THE NEWS, CHAPEL VERY WEAKLY FOR SEVERAL YEARS North Carolina Lady Describe* the Symptoms From Which She Suffered and Which She Says Cardui Relieved. Trap Hill, N. C.—Mrs. Eudora Hol brook, recently made this statement: “I was very weakly for three or four years with womanly troubles. I was much worse at special times. Every month I would have to lie in bed for three or four days. My chief suffering was in my back. I could not tell how badly it ached, but it seemed as if it could not pos sibly ache worse. Whenever I would get tired, or if I was much on my feet, it would ache. Cardui was all the medicine I took. I saw, with the first bottle, that I was being benefited, but I kept right on for five bottles regularly. By this time I was so I could do all my own work, which for some time I had not been able to do. That is the only time I ever took It regularly, but I always have it on hand to use when I do not feel well and it always helps me.” With a successful record of over 40 years to its credit, Cardui has proven its merit in the treatment of many of the simple ailments peculiar to women. Try it. At your druggists.—Adv. Entirely Separate. Millie—“You have no business to kiss me.” Billie—“I never combine business with pleasure.” UP A SINGIN’! Tomorrow will be clear and bright, if you take “Cascarets” tonight Feeling half-sick, bilious, consti pated? Ambition way below zero? Here is help! Take Cascarets tonight for your liver and bowels. You’ll wake up clear, rosy, a M nd full of life. Cas carets act without griping or incon venience. They never sicken you like CaloiflMMkOil or nasty, harshly pills. so little too—Cas- carets 5W|IWhile you sleep.—Adv. Keeps Them Interested, Anyhow. A habitual falsifier always seems able to get a number of people inter ested in the hope that some day they’ll catch him in the truth. CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Tells How to Get Quick Relief from Head-Colds. It’s Splendid! In one minute your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. No strug gling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It pen- ertates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. It’s just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh—Relief comes so quickly.—Adv. Making Progress. “Yes, I’m a teacher now.” “How are you getting along?” “Well, I’m learning.” If You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are ex tensively advertised, all at once' drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says “Take for example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent re sults, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfills al most every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and Bladder ailments; corrects uri nary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swapip-Root by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores.--Adv. The auto that attempts flying is apt to turn turtle. I WHITE MAN Author of “Home" "Through Stained Glass, (Copyright, 1919, by Bobbs-Merrill Co.) ANDREA IS SAVED BY WHITE MAN’S CLEVER MARKSMANSHIP. Andrea Pellor, handsome daughter of Lord Pellor, impecunious aristocrat. Is doomed to marry an. illiterate but wealthy middle-aged diamond mine owner. She disconsolately wanders from her hotel in South Africa, and discovers an aviator about to fly from the beach. Impulsively, of course imagining that the trip will be merely a pleasant excursion, she begs to be taken for a flight, although she does not know him. He somewhat unwillingly agrees, and they start. When she realizes her unknown aviator is not going back Andrea in desperation tries to choke him with one of her stockings. He thwarts her and they sail on into the very heart of Africa. Landing in an immense craal, Andrea finds the natives all bow in worship to her mysterious companion. She is given a slave boy, “Bathtub,” and the White Man sets about building a hut for her. White Man continues deaf to Andrea’s pleadings to be restored to her friends. She goes on a day’s hunting trip with White Man and thoroughly enjoys the exciting experience. Andrea, worrying over her deplorable lack of change of clothing, is surprised and delighted when a trunk, loaded with everything in the way of clothing dear to the feminine heart, is dropped at her doorway by stalwart natives and she is told by White Man that they are hers. White Man by a skillful shot saves her from the attack of a sable bull and she is fast becoming reconciled to her fate after eight days in the craal. CHAPTER VI.