Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, February 10, 1911, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    DAKOTA CITY IIKKAM)
OWES
HER
Women
Inventors
Praised for Great
Many Useful
Articles
OMN H.
M. Pi
r.r
N C T R A C ' A .
THE BOY AND THE GUN.
Each season brings tt own sport or
pastimes, game or fatf for the boye.
The autumn and winter are the sea
cons when many boys hunt or shoot a
great deal, says the Omaha Bee. This
should be the time, then, for tbe reit
eration of that old warning about the
"Id Id nt-know-ltwas load ed" accident
Boys should be careful with their
shooting Irons, and never fall to know
Whether they are loaded or not. Two
boys were out shooting a few days
tigo and one, thinking his gun was
sunpty, aimed It at the other and
pulled the trigger. The other dropped
Bead. "I didn't know It was loaded."
walled the one who killed him, echo
ing the wall of scores of others who
bad at sometime been as criminally
Negligent as himself. No boy or man
fcas a right to aim a firearm at an
iDther person, and when he does It,
whether harm comes of It or cot, ha
jshould be made to feel that he has
tfotie something he should not Par
Ifcnts can well afford to deny guns and
pUUAa to their boys until they hate
reached such ages as will make them
capable of realising their dangers. If
they must have guns, they should be
(cautioned against careless use of
them. It sometimes seems trite to
peak of warning boys against such
things, but If they were warned often
enough such distressing accidents
Would be fewer.
Pittsburg Is growing at a fairly
rapid rate, but wants to Increase still
more swiftly. That smoky town has
an ambition to reach the 1,000,000
mark In population, and Is bending
every effort In that direction. For
one thing, Pittsburg Is pushing the
project for a ship canal from that city
to Lake Erie, by which it Is hoped to
increase still further the already great
Industrial activity of that district
Other schemes Include a big rapid'
transit system, with subway attach
aents, bringing various points Into
easier reach; educational and other
expansion, and numerous Improve
ments designed to increase the at
tractlvenesa and convenience of the
city and Its environs. And Pittsburg
seems to have sufficient public spirit
to carry out the great work suggested.
The census figures continue to give
Interesting results. Mention has been
made of the fact that there are now in
tne United States 60 cities with a
population of 100,000 or more, a not
.able gain In ten years, as there were
but 88 such cities in 1900. Now the
censua bureau, having compiled the
returns, announces that there are In
this country 19 cities with a popula
tion reaching or exceeding 250,000. In
1900 there were 15 towns Included
in that class. From this it appears
that, while there has been marked
gain in many cities, large and small,
the proportion has been greatest
among municipalities of moderate
Ire.
, Also they do some things better in
Germany. A reckless chauffeur who
killed an American woman when he
ran into a crowd of theatergoers has
been sent to the penitentiary for 16
xnonths.
It is said that one of the prominent
female colleges is going to Insist on
.proficiency in spelling and writing In
the students. This looks as If the
higher education were meditating a
return to the simple life.
Some New York undertakers are
said to be In league with preachers
and sextons. It might be worse, aa
there is no evidence offered that un
dertakers are in league with doctors.
It Is reported that there has been a
revival of poetry In England. If tbe
poets can manage to get through this
"winter there may be a chanoe for
some of them, after all.
A New York boy Is to have a legacj
of $10,000 provided he does not enter
tbe ministry. Isn't that an awful pros
peot for the average small boy to con
template T
The Massachusetts man who saws
wood dally at the age of 100 finds that
tie doesn't need any gymnasium ex
crcise.
That Chicago philosopher who ad
vocates the eating of four meals a day
srovides a long-awaited antidote to
Brother Fletcher.
A man In Maryland wants a divoroe
Itecause he Is adfrald of his wife. Ap
parently be considers his condition
unique.
A Frenchman, having taken th
world's altitude record away from
America, that nation is entitled to
tbe honor of being the flightier.
Poverty does nearly everything to
a man except to take away his ap
petite.
A boy running to work in Philadel
phia dropped dead. Infrequent cases
til precipitancy la that town are usual
ly fatal
A French army aeronaut flew 100
xnlles in 70 minutes. There can be do
question of tbe possible value of such
speed and range to an army scout
Many a brave man never get a
chance to prove It, but is Just as well
atisfled
By JOHN D.
