Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, September 12, 1918, Image 3
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BABNWXLL SENTINEL, BABNWXLL, SOUTH 0AX0UN4
MM
■■ i •
:
By
;■/ i7--- /
- Ex-Gunner and Chief Petty Officer, U. 5., Navy
' Member of the Foreign Legion of France
Captain Gun Turret,French BattieshipCassard
Winner of the Croix de Guerre
CJopjrrl^ht, 1918, by Reilly end Britton Co., Through Special Arrangement Wlthrthe Georg? Matthew Adams Service
th
•/
, if
GUNNER DEPEW, IN HOSPITAL, SEES UNUSUAL INSTANCE
OF HUN FRIGHTFULNESS.
1 . 1 5 'A. • 4
Synopsis.—Albert N. Depew, author of the story, tells of'his service
in the United States navy, (luring wliicbfhq attained the rank of Chief
petty officer, 'first-class gunner. The world war starts boon tifter he
receives his honorabip discharge from the navy, and' he leaves for
Trance with a (loferminatioh to enlist.- He joins the Foreign L'egioq and
is assigned to the dreUdnaught Cassard, where his marksmanship wins
him high honors. Later lie, is transferred to the land forces and sent to
the Flnpilers front. He gets his first experience in a fropt line treneii
at Dixnmde. He goes "over tin* top” and gets his first German in a
bayonet fight.. While on ruiingr, service". Depew is caught in a Zeppelin
rind and has an exciting experience. In a fierce fight with the Ge'r- .
mans, la* is wounded :uuj is- sefvf to a hospital. ‘ • .
other efc-nnvy gunners in the States
that would serve with the, French.
I told thefii the country was full ot
good gunners, and. lie wanted me to
flVfIFe">fo all I knew and get them to
cotne over, lie did hot mean by this,
arid neither dii.l, that, there were not j
''good giumers in the Frepeh navy,/be
cause there were—-lofs of them. 'But.-'j
you odri never have too many handy
hoys .with the guns and he Ayiis very
-anxious for, in,e v to get all F could. I ’
had no w/iy of reachihg the ex-garhles'-
I did .know, so. I had.to .pass up this
1 opportunity to recruit by mail.
While \ve were in Brest 1 got pejr-
we drew nearer the shore they began ' mission to go aboard a submarine
using .shr/tphe'l on Up- and in no time
at all our funnels were shot full of
-y~—'
tsagjRBsan
Who Is On the
Lord’s Side?,
a a: child gets sick
CROSS, FEVERISH
IF CONSTIPATED
MiriWMMMW——
By REV. J. it!RALSTON, D, De l
Secret Ary/Iot Corresponderr fr--Bej>xrtpreot7~
, Mogdy Bible Institute-, Chicago
- ' '•/ --- ‘V- • > •/ * . - ‘'
LOOK AT TONGU^! THEN GIVI
FRUIT LAXATIVE FOR STOM
ACH, LIVER, BOWELS. -' Iv
• I
CHAPTER IX—Continued.
But there was a nurse there, who
took "Special interest in his case, and
she stayed up.day and night for some
time and finally brought him through.
The Case was-.very well known, amt
* * - /
everybody said she had-performed a
miracle. He got better’slowly.
Then a few weeks later, when he
was out ofjdanger and .was ably to
'V
and it was only .n
efure he would he i
walk,
time before la* would lie released from
TTH* hospital, this nurse was. trans
ferred to another hospital. Everybody
knew her and liked her, and when she
went around to say good-by, ail the
men Were, sorry and gave her' little
jtresenjs, and wanted her to write to
them. She was going To 'get a nurse
sl)e knew' in the other hospital to turn
her letters into English, so .that she
could write to ine. I gave her a ring
1 had made from a piece of shell case,
hut 1 guess she had hundreds of them
at 1 that. ’ i
But this German doctor would not
say good-by to her. That would not
J'rohahly you have not been over there,
and maybe you think we are not fight
ing tlnu^.oniyin people, -hut only the
kaiser and his flunkeys.
