PAGE SIX REV. T. A. A. DUKE. 13-5-- Belle River Moderator REV- MEMBERS 0F P. E. T. H. B. SOMERS, S.T.M., St. Jamel Clerk IILA, VT. REV. G. CARLYLE WEBSTER Zion ‘ \I"'\'\‘- may. CHARLES CARNEG! Summerslds ' lTETOWN _i.-s_~; . _--. - REV. D. A. CAMPBELL, B.A., Clifton REV. T. W. GOODWILL, B.A., Canoe Cove \ nav. I. a. Mseoowsiv, B-A» Kenslngton O_UI‘OBER_1, _1%_9;4,7 i. oREsBYlEaY ATTENDING SYNOF REV. _c. n. HENDERSON. an, Murray Harbour North HIV. I. K. FRASER, D.D., Allies-ton REV. DONALD NICHOLSON Brookfleld MR. FRED CLARK Alberto: New York Times Features Action By llev. llr. Bonnell The following is from the New York Times of Oct. 1:- The Rev. Dr. John Sutherland Bonnell, the pastor of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, at Fifty-fifth Street, has declined a $2,000 increase in his salary, it became known yesterday. At the last meeting of the board l! trustees of the church, an in- crease in salary was voted not only to Dr. Bonnell but also to the Rev. Ralph B. Nesbitt, the asso- ciate pastor; Raymond S. Swan- son, superintendent o! the prop- erty; each of his deputies, all of the office‘ secretaries and typists, the receptionist and switchboard operator. All accepted the raise except Dr. Bonnell. The additional sum offered Mr. Nesbitt was When Dr. Bonnell was called to the church twelve years ago his salary was $10000 plus the rent o! an apartment. The Bonnell home is an apartment at 1010 Fifth Avenue, opposite the Metro- politan Museum of Art. Dr. Bonneil received an increase in his stipend several years ago This is understood to have been $2,000. "In no sense do I regard my action in this matter as a. neces- sary pattern for other ministers," Dr. Bonnell said when he was asked by telephone last evening. “Indeed, I hope that many chur- ches whose pastors‘ salaries are in the lower-income brackets will take steps to increase their sti- pends to meet the inflationary costs of today." He explained he had refused the extra $2,000 for two reasons. “First, I hoped that my action would enable the church to con- tribute more generously to the work of missions and the restora- tion oi what the war has de- stroyed," he said. "The General Assembly ‘oi the Presbyterian Church has asked all churches to more than double the annual amount previously given to the boards of the church. “Second. my wife and I felt that by an adjustment in the fam- ily budget we will be able to meet the rising cost of living." Dr. and Mrs. Bonnell have four children, the three oldest of whom I the are in college. In the last five years 1.067 per- sons have been received into the membership of the Fifth Avenue Church, this being the largest gain of any church in the Pres- bytery oi New York. When Dr. Bonnel came here in 1935 from the pastorate of the Westminster United Church, Winnipegflanada, average attendance Sunday mornings at the church here was 600. Now it is 1,600. The Gothic brownstone church. which has stood on its present site since 1875, is having its “face lifted" at a cost of $50,000 or more. The scaffolding is now erected on the exterior. The "iace-lifting” has included the removal of the six-foot stone fleur de lis at. the top of the high steeple, which weighed several hundred pounds. The fleur de lis was taken down because it was feared to be insufficiently secured, Now the spire tapers to a point The entire stone work is being pointed. John I. Downey, president of the Fifth Avenue Bank, is chair- man of the Church Property Committee, which has supervised the repairs. Mr. Downey is treas- urer of the church, an elder and a trustee. (Continued on Page 1i) a ACADIA WHYP... COAL ls n; COAL! BECAUSE ITS WASIIEII T0 liIIIE YOII: 4' A clean cool 9 A more efficient loll ‘F Greater economy IIIIII ITS OIL-TREATED T0 GIIIE YOII: '9' A dusfless fuel 4' A clean home ‘V’ Greater comfort u The installation of c new washer plunt of the Acadia Cool Collieries os- sures you of a vastly improved type of cool. All stones and dirt and‘ other im- purities are removed to give you o much more efficient and dconomiccl fllal. Acadia _Coul is oil-treated, foo, to eliminate dust. It's mode to order for your needs in three sizes- Egg, Nut and Stoker Pee. I semi cont oonrssv m. Qrcller Novv From Your Dealer I. The Best Domestic Stalker and Household Fuel on‘ the Market, A Product of Nova Scotio slstulnoll, MR. J. P. MATl-IESON, M.L.A, Oyster Bed Bridge MR. MALCOLM A. BEATON, Murray Harbour North Zion, and Mr. J. R. Burnett, available. MR. M. J. STEWART, Caledonia MR. R. A. MacKENZIE, Plnette In addition to the above there are: Ministers-Rev. G. B. Cunning- ham, B.A., Alberton; Rev. 1". N. Young, B.A., Marshfield; Rev. a. D. lpale fave 011i of We 81°01" a" MacLenn, BA, Montague; Rev. w. AHYmulg, 3A., Tyne Valley; and, | made it beautiful. She set the Elders——Mr. Milton Fraser. Montague; Mr. Gordon MacArthur, Vic- llamp down and knelt down beside torla West; Dr. J. A. MacMurdo, Summerside; Mr. A. A. MacDonald, hm as a mother might soothe a St. James, whose photographs were not ‘ child. "David's 80m f0!