The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, February 13, 1913, Image 6
^ <$>■ The Sable HORACE HA'ZELTINE LOUCUA COPY/P/GSiT' /3VZ, A C Pf CCA UPC &. CO., t SYNOPSIS. Robert Cameron, capitalist, consults Phillip Clyde, newspaper publisher, re farding anonymous threatening letters he as received. The first promises a sample of the writer’s power on a certain day. On that day the head Is mysteriously cut from a portrait of Cameron while the lat ter is in the room. Clyde has a theory that the portrait was mutilated while the room was unoccupied and the head later removed by means of a string, unnoticed by Cameron. Evelyn Grayson. Cameron s niece, with whom Clyde Is In love. “n”s the head of Cameron’s portrait nailed to a tree, where it was had been used as a target. Clyde pledges Evelyn to secrecy. <^lyde learns that a Chinese boy employed by Philetus Murphy, an artist living nearby, had borrowed a rifle from C am eron’s lodgekeper. Clyde makes an ex cuse to call on Murphy and is repulsed. Tie pretends to be investigating alleged Infractions of the game laws and speaks of finding the bowl of an opium pipe un der the tree where Cameron’s portrait was found. The Chinese boy is xjuna dead next morning. While visiting Cam eron in his dressing room a Nell Gwynne mirror is mysteriously shattered. Cameron becomes seriously ill as a result of tne shock. The third letter appears myster misly on Cameron’s sick bed. It manes direct threats against the life of Cameron *'Ivde tells Cameron the envelope wa. empty. He tells Evelyn everything ana plans to take Cameron on a yacht The yacht picks up a fisherman founa drifting helplessly In a boat. He Co the name of Johnson. Cameron disap pears from yacht while Clyde’s back is turned. CHAPTER IX.—Continued. "There’a no other explanation." he decided, conclusively. “You mean he committed suicide? "Call It what you like, sir.” “But there was no reason for him to do such a thing,” I objected. “I understand he’s been pretty ill, sir.” “He was ill, yes. But he was on the road to recovery.” And then, with the realization that I was speaking of Cameron in the past tense, as though It were already settled that I should never see him alive again, a shiver of horror swept over me. I know Mac L«eod observed it, for he said: "There’s been a drop in the tem perature, in the last half-hour. It’ll be more comfortable in my cabin, sir, if you don’t mind coming in, and talk ing the thing over a bit.” “Good Heavens, MacLeod," I ex claimed, turning on him with nervous savagery, “do you expect me to sit down and talk calmly at such a mo ment? 1 can’t.' It’s all I can do to stand still here, for a minute at a time. I feel I must do something. It’s torture to have one’s hands tied this way.” “I think I know how you feel. sir. Rut walking the deck will do no good, and if you could calm yourself eiiough to talk it over quietly, we might get down to something that would guide us, so to speak.” “Guide us?” I repeated. “Yes, sir. It’s not Impossible, you know, sir, that when he went over board he was picked up.” The light from his cabin porthole illuminated us both, and now as he looked at me he must have seen my perplexity. “You said yourself, sir,” he ex plained. “that you thought you heard the exhaust of some sort o’ craft not far away.” It was this reminder, I think, which Brought back my wool-gathering wits and steadied me to a perception of the real importance of the captain’s plea. Of one thing, at least, I was assured: Cameron was not a suicide. How he :ould have gone over the tafTrail with put my seeing or hearing him, I should never be able to understand. But gone he was, and it lay upon me to dis cover by whose assistance this mar velous disappearance was accom plished. And so It came about that, controlling my futile unrest, I wras presently seated in MacLeod’s swivel chair, while he, from a place on the side of his berth, fired pointed ques tions at me, which I either answered as best I could or returned in kind. “Now maybe it’s none of my busi ness, Mr. Clyde, but in view of to night's occurrence 1 think it’s perti nent to know why there was such a '.horough inspection of the Sibylla be fore we sailed, and such a lot of cau tion regarding the crew." That was the first of his volley, and for a mo ment it staggered me. I recognized, however, that this was not a time for quibbling, and as MacLeod had been ’or years a staunch soldier in Camer on's army of employees, I saw no harm in letting him know the truth. I “I’ll tell you,” I returned, frankly, ‘but it’s not to go any further. In the past nine weeks Mr. Cameron has beep receiving a