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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1912)
A xsz I Evil of Idleness. Work develops all tho good thcro Is In a man; Idleness all tho nvll. Work sharpens all hla faculties and makes 'him thrifty; Idleness makes him lazy and a spendthrift. Work surrounds .a man with those whoso habits nro Industrious and honest; In such so ciety a weak man dovolops strength, and a strong man Is made stronger. Idleness, on tho other hand, Is opt to throw a man Into the company of men whoso object In life Is usually tho pursuit of unwholesome and demoraliz ing diversions. Darius Ogdcn Mills. A Painful Occasion. "What Is tho trouble next door?" "Little Tommy Tibbies Is giving a coming out hawl." "A coming out ball? I don't under stand." "Ills father has Just released him after a short session In tho wood iBhcd." A One-Ringed Circus. ""There's a ring around tho moon." "I guess the man In It Is having a circus." The Car. Knlcker Thought Jones bought a runabout. Ilockcr Yes, but after tho bills carao In be called it n runup. Few people would Jump at conclu olona If they could sco their finish. Sioux City Directory "Hub of the Northwest." Bavidsou Bfos.Co.,Sioux City,Ia, t.- cssv C3vC5x cc?Ti czdcskz?' ZJ sskv c?r A cr (Vji.-j t rn HBi mi m . fflA W W i. ?! v--riwu'TVu c)cJCi cij3 . c-eu ess eJ "ass-?? a item fa&r m MrW 6Si ci5i CSS -a fedACK LONDON rH" nllrunr, sr? " Vif nt t f -r-ur- p.ttt rs ".jsrjcr tmAJi" JwjrnrAj jrnrAi" z-rv- rrir i l. i rtrv. itniriiiw t,isuiT, io. ywJ (Copyright. 1910. by thf New York Herald Comr"ny.) (Copyright. 1910, by tho MacMIUan Company. OYNOPSI3. nlnm Ilnrnlih, known nil tliroush Alas ka ub "HunilnK DayllKht," celebrate nm 30th blrtlnlay with a crowd of miners at tlm Clrclo City TIvoll. Tho tinner- liiil; to heavy Rumbling, In which over Jl A000 li HtakoJ. ItnrnlHh Iorch his rnoneJ" and his mine but wins tho mall contract Ho rtnrls on his mall trip with doss nnrt aledpo, telllnB his friends that ho vIU bo In the bin Yukon sold strlko at tho start. Hunting DylUlit makes a sensat'onal y rapid run across country with th' mall, appears a: tho TIvoll and Is no ready to Join his Trlcnds In a dash to the new Kold fields. Deciding that wild will bo found In tho up-rlvcr district Hnrnlsh buys tuo tons of Hour, wlilcli ho declare Will I in ttrnrll. Ha inlrrllt In BOll. bUl when h arrives with his flour he finds the IiIk flat desolate A comrade discov ers cold and Da light reaps n rich har vest. Ho coes to Oawsoii. becomes tho most prominent flKino In tho Klondike and defeat. n combination of capitalists In a Vast mlnlnR deal. He return to civilization, and, nmld tho bewildering complications of high finance. Daylight finds that ho has been led tn Invest his eleven million In n manipulated scheme He Koes to New York, and confronting hl disloyal partners with n revolver, ho threatens to kill them If his money Is not returned. They nro coned, return their irr? fJAtrir C.t-f ,1,1,1 n nl.nn "" nn anil llarmsn goes iiik '""'!" WE HAVk JUSt added a piano i.Vnnclsfo, where he meets his fate In dnnnrtmont to our trrcat establish- Dle Miaon. n pretty stcnoBrnpher. ment. ffifllf Wo sell pianos on the same basis as other lines from $ioo to Si 50 saved on any instru ment. We carry a full line of pianos, CHAPTF-.R XI. Daylight was In tho thick of his sprctncular and Intensely bitter fight with tho Constwlso Steam Navigation Company, and tho Hawaiian, Nlca- piano players, Victor roguan, nnd Pacific-Mexican Steam- find Edison Phonographs. Write b'P Company. He stirred up n uig for our piano price list and other B muss than ho had anticipated. intLn ,-.,:;,wr t ;-,c nad even ho wes astounded at the information pertaining to pianos. rninIflcatlonB of tho struggle and imi A c-iinia a n ' ar tho unexpected and incongruous In- ROCKLIN & LEHMAN itn, wjnoiltxiivi ill .31111 j.