—Continued. “Certainly,” he answered, absorbed in his topic. “Exchanged where there’s another daughter available; where there isn’t, money is refunded by order of the courts. But what I was driving at is that in spite of the contention mentioned above, wherever a woman is concerned a black can never get it out of his head that she can be replaced at the regular market price. Now you’ve got the kernel of his whole attitude toward women.” “So if it had been you they wouldn’t have laughed and yelled.” “In this case, yes,” he said. “They most certainly would, because they had no direct responsibility. But where responsibility attaches the rule for men is a life for a life, and it’s a rule that has no exceptions. Anyone can brain a woman if he feels like it and get away with the identical obolo her husband paid for her.” “You seem to be a great admirer of the native social system,” said Andrea quietly. “I am,” answered M’sungo. “For natives, of course.” “Are you sure you’re not a bit taint ed with it for yourself?” “Sure,” he answered promptly. “That’s part of the secret of my grip on every country I’ve shot over. I’m aloof. I’ve never turned my back on the White Man’s God. Circular A is not for me.” “What’s Circular A?” He hesitated. '“Circular A,” he said finally, “is the regulation that governs the relations between British officials under the colonial office and the wom en of the tribes they govern.” “I’m British,” said Andrea, after a pause, “and I blush for the necessity.” “You are prompt, like most of us,” said M’sungo, “to sit in judgment be fore any force of nature that you’ve never felt. Poor devils of clean-bred youngsters! Take one that I knew. Three weeks’ training under his prede cessor, crazy to leave; a hundred thousand natives under his sole rule; one, perhaps two, bearded white faces a year. The long, long days after the sportsman has been swallowed by the pot-hunter, when game becomes just meat! And then, the fatal hour at dusk when a passing native girl—any girl—looks to him like some woman at home! He marries, not by canonicals perhaps, but by the common law of the land, and the ‘people at home’ shout ‘crucify him,’ but in the end it’s God alone that will judge his agony and measure the price.” He stopped speaking and for a long time they traveled in silence. The sun was sinking fast—so fast that it seemed to be dropping by jerks, like the loose hand of a grandfather’s clock. “There is no twilight in the tropics,” said M’sungo, “by the deliberate judg ment of God who knows the capacity get in one more nasty bit of cleverness before—before I died!” “Oh, no,” protested M’sungo. “Go easy, now. Why, Marguerite has done that dozens of times. He knows ex- actly how to slice off his rider, besides, he always stops.” “But what if he hadn’t—what had?” continued Andrea hotly, you know what I mean. What had killed me?” And if he “Oh, if he “But he wouldn’t,” insisted the man weakly. “He wouldn’t think of it.” Andrea pounded the horn of her sad dle. “But—what—if—he—had?” M’sungo suddenly whirled, thereby winding the quiescent neck of Mar guerite around his waist. He caught Andrea by both arms and fixed her startled eyes with the blaze of his own. “You will have it!” he said, shaking her lightly, “your d per sonal element! Well, I’ll give it to you. If he’d hurt so much as a hair of your head I’d have shot him and then my self and left word with you to bury us both in the same grave.” . She flushed and looked away. When her eyes came back to his set face there were three kinds of , sparkling wickedness in them—tenderness, the forked tongue of a serpent, and a two- edged knife. She chose the knife. “White Man,” she said, “that would have been adorable at the price—sim ply adorable!” By GEORGE AGNEW CHAMBERLAIN 'John Bogardus,” Etc. pleading in the tone of her voice made him turn boldly to the personal, after all, and however much we may jeer at it, the ultimate measure of sincerity. “I will,” he said. “If ever I’m bent on plundering the heart of a woman, I’ll travel the highroad of surrender in the company of ravage and love. I’ll give and still give and with each giv ing will grow the heaped mountain of my demands. You see it, don’t you? That’s justifiable plunder.” Andrea’s cheeks flushed, her eyes were dreamy with new thoughts and old emotions. While the supply of the vast larder and the supervision of the fiber camp formed the major part of M’sungo’s untiring industry they were by no means the total of his affairs. Watch ing him, Andrea soon learned why he never lunched. He hadn’t the time; too many things pressed to his atten tion. He was a governor on no mean scale and during the midday rest hour he would pass from group to group settling all those disputes which could be determined without recourse to legal argument. In this manner he sifted to a minimum the cases to come before the solemn conclave of chiefs. On the first occasion that Andrea witnessed this tribal ceremony which occurred monthly at a certain stage of the moon, she began by feeling huffed but, lacking an audience for her mood, soon gave it up for one of scornful amusement which, in turn, surrendered to an interest that almost amounted to awe. The day in question began with the curt information from M’sungo, who appeared carefully groomed and, fol- the first time in her experience, dressed in punctilious mufti, that she would have to amuse herself for twelve hours without his aid. Mysti fied, she awaited developments, and they came—rapidly. Under the great acacia was placed a table and behind it a camp armchair. To the right and left of this throne of of the chart of man and would have it burst.” “I can feel what you mean,” swered Andrea, “even