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Show CACHE AMERICAN, I.OCAN. UTAH STOP YOUR COLD ! IN 12 HOURS WITH wife' grlevinr was left, ha could , without a h( to ataud STAGE COACII ou. TALES By E. C. TAYLOR 'TkeaW cold in 6 hours. Drivel it ewey in 12 houri, Relieves Peina Headache Neuralg! Last of the Road Agent b limiiited RWMoMi IIOIXSE this wny. an spelled elhil although It usually was Solia by the (Millce waa probably the lua. of the notorluua highwaywho preyed men or road agent A fi irtMi.r BianiiM ,mi uMin the old atuge coachea In the Northwest. Fought Firo With Malone lie operated In Wisconsin and A truck loaded with u utermclons In the ism. and was fathat Will lor Griffith was tnklng to as a ernek shot, lie pracmarket skidded off the highway near mous ticed shooting by firing at a bull's Wenatchee, Wash., and buret Into while riding swiftly on a horse. Games. With no enter available, eye he would toss u; hazel Sometimes tlrlftUU hud an Idea, lie hurled waand cruck them with revolver termelons at the blazing truck. They nuts was of the same type burst und spouted water all over the shou. lie of gunman fnnious through the blaze. The twenty third melon put Southwest a few years enrller. out the Gre. In the spilng of 1SW a singe coueh was held up between Pulolfer Now Yolo Expedition and Itudhel. WIs.. with sn.nll loss. A Yule expedition la in e..,i.ore the The holdup was laid to llolzse. Illnmluva mountain and western One morning soon after that. Tibet In search of niun's developItafuth was driving his stage ment from un apelike creature. coach from the north toward Shawano. He linked around and stared A farmer never bus time to be Into the muzzle of a revolver pointbored. I.e one. ed at his fuce. Itehlnd the gun was llolzse. JfqwOWq-I'MTUyaU on There were two passenger 1A' Ainsworth, the conch, Thomas I J tuZTTV a wit In that section, and known Menominee Indian. Rafnth at once brought hla horse to a atop, and llolzse ordered the mall pouch be thrown out. Itnfntb asked Ainsworth whnt he should do, end Ainsworth advised him to obey the command. After the mail wns surrendered, the bandit ordered the driver to produce all his money. Itafath handl'd hint $11. llolzse demanded more, but Itafuth Insisted that was all he had. In later years he said he had SIS In a vest pocket and had la i , saved thnt by lying to the bandit. I iti lidllfc llolzse took $0.75 from Ainsworth, all that gentleman had with him. I'm sorry It Isnt an even $10. I stll' Ainsworth told the bandit. owe you a quarter. Come and col lect It some time. llolzse Ignored the Menominee In dlnn. and ordered Itafath, Ainsworth and the Indian down the Physicians tell us that one condi- road. They walked a hundred yards tion Is nearly always present when a away and turned around to see child has a digestive upset, a starting llolzse ripping open the mall pouch. cold or other little ailment. ConstiThey could hear him swearing berelief towards first The pation. step contained nothing cause the Is to rid the body of Impure wastes. of vnlue. pouch And for this nothing Is better than After thnt stnge holdup, Holzsea genuine Custorial Custorla Is a pure description wns broadcast throughvegetable preparation made specially out Wisconsin, and a constant watch for bullies and children. This means was kept for him by police and It is mild und gentle; that if contains coach drivers. The sheriff a no harsh drvgs, no narcotics. Yet It stnge short time later took Rafnth to look always gets results! You never have at a suspect he had captured, blit to coax children to take Castorla. It wns not llolzse, and the man was Beal Castorla always bears the name: released. Rafnth kept a wary eye open for the bandit after that, but never encountered him again. A youth who often substituted for Rafatb as driver of the coach, however, did not take any chances. He whipped up his horses whenever he saw a Nrfd rapitnl? Security iwuea considered suspicious-lookinmnn standing by Also business, ranch and realty loans Good') Co.. 64S 8. Spring. Los Angeles. the roadside, and many a prospective passenger was left swearing PARKERS when the stnge rattled past him at BALSAM HAIR a fast clip. Dandruff Hair Removes Stops Failing j! llolzse loved the limelight and It Imparts Color and jyi v tx 1 .! Beauty to Gray and Faded Hail 6oc and f 00 at DruggiaU. proved his undoing. He held up dHleeoY T'K3.. Patrhogue