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jit. .firm Heart toHeart By EDWIN A.NYE. THE WAY OF THE CROSS. A dear old lady wants me to write Something on the ministry of pain. She asks why there-should be pain in the world and, being here, how it can minister to good. Of course I do not know why pain Should be in the world except as 1 can see Its uses. The poet says, "No pain the body •offers that the soul may not grow by," which is to say the spirit may benefit by the travail of the body. By overcoming, the spirit may strengthen Itself. A brutal view Not necessarily. But if so it is in evitable. None of us can escape pain of the body or suffering of the mind. In every life there must be sorrow and change and loss aud decay. How shall one grow strong except one shoulders his cross? How- find the virtue of endurance save by depriva tion and agony of mind? Being human, there is no other way. You may or may not accept the re ligious view. You may or may not take up the challenge of the Nazarene —"He that would be my disciple let him deny himself and follow me." But You cannot escape the vicissitudes of mortal life. If pain and struggle do not come to you today they will come nevertheless. The blight of loss no less than the joy of increase is part of your mortal heritage. How will you meet the crisis? Stoically? That may be for some rfcre-sould Certain it is that, no mat ter how you may strive and cry out, you cannot change the decrees of des tiny. Why not try patience and submis sion and courage and faith? By so do ing you .transform the struggle from despair to hopefulness. You give your brave spirit a chance to fight its bat tles. And that chance for high courage is one of the ministries of pain. Whyjiotaccept that view? You can not disdain your trouble. But yon need *tiot cringe and cower under its load. Pain is a barrier against which forti tude and patience and faith may cast themselves and in the spirit of the overcoming life become valiant, though chastened. "Whom, the Lord loveth he chasten eth and gcourgeth every son whom he mjetveth." That is one way. It Is the way of the cross. DESIRE-WILL—SUCCESS. What a man wants that he will get or b* changed by the trying:.—Emerson. "I have been wanting to write to you," says my correspondent, "but hitherto have not had the time." I take my friend's words with a grain of salt. If he really had wanted to write to me—not being ill nor unusually en gaged—he would have found the time. "My dear, 1 have been wanting to call on you for an age," says the vis itor, "but you know I have been alto gether busy." And the friend understands that her caller has not wanted to call or she would have done so. What one wants he gets. A strong desire puts the will power Into action. A whole hearted wanting of a thing Is a leverage in getting it. Here is the formula: Desire will success. The formula is as true, other things being equal, as is the law of physics respecting a moving body. In order to find the impact, or striking force, of a moving body you multiply the velocity of the body by Its weight. So of accomplishment. Multiply a real want by a real will power and you will get the Impact of effect upon the thing desired. One of my friends, hearing of a mu tual friend who at the age of forty, though married and with a family to support, entered a university, said: "I wish I could do that. I have al ways wanted a classical education." He did not want It! If he very much wanted that educa tion he would get it. The man who thus excused himself from trying was rich and a bachelor. Mostly we get what we want. Miracles aside, nothing can defeat the divine combination of wishing and willing. And— As Emerson says, if in the extreme exception we do not get our desire we are thereby changed into something stronger and better. We get what we want badly enough to try hard enough to get it. "THE CHOCOLATE SOLDIER." For many years comic opera has had Its merry jest at the expense of the mock hero, who carried chocolates in stead of bullets In his cartridge belt. Ha, ha, ha! To the ragtime of musical comedy the people lipve laughed at the cari tature'd soldjers of the Balkans—the soldiers of Bulgaria and Servla and Montenegro and Greece. And now? Thewe chocolate soldiers have met the Itfvtncible Turk, and the crimson Chapter has been one of the reddest in the annals of warfare. The laugh is out of the other corner of the mouth. These rehqcolate soldiers have chased the retreating flag of the Ottomaji en- pit'£ across the plains of Thrace and whgre kiosk and minaret haVe flaunted in defiance have lifted the cross in the place of the crescent. The Gordian knot which the diplo matic palaver of "the powers" could not untie has been cut by the sword of the chocolate soldier. Do you remember "Mme. Chrysan themumV" i Before the Jtusso-.Tapanese war that opera was much exploited, and thou- Bauds laughed at the droll nonsense. The Japanese soldier was featured i as the toy soldier. Ilis diminutive size was exaggerated and his llliiputian swagger made grotesque. But— The toy soldier soon put that opera out of business when he began to tight "the bear who walks like a man." There- was nothing to laugh at when the toy soldier went up 20.'