Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, September 03, 1914, Image 2

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DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA.
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Front vlow of tho French war dirigible, Sploss, which la of the semi
rigid typo.
HE TRAFFIC OF IDE WORLD
Uner Ancon of the War Department Makes Trip Through Water
way That Marked Official Opening of Canal for Traffic
Big Ditch Is Completed After 400 Years of
Effort by Leading Nations.
Panama. Tho United States war do-
i parttncnt Fteamshlp Ancon made tho
f posBago through the Panama canal,
fend transit through tho waterway was
. officially 3pen to tho traffic of tho
world.
Tho Aucon left Its berth at Cristobal
at seven o'clock In tho morning and
mado Its way to the end of the deep
water channel from tho Atlantic to tho
Gatun locks. It went through these
jBBfr 3fP NdPEl bbbbbVbbI
m, President Woodrow Wilson.
locks, -which have a lift or 85 feet, In
70 minutes. It continued through tho
watorway, from deep water on tho At
lantic to deep water on tho Pacific
side, without Incident.
Leaving Cristobal) the Ancon passed
several vessels at anchor In the har
bor, waiting to follow It through tho
canal and thus make the first com
mercial use of the water,
i Tho docks of the Ancon woro crowd
red with guests of the government and
officials of tho canal administration
and the republic of Panama. The
party Included Colonel Goethals, U. S.
A., bulUler of tho canal and governor
of tho zone; President Porras of Pan
ama, and Capt. Hugh Rodman, U, S.
J?., superintendent of transportation.
,In conformity with a promise made
'by Colonel Goethals, tho peace flag of
'the American Peace society fluttered
Strom tho foremast of tho Ancon.
Beneath Its decks, howover, wcro
two huge ploces of artillery which are
destined to form an important part
in tbo defenses of tho watorway.
Tho gronr watorway now becomes
froo and open to tho vessels of com
merce and of war of all nations on
terms of entire equality," In accord
ance to tho provisions of the Hay
Pauneofote treaty.
Vessels drawing uot raoro than thir
ty feet of water ar.tl up to 10,000 tons
register may now inako tho passage.
It would be possible to put some of
the big Amerk-tm dreadnaughts
through at any time.
The passage of the Ancon and Its
company of eliips opens tho canal to
shipping, although the formal opening
of tho waterway will not take place
until next spring. Tickets havo been
old at the Isthmus to all vessels wait
ing to make the trip. Tho charge Is
1.26 a ton, which Is purely nominal In
view of the fact that It cuts about 10,
000 miles and two months of almost
continuous steaming from the timo re
quired for the ordinary freighter to go
around South Amerloa to a position
GOV. MAJOR IN OVERALLS
Mlttourl Executive Heads State High
way Work on Second Annual
i Goods Roads Day.
Jefferson, Mo. Armed with pick and
huvel. Governor Major for tho second
tltto led Missouri men in tho better
ment of the state's highways. Major
Inaugurated a good roads plan last
year, and 250,000 men In the two days
Bkmii'cj work and material estimated
In the Pacific opposite tho canal.
American ships will receive no conces
sions In faro.
The chargo made Is expected to re
turn $12,500,000 to tho canal treasury
in the first year of oporatlon, which
will cover tho $4,000,000 a year cost
of oporatlon, and nlmost cover the ad
dltlonal $11,000,000 Interest on tho
monoy required to build tho waterway.
Judging by tho experiences of the
Suez canal, tho Panama waterwny will
bo carrying 20,000,000 tons of freight
In n few yenrs, nnd on that basis a re
ductlon of tho tolls would be posslblo
Tho canal has been completed after
almost four centuries of effort by tho
leading nntlons of tho world. Balboa
Hrst saw the possibilities of tho canal
when ho crossed tho Isthmus on Sop
tembor 25, 1513, nnd found himself
gazing on tho Pacific ocean. In the
noxt year Balboa and his men carried
two small ships across the Isthmus,
Intending to uso them in tho Pacific,
and threo years Inter tho city of Pan
ama was founded to become, In a short
timo, tho richest city in tho world
and tho terminus of the routo by
moans of which Spanish adventurers
transported tho plunder of tho Incas
from Poru and other South Ameri
can countrlos to Spain. Highways wcro
paved with brick across the Isthmus
to provlda routo for tho pack animals.
Tho first definite plans for a canal
woro proposed by Savadera, a Spanish
engineer among Balboa's followers,
who was about to forward his project
to King Charles V. of Spain when tho
king dlod. Surveys of tho- proposed
canal routo first woro made In 1581 by
Spanish englnoers, who reported the
projoct lmposslblo of accomplishment.
