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THE YALE EXPOSITOR NAME "BAYER" IS ON GENUINE ASPIRIN 5 tor are helping their husbands to crosocr are clad they encouraged them to go own save Divine rent could reach prosperity and Fcrtilo Land at $15 to $30 an Aero land similar to that which through manyyeara has ylafdad from 20 to 45 bushsls of wheat to tho aero. Hundreds of farmers in Western Canada have raised crops in a single season worth more than the whole cost of their land. v ith sjch crops come prosperity, independence, good comes, and all the comforts and conveniences which make for happy living. iiuiics ui a new Tor lilastratad Vcerature. m npporcuniiiMS in Bianiioba. autitcluvin, mi Aibarta, roductid railway rta. etc.. writ Department ct Immigration, Ottawa, Co.. or . 'M.V.MaclKXES 176 Jefferson Arenue, tetrolt, Mich. Canadian Government Agent AW - Send r brigf year Raw Far ! the Oldest sad Largest Far Manafadarer (a Micaif a For more than 30 years we have been buying Raw Furs and manufacturing them into COATS, CAPES, SCARFS, MUFFS, CAPS, COLLARS. Etc We remit at once but hold Furs for your acceptance of our offer Ask the Dry Goods Merchants or the Postmaster in your city about us.' NEWTON Woodward at Clifford (Since Its Present Use. "What's a menu, pa?" "It Is a printed paper with the prices of food to show you what you can't get." Important to Mother Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOHIA. that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria SOUNDED ALL RIGHT TO HER Prisoner's Defense Naturally Had a Lot of Weight With the Fair Prosecutor. The case looked Mark against the prisoner, who was charted with lolter Inp; suspiciously at the railway station. Presently the magistrate said stern ly: "This lady says you tried to speak to er at the railway station." "It was a mistake," pleaded the man !n the dock. "I was looking for my wife's you nor niece, whom I've never Keen, hut who'd heen described to me as a handsome young lady, with golden hair, well-cut features, line complex ion, perfect tigure. beautifully dressed, and" With a charming Mush, the principal witness against him Interrupted his flow of eloquence. "I don't wish to prosecute the gen tleman, sir," she said to the magis trate. "Any one might have made the same mistake." Mean but True. "That was a nasty thing the cook said to me before leaving." "What was It?" "Just as she was leaving the house she turned hack in a rase and said: "Well, I've got it on your husband, anyhow. I don't have to stay here" What the dew Is to the flower, kind words are to the heart.' The surest sign that a man has be grun to succeed la when his rivals beyln knocking him. HaraWorlcTires muscles and nerves and then to whip them with coffee, 'with, its dru& caffeine makes a bad matter worse FOSflM is a drink for workers that contains no dru. but furnishes a finely fla vored beverage, full-bodied and robust, pleasing to former, coffee .drinkers. Wo sizes " At grocers Usually sold .at 25&15 TTado hy where th;y could make a home of I and redur mat rf IivinKr .v.... independence by buying en easy tarms. Farm Gardens Poultry Dairying irees of income second only to grain growing and stock raising :lunate, goAd neighbors, churches, i.- fx. frc, "T.T , rural telephone, etc.. give you tho 2?$H una wita uie cun ;-j.- - twiy'.. x map, daeeripttnn of FURS ANNIS 1887) DETROIT, MICH. The Reason. "You look depressed this morning." "Yes ; when I went to look at my private stock this morning I found I was out of spirits." Baltimore American. RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 or. Bay Rum, a small box of Barbo Compound, and M oz. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the desired shade. Any druggist can put this up or you csa mix it at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not co'or the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not rub off. Adv. TOWN LONG WITHOUT BANK Colorado Community, In Existence More Than a Century, Is Now to Have Institution. The little Spanish town of San Luis, the county seat of Costilla coun ty, Colo., In the lower end of the val ley, will welcome Its first bank when th State I'.ank of San Luis opens It doors for business. This little town Is more than one hundred years old. and was one of the furthest outposts of Spanish settlement that followed the northward push of the Spanish residents of Santa Fo and vicinity. For nearly fifty years before the first contingent of Americans, under command of den. Frank Baldwin, now a resident of Denver, arrived over La Veta pass and established the military post of Fort Oarland, San Luis had heen a flourishing little settlement surrounded by highly developed farms. In the last few years the progress and development of the town and community has been more rapid until now the town Is considered to be large enough to need a bank. The ma jority of the residents of the vicinity are Spanish-speaking people of the old school, polished, courteous, energetic and prosperous. Some of the wealth iest men of the valley are to be found In the town and Its close environs. The Way It Works. "These are gloomy times." "No wonder, with everybody out of spirits." Mewriicw Copyright by Harper A Brothers CHAPTER VI 11 Continued. 