series of threatening anonymous letters. The last one came a week ago today; and In it this was named as the dare for the climax.” “Climax?” he repeated, questioning tr “Yes. Today, the letter stated, Mr. Cameron would disappear.” The calm, phlegmatic young captain 3id not start. He simply narrowed his eyes in thought. “That’s odd,” he said, gravely, ‘damned odd." And then, after a sec ond's consideration, he asked: “Was that—but of course it was—why ho took this cruise?” “No,” I told him. “That was not his reason; though it was mine.” 1 did not mean to be enigmatic, but i suppose I was, for MacLeod showed plainly enough that he failed to un derstand. “You see,” I went c i, in elucidation, “Mr. Cameron did not know about this last threat. He was ill when the let ter came, and we kept it from him ” It was evident to me that the cap tain disapproved, but he held his peace. “What were the previous threats?” he asked, presently. “Nothing definite,” I answered. Simply that on certain fixed days the writers would demonstrate their pow er ” ’ vnd did. they?” “Most marvelously.” Again MacLeod was silent for a space. “Under the circumstances, Mr. Clyde, don't you think it would have been better if you’d told me about this?" "Mr. Cameron was very anxious that no one should know.” The captain compassed his right knee with his locked hands. "All the same,” he 6aid, "he'd never have been spirited off this yacht If I’d a’ known what was in the wind.” This statement annoyed me, and I resented it. "What could you have done?" I asked. "I was with him almost con tinuously." There came a strange, half-medita tive, half-bold look in the man’s eyes, and I was wondering whaf it portend ed, when, quite ignoring my question, he began speaking: "Vou see there oughtn’t to be any misunderstanding between you and me, sir. This is too serious a busi ness to be bungled because I am only captain of this yacht and you are the owner’s friend. So, if I speak plainly, sir, you’ll understand why, and not think me disrespectful” I smiled to reassure him, still puz zled, and added: "Go straight ahead, captain. You are perfectly right.” “Well,” he began, "I’ll tell you, Mr. Clyde. Your story, as you told It to me, has some weak points in it. You say, for instance, that you were with Mr. Cameron almost continuously. Now- I'm not mentioning the little while you were in here, early in the evening, but during the last quarter of an hour before you gave the alarm, you weren’t writh him, either.” I stared at the speaker for an in stant in absolute dumb amaze. "1 don’t know why you say that,” I said, at length, more hurt than an gered. "I told you that from the mo ment I last spoke to him, seated be side him there on the after-deck, un til I turned from the rail and found him gone, not more than two min utes elapsed. And that was God’s truth.” "You said you were listening for what you thought sounded like a mo tor boat, didn't you?" "I did.” “And you were leaning over the taff rail, looking for it, weren't you?” “I was.” “But you didn’t see it?” “No, I didn’t see it; and I couldn’t hear it after the first few seconds.” The captain had fixed a gaze on me that seemed aimed to penetrate to my soul's fiber. After my answer he was silent a moment. Then he said: “Where were you, Mr. Clyde, when that boat—motor, tug, or whatever she was—crossed within ten feet of the dory we are towing?” Had he struck me in the face I could not have been more dumfound ed. "What do you mean?” were the only words that came to me. “I mean that the craft you have been talking about came up and went astern of us, ten or twelve minutes before you gave the alarm that Mr. Cameron had vanished under your eyes. I was on the bridge and saw It myself—just a black shape, without lights, and her exhaust muffled, just as you say. You tell me that you and Mr. Cameron had been sitting there for three hours, at least; that you heard seven bells strike; that it was not more than fifteen or twenty min utes after this that you got up and went to the rail, and that you only stood there two minutes.” “I told you all of that, and every word Is the truth,” I insisted, vehe mently. “And yet,” he retorted accusingly, “and yet—eight bells had struck be fore you gave the alarm.” I had not thought of the time. In my panic it had not occurred to me, of course to ascertain the hour and minute. But Captain MacLeod knew. At sea they work by clock. At eight bells the watch had changed. “My dear fellow,” I exclaimed ris ing, "you certainly cannot for a mo ment suspect me of complicity.” He stood up, too; imperturbable. "I just want those things explained, that’s all,” was