TOTAL number of patents approximating 6,500 have Ixfn
issued directly to women. Of these a bare dozen would come
under the caption of "freak" inventions, and there is not a
single product of the perpetual motion crank. Dearth of
whimsicalities show that practicability is a characteristic of
the woman inventor.
Harriet Hosmer, famed as a sculptor, has invented the
permanent magnet as a motive power. This is used in lifting
large masses of metal. She also has discovered a method of
transmuting limestone into marble.
A
A process of producing artificial
tillet. Mme. Foppova has invented a
authorities pronounce a success. It has
from its peculiar construction. Mme. Do Condray was the inventor or. tne
manikin, useful in the teaching of anatomy.
The familiar ice-cream freezer was patented in 1813 by Mrs. Nancy
M. Johnson. The model in the patent office shows that it has remained
practically unchanged. Jeanette Towers invented the aquarium, and the
Coston light so useful in maritime signaling at night, is named from
its inventor, a Washington woman.
Lady Amherst's patent spring collapsible muff has had quite a vogue
among the ultra fashionables. Miss Madeline Edison,' who assists her
famous father in his laboratory, has invented and marketed an automo
bile map.
Mary E. Walton's noise deadener, adaptable to elevated railways, and
her smoke consumer, are both successful. The apiarist is indebted to
Frances Dunham for the comb foundation for her bee hives, which so
increases the saccharine crop. The essential feature of this invention is
that all the cells are "worker" size.
Sally Rosenthal's pocket sewing machine; Betsy J. Martin's asbestos
suit; and Augusta Roger's engine, that dumps its clinkers from the rear
on to the track; Maggie Knight's device for making satchel bottom bags,
and the Burden hortt.ihoe machine shows a wide divergence in creative
ideas. But they are all practicable.
Syllabic types, a slate and also a typewriter for the blind, a process
for concentrating ores, a machine for producing ozone, a car coupler and a
car wheel, contrivance for heating cars, a beehive, the self-fastening but
ton, a collapsible collar button, a life raft, a machine for making folding
bags, and uuderglaze painting on potter', are a few of the inventions cred
jted to women, each of which has contributed its mite to the progress of
the race.
The honor of a few epoch-making inventions has been conferred
wrongly on men, if certain historians be correct. Notably is this true cf
the cotton gin. These dissenters say that the honor of that great discovery
Wife's
Duty
to Follow
Her
Husband
By SAMUEL R. RICE
rf Dearer
suit was filed could not see the plaintiff's side and refused to grant a de
cree. Instead he read the woman a lecture, saying it was a wife's duty
to follow her husband and make her homo with him.
The plaintiff instead of being deserted, had herself committed de
sertion and hnd no real basis for bringing the action.
Loud
Church
Bells
Annoy
Many Sick
By OLIVER CLARENCE MALROSE
"synagogue caller" has been dispensed with, as every Hebrew knows the
exact hours when services are held.
Why not dispenso with the tolling of stupendous bells which fre
quently annoy tho unfortunate 6itk in their immediate vicinity and let
thoso who wish to attend services advert to the clock or watch?
Some
Felines
Not
Disease
Carriers
the
By MRS. S. S. KELLOGG
They never see the outside of homes unless in harness or carefully
guarded; must they, perforce, be banished from the face of the earth
because the prowlers are dangerous?
Will the learned doctor be a little fairer and discriminate between
those that are dangerous and those that are not? It would seem, were
these family pets to bo entirely eliminated, as if there would be a lack of
the home environment of which poets have for so many years sung.
Leave us a few just a little longer, doctor, for there an mmy among
ns who love dogs aud cats und need tbem for friend
WHITE
marble was invented by Mme. Du-
rudderless airship which competent
been called the "annulatcd dragon"
really belongs to Mrs. Catherine Greene, widow of
Gen. Nathaniel Greene of revolutionary fame. They
say that dread of the world's adverse comment and
consequent loss of social caste induced her to assume
the name of Mrs. Miller, which was used in connec
tion with the patent. These same historins say that
in 1817 Mrs. Ann II. Manning perfected a mower
and reaper, thus anticipating McCormick's and Hus
Bey's inventions by 17 years.
Should a woman balk at the idea of
living with her mother-in-law and carry
her objection so far as to part with her
husband on that account?
She cannot in our community, at least,
maintain a valid divorce suit on the ground
of being deserted by her husband.
Recently a Denver wife asked for a
legal separation on the ground that her
husband insisted that they make their
home at his mother's. To this she would
not agree, and the pair went their several
ways.