‘ B doc’ 0{>O0%O0%OO%OO€ ‘ IWDIIIGH. Beyond The Law . By , Mary Irnlay Tsylorr CHAPTER IX . . How long he lsy unconscious he never knew. He sank deep down into velvet blackness, and came out 0f it in stinging pain. At first he could not see .Then he tried to lift his right arm and could not; it hlung helpless. A throbbing pain swept every limb. I-ie tried to think and seemed to be wrap- ped in a gray mist. ‘men he re- membered how he had fallen. He eirllflkled to this knees and tried to clutch at the slippery ioe with ; his left hand. He gripped s bit of ‘he ledge and clung to it, his eyes still blinded by the pain in his ‘wad. The wide stretch of snow zriut him seemed to reel craziiy o be dyed all colors of the rain- x-w. Then, knowing fimseli’ caught ind helpless, he called for help, shouting to thcm-Duval and the Where were they? He tried to raise himself so he could sea over the rocks. The trail dropped from the ledge, where ihe had fallen, into the snow barrqns. For miles there showed no other break, only the rise and fall of drifted snow on a fiat land where only the tops of young spruce trees showed above the white waste. The ice fields stretched endlessly; and the wind swept across them with light flur- ries oi’ dry snow, frosted epume of the great frouen cliffs beyond. Duval had halted the sled and whs looking back. O'Hara shouted to him. "Iluvsll Come back. I'm helpless. Oosns back!" For an instant the breed seemed to hesitate. ‘Iillen his long whip whirled. the huskies answered with sharp yelps, the sled lurched for- ward and broke into wild flight. O'Hara shouted again, flnlous- ly, desperately. Then he tied to climb. and feii forward Into snow, the burning ache in his broken srm and the dim blindness be- setting hkn, while the cold soled lhlm and held him like l vise. icicles were forming on his heir and in the corners cf h ‘s eyes. He would be unable to move. He strug- gled madly. but every movrment Increased the agony. Duval was escaping with his prisoner; they had abandoned him to his fate. His fate? How well he knew what it would be! After long agony he would freeze to death. And after- ward, perhaps before the end — wolvesl Ho was able to make little effort after that, but fell Info a kind of twlching, stupor. The pain in, his head was horrible. The sooner the biting cold got In its work, the better. He no longer trod to think but buried this head on his left arm‘ and set his teeth to keep back ifie' groans Iwhlch sprang to his lips.| Once his hand went to his pistol, but ihe did not remove the weapon from the holster. No, please God. he would die lke a men, not like a, coward afraid to face mortal agony. He felt the chill of it creeping into his senses. Again that deadly faint- ness seized him. The cold enfolded him lke a mantle, he raced his head feebiy but he could see nothing but wastes of snow and above them he grew dizzy again, dizzy and unearthly cold. only the burnng pain in his broken arm keeping him consclousyif Me. Objects swam before h‘s eyes. He lost all reckon-- ing of time. A face haunted. her face. His stlff lips formed a word and whispered lt- ‘ "Laure" I A long time after that he heard voices. but took no heed of them. The cold and the pain were st ll at odds over his body. When the cold won he would cease to feel the pain. He almost had attained the point of detachment from which he could view the suffer-ins of thle thing which had been him- self, with impersonal calm. That calm was death, he suspected. Strange, how people feared iti suddenly he felt human hands busy with hm. His head wss lift- ed, a flask pressed to his lips. He opened has eyes. ssnv her fscs close to his, heard her voice. "Put your amt about me, lift yourself on my shoulder, mbieurl“ “L-sare." he gasped faintly. "You're hurt-but how?" She misled herself $17111! to lift his heed upon he: um‘ and (oree brandy down h‘s throat. "Can you get up nrsleur?" “My arm's sunken-hilt it's my held-J’ HII voice trailed. ' breathed with difficulty. loos he Bbe uttered s little cry of oom- MIR. NOR-MAN MacFADYEN, MR. GEORGE D. JARDINE, MB. STEWART MacKINNON bent c-n saving me. Jacquesi" slle called sharply. "Hs arm‘s broken and ihis head Is bruised and b‘eed- ing. He must get him on the sled." Half conscious after that, the . mjrured man felt himself lifted fbodily, felt the sled under him and knew. in a dim, cmtflmd My. that they were traveling _ not south, but north. Then pain