University of South Carolina Libraries
That Luscious Raisin Toast! A NEW delicious breakfast bread. Full fruited raisin toast! A new delight for the entire family. Made with big, plump, tender, seeded raisins-Sun-Maid brand. The raisin flavor permeates each slice. You can get such bread from any grocer or bake shop if you insist. No need to bake at home. Once try it and you'll always have this kind. You'll serve it at least twice a week. Fine food for business men and childten due to the energizing nutriment and the iron of this famous, healthful fruit. Make dainty bread pudding with left-over slices. No need to waste a crumb. Order now for tomorrow's breakfast. But be sure to say you want "one of those full fruited raisin loaves." Sun-Maid Seeded Raisins Make delicious bread, pies, puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send for free book of tested recipes. Sun-Maid Raisin Growers Membership 13,000 - ~ I~ P> t \-5N ; Io Ir to C ilif. Blue Package Uncle Eben. "Don't Ihe at'rail o have a good opin lon of yourself, son." saill 1n1le iuhen, KP IN"s lonigyou' VIIin' t 1 al d1 upi isn serio1us :In' workl hard to derserve IGPLUG TOBACCO - K~ownt as Thousands Have Kidney "that good kind" Trouble and Never C,it-andJot, Suspect It will know why Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected. TFravel by3 Sea -.f -a, r~it N f Ithe publi, there is one p~reparation that Norfolk to theae coinditions. The mild4 and healhng BOSTON...........Wed. Sat. 4:00 P. M. influence of Dr. Kihiner's Swamp-.Root is HALI~of0......Mn. hur 4:0 P M.soon realized. It stands the highest for IIAI'IMRE .Mn. hur 4:0 1' M.its remarkable record of success. Meals anal lerthi includedC~ on Steamer. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in Through tickets from prineipal points, an interview on the suibject, madle thc as tonishing statement that one reason why Merchants & Miners Trans. Co. so many applicants for insurance are re jeeted is because kidney trouble is so A. 1.0. Porter, G. A., Norfolk common to the American people, andl the ~~ large majority of those whose applica Healh-Ret-Ec nomy tions are declined (10 not even suspect A5.EI.~BA~ii~~ui~ that they have the 6sease. Dr. Kilmier's Swamp Root is on sale DAISY FLY KILLER naia~ at all dIru stores in bottles of two sizes, *".o"hmentai Co first to test this great preparation send nual season. Stado of ten cents to D)r. Kilmner & Co., Blingham ALL FLIES.~mtal Nea t, meiu ndlrg.Hoier forws mtaoer rillnot oI ton,.N. Y., for a sample bottle. When or ijuresnjt Adg writin betureand mention this paper. - - prepaid, 81.25. flAltoLD SU~iIR$, 50 Do Kalb Avo., Birookiyn, N. Y. Be tte r St ilil. - ....-.. Turn.'lalier-"Thei4ory ranise's a mans i'.5..st ii it* i $ .i~s~ll(t1-i hopes." B'l s- "Hut practice railsesq 24-t iih'It t':am .i'. Ii H a r" >e'nmarc. h is Swn ges.''-l .41ndon) Aniswe'rs. "Good to the Last Dro Nialtse - CHAPTER Xili.-Continued. --16 He ,seemed to wish to speak, to heatve with speech that declined to be spoken and would not rouse up from his inwards. Finally he uttered words. "I-I-well, I-" "Oh, I know," she said. "A man or a boy !-always hates to be Intrud ing his own convictions upon other men, espec'ally in a case like this, where he mnight be afraid of some Idiot's thinking him unmanlike. But IRamsey-" Suddenly she broke off and looked at him attentively ; his dis comfort had become so obvious that suspicion struck her. She spoke sharp ly. "IRamsey, you aren't dreaming of doing such a thing, are you?" "What such a thling?" "Fred hasn't Influenced you, has he? You aren't planning to go with himi, are you?" "Where?" "To join the Canadian aviation." "No; I hadn't thought of doing it." She sighed agamn, relieved. "I had a queer feeling about you just then that