-1 tii.iow n. ...-.. upon him. It was true, ono or two of thorn had first intimated that they FLORISTS 8ICUX CITY IOWA FreshCutFIOWOrS&Floral Emblems , wero open to subsidization, but Day OF ALL DESCRIPTION ON SHORT light's Judgment was that tho sltua- NOTICE. Order by Mall, Telephone 01 Teleeraph. OUR PRICKS ARE RIGHT Soda Fountains and supplies. We sell them. Chesterman Co., Dcpt. F, Sioux City, la. For Sale ENGINE. One 3 H. P. Steam Engine, run about six mo. Perfect condition, at a bargain. Hallcr Bros. . Aoto Tire Repair Co., 621 Ptrl St., SiouxCitj.Ia. '.HUMPHREYS STEAM DYE WORKS LARGEST IN WEST 1RY CLEANING & DYEING OUR SPECIALTY 117 PIERCE STREET SIOUX CITY, IOWA fill M II Tf" 1 Yonnir pople to BUidy I Uf ft Rl ! L 1 1 aro"K Shorthand, Tele ' U IV I rll prnphy and ItooUkrep- nil I ImU Inc. Indlrldnallnstruc - Hon. It will pnjr jou to write for booklet. 'SATT BUSINESS TflAININQ SCHOOL, Sioux City, l. THE BRICK WITH A NAME Minafutorrd by SIOUX CITY BRICK &TILE WORKS For bale by Your Lumberman FREE onr cntnloga of Btrlnped IuatrumcntH and BtrliiRH, Band Instruments, Ulictt Uon did not warrant such expenditure. Up'to this tlmo tho press had been amusingly tolerant and good-naturedly sensational about him, but now ho was to learn what virulent seurriloiianess an antagonized press was cupabio of. Every eplsodo of hlB life was resur rected to serve as foundations for ma licious fabrications. Daylight was frankly amazed at tho now Interpre tation put upon all that ho had ac complished and tho deeds ho had douo. From an Alaskan horo ho was metamorphosed Into an Alaskan bully, liar, desperado, and all-around "bad man." Tho wholo affair sank to tho deeper deeps of rancor and savogo ness. Tho poor woman who had killed herself was dragged out of her grave nnd paraded 011 thousands of reams of paper as a martyr and a victim to Daylight's ferocious brutality. He was Ilka a big bear raiding a boo-hive, and, regnrdloss of the stings, ho obstlnatoly persisted In pawing for tho honoy. Ho gritted his toeth and struck back. Beginning with a raid on two steamship companies, It develop ed Into a pitched battlo with a city, statu and continental coast lino Al- MllllC.TAlklnir Machine X. ! II. ,1 tilll, Vil,n nn n aulolnllil onlorv ErerjrthlnR In Muilo and Itrcorils. Address , ... . , ' , .. ',, , oBrMttt!c Boos.. 3ltMib St.. Slow City. U. I w,th Princely pickings thrown in, was - I a lawyer, Larry Hegan, a young Irish- PFFRI PQl PHirif nnAn' ,nnn w,tl1 a reputation to make, and Jr, Jr.V. ,.rUUU ' wnoso peculiar gonluB had been un- AKRON MILLING CO., Sioux City, la. MOTOR CYCLES 1912 INDIAN 7 h- !' twln ""nmno $2M. 4 u. lanmumn p. sln?le cylinder innBiieto COO. 14 ImprovementH. with free engine clutch, no eitifccbargo. W.il.KnlQht,2104thSt..SioiuClty,U. woolfsonTsteam dye works 'Suits cleaned and pressed for djl (( 'Express paid ono way. P1 .UU niOCth&BlDW 7th, SlouxClty, In. AUTO TIRE REPAIRING Prloos Right Work Gunrnntooil O Per Oent Otr our retinlr list ou all Itetreads ndTubriwtlrlnato March IS. rite for list. I Many - tipnngriieia 1 ires Auto Accedmirlui. HALLCR DUOS. AUTO TIRE REPAIR CO. 21 Pearl Slreet Sloui Clly.Iows TYPEWRITERS Swanson's Factory Rebuilts yer-Iron clad euarantee. Urmlugton tSS, t.O. Smith H5, Underwood $15, Biullh Tremler $38. A larRe stock to select from. Shipped urwhere on approrul. II. P. SWANSON COMPANY. Meportmcnt 1), blouxCltr, Iowa- ( 7 TTi Cx dm; w7M 3rjri i 1 1 . 1. 