! Meter hill into the jaws of death, into the mouth of hell. It was not a comic spectacle when he gave his body for a bridge over the dit'-hes at fort Arthur, and the world did not smile when his small self helped to make the windrows of the dead at Mukden. Longfellow says: "War is a terrible trade, but in the' cause that is just, sweet is the smell of powder." You cannot tell what is in a small man until he is tested. And 5od is not always on the side of the heaviest battalions. Beware of the chocolate soldier with a righteous cause IMPROVING THE TIME. Hundreds of thousands of dollars arc being spent in the effort to find one sixteenth of a second that is missing in the calculations of the world's as tronomers. A special building fitted with appa ratus was erected—because In the hour glass of' time one small grain of sand was missing! The fraction must bo found. Because the world's longitude is cal culated on the sun's time as recorded at (Sreonwich and faris and Washing ton, so that every calculation must ac count for every atom of time. If not If not every meridian line on earth would neoil to be shifted, every bound nry line between countries and states changed and every map of the world made over. And the movements of the planets would be variant! Io you see the tremendous import of an instant of time? Time is now! All there is of time or ever will lie is comprehended in that now. The past is nothing: the future is not born and never will be. So far as humans are concerned there is absolutely nothing save now. Therefore: Let us utilize the only thing we have. We cannot turn back the dial, neither make the sun stand still. We cannot measure the value of the time we have lost nor compute the value of that which has not yet come to us. The present is potential. He who best'improves what he has best appreciates its value. Therefore you will find upon the desk of the busy man this motto: "Do it Now." He is too busy for regrets over the last chance and does not put, off until tomorrow the only thing he has in hand. N-O-W spells opportunity. Today is the day of salvation. To day you have the desire to do. Today you have the strength to perform. To day you have the hope of accomplish ment. Today you have the time to succeed. Do it today. Sufficient unto the day is the evil— and the good—thereof. Yesterday holds nothiug but a memory: tomorrow noth ing but a promise. Today is the only day. Do it now! "THE WOMAN TEMPTED ME." "Sixty-nine per cent of the inmates of a western prison,'' says a recent writer, "say that they were led to com mit crime by the extravagance of their wives." Balderdash! Within the limits of a reasonable probability it may be stated that per cent of that 00 are unconscionable liars. There's Adam, for instance. Scarcely can there be a doubt that our valiant forbear lusted after that forbidden fruit until his mouth water ed over the thought of its succulence. And, after he had hypnotized Eve to the point of plucking away the apple, he laid the entire blame on her frail young shoulders. "The woman thou gavest me, she tempted me." And the males of lineal descent from Adam to now have followed the like excuse. Now— It must be admitted there are some silly, improvident and extravagant wives. And it may be that some hus bands of weak brain stuff have indi rectly been driven to the commission of a crime by the sort of wife who Insists upon spending more money than her husband earns, but— The excuse is a frayed one. The reasons why a man gets drunk are varied. He gets drunk because he wants to drink, or because somebody Invites him, or because he has made a bad investment, or because he Is mad at somebody, or just because. Under the influence of the liquor he commits a crime. Whereupon'. having been bronght to bay. he whines abjectedly concerning his "wretched domestic affairs" and avows that he was driven to the crime by the extravagance or the nagging or the unfaithfulness of his wife. Mostly such charges are libel. Exceptions aside, more men tluu Mads of Beirijl Served When the Tuilleries