THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. North of BY (Copyright: Mttlp, Hrown & i HAZEL. SEEKING REFUGE IN THE FAR NORTHWEST, GETS HER FIRST GLIMPSE OF "ROARING BILL" WAGSTAFF Synoptis Miss Hazel Yv'clr'ls l i l .v-i I ns stenographer In tin oftico of llurrlnxtoii & liusii ill (irinivillc, Ontario. She I ensu-rod to .luck Iinrrtiw, a .vmuiK real estate 'ciit. Mr. Hush, Hazel's employer, suddenly tiolit-cH her iillriiellveness it ml nl (ince makes lier Ills prl villa NlenoKrilplier. Alter three lilnlillis Hush pniposes liiurrhlKC. Hazel refuses, mill niter n stormy seine, in which Hush wnnis her he will make her sorry of leT iicthm, Ihizel lenves the olllce, never to return, Shortly ufter this I'.iisli Is thrown I'roin Ills horse nnil killed, l'uldlcu tlou of his will discloses ili.il lie left Hazel .f.'i.tMKi In "ropnrutlon fur nny wrons I tuny have ilone her." Jaelc Harrow, In n Jealous nixo, demands an expliiinitloii. mi'l Hazel, her pride hurt, refuses. CHAPTER III Continued "If you don't like my maimer" Harrow retorted stoniiily. Then he rut his sentence In two. and Klnred at her. The twin devils of Jealousy and .11st rust were rlilfa' him hard, and It (lashed over Hazel that In his mlml (die was prejudged, and that her ex (I'nnatlon, If she made It, would only mid fuel to the lla She turned nhrnptly and left him. What d'iil it matter, anyway? She was loo proud to plead, ami it was worse than useless to explain. Kven so, womanlike, she listened, ex pertlnc to hear Jack's step hurrying up hehlnd. She rould not Imagine him lettlntr her K" like that. Hut lie did not romp, and when, at n dlstanee of two blocks, she stole n buckwnrd plance, he had disappeared. She returned to the hoarding house. The parlor door stood wide, and the rnrloiis. quickly averted glance of n irlrl she' knew sent her quivering up to her room. There was only one cheer ful cleatn. She loved Jack Harrow. She hellevcd llHit he loved her. and! fhe could not helleve she rould not conceive him capalde of keeping aloof, ohdurate and unforgiving, once lie got out of the hlack tnood he was In. She was still sitting hy the window, watching the yellow crimson of the winsct, when someone rapped nt her door. A uniformed messenger hoy greeted her when she opened It : 'Tackege for MNs IIwl Weir." She signed the delivery sheet. The address on the package was In Jack's handwriting. A hox of chocolates, or some little pence offering, mayhe. That was like Jack when he was sorry for anylhlng. They had quarreled he Tore over trifles, too. She opened It hasllly. A swift heart-vdn'-'n-j followed. In the small card hoard hox rested a folded scarf, and thrust In It a small gold stickpin the only thing she had ever given Jack Harrow. There was no message. She needed none to understand. The sparkle of the small diamond on her linger drew her gaze. She worked his ring over the knuckle, and dropped It on the dresser, where the face in the silver frame smiled up at her. She stared at the picture for one long minute fixedly, with unchanging expression, and suddenly she swept It from the dresser with n savage sweep of her hand, dashed It on the floor, and stamped It shapeless with her slippered heel. "(Mi, oh !" she gasped. "I hate you I hate you ! I despise you !" And then she Hung herself across the hod and sohlied hysterically Into a pillow. Through the night Hazel dozed fit fully, waking out of uneasy sleep to lie staring, wide-eyed. Into the dark, every nerve In her hody taut, her mind lihnormnlly active. (Irlef and anger Flung Herself Across the Bed and Sobbed Hysterically Into a Pillow. hy turns mastered her, and nt day hroak she rose, liouvy-lldded and phys ically weary. The first thing upon which her gaze alighted was the crumpled photo in Its shattered frame; and, sitting on the side of her hed, she laughed nt the midden fury In which she had de stroyed It; hut there was no mirth In. her lnujjhter. She gathered up the lilts of hroken dass and the hent frame, mid put them In a drawer, dressed herself, and went down to breakfast. She was too deeply engrossed In her own trouble to no' Ire or rare whether any subtle change was becoming manifest