Show ' v TIMES TIIE GARLAND mn THE a The Crippled Lady Peribonka o£cr WKU © CHAPTER hood i Dd womanhood with believing great faith In the visible existence of spirits both good and bad and In the of varied and frequent manifestations a divine Interest and watchfulness 80 the children have come to believe that It was a nil reels which sent the Crippled Lady through the doora of death and ' then back ber safely brought that the might remain with again them always Even tue mothers and fathers believe this Just as surely as they believe It la e sin to steal from one’s neighbor falsehood or speak "Thus works the hand against him of God" the good Father haa said So Church the believes It too And that They all know her story story la an epic which will Uve for a long time In the country about Lac 8’ doubt If It will die until the Jean progress of Industrially active tnaB throau up lti grimy hand and Inundates It along w'th the quaintness and beauty and satisfying nearness to God of living up there It Is this story have aet out to tell with a bit of geography to begin with— who the Crippled Lady la and how she bravely why she Is there tried to give up her life for another sod why she lives woman's husbund today so happily In Peribonka Tin story Is groin to start like a leaaon In geography Thl Is bstuuatt It Is largely a chronicle of real events In bnman lives whether of History things or people rests upon the basic necessity of poaseMlng certain asiects of situation which we encotnpHs with terms of latitude and longitude The following narrative would quite profoundly miss Its drama If It were to IgDore the points of the com pass and the manner In whlrb Fate played with them to bring about an nnusnal combination of ends We will begin with I'erlbouka Is a quaint little French Cana dlan village which nestles on the shore of the glorious Peribonka river four miles above Lac St Jean to the pro?-lues made up almost of a entirely single nw ol thirty or forty houses all of which face the river Should one adventure a little farther Into the wilderness after bar Ing made the wonderful Saguenay trip np from Quebec to Ha Ha bay or Chicoutimi and come to know Peribonka for himself be will understand why the houses are situated with no or neighbors obstructions between them and the river For the rver Is a living breathing t thing to the people of the place about whose drowsy lives there still like a remains veil of old lavender lace the picturesque aim plicity of tbelr era of a hundred and fifty years ago In contrast to the roaring passionate UlstassInL fifteen miles away the Peribonka Is peculiarly like the men nl women and children who Inhabit a few acres of Its shores t has bellevs given to them much of their character for of all the people In the habitant country those of Peribonka are the gentlest aod most lovable Even Id the floodtlmoa of spring It Is not an angry or menacing river' and In winter It Is so genially smooth and well frozen that the habitant farmers nae It for tbelr horse-ancutter races or as a trail by which to come to town (o spite of Its great size and the vast forces behind It the kind uess and gentleness of Its nature must have made its people That they are The men are truthful their morals are right they believe In God as well as In spirits they are cieau and courteous and hospitable The women are bright eyed clear skinned unrouged unbobbed These people are pretty always looking toward the river In the evening when they go tr bed In the morning when they get up They have built their picturesque little church facing It aod the good Father sleeps with his bedroom window opening upon IL The local cemetery occupies an acre of hallowed ground within a hundred feet of the water's edge A venerable Is built at the monastery mouth of It JftPbeL4tls ?- Until quite recently the two happiest people Id the village of Peribonka were Maria Chapdelalne and ber husband SamueL They are still bappy although Samuel Is a bit overcast at present because of a financial loss which has come to him For years Samuel hsa run his little store tnd Marla ber kitchen In which the prepares delectable meals for the few who come heir wny and transients ontll thl recent time to which I have 'referred there la good reason to believe she was the happiest woman In ber little world Now there Is another They call She Is often her the Crippled Lady teen sitting or the wide veranda of a quaint little borne in a garden of Oowers Just this aide ot the church There Is a road which completely en circles Lac St Jean connecting the nd farms n Its nairow rim villages of civilization aDd during the tourist automobiles occasional season pass Their occupants through Peribonka always atare at the Crippled Lady If She she happens to be on ber porch la a vision of loveliness which one Women talk cannot easily forget about her and men silently bear away Her a picture of her In their hearts If one has only a moment's beauty of It strikes almost contemplation It Is Slavic — thick with a shock dark shining hair drawn smoothly back a face clearly white as a nun s ' s slim beautiful eyes unforgettable figure In a big chair — and something It Is that other thing which else photographs her so vividly and so upon one’s consciousness It Is some time before one Perhaps realizes that what be has seen is not The alone but happiness beauty Crippled Lady who cannot walk who cannot stand alone i happy and she covets nothing which God has not Her voice tel la you already