1296 (12) THE HOME CIRCLE; : "RENCONTRE." c If you want Beauty ? ua m mm mm in a j -VmttL in Solid Ie Keeps Perfect Time Watch If you want Accuracy We are as careful in every operation to make tne South Bend Watch a neat and handsome timepiece as we are to make it accu rate in time. South Bend owners proudly show their watches, for they knowthe time is fight and that the watch is stylish in appearance. You want such a watch if you want entire satisfaction. Six Months Building It takes six months to build a South Bend Watch and sometimes six months more to adjust and reg ulate it in the factory. There are thousands of separate operations and 411 insDections. 1 hen tne . perfect time keeping ser vice. Any watch made oi sold in a less careful way cannot equal the amazing records of the South Bend. A South Bend Watch is always sold through expert retail, jewelers because every watch needs that personal regulation by an expert watchman. We will never sella South Bend Watch by mail , be cause mail-order watches do not get this expert service. Ask for Book You ought to have our free book, "How Good Watches Are Made." It tells all about watches and points out many valuable a m watch is run for 70Q hours in an things, to look lor in the purchase accuracy test; then in a refrigera- of a watch. Ask a jeweler to let you see a South Bend. But-first get our book. tor; then in an electric oven. When a jeweler sells it to you he gives it his expert regulation to South Bend Watch Company your personality,. That insures a . 12 Palmer Street - South Bend, lad. S3 JJL2 Watch (119) Sent To You For Year's Free Trial Why Shouldn't You Buy As Low As Any Dealer? More than 250.000 neoole have saved from $25 to 125 In purchasing a high grade organ or piano by tne uormsn nan, wny snoaicurc youx uerexs Oar Of f er. Yoa select any of the lateBt, choicest Cornish styles of instruments, we place it in your home for a year's free use before yoa need make uo your mind to keep it. If It is not sweeter ana ncner. in tone ana Dener made than any yon can buy at one-third more than we ass you. send it bacs at our expense. You Choose Your v Own Terms Take Three Tears to Pay If Needed. The Cornish Plan. In brief, makes the maker prove his instrument and saves you one-third what other manufacturers of high , grade lnstrnmenta miist charca von hftc&nite thev nrntent their de&let a. s Let I7a Sand to Yoa Free tha Mw Cornish Bool It is the most beautiful piano or organ catalog ever published. It shows oar latest styles and explains) everything you should know before buying any instrument. It showswhy you cannot buy any other high grade organ or piano anywhere on earth as low as the Cornish. You should have this beautiful book before buying any piano or onran anywhere. 47amm!U sT7a WaaHixittox& N J Write for it today and please mention this paper. AJI IIIW fvs Established Over 50 Tears i r ii 1 j 1 H, WAS I born too soon, my dear, or were you born too late, ' That I am going out the door while you come In at the gate? For you the garden blooms galore, the castle is en fete; ' You are the coming guest, my dear, -for me the horses wait. - 0 I know the mansion well,, my dear, its rooms so Tich and wide; If you ,had only come before, I might have been your guide, And hand in hand with you explored the treasures that they hide; But you have come to stay," ,my dear, and I prepare to v ride. Then walk with me an hour, my dear, - and pluck the reddest rose Amid the white and crimson store with which your garden -glows,- A single rose, I ask; no more of what your love bestows; It is enough- to giver my dear , a flower to him who .goes. The House of Life is yours, my.deari for many and many a day, But I must ride the lonely shore, the' Road to Far Away: ! : So bring the stirrup-cup and pour a brimming draft, I. pray, v And when you take the road,' my dear, I'll meet you on the way. v. ' .. . -. , Henry Van. Dyke. JUST A BIT OF EDEN. Teaching Margaret and Being Taught by Her- Some of the Un answered Questions About Child Culture and Some of the Un answerable Questions of the Cultured Child. Y By Mrs. Lindsay Patterson, Winston-Salem, N. C. ARGARET is down in the yard, had jumped1 up and down on the seat building an automobile out of of one of my pretty chairs until it had broken thru, and there she was, charging up and down the room in side the chair. Now she really meant no harm, she merely wanted to play horse ind buggy. She was extricat- persoh was perch- ed with difficulty, and tho new pink ed on' the giddy gingham mended. Then going to two barrels, a plank, and. somewhere in the neighborhood , of three thousand .snails. When" last seen, - that enter prising yb u ng eminence of the? T ha n ks giving pumpkin, sooth ing a mashed thumb, and