you were thinking of doing some such thing. You looked so odd-and you're always so quiet, anyody might not really know what to think. But I'm not wrong about you, am I, Itm.. sey?". They had com to the foot of the steps that led up to the entrance of her dormltory, and their walik was at an end. As they stoppead o faced each other, she looked at him earnest ly ; but he did not meet the scrutiny, his eyelids fell. "I'm not wrong, am I, Ramsey?" "About what?" hie murmured, un comfort ably. "You are my friend, aren't you?" "Yes." "Whan it's all right," she said. "That relieves me and makes me happer than I was just now, for of course if you're my friend you wouldn't let me make any mistake about you. I be llev~e you, and now, just before I go In and we won't see much of each other for wek-Iat' you still want e to go with you again next Sunday- " "Yes-won't you, please ?" "Yes, if you like. But I want to tell you now that I count n you in all this, even though you don't 'talk much,' as you ny ; I nunt on you more than I do en anybody else, and I trust you when you say you're my friend, and it maes mha c py. heetaneo herdritoy n thin eir ws aergt tan end who thlk solmuch! and fae eahn other, stea lofe tking earet would du he gotode th snyamun, of' argun r.ng, am trus youyu"ee Adbi orry w hat ?"lemrued, dubt ofyorua." h dothrhn."n "You happntse yyouind arn'th yomu "ora mint'el inltshe meaime, "It's -elveso mobe ntie then hapie "ha iws it" w o f orei you'den't fwan you ouldnst eto me aythny lsitat." oi o. e I think yo' al iighut eforehi to go "o do?~l yo imi nt gounodaght" "Oh !" she yrie, turedseve re" e "hnYe, and yan lipe the s ato stel. But efo thoe o storm' dtalk mch,'sed upen her she look'edw my weread aneI stomodI withi hi eyes tlyoured rih menit beow. hier(vice calkh upn' a (sobli a, she14 splyke. sthtlut "I stayuet linenat yours we1.l(i o~ go od itulf," a he aidn ofhittry. "I anti-Is yyot-seak to youm' Shei lfter ot h rhad.!"n It~-y was tin y eug foim to evadeS -welldo 1tcel's)lly~ il thene day' "Waltpr"gs md asy. uln, o towad his it.mt bt?"ar cn gres whach awratstrgles fIy hast thadn'e ito you dfntol trut war thd anythany.ie iii chagWha coe7the"s i te year sthit all rige cenr io go, ifage, antushed,' suddey, threateneds wethabanomnt;yudnswokn "fou seno? hoorshi ogo tem every-" thig wse forite, texclevenha row thn thendri uhe olieson.te Suer hek eastor alfe Dora's upon hentioned booedwn te wheraes.i Then, wite dveing eye slked, ah rlely scedi thger supdy flieor:e "Iav you fee yourc thac it asen to e gockienup,", yFrdlsaidshngriiy. "Hav you ihfer thsh di!"i nCHAPTER ne" rid Ii61l~jin Illustrations by *irwiN Myers/ / Q a 'Q 944: oubled, Pctge &Company. "It's all over college. She got up in the class in jurisprudence and made a speech. It's a big class, you know, over two hundred, under Dean Burney. He's a great lecturer, but he's a pacifist -the only one on the faculty-and a friend of Dora's. They say he encour aged her to make this break and led the subject around so she could do it, and then called on her for an opinion, as the highest-stand student In the class. She got up and claimed there wasn't any such thing as a legitimate cause for war, either legally or moral ly, and said it was a sign of weakness in a nation for it to believe that it did have a cause for war. "Well, it was too much for that Pit tie, spunky Joe Stansbury, and he jumped up and argued with her. lie made her admit all the Gernians have done to us, the sea murders and the land murders, the blowing up of fac tories, the propaganda, the strikes, trying to turn the United States into a German settlement, trying to get .Japan and Mexico to make war on us, and all the rest. He even made her admit there was proof they mean to conquer us when they get through