In the attitude of her fellow boarders. The worst, she felt sure, had already over taken her. She had o little line to spare, anil (hat time she devoted to making up a pnekig- of Harrow's ring and n few other trinkets which he had given her. This she addressed to his office and posted while on her wny to work. She got tl, tough the dur somehow, Struggling ngulnst thoughts Hint would persist In creeping Into her mind end atlrrlns up emotions that she wus de- AIM A LEs Fiftv - BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR Co.) lermlned to hold In check. Work, she knew, was her only salvation. And so she got through the week. Saturday evening mine, ami she went home, dreading Sunday's Idleness, with Its memories. The people at Mrs. Stout's establishment, she plainly, saw, were growing a trifle shy of her. She hail never been on terms of lull inncy with any of them during her stay there, hence their attitude troubled llttb' afler the first supersensltiveness wore off. Hut her own friends, girls with whom she had played In the plna-fore-andplgtail stages of her youth, young men w ho had paid court to her until Jack Harrow monopolized her she did not know how they stood. Sh had seen none of them since Hush launched hi last bolt. Harrow she had passed on the street Just once, and when he lifted his hat distantly, she looked straight ahead, and Ignored him. Whether she hurt him as much as she did herself by the cut direct would he hnrd to say. When Sunday noon arrived, nnd the phone had failed to call her once, and not one of all her friends had dropped In, Hazel twisted her chair so that she could stare nt the Image of hgrself In the mlrriir. "You're In n' fnlr way to become n pnrlah. It seems," she said bitterly. "What have yon done, I wonder, that you've lost your lover, ami that Alice and May and Hortense and all the rest of them keep nvmy from you? Noth ingnot n thing except timf your looks attracted n man, nnd the man threw stones when he couldn't have his way. (lit, well, what's the differ ence? You've got two good hands, and you're not afraid of work." She walked out to Oranvlllo park after luncheon, and found n seat on a shaded bench beside the lake. I'eople passed and repassed couples, young sters, old people, children. It lunde her lonely beyond measure. She laid never been Isolated among her own kind before. 1 A group of young people came saun tering along the path. Hazel looked up as they neared her, chattering to each oilier. Maud Steele and Hud Wells, and why, she knew every one of the party. Hazel caught her breath lis they came abreast, not over ten feet away. The three young men raised their hats self-consciously. "Hello. Mussel:" the girl said. Hut they passed on. It seemed to Hazel that they quickened their pare n trllle. It made her grit her teeth In resentful anger. Ten minutes later she left the park nnd caught a cur home. Once In her room she broke down. "Oh. I'll go mad If I stay here and this sort of thing goes on!" she cried forlornly. A sudden thought struck her. "Why should 1 stay here?" she said aloud. "Why? What's to keep me here? I can make my living any where." . "Hut, no," she asserted passionately, "I won't run nway. That would be running away, and I haven't anything to be ashamed of. I will not run." Still the Idea kept recurring to her. It promised relief from the hurt of averted faces anil coolness where she had a right to expect sympathy and friendship. The legal notice of the bequest was mailed to her. She tore up the letter and threw It in the fire as If It were some poisonous thing. The Iden of accepting his money stirred her to per fect frenzy. If she could have poured the whole miserable tale Into some sympathetic ear she would have felt better, and each day would have seemed less hard. Hut there was no such ear. Her friends kept away. Saturday of the second week her pay envelope contained a brief notice that the (inn no longer required her services. There was no explanation, only perfunctory regrets ; and, truth to tell, Hazel cared liltle to know the real cause. Any one of a number of reasons might have been sulllclent. Hut she realized how those who knew