sur veying the result of her arduous,. mrs. Patterson, toil with a pride of workmanship equal to that of good old Cheops, when he , had the cap-, stone placed on the Great Pyramid. I, too, am puffed up with pride and vainglory, for have I not jusTftnished my, flowering hedges of over 200 dog woodsthe same number of white and purple lilac; and hundreds and hundreds of bulbs poet's narcissus, single and double jonquils, purple flags, larkspur and hollyhocks and corn-flowers past counting? Right in the midst of all this glory are two worthless plum .trees, and orders had gone out for them to be taken up, but remembering the keen delight it gave Margaret to skin lip trees for the lit tle wild fox grapes and muscadines, the order . was countermanded. The plum trees are low' and bushy, and ' Bible! the washstand to wash my hands, the pipes wore found to be stopped up with bananas the work of busily idle little fingers After working sometime to repair damages, I got out the sewing basket for a few min utes' peace, only to find; the embroid ery silks had been cut into two-inch lengths. That, as Margaret explain ed, was for lovely hair for the new Vow '111m . Vai i. ji ' xi cfiild meant any harm, yet something ' had to be done to stop her wild ca reer of destruction so she was told to go down to the library and wait for me. In almost ten minutes I de scended and found her sitting on the family Bible, which she had pulled off the table and put on the floor. "I'm pressing flowers" she explain ed, "I took the roses the lady, sent you and put them all in the Bible, and I'm sitting on them just as hard as I can, 60 we can press and keep them." - ; The roses for my dinner party and blessed old srreat erandfather's IIM ft THE SEWING MACHINE OF KNOWN VALUE Known the world over for its serving qualities. The only Sewing Machine which U a life asset at the price you pay. Purchase the NEW HOME and you will not have an endless chain of repairs. It is better made, does nicer sewing, easier to operate, and more silent than any other. Guaranteed for all time. ; Write THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO., Orange, Mass., for booklet P. easy for a child to climb, so this week we are going to drive out to the river and grub up a lot of wild" grapes and plant them around the plums that she and her little play mates may have a month's delight when grape time comes. Really, I believe the chief joy of a country place is that 'It is never fin ished there is always something else to be done. - Planting growing things is the most fascinating of all occupations, and surely of it, more than Qf any other, one may say with the Psalmist: "The, work of my hands, 0 Lord, the work of my hands, established Thou it!" '. If any woman living, really knows how children should be trained really ws not just experiments with i ; I am doing, she is most do Prof. John Mlchels ha written two of the best books for Southern dairymen. They are Dairy Farming" and "Market Dairying-." "We can supply them for 1 each. i Write for list of other dairy books. Feather Beds New 40-pound Feather Bed and Pair of Plllowa .AAA THE STOKES COMPANY, Durl&iton, N. C. "Margaret!" I gasped; "Why you make so much trouble?" You should have seen the look of injured innocence that spread .over her countenance. "I don't make trouble" she assured, "I Just do things you are the one that makes trouble!" ." If I had been limp before, I was speechless now and the child wa3 right from her viewpoint. I was the one who did make all the trouble; she just "did things"; following-out the mandates of a busy little brain. "The flowers are pressed now" she said "shall I go sing a song for you?" , "Yes," 1 assented meekly. :' So she climbed up to the piano; ",I'm going to sing you the beautiful song Jesus sang when He went down into His garden," she exblained. and then. earnest untreated to spend a week making p tune and accompaniment .at Brainlette, and impart her most as she went along, she began in, her rare and useful information. At just sweet, shrill voice: "Consider : the what point will a child's energy and lilies, consider the lilies. TheyMoll ignorance of cause and effect, be- not, neither do they spin," and "if come so mischievous that they should that child deserved a spanking v for be checked, and in what way? The all the mischief he had done, she other morning, there was a terrible didn't get it, for I listened with tears commotion and thumping up stairs, in my. eyes, and I whispered to my and Margaret's voice rose above the self, "In Heaven their angels do ai ding "Aunt Lucy! Aunt Lucv! 'coTfin vara hoVi nl A 4Ka ; ' tt ai be a horse and buggy!" - which is. in Heaven.". one sure enough. She , Training children is an absolute see me wne was "1