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J iW. ■ M - I \ H 4 ;■>. y •ri M (*»; , -i *- f ST T V BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA ■ / PAOI TMMIr; lllllltllllllll = 5 ALBERT N. DEPEW ' J / - ■ * / > ■ ~ ' / r / Ex-Gunner and Chief Petty Officer, U. Navy Member of the Foreign Legion of France Captain Gun Turret, French Battleship Cassard Winner of the Crotfx de Guerre Show Thyself a Man THE JOY OF By RF.V. W. W. KtfTCHUM Dirrrtir <*fj?r»qtical Work Courte, Moody Bible Institute. Chicago 1 Came to this Woman after Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound to 4 Restore Her Health , 11;; 1111:: 1M1 i 11111111111111u1111111111ir111:i111>11111j1111111111j 11111111111111 m11111111111111111111111111i1111111111m11111111111111M1f111j111111il1111111111111111 {1111111 ij 11m, 11111,1,,m1,i 1 anything else picked—up 1 along tht DEPEW IS WOUNDED IN FIERCE FIGHT WITH GERMANS AND GOES TO HOSPITAL L * Synopsis.-f-AlhVrf N, Depew. tiutlinf, of the story., tells of his service in the United -States Davy, during which he attained the- rank of ehief petty oflj/cr, first-class gunner. The world 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 l/cgion lin'd is assigned to thj/dreiidnnught Cassurd: where his '-markmanship wins him high .honors. - Later lie is transferred to theTand forcesHind sent to t Flnnders front.’ He gets his first expericnce / jn a front Jine trench ^ Dixmude. He goes “oYer flic top" and gets hit; first Herman in Vy- bayonet fight. 'While on runner, service Depew is cuughtHn a "Zepjndin raid_arid has arr exciting e^nertencp:' , - CHAPTER IX. - ^ —Lraid Up for Repairs. One night, ■after I,had been at I>ix- pmeanwinie mude for about tliree weeks,,\ye made Fas he vvtts troops, in small groups—what was left of squalls' and platoons ’and singly. < >wr captain hud got .it a fifth time, unennwhile. iiut he would not leave us! the. ranking officer,. He had ti charge ill the face of si very heavy a seal]) wound, hut the other# weae in .r ..lire. Our captain ajways stood at Hie -qwtrp^t when we were going over,-and made tly ^ign Vjl'. the cross and shouted. ‘‘TTTr .God ail'd France." Tlhn Uv would go over. Our officers always led us, hut I have never seen a Gorman officer Tcc'd' a vharVe ' T: ■'/ a.' . v CSV ’lic- Uind their men driv ing instead of legd- his tirtiis and shoulders, .lie could not move his hands at all. P.ut in* icd our charge when , we ran for the wood!?.'*"' c \Ve. carried some ma chine'guns with us tis we went, and • i the LMiiiuers w ijhiilrfufirm-4iietv_, set «pu-| lire while we opened up for them, .and , run on again. Some troops came out it.- I do not believe they are as brave | of lrH1 ,. h stil , fl , rt , u . r t0 the fight and liefped us, and wo druve the Her-' mans out of the woods arid occupied it as they tire stiid to be. Well, we went’over, this time,' and tie' machine guns were Certainly going it strong. We were pretty .sore., about tla> chaplain ajnt the Swiss and all 'hat. mid we put up an trtvful fight, hut we could not make it and had to come Jbif.L—LiuU. gin. coffifiany retiChetl. the.- Doclie tTci^hcs and not a man of it came back who had tint been wounded on the way and did not reach the tr». tich. They wede just w iped out. The captain 'was m.is>iiig, too. We thought In* fvsis" done for," hut about two o'clock in the morning, he catpe ( haek. He simply fell over into the trench, till in. Hi' ha<J been wounded four times, and had lain in a shell crater .full of water for So-feral hours,. —. 1 if . Uollid In it fn hack for \ i-. ■; 111 n.'|| f then, and when daylight came. If was . tod mTey he^-nuse we were practically cut off by artillery fire behind the front line trenches. When daylight carne, the artillery fire opened up right on .its; and the Hermans had advanced.their lines Into some trenghes formerly held by us and hardly forty-five yards away. We re- ~ cehrrth iimtiinr ntni shells right in mir face’s. A.Tunisian in our company got, crazy, and fan ha'ck over the parados, lie run a few yard,*, then stopped and looked hack at us. I think he'was coming to his senses, and would have started hack to us. Then the' spot where he hud been whs eni|\ty, and a second litter ills body froln the eliesj . (luivu fell not tliree Vards. from the parados. I do .not know where