given her Doim CHAPTER A - Inc) II It Is unusual that an Indian should fambe born In one of the wealthiest ilies In New York Tet It happened A traveler to the ity of Brantford Out will find within a few miles of the town a little church built for the Indians by the Third and close about It an old cemetery In which resta the dust of the last and warriors of the great Iroquois In a tomb bnllt of atone which chiefs Is green with age and moss Ilea greatest of all the MoThayendunegea hawks and more commonly known aa Headers of the roJoseph Brant mance aa well as the act ot history may recall the day when Sir William Johnsofi the king's right arm In the first saw Thayeudanegea's Colonies He was attending a muster of sister militia when an officer his county came galloping by with a beautiful Indian girl of sixteen riding laughingSir William him whose behind ly wife had recently died caught a vision of lovely dark eyes and of flowing In a cloud beblack bain streaming and hind a form of rare symmetry grace and In that moment the heart of the lonely and snsreptlble widower was smitten so deeply that evening found Molly Brant In Johnson castle thenceforth where she remained Its mistress and the Idol ot Its proprietor and history skip a hunGeography dred and years after this event until tbey arrive at tbe birth of the Indian boy on Fifth avenue When James KIrke married Molly Craddock neither thought very much about the strain of Indian blood In Molly’s veins except that Molly was Klrke always secretly prood of IL was not the kind of man to boast of ancestors- - or even to think about them for he had one consuming ambition from the begluulng and that was to pyramid his Inherited millions Into financial power He became o completely absorbed In this task that after a few years Molly was left very largely to whatever dreams she may have bad of the pic turesque and romantic past and to an absorbing love for her young son Paul She told him many of the pretty stories and some of the tragic ones which deeds had written In the Uvea of their ancestors and twice she went with him to the ancient burial place near Brantford and eat beside tbe tomb of Thayendanegea and tried to make him see as dearly aa herself the stirring days when Molly Brant came with trasses flying tiefore Sir William Johnson (TO BI CONTINUED) Uitd to It Tbe night was dark and the hour late as a solitary wayfarer passed along the deserted street Was It deserted thought Nol— threp slinking from the shadows figures emerged marked their prey and then attacked him Three to one Is powerful odds but the wayfarer held his own One by one his assailants landed with s thud on the ground battered and bruised tbelr clothing torn A policeman hurried up and surveyed the wreckage "Fine work I” he said addressing the hero who was calmly lighting a cigarette “Jujitsu?" “No" answered the other "Railroad porter" — Pearson's Weekly that The people of Peribonka love tbia who haa made ber charming foreigner The women are borne among them She makes the not Jealous of ber of significance purity and beauty for more and nearer comprehensive The Church prayed for her the men She Is of when she was very alck all religions Just loving God so that of the monks In even the sternest tbelr grim white walls down near the lake speak and think of her tenderly The children worship ter and the big wide porch of her home ha become shrine for them In Perltmnka yootb till condones to grow up Into man OLD DOCTOR'S IDEA IS BIG KELP TO Wkilmu'i “Ballyhoo" Whitman writes Walt Harvey at O'HIgglns In Harper's Magazine the time hla first book of poems aphimself baLlyhooed peared anonyId American the mously Phrenolog leal Journal as the “haughtiest of writers that has ever yet written and primed a book" And In the United States and Democratic Review for the same month of September be as “one hailed himself anonymously of the roughs large proud affectionate his costume manly and free his face sunburnt and bearded hla pos turea strong and erect" OVERFEEDING IS CAUSE OF TROUBLE Calf OftenGiven Too Much Milk or Alfalfa Hay Overfeeding of skim milk and alfalfa hay or filth In pens mangers and feed bucket are the causes for must calf troubles says E A Hanson dairy extension specialist University Firm 8t Paul When scours appear at once reduce the amount of milk and grain fed advises Mr Hanson as well aa changing to timothy hay If alfalfa or dtfver la being fed Palla and utensils for calf feeding should always be washed each day and placed In tbe In 1885 Dr Caldwell made a discovery for which elderly people the world over praise him today Year of practice convinced him that many people were endangering their health by a careless choice of laxatives So he began a search for a harmless prescription which would be thoroughly effective yet would neither gripe nor form ny habit At last he found it sunlight Newborn calves should be allowed to have tbe first or colosirum milk from tbelr dams aa this is an aid to milk Ihqd)geitlvjysirBk-jrhole should be fed for the first three or four weeks After this the change from whole milk to skim milk may be made by adding one sound of skim milk and taking away one pound of whole milk dally until all sklnAnllk Is being fed Healthy vigorous cal vee can take one pound of skim milk for each 10 pounds of live weight ontll are 10 consuming tbey pounds dally After that nothing is gained by the of additional acfeeding quantities cording to Mr Hanson When eight or ten days old calves