.nedi , * who had made It a policy to terrorize Not much more than an hour before Out In No Man's Land It looked like .the p«*o '.e of tbe’town. the Z**pp ram**, we had been sitting In *)worth'* flve-and-toQ; everywhere > h«d Just got Into the car and n t the house of the local mlll- Saws for''Cutting Metal. Not so very long ago the discovery was made in Germany that metals could 1 lie sawed easier nnd qub’l-.er , xilb—rupfiby revolving smooth disks of steel, than with toothed circular *nws. It was found that tlie cutting ~was" donevliy the" beat generated by the friction of the edge of the disk against the Metal. The'metal is melt- :ed at the point of contact, while tfie steel «f the diitk, being cooled by the air, does not reach the melting point. The disks need no'sharpening and do not <\ear out >«» quickly as the toothi'd- . saws heretofore used-foe-cutting met al. The foster the disk revolves, th# greater the amount of heat generated, and the quicker the Job.—Popular Sd* #nce Monthly: — . . to die for his enemies. V. Lend,'Hoping for Nothing Again (v. 3fi). - Thiels what tfie Heavenly Father is eonstnntly doing, lie is kind, and gra cious unto- the unthankful and tin*, wicked. He sends ids rain and sun-, shine updli the unjust nnd sinners. He makes fruitful the, -toll o'fi those who lT.as[dieme ids name. He tints does be muse it is bis nature to so do. VI. Be Merciful (\. Tlie .example for the invitation of the disciple is the Ilmvenly Father. VII. Judge Not (v. B7). To Judge does not rpean tfie’plAcing ilf- Just estimates upon meu’s actions and lives, fur. “Jly tln'ir frlTTLs ye siiall I now the?!).” 1 The free is judged l»y the fruit. it bears. The thorn tree does"' not bear figs, nor the apple:tree beyr grapes. Our only way of discerning the character of men and . vfotnen is tlieir actions. That which is con- dCmned is censorious Judgment—the Impugning' of motives. VIII. Condemn Not’fv. !V7). J liis means tli:\.t we should not puss sentence upon men for tlieir acts, for to tlieir own master they stand or fall (Bom. 14:4). Tin* real reason why such action Is not warranted Is. that the bias of our hearts and the limita tion of our judgments render it Im possible, to" rigliteously and intelli gently pass judgment. IX. Forgive (v. 37.) -— j; Those who forgive shall be forgiven. The one Who has realized the forgiv : ing mercy of God will be gracious nnd forgiving toward others. ^ XI. Liberality Determined by What Is Left (Luke 21 :l-4). The rich cast into the treasury much, ■Hut it was from their abundance, l*he poor widow cast in all that she had; there wbr nothing left. (Jod estimates !• a gift by what one has left, not by .] the size of the gift To give the wid ow’s mite is to give .all. For the mil lionaire to give the*widow’s mite would m^ap for‘him to give his millions. VV-omen and Tractors. Women riVe everywhere in the fields m.vf l^ng Island this season. -A serv ice flag In one' farmhouse window shows four stars and tells* why tfie women of that house are brushing the peas. Nearly every house along the road shows a flag With a star or two. IrMother and tin* girls are also brave. The tractors are making the earth turn over on Long Island. The horses work In the- same fields with those ugiy looking engines and «how no fear. The horse \yitli nerves has pnssedYout like the lady with nerves In the Vic torian novel. No women were to be « seen running the tractors, altinuu'h It is an easier job than clod-hopping-be* hind a plow*.—Brooklyn Fngle. ' Tales, ind?ed. f William IkapH Howells, the author, nf a luni lo'Mfi’at hD KUteiy lioint tiigt*. wx< praising fairy tales. “I gave a little hoy," he said, “Han# Andersen's fairy tales' one day, und a si tort time after this Ids nurse found him in teai s. . * ■ - N • ** 'What U^tluijuiatter with you?’ she asked, ’Why are you crying?’' “ Eon. boo!’ blubbered tlie little bj/. 'I ate all uiy^supper while ybu were reading tin* one of my fairy tales, and lvei'+- 4 didn't know I’’d eqfeii it !"’s Wiien 'a stingy man suddenly gets charitable it's a s,|^n of eiilier a wed ding or a funeral. Children Like the attractive tlar —"vor of the Kealihful cerea! drink 1 Gerrru* and Ta«te. To ray nothing of its hollpess or authority fli'e Bible contains more* *poc|meQ8 of genius and ta<Ue than •n.v uher volum# lu exlstence.^-Liln- 4or. ~ “r-* And it’s f’ne for them too, for it contains nothing harmltil- cnly tho {Joodncsj of *heat and pure molasses. ?0STUM is new ro^u- lariy used in place of xea and coffee in many of the<£ csf of tan.'lies. Jcal and hwalturui. “Theres a ~^?5son ” v • - A A ' . •I