with the others, and that they've set out to rule the world for their own beneilt, and make whoever else they kindly allow to live, work for them. "She said it might he true, but since nothing at all could be a right cause for war, then all this couldn't he a cause for war. Of course site had her regular pacifist 'logic' working ; she said that since war is the worst thing there is, why, all other evils were He Swallowed. "Yes." less-er, andl a lesser evil can't h~e a just cause for a greater. Shte got terribly excltedJ, thtey say, b~ut kept right on, anyway. She said war was murder andl there coudln't be any~ ot her way to look at it ; and she'dl heard thtere was already talk in the university of s-tu dlents thintking about enlisting, and whtoever did( such a thing wats virtual ly enlisting to return murder for mu der. 'lThen. .Joe Stansbury asked her if she meant that she'd feel toward any student that enlilstedl the way shte wouldl towardl a murderer, andi shte saidl, yes, s-he'd have a horror of atny st udent thlat enlistedl. "WVell, that broke up the class ; JToe turnedl from her to the pla:1tformn and told old flur ney thait he was responisi bile for allowing such tlk in his lecture room, and Jloe saidi so far- as he was concerned, he resignedl l'romu unny's classes rIght there. Trhat started it, and practically the whole class got up and wvalked out with JToe. They' sahl( Blurney streaked off home, and Dora was left alone in thtere, with her head down on her desk-and I guess she certalitly deserves it. A good nmany have already stoppedl speaking to her." Ramsey fidlgetedl with a pea on the tabule by whtich he sat. "Well, 1 don't know," he said, slowly: "I don't know if they ought to do that exactly." "Why oughtn't they?" Fred demand. ed, sharply. "Well, it looks to me as if she w~as only fightin' for her principles. She Compass on Crossing the Equator. The compass needlle dloes not turn around in passing from one hemi sphere into the other. The north-seek lng endl of .thte compa~tss nteedle has no greater significance or meaning in the southern hemisphere thanm the south seeking endI of the needle has in the norther-n hem ispher'e. rThe comipass nieedle is a piece of magnet izedl steel. It has its o~s'n p)ositive andu negative poles, or northt and south poles, just like the eatt. The needle antd its lines of force align themselves witht the earth's lines of force. In the north ern hemisphere the northt magnetic Dole exerts the domninating influence of believes In 'em. The more it costs a person to- stick to their principles, why, the more ,I believe the person must have something pretty 'ne abbout 'em likely." "Yes l" said the hot-headed rred. "That may be In ordinary times, but not wheni a person's principles are lla. ble to betray their country I We won't stand that kind of principles, I tell you, and we oughtn't to. Dora Yocun's linding that out, all right. She had the biggest position of any girl in this place, or any boy either, up to the last few weeks, and there wasn't any stu dent or hardly even a member of the faculty that had the influence or was more admired and looked up to. She had the whole show! But now, since she's just the same as called any stu dent a murderer if he enlists to fight for his country and flag-well, now she hasn't got anything at all, and it she keeps on she'll have even less I" He paused in his walking to and fro and came to a halt behind his friend's chair, looking down compassionately upon the back of Ramsey's motionless head. His tone changed. "I guess It isn't just the ticket-me to be talking this way to you, is it?" he said, with a trace of huskiness, "Oh-It's ill right," Ramsey mur miured, not altering his position. "I can't help blowing up," Fred went on. "I want to say, though, I