In 1620 King Phillip II decided against
building tho canal after referring the
question to tho Dominican friars, who
suggostcd the project was sacrilegious
bocauso "What God hath Joined to
gether, lot no man put asunder."
England becamo Interested in the
possibilities of a canal In the latter
part of tho seventeenth century when
William Paterson, founder of tho Dank
of England, tried to found a commun
ity on tho Isthmus of Darlen, south of
the present Panama, with tho ultimate
flBT " B
mt .ui"i
blg THEODORE ROOSEVELT M,
Intention of establishing a translsth
mlan route. Although that project
proved an utter failure, other British
survoys wero made from timo to time
for 60 years.
In the first part of the last century
tho German poet, Gootho, said: "It 1b
absolutely Indispensable that tho
United States effect a passage from
the Moxlcan gulf to the Pacific ocean,
and I am certain they will do It."
In 1814 the Spanish government, by
decree entered upon the construction
of an Isthmian canal, but the success
ful revolt ot tho South American col
onies stopped tbo work. In 1825 Pres
ident Bolivar ot the republic of Now
v.,-.,
to bo worth $1,600,000. Greater re
sults are expected thlB year.
The results obtained last year lu
Missouri stood out so favorably aiid
tho plan proved so popular that many
othor states took up thu Idea, whllo
more are preparing to follow tho move
of Missouri this year August dates
were selected because tho season is
most favorable for road Improvements
and becauso the farmers havo mora
spare time at this particular season.
Thousands of Missouri chickens
wero sacrificed to the cause, Tho
Urnnada gava n frnnchlso tor a cana
at Panama to a Frenchman, Uaroi
Thierry, who failed to ralso tho cap
Ital roqulred to carry out the project
Tho first appoarance of tho Unftet
SUitcs In tho history of the Panami
canal Idea was in 1836, when Henrj
Clay Introduced a resolution In thi
scnato which resulted In Charles Did
dle being sent by President Jackson tc
visit tho various canal routes proposed
and report on their relative feasibil
ities. Blddlo reported In tho following
year that he had been so struck by
tbo feasibility of the Panama route
that he had not visited the other pro
posed routes, tho Nlcaraguan, Darlen
and Tchuantepoc projects.
Ferdinand do LessepB, the builder ol
the Suez canal, formed tho Interocean
tc Canal company in Paris In 1877 and
actual work on the canal was started
In tho next year. On January 20, 1880,
tho Do Lessops company, In the pres
ence of a distinguished gathering, fired
the first blast for tho tearing away ol
Culobra hill. Do Lessops wlthdrow
from tho project In 1887 when the Im
possibility of building a sea level canal
within tho estimated 12 years becamo
apparent.
At tho same timo it was Indicated
tho project could not be completed for
tho estimated cost of $240,000,000, as
$200,000,000 already had been spent.
Tho company 'wont Into bankruptcy.
In 1894 tho New Panama Canal com
pany started work again, but It prac
tically ceased operations after five
years of desultory work.
Tho United States in 1904 obtained
tho necessary concession from tho new
republic of Panama for the building
in i " . - -
Col. George W. Goethals.
of tho canal and took over the rlghU
and properties of tho old French com
pany. Actual operations started or
May 4 of that year. Twp or threo head!
of largo transportation companies In
the United Sttaes wero put In charge
of the building of the canal ono aftei
another at tho start of the project, but
each In turn gave up tho work and re
turned home. Finally the government
put Colonol GoethalB In chargo of the
operations and under his leadership
the bulk of tho work has been done.
Tho first union of tho Pacific and At
lantic waters was on October 10, 1913,
when Presldont Wilson touched an
electric button In Washington, which
exploded a charge under the Gamboa
dlko.
The first boat of any description tc
make tho completo trip through the
canal was a nameless mud scow of the
Panama railroad, which passed from
the Pacific entrance to Culobra cut In
November, 1913, nnd was sent to the
Atlantic entrance In the following
month.
On January 7, 1914, the crane boat
Alexander La Valley, an old French
vessel of 1,200 tons, Bteamed through
the canal from the Atlantic to tho Pa
cific. The first vessel to stean entire
ly around South America by way ot
tho canal was tho tug Reliance, Capt.
R. C. Thompson, which sailed from
Colon on February 11, 1914.
WOUNDED BIRD UPSETS BOAT
Gets Caught on Woman's Hat and
Nearly Causes Her Death by
Drowning.