though haven’t really said it in words. not an- you The heart can hold just so much beauty and no more; and even now, mine is aching!” “Andrea Pellor,” said M’sungo, “you have the faculty of your sex. have pinned the butterfly.” You She felt a sudden revulsion, a rage at this man, this stranger, who talked as she imagined he would fight, with out gloves. Her eyes narrowed. “By the way, when Marguerite bolted, just what was it you shouted at me?” He paused in his stride so suddenly that the dozing donkey butted into him and almost knocked him over. “Eh? What?” he asked to gain time. “Come on,” persisted Andrea. “Just say it again—what you shouted.” “Well,” lied M’sungo, “I may not remember the exact words, but it was to the effect that you’d him off or jump off.” “Something like that,” incisively, “only shorter. ‘Marry him or jump off!’ : “I believe you’re right,’ better head said Andrea You yelled, said M’sun- go, and added, apologetically, “You see, I didn’t have much time to think.” “Exactly!” said Andrea. “Instinc tively all you saw was a joke, like every nigger in the line. You didn’t care what happened to me. I might have been brained under that tree and you knew it and all you could think of was that you just had time to The weeks that followed were the, remaking of Andrea physically. Eac^ day (she walked 1 more atd felt it les™ From head to toes her body was with out blemish and in her eyes, her cheeks and in the spring of her light step, sheer health flew its rejoicing banner. Day by day she followed M’sungo farther afield, took more of an interest in what he was doing be cause she understood it better and learned to wait before she sat in judg ment on his actions, often surprising, always swift and assured. She even hardened herself to accompanying him on his hunts for meat for the -camp pot and there was nothing that he did that gave her a deeper insight into his composition than this same butcher ing. He made no secret of his distaste for the job and never an apology. Hav ing a disagreeable task on his hands he faced it squarely and going out to kill, laid his plans, held to them with unswerving concentration and killed with a dispatch that was blood-cur dling but admirable. It was during the return from one of these expeditions that he expound ed his definition of justifiable plunder. With his memory raw, as is the whole world’s, from contact with the long- heralded Superman come to life to ex pose in the flesh the brutalizing doc trine of “thine is mine if I can take it,” he found himself on treacherous ground and his words picked their way slowly as though bent on avoid ing all misunderstanding. “It is the truth,” he said thought fully, “that the spirit of man advances only by plunder and the -corollary to that is the fact that the plundered world is always the more fruitful, but the unpardonable sin as far as peoples are concerned is the failure to define robbery under arms from productive plunder, and you can almost say the same thing of individual relationship.” He glanced at her and something of his earnestness passed to her with the look. “Go on,” she said kindly. “Can you believe me,” he continued, “when I tell you that no one was more surprised than the Superman himself when he assumed flesh after his long preparation and awoke to find himself a Vandal—a Frankenstein? The theory was perfect—all that was lacking were the things .of the spirit, the breath of life without which any ani mated creation becomes automatically a monster. “Ami yet the collective spirit of man advam.es only I " plunder. You can se^ : in my own country, yesterday, 1^ -.. a. today and it will come in the Dispensing Justice With a Breathless Rush. justice stood in a crescent fourteen other seats of varying dignity—chairs, petroleum cases, kerosene tins and an inverted bucket—for every native king, be he monarch of but one vil lage, has the right to sit in the pres ence of authority, whatever its grade. The white man took the armchair and immediately, to the rumble of a dozen tom-toms, a horde of natives—all men —swarmed into the beaten the craal. Those natives who lacked hall-mark were squatting court of the royal on their oti " Americas irrow. The great- evider dang g men, v s that ruins are ,i r -mpation and that Tam •• e-s us face to face ke . , k of the road ‘ uii, While Man,” said Andrea, he? b; . puckered with internal effor!. “please ap- :. ; To Wividuals.” Ik si anted to . ■ her to km tradh tions.of her sex . : something truly heels in a vast mass of serrated and concentric circles of which the inner- most left an open space whose peri phery was determined by the exact circumference of the wide-spreading branches of the tree. Andrea coughed softly but M’sungo did not look up—in fact, nobody looked up. It was ex actly as though she were not. She slipped to the trunk of a tree and leaned on one hand placed against it. Somehow it seemed an only friend in an empty world. The preliminary palaver was a mat ter of much leisurely ceremony, gut tural pronouncements, grunts, pauses, more monologues, repeated grunts; but, once it was over, M’sungo