her would take It, what cause they would ascribe. It did not matter, though. The very worst, she reasoned, could not be so bad as what had al ready happened could be no more dis agreeable than the things she had en dured In the past two weeks. Losing a position was a trifle, Hut It set her thinking again. She stopped at a news stand nnd bought the evening pnpers. I'p In the top rack of the stand the hlg bends of an assorted lot of Western papers caught her eye. She bought two or three on the Impulse of the moment, without any definite purpose except to look 'them over out of mere curi osity. With these tucked under her arm, she turned Into the boarding house gate, ran up the steps, and, upon opening the door, her ears were glad dened by the first friendly voice she had heard It seemed to her In ages, a voice wit hill Hint she had least ex pected to hear. A short, plump woman rushed out of the parlor, and precipi tated herself bodily upon Hazel. "Kitty Itynnl Where In the wide, l. wide world did you come from?" MasSel cried. "Kroin the United States nnd every where," Miss Ityan replied. "Take me up to your room, dear, where we can talk our heads off. "And. furthermore, Hnzle, I'll bo pleased to have you address me ns Mrs. l'.rooks, my dear young woman." the plump lady laughed, ns she settled herself In a chair in Hazel's romii. "So you're married?" Hazel said. "I am that," Mrs. Kitty responded emphatically, "to the best boy that ever drew hrealh. And so should you be, dear girl. I don't see how you've escaped so long a good-looking girl like you. The boys were nlways crazy after you, There's nothing like hav ing n good man to take care of you, dear." "Heaven save tne from them!" Ha zel answered bitterly. "If you've got one you're lucky. I can't see them ns anything t.it self-centered, arrogaut, treacherous brutes." "Lord bless ms It's worse than I thought!" Kitty Jumped up and threw her iirins aroit.iii Hazel. "There, there don't waste a tear on them. I know all about It. I came over to see you Just as soon ns some of the girls nasty little cats they are; n woman's always meaner than a man, dear Just ns soon as they gave tne an Inkling of how things were going with you. I'slmw ! The world's fujl of good, de cent fellows and you've got one coin ing." "If you'd had my experience of the last two weeks you'd sing n different tune," Hazel vehemently declared. "I hate I" And then she gave wny, and In ilu'ged In the luxury of turning herself loose on Kitty's shoulder. Presently she was able to wipe her eyes nnd re late the whole story from the Sunday Mr. Hush stopped and spoke to her In the park down to that evening. Kitty nodded unilerstiindlngly. "Hut the girls have handed It to you worse thi n the men, Hazel," she observed Then She Turned to the "Help Want ed" Advertisements. sagely. "Jack Harrow was Just plain crazy Jealous, and a man like that can't help acting ns be did. You're really fortunate, I think, because you'd not be really happy with n man like that. Hut the glrk that you nnd I grew up with they should have stood by you, knowing you as they did ; yet you see they were ready to think the worst of you. They nearly nlways do when there's a man in the case. That's n wenkiifss of our sex, dear. Well, you aren't working. Come nnd stay with nie. Hubby's got a two-year con tract with the World Advertising com pany. We'll be located here that long at lenst. Come nnd stay with us." "Oh, no, I couldn't think of that, Kitty!" Hazel faltered. "You know. I'd love to, and It's awfully good of you, but I think I'm Just about ready to go nway from Granville." "Well, come nnd stop with us till you do go," Kitty Insisted. "We nre going to take n furnished cottage for n while. Though, between you and me, dear, knowing people as I do, I can't blame you for wanting to be where their nasty tongues can't, wound you." Hut Hazel was obdurate. She would not Inflict herself on the one friend she had left. And Kitty, after n short talk, berated her ii.Tecilonntely for her Indcpmdence and rose to go. "For," said she, "I didn't get hold of this thing till Addle Morton called nt the hotel this afternoon, and I didn't stop to