1 Ui. 7l Ml A?A essm kJfl 1 y-,-tsm s v, "fa ' ' i& lh-i- "? I I i ,wA'tri& Afa's',, ." TaA-A-, -sbHsbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbHIuSI. FORD, MODEL T High In Quality Low in Price Touring Car $690 RunabouU $590 Fully Equipped F. O. B. Detroit. Write for new 191 a catalogue. It's Interesting WM. WARNOCK COMPANY, Sioux City, lows DRINK HABIT CURED IH THREE DAYS Without Hypodermic Injections by tho Neal PAethod Write for Indorsements and Booklets. A Sudden Envy of This Young Fellow Came Over Daylight. recognized until Daylight hnd plckod up with htm. It wna Hegan who guldod Daylight through tUo Intricacies of modern politics, labor organization, and commercial and corporation law. It was Hegan, prolific of resourco and suggestion, who openod Daylight's yes to undreamedof possibilities in twontloth-contury warfare, and It was Daylight, rojectlng, nccoptlng, and elaborating, who planned tho cam paJgns and prosecuted them. With tho Pacific coast, from Pugot Sound to Panama, buzzing nml humming, nnd with San Francisco furiously about his eaiB, tho two big steamship companies had all tho appcaraico of winning. It lurked as If Hurnlng Daylight was be ing boaten slowly to his knees. And then ho struck at tho steamship com panies, at San Pianclsco, nt tho wholo Pacific coast. It was not much of a blow at first. A Christian Endeavor convention was bofng held in San Francisco, n row with started by lixpross Drivers' Union No. 027 ocr tho hnndllng of a small hc'ip of baggage at Kerry Ilulldlng. A fow heads wero broken, a scoro of ar rests mado, and tho bnggngo was de livered. No ono would hnvo guossed that bohlnd this pett wrnnglo was tho flno Irish hand of Ilogon, mado polont by tho Klondiko gold of Hum- I Ing Dayliput. It was an inslgnlncnnt nffnlr at or bo It seemed Hut tho Tcaiustis' Union took an tho strlko becamo involved. A refusal of cooks and waiters to Bervo scab team sters or teamsters' employers brought out tho cooks nnd waiters. Tho butchers and meat cutters refused to hnndlo meat dostlnod for unfnlr restaurants. Tho combined Employ ers' Associations put up n solid front, and found facing them tho 40,000 or ganized laborers of San Frnnclsco Tho restaurant bakers and tho bakery wagon drivers struck, followed by tho milkers, milk drivers and chicken pickers. The building trades asserted Its position In unambiguous terms, and all San Francisco wns In turmoil. Hut still, It was only San Frnnclsco Hegnn's Intrigues wero mnstorly, and Daylight's campaign steadily dovel oped. Tho powerful fighting orgnnl zatlon known as tho Pacific Slope Sea man's Union refused to work vessels tho cargoes of which wero to be bundled by scab longshoremen and freight handlers Tho union presented its ultimatum, and then called a strike This had been Daylight's objective all tho time. Every incoming coastwise vesfiol was boarded by tho union olll clals and Its crow sont nslioro And with tho seamen went tho firemen, tho engineers and tho sea cooks and waiters. Dally tho number of idle steamers increased. It was Impossi ble to get scab crews, for the men of tho Seamen's Union wero fighters trained In tho hard school of tho sea, and when thoy went out it meant blood and death to scabs. This phase of tho strike spread up and down the entire raciflc coast, until all tho ports wero filled with Idle ships, and sea transportation was at a standstill. The dnys nnd weeks dragged out, and the strlko hold. Tho Coastwise Steam Navigation Company and tho Hawaii- 1 an, Nicaraguan, nnd Pacific-Mexican Stcnmship Company wore tlod up com pletely. The expenses of combating tho strlko wero tremendous, nnd they wero earning nothing, whllo daily tho situation went from bad to worse, un til "peaco nt any prico" becamo tho cry. And still there was no poacc, until Daylight and his allies played out their hand, rnked in tho winnings, nnd allowed a goodly portion of a conti nent to rcsumo business. Daylight's coming to civilization hnd not improved him. True, ho wore hotter clothes, hnd lcarnod slightly hotter