Cold Spring, N. Y. A maimed spar
row, which fell upon Mrs. Floyd Nea
bitt'B hat, and got entangled In tho
trimmings, nearly caused her death
by drowning on Lake Oscawana.
Sho was paddling alone In a ca
noe. When tho bird landed on hor
hat, and waB caught. Mrs. Nosbitt,
frightened, jumped to hor feet and
overbalanced tho canoo. Her hus
band, who was on shore, swam out
and brought her to safety. The bird
escaped in tho excitement.
Reunited After 38 Year' Separation.
Wllkes-Barro, Pa, Mrs. Margaret
Backes ot Plttston and Peter Miller
of Chicago, brother and sister, who
have been separated for 38 years, each
bollovlng tho other dead, wero re
united when Miller walked into the
homo ot his sister unnanouncod and
declared he was her long lost brother.
Miller and his sister lived at Bucalo
38 years ago. Ho then doclded to go
West, and when after a few months
no more was heard of him he was
given up as dead. Recently ho learned
ot his sister's whereabouts, and oune
here to visit hor.
good wives, knowing well tho appe
tites of load workers, selected shady
spots near where tho various gangs
wero at work and scrvod real feeds
for tho volunteers, which turned the
noon hour into a picnic.
Sidesteps Federal Tax.
. ParkerBburg, W, Va.-To avoid pay
ing tho federal tax, a brewing coin
I pany allowed" 17,000 gallons ot boor to
' flow luto tho Konawah. Tho beer had
1 been on hand whon tho stato prohtH
tlon law went luto effect ou July 1
lifrj t 8
ruiiuawemai
Principles of
Health
lKOIOIOIOIOICOIOIOIOZOIS
(Copyright. 1914. by A. S. Cray)
ANEMIA.
Life and health aro among our most
familiar words nnd In their ordinary
meaning probably no words are more
widely understood, and yet In specific
application no terms are more difficult
to oxpress and comprehend. It Is
generally understood that life consists
In an ability to change and to adapt
to environment, and probably It will
be generally agroed that health Is an
Individual condition of sound mind,
normal body, absence of disease and
a normal blood supply.
Few of us ever get very far along
life's highway without departing In
some degree from this ideal condi
tion, and few over fully recover it
onco It 1b lost, largely because we do
not understand what we have lost,
where we lost It, why we lost It, how
we lost It or how it may be regained.
The chief characteristic of disease
Is loss of physical strength and of
color, and few convalescents from
even comparatively slight illness fall
to show these two symptoms In
marked degree. We cover tho condi
tion, quite satisfactorily to most of
us, by saying, "Wo aro a little ane
mic," and then we take oomo Iron
because it Is known that Iron has a
strong affinity for oxygen and wo
know that our body cells must havo
oxygen to breatho in order to restore
the ruddy glow of health to the cheek,
the rhythmic and vigorous swing to
the walk, the sparkle of vim and en
ergy to the eye
Anemia as generally understood is a
condition mnrked by pallor of the skin
and mucous membranes, and by palpi
tation nnd debility, duo to a deficiency
In the blood or Its constituents.
To bo nble to sense the character of
any physical body we must be able to
see and to comprehend Its throe di
mensions of length, breadth and thick
ness nnd personally to test Its density
and hardness; and In like manner to
win and mnlntaln health wo must see
and comprehend Its limits.
The blood contains Iron and the
Iron in the blood corpuscle Is mostly
In a combination known as "hemoglo
bin," which has a peculiarly looso af
finity for oxygen and carries that ele
ment to tho Individual cells through
out tho body, enabling them to
"breatho."
Wo havo already noted In previous
articles that we can live only about
threo minutes without air, and wo
shall seo as we pursue this Inquiry
how quickly nnd lhtelllgontly nature
adjusts and compensates for material
changes In environment, if only we
have sufficient intelligence not to In
terfere with her systom.
It Is on this complicated cycle of
changes that our health, happiness
and sanity depends, and the slightest
visible evidence of anemia may be
taken to mean a grave disturbance of
the balance between these changes and
consequently of every vital function
of the body.
For sound health normal digestion
Is a necessity; for sound thought, nor
mal digestion is likewise a necessity.
The nervous system, controlling pbfe
iologlcal processes. Is dependent for
Ub health and ability to function on
the nutrition derived from the blood;
and it is owing to deficient nutrition
derived from the blood in anemia that
tho tissues of the secreting glands and
tho glands themselves, the secreting
cells, the secretions and the muscular
and all other tissues of the digestive
system, are in a defective condition,
In consequence of which they are In
capable of fulfilling tholr functions.