Well, nobody had better tell me that.
Because I have been there, and 1 have
seen this. Arid.I know.
holes and a sieve was watertight com
pared to them.
Naturally we were not just taking
all this pujdsljR'iient without any"come
back. . Our guns were sit it fast and
from the way the fire slackened in
cigtain places we knew .we were mak
ing it effective. My guns did for two
enemy pieces that I know of, and per
haps several others.
The French garbies were a good
deal mprt*—-excited in action than I
thought they would he/ They were
dodging around below decks, tfyfng
to miss the shrapnel that came
aboard, shouting, swearing, singing—
hut fighting hard, at that.. They stood
the >gaff just as well as any .other
garbles would, only in their own
sweet way—which is noisy enough,
CHAPTER*X. '
Hell at Gallipoli.
A
a. 4Q.».y:tl ( jP o|. After. I .was.,discharged from the hos
pital, I was ordered to report to my
ship at Brest for sea duty.
'The hoys aboard the Vassard gave
j me. a hearty welcome, especially Mur
ray, who 1uhI come hack after two
i weeks in tin* treaches at Dixmude. .1
! was glad to see them, too, for after all,
tiny wefe garbles, and 1 always feel
more .at home with them than'with sol-
believe me.
One of our seamen was hit IfiO
times by .fragments of shrapnel,- so
you can sv& what they wet'e
hgt^nst in the dodging line. A
j turret In action is not exdctly
best place on earth for a nervous
man nor one who likes his 'coiufoTf*" i "‘ i
There is an aw ful lot of hcnT* me
noise and smell and work, all the"
time in a fighting gun turret. Blit
during an engagement I would rather
be in a gun turret every time- than
between decks. At that, if anything ;
does, happen in a turret—it is good,
night sure lor all, and-no rain checks j
needed. <• I
ami a petty officer showed me around.
This Was fhe fir-st time I Was- in the
interior of a sob and I trrld the otVuvr
that I w;oulil like to take a spiff in tiie
tub myself. IJv Introduced me to tiie
rcommlmder, hut the petty rdlVcii|>^ij|j^
In* did not think they Would tet'j’idfaij 1
stay aboard. 1 showed the .com
mander ray passport and talked to*
him for a while, and he said hft
would take me* on thoir practice
cruise ,two days later If the Old Man
gave me written permission. •.
So I ‘hot-footed it hack to the Crts-
sird and while I did not promise that
I would get any American gunners for
him* in exchange for the written per-,
mission, he was free to think that if
he wanted-.to. It seems as thotrgh he
did take it that way, for he gave nn*
a note to the suit commander, and sent
him another note by messenger* I
wanted Murray to go too, hut the Old
Man said pne was enough.
So, two days later. 1 went abqxfd
• up f in the morning and had breakfast
gun ; with the sub crew. and a“gtx>0 hreak-
thc j fusi it wlLs. too* AfterJiiymcfast they
TK.yT—Whoso-is on Jehovah’s side let
h oi ooii.t- unto me - K. V. • > /. -
, .ItUs reiitted th;*.t at a eerfaiit point in
Liijc.MiTs"'^residential experience 1 , When
the affair* ojf the
“CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIG8P
CAN'T HARM CHILDREN AND
LOVE IT. >
nC
THEY
i '
having
Vnl'otr -were .^
a precarious con-
<lltl<»n. a frienrf
rerii..rketi to him
that it, was a
good thing to
Itave tiie Lord on
Aur si4c.- ; - Ml -
LihcoTn" very se
riously -Replied
s more -
ahojit
er lie w i re,
the Lord’s'
suie. '1 here arc
rtuliea thins that
the German kite
>er is tiiyre Coti-
the Lord on his
f SSS--}
/
One of our junior lieutenants was
diers. '1 hen. was iHvtty rough NtulT .^ trut . k by a fragment of sfidll as he
e, and utter resting up xvas at station behind the wht'vl-
th# * hospital, I was keen on goliwT to ,,; nise an(1 - a Viec e of his skull was
sea again.