dead- ] ened everything, and something akin tto delirium gripped him. He mum- Ebled her name and cred out for lhelp. It was a long while before he felt them carry lhlrn on a blanket into Grhariams cab n, know that {he was lying on a bed and the woman was mlnisilfing to his hurts. His blurred eyes followed her, sarw her figure otitlined agaanst the light from tihe outer room. heard her kindling a fire. "Laure!" he cried, "Laurel" She came cut at once, carryng a llamp in her hand and lifted her [Duval wouldn't come back; he was i tor. He is staying close by; W-BFFE been - Illness near. He'll be here by morning anyway. Meanwhile, m‘sieur, take but a little oi the hot brothe. It'll give you Elrflnillh so glght the fever." But he would do not more than taste it to please her. “I can't eat. Laure. Wlhy should you feed me? I was taking you to prison!" "I don't thhk of thm now. rn'sieur; you are suffering, I must do what I can. Your head is hot with fever-I'll bathe your fore- head.“ And in a moment he felt her hands busy with cooling water 0n his wounded head. Her gentle touch soother. Elie raised him a throldbed pa niully. But. all the ‘while her face hovered before his burning eyes, her voice tried to comfort him. He called hcr an angel and again through ensuing delirium, he cursed h imself for be- traying her; she was innocent and he loved her. In the long hours of the night he raved. He had run her down IPi-om that moment vrhen first he saw her face at Frenzli Petds his, accursed Instinct had set him on her track. I-Ie ihad hunted her. trapped hcr -—— but he loved herl The woman. tending him through the long niglht, heard Jt all. "Laure," he moaned "Laurel" Over and over again, the same battle, his duty and his sudden, overwhelming attachment for the woman. Then, when he felt her cooling hand on his hot forehead, oi’ tasted the water she pressed to his parched lips, he raised glazed eyes to her and mumured broken, unintelligible words. Hour after hour, thus, and then, at last, voces. figures, moving before gomwau Freetown Hlghfleld I sniseration, touched his cold nheek little on the pillow, eased his [with he! hami "Mo" ole“, how stralnednsttllude. The fever had lyou mum sum,“ And at n“, seized hm, and the swollen arm Ontario Mystery Base Unsolved NORTH BAY. Ont» Oct. 5—(C'P) -—Seven years ago this week-end, a Nccth Bay couple said good bye to their four children and startsd their two-ycar-old blue sedan along the lonely highway to Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.. on the frst lap of a holiday trip to Wlnnpeg. They visited friends in Sudbury, made a date with them at the Sault for thrce weeks later and continued svestword. The date was never kept. The car never reached Sault Ste. Marla, and seven years later police still list the case of Mr. and Mrs. Earl D. Krk as unsolved. Somewhere along 250 miles of pavement and gravel the car left the road and his fevered vision, strange shapes, was not seen again. The investigation was one of the fresh thrill! OI 88011! at B newfmost thorough evcr undertaken in touch of h‘s swollen arm and his wounded head. a strange voice. Give me more light! And a basin of hot water." The words trickled through hie consciousness. A glare shone in tho room. He tried to rise and was thrust back into — nothlngness. It was morning when he opened his eyes again. Through the door of the outer room he heard a ket- tle ainglng loudly on tihe stove. Then he suddenly was aware that his broken arm lay in splints, and that his head had cleared. Dimly things came back to him. A doc- tor had been summoned fos- him from somewhere. (To Be Contnued) Northern Ontario. Questioning of hundreds of roadside residents turned up a man at Sudbur-y who remembered directing the Klrks to the Carter Road. Apparently he was the last to see them alive. ‘Ihe case rated screaming head- lines when a few human bones were found in a Sault Ste. Marie Junli yard in May, 1941, but hey proved to be discarded mcd cal specimens. ‘Three months later, two fishermen found human hair tangled In their hooks at Red Cedar Lake. 40 miles north of here. Draggini equipment was rushed to thil scene, but there were no further discoveries. ' King and lay 81s., Toronh, In I897 — Mel's when _ Grape-Nuts wss barn] i ‘ Aébzsaflbfle I I011 ‘offle ALMOST from Its very beglnnln 1091, Grape-Nuts wss s sen That malty-rich, sweeten-nut flavor made an Instant hit. And the In nourishment when and ms sod hsrley lsss helped issko Imur breakfasts for $0 years. 6467 u l W and rovided by Csmdl fies/i lsglslsvod leads-Mesh fisevt" ' Idea G IIIT°BIIY t sod’ esiln will: new r wvhllo- ll_s psehge - really economical because only two tablespoons nukes II svsrsgservlng. Your grocer lass Grsps- sis. Nujs s ___ n