manners, nnd spoko better Eng linb. Hut ho had hardened, and nt tho cxponso of his old-tlmo, wholosouled geniality. Even his human ntnilatlons wore descending. Playing a lone hand, contemptuous of most of tho men with whom he played, Inciting In sympathy or understanding of them, and certain ly Independent of thorn, ho found lit tle In common with thoso to bo en countered, sny at tho Alta-Paclflc. In point of fnct, whon tho battlo with tho steamship companies wnsat Its height and his raid was inflicting Incalcula ble damage on nil business Interests, ho had been asked to resign from tho Alta-Paclilc. Tho Iden had been rath or to his liking, and ho had found now quarters In clubs like tho Itlvorslde, organlzod and practically maintained by tho city bosses, Ono week-end, feeling heavy and de pressed nnd tired of tho city and its wnys, ho obeyed tho Impulse of a whim that was later to play an impor tant part In his life. Tho deslro to get out of tho city for a whiff of coun try air nnd for a chnngo of scene was tho causo. Yet, to himself, ho mado tho excuse of going to Glon Ellen for tho purpose of Inspecting a brickyard which Holdsworthy had sold him. Ho spent tho night In the little country hotol, nnd on Sunday morning, astrido a saddlo horse rented from tho Glen Ellen butcher, rodo out of tho village. Tho brickyard was close at hand on tho flat bosldo tho Sonoma Creek. ltcsolvlng to have his fun first, and to look ovor tho brickyard nftcrward, ho rodo up tho hill, prospoctlng for a way crosB country to get to the knolls. Ho left tho country rond at tho first gato ho enmo to and cantered through a hnyflold. Tho grain was wnlst-hlgh on cither sldo tho wagon road, nnd bo sniffed tho wnrm aroma of it with dollghto'l nostrils. At tho baso of tho knolls ho encountered a tumblo-down Btakound-rldor fonco. n x--N VfwlL v v ) K? -.1 M V ) IS SURE OF OBITUARY ONE REASON WHY MR. SPARROW. GRASS LIVE3 IN COUNTRY. There Are Others, of Course, But This One Is Paramount 8ort of a Letter of Recommendation to St. Peter. Ono argument against tho rush to tho cities is tho city obituary column. I have known men to lead long, useful nnd honornblo lives In the city nnd got only four or tlvo lines at last, whereas if they had stayed on Uie farm tho country papers would have given thom columns. Wo don't have porcelain bathtubs up hero in the hills. Steam heaters and Janitors nro scarce. Therc'B a good deal of snow, too, nnd no doll catossen around tho corner. Gut there Is nlways the satisfaction of knowing that tho local paper will print n lino piece about us when our turn comes to bo shoveled on, ns Shakespeare puts It. I may have to raise my own turnips, instead of paying a market gardener throe prices to raise them for mo, and a grocer six prices for bringing them to mo. I may work hard in tho sun light nnd the air of tho Holds when I might be lolling In the gaslight and tho dust of n factory. I may have to send my children a mllo to sciiool instead of two miles to a sweatshop; and per haps thoiu Is a Plymouth Hock roos tor on the premises Instead of one of them things your newspaper calls pia noletups. I admit the country's disad vantages freely. Put when this valo of tears is done with me and I nm laid to rest under tho plno trees In tho old family lot, I know thcro will bo a gen erous write-up by Editor Greon In tho , Dackwoods Weekly Guide, .loyvillo ' nnd Passaic county papers please I copy. I shall not go out llko a common critter of the pasturo, without a letter of recommendation to St. Petor. There will bo a long article right down tho mlddlo of tho first page, and Lem uel Green will spread himself to make It a first-class Job. Ho will tell tho neighbors all the good things in my history that tho neighbors can think up to tell him; how I was