his reply. “And I can’t explain them,” I told him, candidly. “You say you saw the boat. I didn’t. You say it was after midnight when I came to you. It may have been. I don’t know. It may have been nearer twelve, when I went to the rail. My impression is that it was not. I’ll admit it is mys terious. The whole awful thing is mysterious.” My candor seemed to relieve him. “Well, Mr. Clyde,” he said, with equal sincerity, “maybe I was out spoken, but I wanted to know what you’d say to the points that were puzzling me.” “You did perfectly right,” I told him. "As you have said, there must be no secrets between us.” And then, as I resumed my seat, I asked: “What about the fisherman? He hasn’t evad ed his guard, has he?” MacLeod sat down again too. "He’s in where I put him, now,” he answered with a shade of reluctance, “but—I’m not sure; it’s almost as mysterious as the other—but I could have sworn I saw him come up that for’ard hatchway and go sneaking afl while I was on the bridge." “When was that?” I pressed, eager ly. “About a quarter of twelve.” “What did you do?" "Nothing, Just then. I waited. And while I was waiting I saw that black spooky craft come out of the dark and go skimming astern of us. 4 little after eight bells I came down from the bridge—I stopped there for just a minute to have a word with Brandon when he' came up—and then I went myself to look after Johnson and the man I’d set to watch him. The fisherman was in a bunk sound asleep, and the man swore he had been lying there snoring, for the past two hours. ’Who was it came up the ladder twen ty minutes ago?’ I asked. He looked at me as if he thought I was gone suddenly loony. ‘Before the watch changed?” he asked. I nodded. ‘Not a soul came or went,’ he said, ‘since I been here.’ ” ‘‘And the boat without lights?" I questioned. ‘‘Did you inquire about her? Who else saw her?” “I asked the lookouts; but—well, no. sir—and that’s very strange to me —neither of them saw her. I gave them both a rating. If they weren't asleep I don’t see how they could have missed her." The thing was growing more and more baffling. MacLeod was the last man to be accused of imaginative fan cies. He was thoroughly in earnest in what he had told me; and yet for neither of his statements had he the smallest corroboration. For my own part I was sure that, at the time he mentioned, no vessel of any descrip tion had passed anywhere near us. “What did you make the craft out to be?" "Weil, sir, I couldn’t say exactly. She was in sight only a minute, com ing in range of our own lights. She looked more like a tug than anything else; but she had more speed than any tug I ever saw. She hadn't the lines of a yacht.” "She wasn't a pilot boat?” "Oh, no, sir. New York pilots don’t cruise this far east, and the Boston pilots wouldn't be so far away from home either.” I offered the captain a cigar, which he declined, filling his pipe in prefer ence. When I lighted a cigar myself, I asked: "I suppose you have some theory, MacLeod. You don’t seriously think it was suicide?” As usual he w'as slow to answer. After a thoughtful second, he said: “I’d be sorry to think that, Mr. Clyde. Taking into consideration what you told me about the threat, and connecting that boat with it, it looks—” and then he paused, thought ful again. “It’s not in possibility," he went on, after a second, “that they could have plucked him olT with a line. But if that fellow I saw' going aft—Oh, Lord, no, sir! It’s past me to see a way out. All the same, we are keep ing that craft in sight, and if we can only get thirty knots out of the Sibylla again, we’ll find out what she is and what her business is, before morning.” CHAPTER X. A Woman of Intuition. Ill tidings, always a heavy burden, never weighed more heavily on any one than on me that dismal, rainy Sunday morning, on which I stepped from the Sibylla’s launch to the stone water steps of Cragholt. For two days we had searched the bays and inlets from Provincetown to Plymouth and from Siasconset to Providence; ques tioning at every pier and landing stage; making inquiry in every town and hamlet; but without a thimbleful of profit for our pains. As that black craft, with dimmed lights and muffled engines, had eluded our pursuit on the night of Cameron's disappearance, so for forty-eight hours succeeding she had baffled our quest. No one knew her; no one had seen her. As for that shaken, frayed, pallid fisherman. Peter Johnson, he ap peared below, rather than above, sus picion. If my knowledge of men went for anything he was too inferior both mentally and physically to be a par ticipant in any such plot as was here involved. He