at Hixtmidi
Tin; <'assard was, in dry (lock for re-
pa’lrs after her last voyage to the Dar
danelles ns convoy to the. troopship
have made me. sore, but It made this . I mpieix, Everythin
French girl feel very had. and she la
gan to cry- One of tiie French officers
saw her and found out about the doo-
t,or, and the officer went up and spoke
to the German. Then the French of
ficer left, and the German called to
the nurse tmd she Went over to him
and stopped crying.
Thet talked for a little while, ami
their sin* put out her hand.yas if she
was going to leave.' He put out his
hands, toil and took hold of hors. And
t hcii
them
was being rushed
to get her out as soon as possible, and
crews were working day and night.
There were other ships tliere too—su-’
perdrendnaughts, and dreadnoughts,
and battleships, and armored cruisers,
all being overhauled.
We received and placed guns of
newer design, filled the magazines with
the highest explosives known to naval
use. and generally made ready for a
hard job. our magazines were filled
with shells for our big 12 and 14-inch
ie twisted her wristband broW^ guns. A 14-inch shell can tear a hole
We heard the sjyiffi. f through „the heaviest armor plate at
There were men in that word who ' 12.000 yards, nmi•will do more damage
had not hveu .au foot since the day thnlvyou would .think,
they cnfiie to the hospital, and one of j Wimp we hud coaled and hmi got
them was supposed to he dying, hut it i our stores aboard, we dressed for ae-
sry-.
is an absolute fact that-wln n we heard
her scream, there was not a man left
in bed.
I need not tel! you what we did to
.the German. They did not need to
shoot him. after we got through with
him. They did shoot what was left of
him, to make surtf. though*
Now, 1 Jiyve hemfL people say that
it Is md the Germans vve are "fighting,
hut the kaiser and his system. Well,
it may "he true that some ot the Boche
Soldiers would not do these things if
they .did not have to: myself, ilijii not! steel plate
sh surg. .Finally, we had. roll call—all men
But you take this-doctor. Here he | present. • Then we set sail for the
w as, an educated man, who had, been Dardanelles as escort to the Duplelx, uoi heryre the job was over,
mailed all his life to help pe< pie who .which huff on board territorial and z: Aboarii\ship it was deck work, of
-provincial French *, troops—Guscons. ..course, and it was not much better
Parisians.. ^Normans, Indo-Chinese, thjefe than ashore with the guns, be-
Spahis, Turcos—all kinds. When we i^use the enemy trenches were near
tion—or. rat her, undressed. The decks
w ore clear; xmteh covers bolted and
davits, folded (town ; furniture, chests,
tables, chairs won\sent ashore, and In-
llaiiiinahle gear, like otir rope ham- |
ni(»cks, went overhoard. You could
not find « single wooden^hair or table |
in the ward room.
When th(> ship Is cleared rhf action,
a ’died bursting Inside camiht find
much to set afire, and if one hursVs on
(i‘"ck. there is nothing to burn but the
wooden /leek, and that Is covered with"
driven into his lmiin. He wits car
ried into* my gun turret, hut he.
would not let them take him to sick
hay to have ids wound dressed. There
he ^^L askiug a very now ami .then
how the fight was going and. then sort
of dozing off for h while.
l After half an hour of action we put
about and -started away, still firing.
As a parting slap qn. the back the
Turks tore off one of our hig-gun tur-
I rets, and then away we Went, hack to
Brest with a casualty list of only 15.
We did not have much trouble guess
ing that It was dry dock for us again.
We got hack to Brest after a quiet
voyage, patching ourselves up where
wd could on the way, and again there
was the rush work, day and night,
to get into shape and do It over again.
They turned us out In 12 days and
buck we went to the Turks and their
Hun assistants.