industrious, Saving; a Desperate Man. "Why did you got engaged to Har ry? You sworo that you would never, nover, huvu anything to do with such n man." "Yes, denr, I know I did. But well, I wouldn't hnvo accepted him If ho hadn't mado such a perfectly dreadful throat." "Oh! That old stall about rushing out and committing suicide?" "No, worso than that." "But any of thoso threats are bluffs. I supposo ho said he'd kill tho next man who called on you, eh?" "No, no! I'vo heard that boforo, Dearie, ho threatened that If I did not accopt him ho'd go and prpposo to you. And I bcllevo ho would hnvo done it, too ho was perfectly dosperatol" Sad Meeting. "I think we met nt thl cafe last winter. Your overcoat is c-y familiar to me." "But I didn't own It then " "No; but I did!" Fllegendo Blaet- tor. A man's nature runs either to herbs or weeds; therefore let him seasona bly water tho one and destroy the oth er. Bacon. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pcllcta regulate nnd invigorate stoinich, liver nnd bow els. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take. Do not gripe. Time is Incalculably long, nnd every day Is a vessel Into which very much may bo poured, if ono will really nil It up. Goetho. J'lI.KS CIIUI'.I) TK fi TO 14 n.'.Y3 TotinlriiKKist will ruiund monoy If I'ASO OlNT. MKNT falls to euro any cafco of Itchlnis, Illlml, Uleedlng or 1'rotmaing l'lles In G lo 14 days. Ux- Somo married men look upon home as a placo to rest and somo others got anything but a rest while there. FARMS FOn RENT OU SALE ON CHOP payments. J. MULHALL. Sioux City. la. Many a high flyer has no knowledgo of aerial navigation. SAVED FRQ1 AN OPEIDN sober, honest, patient under trial, kind How Mrs. Reed of Peoria, 111. "It Sure Beats Country Places and Bungalows at Menlo Park," He Com muned Aloud, lie tethered tho horse nml wan- I tab'o garden, catir.g strawberries and dored on foot among the knolls. Their tops wero crowned with century-old spruco trees, and their sides clothed with oaks nnd madronos and native holly. But to tho perfect redwoods be longed the small but deep canyon tnat threaded Its way among the knolls. Hero ho found no passago out for his horse, and leading tho animal, ho forced his way up tho Hillside. On the crest ho came through an amazing thicket of velvot-trunked young ma dronos, and emerged on an open hill sldo that led down into a tiny valley. Tho sunshine was at first dazzling In Its brightness, nnd ho paused and rested, for ho wns panting from tho exertion. Not of old hnd ho known shortness of breath such as this, and muscles thnt so easily tired at n stiff climb. A tiny stream rar down tno tiny vnlley through a tiny meadow that was carpeted kncc-hlgh with grass and blue and whlto nemophlla. Crossing tho stream, Daylight fol lowed a faint cattle trail ovor a low, rocky hill and through a wlno-wooded forest of manzanltn, and emerged upon another tiny valley, down which filtered another sprlng-fcu, meatiow- bordered streamlet. "It suro beats country places and bungalows at Menlo Park." ho com muned aloud; "and It over I get tho hankering for country llto, it's mo for this every tlmo." An old wood-road led him to a clear ing, where a dozen acies of grapes Hiow on wine-red poll. A cow-path, moro trees and thickets, nnd ho dropped down a hlllsldo to tho southeast ox- posuro. Here, poiseu uuuvu u uik iui ested canyon, nnd looking out upon Sonoma Valley, was a small farm house. With Its barn and outhouses It snuggled Into n nook in tho hill side, which protected It from tho west and north It was tho erosion from this hlllsldo, ho Judged, thnt had formed tho little level stretch of vego tablo garden Tho boll was fat ?nd blnck, and thoro was water In plenty, for ho saw several faucets running wtdo open. Forgotten was tho brick ard. Nobody was at homo, but Day light dismounted nnd ranged tho vego- Wall Street Is Interested 1625 Douglas Street IOUX CITY IOWA HODYDROTHER3,PROPRIETORS arr.Cl' ",aclw,a by lUo w,lolc 'Valor t MTnn V IAjI ivvnilnn (II... t. .. 