the top part went.' That same shell cut a groove in tlie low hilltop before it ex ploded. He had been lift by a big shell, and absolutely cut in two. 1 have semi this happen to four men, hut this wax tlie only one in France. About seven—ti'clock, w W received Te- eriforoen wptX arid poured freVfi tniops over and retook Hie trench. No sooner d we entered it, however, than the Oebpans turned thebe artillery on us, not evigi waning for thejr own troopi to retire xiifciy. They kimid numbers of their- ow iNnen in this w'a\v Jlut Jhe ourselves. *" • , . , * 1 loin He re, we hail the Hermans in | our ol/l french almost iiref tly . from ihe rear, and ffe Hmply Ciehncd them out. T think all tlie vows wore - kepi ptUn v- . of eh*e the men who tm di them died- first. » , I was through the thigh some time or other after the captain got back. It felt just like »• ncedlcip'rick at first, and tie n for a while my leg w as numb. A’couple r»f hours after we took our trench back, I started out for tlie rear amThospital.. The wound had been hbrting for some time. They car ried the captain out on a stretcher about the same time, hut he died on file way from loss Tif blood. Fresh , troops caniy up to relieve us. but our men refused to gb, and though official ly they were not there in the trench, tjiey stayed until, they took tlie cap; tain away, i Then, buck to billets- 1 —not i bullets, this time. I believe that we re ceived an army citation for that piece of work, tint I do not know, as I was , in-The hospital for a short time after ward. I do not remember much about going to tlie hospital except that tlie ambulance'made an uwful racket going over tin* stone-paved streets of Etnples, and that tlie hearer who picked up one j end of my stretcher, had eyes like dead j fish floating on water; also, -that there j wore somA civvies standing around the entranc^ as we were being carried In. The first thine they do in the hos pital is to take off your'old dirty hand- ages and slide your stretcher under u big electric magnet. A doctor conies ill and places his hand over your wound, and they let 'down tlie magnet over ids hand and turn on tlie juice. If tlie shell fragment or bullet In you is more than seven centimeters deep, you cannot feel the pain. The 'first doctor reports to the Chief how deep your wound Is, arid where it is situ ated and then a nurse. < omes up to you, w here you lie. w ith your, clothes still on,, and asks you to take the “pressure/* Then they lift you on a four-wheeled cart, and roll you'to tlie operating the- Tfter. They take off your-clothes there. I remember 1 liked to look’ at the nurse* .and surgeons; they looked so ■good in Their clean white clothes. Then tlu>y stick hollow needles into , Neon, which, hurt a good deal, and you j take the pressure. After a while, they begin maybe rotten tlesh, removing tlie old eloUi, piece&xof dirt, araKso forth, and scraping awuythe splinterXof bone You think for si bleed to dgath. ‘through you ifkc gt*t a Sight of yuurst yourself turning pale, you to your bed, find witli blankets and hot-tvuter bottle {-They raise your bed on chairs, so the blood will run up toward your head, and after a while, your eyes open and the doctor says, “Oui, ou4, ii vivra,” meaning that you still had some time to spend before finally going west. _. The treatment we got In the hospital was great. We received cigarettes,.to bacco, mutches, magazines, und clean clothes. The men do not tulk about front. When they are getting well, the. men ■learn - harness making, ,mechanical drawing, telegraphy, gardening, poul try raising, typewriting, bookkeeping and the men teach the nurses how to makb canes .out of shell eases,- and rings of aluminum, and slippers and gloves out of blankets. The r nurses certainly work hard. They, always have more to do 1 than tl/ey-plight to, hut they never complain, atid are always cheerful and ready to play games when they have the time, or read to some pdtiu. And their work is .pretty dirty too: I would got like to haV.