We were lucky getting inshore, only
receiving a nasty, smash astern, when*"
the Turks got our range and landed
two peaches before we got out. We
nearly tore our rudder off getting
away. But,we bad to come back right
away, because we had carried quite
a number of heavy guns , from Brest
mid were given the Job of running
them ashore. It wa3\ day and night
work and a great Job for fun, because,
while you never knew when you
mild get it. you hprl good reason to
feW you would get lammed by a. cute
littlXshell or,a dainty bit of shrap-
4
\
being on thi^Lord’s
, The natural tendency of man Is to
seek bis own or the things iTf bujmin-
lty. rather ih;ip th«Mhiiigs of the Lord,"
and man is sijuipTy asking what some
particular course will bring to him, or •
w lfat it .w ill bring-to-his tiifie. The
chief end of man in these days is not
to glorify Aod. In this', grievousWrong
Is (Ioffe. When u roiirse of action ]s
before one, tin* chief question should
not be,.-How will it affect ine?” nor,
indeed,-‘‘How-w ill it affect iny neigh
bor?” hut "How w ill it affect God?”
li e great need of.the day is a new/
sensing of God—God at the beginning,
God in' the middle, God at the. ending.
The right thing for nian is to ask
where God is, and to gn/where he is,
If man vArold do that many of his
great theological questions would lx*
settled. God manifests himself
through his .Word, and if men would
go to tiie Word of God with these
questions they would soon he substan
tially correct on all tot thetn. '
The text suggests the question, “Who
Is on the Lord’s side?”,nr rather 1 ,
“What man or woman has a right to
say'that he is on the Lord’s side?”
Mother! Your child Isn't naturally
cross and pefivtsli. See If tongue Is
coated; thw is.a sure sign the llttl«
stomach, llv* r and bowt-ls need a
cleansing at once., ,
When listless, pale, feverish, full of
|old, In-oath, lnid, throat sore, doesn’t
eat, sleep or act naturally, has atom-
ach-ache, diiirrinra. remeniber, ,1a gen-
th* liviT and huui-l c!c;i-nsing should
always .he’the fir.s't treatment given.
Nothing,eqtfals ."California Syrupof
Figs” for children's Ills; give a
spoonful, and in a few hours all/fh«
foul waste, sour bile and ferr
fo.xL wltteh is dogged in thX bowel#
passes out of the system^ and • you
iiave n well and playftK child again.
All children love tlihr harmless, deli-
clofis "fruit laxariAV," and It never
fails to effect n^ood “ip<i(le” cleans
ing. IHrectiqKs for babies, children
of a]l ages and grown-ups are plainly
on the hot.tle. • / .
Kcep.lt liiiij>h- in your home. A llttl#
given today save's a sick child tomor
row, htiv get the genuine. Ask your
druggist for a bottle of. “California
S.vnjp of Figs,” then see that It la
Blade by tlx* “California Fig Syrup
Company."—Adv.
- /
Mud Baths.
Representative (’apstick was talking
about airplane production
“Our airplane production has been
slow,” he *nid, “hut I really think that
In the particular case before us, thft too much abuse lias been showered on
' 1 >
messed, we had to squat down on the
steel mess deck and eat from metal
plates.
There had been a notice/£osted be
fore \ve left that the Zeppelins had be-
th<* 1 shqre and they amused them
selves trying to pick us off whenever
we showed on deck. I guess we Were
a- regular shooting gallery for them,
and some of our men thought they
did not need all the practice they
wer/;., get ting,' for quite a few’ of us
aCTed' asTjull’s eyes'
But we did not mind the bullets so
guiv sgB—raids, tmd we kept a live eye
out for them.—TligMews proved^ to he*
a fake. though^Xnd we did not see a
single cigar While .we W ere out.