One of our judges before whom the
The church bells whose tolling we .re
so much accustomed to hear seem indis
pensable for announcing the time of meet
ings and church services.
Among the Mohammedans, instead of
tho bell, a man, a priest, stands on top of
the temple to announce the time of service.
Among tho Hebrews in little Kussian
towns they formerly had "synagogue call
ers" stentors whose main duty was to
walk from street to street to call the
people to the synagogue.
Hut in modern times a clock or watch
is found in every house and hovel, and the
It is nothing new for any intelligent and
thinking person to be told that the average
prowling tlog and cat is not a safe compan
ion for children .or a proper inmate of our
homes, but the writer begs most emphat
ically to take exception to the opinion of
the learned specialist who places all of
these faithful fireside companions under
ban.
Take, for instance, the beautiful Per
sian and other fine breeds of cats which
adorn so many homes these days and also
are to bo found in many of the fine cat
teries of the city.
(III ST"
Mr. William A. ludford will mmwer
HiioBtlons and arlve advli'fl I'"HlCi OK
COST on all subjects prrtalnlna; to the
iitpct of building for the readers of
tills paper. On account of hlR wide expe
rience aa Kditnr, Author and Manufac
turer, he In, without doubt, the hlirheit
authority on all these subjects. Addrena
all Inquiries to William A. Radford. No.
194 Fifth Avi., Chicago, 111., and only en
close two-cent stamp 'or reply.
The perspective and floor plan
shown herewith illustrate a very ar
tistic cottage designed In the western
bungalow style. Five good sized
rooms are provided, each one very
well lighted. The arrangement pro
vides for that convenience which has
become typical of the weBtern bunga
low style of houses.
Many practical builders have said
that the bungalow is a fad, no doubt
good enough, It Is true, for southern
California, or southern states, such
as Florida and Louisiana, but in the
main not suitable for practical build
ing throughout the country at large.
It has been affirmed that the coBt of
the bungalow style dwelling is far in
excess of that for the ordinary type
two-story house, providing the same
accommodations.
The criticism against the bungalow
have been due, not so much to the
real characteristics of the style Itself,
as to the overenthusinsm of its de
votees who have advocated it for
buildings for which it was never in
tended. Designed originally for summer cot
tage work and for spacious building
sites, preferably of a hilly nature,
there have been too many instances
where this type of dwelling has been
squeezed Into narrow city lots and
put in between high two or three
"4
1
t. 'i ... ;i a .M x ! .- .7 " . ,j -ml ft . ..
t. . ,. :: t,-.rn-.u. ....vxA,..,. i X... . ...i,s .-v
' ? t
story dwellings, mucb to tlie detri
ment of the typical bungalow style.
Much very peculiar art has been
perpetrated In the name of the bunga
low and it has to account for many
freakish dwellings for which it is
not In any way to blame.
We have never happened to see a
bungalow style office building nor do
we remember of having heard of one;
still, what is almost as bad, tbe bun
galow style church is quite a com
mon thing in many of our cities and
suburbs. TheBe are uses never con
templated by the originators of the
bungalow in this country and should
not be charged up against the style.
The bungalow, rightly understood, is
an artistically designed cottage, and
within that sphere has some exceed-
Floor Plan
ingly creditable features of work to
show.
Simplicity and directness are the
keynotes of this style as Illustrated in
tho accompanying design. At a cost
no greater than for the plain, unor
nainented cottage with the same ac
commodations, a real home-like, cozy
and attractive dwelling is aecurod.
The co hi is estimated at $2,000, aud
without doubt in a good many loca
tions it would not run as much as
that.
In any typical bungalow design the
porch is sure to have a prominent
place. This one is eight by twenty
feet in size, forming not only the
main decorative feature of the front
of the building, but serving the ex
tremely practical end cf being the
outdoor living room for the family In
summer weather. Entering the house,
we lind a living room, 11 by 12 feet
iu sl.e, connecting with a broad cased
opening into the dining room which
is 14 feet 6 Inches by 12 feet. Doth
of these rooms are nicely lighted and
provide the accommodations for the
necessary furniture for convenient
housekeeping. Tbe broad space In
the dining room near the kitchen door
Is Just the location which a built-in
sideboard or buffet should have to be
most convenient and ornamentally lo
cated. Tbero are numerous stock de
signs for built-in sideboards, as well
as for other pieces of built-in furni
ture which ran to had at very small
cost. Ask your building supply deal
er or building contractor to show you
Kitchen & $xVooa I
O.OJ.BT I
fa
irlVARADFORD
- EDITOR
the designs that can be furnished
along this line at moderate cost
The kitchen connects with the din
ing room through the pantry, well
supplied with built-in cases. This Is
an arrangement that has been tested
out in a great many houses and has
been found to be very convenient and
satisfactory. It serves to separate
the kitchen from the balance of tbe
house and so keeps out all the cook
ing odorB, and at the same time the
service between the kitchen and din
ing room is Just as near as possible.