&. la. do it. They say there wore lot^ of I'Yeiich society ladies working as nurses, but you -never heard much about, society,'or liny tulk about Lord Helpus, or Fount Whosfl, or pirik teas or anything like that from these nurses. ■ _ * A few shells landed near our hos pital. while I was there, but no patient was hit. They knocked a shrine of (iur Ludy t<i splinters, though, arid bowled- over r n big crue^ix. The kitchen was near by, and it w as just the chef’s luotf I that he had Walked - Over to our ward to see a pin of his, w hen a shell lujiVded pLumb in the center of > the kitchen, and.a)l you could see ail over-the bar racks.was stew. * , That tens a regular eatless day for 'us, until they rigged tip J>ogios and got some more.dixies, and mixed up some eornmeal for us. The chef -made up for it tin- next (lav, though. Tlie -chef was a great Ji'tlh} guy. /lie was a "blesso” himstdf,-and-f gm-ss- his ^rtom- iw'li sympathized with Ours. There was* a Frenchman in the bed next to me who had the whole shle of .hi-- face torn off. He (old me he had been next t<> a bomber, who had just lit a fuse and did not think it was burning fa>t enough, so he blew on It. It burned- fast enough after that, and he was. There was a Belgian In one of the nt her w nrds, w hom I got to know pretty well, .and he would—often come. over, and visit me. He asked many...ques tions about Dixnitide, ftir he"-had had relatives there, though he had hjst track*of them. He often tried to de scribe the house they had lived ip, so that I might tell him whether it was still standing or'not, but I could not remember the place he spoke of. Dur ing our talks, he told me about many atrocities. Some of the tilings he told me J had heard before, and some of them I heard of afterward. Here are some tilings that he either saw or heard of from victims: He said that'when the Germans cm tend tin* town of St. Quentin, they started firing into the windows as they passed along. First, after,.they had oc cupied the town,- they bayoneted every workingman they could find. Then they took about half of the children tlmt they could find, and killed them with-their musket butt's. After this, they marched the remainder of the chil dren and the women to the square, where they had lined up a ro\C of male citizens against a wall. The women and children were told that If they moved, they would all he shot. An other file of men was bnmght up, and 'shot,, after tin- Hermans^had put out, their eye* and tortured them with bayonets. Tim/ others were brpUght before .their wives and "children and sabered. , " , \ ' , ^he Belgian told me he was at Na mur When tin* Hermans began shelling* it. Tin- bombardment lasted tlie whoie of August t’l and 22, 191+. They cen tered their*fire on the^prison^the hos pital, and 1 h •^jp v i.ij.w'.uy-J-sifi tj < >tTr^Tb ey entered tlie town at fourWAHoek in the afternoon of August During the first twentj four hours, they behaved themselves, but on tlie 2 till they began firing at anyone they pleased, atid.set tire to different houses on five of the principal squurex- ... v ' Then they ordered every one to leave his house, and-those'-who did not went shot. Tlie Others,'about four hundred in all, were drawn up in front of the, church, close to.the river bank. The- Belglan said he could never ftirget how they all looked/ , “I cqn reVneuiber just how it was,” he said. ‘There were eight men. whom I ktrew very well, standing in/a row with several priests. Next earrie two good friends of mine named Baibhu TEXT--! c i th». earth t>e'f tlvoti Mtro»- r therefcifTi- a'trc[* show thyself •a nian.-%I-rK;r.g9 . - ^, ■ ' • „ r "-Z2i. . An old man lay dying. .Behind him was a checkered and ronfantie career. In .his ■ youth b-- v \<:as a shepherd. I Ye heentiHe . kjag of iludah. ' add wpon Sard’s death was elected king of Israel as well. His soils A-psalojli and A d on i J a ii. sej«ii'iitely*and at different times, j • tried to wrest his throne from him. Ykt last, however, fte had tlie satis- ’v -W - Ellen>burg, Wash —“'After I married 1 was not well for a long tim# and a good deal of time able to go about. Our greatest desire was to have a child in our home and one day my husband came back from 'town with a bottle of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound and wanted me to try it. It brought relief from my troubles. succeed him crowned king. As he lay dying tie called the young king into ids pres ence. und this is ' w lint Solomon lo-tifd Duvid. his father, say: “1 am going Fie way of all tlie earth. Show thy- siltya man.” Not by Clothes. Solomon must have pondered