seemed to me woefully weak and wasted, and with as little brains as sinew. So, with enough money for a new mast and sail, we had put him and his dory ashore at our first landing, and had forthwith forgotten him. MacLeod had been inclined to con tinue the search, but I argued that any further efforts in that direction would be only a waste of time. The craft we were looking for might have come from any one of a thousand places and returned to any one of a thousand more. Some more effective, general and far-reaching steps must be taken, I held, and taken quickly. Indeed I felt now that to keep secret longer the conspiracy, as indicated in those mystic letters, would be little short of criminal. The aid of the po lice and the press must be invoked at once, and nothing left undone to trace the crime to its source. But my first and most onerous task was to acquaint Evelyn Grayson with the facts as I knew them. How I shrank from that duty is beyond any thing I can put Into words. I know it would have been far easier for me to have carried her definite news of her uncle’s death. What I had to tell was horrible in its stark obscurity. And yet, if I could have foreseen just what was to follow, I might have spared myself a goodly share of dis tress. I imagined I knew Evelyn Grayson, before this. I thought I had sounded the profundities of her fortitude and courage on the night that I spread be fore her and read with her that third and last letter. But my fancy did her an injustice. She was even more of a woman than I dreamed. Recently I chanced upon these lines by Thomas Dunn English, which must have been inspired by such a one as she: So much Is clear. Though little dangers they may fear. When greater perils men environ. Then women show a front of Iron; And, gentle In their manner, they Do bold things In a quiet way. Evelyn Grayson did a bold thing in a quiet way that morning. I have not yet forgotten how marble white she was, and yet how bravely she came, with springing step and lifted chin and fearless eyes. I had waited her coming in the music room, with its score of reminders of happy evenings in which he had participated. The chair he usually chose, in the corner, near the great bow window against which the east wind was now driving the rain in gusty splashes, took on a pathos which moved me to weakness. The Baudelaire lyric, spread open paged upon the music rack of the pi ano, stirred memories scarcely less harrowing. A photograph, an ash tray, a paper knife, all commonplace objects of themselves, but so linked to him by association, became, sud denly, instruments of emotional tor ture. In this environment, under these influences, I rose to meet her. word less. Yet my expression and attitude must have spoken loudly enough to confirm the dread that was in her heart, for even before she spoke I was 8ure that she knew. And then she had taken my two outstretched hands in hers and raised her brave eyes to mine, and low-voiced, but sure and tremorless, was saying: "I feared it, Philip. From the very first, I feared it.” And when I told her all, to the smallest detail, it was as though she were the man and 1 the woman; for the recital had been for me a very painful confession of my own incom petence, and its conclusion left me more nervously unstrung than at any time since the night of the strange catastrophe. With what heroic forti tude she heard the narrative may best be indicated by the statement that throughout it all she 6at calmly atten tive, but unquestioning, and with no sign of emotion beyond her continued pallor and a recurrent tensing of her small white hands. At the end I leaned forward and with left elbow on knee rested my forehead in my palm. She sat beside me on the same settee; and now she drew closer, and laying her cool right hand over my own dis engaged one, began stroking my hair with her left. For a full minute she said nothing. Then, in soothing ac cents: "I am glad you didn’t find the boat. That means he is on it. If you had found it, it would have been some or dinary thing having no connection with this affair, whatever.” It was odd reasoning, but very fem inine, and in an esoteric way, forceful. “But you made one mistake, Philip," she went on. “You should not have let that fisherman, Peter Johnson, go.” At this I raised my hea<} and regard ed her with something like astonish ment. "He was one of them,” she explained in a tone of conviction. "How can you say that?” I asked, a little nettled. It annoyed me that she should be so positive, knowing no more of the man than that which I had told her. “I feel it,” she answered. And that was all the