The bedrooms in this cottage are
very well placed. The front bedroom
opens off the living room and is 10 by
12 feet in size. The large closet open
ing off from this, lighted and venti
lated by a good sized window. Is a
feature that will be much appreciated
by the housewife. The second bed
room is In the rear of the house open
ing off the dining room. It la 9 by 14
feet in size and has a good Bleed
clothes closet.
The exterior material for this bun
galow cottage is rough boards stained
with creoBote oil, which is a very ap
propriate, economical and substantial
material for this type of house. An
artistic touch is given the gable end
by means of cement plaster with
board paneling. The attic space is
large and is well lighted and venti
lated by means of four good sized
windows.
Prospective builders will gain many
good Ideas by the careful study of this
perspective and floor plan.
Drug Causes User to Sleep Standing.
A mysterious eastern drug, the anal
ysis of which has baffled the chem
ists of this state and city for weeks.
4 Y i
I , kw fa - M
nas been discovered in large quant!
ties in Boston by the New England
Watch and Ward society, writes a Bos
ton correspondent
A chemist, who has studied Oriental
drugs, is to undertake an analysis aft
er Inoculating cats with the drug solu
tion. ' The drug, which Is said to have
been discovered at a number of places
In this city, is believed to be the same
as mentioned In the "Arabian Nights,"
and frequently referred to In the "Ve
das" and In the "Zend-Avesta" and
"Upanlchads."
Agents o fthe society found the drug
when on the lookout for the Illegal
sale of the drugs. It Is of a brown
ish tinge and not unlike a plug of to
bacco In appearance. It Is said to
be used both in smoking and by injec
tion or internally in solution. Opium
tests on animals make them lie down
and go to sleep, but this drug causes
the animal experimented upon to go
to sleep standing up.
The Tomblgbee.
Kverv school child knows of the
Tmj.itrii river, and yet hew few
know from whence sprang the name
or why. It la of Choctaw origin, but
greatly changed from Its original
t nritrinnllv it was known as
1 v l ill. -w
iho "Tnm-bi Ik-bi:" this at the time
when the tribe of Choctaws Inhabit-
on th territory now embraced wun
in the states of Alabama and Mlssis-
cf.i a eentnrv and more ago a car
nr.rt drifter that way, making his
home among the Indians, and among
other things he made rude boxes for
burial purposes. Before he came the
Indians were in the habit of plac
ing the bodies of their dead on an ar
bor supported by roles, but they grad
ually adopted the white man's ways,
and the carpenter made the boxes for
them "Tom-bl." with the Indians,
meant a box, and "Ik-bi" the maker,
and the Indians added the word bok.
which means a river, so that the lit
eral meaning of the phrase Is The
river where lives the man that makes
boxes." The Anglo-Saxon disposition
- - j m-nmiTirlfitlnn Rnon
to rounu corner mi ihvu
anglicized "Tom-bl IK-nr mro i
blgbee." Mrs. Carnegie Is Charitable.
Thm-itablB? Thu t hundreds.
perhaps thousands, of charlUole acts
uerformod by Mrs. Carnegie every
vear of which her most Intimate
friends have no nuuu8.
young men ana u. '"7,
harvest of tae wu.-u
has bestowed upon them."
"What are her hobbles her chlel
interests?" waB the question asked by
a reporter.
"I believe," was a friend's thought
ful reply, "that Mrs. Carnegie's hobby,
If she has any, Is mnking people hap
py. I think that nothing pleases her
more than to be the means of doing
some one some real good. That is
Mrs. Carnegie as I, know her really
a wonderful woman, as wife, mother,
friend and a representative of the
highest and noblest type of American
womanhood." New York Evening Tel
egram. First Newspaper Advertisements.
Newspaper advertisements made
their earliest appearance in 1652.
MAYORS OF GERMAN CITIES
Position Is Considered One of Honor,
and Graft Is Rarely Heard of
There.