We madXyie trip to the Dardanelles ihucb. They make a clean wound or
without sighting an enemy craft, keep PM~ you ■" aa*a"y entirely”; shrapnet
!ing in close tou>h with the Dupleix t(1 ors you up and cun play all kinds
und busy every minute preparing for I tricks with various parts of your
Kction. x .\/ ; body without killing you. As for-
I was made gun cnprnin’gnd given > shells —mincemeat is the word,
cluirge of the starboard bow v turret, -The Narrows were thick with mines
’mojritlng two 14-lnch guns. I hadvmy an( l there had been a great deal of
men at gun practice dally, and.by the damage done there, so after a while
time we neared the Dardanelles, after Mb'* British detailed their Yarmouth
five days, they were in pretty fair trawlers to go In and sweep up. They
Gunner Depew in French Sailor Uni
form.
• ’ ' s \ , , ' /
took stations and the commander went
up on the structure amidships, which
was Just under the conning tow/y. and
I squatted down on the deck "beneath
the structure.
Then the *gas engines started up
and made an awful racket and shook
the old tub from stem to stern. I
could tell that we had cut loose from
thn dock and were moving}-. After a
while' they shut off the gas engines
and started the motors and we begun
to submerge. „ When we were all the
way under I looked through the peri
scope ahd saw a Dutch merchantman.
We stayed under*about half an hour
and then came hack to the surface.
One of the garbies was telling me
later on that this same sub had gone
out of control’a few weeks before
and kept diving and diving until she
struck bottom. I do not know how
many fathoms down it was, hut It was
farther than any commander would
take a sub if he could -help—tL— This
garby said they could hear the plates
..cracking and it was a wonder' that
thejr did not crumple up from the
pressure, hut she weathered It, pres?
sure button and all, and in a quarter
of an hour was o,n the surface: While
on the feurfuce they sighted smoke,
submerged again, and soon, over the
.horizon cante eight battleships, ,j?s-
ebrted hy..Zepps and destroyers.
‘y tested fheir tubes before they
got In range. Finally they Jet go. The
first shot missed,, but nfteH that th£y .Fundamentally; the-Jssue is the
>eople had made a golden calf and
jtnjre. worshiping it. To do that was
to b^eak the first two commandments
of th<!\DecftIoguev and It uecnine open
It is inevitable that, a man
worship. If he dogs not worship God
be will worship some thing, or some
one else. Nur\mn a tiuin be on the
Lord’s side if he uu/?s those things that
the Lord hates.
If a man would know his duty to the
Lard he should seek to know what the
Lord thinks of certain things, and here
again he must take the Lords judg
ment through his Word, for he Cannot
know what the Lord thinks unIefi?K|i6"
knows-hfs Word. As to partlculamc-
tions, a man may be left to his own
judgment, hut as to the grelit princi
ples that lie at tiie root.of things, the
Lord makes clear declaration in his
Word. Does the Lord love a liar, bru
tality, deception? , The remnant of
God’s ini;/ge in man says at once, “No!
No!” Does the Lord favor truth, lib
erty, kindness? T^iat same remnant
of God’s image says, “Yes!*Yes!” And
consequently, the duty is clear, and he t
should stand, for these things. We
might sum up everything by saying,
“Ye uunnot s"Crve God and mammon.”
The scene connected with our text
was probably this: There was
a golden calf and people were
dancing about it. Moses*stood aloof
and made the cry. “Whoso is on the.
Lord’Reside, let him come to me.V Ac
cording to the constitution and nature
of man we make uppeals to him as~to
his 'Conscience, to his sense of duty or
privilege, and he must make choice.
What Is it" to he on the Lord’s side?
It is a' natural inheritance from our
sinning first parents that wervriH eithei
be Indifferent to God’s commands or
we will positively refuse to obey
the men who inaugurated it.