1 .. 1. awy uy BitT, uia Front Foderatlon. Fancy Job of Trucking That Takes tho Minds of Financiers Off Money. Flnanco Is what engages It mostly, but Wall street can sparo a momont for other things that aro Interesting, as It Is doing occasionally Just now to look on nt somo exhibitions of fancy trucking. Tho structural stool for tho now building going up on Wall and Nassau streets is landed from lighters nt a South street wharf at tho foot of Wall streot, so it Is only a short haul from tho wharf to tho now building, though It's n lively ono. Somo of tho supporting columns on pillars going into this building weigh from 25 tons to 30 tons each, but thoy are handled easily. Thoy bock ono of thoso long and pot Jerous trucks with low, brond-rlmmcd. heavy, solid Iron wheels down on tho wharf, nlongBldo tho lighter, and then tho lighter's steam derrick lifts off Its deck ono of thoso 30-ton pillars and lays It gently on tho truck, doing this quickly nnd easily. To huul this load thoy hnvo hooked to tho team bovcii pairs of big horsiau, a team of 11 Screes, all used t tu business and Ml vulllng ably. All ready, tha drlvor mounts to a scat ou tho forward end of tho big pillar on tho truck, which puts him high In tho air, and gathers up his lines. Thero aro three other men scat tered nlong tho team ns leaders and guides for tho horses, and then with out flummery or ceremony thoy get nway, stnrtlng the great load easily There's a broad, easy Bweep from tho wharf Into tho broad lower end of Wall Btreet and tho outilt makes this, describing a great arc, and then It straightens out for tho run up Wall atreot. It's nn up grndo all tho way from South stteet to Broadway, but tho team takes it easily on a steady trot. It's aa good, If not bettor, than a circus, and prlmnrlly Intoredted though It Is to flnanco, Wall street finds tlmo to look when ono of thoso great outfits sweeps by. Now York Sun. Customer's Opinion. Soymour What do jou think of tho novel that Bennor, tho restaurant keeper, has wiltton? Ashley It's too much llko his sand wlchos nothing between tho covers. Knlcker Yes, my dear, I shall bo glad to go with you; I Joug to seo tho beauties of tho country. Mrs. Kulckur Wo will stay In town. Judgo. green peas, inspecting tho old adobo barn and rusty plow and harrow, and rolling and smoking cigarettes while ho watched tho antics of several broods of young chicks and tho moth er hens. Nothing could satisfy his holiday spir it now but the ascent of Sonoma Moun tain. nd hero on tho crest, threo hours afterward, he emerged, tired and sweaty, garmonts torn and face and hands scratched, but with sparkling oyes and an unwonted zestfulness ot expression. Ho felt tho illicit pleas ure of a schoolboy playing truant. Tho big gaming tablo of San Francisco seemed very far away. But thero wna moro than Illicit pleasure in his mood It was as though ho wero going through a sort of cleansing bath No room hero for rll tho sordldness, meanness and vlciousness that filled tho dirty pool of city existenco. Ho was loath to depart, and It was not for an hour that ho was able to tear himself nway and take tho descent of tho mountain. Working out a new route Just for tho fun of it, late after noon was upon him whon ho arrived back t tho wooded knolls. Daylight ca3t about for a trail, and found ono leading down tho side opposlto to his nscont. Circling tho baso of tho knoll, ho picked up with his horso and rode on to tho farm houso. Smoko waii rising from tho chimney, and ho was quickly In con versation with a nervous, slender young