N T. IL.l In a grand eloquent manner, stages fy in use Ideal for FLORLilON SHAMPOO tried to put on a connection with ParkersHairBalaam.Malcea the and apparently bait soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail oral whenever he was comshow special Hiscox Chemical Works. F&tchogue, M.Y. mitting his crimes. Near Marquette, Mich., a short Just for Comparison time after his activities had forced Three hundred thousand worlds him to flee bpvond the state line the size of this earth could be stored of Wisconsin, llolzse stopped a stnge inside the sun. coach, carrying mall and filled with passengers. He warned all aboard the stnge against shooting, but one passenger did not heed the warning, and fired a shot at the bandit. llolzse opened fire on the coach, then, firing bullet after bullet through the windows and walls of the vehicle. One passenger was If your stomach Is temporarily de killed and another seriously woundranged. If you tire easily, lapse Into drowhines or feel stagnant, drink to ed. Two bullets pierced the hat your health with acupor two of Gar field Tea. Its pu re, fragrant h erbs actl of the driver. yate the bowels. Ihey flush them thoroughly and give you the wonder llolzse was captured by poRses fut tone of cleaucut and who were quickly put upon his trail, energetic heal til. At your drug a (ora and later was sentenced to the Michigan state penitentiary for life. He s4 QlaluratXaxalivt Shrink. wns released in a few years, however. - EGINNERT r r li ajnki tat eA Xovcl by Gipyriglil Ly PRECEDING Bobbs-Mcrril- EVENTS In perfectly itooit faith In an In aid a hi... r. Ituih nv. Inuritmm. In a buroiree of llt Chi-rati- o Piittcrai.n, ra-lu- rr aitcfii y of a life Ineuram e company, la wrongly by hi wife, Jultu. of Infldeiitv. tier ra--IIn a Idler from a al aCU-tlo- n. aurnmer reeori, unhta him fop bul-n-tnd h lakia a abort vaia-tiu- n. Aolln Her-mu- -- , Made specially for BAB I ES and CHILDREN CAS TO Rl A g 1 i i drujr-ffist- a. DRINK to Your HEALTH g GARFIELD TEA (. 1931. Western Newspaper Union.) Estimate of Friendship Freak of Appendiciti Hello, Pal, lend me a nickel, will Two cases of appendicitis on the you? I want to call up a friend." Here's a dime. Call up all your Iqft side have been reported at friends. STOP THAT COLD ;n chest or often leads to cold Distressing so something serious generally responds to good old Musterole with the first application. Should be more effective if used once every hour for five hours. This famous blend of oil of mustard, incamphor, menthol and other helpful gredients brings relief naturally Musterole gets action because it is a scientific "counter-irritan- t" not just a salve it penetrates and stimulates blood circulation, helps to draw out infection and pain. Used by millions for 20 years. Recommended by doctors and nurses. To Mothers Musterole is also made in milder form for babies nf and small children. Ask for Chil-Ar0- MiUttGrnle- - dge ices ron Paris by Dr. R. Bloch. In one patient the pain was on the right side where It is nort ally to be expected while the organ In appendicitis, whose Inflamed condition caused the disturbance was on the left In the other the condition was Just reversed. These cases confirm, It Is stated, that there Is a clinical and an anatomic form of left appendishould be used to citis. diagnose this condition which usually can be established only after the patient has actually been operated upon. What Make Cynic Nothing so rapidly corrodes one's faith In human nature and the good ness of the world In general as to receive a blue envelope addressed In a dainty and unknown feminine hand, marked personal, and upon opening It with mingled emotions find It la and heart fluttering merely another advertisement of a new tonic for indolent livers. Ohio State Journal. Her If I Webster Henry Kitcliell fa : Mli-hlu- W HVNP CHAPTER I Continual! 