will begin to nibble hay and should bo given some clean bright clover and Alfalfa Is enellent for timothy hay older calves hut frequently causer scours In young animals sud therefore should be fed sparingly Calves should be encouraged to eat grain early aa this will supply some of tbe food materials such aa fat which are A good lacking In skim milk feed mixture may be composed of pounds ground oats SO pounda ground corn 30 pounds bran and 10 pounds IlDseed ollmeaL Calves under five months of age may be fed as much of this mixture aa they will clean up twice a Older calves should be limited day to 0 pounds or less depending on their age and growth Cows Are Now Milked by Machines Record-Makin- g The prejudice which still exists among against the some dalrymeD Is entirely unjustified saya a dairy expert In the Farm Where better results are not obtained than by the ex planatlon usually Is not that the ma chine la at fault but that Its user Is In careless cleaning and caring for IL be observes Positive of proof of tbe efficiency the machine Is offered by receDt world records set by two Holstein cows One of the cows a Holstein owned by John G Ellis Lee made three world's records by tbe Her latest route record Is 701 pounds of fat to 305 Conception of "Uncle ' Sam" Goes Back to 1812 tired The creatoi of "Uncle Sam" Is un known The character first appeared In publications during the War of 1812 The type la r genial Yankee trader of the time: the beard the haL and the cut of the clothes are of that period The earliest recorded use of the name Uncle Sam for the United States pears to be In the Troy government (N Y) Post of September 7 1813 The Tost used It In a phrase which had some popular currency already and explained that' "the letters U 8 on the government ctc are wagons supposed to have given rise to IL At first the nickname was employed In a and only In the papers derisory sense The cartoon conception of Uncle Sam did not arrive until a little later There seema to be no ground for a popular story ascribing the origin to "Unde Ram" Wilson a government Inspector In the War of 1812 cvei xnoxnin Get poisons out of tbe system wiik the Chewing Gam Laxative Smaller doses effective when taken In this form A modern scientific family laxative Safe and mild is ' X J t f I'Vv lif'-- s pfegBornfotl a Winner FOR CONSTIPATION Over and over he wrote It when he found people- - bilious- headachy— out of sorts weak or feverish with coated tongue bad breath no appetite or energy It relieved the most obstinate cases and yet was children and gentle with women ring bon or similar troubles gets boro going Bound Abeorbin sctsmildly bntqulckly blistar Doss not molts Lasting or remove hair and boras can bo worked At druggists or postpaid firs 8 book pJOv Horae “Had a vary In kora with boo spavin Now sound M duller not hues Step la BMOliia Worhinc dally" 1 f i from a hone apavin splint curb rid bon YOUNG tee lUtrran St 5trirtnkjji— Fortaaea -r Men Inna Tslvat Threw K (II dull employment Travel See (he world Tour opportunity El Ik Nay Complete DOLORKS Bt Manhattan LKON 111 W TTlie ideal Vacation Land Sunshines All Winter Long Splendid roads— towering mounts la h type hotel— dry inclear starlit sights— Fsrsmsat Dsasrt Pleygre—4 — Srea a SSeVK j ' Highest vigorating air— ranges— California's PWrtt It t " Denver Boy Every mother realizes how Important It Is' to 'teach children good habits of conduct but many of them fall to realize tbe Importance of their chilteaching dren good bowel habelderly people its until tbe poisons from decaying Today this same famous effecwaste held too long In the system tive prescription known as Dr have to affect the child’s Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the health begun world’s most popular laxative It Watch and at the first may be obtained from any drugstore sign of constipation give him a little California Fig Syrup Children love Russian Cobbler Made Its rich fruity taste and it quickly drives those Good in Surgeon Role away distressing ailbad breath Although be bore the nickname of ments such as headaches coated tongue biliousness feverish“The Slasher" alck people In the Ukraine used to bjurry to Comrade Doc- ness fretfulness etc It gives them a their stomregnlatea hearty appetite tor Nelskl chief surgeon of a group of Soviet hospitals at Kiev He had ach and bowels and gives tone and 000 major operations to hla credlL and strength to these organs so they conof their own hla nlckDame was well deserved by tinue to act normally For over fifty years leadthe ruthless vigor with which be accord ing physicians have prescribed it for wielded the knife bilious constipated chilBut whatever Doctor Nelskl did lilore than 4 million bottles he always sewed up his gaping Incis- dren used a year ahows how mothers ions with admirable neatness — aa neaton ly as a eobbler stlchlng uppers to a Mrs CL G Wilcox 8855tf sole Doctor Nelski's career as a surgeon St Denver Colorado says : "My son la now ended lie bas been sentenced Jackie la a prize winner for health to six years’ Imprisonment for he now but we had a lot of trouble with confessed his real name was Iran him before we found hla trouble was and began giving him Kolesnikov and his true profession constipation Fig Syrup It fixed him shoemaklug Eight years ago he stole California tbe diploma and paraphernalia of a up quick gave him a good appetite him made fine and he's been sleep certain assassinated Doctor Nelskl and decided to palm himself off aa