man, who, ho learned, wai only n tenant on the ranch. How large was It? A matter ot one hundred nnd eighty acres, though it seemed much larger. This was because it was so Irregularly shaped. Yes, It Included tho clny-plt and all tho knolls, and its boundnry that run along thu big can yon was over a mllo long. Oh, yes, ho and his wlfo manaaed to scratch a living without woiklng too hard. Thoy didn't have to pay much rent. Hlllard, tho ownor, deponded on tho incomo from tho clny-plt, Hlllard was well off and had big ranches nnd vino yards down on tho flat of tho valloy. Tho brickyard paid ten cents a cubic yard for the clay. As for the rest of the ranch, tho land was good in patches, where it was cleared, llko tho vege table garden and tho vineyard, but tho rest of It was too much up-and-down. "You'ro not a farmer," Daylight said. Tho young man laughed and shook bis head. "No; I'm a telegraph operator But tho wife and I decided to tnko a two years' vacation, and . . . hero wo aro. But tho time's about up. I'm going back Into the offlco this fall after l get tho grnpjs off." As Daylight listened, thcro camo to him a cudden envy of this oung fol low living right In tho midst of all this which Daylight had traveled through tho last few hours. "Wha In thunder nro you going back to tho telegraph office for?" ho demanded Tho joung man smiled with a cer tain wilfulness. "Uecnuso wo can't get ahead hero. . . ." (ho hesitated an tnstnnt), "and becauso, thoro aro added ex penses coming. Tho ront, small as It Is, counts; nnd besldeB, I'm not strong enough to effectually farm tho placo. If l owned It, or If 1 wero a ronl husky llko you, I'd nsl: nothing hotter. Nor would tho wlfo" Again the wist ful smile hovorod on his fnco. "You seo, wo'ro country born, and after bucking with cities for n few joars, wo kind of feel we llko tho country best Wo'vo planned to got ahead, though, and thou bomo day we'll buy a patch of land and stay with It." (TO BE CONTINUED.) in prosperity, a loving son, a devoted husband, a fond father, a faithful j friend, a man truo to principle and i spotless In character, a worthy citizen, whose loss Is a severo blow to all. Would thero were more of my kind Ho will recall my public deeds and private virtues; tho time I ran for sheriff on tho Prohibition ticket; tho poor families I helped shelter tho year the dam broke, and tho tlmo I carried wnlor to savo the Widow Gnrwin's cottage from tho flames and caught my last cold. No matter how lowly my life has been, I shall go out In stylo nnd good ordor, nnd a loving hand will write "The End" after my own has dropped the pon. You see, Mr. Editor, tho country still has some thing tho city can't offer. "Simon Sparrowgrass" In Newark News. Escaped The Sur geon's Knife. mifrnfj !)! "JJJ1J "I 'r l!wrffw Sidelight on Lloyd-George. On tho day Lloyd-Geoige becamo chancellor qf tho exchequer ho left the house with a friend of his boy hood (and his lovo of old friends is not the least attractive phaso of his character). As thoy talked of his ad vancement he said: "In all my ca reor I do not remember a hand be ing held out to mo from abovo and and a voice saying: "Drlng 1 fynoy yma' (climb thou up here). But don't misunderstand mo," he wont on, "there hnvo been thousands of hands which have pushed me up from be hind." Ho does not forget these hands. Ho does not forget from whence comes his authority and his commission. Thero have been times when ono has feared times when his light anchorage seemed in danger of yielding to the Impact of opportun ism. But thnt memory of his own people, that loyalty to tho Inspiration of the mountains nnd tho bimplo tra ditions of hts fathers has saved him and will savo him. London Dally News. Hot Off the Griddle, Mrs. Robert S. McKeo, daughter of President