was being repair ed Napoleon suspected that the up holsterer's charges were higher than they should be. So he asked one of his ministers, who was with him, bov much the ivory egg at the end of the bell rope ought to cost. "1 do not know," was the answer. "It shall be ascertained," said Na poleon. Thereupon he cut off the ivory handle, called for a valet, bade him dress himself in plain clothes, inquire the price of such articles at several shops in faris and order a dozen as if for himself. The valet bought them for two-thirds of the price that the emperor had had to pay. Napoleon, inferring that the same overcharge had been made in the other articles, deducted a third from the entire account and informed the tradesman that it was done at his own express command because on In vestigation he had found the charges to be exorbitant. A DREAM AND A CRIME. The Story of a Slumber Vision That Comes From Cicero. Cicero furnishes us with a tale of two Arcadians, who. traveling togeth er. arrived at Magara. a city of Greece, between Athens and Corinth, where ouo of them lodged in a friend's house and the other at an inn. After supper the person who lodged at the private house went to bed and, falling asleen, dreamed that his friend at the inn appeared to him and beg ged his .assistance, because the inn keeper was going to kill him. The man Immediately got out of bed, much frightened at the dream but, re covering himself and falling asleep again, his friend appeared to him a second time and desired that, as he would not assist htm in time, he would at least care not to let his death go un punished—that the innkeeper, having murdered him. had thrown his body in a cart and covered it with rubbish. He therefore begged that he would be at the city gate in the morning before the cart was out. Struck with this new dream, he went early to the gate, saw the cart and asked the driver what was in it The diiver immediately fled. -The dead bodv was taken out of the cart and the Innkeeper apprehended and exe cuted. No Secret Telegraph System. Many persons are of the opinion that the wireless system of communication Is particularly subject to tapping: but. according to the Scientific American, no telegraph system is absolutely se cret. Any one familiar with the Morse code can read ordinary messages enter ing any telegraph office. At Poldbu, on a telephone connected to a long horizontal wire, the message passing on a government telegraph line a quar ter of a mile away can be distinctly read. It has been shown that it is possible to pick up at a distance, on another circuit, conversation which may be passing through a telephone or telegraph wire. On one occasiou an investigator was able to interfere from u distance with the working of the or dinary telephones in Liverpool. Why Rain Clouds Are Black. The color of a cloud depends on the manner in which the sunlight falls upon it and the position of the observ er. It will be noticed that high clouds are always white or light in color, and this is because the light by which they are seen is reflected1 from the uuder surfaee by the numberless drops of moisture which go to form the cloud Heavy rain clouds, on the other hand, are found much nearer the earth, and so the light falls on them more direct ly from above, giving a silver lining to the cloud, though the undersurface ap: pears black owing to. the complete re flection and absorption of the light by the upper layers. Seen from above by an observer in a balloon, the blackest rain clouds appear of the most daz y.lingly brilliant white. Death by Boiling. In old England, before the law was passed which prohibited "cruel and un usual forms of punishment," murder ers were often condemned to death by boiling. In such cases the victims were chained In large kettles of cold water, whi i were gradually heated until it cam -d the flesh to drop from the bones. The last English victim of the "boiling death" was one Rouse, a cook, who. it was alleged, had killed seventeen persons. A Bad Egg. "Owens Is trying to strike every one he meets for a loan. He's a bad egg. that fellow." "Why do you call him that?" "When he's broke he makes the fact deucedly conspicuous."—Boston Tran script. No Deception. Toff—You told me that horse was free from faults. Why. It's blind. Dealer—Blind? Well, that's not a fault. That's a cruel misfortune.