Children of anemic parents have ill
developed bloodtormlng organs at
birth and consequently are unable to
manufacture red corpuscles In suffici
ent quantity or of normal quality.
These congenital anomlcs, unless
given extraordinary care, nro unable
to develop normally and go to form
our arrested development types.
Fortunately, tho matter of sound
blood need not be a matter of per
sonal opinion, as there are scientific
means available for determining -its
condition onco we are made to com
prehend the gravity of any departure
from tho normal.
UNDERFED BLOOD.
The fundamental basis of all philos
ophies Is the pursuit ot happiness.
And we fall to attain the desire only
REMARKS THAT CAUSED WAR
Event Probably Not Reoognlzed Inter
nationally, but Decidedly Lively
While It Lasted.
While the policy of watchful waiting
continued in Moxlco City, Washington
had a little Mexican war ot Its own.
Not much blood was shed and no ar
rBts were made, but It was a lively
young war at that. 8evoral days ago
two young and stylishly dressed Mexi
cans stopped In front ot a haberdash
ery at the west end of Pennsylvania
avunue. Mexicans? Well, anyhow,
they looked like Mexicans, and from
the way the shorter one Btarted to mix
things It seems reasonably certain that
the guess holds good Ills opponent
was a clerk.
The duo walked Into tho store and
tho shorter one announced that ho
wanted to seo a pair of socks.
Tho shorter Mexican looked at tho
socks contemptuously and flung them
back on tho countor. When ho spoke
it was In porfect English.
"They soil thoso In my couutry 20
for two pesos," he ahl You could seo
:
si
V
I
By ALBERT S. GRAY, M. D.
..............
.
because we are unable to make out
Ideas colncldo with things as they
actually exist This being truo, then
In anemia wo have tho most general
and tho most Insidious and destruc
tive foe to tho attainment of man's
chief desire happiness. For the
fundamental characteristic of anemia
Is lassitude, weakness and impotence
incapacity for happiness.
Examination of every efficient steam
engine will disclose that tho designer
and tho construction engineers havo
recognized tho necessity of construct
ing tho machine according to tho re
quirements of natural physical laws,
and thero will bo found a definite ra
tio between tho grate surface on which
tho carbon fuel ia burned, tho boiler
Burfaco by means of which tho water
la exposed to the heat ot combustion
and the cylinder area and stroke
through which the transformed po
tential energy Is delivered as dynamlo
energy.
Our bodies, Uko othor machines,
havo a definite capacity for trans
forming potential energy contained in
what wo call food Into dynamic en
ergy, and thore Is not any great mar
gin, or, as tho engineers call It, fac
tor of safety. We work close to our
capacity most of tho timo. Thoroforo,
If we waste energy or if wo do not
tako In sufficient quantity of food of
tho right quality wo fall to maintain
our physical energy balance. A steam
engine or a gasoline engine simply
stops when tho fuel runs out, but the
human body cannot stop and live.
Normal blood ot tho average man
contains about five million corpuscles
per cubic millimeter, a millimeter be
ing approximately one twenty-fifth of
an Inch. We have noted that tho total
area of all the corpuscles In the body
of tho averago man Is approximately
35,000 square f5et, and that tho hem
oglobin spread over this area of blood
corpuscles carries oxygen to the cells
in distant parts of tho body to cnablo
them to breathe or oxidize and burn
up the matter necessary to cell life.
This corpuscular area passes through n
capillary network In the lungs approx
imating 807 square foot of surface.
Nowhere In nature do we find any
great margin over nctual necessities,
and tho fact that there is a matorlal
difference In the net results of com
bustion at low and at high altitudes
raises many questions in tho inquiring
mind. We know that water bolls at
sea level at 212 degrees Fahrenheit,
and at 10,000 feet above sea level tho
same water bolls at 192 degrees Fahr
enheit. Many of us have experienced
tho practical dlfilcultles of this in at
tempting to cook beans or boll eggs
at the higher altitude. If our oxygen
balance is so close and delicate, how
Is It then that man lives and thrives
as well at the high as at the low alti
tude? In clearing up this point we find an
Illustration of tho wonderful compen
sating power these bodies ot ours
havo, If we will only give them the
necessary material to work with. Tho
first effect of our going quickly from a
low to a high altitude Is that most of
us are subject to symptoms exactly
paralleling thoso of anemia; there is
weakness, palpitation, shortness of
breath, pallor of tho skin, and many
aro liable to faint as tho result of any
material exertion. But after a few
weeks "we get used to the climate"
and overything resumes the normal
again.