2 It was vain to look buck In the effort to see why. having come so far, he had stopped so finally. There wasnt a mark, not even a question ninrk. upon his record. Hed never been remiss In Ids duly; he'd made no bad mistakes ; hed lived frugally wltliin his Income, a righteous and sober life. For some reason or other this wasnt enough to prevent them from simply forgetting all about him. Wlmt was the reason? Julia used to say she thought she was. lie might, she used to speeulnte. hme married some New York girl money of her own and social position, some one who would have helped rather than Impede his advancement. Eduard had sometimes reflected a little Ironically thnt so far as Julia herself wns concerned she might be right If his salary. Instead of being subdivided among a wife, two babies and a house, had been concent rated on himself, he could have been a more orunnientnl figure. He could have kept up a look of success which might have made Just the difference needed. These wpre no new thoughts; hut always, until now, they'd been guilty ones, nlwuys dismissed with the ringing assertion that the sacrifice if there had been a sacrifice was well made. Hed been rewarded for It Ineommensurably in the possession of Julio and the children. been married They'd twenty years, and their quarrel about Ruth Ingraham, begun less than a year ago, had been their first overt, dramatic difference. Rut the blight had begun settling upon their marriage, eating Its way in, destroying the life of It, long, long before that He couldn't honestly blame Julia for it, but neither could he honestly blame himself. Searching for a beginning of the chunge, he found himself coming back to Ills decision, when ICdith was a baby, that they couldn't afford to have any more children until he got another promotion. He had thought at the time persuaded himself anyhow that his wife agreed with him. All shed ever said was. In explanation of her having Joined some new charitable board or committee that he had feared might be too much for her, I might as well, if Im not going to have any more children." He hadnt discussed the alternative with her; there was nothing to say. They couldn't afford to have any more children, unless he got a promotion. She had come to regard him, he gloomily supposed, as a failure. Well, of course, he was. The brilliant young New Yorker shed married had slowed down into an office hack. Hed become crotchety, dull, censorious. After seven or eight hours of nagging routine in that d d office, he didnt bring home much that a wife could take any great satisfaction in. She had ill health, too. Asthma cost her many a sleepless night; him, too, incidentally. And she was a martyr to hay fever. But her version of the Ingraham affair wasnt candid; wasnt even true. He believed she knew It wasnt. It came to this: that she and Edward had had a perfectly happy, satisfactory life together until he, with sheer masculine Inconstancy, had allowed himself to become Infatuated with a younger, prettier woman. How Innocent or how guilty tlie pair might be now, she had declared In her letter, was no concern of hers. That was a matter merely of prudential considHe'd probably been seerations. cretly desirous of Ruth a long time before her husbands death and Julias compassion for the widow had given him Ills opportunity. He ought, perhaps, to have been grateful to Julia for this accusation. He could muster up a clearer sense of outraged virtue In refuting It than he could summon In connection with any other phases of the affair. Hed honestly never thought of Ruth at all save as the supposedly frivolous wife of a neighbor he didnt like, until he went, at Julia's own suggestion, disinterestedly and half reluctantly, to offer the help of his expert business advice to a bereaved women. The Good Samaritan himself had not acted In better faith. l Company Ruth hinl been a revolutionary phenomenon to him. Front the beginning he'd let him see Made him believe, snv how that h ad mired him, had long admired him. a a iiiun, She aooii began confiding to him mutters that were entirely out of the range of her business affairs. She tld him how un happy slu'd been with her husband, how hed neglected tier and been unfaithful to her. She said that at the time of hia death ahe'd been upShe on the point of leaving him. told him thee things forlornly, under the si re ns of what he hud believed to be a profound emotion. She put blin under the seal of confideiii'e. He wasnt to tell anybody. She didn't say In so many words that he wasn't to tell Ids wife, hut he knew that wa what she meant. It had thrilled him to be trusted with Intimacies like that ; enormously it set him up in Id own estimation. lie must be something more failure than a dull middle-agewhen Ihls charming, rather worldly, young wnmuu could turn to him as her friend. The time came when, on wishing him good night, she held up her face for a kiss, as