“One of these men was recently tak
en down with rheumatism. As he hob
bled on ills two sticks across the ve
randa of a seashore hotel a sympa
thetic lady'gajd to him:
•‘‘Have you -^ver .tried mud hatha?*
" ‘Yes/ Indeed,* lie answered. ‘Didn’t
you know that I served on the aircraft
production hoard till they kicked ma
out?’ ”
Lemon
.. Fo
Jui(
r Fi
:e
reckles
y lotion at
ta. Try itl
Girls? Make beaut
home for a few cen
Squeeze the Juice of two lemons Into
a bottle contalhlng three ounces of
orchard .white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle,
sunburn and tan lotion, and complex
ion whitener, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and
any drug store or toilet counter will
supply three ounces of orchard whita
to a few cents. Massage this sweetly
fragrant lotion into the face, neck, >
arms and hands and see how freckle*,
sunburn an*d tan disappear and how
clear, soft and white the skin bacomaat
Yssl It Is harmless.—Adv.
+ v " >,
And Then He Twisted Hsr Wrists and
<’ Broke Them.
were in pain, and not to cause it. And
he was not where he would have to
obey the kaiser or any other German.
And this nurse had saved hts life.
So I do not see that there is any
argument about it. He broke that
girl’s wrists because he wanted to;
that is Ml there ls4o lt,_ ?Jow, I say
this German doctor was a "dirty cur
and a scoundrel. But 1 say that-he is
a fair sample, of most-of the Germans
I have met. And It Is Germans of this
kind that we are fighting—not merely
the kaiser. ^i
It is like going to Qpllege. I have
never been there, blit f have beard
some people.say It did noV do a man
days,
shap'd^
It was About 5 a. in. when we drew
near Cape Helles and took stations
for-action. The Duplelx was in front
of us. The batteries on the cape
opened up on us, and in a few min
utes Inter those at Kum Kaleh Joined
in. .
As the Dupleix made for “V" beach
and prepared' to land her troops, vie
swung hroadslde on, raking their bat
teries as we did so, and received a
shell, which entered through a gun
port in.the after turret and exploded.
Some bags of powder stored "there
(where they shopld-aever have been)
were fired and the "roof of the turret
was just lifted off. It landed on deck,
tilted up against the side of the tur
ret.
<*)n deck the rain of fire was simply
terrific. St^el flew in all directions..
It was smash, crash, slam-bang all
the' time, and I do not mind saying I
never thopght we would-’come out
of it.
Some of the heavy armor plate up
forward was shot away and after that
* i ri « J ....
any good to, go. But I have never ibe'old Cassard looked more like a
beard a n «in "ho Went there say that.. "Monitor than anything else tq me. As
the
go up unprotected, of 1 course,
started off one night all-
had t>
agd
serene.
Everything x swent
turned ut the Na
weir until they
and startl'd
rrows .
back. Then," before\vovi could tell it,
five or six searehlighf» x were playing
on one of the trawlers'vjjnd shells
were splashing the water airuwr her.
Both banks were simply banging a» ny
point J/Iank at them and I
.thought they would get back.
They did' get* back, though,' but
some of them had hardly* enough men
left to work ship. -But that is like
the Limeys., They wid get back froni
anywhere while there. 1$ one man
alive, • . • .* V
f ......
A chap aboard one ot the trawlers
said a shell went^through tne wheel-
house” between the qunrteYmasFer and
himself and all the Q. M. said was.
VGaw blimey, that tickled.”
“Rut l- know their shooting was
very bad.” said the other chap to me.
“Those Turks must have thought the
flue wus' behlnd them,”
Gqming back.frmn the DardaneRoi
ff **
me
got into It good and the garby said all
you could hear was'the knocklpg of
the detonated gqncotton:
About five minutes later they, sight
ed five destroyers, t\o on each "bmvf
and one dead ahead. The sub steered
in at right angle zlgzngs\and the de
stroyers stayed with their convoy. The
sub launched, two torpedoes "at less
than a mile before diving, to g(‘t away
from the destroyers and the gaWy
said at least one pf them was hir>
These •sliips must have been soine-
of the, lucky ones that came down
from the North s’ea. The garby said
he thought .they were off the Dutch
eoffSP at the time, but -he was not
ne '*' r t' sure.