—San Francisco Chronicle. Those edges soonest turn that are most keen. A sober moderation stands •nre. No violent extremes endure,— Aleyn. Uphill' ll li* l"^ rrfrt'»»ir'riuVl nfri With Hon««ty and Economy. Emperor Napoleon I., dressed in plain clothes, often visitfed the markets of Paris in order to learn the current prices of food and find out whether his household officers served him with honesty and economy. In "Foreign Reminiscences" Richard Lord Hol land says that this was only one illus tration of the emperor's thrift arid shrewdness. A FIGHT FOR A WIFE By M. QUAD Copyright, 1912, by Associated Lit erary Press. "I dunno much about romance, as i they calls it, but I reckon 1 shaved it I mighty clus when I got my wife. One day, when 1 was a young feller of twenty-two. I seen n gal over on t'other side of the mountings that jest filled the bill. I made up to her and was talkin' 'bout b'ars and wildcats and slch when her mother steps in and sez: 'Stranger, mebbe yo' are wantin' to take my gal away fur a wife?' "'I'm reckcnin' to consider that I would,' I replies. 'Then I'll blow the horn fur her pop to cum outer the woods and tell yo' what Is what!' "She blowed and blowed. and bimeby the old mau appeared. He was a powerful man, and he didn't look good natured. His name was Babbit, and arter look in' me over he'sez: 'Stranger, it s got to be a mighty good man who takes my darter Sue away fur his wife. How fur kin any body h'ar yo' holler?' 'Two miles, if the wind Is right,' sezl. "'And about yo'r jumpin'?' 'It's clus to eight feet when I don't slip.' 'Hev yo* ever dun any climbin'?' "'I hev. I've climbed the tallest tree in sight of these yere Cumberland mountings.' 'And the number of b'ars and wild cats what yo've slain?' he goes on. seemin' to want to pick a furse with me. "'They'd purty nigh 011 yo'r cabin.' sez I, feeliu' a leetle riled at the way he spoke. 'Well,' sez he, arter stoppin' to con sider a bit. 'nobody kin take that gal away jest bekase he kin hoot or climb or kill varmints. He's got to lay me on my back in a fa'r font. I'll gin you a week to think it over. If yo' want the gal yo' must cum back and tackle me, and I'm tellin' yo' I'm a bad crit ter as long as I've got one foot on the airth.' "I went away feelin' sort o' cast down, but the mo' 1 thought of it the mo' I wanted the gal Sue fur my wife. That night 1 made up my mind that I'd try fur her, and next day I went back to the cabin. Her pop was thar and walkin* around aud feelin' power ful peart. "Thar was a el'ar space in the front of bis cabin," said the old man. "and when the gal and her mother had cum outdoahs we threw off our coats and begun bizness. I was accounted a powerful hand on a wrassle, but that man was also a powerful critter, and I reckoned I'd hev to hev help from the Lawd to gain the victory. It was 10 o'clock In the mawnin" when we begun, and the clock was jest strikin' 1 when I flopped him on his back. That spot on the ground looked as if fo'ty hawgs had bin rootin' it up fur a week, and lie was so beat out he could hardly speak. 5Io' than twenty times In them three hours that critter had me almost dun fur, but I'd send up a sort of prayer and git a new hold, and at last I fetched him. When he was able to talk he riz up and took my band and sez: "'Stranger, it was a far wrassle. and I've been flopped. I wouldn't 'a be lieved yo' could hev dnn It. but yo' did, and I'm sayln' yo' ar' a purty good mau. Howsumever, it ain't over yit. Yo've got to lick me to git Sue, and I know you kin' never do it. We'll take three days to rest up. and then yo' kin cum back and tackle me.''' "And did you go?" I asked as the old man made a long pause. "Fur suah," he replied. "I was mighty sore and lame, but I knowed he would be as bad off. Besides, that gal Sue had hooted fur me when I flopped her pop. and I knowed by that she was with me and would hope fur me to come out on top. In three days I went back to hev it out. The critter was a-lookln' fur me and glad to see me. 'How's it to be?' sez I. «"A fa'r fout,' sez he, 'no throwtn' rocks nor hittin' with clubs. Whoop! Cock-a-doodle-do!' "Waal, we went at it. Sue and her maw was out thar as befo', and the gal gin me a smile as I went in. It was a rough and tumble fout. I Jest knowed I'd got to do my level best or go under, and I lost no chances.- That fout last ed mighty nigh two hours, and two or three times I was almost on the p'int of lettin' go. Bimeby, howsumever, 1 seen that Babbit was gettin' tired out, and the gal clapped her hands and sicked me on. Ten minits arter that 1 had him whopped. Thar wasn't no mistake about it, bekase he riz up and sez to me: ".'Zeb White, I'm a whopped man, and that gal is yo'rs. I didn't believe thar was a critter on these mountings as could make me hoot, but yo* dun it. .And now when do yo' want the gal?' 'Right now, I reckon,' sez I. "'Ain't it purty sudden?' 'Not so very, bein' as she's ready to go.' 