simply os a child. Thered been something almost unbelievable to him about nil this thnt to him married and forty-siyears old It should come unsought. Ills response to her curesses was made promise to a passionately himself that be would not betray her trust In him, that she should never find hint anything but the friend 6he faithful, took h I in fur. Might the thing have worked out belter bad he been less If he'd been simply a about It? predatory mule taking as much as lie could get, rather than a quixotically chivalrous fool? As far as his present relation with Julia was concerned hed he no worse off now, he grimly reflected. had the episode with Ruth taken Its natural course. There were gusty, furious moments when he wished It had worked out that way. A straightforward, masculine sin would be a preferable thing tj feel guilty about. If he must feel guilty. With thnt on his conscience he could go hack to Julia and tell her he was sorry. He would be sorry, all right. Hed feel, no doubt, like the very devil, but as a sort of to his repentance, background wouldn't tliere be a comforting sense, not of achievement exactly, but of regularity? Anyhow, he wouldnt be obliged to think of Ruth laughing at him now. Whatever buoyancy hed found In the act of running away, the sense of adventure, of truancy, evaporated when he got on the train to go home again. It did no good to run away, he reflected, unless one could keep on running. He couldn't He had to turn around and come back. There was his Job, his stale, unprofitable Job, waiting for him at the end of the trip. Ruth, thank God, wouldnt be waiting. She'd have gone by now, having made the discovery that he wasn't quite the Abject thing she had taken him for. There was some satisfaction in that. He rubbed his eyes and wondered why hed tortured himself about her so long. But Julia, with the children, would be waiting for him. He tried to Imagine her a repentant Julia. Ed, on going back to Buttermilk Brook, would have told her thnt Ruth had sold her house and was going away, and that his father hadn't known of the plan. That would have convinced her thnt she had done him a gross Injustice, lie imagined her passionately regretting that she had written that savage letter. He had answered It an flour before he took the train for California, and had felt at the time of writing pretty well satisfied with what be said. Hed told her he was making a little run to California by way of a vacation and be didn't expect to get home until a few days after she did. The substance of her letter he dealt with in a single sentence, pretty carefully and, he felt, satisfactorily thought out. Youll have learned, no doubt, from Ed that the ground for your objection to returning to Lakeside no longer exists." Thnt was dignified, he felt, and sufficient. Julia had told him not to try to justify iilmself, and he'd refrained from doing so. It wasnt what she wanted, of course. She wanted him to grovel ; to promise her that he would get rid of Ruth. Whether hed have done that If Ruth hadnt of her own accord packed up and gone away wns an academic question. She had done it, and hia Rut h! thought during the lat day of hi trip were not ,t comfort-able- . The moment of til meeting with Julia tomorrow him. How would he look ? tVhut would What would the do? The logic of hi position wa all rigid, wnun't It But logic wa no punaiea for the trial of marriage. He'd found that out long ago should have found It out. at least. Julia would never have written him that letter cveept lu an agony of humiliation and d'spalr. Whatever the and wrong right of the case lie had been aorely might tie, wmiinh.l, and lil rrply, cold, curt, cunt hud rubbed salt Into the wound. Hed known It at the time. It wa wh it he hn I meant to do. He'd been hurt and angry Indignant, r.ither-und- er an scruatlon that a ou!rugeouly unjust. He'd got lo retiiemlier that. He couldn't go crawling bark and ask to be forgiven. (She'd never believe In hi Imioeenee If he did that. He might have told her, though, la that letter, that he hadn't neen Ruth Ingraham In week, and never expected to ee h r again. That wouldnt have compromised hi pride too much, and would have been restorative to Julia. At thing stood now, ahed keep her grievance alive to balance hi. Ad arhl, hoH-lc- t sort of way of living that would he fur two people who had to sliure the tame liouie, the