Now, as a matter of fact, we have
experienced a "technical" anemia.
Tho lightness of tho air gave us less
oxygen at each breath; less pressure
on our bodies called for more blood In
the tissues, consequently less blood
was In tho veins and arteries. .There
fore, tho heart and lungs had both to
work harder and faster to keep things
moving. But after about two weeks a
blood count will show that the 6,000,
000 corpuscles to the cubic millimeter
have increased at 5,000 feet altitude
to 6,600,000 corpuscles.
If tho body is so Jealous of Its bal
ance in numbers and areas of blood
corpuscles as shown by Its so cleverly
matching one against tho other "au
tomatically," as we express It we can
begin to understand why there Is so
much unrest and unbapplness when
through deficiency of hemoglobin the
oxygen demands of the body are re
duced one-tenth or one-half. Kirk sa,ys
that 13,000 grains of oxygen are ab
sorbed dally "by the lungs of an aver
age healthy adult; therefore, if hemo
globin is 10 per cent deficient that In
dividual would receive only 11,700
grains, and It 20 per cent deficient only
11,400 grains.
In all anemias the Individual cells,
the corpusfies, suffer first In quality;
that is to say, tho hemoglobin con
tents aro first reduced and then after
a time tho corpuscles themselves be
gin to detorlorntp in general quality
and number.
Barring a congenital anemia result
ing from very anemic mothers, in
fants aro given a fresh and fair start
each generation, the newborn' Infant
showing about 8,500,000 corpuscles per
cubic millimeter, but reverting to nor
may in the course ot about two weeks
after food is Ingested. It would bo the
part of Intelligence carefully to watch
and guard this practically absolute In
dicator ot health.
the clerk's hair started to rise as he
heard the word "pesos." He had been
reading the paper.
"Come on," continued the young
Mexican to his companion. "We will
leave this hideous hole and go to a
store."
The clerks faoe showed astonish
ment. "Huh?" he said.
The Mexican was already walking
out.
"Wanta see something better?" the
clerk shouted.
"Your garments aro intended for old
women," the Mexican sboutod back.
He had reached the door.
"Woll," said the clerk, "whon we git
through with your old oountry you'll
wish you had theso, 'cause you won't
have nothing else!"
Then the fight started. It took the
proprietor, two clerks and tho friend
of tho Mexican to break It up. Wash
lngton Star.
Must Be Fellow Feeling.
Wo do not comprehend ruins until
we aro ourselves In ruin. Heinrlcb
Helno
$TJQRjT$
offiiaOKS
Newsie to Enjoy What He' Calls "God's Freedom"
""" -- i
M EW YORK. Lower Broadway Is going to loso ono of Its newsies. Isidore
li Greenberg, who for 13 years has sold papers at tho northeast corner ol
Broadway and Fulton street, Is going to onter Cornell to study scientific agri
culture! He told a reporter that he
medicine?"
"Tho woods are full of them," said Izzy, "and then you've got to remem
ber that scientific agriculture Is the coming thing. I've stood on tho corner
down there many a long afternoon looking and listening and thinking it
all out.
"I've watched the faces of tho thousands of men and women who passed
me in the crowds and it atruck me that a lot of them woro playing a losing
game. They were prisoners of the city, serving a life sentence.
"I know that the day would come when I'd have to quit the gamo on
the corner, and I kept wondering what I'd do. The outdoor life haa mado
me hard as nails. I wanted to find something that would keep me out in
God's fresh nlr something that I liked and that would be a paying propo
sition. "And then it all came to me in a flash. People have forgotten that all
the wealth in the world comes out of the ground. They've left the open
places of tho earth and have crowded into tho markets in tho cities, and
they are stepping on each other and narrowing themselves, mentally and
physically, while they grub for pay dirt.
"Pretty soon, some day, they are going to go back home back to tho
forests and the farms, and when the back-to-nature movement starts the man
who has specialized In scientific agriculture Is going to have his day."
Love Powders a Failure; Wizard Lands in Cell
CHICAGO. Prof. Pesizo Lomez, the "love-powder man," landed in Jail the
other day. The police believe this announcement will havo the effect of
breaking a number of "love spells" which the "professor" conjured up for
negro women on the South side at $1
per conjure.