think that It was near teatlme, but came straight here. Jlinnile'll think I've eloped, fco tu-ta. I'll come out tomorrow about two. I have to confab with n house agent in the fore noon. Hy-by." Hazel sat down and nctually smiled when Kilty wns gone. Somehow n grievous burden had fallen off her mind. .Likewise, by some psycholog ical quirk, the idea of leaving Gran ville and making her home elsewhere no longer struck her as running away under fire. She felt that she could adventure forth among strangers In a strange country with a better heart knowing that Kitty l'.rooks would put u swift quietus on any gossip that came her way. So that Hazel went down to the din ing room light-heartedly, and when the meal was finished came hack nnil fell to rending her papers. The first of the Western pnpers was n Vancouver World. In a reul-esvate man's half page she found n diminutive sketch plan of the city on the shores of Hur ra rd Inlet,. Cnnadu's principal outpost on the far I'liclllc. "It's quite a big pluce," she mur mured absently. "One would he far enough away there, goodness kiiov." Then she turned to the "Help Wonted" advertisements. And Jiwn near the bottom of the column she happened on mi Inquiry for n school teacher, fenialo preferred, In an out- hree of-lhe-wny district In the Interior of the province. "Now, that" Hazel thought. She had a second-class c rtlllcate tucked nway among her be.onglngs. Originally It had been her Intention to teach, and she had done so one term In n backwoods school when she was eighteen. With the ending of the term she had returned to (iranvllle, studied that winter, and got her second cer tificate; but nt the same time she had taken n business-college course, nnd tho following June found her clack ing a typewriter nt nine dollars n week. And her tcnrhcr'H dlplomn hnd remained In the bottom of her trunk ever since. Unaccountably, since Kitty Hrooks' visit, she found herself Itching to turn her hack on Granville nnd Its unpleas ant associations. She did not attempt to analyze the feeling. Strange lands, apd most of all, the West, held alluring promise. One thing was certain: Granville, for all she had been born there, and grown to womanhood there, was now no place for her. The very people who knew her best would make her suffer most. She siient that evening going thor oughly over the papers and writing letters to various school boards, taking n chance lit one or two she found In tho Manitoba paper, but centering her hopes on the country west of the Itockles. Her savings In the bank amounted to three hundred odd dol lars, nnd cash In hand brought the sum to n total of three' hundred and sixty-five. At any rate, she had sufll dent to Insure her living for quite n long time, fueling better And she went to bed than she had felt for two weeks. Very shortly thereafter almost, It Seemed, by return mail Hazel got re plies to her letters of Inquiry. The fact that each nnd every one seemed bent on securing, her services aston ished her. Hut the reply from Cariboo Mead ows, H. C., the first place she had thought (If. decided her. The member of the school board who replied held forth the natural beauty of the coun try as much as he did the advantages of the position.. The thing that per haps made the strongest appeal to Ha zel was n little kodak print Inclosed In the letter, showing Hie schoolhouse. The building Itself was primitive enough, of logs, with n pole-and-sod roof. Hut It was the huge back ground, the timbered mountains rising to snowclad heights against ll cloud less sky, that attracted her. She sat for a long time looking nt the picture, thinking. Here wus the concrete, visible presentment of some thing' that drew her strongly. She found an atlas, and looked up Cari boo Meadows on the map. It was not to be found, anil Hazel Judged It to he a purely local name. Hut the letter told her that she would have to stage It a hundred nud sixty-five miles north from Ashcrofl, H. ('.. where the writer would meet her nnd drive her to the Meadows. "What a country!" she whispered. "It's wild; really, truly wild; and ev erything I've ever seen has been tamed and smoothed down, and made eminently