same children, the same How long would It go on bed! like that? He couldnt see any end to It, Hi home would he a dead thing, just aa hla job wns. He had telegraphed Julia that he wa gelling home Sunday morning, hut hadnt told her the exact hour or the name of the train. They could figure that out, of course. If they wanted to, from the sending point of hla telegram, but It wasnt likely that this would occur to any of them. There wa a possibility that he'd he met, but the chances were against It. On the whole he was rather relieved when he found that he wasn't He couldn't have luheled his feelings either as dread or anticipation. itccd bea? Dad, She Asked, Why Did You Go to California? You Really Did Go There, Didnt You?" Whatever It was. It turned him limp It didnt occur to and breathless. him that anyone but Julia might open the door hed forgotten he had any children but It was his seventeen-year-oldaughter, Edith, with exciteflushed and bright-eyement, prettier and more grown-ulooking than shed been when hed last seen her In June, who came flying down the stairs to meet him. She cried out, Dad I I knew It was you ! and hugged him. There was warm reassurance In that hug. However Julia felt about him, she had not, he decided, given anything away to the children. He said, Well, it's good to be home again, isnt it? Are you glad to be? She said she was, but he felt sure that there was something more than a mere welcome on her mind. Does it seem natural? he persisted. Everything all right about the house, and so on? Oh, yes, she said, "sure. Weve been here quite a long time, you know since Thursday morning. He felt his throat stiffen as he Wheres asked the next question. your mother? Shes at home, Isnt she? Oh, she's here," Edith told him, but shes gone to church. Ed took the car about ten minutes ago to meet her and bring her home. Theyll be here any minute. Embarrassment was piling up between them thicker and thicker. She went to the window and looked out to see if the car was in sight It wasnt but there was quite a long moment before she turned again and faced him. Dad," she asked, blurting out the words as if they had burst from her, why did you go to California? You really-digo there, didn't you? Of course I did, he said. "I dont know why exactly. Mostly for the ride on the cars, 1 guess. What made you ask if I really went? Oh, I don't know, she said unI didn't mean anything in easily. particular, only It seemed sort of funny." he said, after another Well, silence, I guess I look as if Id spent the last three day on the d train. I think Ill tak my hag up- atair and frr.heo up a llttl bvfora your mother get home. Left K BLu4 young man registered In an Ontario (Calif.) rooming house for tbe night. When the manager went to the room to straighten It the next morning, she found that the guest bad departed with two bed ebeeta, one pnlr of double blanket a single blanket, one spread and on pillow A MercolizcdVax Keeps Skin Young He had ald It for the sake of taylug aometlilng, doing oiiie(hlng, OetM li U y m bi pact 6 w jAb hreuking the Ice which, he reminded hluiwlf, alvvu.va forun-- after the MUeeivf yw leUbwf K u bruM Ue bid I Uwty od rw at. fimt moment of greeting. Rut the I lie vtta fcai. A dn didn't lake It with the relief he'd tvhe gave him aa odd expected, Had Proof lip. quick look, started to aay aouielhlng Do you believe that there Is but checked herself. A lot of misery conalats lo simply higher lower? lie waited an Instant ; then turned My good mnn, 1 married her." remembering. away and phked up his hag. He was stn tiding with It at Hie foot of the ttalra, when, for the second time, die hurst nut : You'll find your trunk and the rest of your things In the spare room, she said. She turned nway quickly under Ida Mitre, but he knew she'd been Now U tbe time to help your children build strong bone nd beilthy teeth. The wealth of itiruia D and tlie miner il looking at him when aim said It tilt to Scott Emultioa ot Cod Liver Oil, will help ye da with that mime excited, curious exthu. And doctor recommend it Viumia A content too. pression he'd noted In her face Thu jvomote growth sod increases mutince to dtieoie. moment earlier. He felt hia own Scott s Lmuliioa is alto good lur expectant mother and He couldn't face growing hot adult. It help wud ou colds. Plciuntlr It doubt hut the girl knew what flavored. Exiy to uke. Scott & fiowne, Bloomfield, N. J. Sole He mauaged the words, meant. Kepraenuuvex, Harold F. Ritchie A Co., Inc., N. I. Thank you, Edith, and with bl farm tvm ol MVT Imm, artairatlOtaXwla.OJIVIViliW IJtp bag started up the stair. VI :mm tU SU ay. MM MU, Here they are," she cried. Mother and Ed back from church." She Dung open the front door and cried out Mother, dad' come ome." He descended the stair again and set down the bag. He could see hi th- wife and hi son coming up the walk. The resultant of the conflict Aka! Family Sacral Ing force playing upon him wa Mrs. Wife I'm sorry, but dinner wool come Where doe Teacher 11. The at thing precisely nothing Is a bit burned tonight dear. lie wanted to do contradicted each from? Mr. Husband Oh, to they bad A Boy Sheep. other. fire st the delicatessen? Teacher What 1 made from It? Good G d, why had he come No anawer. home to a mesa like this? Teaclier Weil, for Instance, what He supposed because he had nowhere else to go. He had nothing are your trouser made of? Willie volunteers My dad'. but bis home and hla Job. Nothing! V bM For STRONG BONES and TEETH tt .tr. tlllM X in wp.ufy CHAPTER II STOP THAT COUGH! Bronchitis Edith. COURSE, a birthday was Just like any other day. It wa silly little girl Idea that you woke up that morning different ; older Edith sat up. and and bigger. craned around for a look out the window. Of course. It didnt really matter what kind of a day It was, since her birthday trent didn't deShe and pend upon the weather. her mother were going to a matinee, to see a play that sounded rather Jolly. Captain Applejack." The original Idea, dad's, for the celebration of her birthday had been a dinner party; four couples. They could piny cards afterward, or dance. It had tempted her. It was and digso satisfactorily grown-up- . nified. It would have been perfectly slick If things had been right at home or even not so horribly wrong. There was nothing to show, from the outside, that anything was wrong. Except for Ed's being away at college there wns nothing about the household to make It look different to an outsider from whnt It had always been. Rut If she brought any of her friends home with her she was sure theyd guess. Even If dad and mother refrained, as they probably would at a party, from getting Into one of their terrible rows, just the way things felt would give everything away. She couldn't even be sure that the girls going upstairs to lay aside their wraps mightn't discover that all dad's things were In the spare room and thut mother was living alone In the room thnt bad always been theirs. Theyd draw their own conclusions from that, most likely. But what would those conclusions be? The Intolerable thing was that Edith couldn't be sure. She hadn't been able to draw any, herself. And she couldnt even have talked to her best friend, Agatha Willard, about that. She was almost glad that Agatha Imd gone away to boarding school In the East It made It easier, somehow, to keep up the bluff. Only, what was the use? Oh, dear, whnt was the use of anything? She felt her throat getting stiff and abruptly she turned, beat up her pillow and lay down again. It was nowhere near time to get np. She had better go back to sleep If possible. Her mother's voice called to her from the next room. The communicating door stood open, as It usually You did, these days. awake, Edith? Happy new yearl Come In and give me a kiss. Edith sprang out of bed and without stopping for bathrobe or slippers, for tlie cold floor felt good under her feet and the chill air delicious as it bathed her body, padded Into her mothers room. After the kiss Edith sat for a moment, stroking her mothers firm smooth arms, but at the question How does it feel to be seventeen? she desisted. I dont know," she said. I was Just thinking about that Of course Ive beerf practically seventeen for quite a long time and Im not sure thnt that wnsnt nicer having it to look forward to, I mean. Because what Ive got to look forward to now is eighteen, and that Is not so I mean this is practically thrilling. the end of well, of growing np. Mother wouldnt It be nice If you could pick the age you wanted and Just stop there? What age would you pick?" To go back to, you mean? Some change in Yours, I guess. the quality of the voice caught the girls ear. Then she turned a puzzled look ou her mother. But If youd stopped then, Td never have been born would I? OF (TO