12 The outcome was that Mrs. Hardy (nslsted upon Irene embarking at once upon a finishing course. Afterward they traveled together for a year in Europe. Then home again, Irene pur sued her urt, and her mother sur rounded her with the social attractions which Doctor Hardy's comfortable in come and professional standing made possible. Her purpose was obvious and but thinly disguised. She hoped that her daughter would outlive her youthful Infatuation and would at length, in a more suitable match, give her heart to one of the numerous ell gibles of her circle. To promote this end Mrs. Hardy spared no pains. Young Carlton, son of a banker and one of the leading men of hl3 set, seemed a particularly appropriate match. Mrs. Hardy opened her home to hlra, and Carlton, whatever his motives, was not slow to grasp the situation. For years Irene had not spoken of Dave Elden, and the mother had grown to hope that the old attachment had died down and would presently be quite forgotten in a new and more becoming passion. The fact is that Irene at that time would have been quite incapable of stating her relation toward Elden and its influence upon her attitude to life. She was by no means sure that she loved that sunburnt boy of romantic memory; she was by no means sure that she should ever marry him, let his development in life be what it would ; but she felt that her heart was locked, at least for the present, to all other suitors. She had given her promise, and that settled the matter. Notwithstanding her indifference the firl found herself encouraging Carl ton's advances, or at least not meet ing them with the rebuffs which had been her habit toward all other suitors, and Mrs. Hardy's hopes grew as the attachment apparently devel oped. But they were soon to be shat tered. Irene had gone with Carlton to the theater; afterward to supper. It was long past midnight when she reached home. She knocked at her mother's door and immediately entered. Her hair was disheveled and her cheeks were flushed, and she walked unstead ily across the room. "What's the matter, Irene? What's the matter, child? Are you sick?" cried her mother, springing from her bed. "No, I'm not sick." said the girl bru tally. "I'm drunk !" "Oh, don't say that," raid her mother soothingly. "Proper people do not be come drunk. You may have had too much champagne and tomorrow you will have a headache " "Mother I I have had too much champagne, but not as much as that precious Carlton of yours had planned for. I Just wanted to see how des picable he was, and I floated down stream with him as far as I dared. But Just as the current got too swift I struck for shore. Oh, we made a scene, all right, but nobody knew me there, so the family name is safe and you can rest in peace. I called a tail, and when he tried to follow me in I slapped him and kicked him. Kicked him, mother. Dreadfully undignified, wasn't it? ... And that's what you want me to marry, in place of a man I" Mrs. Hardy was chattering with mortification and excitement. Her plans had miscarried. Irene had mis behaved. Irene was a difficult, head strong child. It was useless to argue with her in her present mood. It was useless to argue with her in any mood. No doubt Carlton had been impetuous. Nevertheless he stood high In his set and his father was something of a power In the financial world. As the wife of such a man Irene might have n career before her a career from which at least some of the glory would reflect upon the silvering head of the mother of Mrs. Carlton. "Go to your room," she said at length. "You are In no condition to talk tonight. I must say it is a shame that you can't go out for an evening without drinking too much and mak ing a scene. . . . What will Mr. Carlton think of you?" "If he remembers all I told him about himself he'll have enough to think of," the girl blazed back. "You know what I have told you and still MIfiter Carlton stands as high in your sight as ever. I am the one to blame. Very well. I've tried your choice and I've tried my own. Now I am In a position to Judge. There will be noth ing to talk about In the morning. Mention Carlton's name to me again and I will give the whole Incident to the papers . . . with photographs . . . and names. Fancy the feature heading, 'Society Girl, Intoxicated, Kicks Escort Out of Taxi Good night- But other matter were to demand the attention of mother and daughter In the morning. While the scene was occurring In Mrs. Hardy's bedroom her husband, clad in white, tolled In the operating room to save the life of fellow being. There was a slip of aft Instrument, but the surgeon tolled tv be could not at that Juncture pause; the life of the patient was at stake. When the operation was fin ished he found his Injury deeper thun he supposed, and Irene was summoned from her heavy sleep thaf morning to attend his bedside. He talked to her as a philosopher; said his life's work was done and he was Just as glad to go in the harness; the estate should yield something, and there was his life Insurance n third would be for her. And when Mrs. Hardy was not at his side he found opportunity to whisper, "And if you really love that boy out West marry him." The sudden bereavement wrought a recoucillatlon between Mrs. Hardy and