respectable and conven tional long ago. That's the place. That's where I'm going, and I'm going it blind. I'm not going to tell any one not even Kitty until, like a bear, I've gone over the mountain to see what I can see." Within an hour of that Miss Hazel Weir had wrrlten to accept the terms offered by the Cariboo Meadows school district, and wns busily packing her trunk. CHAPTER IV. Cariboo Meadows. A tall man, sunburned, slow-speaking, met Hazel at Soda Creek, the end of her stage Journey, Introducing him self as Jim Hrlggs. "Hretty tiresome trip, ain't It?" he observed. "You'll have a chance to rest decent tonight, nnd I got n team uh hays that'll yank yuh to the Mead ows In four hours 'n' n half. My wlfe'll be plumb tickled to have yuh. They ain't much inore'n half a dozen white women In ten miles uh the Meadows. We keep n boai'iaii' bouse. Hope you'll like the country." That was a lengthy speech for Jim Hrlggs, ns' Hazel discovered when she rolled out of Soda Creek behind the "team uh hays." Ills conversation was decTdedly monosyllable. Hut he could drive, if he was no talker, and his team could travel. Hy eleven o'clock Hazel found liersMf at Cariboo Mead ows. "Schoolhouse's over yonder." Hrlggs pointed out the place an unnecessary guidance, for Hazel had already marked the building set off by Itself and fortified with n tall flagpole. "And here's where we live. Kinda out uh the world, but blame good place to live." Hazel did like the place. 'Her first Impression was thankfulness that her lot had been "list In such a spot. Hut ft was largely because of the surround ings, essentially primitive, the clean air, guiltless of smoke taint, the aro matic odors from the forest that ranged for unending miles on every hand. So with the chnrin of the wild land fresh upon her, she took kindly to Cariboo Meadows. Her first nfternoon she spent loaf ing on the porch of the Hrlggs domi cile, within which Mrs. Hrlggs, n fat, good nntured person of forty, tidied nt her cooking for the "boarders," and kept a brood of five tumultuous young sters In order the combined tasJcs leaving her scant time to entertain her newly arrived guest. CnrHioo' Meadows, as a town, wns simply n double row of buildings fac ing each other across n wagon road. Two storw, n blacksmith shop, n feed stable, certain other nondescript buildings, and n few dwellings, mostly of logs, was nil. I'rolmhly not more than n total of fifty souls made, per manent residence there. Iilrcclly op posite Hrlggs' boarding house stood a building labeled "Uegent Hotel." Ha zcl could envisage It nil with a half turn of her head. I'roin this hotel there presently is sued a young man dressed In the ordi nary costume of the country wide hat. flannel shirt, overalls, hoots. Me sat down on a box dose by the hotel entrance. In a few minutes another came forth. Ho walked pust the first a few steps, stopped, and suld some thing, Hnzcl could not hear the words. The first man was filling his pipe. Ap parently he made no reply; at least, he illil not trouble to look Up. Hilt she saw his shoulders lift in a shrug. Then he who had passed turned square about and spoke again, this time lifting Ids voice n trllle. The young fellow sitting on the box in stantly became galvanized Into action He flung out an oath that carried across the street and made Hazel's curs burn. At the same time he leaped from his seat straight ut the other ma it. Hazel saw It quite distinctly, saw Iti in who Jumped dodge a vicious blow and close with the other; nnd saw, moreover, something which amazed her. For the young fellow swayed with his adversary n second or two, then lifted him bodily off his feet al most to the level of his head, and slummed him against the hotel wall wlih a sudden twist. She heard the thump of the body on the logs. For an Instant she thought him about to Jump with bis booted feet on tin? pros trate form, and Involuntarily she held Emm rnumi I mm m Knocked the Man Down Again With a Clow of His Fist. her breath. Hut he stepped back, and when the other scrambled up, he side stepped the first rush, and knocked the man down again with n blow of hl fist. This time he stnyed down. Then