a gaining in weight right along since the first few days taking it" surgeon To avoid Inferior Imitations of testified that he Hospital officials was a man of practical efficiency and California Fig Byrup always look for on the carton the word “California" stoutly praised “The Slasher” They are however also being tried to see Undelivered Goods whether they have taken bribes from "is there much money nsed In politbe shrewd cobbler ties?” little" answered Sen"Comparatively "But there Is a scandaStriving to better oft we mar what's ator Sorghum well— Shakespeare lous amount of It wasted" — W N U OprinfivN 8alt Lake City No u Cold Headed Off Chlorinated air has been used very aa a preventive of colds successfully and lung troubles by the students of the chemistry division of the University of Missouri A small amount of chlorine Is mixed with the air and this Is sent Into tbe room through special ventilators By this means the air ig purified as It enters the room and the use of air outlet makes it possible for the air to be changed a often as It Is thought necessary A decided improvement has been noticed so far a the prevalence of colds la concerned among the students i u days For six years Ellis has been doing machine milking and In the past five years hla cows have made 13 world's records He Is producing grade A milk for the New York market The other record cow Is a Holstein owned by Charles Hughes A gon old she Neenab Wig As a 642 pounds of fat 20114 produced pounds of milk In 365 days All this milk was drawn a mechanical by milker milking Lubricity" means :: : Dairy Facts 1 Freedom from Friction 2 A “Carry-Over- ” Film by Metal Penetration full dinner pall for the dairy cow means a full milk pall for the dairyman A Cowa like salt to every ture salt 100 lubricate an oil must decreaa friction between metal eurfaoet A motor oil doee this by jeparatin (ha metal surfaces and theoretically keeping them separated under ill operating condition It may amaze you to know that many oil frequently fail to do this Think how this “seperation” of moving pert accomplished The oil forme a well or oust it it “film” between opposing (urfsces upon tkit film that the reputation of every oil must rest Tbe film is thin ol course lor it null ride in the tight crevices of bearings But it mutt also be ol etc it mutt cling tena extraordinary strength or the prenure oi your motor ciouily will (queers and hurl it from tbe vital point that must be kept separated Feed one pound of pounds of grain mix- It takes all winter for a good cow to recover from the effects of a poor pasture and do grain Cows respond to good treatment of milking careful manageregularly ment and liberal feeding Children and young calves may contract bovine tuberculosis by drinking tbe milk from tuberculosis cows The moved cannot tubercular cow should from the milk supply always be guaranteed be Penetrative Lubricity The New Gauge of Motor Oil Merit Penetrative lubricity it theoutatanding char cteriflic ol ihc new Conoco Germ Proceed Motor Oila This characteristic ia the direct result ol You mutt know this story of Briefly it is the patented result of 16 years' experimentation by tbe British scientists Back in 1901 Wells and Southcombe when everything ol fundamental importance wee known about the refining of mineral oils theta two scientists foresaw that additional improvements must be made in order to keep lubricants abreast of the future development of the "gstolipe buggy" They knew that animal and vegetable oil re- Safety pas by teurlzatlon Cows love water ter Is the cheapest Water also health manufactures blood secrete uilik Next to air wa food known for aids' digestion and Is used to Cool tbe cream after skimming and keep It cool by getting tbe can In cold water changed three times dally durStir the cream at least ing summer twice a day and don't mil warm cream with eold'eream '— on most will be plentiful Silage farms although the quality may be poor In many cases the specialists beThis Is due- ttr the early frosts lieve and tbe wet weather during the season which caused a low quality of corn and tome mold In tbe Ilaga v were “oilier" than miners! oils eould ever be but were impractical for ui in internal com bustion motor which operated at high tern peratures Finally the containing di “oily" property lacking in mineral oils was isolated And a method was devised for com bining this essence with highly refined mineral oils Only Conoco Oils Are This Gives Them Penetrative Lubricity Continental Oil Company now owns the ex elusive right to for North America Only with these new oila can you film which actually secure a f penetrates the metal surface t of your mot or t What doee this meanP It means that the film no longer may b hurled end squeezed from moving parte The Germ Essence carries the oil into every minute into the very metal itself And crevice there it ding— clings when the heat of high speeds seeks to scorch and drive it away when bearings try to squeeze it out cling clings too when you stop your motor And this is most important lor die oils you era now using drain away as the motor stops and require 5 to 15 minutes to resume their guard duty when you next tread on the starter That’ of your motor wear occur to 60 why 4D in those first minute ol operation Save your motor by the uie of this new oiL oil Introduce it to Conoco today at the sign ol th Bed Triangle Jv t“ PARAFFIN ( T UTAH ELDERLY PEOPLE Birrlct ilWi DottbMar GARLAND PROCESSES) SAFE MOTOR Oil-- |