know I'm not very considerate to blow up about her to you this way. I've been playing horse with you about her ever since freshman year, but-well, you must have understood, Ram, I never meant anything that would really both er you much, and I thought-well, I really thought it was a good thing, you-yout-well, I mean about her, you know. I'm on, all right. I know it's pretty serious with you." He paused. "Its--It's kind of tough luck !" his friend contrived to say; and lie began to pace the floor again. "Oh-well-" he said. "See here, ole stick-in-the-mud," Fred broke out abruptly. "After her saying what she did-- Well, it's none o' my business, but-hut.--" "Well, what?" Iamsey murmured. "I don't care what you say, If you want to say anything," "Well. I got to say it," Fred half groaned andi half blurted. "After she Said that-and she meant it-why, if I were in your place I'd he darned it I'd he seen out walking with her again." "I'm not going to he," Ramsey said, quietly. "fly George !" And now Fred halted in front of him, hoth being huskily solenin. "I think I understand a little of what that means to you, old Ram. sey I think I do. I think I know something of what it costs you to make that resolution for your coun try's sake." Impulsively he extended his hand. "It's a pretty big thing for you to d1o. Will you shake hands?" But Itamsey shook his head. "I didn't do it. I wouiln't ever have done anything Just on a'eount of her talk in' that way. She shut the door on me--it was a gool while ago." "She did! What for?" "Well. I'm not muich of a talker, you know. Freil." sail Itamsey. staring a the pen he p laryed wi~th. "'I'mn not muchel of anrythtlin., f''r that. matter, pro'ly, butt !-ti-llI-I-" "Well. T had to tell her I didn't feel about inlgs rte wnty site ulhl. She'dl tho'ught I lt9t1, all ailonrg, I guess, .Any way, It mad'e her haute me14 or somec thinrg. I guess; anrd she canld it aill oft-. I exipect thiere wasn't much to call off, so far as she was conicernmed, tany. how.," Ilie lautghe(d feebly. "Sihe told me T bet teri go andl eniist." "Pl'eausant of her !" lFred muttered. "spciamlly- as we know whlat site tinks enilsting means." lie raIsed his vilce cheerfully, "Well, thait's settled; amid, thank God, 01(1 Mr. Bernstorff's on his way to his sweet little vine-clad cottage homte! They're getting guns on the shuips, and the big show'~s lible to coimmtenee aniy diry, We cnn hold( uip oitr hteads now, and1( we're going to see somie great times, 0old Iamsey b)oy! It's hard on the htomie folks-Gosh ! I dIon't like tot thtink of that ! And I guess it's going to be hard on a lot of bo0ys that haovenu't uniderstood what it's alii abouit, antd haurd on sorte that Wheir family affairs, and1( buin~ess, anmd so on, havite got 'emi tied up so it's hard to To -anid of course there's plenty' that just (enn~'t, and some thait amren't husky enioughl--huit thle rest of its are- going to have tile big timou In our lives. We got an awful lo't to learn ; it scares me to think of what I dlon't knowt ahopt being any sor't of a rear-rank pri v-ate, Why, it's a regular' profession, like practicing haw, or sellinig for a dIrug hoitse on the road. "G;olly ! D~o you remember htowt we talkedl ahout that, 'way back in fresh mian y-ear, what we were going to (10 wthten we got out of college? You were going to be p~ratitcinig law, for in stance, anld I--wtell, f'r instatnces re member Colburn ; he was going to be it doctor, and( lie (11d go to some1 medi caII school for one 3-ear, Now hle's in the Ied Cr'oss, somnewhere in Persi#, Golly I" (TO BE~ CONTrINUE1D.) thte nieedie, so it points to that pole Thte south end of the needle is dilsre, gard(ed. In thle southlern hemisphere the south mlagnletle pole exerts the dlominting liflence on the need(1e and it pl)Onts to that p)o1e, the north end of the needle in this case being disr'egard, ed. Thte needle does not reverse In going from one hlemisphuere to another, 'lThe tith cnd of it becomtes the gutir in the sourthern hemisphere, as tIl nor th end Is the guide in the northtera hem isphiere. "Man is the only animal that blushjn -and the only oneO that huas ocCaslo e to blush."