, But this cruise that I was on was
only a practice cruise" and we did not
meet with any excitement In the short
time that we were out
Things Unpu'rchasable. ’' /
oils could be Illustrated by-'takc l lierc aie things, said the phi-
wcTsides of an imaginarjUiuer” ,0, l f>h< l “ ,lmt ln " n " y ™ nnot bu /" "
^nrnvinxrv line there rnn he “Yes^Txpih.V^his wTfg. "Bat 1 wish""
you would quir talking about the high
cost of living.” "
-t. ^
In. the nexflnstalirrent Gun
ner the wonder
ful’ work- of the , British and
French navies in- the Gallipoli
C? -paign. Don’t rUss It.
<TO BE CONTINUED.,. .
—-. ...— —-——' - - ,
. Must Remain Awake.
importunity knocks at every man’s
door," said Uncle Elixn; “but .if you
!<1 stripe sent for me and asked | i M ’ sits -down an’ listens^ you’s liable
uhether I thought there were / to drpp off to aleep aot ootke It"
same. 4n the<’ase before us, the Wor
shiper Of the golden calf either con
tjnued his dancing and worship, or
just endeavored^to be neutral. A man
must “come "across;” lie nup|t take A
positive stand. .The-position of a neu
tral is the. position of the etnemy of
God. Tliere are no* neutrals in our
country now as to GA^uaxiy. Political
ly we were neutral until the president
said that a state of war existed, but
now tlx* neutral is a pro-German. We
be out and out for the United
Stb<es of America. A ttVftn’s religious
obllgKi
ing the
and to nnNmtiginary line there can be
only two si<ms. It is-one thing or it is
the other. \VV most be positively,
clearly, professionally on God’s side,-
or we are against’mm. ..In the dfiy in
which we are living tfiv ideals and mo'
tlves are to be more sharply defined
than in .former days, v
. An eloquent mflfn said. veryM/ecentlr
that heretofore men were living to
make money, and now they are dying
to pf/serve righteousness, a tretm
dous reversal of form. Precisely
i of a nun’s actions >if their character
®j is to be determined by whether thef
prre right in' the sight-'of God" ratljer
I than whether they have been person
ally or socially lx*neflcial. man w : i1bar
rive at the realization of the^urimse
of God and at the realization of hi*
^ *■ (
own’greatest ha^plnes*
Not Quite Extinct.
“What’s become of the old-fashion
ed persons who used to say motion pic
tures were Injurious to the eyes?*
“How do I know?” replied th#
irascible man. “-I don’t even know
what’s become of the old-fashioned aD-
Uvampire prude who used to claim
that motion, pictures were undermin
ing morals of the ‘young, thing.”’—Bir
mingham Age-Herald.
Skin Troubles That Itch
Burn und disfigure quickly soothed
and healed hy\ hot baths with Cuti-
qura Soap and gentle anointings of Cn-
ticura Ointrnent. For free samples*
address, “Gutlcura, Dept. X, Boston.**
Sold i»y druggists and by mail. Soap
25, Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv.
V
An Ov«r-np« Tomato
and otboroTer-rip* ▼egeiabl'* or Jruttaoftenoaaad
ftry •erloua Bowel Troabio In hot weather, (beck
U as uuicklT ne poeslble. liet a botOe-oFOROVB#
BAB? BOW BL m KOICIN h. a tale and sure remedy
for Rammer piarrboeaa. It la J oat as efiecUre tot
AdaHa as for Children. -
Washington police force Is to b*
Oiled from the limited service depart
ment of the National army.
Granulated Eyelids,
Eyea inflamed by expo-
lure to Su. Duland Vlad
S quickly relieved by MaHa#
{yegeacdr NoSmartu*.
jud Eye Comfort. At
by mail Me per Botfk.
/fee write Mi
y Ca^ Chlcafaw
Your D
Fqr Beet ei Ike
Maria* £~* R
Hr
1 1
.v,c 3
. A
t
.
i--k -f .... •- ^.i