her daughter. Mrs. Hardy took her loss very much to heart. While Irene grieved for her father Mrs. Har dy grieved for herself. It was awful to be left alone like this. And when the lawyers found that, instead of a hundred thousand dollars, the estate would yield a bare third of that sum, she spoke openly of her husband's Im providence. He had enjoyed a hand some income, on which his family had lived in luxury. That it was unequal to the strain of providing for them In that fashion and at the same time ac cumulating a reserve for such an eventuality as had occurred was a matter which his widow could scarce ly overlook. Her health had suffered a severe shock, for beneath her ostentation she felt as deep a regard for her late hus band as was possible in one who measured everything in life by vari ous social formulae. She consulted a specialist who had enjoyed a close professional acquaintanceship with Doctor Hardy. The specialist gave her a careful, meditative and solemn ex amination. "Your condition is serious," he told her, "but not alarming. You must have a drier climate and, preferably, a high er altitude. I am convinced that the "No, I'm Not Sick," said the Girl Bru tally. "I'm Drunk." conditions your health demands are to be found in ." He named the former cow town from which Irene's fateful automobile Journey had had its start, and the young woman, who was present with her mother, felt herself go suddenly pale with the thought of a great prospect. "Oh, I could never live there !" Mrs. Hardy protested. "It is so crude. Cow punchers, you know, and all that sort of thing." The specialist smiled. "You will probably not find It so crude, although I dare say some of its customs may Jar on you," he remarked, dryly. "And it is not a case of not being able to live there. It is a case of not being able to live here. If you take my ad vice you should die of old age, as far, at least, as your present ailment is concerned. If you don't" and he dropped his voice to Just the correct note of gravity, which pleased Mrs. Hardy very much "if you don't, I can't promise you a year." Confronted with such an alternative, the good lady had no option. She ac cepted the situation with the resigna tion which she deemed to be correct under such circumstances, but the boundless prairies were to her 60 much desolation and ugliness. Irene gath ered that her mother did not approve of prairies. They were something new to her life, and it was greatly to be suspected that they were Improper. CHAPTER IX. Very slowly It dawned upon Mrs. Hardy that this respectable, thriving city, with its well-dressed, properly mannered people, its public spirit, its aggressiveness, its churches and thea ters and schools, its law and order, and its afternoon teas, after all, was the real West; sincere, earnest; crude, perhaps; bare, certainly; the scar of Its recent battle with the wilderness till fresh upon Its person ; lacking the finish that only time can give to a landscape or a civilization; but lack ing also the ruddiness, the mustlness, the Insufferable artificiality of older communities. Even Mrs. Hardy, steeped for sixty years In a life of precedent and rule and caste, began to catch the enthusiasm of a new land where precedent and rale and caste are something of a handicap. "We roust bay a home,- she said to MM Robert J. C. Stead Author of ''Kitchener and Other Poems" Illustrations fry IRWIN MYERS i Irene. "We cannot afford to continue living at a hotel, and we roust have our own home. You must look up a responsible dealer whose advice we can trust in a matter of this kind." And was it remarkable that Irene Hardy should think at once of the firm of Conward & Elden? It was not. She had, indeed, been thinking of n mem ber of that firm ever since the decision to move to the West. Tho fact Is Irene had not been at all sure that she wanted to marry Dave Elden. She wanted very much to meet him again ; she was curious to know how the years had fared with him, and her curiosity was not unmixed with a finer senti ment ; but she was not at all sure that she should marry him. "What, Dave Elden, the million aire?" Bert Morrison had said. "Every body knows him." And then the news paper woman had gone on to tell what a figure Dave was In the business life of the city. "One of our biggest young men," Bert Morrison had said. "Ke served, a little; likes his own company best; but absolutely white." That gave a new turn to the situa tion. Irene had always wanted Dave to be a success; suddenly she doubted whether she had wanted him to be so big a success. She had doubted wheth er she should wish to marry Dave; she had never allowed herself to doubt that Dave would wish to marry her. Secretly, she had expected to rather dazzle him with her ten years' devel opment with the culture and knowl edge which study and travel and life had added to the charm of her young girlhood; and suddenly she realized that her luster would shine but dimly In the greater glory of his own. . . . It was easy to locate the office of Conward & Elden; it stood on a prin cipal corner of a principal street Thence she led her mother, and found herself treading on the marble floors of the richly appointed waiting room in a secret excitement which she coi'Jd with difficulty