settled back -with a sigh and started dispens- : ng justice with a breathless rush that reminded one of the manner in which he dispatched' game. It seemed to Andrea that he never aited to hear mo,re than, the state ment. of the offense when he would im- . iately pronounce sentence. “Twen- 7 lashes; next! Thirty lashes; next! elve lashes; next,” at the rate of about a case for every two minutes. Nine times out of ten the victim would smile sheepishly and withdraw; in the tenth case there would come a look of sullen wonder into the culprit’s face, whereupon the white man would promptly call a halt and demand more evidence. Such cases were then al lotted half an hour and even an hour each, and without exception resulted in the acquittal of the prisoner at the bar. Andrea was suddenly aware of M’sungo’s voice indubitably addressed to her though he kept his eyes to the front and spoke in a toneless mono logue as if he were communing with himself. “Behold! Psychology on the job,” he said. “Watch their faces. Every native that knows his sentence to be just, takes it with an apologetic smile; if he looks sullen, the chances are a hundred to one that he’s inno cent. I’ve never gone wrong. They think I’m a wonder. Next!” One c^e alone that day was appar ently interminable. When at last it was completed M’sungo dropped his eyes for the first time and sat for a long while with bowed head; then he drew erect, looked the prisoner in the eye and spoke three words. A gray hue crept into the black’s face as he turned away. “I have surrendered him to the justice of his tribe,” murmured M’sungo. “Poor devil!” And Andrea knew that she had witnessed the pre cursor to an inevitable sentence of death. That night M’sungo was too tired to talk and excused himself immediately after dinner. Andrea read until her eyes ached and then went to bed won dering if she were feeling only slight ed or if existence were actually be coming monotonous. She shrank from the latter admission for she knew that, once made, it would shatter the longest run of sheer peace of spirit which she had experienced in her short but much bored life. She need not have worried. When she stepped out early next morning dressed for the field in compliance with a message from M’sungo to put on her roughest and toughest she was so excited that even the memory of her doubt was blotted from her mind. Something was in the air of the craal that could be felt rather than heard, the sort of something that one c'ouTd imagine pos sessing a hive just before it began to hum. M’sungo was already sitting under the dining tree engaged in a diminu tive palaver with three wizened blacks who squatted on the ground squint ing up at him and speaking in turn in answer to his patient questioning. Around them but at a. respectful dis tance were gathered various members of the camp’s personal staff. On the faces of the wizened three and also on M’sungo’s was the same look of fanatical exaltation, the look that pro claims any group of diverse men brothers at heart. “What is it?” asked Andrea, breath less from hurrying. “Elephant,” replied M’sungo. He drew a chair to his side. “Sit down,” he said softly as one whose mind is half-narcotized and fearful of losing the dream, “Watch and listen, for these men bring great tidings.” He smiled almost like a boy. One of the wizened produced a thin wand, about twenty inches in length, freshly broken at one end. He passed it to his companions; who stared at it as though they saw it for the first in stead of the hundredth time, fingered it, gurgled over it and finally gravely handed it to M’sungo. He went through more or less the same process and re turned it to the man who first pro duced it with what was apparently a slighting remark. The man glanced up with a pained look on his face, arose, laid the wand on the ground as a measure and with laborious fingers began to trace a mighty oval. M’sungo leaned across the table and gazed with fascinated eye; Andrea, watching him, could see the pulse throbbing at his temples. He was a new M’sungo, somebody young, approachable, lovable, an eager boy. She leaned close to his shoulder. “Please, White Man,” she murmured, “please tell me.” Without turning he put one hand out and grasped her wrist as though to still her. “The little man,” he ex plained, “is drawing the spoor of a mighty beast. Look at it and learn it by heart, for it will be a photograph.” Having completed the circumference of his oval, the native was making various tracings on its face, dividing it as with a maze of tracks. When he had apparently finished, he sank back on his heels and gazed critically at >his handiwork. “Watch,” said M’sungo. “Before he gets up, he’ll put in some mark, some distinctive feature that distinguishes this spoor from all others.” No sooner had he spoken than the black leaned forward and with a sure touch deepened two of the cracks till they formed a long narrow V running diagonally half across the oval. That done he turned abruptly from his drawing, joined his comrades, turned his back on M’sungo and unstoppering a cartridge case, proceeded to tak'i