'Then, maw, bring out the broom stick and let 'em jump over it, and if they wan.t to be married toy a preacher they kin do It sum other tlmeA" "And you took the girl home?" I asked. "Sartlnly," replied Zeb. "Yes, sab, took her right home with me, with her feather bed on my back, and she's out thar in the kitchen makln' mince pies this minit As I was sayln', these yere marriages of today don't amount "to shacks. When yo* lava gal and hev to Mck her ole pop to git her then yo' know (she's wuth the gittln'." V u', -, 25 Per Cent Discount Sale Commencing with this issue we will, for two weeks, sell the following goods at a 25 per cent discount for cash. This is a real discount, and you'll find every article marked in plain figures—you can figure the discount yourself: China Both hand painted ana table China. For instance, a f2.00 plate will cost you during this sale $1.50. Cut Glass A $2.50 Sugar and Creamer will cost you $1.88. A $1.25 nappy will cost you only 94c. A salad bowl at $4.50 will cost you ?3.38, and so on. Jewelry This includes e^eiything in our line except watches, and our Big Ben clocks. It includes stick pins, cuff links, Bar pins, neclc chains, brooches, pendants, etc., etc., at 25 per cent off our regular preie. Silverware Spoons knives and forks, gravy ladles, etc. For instance, a set of six tea spoons at $2.50 will cost you during this sale only $1.88. Hand Bags $2.00 Hand Bags for $1.50 Hair Brushes 50c. Brush will cost 38c $1.00 Brush will cost 75c. $1.50 Brush will cost $1.12 and so on. Rubber Goods Hot water Lotties at $2.00 only $1.50 Hot water bottles at $3.00, only ¥2.I'd, Fountain syringes, and in fact everything rubber goods. Pictures We have an extra fine assortment from 10c to they are priced low in the first place. Hand Mirrors In fact mirrors of every kind that we have in stock. SI.12 will buy you a $1.50 mirror. Mirrors run from 55c to $3.00. Pocket Books, Pipes, Box Paper, Box Candy Soaps—of all kinds Games, Sleds, Pennants, Pillows, Goggles, Albums, Post Cards* Casseroles, Vases, Toilet Sets, You will find this a good time to buy something you have wanted in the above list. We sell our goods right at all times and when you get a 25 per cent discount ait the Benno Drug Co. it means MONEY SAVED FOR YOU. REMEMBER---25 per cent discount until January 15th Thermometers Every home should have a good thermometer. We have them from 35c to $1.50. Why not get a fever thermometer? It saves money in doc tors' bills as it foretells ill ness, which will help you in prevent ing it.. $1.00 and $1.25. Get Your Eyes Tested During the month of January we will test your eyes, and guarantee the work, same as always, and we will give you the benefit of a 25 per cent discount. $7.00 glasses at $5.25. $10.00 glasses at $7.50. $4.00 glasses at $3.00. You who suf fer from headaches, dizziness, pain in the eyes, will find this a good time to get fitted with glasses. We guarantee our work. 411 Nyai Remedies 50 per cent discount We need room for our toilet section and to get it we intiend to close out our entire line of N yal remedies at 50c on the dollar. Rexall Remedies The kind of remedies we know are good, the kind we recom mend to our customers. We couldn't afford to if) they didn't back up our statements. Every Rexall preparation is guaran teed to give satisfaction, or you get your MONEY BACK. You don't have to take anything in exchange—just ask for your money. Rexall Lesperine The good antiseptic. Every family should have a bottle in the house to ward off dangerous sickness. Price 50c. Rexall Blood Tablets If your blood is poor, try a box of Rexall Blood Tablets. Do it now. Don't wait till spring. Price 50c. Rexall Rubbing Oil For sprains, lame back and arms. We have also found it the best thing a person can use for a cold in throat or chest. Just rub it in and cover with a cloth. It will cure a cold in a hurry. 25c and 50c a bottle. There is.no c.ure-all In the Rex all remedies. Each remedy is the best known treatment Cor the ailment it is recommended for. We have used them ourselves. The Benno Drug Co. appreciates the business It has had in the past year,' and we will endeavor to merit a continuation for the coming year. We try to treat aU alike. Sometimes little differences do arise, but we always stand ready to rectify any misunderstanding. We are as human as anyone. Take advantage of the new parcel post law. We will fill phone orders and mail: orders promptly. You have the largest stock of drug store wants and jewelry in the northwest to choose, from at the Benno Drug Co. BENNO DRUG & JEWELRY CO. The Rexall Store Merchandisers vT:K'---' ^rr•y-""*i''' $1.00, and