other men three or four of them came out of the hotel, stood uncer tainly a few seconds, and Hazel heard the young fellow say: "Heller take that fool In and bring lilm to. If he's still hungry for trouble. I'll be right handy. I wonder how many more of you fellers I'll have to lick before you'll get wise enough not to start things you can't slop?" They supported the unconscious man through the doorway; the young fel low resumed his seat on the box, also his pipe lilling. Hazel hai her next encoun'.er with "Roaring Bill" when, lost in the woods, she stumbles upon his camp after wandering until late at night through the track less forcot. The story ef this meeting Is told in the next in stallment. (TO in-; CiNTIM'i;l. HUNTED BY WILD ELEPHANT Carl E. Akeley, Naturalirt. Relates Ex perience of Being Attacked by Mas Give South African Doast The hunter. and taxidermist. Carl V. Akeley, who has spent tl great deal o palnslaklng effort In preparing the wonderful animal groups at the Ameri can Museum of Natural History, I known throughout South Africa as an elephant hunter. He has hud many thrilling experiences, one of which lit describes In the New York Sun ns fol lows : FJcphnnts nre no more conspicuous In their own country than Jack rabbits nre in theirs. They are the color of the shadows In the forest and almost ns Indistinguishable. Intelligence nnd vlndlctlveness are two of their most prominent characteristics. When oiic knows be Is being hunted he will lie In wait, still ns a rock, and looking much like one. and will hunt his hunter us a dog hunts a rat. 1 had cut a big bull out from a herd and was following bis spoor, knowing well enough Hun lie was lying In wait for me somewhere. The big beast, as It turned out nfierwaids. got my wind as I was stalking hliu. nnd was search ing for me. I must have got within ten or twenty feet of him. because I icineiiibered afterward that I beard a swift rush hut did not catcli sight of him coming. Hie first I knew of his presence wns n quick vision of Ids trunk as be knocked me down. Then I caught one glimpse of his liltle eyes as he curled up his trunk out of the way and tried to Impale me wllh his tusks. I had Just time to grasp a tusk wllh my left hand and twist myself so that my body was between the two shafts of Ivory. I felt the Impact of his tusks as they dug Into the ground on either side of me. and his heavy uoae crushed against my chest. That is nil I re member. My hunter fortunately shot him dead ns lie was preparing for another thrust. I was unconscious as they cur ried me to the camp, where I lay for three months, with my chest o crushed that It was doubtful whether or not I should live. Forty Miles of Jam, So enormous hns the business of Jam innklng become In Dundee, Scot laud, since the great firms there or ganized to supply preserves to the Hrltlsh tinny nnd nnvy that, according to a report sent by E. It. l'ottle, U. S. vice consul there, to the department of commerce, the tins In which they put up one week's supply nlono "would. If stood end on end, forin a column fully 10 miles high. It Is no unusual thing for this firm to deal with lOO.OOO.fMH) oranges, nnd ull kinds of fruit nre dealt with on a slmilnr scale." The Dundee manufacturers nre nbul to give up the use of earthen ware, glass Jars and tins, for n stout cardboard contaliwr Is now being made nnil experiments with It have proved highly successful. Waiting for His Son By REV. W. W. KETCIIUM Director of Practical Work Courw, Wood BlbUInilitula, Chicago TEXT-How y turned to God from Idols, to Krva tho llvInK and true Ooil; and to wait for lilt son from lienvrn, whom ho ruisi'il from the doaj.