snuff. M’sungo straightened with a long quivering sigh. “It is well,” he said in dialect, “We will go.” The three wizened men nodded their heads many times and grunted. With no further instruction, gunbearers, water boys, trackers and Marguerite’s attendant scattered to their various prepara tions, hindered by excited women and children. The camp hummed. Bathtub slapped breakfast on the table and then stood on one foot, then on the other in impatience. On the faces of' all was the same half-smile, the same- look of suppressed but mighty antici pation. M’sungo ate a few mouthfuls but they seemed to choke him. He pushed back his plate, stuffed his pipe full and lit it. His eyes played over An drea’s face and fired hers with their own brilliance. When he spoke every word thrilled her as though this won derful morning were surcharged with an emotional current sensitive to every sound and movement. * “Andrea Pellor,” he said with a hap py twinkle of mock solemnity in his glance, “you are about to be initiated into the mysteries of the major guild of many centuries, the closest corpo ration of sport in the world; in thre^ words, the society of elephant huntei s. You will probably witness death and I hope and pray it will be the deatl of the hunted, but for the comfort of your soft heart let me tell you that to day we go forth not to slaughter but to battle.” He turned his eyes from her face- and continued in a more serious strain: “The hunting of elephant is a science. It is a crescendo of delicate ly balanced factors that starts from two distant points and beginning on a cool foundation of mutual respect passes upward through stages of in telligence against intelligence, caution for caution, perseverance on the heels of endurance, until it meets on the high plane of naked courage and sweeps to its tragic climax of white- hot battle and death.” His eyes came back to hers frankly* “Like all the great sciences,” he con tinued, “it has used the lives of val iant men for stepping-stones so that we who go out today are backed by the age-long sacrifice of a noble com pany. Looking back only to the days of black powder and the four-bore rifle we are mere pygmies, but pyg mies carried high on the crest of an ancient tradition. It’s because we have an accumulation of knowledge to lean upon that I’m willing to take you with me today if you’ll promise to sur render yourself to me, to do just ex actly what I tell you and no more and no less.” Eyes wide and intent, cheeks flushed and lips parted, Andrea was too ex cited to speak. She threw out hands toward him in a gesture abandon and with an imploring that^made her look as though she giving herself into his keeping not for a day but for all time. CHAPTER VII. They started out, a skeleton caval cade. The three wizened ones led the way and Andrea measured their im portance by the fact that they carried M’sungo’s battery of rifles, respectful ly surrendered by the gunbearers as a fitting tribute from onlookers to men who were hunters in their own right M’sungo nodded toward them and spoke to Andrea over his shoulder, “The old boys are. my brothers in arms and they carry the guns as a sort of insignia. When it comes down to business they’ll slip them to the trained bearers.”. Behind Andrea came Marguerite, his attendant before and Bathtub af ter hini; then followed the gunbearers, a single tracker and a single water- boy. No hangers-on were allowed even to see the cortege from the craal. Over one shoulder Bathtub carried slung a cracker tin, container of all the food allotted to the day. In ten minutes’ march they came to the river which,, in spite of its prox imity to the camp, Andrea now saw for the first time. Often she had sug gested to M’sungo that she wished to visit it, but on every occasion his lips had set in a straight line and he had invented manifold reasons for keep ing her from its shores. The most ef ficacious of these arguments were snakes and crocodiles, but while she conceded the strength of those two sdeterrents she could not escape from an intuitive belief that there was something else—some other and rank ing cause in the back of M’sungo’*’ mind. Some thrills in the next installment. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Concentration of Mind. The brain of the average person is too receptive and not positive enough, It is swayed by every gust of emotion, yields too easily to outside conditions, It reproduces too easily the idle thoughts of others, or its own phan tasies, and avoids the effort of con structive thinking. A complete change in the mental habits of such a person may open the way for unlimited future development. Mental efficiency can only be attained when one possesses the power of concentrating the mind Weak powers of concentration mean inefficient thinking and vacillating ac tion. Regular daily practice in concen tration, keeping the mind centered upon some one subject, some difficult problem, will soon give the mind tb« habit of constructive thinking. Pen sist in this practice and ignore all seeming lack of progress if you wov^ obtain the fullest •esuit”—N • ^