BB CONTINUED.) Don't Neglec? Your Kidneys la Increasingly lent at this season. Alone, It preva1 sel- dom tcrlous, although the cough may be very annoying. But the serious side of Bronchitis and other mild Infection of the lungs and throat Is that the Inflamed tissues may be Invaded by some far more serious orgnnlsm, particularly Pneumonia. This 1 a real danger la most cases. It Is tbe best of reasons why a bronchial cough or an attack of laryngitis should be stopped as quickly as possible. The quick effective way to check these troubles la to apply B. A. M., The Penetrating Germicide, three times a day, spreading It over the entire chest and throat Usually the first application will bring out a reddish flush showing where the trouble Is. B. & M. Is obtainable from most druggists. If yours cannot supply It send bis name and $1.25 for a large-siz- e bottle sent postpaid. Ylelp-fbooklet free on request F. E. ROLLINS COMPANY, 53 Beverly St, Boston, Mass. Adv. :C Deed Promptly Kidney and Bladder Irregularities If bothered with bladder irregularities; nagging backache and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling due todisordered kidney action or bladder irritation, dont delay. Users everywhere rely on Doans Pills. Praised for more than 50 years. Recommended the country over. Sold everywhere. Doan's ills ul A DIURETIC FOR WEmSEOrn When the right man meets a crisis he is not excited. Dost plants, spider, to put of the willing being? thou not see tbe little the little birds, the ants, the the bees working together, in order their several parts universe? And art thou unto do the work of a human Marcus Aurelius. Where Mosquito Breed Mosquito larvae are hatched In water where they start life as swimmers. When they cast their final skins these split and float so the young mosquitos can rest on them until their own wrings are dry for flight Divine Right King James 1, who followed Queetr Elizabeth, once cried out angrily: It Is Just as much hatred and unbelief in God to question what the king does as to question what God created." Call for Concentration who would do some gre&t thing in this short life must apply himself to work with such concentration of his forces as to fdle who live only to amuse themselves, looks like Insanity. Pavk-ma- ne speo-tator- s, n. Windows Exprett Home Windows give the expression to Some day the face of a house. architects may .tnke to specializing aa doctors, do, to prescribe for your window troubles. American Magazine. Firm Hold Astrology From the Fourteenth to the Sixteenth century, when astrology flourished throughout Europe, there was scarcely a ruler of Importance who had not hia court astrologer. Theatrical Screena The average theatrical screen used In the large motion picture theaters Is made of prepared fireproof white material which Is porous to permit the sound to filter The material Is called through. alabastine. Irish Literature Generally, literature written by Irishmen in English is known In Ireland as Anglo-Irisliterature, whereas Irish literature Is taken to be the literature written In the Irish language and that alone. h Man Bet Racer According to studies of racing animals by an English scientist, man leads all others for endurance, although exceeded by several In speed for short distances. For Unskillful Diner In Eighteenth-centur- y England, table knives often had blades wide and curved at the end for eating peas and other food likely to slip fork. through a Historic on Spot Plaque A bronze plaque marking the spot where gold was first discovered In Silver Bow county, Montana, recently was dedicated by the Butte chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The plaque, which was mounted on a granite bowlder, marked the spot where B. H. Barker and companions panned the first gold from Silver Bow creek Old Roman Organ An organ with a bronze keyboard and silver pipes was found at the site of the Roman city of Aquinl-cuand Is believed to date from the Third century B. CL d in 18(14. The spot is between Kiss! and Silver Bbw. Right! Mary Whats a John rast tense of a Exchange. saw-hors- sea-hors- e. six-to- A torn jacket is soon mended; but hard words bruise the heart of a child. RELIEVES HEAD, CHEST Longfellow. and BACK, COLDS UtVi Stainless "Rvb In', and inhalant unsurpassed in preventing and relieving cold congestions' SOLD AT ALL QUALITY McKesson lRobbins DRUG STORES SINCE 1833 |