reason she could give. I had not expected to find such de velopment of intuition regarding world ly matters in one so young, and so fresh from conventual seclusion. And then her judgment seemed to keep pace with her auguries; for when I spoke of inviting the aid of detectives and the newspapers, she begged me to consider. “I am afraid for him,” she pursued gravely. “Publicity might mean death. If they discover they are being sought, they may murder him. Somehow, I feel he is still alive; and so we must do nothing that will incite them to further violence.” ’ “But,” I returned, conscious of the force of her argument, yet failing to see how this caution could very well be exercised, "we can't find him with out seeking." “No, but we can seek him in se cret The newspapers must not tell the w’orld.” “The police would of course tell the newspapers,” I added. “We can do some things, without the police,” was her next assertion. “There are some things that I can do; and there are more that you can do.” She was thoughtful for a moment, and t®n: "I am so sorry about Peter Johnson! You should never have lost sight of him.” "We gave him money and God speed,” I reminded her. "Captain MacLeod must go back there, where you left him. Where was It? Siasconset? He must trace him. His trail won't lead to Glouces ter, I'm sure of that.” My self-esteem was not being vigor ously stimulated by the young lady at this juncture. Indeed. I was being made to feel more and more my stra tegical inferiority. “And I," she continued, with the methodical expediency of a command er-in-chief, so curiously inapposite in one so young and inexperienced as she: “and I shall find out about those letters.” "Find out what?” I asked in aston ishment. “Find out what manner of man wrote them." she amplified. “But how can you?” I inquired. “That seems a pretty big undertaking of itself, for one so small.” “I have thought of a way,” she de clared, noncommittally. "And what am I to do?” was my next question, feeling miserably small beside this efficient child. "You must give me the letter yon have, and help me look for the oth ers.” The first part of the command was easy enough of obedience; for the letter was in my pocket at the mo ment. But my assistance in searching for the first two communications was more energetic than successful. To gether we ransacked desks, bureaus, tables, closets, trunks, clothes In deed, every possible hiding place both at Cragbolt and on the Sibylla was carefully and systematically delved Into and exhausted without reward. Either Cameron had destroyed the let ters, or he had them on his person when he vanished from the yacht. At Evelyn’s request, however. 1 wrote copies of those two strangely couched, malevolent epistles, as near ly as I could remember them; and save, perhaps, for possibly two or three verbal errors they were, I think quite accurate. "And now,” I asked again, “what am I to do?” It was nearly midnight, and I was leaving her, my car waiting in the sopping driveway to carry me home. "You are not to worry any more than you possibly can help,” she told me, with a brave little smile, "for we are going to succeed. Aud tomorrow you must go to your office, and keep very, very silent about what has hap pened. And then you are to come to me again in the evening, and I will tell you all I have learned.” With which she gave me her hand to kiss, in the odd little French way she had—a way that could scarcely have been a part of her convent teach ing. As I come to review these matters now, it seems singular that I should have so readily consented to be guid ed by this girl’s will in a case of such grave importance; yet I cannot but believe there was something providen tial both in her assumption of leader ship and in my own unquestioning ac quiescence. For the day of office work and silence, which she enjoined was exactly what I needed to restore my nerves to their normal tension. It was, in fact, a sort of counter-irritant, which brought me up standing, with a revised self-confidence and recuperat ed energy. So when, a little before five o’clock that afternoon, just as I was making ready to run for my train, I heard Evelyn’s voice over the telephone, I was fairly tingling with ardor for the game; and her request to call on Pro fessor Griffin, the expert in Oriental literature, who occupied a chair in Co lumbia college, and lived a mile or more back from the Greenwich sta tion, was a welcome call to action. (TO BE CONTINUED.) m Jefferson as a Naturalist Carried Bones of Common Sloth to Philadelphia Supposing Them Those of Mammoth. It is said that when Thomas Jeffer son journeyed from