A public trust iu Germany, accord
ing to Heinrich Theurer of Frankfort,
is a public honor, and there are but
few cases of graft known In the fa
therland.
"One of the principal requirements
of a mayor in Germany." said Herr
Theurer, who is a banker, "is unquali
fied honesty, for in the municipal ad
ministration of Germany graft in any
form Is not tolerated; In fact, It Is un
known. To become the mayor of a
city like Berlin, the applicant must
have established his reputation for ef
ficiency by governing other German
cities. His career is carefully scru
tinized by tbe members of the town
council, who select him, for not only
must he be competent, and be able to
perform successfully the duties of his
high office, but also he must be young
enough to remain competent for many
years, for a mayor in Prussia is elect
ed for a term of 12 years, and, if not
re-elected after that period, Is entitled
to a life pension of half the amount
of his salary. After a service of six
years his pension is one-fourth of his
salary, and after serving 20 years, two-
thirds. He need not be a resident of
Berlin at the time of his appointment;
In fact, the mayor is usually chosen
from the residents of other cities.
"The mayor is appointed by the
town council, subject to the confirma
tion of the king of Prussia," continued
Mr. Theurer. "When it becomes
known that the office of mayor is to
be vacant applications for the position
are considered by a corrmittee of the
town council, and If municipal officers
have made especially good records in
other cities they may be requested to
apply, If they have not already done
so. After a thorough discussion of
the merits of the various applicants,
the appointments are made.
"We regard the administration of a
city from a strictly business stand
point, the same as any other big en
terprise. If industrial, financial and
commercial concerns are anxious to
secure the best managers to be had
to take charge of their interests, Why
should not a municipality do the same
thing, when It is considered that the
interests involved are so great and im
portant and concern every citizen and
tax-payer? The less politics in the
public administration and more busi
ness principles the better. Why don't
you apply the same principles in
America." Washington Herald.
HEALTH MOVEMENT IN CITY
Washington School Children Given
Circulars Telling How to Pre
vent Disease. s
An elaborate health movement will
be started in Washington, D. C, in the
near future when more than fifty
thousand children of the grade and
high schools will be given circulars
telling in simple language how to
take care of themselves and prevent
diseases to which, it has been found
by investigation, school children are
peculiarly subject.
The movement will aim primarily
to prevent diseases which are due
mainly to neglect and bad habits.
Co-operation between parents, chil
dren, teachers, school officials and
family physicians will be assured in
this way, it Is hoped, with the result
of a better physical juvenile Wash
Ington. Furthermore, In endeavoring
to obtain the co-operation of the fam
ily physician, copies of the circular
have been sent to more than one
thousand members of the medical fra
ternity of the district, with personal
letters asking their aid in the move
ment.
The circulars, printed as they are
In simple language, entirely free from
technicalities, will form easy reading
matter for the children. Because of
the simplicity of the circulars. It is
hoped by those who are interested in
the movement that they will be
"taiKea over, paragraph by para
graph, and word by word, In sixty
thousand homes.
In spite of the fact that the keynote
of the pamphlet is simplicity, the lat
est scientific discoveries and data com
piled on the prevention of disease
have been embodied in the four pages
of the circular.
Combined Beauty and Utility.
Paris, which knows how to charge
travelers who are rich, and yet bring
to Itself those who wish to live pleas
antly and economically, has shown
also how to maintain the most beau
tiful park In the world and yet have
It a source of revenue rather than ex
pense, says Franklin Clarkln in Suc
cess Magazine. It costs $142,000 year
ly to maintain the Bols de Boulogne,
a park of 1,530 acres. But it brings
to the city treasury annually $180,000
in rents and concessions. There are
better ways than this one of making
public revenue from a city people like
to go to, or live in. "Excess condem
nation" is one of these and it is
spreading. It means taking some
what more land than Is required for
a park'ur public-building site, uud al
lowing the community generally to
receive the benefit of the increased
vtUue of abutting lnud.
Cynical Florida Buck.
Mr. B. Ueachham, .who recently re
turned from the forest, among other
trophies of tbe hunt brought back a
pair of buck horns, and upon the ex
treme poliit of each prong was the
perfect, formation of a dog's bead. Mr.
Beachnm's only reasonable conclusion
Is that it la the result of a former ex
citing chase. After having it exquis
itely mounted he may present it to
the Smithsonian institution at Wash
ington. Orlando Reporter.