Harrison, is a groat believer in woman suffrage, and whenever she has tho cbanco she steps right up to the bat and lines out a hot argument in support of her position. One duy she was having such a discussion with a prominent Now York lawyer. "Now, my dear Mrs. McKee," Insist ed the attorney, "It would be all right to have woman suffrage if tho edu cated and brilliant women like you wont to tho polls. You and your kind know all about tho public questions, and your votes would undoubtedly bo of great good to tho country. But you would not dorlvo any beneiit from hav ing tho Ignorant and uneducated wo man voting. Imaglno tho absurdity of your cook voting nnd attempting to solve tho great Issues of tho day." "Unfortunately," replied Mrs. Mc Keo, with a tragic air, "ho does'" Popular Magazine. Peoria, 111. "I wish to let every one knowwhatLydiaE.Pinkham'sVegetable Compound has done forme. Fortwoyeara I sufTercd. Tho doc tor said I had a tumor and tho only remedy as tho surgeon's knife. My mother bought mo Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, and i .i touay jl am a wen ana $ healthy woman. For J months I suffered from inflammation, and your Sanative Wash relieved me. I am glad to tell anyone what your medicines have done for mo. You can uso my testimonial in any way you wish, and I will bo glad to answer letters." Mrs. Christina Reed, 105 Mound St, Peoria, 111. Mrs. Iiynch Also Avoided Operation. Jessup, Pa, "After tho birth of my fourth child, I had severo organic inflam mation. I would have such terrible pains that it did not seem ns though I could stand it. This kept up for three long months, until two doctors decided that an operation was needed. "Then one of my friends recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and after taking it for two months I was a well woman." Mrs. Joseph A. Lynch, Jessup, Pa. Women who suffer from female ills should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, ono of tho most success ful remedies tho world has ever known, before submitting to a surgical operation. Chest Paks and Sprams Sloan's Liniment is an ex cellent remedy for chest and throat affections. It quickly relieves congestion and in flammation. A few drops in water used as a gaigle is antiseptic and healing. 1 As One Man Sees College Life. John Arbucklo, who mado his mil lions In tho coffeo trado, says of tho rich man's son In college thnt "ho Is not worth tho powdor to blow him up," and of tho average fresh-caught col lego graduato that ho Is "not worth oven ?G a week." Of tho rich men's sons Mr. Arbucklo says: "Thoy go to collcgo to bo as far ns posslblo away from tho homes of their parents nnd relatives, so that their conduct may not bo criticized They caie llttlo about tho faculty, in fact, to thom thoy nro a Joko. All they go for Is to go joy riding in their automobiles and to run nround with chorus girls." Here's Proof " I have used Sloan's Linlmtnt for yeara and can testify to Its wonderful t'Bciency, I ruve used it for sore throat, croup, lame back and rheumatism and la every case it gave instant relief." REBECCA JANE ISAACS, Lucy, Kentucky. SLOANS LINIMENT is excellent for sprains and bruises. It stops the pain at once and reduces swell ing very quickly. Sold by all dealers. Prico, 25c, BOG., $1.00 Sloan's Treatise on the Horse sent free, Address Dr. Sloan Adam and Eve. "What did Adam havo to do whon ho was nut out of tho Garden of Kdon?" was tho reported boglnnlng of i a Scotch classroom Interlude. I "Ho hnd to work hard and till tho ground." "Very good. And what did Eva have i to do?" "Evo had to do what Adam told her!" y 'IT Address H f vU ni?Rs Earl S. Sloan m 1 '& w jY0wsr I Tit i.n.y.tiii-i uf iii fJJxtt7'.'J'Mlli-qCP3il!- t is iicut'onsn Syrup. Tutti Qowl, Uh In time. Sold by Drotxi.u. tor