..ur.k Tnmain Tombstone at Parents! Grave Seized for Debt New York.-A tombstone on a plot in a cemetery can be seized and sold at auction to satisfy a debt for vii unpaid balance on the stone, it was decided by Jus tice MacCrate in Queens Su prome court. The makers of the monument, which was ordered by Joseph lirandi, said that their attorney is arranging to auction the stone. The firm contracted with Brantdi August 20, 1020, to put Up a tuonument afn( four name Posts on his lot in Calvary centetery for $1,250. Brandi paid $475 and had the bodies of his father, mother and two sisters burled in the plot. Other Installments were not met, and after trying vainly to find( Bradttli, the company brought suit. BLACK HAND FORBIDS BOY VICTIM'S TOMB Threaten to Kill Father of Giu seppe Varotta, Who Squealed on the Gang. New York.-The fear of the Black iHand hats never yet been lifted from the heart of Salvatore Varotta. 'll though it has been altost a year since his five-year-old son, Giuseppe, was kidtnaPel and1 his bodly thrown into the Hudson river. Frequently agents of the Black I1111nd (come to thle corner where Va rotta struggles to titake a living by selling vegetables and fruits frot a pusheart, and tell hinm that the Black "' I "You'll Get Killed." Ha2-ndl st2ill rinemb'tiers I att it was ona his tIest iiony 'thaI t live mlen wvere art restedt f"or thle cime, an ~d thlat one of th eta is ni w in thle deaithl-htouse ait Sintg Sing it in lg eX'ctut itn. VarIot ta satvedl ever'y pennty Possible for many months, enough to mtke a leposit on a ttonuent for the grave oft his soni. This wvill heari a piortrait of the boy and this Ins('ription: "'Here lies thle reamaIns of' Giutseppe Voeta lyve-yea r-old boy killed b~y tihe Black Jiatnd. lie was kidnaped by the Black I land on M1ay 24, 1t)al, and11 I b~lody was totund in I the ltudson river, off' 'iermaont, Ott June 11, 19)21, Er(ctedl by3 his fatther."' "'Nobiody but toe atnd moy wifte knmew of the tm otuament , we thot ugh t,'' said Var'ot ta, "butt the Black I land fotund it ot. A manl ti 'nmte to tmy litshist and anml said: 'You mustnt't do thai~t,V rottIa. You'll get hurt, Vartot t a; yotu'll get killed." "Th'len the mani ran away btefor'e I 'outld ''all thle poicem(itan, wh'lo stands AVIATOR ATTACKED BY EAGLE King of Birds Breaks Neck Against Airplane Strut in Battle in Air. Qituntico, Va.-A 'ombtlat In the air bet weenili ''n aie aii at tmatrinte corps hmte, int wthih thle king of the atr lost his life, took laice near' Qutan tico. let- Ii. 0. Sanderson, flyinig ntear lie Ityling flel, sa1w a flock of bir1ds andh galve c'hase. An eagle which had heen hoverinog hk~h over' thle flock wheeled ott his appron'oath and1 at top sple(d flew dliriect ly t owarid himii T1hie blrd stru'ick one~ of theo wire braces of the 1)1ane1 with suchl force as to br'eatk th br itaci' and1 the eagle's neck. 'The bird thlen was cautght in the bratces of t he I din t. The euigle tliniere se'vet feet betweent the wing tips. Struck by Lightning in Chair. F~ort \\ atyto, Indi.'-Wh'ilet alttinug in a ehatir' a1t his room.'intg house onte a fter' Itoogin Orliile Callawayva, age twetnty Ithriee, was.' sItrutck byv Iightin g. Itutt.ht iHuttson, ia sister'-in-lhaw, was sitting 9ire thle armii of (Iallawatwiy's eiti. ii' Itii 4 Ihhoutgh shoctked, wats not hutrt serilous ly. Callaiiway3 wits taklen t7 a hospitaL. Io wviii r'eco(ver.