the meaning oY tteese~ words, .and as we look back "* v sr bis life It might be won- '-dorcd Hf - he did not dn+erpretr “Show thyself a hum,” to mean that he fdiould wear costly aiuj ornamental array. His magnificent clothes made such an im pression that our Lord, holding forth u lily, said: “Solomon in ad his glory was not arrayed' Like one of these.” tStra*uge, is it not, that even in these days, when tin- realities of life are be- iiig.borne it; upon us as never before, I impfoYed ir. health go I coul^domv housework; we now have a little one, all of which I owe tQliydia E. Pinkham’g Vegetable Compound/V— Mrs. 0. S. Johnson, R. No. 8, EUensburg, Wash. There'are- women everywhere- who faction of scci.ig for children in their homes yet art . v denied this happiness on account of Hie son w lioni b-- Bome functional disorder which in moat h a d. chosen to case9 would readily yield to Lydia fi. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Such women should not give up hop# until they have given this wonderful medicine a trial, and'for special advict write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. # Lynn, Mass. The result of 40 yean experience is at yopr service. absorbine ** TRAOE «A«H BfG.U.S PAt Off Will reduce Inflamed, Strained* Swollen Tendons, Ligament*, or Muscles. Stops the lamenessand pain from a Splint, Side Bone or Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horse can be used. $2. 50 a bottle at 'druggists or delivered. De scribe your case-for special instruc tions and interesting horse Book 2 R Free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic linimentfor mankind, reduces ’ Strained, Torn Llga- . ! ments Swollen Glands, Veins or Muscleti flier** :irc foik^wim UCt ax. if thvy -^Cuts. bore*. Llcera._A.lUys pain. Price 77"^ 77 ■ * F - *' 7 H.25 • heRlc at dealer* or delivered. Book Bvt+ecec’* fee* Women and Children Begged for the • Lives of the Men. s and Guillaume, with Bnlbau's seven- teen-year-old son-; then two meji who thought clothe*; instead of- character make the man. - > , You can test this in most any^soclal .gathering. Two men enter; one. with heart as black as hell, but dressed like a fashion plate and with the airs of a gentleman; the other, with sterling character, but green and awkward, wears ordinary pluin clothes. The first Is a center of attraction while the sec ond is unnoticed unless some one, put of plrv, keeps him company. I do not say this would be so if the real value of e^h man wiis known, but In the ab- smire of such knowledge, is it not true that often we act as if clothes and not Character, make the man? Not by Wealth. It mny be Solomon thought his fa- ■tli/r' rmutqt that he should acquire wealth, for be aumssed a great fortune ami became the richest man of all time. He erectetb^ palatial residence that took thirteen ybars to build, and W F. YOUNG, P. 0. F., 310 Temple Street, Sprlngflelfl, Mm.- HOW- TO cm your Kfofery 11 In half. Itavc-plenty to rat, and k* t wi'.j and k.-op «p;i. which the Govcnuncni wants «*T<>rjrone to do In order to be efficient In all things and accomplish their rightful desires. Tbta man has been trained at a big expense t fo> the ex*.. press purpose of showing 70a how. For fall Infor mation address ten cent (tamp to Kat for Health and EIHclenrj Man. Plainfield. Indian* Clear Your Skin WhileYouSleep with Cuticura Alldruggt«t*.8o»p Sample each f: Soap 2S . Ointment ISAM. Talcnm J5. OlUnra. Dept *, HADLEY WILLING TO FORGET Subject of Dislocated Jaws Seldom Seletced. for Conversation by 1 Head of Yale University. mode To ktn-ol In front of the other men agulpst the wail. The'women and children began to bog for the liyes of the men. and many of them were knocked in the head with gun butts' before they stopped. Then tie* Germans fired at the double rank of men. After three volleys, there were eighty-fo.ur dea'd and twenty wounded. Most of the wounded they then killed with axes, but somehow, three wr four escaped by hiding under the bodies of others and playing dead, . . . . . „ ,.u | though the officers walked up and XSSS r? r “T ! their revolvers into the S fwten llesh, Xn.nvme the- nl.l ^JJes of bodies. . ‘ _ The next day the * Germans went through the wine cellars, and shot all tlie inhabitants ” they found hiding there. A lot of people, who had taken refuge in a factory over night, decided l() came out *with a white tlag. Tlu-y aiitiwed to think that the-.white fiagNwonld he resp(*rted, but no sooner Were they nil out.than they woTO'Seized ui iniblicly Violated jin Hie wkteh the men were shot. as he sat fu hi/ of fourteen was pulled apart. 