-l Then. 1:9-10. Here nre Indicated In the experience of the four steps the Christians at Thessnlonlcn to whom I'liul wrote the epistle. First they turned to (iod. That Is the first step of every truly converted person. Turned From Idols. Secondly, "they turned from Idols." That Is the second step In the experi ence of every true Christian. Tho Idols nre not nec essarily those made of wood or stone, but anything upon which the af fections have been set. The order here is worthy of noting. It Is not from Idols to (Iod, but to Cod from Idols. This Is significant, because It Is when one turns to (iod that he gets the power from Cod to turn from idols. The third step was the one of serv ice; "to serve the living and true (iod." Such should bo the step taken by ev ery child of Hod, for while not saved by works, we are saved to work. The last ami fourth step In their experi e was "to wait for Ids Son from heaven. And should not this be our attitude, too, If we are following In the steps of these Thessnlonlcn Christians? Expecting Jecus. Kvldeiitly from their attitude, these early Christians believed that Jesus was to return from heaven. The buck ground of their belief was the fact Hint (iod had raised bis Son, even Jesus from Hie dead. To them the resurrec tion meant more than the continued existence of the personality of Jesus after his death; it meant his bodily resurrection, and coupled with this was their belief 111 his bodily ascension Into heaven. It Is not dilllcult to see how with such n fiillh, It was easy for them to believe III the return to this earth of their risen and ascended Lord. Were they In their faith mistaken? There Is only one place for us to go to tlnd out mid that is to the Hi hie. 7 hose who have taken the pains to count, tell us that there are In the New Testament alone, ,11S references to the second coming of Christ, Tills shows the large place that this subject holds In these Scriptures, not to say anything about the reference to It in the Old Testament. Not Death. Hut are we not to understand hy these references to the second coming of Christ, the death of the believer? Many have so taught, hut that such teaching Is Incorrect Is evident, if we take the passages In which these ref erences occur and substitute the word death for the word or words which refer to Christ, as, for example. In our text, which would then read, "to wait for death from heaven, even death whom he raised from the dead," This Is so absurd that we see at once that by the second coming of Christ Is not meant the death of the believer. Hut does it not mean the coming of the Holy Spirit? This teaching Is far more plausible, for as some one has said, and Ids saying Is true In a sense, "the Holy Spirit Is Christ's other self." Yet it Is evident that we must not con fuse Hie Lord Jesus Christ with the Holy Spirit. Jesus himself Is cnrehil In making the distinction nnd speaks of the Holy Spirit as "another com forter whom I will send unto you, even the Spirit of truth." Clearly by this statement he does not mean himself any more than when be speaks of his own coming he means the Holy Spirit. Manifestly only by the most severe straining of the Scriptures could the second coming of Christ lie Interpreted to mean the coining of the Holy Spirit. Try the same test used to prove that by the second coming of Christ dentil Is not meant and substitute for the word or words referring to Hie Holy Spirit, word or words referring to Christ and the absurdity Is Just as ap parent. As for example, In the passage quoted above; It Is impossible, us you will see, to make this substitution and have nny sense whatever left. Try It, and you will be convinced that hy the second coming of Christ Is not meant the romling of the Holy Spirit. Not Destruction of Jerusalem. Hut may It not mean the destruction of Jerusalem hy Titus In A. 1. 70? Hy no means, for In the Revelation, chap ter --, verse 20, Is the last promise of our risen Lord given long nfter the de struction of Jerusalem to John, the aged, on the Island of I'atmos: "Sure ly. I come quickly." And In response, the old apostle lifts Ids voice nnd cries, ' "Amen, even so, come Lord Jesus." This makes It very evident that by the second coming of Christ Is not meant the destruction of Jeru salem. Well, w hat Is meant ? Just precisely what the Scriptures teach; that Jesus Christ, the risen, ascended, glorified son or man Is to return a second time to this earth. He himself so taught by direct word and hy parable and so taught his dls- clples, ami so In expectation of his re turn they waited. To try to make the second comlnc of Christ inenn anything else than the literal personal return of the Lord Jesus Christ to this earth Is to twist and pervert the Scriptures from their plain and simple inclining. "This same Jesus," said tho two men In whlto ap parel nt his Ascension, "w hich Is taken up from you Into heaven, shall so come In like milliner us ye have seen lilm go Into heaven." "Amen. Kven so, come Lord Jesus." Confessing Our Sins. If we confess our sins he Is faithful nnd Just to forgive us and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. St. Johu. s ::::iK,iur. 1 ! CORNS LIFT OUT! COSTS FEW CENTS Drops of magic! Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little Frcezone on a touchy corn, instantly that corn stops hurt ing, then you lift , it off with the fingers. No pain! Try it! Why wait? Your druggist stllj a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or enrn between the toes, and calluses, vithout soreness or irritation. Freczone is the much talked of discovery of the Cincinnati genius. Proving Their Patriotism. "(If course we have u family sUi. ton." "Well, let's trot It out. It. will a credit "to us now. Shows we hi Hot overeating." Kansas City .Tiiiiinul. A DAGGER IN THE BACK That's the woman's dread when nht frets up In the niununx to start the J.iy'i wnrk. "Oh! how my back aches." (iuLD MKDAU llaurletn Oil Capsuled token to day eases the bai knrli of toinurruw titken every day emla the backache tor II time. Don't delay. What's the ux Of siifTerliiR? Ileum tuklnK (iOI.L) MICHAIy Haarlem Oil CnpsuU-s today n4 be relieved tomorrow. Take three or tour every day nnd be permanently free from wrrnchlnK. dlstressini; luo-k pain. Hut I hob to col (iOl.D MklAI,. Since 1 (lOl.n MKDAI, Hunrlein fill hns Iipi-ii the Niitlonul Itomedy of Holland, the (Juvern. nient of the Netherlands Imvintf sTunt'-d spclnl chnrler nuthorlzlnit Its pr'-pj. ration and ti::le. The housewife of Hoi hind would almost ns soon I without bread ns she would without her "lli-il Imteh lrnpH," ns she imilntlv calls f'.iil.D MKOA!., Ilnarlem Oil riipsules. This It the one reason why you will find tu vomen nnd children of Holland so sturdy ard rolmsi. ',oi.l MKDAI, nre the pur. orlu-lnil Il.-iarhni Oil Caprioles lmi'rted dii.--t from tho hi horn torles In llnnrlem. Il'l h.nd. T'.at he sure to K l GOLD MICI'VI. l.noli for the name on every bnx. Soil hy reliable drimuisls In si-iled pneknurs, three sizes. Money refunded If tliev do rot help you. Accept onlv the (I'll.D MKDAI.. All others are Imitations. A'tv, "Kooky but i'oli;nhlc," said tin' cradle maiiiifnclurer, describing his business. A single ilnte of T)r TVery's "Dend K'lit" mill i,cl Worms or T.-tp, worm. No . ond dosi. or after purgative nro-nanry. 'i'oiui tip thfl stomueh ami llowels. Adv. Many a man seemingly leads a age less life, but he serves a puriose in tin example to others. HAVE YOU A SWEETHEART, Son or Brother In training camps in tho Amerlnai Army or Navy IP It so, mull him a package of ALLEYS FOOT a EASE, tho antiseptic tMiwiler til hn shaken Into tho shoes and sprinkled in! tho foot-htitu. 2 he Ameri can, llrlllsh nnd Krcnih troops use Allen's Foot KnMe, because it takes the Friction from the Shoe anil freshens the feet. It is the greatest comforter for tired, aching, tender, swollen fit't, tuidurs nnu Kivea runui iu corns uuu rM-im bunions. The PlattuhurgCuinn Manual advises men In training to shake Koot-Knsu In their shoes each morning-. Ak your dealer to-day for a !i"c. box of Allen's Koot-Knse, and tor a 2c. ntiimp he will mnll It for sou. What remeiu- hriuice could be so acceptable r Both Quality: And Quantity Try Yager's Liniment, the great external remedy for rheumatism, ncuralpia, sciatica, sprains, chest pains, backache, cuts and bruises. This liniment hns wonder ful curative powers, pene trates instantly, and gives prompt relief from pain. It is tho most economical liniment to buy, for the large 35 cent bottle contains more than the usual 50 cent bottle of liniment. 35cPgrBott! au GILBERT BROS. & CO. BALTIMORE, MO. COUGH. NG annoy others and hurt you. Relieve tlimut Irritation and tk'kllna.aml set rid of eouli. colds and hot reciters by taking at ouct A u w J mmI III
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers