DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. IMMtalMIU 11 i .' etter 1SCU1IS Baked "You never tasted daintier, lighter, fluffier Llscults than those j baked with Calumet , :d xnin uiiumeu jr'ro always I delicious . II ( Calumet in- i They' nood- For Calumet I cures perfect baking. RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS R World'. Pure Food f- ExpoeiUon, Chicago, tllinoU. Parle Eznotltlon. France, March, IU1Z. ft Jt KJr j Fta"" " It WADS-bww PJtWST zzaiti S . CHICAGO You don't tire money when yu buy cheep or bif -un bauaz powder, uoa I oe mmea. cur uiumit. u i mora economic! more wo.lewm. itm btM rtmu. ! Unmet U ur mperlor lo loor mult tea oaa. Qfo., wnfinnni H,ro. , Ono hundred years ago tho eele- brated colossal statue of Sir William Wallace was formally dedicated by the earl of Buchan, In connection with tho celebration of tho flvo hundredth anni versary of tho battle of Bannockburn. . Sir William Wallace Is known as tlio I national hero of Scotland, and the Btorles of his courage, patriotism and I devotion are familiar to all tho chll-1 dron of that land. As tho leader of a Vnml rf nfilrlnllx fnllnwfirfl. hn follpllt I tor years to deliver Scotland from English rulo. When victory Boomed "about to crown his efforts ho was de feated and captured through treach ery, August 5, 1305, and sent a prison er to London. There ho was tried for high treason. On tho samo day that ho was convicted ho waB executed and his body quartered. J ' Looked Older. "That boy looks moro than flvo years old," said the railroad conductor to tho mother. "I know It, Blr, but he's not. Ho tho vehicle which communicated its was brought up in Philadelphia," re- j thought. It necessitated the creation piled tho mother. 0f now words; and it gavo now nnd nobler meanings to old wordB. It la Father Tlmo probably hands a worn- not t00 much to say that It almost cre an a new wrinkle occasionally, merelt Bte(j a now Greek and Latin tonguo. as a reminder that Bho hasn't been for i u ha8 g,von noblo thomea nnd Etten' thoughts to our greatest writers. Go 1 through a library and count tho num Dr. Pierce' Pellets, small, sugar-coated. ber o thQ books wnlch tno Blb,e haa eaiy to take as candy, regulate and invig- . . ., ... . . . " orate stomach, liver and TjowcIs. Do not , suggested. Vou will at onco put Into gripe. Adv. i tho category Dante's "Dlvino Comedy," ' TaBBo'o "Jerusalem Delivered," Spen- Tho face of a new blackboard eraser BOr'B "Faerie Quoone," Milton's "Para la mado of felt so perforated that tho ,iiSQ Lost" and "Paradise Regained," crayon dust is gathered insldo it. i Pollok's "Courso of Time," Popo's "Messiah," nnd many others of llko Fluorspar production In tno united States in 1013 aggregated 115,580 tons, valued at ?6.37 per ton. TheHumanAutomobile The human body, llko an automobllo, cbanjjes fuel (food) Into power. When the fuel is too rich, or tho mixers and valves aro out of order, watte products clog the machinery and reduce tho powe". The kidneys, llko oxhauBt valves, should carry off the waste (urlo aold), but weak kidneys can't. Urlo acid In exewiss caflses headache, weak eyes, rheuwatlo pains, gravel, dropsy afed fatal Urlght's disease. Donri's Kidney Tills help the kidneys fight off urlo acid. It Is tlio best-recommended special kidney remedy. A South Dakota Case "Ercrv Tfature Mrs. B. Nichols. ,16J Illinois St., IIu Iron, 8 D, iayii "My back was weak and my system became all run down. I had it hi a to take to my beu ,and the klrtnoi se cretions became un natural and Irrt-KU- la In panaag-e It took onlj two boxes of Doan a Kidney Pills to put me on my feet, a well wom an The pxln ami w. aknrse lett me and my health wi restored I have bad no kldno troubln since." Cat Doan'a at Any Store, 50 e a Bos FOSTLK-MILDUIU1 CO.. BUFFALO, N.Y. own ?r?afa fTTKVit " ( tj'V fseMr&&LjL -- 4 Back to! the Bible I St -- Application o! the Scriptures (o y the World Today as Seen by Eml I nent Men In Various Walks o! Lite ! - - o- (Copyright. 