Professor Lomez Is a negro who
found it convenient for business rea
sons to adopt the Cuban flag as his
national symbol. His real name Is
John Henry William Rogers at least
that Is as much of it as the polico
have at present,
"Lady, has you any love trou
bles? Is yo' fee-an-see untrue to you?
Is yo husband's love gettln' like n
col' potato? Does you want to bring
back some gentlem'n fren who loved and went away?"
This was the introduction used at South side back doors by Professor
Lomez.
Tho charm seller then introduced the powder that would bring to pass
the wishes of the purchaser.
With mysterious passes of the hand he would mix the powder in half a
glass of water nnd tell his patron to drink it.
"Now concentrate on the object of yo' deslahs," he would say. tying a
small gold-colored thread around tho patron's left ankle. The dexterous col
lection of $1 completed the "conjuring."
Mrs. Anna Wllvey of 335 West Thirty-seventh street met the love pow
der man at Forty-second street and Wentworth avenue, where he was Just
coming out of a house. She called a policeman and had tho "professor"
arrested.
"That powder didn't work on me; I want my dollar back," said Mrs.
Wllvey.
"Bread Cast on Waters"
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Milton Elrod, an Indianapolis business man, has be
come convinced that bread cast on the waters will return after many days.
In his case, however, it came back in a few hours.
but he would fix it if he could. It did',
not take long to find the trouble and ho soon had the engine going. The
occupants were profuse In their thanks and offered to pay him for his trou
ble. Ho declined with thnnkB and one of tho men said he might be In a
position to favor him some day and that bo would not forget his kindness.
Elrod got back to the city about nine o'clock the same evening and was
"hitting It up" pretty lively In North Meridian street when a policeman
stepped out and stopped him.
"Little too fast thore, partner. Better drive down to the station houso
with me," said the policeman.
Ho then stepped up to the side of tho car and got his first view of Elrod.
A moment later he surprised that young man by ordering him to drive on.
"Beat it and beat it quick," he said.
Tho policeman was one of the occupants of the stalled car near Martinsville.
Society Woman's Black and White "Child" Lost
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. A symphony In black and white, In which figured
a black and white automobile, a black and white gowned society matron
of Nob Hill nnd n blnck and white "child" almost turned out a tragedy the
other day at the ocean beach. First
tho society woman left her automobile
and raced up and down and In and
out of the park near by. Finally she
saw a policeman, nnd In accents wild
implored him to "find her child."
"Just the sweetest llttlo thing, so
high," she moaned. "He's all lu white,
with a pink face. He crawled out ot
my car and ran into the bushes As
sistance, Mr Policeman, dear Mr. Po
liceman, assistance."
Immediately the doughty officer
thought of kidnapers So. before he advanced Into the bushes, he drew his
trusty revolver and held It ready. The matron followed, remarking that tho
"child" might bo in a sand pile, as he dearly loved to play In dirt.
At the end of half an hour's search the policeman saw a movement In
the bushes. Ho crept up cautiously and drew the branches aside.
There, scratching1 and pawing In the ground, was a little white Spitz dog.
"My child, my own dearly beloved Ruthle!" cried the woman, as she
leaped for tho animal. "I thought I had lost you, you naughty, naughty girl.
Oh, Mr. Policeman, please pardon me, but If you had known It was a dog
The black and white auto flashed up the road. Then, and not until
then, the policeman said .
Apprehensive.
Wife Ta-tu, dearie. I shall write
before thu end of tho week
Husband Good gracious. Alice
Von id j r niake that check last longer
than that
py Jljifr
&
had been selling newspapers since he
was flvo years old. Ho Is eighteen.
"I kept my wits about me," waa
the way ho put it. "I worked hard, 1
Btudled nnd observed men and events,
and now I am going to bo graduated
from tho street corner. It was a good
'prep.' school, even If It was a hard
ono."
"But why scientific agriculture?"
ho was naked. "Wh not tho law ot
ianY.HA3Yo'Aiir
LOVETROUnlES?
KVrf FPF-AN-ce
UttTWUE TO t0' .
CHARM WILL
FIA If AIL UP
(jCRUMpous
Returned With Interest
With a party of friends he was
driving in an automobile In the vicin
ity of Martinsville. Two miles north
of that place they found a dead ma
chine along the road with three per
spiring men standing beside it.
"Say, partner," said one of the
men, "know anything about an auto?
Wo can't get this blamed thing to
move."
Elrod remarked that he did not
know a great deal about a machine,
His Policy.
"Do you kiss all the pretty glrU In
tho course of your campaign?"
"Certainly; no candidate should fail,
to embrace every opportunity to make!
himself rgroeable"
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