Monticello to Philadelphia on his way to take the oath of office as vice president he car ried a lot of bones in his baggage. The bones, alleged to be those of a mammoth, had been found in Green brier county, Virginia, and sent to Monticello, where they were set up by Jefferson, who, it appears, enter tained a somewhat exaggerated no tion of his attainments in natural his tory, and who stood sponsor for the bones as those of "a carnivorous clawed animal entirely unknown to science." It was not until after Jefferson reached Philadelphia that he was un deceived, for at a glanoe the learned Doctor Wistar saw that they were the bones of tbe common sloth, several specimens of which he showed the Vir ginian. Jefferson, it is related, was greatly chagrined, especially as his discovery became known as Megalo nyx jeffersonii. It has been pointed out that, in directly, no less a naturalist than the great Buffon may have been responsi ble for Jefferson’s error. It was the Virginian’s practice to send Buffon specimens and information, and with the subtle flattery of a courtier the French naturalist wrote: "I should have consulted you, sir. before publishing my natural history, and then I should have been sure of the facts.” Love That Endures. Remember, that there is sometimes a fine love that never leaves a man’s heart It stays and waits!—Man chester Unioq| OLD CITY IN DECAY Bruges, in Belgium, Once Great est Town in World. Had 200,OCO Population Six Centuries Ago—Was Next to Venice in Com mercial Importance—Deserted When Sea Cut Off Town. Bruges, Belgium*— At the beginning of the fourteenth century Bruges was a city of 200,000 inhabitants. It was not only the most important city in Flanders, but next to Venice the greatest trade center in the world. Its harbor was filled with ships, and its people were enormously wealthy. Their homes were filled with every luxury. Their churches and public buildings were beautiful, and the in sides were decorated with precious gems, beautiful windows and exquisite carvings. Art flourished as the town grew richer, and it produced such painters as Van Eyck and Hans Memlinc. Then came an awful blight upon the city. The zivijn, or chanenl, which connected Bruges with the sea became clogged up with sand and mud. At first it was only the larg est ships that could not get past, but gradually the sand became so high that it formed a bank across the zivijn and Bruges was cut off from the sea. And with the loss of trade the town became deserted and fell into decay. The people that remain ed behind became so poor that alms houses had to be stationed through out the city and it fell upon the church to support them. Even to •his day out of the 55,000 inhabitants it still retains, 11,000 are paupers. It is a very sad old town and seems to be in a dreamy slumber from which even the gayest sunshine can not awaken it. Its brilliant glory has faded, but a mellower beauty is left that is still more poetic and alluring. The belfry alone seems to have ! lived through the past, and it rises ; high in the market place like an old I mother watching her sleeping chil | dren. The belfry is the heart and j soul of Bruges. In olden days a watchman was stationed here always to signal the approach of enemies or the breaking out of fire. In the square below the belfry market Is held, and here everything can be bought from a piano to a collar-button. In the corner of the market place is the famous chapel of the Holy Blood. In the under part of the chapel are a number of cold, damp cells where the people go to pray. In the upper chapel, which is very gorgeously decoratetd, the relic of the I-1 I Ancient Houee In Bruges. Holy Rlood is, kept. Once a year, on May 2, it is carried through the streets of Bruges at the head of a great procession and taken to the Cathedral of St. Sauveur and placed on the high altar while mass is cele brated. On this day the city is full of strangers, and it is decorated with flags, music is played in the streets and candles burn at every window in Bruges. At one side of the city, sit uated on the Minnewater, which was once the harbor of Bruges, is the Beguinage. It is an order of nuns. These nuns are free to enter the world at any time they choose. The people of Bruges live very much in their own narrow sphere and let the world wag as it will. They do not care what the world is doing and their daily topics are the scandal and the gossip of the town. They gather at the market place each day to talk over the affairs of Bruges as if it were the center of the world, but in the long winter evenings when j the old men and women are gath ered around the Are they speak to the children not of Bruges as it is or might be tomorrow, but of its glorious past, and of the days when the city ' was filled with merchants, dukes and princes; of the days when boats came from all over the world into the har bor and the flogs of all nations float ed over Bruges. HIS BED AFIRE, HE SLEEPS ON Friend Dashes into Flames and Drags to Place of Safety a Man Who Refuses to Wake Up. Atlanta, Ga.