1914, by Joseph U. Bowles) THE Q08PEL OF PROGRESS. (By ARCUDIBIIOP JOHN 1HEL.AND.) "IU constructlvo ideas (tho initio's) I aro as far abovo thoBe of tlio other books of religion aa tlio lieavens'aro abovo tho earth." Washington Gtad don. Tho dlvino purposo In tho creation and tho preservation of tho universe Is man. Wo be- como God-llko In act when wo work for man. God, In deed, must ever bo tho supremo end of our willing and our doing. Di rect homage Is duo to tho ma jesty of God, and this homage God demands from us. But ho demands also that wo for his sake servo our fellow-men, and tho nrst com-' mandment of tho i law makes re-1 Hglon to consist in tho servlco of God and In the serv- Ico of man. Christianity, the historic manifestation of tho Eternal Mind, makes work far humanity a fundamen tal prlnclplo of religion. "Amen, amen, I say to you: as long as you did it to ono of theso my least brothron, you did it to me." And working for man is not the i hopeless task that pessimists proclaim it to bo. Progress is tho law of God's I creation. Tho Creator has bestowed upon us faculties capable of expan- ; slon and it Is His will that wo sum mon into action their latent forces. He has subjected to us tho earth, and it Is His will that we take possession ol u, uuu UHbcri uur uuimiiiuu uvut its every part. Powers that lie dor mant find no favor In tho eyes of God. Progress Is tho continuity of creation; to arrest It, through malice or indolenco, is a crime "against Cre ator and creature. Christ's gospel Is a gospel of progress. It announces that all things should bo put to profit and mado to increase; tho talent that is wrapped in a napkin but draws down upon Its possessor the Master's ire. History Is witness that under Christ's touch humanity was Impelled into moral and spiritual progress with such might that centuries do not still tho sublime vibration. Tho pes j slmlst who stands Idly by uttering words of discouragement, does not read nature's lesson in tho brightness of tho morning sun, and in the rich ness of tho autumn fruitage; nor does he read in his Bible the divine lesson of mercy and grace. There will al ways bo sin and suffering, misery and death. But evil may bo lessened, and good may be Increased, and this Is progress. I shall never believe that EdT necessarily yield to evil and I shall never cease to put my hopo in tho divinely ordered progress of humanity. THE BIBLE'S INDIRECT ENCE. INFLU- (By ROBEB.T STUART MACARTHTJR. D. D., LL. D President, Baptist World Alliance.) "When I ran across something In the poets that most deeply Impressed me, I have laid down the book and said: Now, whero have I seen that In the Blblo?" Robert J. Burdette. Tho Blblo has ennobled every lan guago into which It haB been trans lated. Its thoughts aro so lofty that tho moment they aro embodied in human speech, whatever that speech may be, It is exalted, and glorified. When It camo Into tho Greek and Latin ' languages It largely regenerated oven character. It has often given tho Idea of tho characters which aro tho subjects of many books. In this way, wo aro In debted to It for striking features In Scott's "Ivanhoo," Mrs. Stowo's "Undo Tom's Cabin," and for many characters In Georgo Eliot, In Tenny son, In Byron, In Shakeapoaro, and in many other writers. It Is said that tho Red Cross Knight, in Sponsor's "Paorio Quoene," 1b but Paul's armed Christian In tho sixth chapter of tho Epistle to tho Epheslans; that Pope's "Messiah" is but a paraphraso of prophetic and soraphlc passages In Isaiah; that tho noblest strains In Cowpor'e "Task" drew tholr inspiration nnd part of their Imagory from tho snme rapt And What Could Ho Answer7 Ono Sunday morning Mr. Moody, tho revivalist, entered a Chicago drug store, distributing tracts. At the back of the store Bat an elderly and distin guished citizen reading a morning nowspapor, Mr. Moody approached thlu gentleman and threw one of the temperance tracts upon tho paper be fore him. Tho old gentleman glanced at tho tract, and then, looking up bo- i Ignantly at Moody, asked; 'Aro you a reformed drunkard?" "No, sir, I am not!" cried Moody, drawing back, in - 3-44 prophet; that tho "Thanatopsls" of I Bryant Is but tho expansion of a pass age In Job; that Wordsworth's "Odo on Immortality" could never have boon wrltton but for Paul's fifteenth chap ter of First CorinthlanB and tho eighth chapter of Romans; that Shakcspcaro'B conception of woman, of a Desdomonn and of nn Ophelia, would have beon impossible, had not his mind boon por montod by a BIblo ideal. This suggestlvo thought could bo much expanded, and theso Instructive illustrations might bo greatly multi plied. Tho Bible gave all theso men working in dlfforont departments of genius tholr inspiration. Shall wo bo so Inconsistent hb to rejoice In tho streams whllo wo desplso tho fountain whonco they flowed? Tho Blblo is a light to tlio path and a lamp to tho foot of tho noblest literature. No man may claim tho honors of tho highest culturo if ho Is Ignorant of tho word of God. Lot It sing Itself through tho soul, giving clearness to tho thought, wings to tho Imagination, onterprlso In practical life, inspiration to daily duty, hopo In death, and glory In eternity. THE EMPLOYE'S DUE. (By His Kmlncnco JAMKS, CARDINAL GIBBONS.) "The