The Nimble Penny.
It Is estimated that on an average
each penny in circulation changes
hands eleven time a week.
HEALTH
To Lydla E. Plnkhairf
Vegetable Compbund
Rcottville. Mich." I want to tell
yea how much good LydlaE.Pinkhnm's
. ', '..-... .i Vegetable Com
pound and isanauve
Wash have done met
I live on a farm and
have worked very
hard. I am forty
five years old, and
am the mother of
thirteen children.
Many people think
it strange that I am
not broken down
with hard work and
the care of my fam
ily, but I tell them of my good friend,
your Vegetable Compound, and that
there will be no backacV) and bearing
down paina for them ir they will taka
it as i nave, i am scarcely ever wun
out It in the house.
"I Will saT also that I think there ia
no better medicine to be found for
young- glrla to build them up and make
them strong and well. Mv eldest
daughter has taken Lydla . link
ham's Vegetable Compound for pain
ful periods and irregularity, and it has
m ways neipea ner.
"I fem always ready and willing to
cpoak a good word for the Lydia E.
llnkham s Remedies. I tell every ona
I meet that I owe my health and hap
pImbs to these wonderful medicines'
Mrs, J.O. JoHNBON,Scottville,lIlch.,
Lydia E.rinkhams Vegetable Corn-
round, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harm
ful drags, and to-day holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases.
OPINION NOT ALWAYS FINAL
Pretty Safe to Say That Doctor's
Diagnosis Was "Away Off"
In This Case,
The pretty daughter of a physician
is engaged to a college student of
whom her father does not altogether
approve. His daughter Is too young
to think of marriage, the doctor as
serts; the college student is too
young te think of it, likewise. It Is
out of the question.
She explained all this to her lover
the other night.
"Father says," she summed it up;
father says, dear, that I will have to
give you up."
The young man sighed. "Then It's
all over?" he murmured, with gloomy
interrogation. And the girl laughed
and blushed.
"Well," she said, "well, you you
know that when the doctor gives you
up that's just the time for you to take
mere hope. Isn't it sometimes that
way?" Reboboth Sunday Herald.
BLAME PHYSICIANS FOR
GROWTH OF DOPE HABIT
Druggists Say Prescriptions and Not
Patent Medicines the
Cause.
New York. Blame for the prev
alence and growth of the morphine
habit was placed on the shoulders of
physicians, who prescribed the drug,
at a meeting of druggists here to
night to protest against the recently
enacted city ordinance prohibiting the
ale at retail of any preparation con
taining morphine or Its salts except
upon a doctor's prescription.
The ordinance is aimed primarily
at paregoric and at stomach remedies,
according to members of the board of
health who were Instrumental in ob
taining Its passage. Caswell Mayo,
one of the druggists. Bald he had
made a canvass by mall of several
sanitariums and the replies convinced
him 90 per cent, of the victims of
drugs formed the habit as a result of
using prescriptions given by physi
cians and only 8 per cent, from using
proprietary medicines.
Careless and Cappy.
We have undertaken to blend In
one the best of the two proverbial
conditions to be careless and happy,
hairless and cappy. We are now hap
py and cappy, and frequently careless
as well. A pretty figure may be con
jured up a figure in leaf-green satin
veiled with rose and silver shot gauze.
The dark hair Is covered by a sai
lor's cap, point and all, worn flatly
over the whole head, the point falling
at the back. Instead of being made
of scarlet cashmere, It is of the gauze,
over silver tissue, and etudded with
pink and yellow topaz, while it is bor
dered with great gray pear shaned
pearls, these, of course, hanging
around the back of the neck and over
the soft hair In front.
We have taken to cap;!
Careful Man.
"Pretty careful, is he?"
"Pretty careful. He left a partly
smoked .cigar in my office the other
day, and a little later sent his clerk
around after it."
RIIEWISQ
Muuyou'i UbrumatlHm Remedy relieve
pului lu tho leg, nua, bark, utter or
twollea joints. Contains no mor,litn,
C'pluiu, cocaine or druga to deaden tl
alu. It Ueutrillxea tna sold aud drives
out all rheumatic rolsona from the t-ti-m.
Write 1'rof. llunyon, 63J and J(T
ernou hi., I'hlla., 1'a tot luedkal ad
vlca, atiaolutely Ire.
H C M EM
E R
n
for Coughs tCOLOf)
mm