—'The leading man of | the "Please Go ’Way and Let Me ! Sleep” song, so popular a couple of i S years ago. bobbed up in real life here ! in the person of E. H. Seymour, an aged merchant, whose house was robbed and set on fire. Like the man in the song, Seymour's bed began to burn from under him, while he slept peacefully on. J. M. Thompson. a neighbor. hurried through the smoke to awaken the sleeping man. and dragged him. still half asleep, from the flaming quilts. So unusual was the whole affair, the police made investigations to see whether the sleeper had been drugged or not, but the very pillow on which his head rested was so singed with flames and blacked with smoke that it was impossible to tell whether any chloroform had been used or not. The man's beard was slightly scorched, but otherwise he was unharmed, though how he kept from choking in the smoke is still a mystery. For Eveiy Baking CALUMET BAKING POWDER Best—because it’s the purest. Best—because it never fails. Best— because it makes every baking light, fluffy and evenly raised. Best —because it is moder ate in cost—highest in quality. At your grocers. RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS World'* Pure Food Exp sition, Chicago, 111. Pari* Exposition. Franc March, 1912. You don l save money when you buy cheap or big-can baking powder. Don't be misled. Buy Calumet. lt‘s more economical — more wholesome—gives best results. Calumet is far superior to sour milk and soda. JAKEY’S FAULT VERY SERIOUS Father Rightly Felt Me Could Never Be Captain of Industry Unless He Was Taught to Improve. Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs took great pride in their young son, Jakey. Fa ther was determined to make him a great business man, a veritable cap tain of industry. One day mother heard loud screams coming from an adjoining room and rushed in to in vestigate the cause of the trouble. Father was vigorously administering a dose of ‘‘strap oil” to the young hopeful. “Ikey! Ikey! Vy for you are lick ing liddle Jakey?” "Because I caught him in a lie; dot’s vy.” replied father, continuing the chastisement. “A lie? You say a lie?” “Yes; I vill teach him to lie better as dot eef 1 haff to break effery bone in hees body.”—Exchange. Occasional Visitor. A notable housekeeper of the past generation, before the days of screens, had just announced with decision that she never had any flies. “But, Aunt Augusta,” faltered the timid visitor, “it seems to me that I saw a few in the dining room.” “Oh. those,” replied her aunt, with a majestic wave of the hand, "were the neighbors’ flies. They will come in occasionally. But I was saying, we never have any of our own.”—Youth's Companion. He only is rich who owns the day and no one owns the day who allows it to be invaded with worry, and fret, and anxiety.—Emerson. -Too Hasty. “Diggs can dash oft epigrams with out a moment's thought.” “That’s just the way they sound.” A DIFFERENCE. It Paid This Man to Change Food. “What is called ‘good living’ eventu ally brought me to a condition quite the reverse of good health,’ writes a N. Y. merchant. “Improper eating told on me till my stomach became so weak that food nauseated me, even the lightest and simplest lunch, and I was much de pressed after a night of uneasy slum ber, unfitting me for business. "This condition was discouraging, as I could find no way to improve it. Then I saw the advertisement of Grape-Nuts food, and decided to try it, and became delighted with the re suit. “For the past three years I have used Grape-Nuts and nothing else for my breakfast and for lunch before re tiring. It speedily set my stomach right and I congratulate myself that I have ^ regained my health. There is no great er comfort for a tired man than a lunch of Grape-Nuts. It insures restful sleep, and an awakc-ning in the Corn ing with a feeling of buoyant courage and hopefulness. Grape-Nuts has been a boon to mv whole family. It has made of our 2 year-old boy, who used to be unable to digest much of anything, a robust, healthy, little rascal weighing 32 pounds. Mankind certainly owes a debt of gratitude to the expert w'ho invented this perfect food.’’ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason.’’