conceal. She was, in deed, very uncertain about the nexl development. . . . Her mother had to be reckoned with. A young man asked courteously what could be done for them. "We want to see the head of the firm," said Mrs. Hardy. "We want tc buy a house." They were shown Into Conward'i office. Conward gave them the wet come of a man who expects to make money out of his visitors. He placed a very comfortable chair for Mrs Hardy; he adjusted the blinds to a nicety; he discarded his cigarette and beamed upon them with as great a show of cordiality as his somewhat beefy appearance would permit. Mrs. Hardy outlined her life history with considerable detail and ended with the confession that the West was not as bad as she had feared and, anyway, It was a case of living here or dying else where, so she would have to make the best of It. And here they were. And might they see a house? Conward appeared to be reflecting As a matter of fact, he saw In this in experienced buyer an opportunity to reduce his holdings in anticipation of the impending crash. Ills difficulty was that he had no key to the finan cial resources of his visitors. The only thing was to throw out a feeler. "You are wanting a nice home, I take It, that can be bought at a favor able price for cash. You would con sider an Investment of, say " He paused, and Mrs. Hardy supplied the information for which he was waiting. "About twenty-five thousand dollars," she said. "We can hardly invest that much," Irene Interrupted, in a whisper. "We must have something to live on." "People here live on the profits ol their investments, do they not, Mr. Conward?" Mrs. Hardy inquired. "Oh, certainly," Conward agreed, and he plunged into a mass of inci dents to show how profitable Invest? ments had been to other clients of the firm. Then his mood of deliberation gave way to one of briskness ; he sum moned a car, and in a few minutes his clients were looking over the property which lie had recommended. Mrs. Hardy was an amateurish buyer, her tendency being alternately to excess of caution on one side and reckless ness on the other. Conward's manner pleased her; the house he showed pleased her, and she was eager to have it over with. But he was too shrewd to appear to encourage a hasty deci sion. He did not seize upon Mrs. Hardy'a remark that the house seemed perfectly satisfactory; on the con trary, he Insisted on showing other houses, which he quoted at such lm possible figures that presently the old lady was in a feverish haste to mak? a deposit lest some other buyer shoull forestall her. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Observation of Oil Belt Philosopher. A scientist has Just discovered that fish are intelligent. We had observed also that they don't bite on everything that comes along. Baxter Citizen. A London choir of one thousand voices has been organized tinder the auspices of the League ol Art to s If at public ceremonies. Take tablets without fear, If you see the safety "Bayer Cross." If you want the true, world-famous Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years, you must ask for "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." The "Bayer Cross" is stamped on each tablet and appears on each pack age for your protection against imi tations. In each package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" are safe and proper direc tions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia. Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism. Lumbago, Neuritis, nnd for Pain In general. Handy tin boxes containing 12 tab lets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger "Bayer" packages. As pirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Man ufacture of Monoucetlcacidester of Sallcyllcacid. Adv. A Bear Defined. Friend A bull, then, Is an optimist arid a bear is a pessimist. Operator Well, not exactly. 1 should call a bear an optimistic pes simist. He thinks things are going to smash and hopes to make money If they do. Pneumonia often follows Neglected Cold KILL THE COLD! HILL'S CASCARALQUININI coll remedy for 20 years lorm ate, sure, no breaks up a cold in 24 elieves grip in 3 civs, back if it fails. The genuine bos has a Red with Mr. Mill's picture. At All Drat Stmrea Sampling the Cellar Stock. "Has Bill changed much since he got out of the army?" "Not much. He ttlll spends a great deal of his time in a dugout." The Home Sector. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER. Constipation Invites other troubles which come speedily unles? quickly checked and overcome by Green's August Flower which Is a gentle laxa tive, regulates digestion both in stomach and intestines, cleans ana sweetens the stomach and alimentary canal, stimulates the liver to secrete the bile and Impurities from the blood. It is a sovereign remedy used in niany thousands of households all over the civilized world for more than half a century by those who have suffered with Indigestion, nervous dyspepsia, sluggish liver, coming up of food, pal pitation, constipation and other in testinal troubles. Sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. Try a bottle, take no substitute. Adv. Mr. Carnegie's Advice. "In considerable fear," said a bank er, "I once consulted Mr. Carnegie About a new venture. The business looked as If it ought to be profitable. There seemed to be a public need of It, Still there was some risk Involved, and I was afraid. "But Mr. Carnegie laughed at my fears. 