7 At one place, 11'iminNvrts tied by the arms to tlie ceiling.ojHhisT°otn_apd s«'t afire. ITis trunk wu£<completely, car bonized,- but Ins }>ead andSirrns were . m | unbuhned. At/the same* place, tHe their rwounds much, and everybody p 0( j v v f tries to be hapjty and show It. The ‘ ’ food was fine, und there was lots of It. a Tif teen-yea r-ob.1. boy was found, pierced by more than, twenty T , . - - bayonet thrusts. Other dead were 1 do not think thert? were any doc.- foun(1 with.thelr bands still In tbe air. leaning up against walls/ ^ X •ire was so heavy that, wh(*n they coun ter-attacked, we -h'ad -To retire agniti, ; * n the world better-Yhan ours, und and this time they kept after us and they were always trying to make At another nine t+e drove us beyond, the trench we had easy for us. Th^y did not rip lhelu , d the^Wn fo/a <Xv originally occupied. the dressings off your .wounds like ontemJ and ^ kp , , * We left them there, with our nrttl- °f the butchers.do In s«myt-uf^mr ..lery taking care of. thenr, ant)our jjm- ,J hspensuries that I know of, but took them off Carefully. Everything was \ery clean and sanitary, and some of the hospitals hfcd. sim parlors, which were wdl used,'you can be sure.- Some of. the men ma<le toys and funcy-articles, such ns button hook' chine'guns trying t*> enfilade them, and moved to the right. There was n hunc h of trees thereabout like a,smnil woods, and as we* passed the Germans . concealed in It opem>d fire on us. and we;retired to s<)me reserve trenches. Germans and then The women and children were turned loose, with out being allowed to take* anything with them; ami forced t<i have the town.- 'Nearly five hundred nidi were " cn dep'.ricd to Germany. 'IXc who] ^ \Vjre t]lnjyvt, exliuus.ted by'tiUiiL' r. tri* •; to 'escjipe. "jThyy . W‘<*^& bayonet' d ur.■ i (TubbedToTJ(%tlt.- 'Tuei\v men, who had taken refuge in a barn and had * ia< l * s ueh sumptuous s^hwoundings and ' . been discovered and blinded; then two so"rnuch wealth, that the queen of Arthur lladley, president of Yalo other men whom I had never seen be- Sheba,-hearing of his glory^* canie to university, is un honored authyrlty on fore. visit him und when she saw it ail. ex- ,nu ny subjects, but he declines to in- claimed: “The half was never toTd." elude among them dislocated jaws. ■ ‘jit was awfnl to see The way the women were crying—‘Shoot me Too, How many there are today to whbna Thereby hangs this tale, shoot me with my husband." wealth is an indication of manhood. ^X.^ he educator \vas sharing his stat^ "The men Were lined up on the edge !•«*<■he said that one Is rich, and Im- ] r "^" 0,1 !1 i , '»H Rive* boat witj^,a pleas- of the hollow, which runs from tlie 'Mediately these people do him honor, as ant gentleman who had otherwise^sJjept... high road to the bottom of the village. ^ what he possesses, Instead of what he * on la the open cabin, when, w'ell One of them was leaning on the shoul- uiakes hLm a man. It is a bad cus- a h'»K toward morning, he heard, com- ders of un old priest, and he was cry- t " rn we have of asking how much a ln k fr *> la the fipper berth, sounds of lng, ‘I am too young—I can't face Im ‘ n ls worth, rather than what Is his *"Kglng and garbling and moaning, death bravely/ Lj Laracter. A man may have a good ■■Jumping up and switching tm the light “I couldn’t bear the sight liny longer, character with dollars, and just as he saw his m-.piaintane^ was suffering I turned my hack to the road and, cov- he’muy have a. bad character jrently. His chin was 6n his breast, ered my eyes. -I heard the volley and wlthout th, ‘ m - II is not money, or tbe his mouth rigidly open, his taes tight the bodies falling. Then some one uant *>f it. that determines a man’s closed and perspiration on hhx, fore- character. It is what he actually is. head. ' ■ x s ^ Wealth may Induce to badness, ami ^ calm, sir," cried Mr. Hadley. **I so may poverty ; neither, however, need be blamed for ruined character, be- [ cause God will give strength and grace bear either, if we ask him. Not by Culture. Possibly Solomon thought that cul- .trite makes a man, for we read* that he became the wisest of all men. Yet after acquiring understanding in many * ~^ ■ things, It was he w^io said at last: Canine Statistics. “Trust in the Lord and lean not to “ What interest has the dog In chas ing that cat?” “I guess his Interest ls cried, ‘Look, they’re all down.’ But a few escaped.” This Belgian had escaped by hiding —he could not remember how many days 1 —in an old cart filled with manure and rubbish. He had chewed old hides for food, hail swam across the river, and hii^in a . mud-bank for almost a \yeek longer, and finally got to France. He took it very hard when we talked about Dixtnude, and I. told him ttjnt tbe old church was just shot to pieces. He asked about a painting called the “Adoration of the Magi," an3 one of the other prisoners told us it had been saved and transported to'Germany. If that iff true, atniXhey do not destroy it meanwhile,’we wlN^get it back, don’t worry 1 • know just what to do/ Wrapping a towel around his thumbs to save them from the release, he clam bered up beside the man, knelt by hla shoulders, began to work the Jaw Into Its place— : und then spent the rest Of the night trying to explain himselfl For It was only u case of nightmare. thine own Understanding.” . t We should remember that God puts tio -premium upon ignorance. He ex perts us to develop and increase in knowledge. \ " ' ~ The splendid schools and colleges 'of about one pur? scent.’ ' My wound was just aVlean gunshot our v <,a Y ofr *- jr youth gre«*t opportunities* wound and not- very 'seruhrs, so, al- for development; but should"'ali the though it was not completelKhealed,- cuU,,ro an, . f 'learning of the wi.rld ,\>e. they let me go after three \ve<>k\ But aur, l>iired. and one know not God and before I ’went,: I Saw somethinirYW • 7f * s,ls Fhrlstwhom he has sent; he Is aw something tinit no man of ns w ill' ever /Orget. .Sonh cf them took vbw3" just like the men n< the legion I have told about. “One of the patients was a German doctor, who. had been picked up in No Man’s Land, very seriously wounded. He, was given the same-.treatment as, any of us, that is, the very best, but finally, the doctors gave him up. ThFy still ignorant of the greatest and most vital truth—truth that 1s essential to character, mid without which he the power to build that Christian chiiriixten which fiione can stand the testingsXof God, and having stood them, entmre,throughout -eternity. Tip* aposHe tells us *thiTt “other • foundation can\n«> man lay than that tbought he Would die 1 slowly, and that * a *^’- 'vbich‘^\Tesus Christ." And it might take several weeks. While In the hospital Depew witnesses a scene that con vinces him that it is not only the kaiser and hit system, out the German soldiers them selves, that are responsible for much of the frightfulness'that has marked— the “War. -Read about this a<;ene. in the next, in- stallrhent. J _ (TO BE CONTINL'Fi Experiments with poWdered for Hm, r »FT 7"' 1 „"‘"7 Th <T “*'1* «"• .iwd tukyn rrtint* 1.0 * f«fm. », w :M . (OH have *.**.*. succes-fal in Sweden S r ; e LTned W. e handles from empty shell case,, or .tm-ethe/and sh.j ih.,a Another that- a Vanf M in. pnetuetion on * there, and were, Jo nvd b, other of our , shrapnel, or piece, of Zeppelin., or „-mup of six acre Tied toother ana large scale has been Published. - he says:—LTf any tih^n build upon this foundation”—not learning, hot ciburi' but Christ—“he shall "'Receive a re ward,” provided of cours<vbis bhildiog. be of such material ns will stand.the test of fire. Anil «o. he .adds: “Take Ijeed how ye build thereupon^ Yes, let ns" take heed bd.v wc buUd thereuponwhat kind of Christian ' characters we erect; but flr>t of*^lI, we need to be definitely sure that w< are building upon the only foundation, w.hh-h rs .TeAis Chri-t -■ ir Lord. - Then ‘ as we build our Christian character upon him, may each one of us show ■t hi mself a man. \ — /^Christ’s Desire. In our business Christ wants not i . much ours> but us. ^c7f\c Wear and Tear on that boy of yours during the active years of childhood and youth necessitates a real building food. Grape-Nuts \ supplies the essentials for vigorous minds and bodies at any agfc. "There's a Reason"