'If it is a good thing plunge in he said. 'Far is old womanish. Fear Is what keeps untold millions from mak ing fortunes. When Benjamin Frank lln thought of starting a newspaper In Philadelphia his mother, greatly alarmed, tried to dissuade him. She pointed out that there were already two newspapers In America" Nothing Left. Ragged little Tom Brown had been committed to Juvenile hall, where he was Immediately given a bath, clean clothes, had his hair washed and cut fihort. His old clothes were burned. As his adenoids interfered seriously with his breathing they were removed. When he had recovered from the op eration the matron noticed that there was an unusually big and disfiguring wart at the end of his thumb. "Tom," he said, "I'll see that this wart Is removed today." A, look of absolute disgust spread over Tom's face. "Gosh I" he ex claimed. "Don't you let a fellow keep anything here 7" Harper's Magazine. i V X Standard -v in tab opiates y av noura r a. Money f'JWXX A. The Sweet Cereal Flavor of (GrapeNut lis not produced hy adding uar to this blend of wheat and malted barley: The sweetness is due? tcf ac . tual rain suvSar, self-develt ' 1 oped oy the processing and Ion baking ot this reor food! Tkeres a Reason WGrapeNuts 9 Reje IHDICZSVOSJI 6 Bell-ans Hot wafer Sure Relief LL-AEV3S FOR INDIGESTION E "BLUES" Causod by Millions of prop) who worry, ars despoa dent, have spells of n.entai depression. blue and are often melancholy, ballev that these conditions are due to outside lafluanca over which tbey have little or no control. Nearly always, however, they can be trace to an Internal source iwlU-stoiiiarh. Nor tm it to be wondered at. Arld-ctomach. befla nina; with such well deAned symptoms ae la digestion, belching, heartburn, bloat, etc, will. If not checked, in time affect to some deg-ree or other all the vital erf ana. The nervous system becomes derang-ed. Direction suffers. The blood la Impoverished. Health and strength are undermined. The victim of acid-stomach, although he may not know the cause of his ailments, feels hie bope, courage, ambition and energy slipping. And trulr life Is dark not worth much t the man or woman who lias acid-stomach! Get rid or Itt Don't let arid-stomach hole you back, wreck your health, make your days miserable, make you a victim of the "blues" and gloomy thoughts? Th-re la a marvelous modern remedy called KATONIO that brings, oh! such quick relief from your stomach miseries sets your stomach to right makes it strong, cool, sweet and eomfort able. Helps you get back your strength, vigor, vitality, enthusiasm and good cheer. 8e many thousands upon thousands of sufferer have used B ATONIC with such marvelously helpful results that we are sure you will feel the same way If you will just give it e trial, (let a big 60 cent box of EATONIO the good tasting tablets that you eat like a bit of csndy from your druggint today. Ha will return your money if results are ae even more than you eipect I L"ORYOUR ACSTOMAClO W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 9-1920, His Favorite Place. "He Is a man of extremes in hla moods. He Is either up in the garret or down in the cellar." "Well, if he was prudent enough to lay in a private stork 1 bet most of the time lie's down In the cellar SHE THOUGHT DYEING WAS OLD FASHIONED But "Diamond Dyes" Made Her Faded; Shabby, Old Garments Like New. Don't worry about perfect result Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed t give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool. silk. linen, cotton or mixed goods dresses Mouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, fenthers everything! Direction Book in package telta bo to diamond dye over any color. To match any material, have dealer sho you "Diamond Dye" Color Card. Adr, GETS MONEY FROM RUBBISH Invention of Englishman Has Proved Its Practical Value In a Num ber of Towns. , One of the most remarkable ma chines in the world has Just been in vented by an Englishman, W. P. Uoyle. It converts dust Into cash or, moro correctly speaking, it extracts what la worth saving from rubbish and pre pares it for redistribution. Cinders are washed, dust Is converted into fer tilizer, tins are cleaned, and paper and rags are sorted. Another bit of machinery ured in this wonderful Re fuse recovery plant" deals with clink ers, turning them into molded con crete blocks for building. It has been proved that every hundred tons ot waste produce $1C0, and since a town" of 75.000 inhabitants discards about one hundred tons of rubbish dally ono can easily work out the municipal revenue that 6uch a plant would pro duce. Not a few towns in the United Kingdom have already Installed a Hoyle rubbish converting plant Aber deen In one day collected $3,000 worth of discarded bottles, a week's Jam-jar collection In the dy of Sheffield real ized $000, while Glasgow estimates that one year's conversion of Its rub bish will brlug in $20,000. Novel. "I have a novel Idea for a film play." What Is it?" "The husband and wife in the plot have no serious marital dlfflcnltJes