modern democratic spirit came from tho Blblo. The popular Institu tions of today can bo seen ns develop ments of early Hebrew Institutions." William P. Merrill, D. D. Tho Redeemer of mankind never conforrod a groater temporal blessing on tho human raco than by on nobllng and sanc tifying labor, nnd by rescuing It from tho stigma 0 f degradation that had been branded upon It. 1 cannot concelvo any thought bet ter calculated to cciso tho yoke and to lighten tho bur den of tho Chris tian toller than tho reflection that the highest typo of manhood vol untarily devoted himself to manual labor, his boyhoqd and early man hood being spent in a mechanic's shop; "Is not this tho carpenter, tho Son of Mary?" Labor has Its sacred rights as well as its dignity. Paramount among tho rights of the' laboring classes is their privilege to organize for their mutual protection and benefit. It Is In ac cordance with natural right that thoso who havo ono common Interest should unite for its promotion. It is as un just to deny to worklngraen tho right to band together because of tho abuses incident to such combinations, as to withhold tho samo right from capitalists because they sometimes un warrantably seek to crush or absorb weaker rivals. That "the laborer Is worthy of his hlro" is tho teaching of Christ bb well as the dlctato of reason. Ho deserves something more, nnd that Is kind and considerate treatment. There would bo less ground for complaint against employers if they kept in vlow tho golden maxim of the gospel: "What soever yo would that men should do unto you, do ye also to them." Our sympathies for thoso in our employ, whether in tho household, tho mines, or the factory, are wonderfully quick ened by putting ourselves In tholr place and asking ourselves how wo would wish to be treated under sim ilar circumstances. Thero Is no enjoyment in life Sv pure and so substantial as that which springs from tho reflection that others are mado content and happy by our benevolence. And I am speaking hero not of tho benovolenco of gratuitous bounty, but of fair-dealing tempored with benignity. Considerate Kind ness is like her Bister Mercy: "It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the ploco beneath; It Is twlco bless'd. It bleBseth him that Rives, and him that takes; Tls mightiest In tho mightiest! It be comes The throned monarch better than hl crown." Good Joke on Sothern. ( Mr. Samuel Sothern, tho English actor, says the worst moment of his stage career was passed In a state of mental paralysis owing to a trick played on him by another actor. This actor, who had a passion for practical Joking, and Mr. Sothern wero appear ing in tho samo play. It was a senti mental comedy In which Mr. Sothern had to make a long and effective speech with the Btage all to himself. Tho prac tical Joker got an alarm clock, timed tho alarm very carefully, and" set it up on a sideboard upon tho stage. "At tho very moment I oponod my mouth to declaim," Mr. Sothorn says, "It went off. I stood before tho footlights lit erally gaping, whilst tho blatant boll rang and thrummed and clattered through an eternity. It waB a night mare! 1 wanted to run, and could not; I wanted to speak, and could not. Sud denly from tho gallery' a piercing volco cried out: 'Say, boss, I guess your llno'e engaged!'" Hilarious Announcement. Mrs. Noowed "Oh, John, our cook Is going to leavo ub In tho morning I" Mr. Noowed "What makes you think so?" "Why, she's boon sitting on tho kitchen floor with a bottle In hor hnnd, singing. And when I asked hor what was tho matter, sho threw tho bottle at mo and said, 'Wo won't go homo until morning.' " Exchange dlgnantly. "Thon why don't you ro form?" qulotly asked the old gentle mau. Humanitarian. At an evening party n very elderly lady wub dancing with a young part nor. A stranger approached Douglas Jerrold, who was looking on, and said: "Pray, sir, can you tell mo who Is tho young gentleman dancing with that elderly lady'" "Ono of tho humauo i society, I Bhoulo: Judge," replied Jor 1 rold. Exchange. jrtjSTjffiwjCwT3hw w Bvf 'v? ' it 9H i & v SHELTER FO BIRDS Particularly Desirable Where Edible Material Is Scarce. Designs of Two Houses Given In Bul letin Issued by Agricultural De partment Importance of Pro tecting the Milk Cans. (Prepared by tlio United States Depart ment of Agrliulture ) Tho fanner who will build a food! end of three hours tho cans Uiat woro .. . . t- . .flknl ..11 1--1.-.-.1 1 1 I-- shelter and furnish an abundnnco of food In It will find that many birds of vnluo to him ns Insect-destroyors, will haunt his promisee. This Is particu larly true when there Is a scarcity of bird food in tho vicinity. Tho United States department of agriculture In a recently published bulletin on bird houses has offered designs for shel ters that will protect food In all kinds of weather. To lnduco birds to enter a food shel ter baits aro first placed in a conspicu- Food Shelter for Attachment to Post Roof Cut Away to Show Construc tion Sides Made of Glass; Size of Panes 8 by 10 Indues. ous place outside and tho birds aro led by degrees to enter tho lnclosuro. Such food ns Buet, seeds, or cracked nuts will prove attractive as bait. Two designs aro given In the bulle tin for adequate food shelters. The first may bo attached to a tree, tho other may bo placed on top of a post or tree stub. Tho sideB aro mado of glass. There Is no bottom to either of these structures. Besides protecting food, such a shel ter will provide a place whero one in terested in birds can watch them con veniently. If tho farmer has neither tho tlmo nor Inclination to make a shelter but ' etm defl,res tQ Mnci vnluablo blrd8 by putting out food, tho next best thing is to fasten the bait to trunks or brancheBxof trees or scatter It on tho ground In sheltered places. Deslrablo birds may be attracted by other means than food, particularly In summer. On warm days the appre ciate fresh water for drinking and bathing. A shallow- pool of varying depth, If only a foot across, becomes a center of attraction for all tho birds in tho vicinity, and It may bo mado with llttlo effort and material, Only a small amount of cement is required, or, If thnt bo lacking, a paD with stones In It, set in the ground will bo equally serviceable. Cats aro particularly dangerous to birds, and should not bo permitted Food Shelter for Attachment to Trunk of Tree. near tho homo-mada bird pool during bathing hours or go near tho food shelters. ' Designs for elmple and elaborate bird houses that will Interest all bird lovers aro given In a farmers' bulletin No. COO, which tho United States de partment of agriculture hua recently Issued. It Is entitled "Iilrd Houses, I and How to Hulld Them," nnd will bo sent free of chargo to anyone request Ing It from tho department. Protection for Milk Cans. Much milk that seems to bo perfect ly good when It leaves tho farm, reachos the consumor In bud condi tion, and tho United States department of agriculturo Is now convinced that this is frequently duo to n riso in tho temperature of the milk during trans portation. A series of tests that haa recontly ibeen completed shows the Importance cf surrounding tho milk sans during hot wouther with somo ap propriate Insulating material which will effectually exclude the heat. Evun when milk Is to be nhlppod jnly a short dlstanco its temporaturo ihould not be higher than 50 dogrees 7. At this temperature bacteria will Multiply but the lucreaso is slow and t few hours delay will result In no lorious injury, in milk above 50 do- . fcf P iilop .grecs V. tho rato of hncterln growth Is i much moro rapid, it follows that when tho milk is to bo shipped a long dis tance It must bo loaded on tho cars at a temporaturo much less thavi SO de grees F. unless somo efllclcivt means Is taken to prevent tho temporaturo rising during tho Journey. Perhaps tho most practical way of accomplishing this Is to wrap the cans In a pair of quilt Jackets, wot burlap, or somo other similar material. In tho course of tho recent experiments milk was haujed a dlstnnco of 13 miles In an average air tempernturo of S2.G5 de grees F., tho milk being shipped at a temporaturo of GO dogrcoa P. At tho iiiiii-tjuiii juuKuiuu Hiiuwuu u rumu of only GJ degrees P.; thoso wrapped In wet burlap, a ralsoof & degrees P. Milk In cans that wero left unpro tected roso In tho enmo tlmo to a torn poraturo of 78.5 degrees P., an Increase of 28.5 degrees. This is much too high. Moro elnborato methods of preserv ing milk during shipment by refrigera tion aro discussed In a professional bulletin Ju.t Usucd by tho United States department of agriculture, which deals In a technical way with many types of refrigerating apparatus. The bulletin discusses fully tho influ ence of tlmo nnd temporaturo on bac teria In milk. It also contains elab orate diagrams Illustrating tho differ ent methods employed In utilizing re frlgorntton, and tho cost of operating them. This bulletin so long as the department's supply lasts will bo sent freo to all Interested In the rofrlgora tion of milk, Hofrlgcratlon, however, Is, of course, not alwnys possible, whllo any shipper can take tho precaution of Jacketing his milk cans. PROFIT MADE IN CAPOMZING Increased Value of Birds Pays Well for Time and Labor Operation Is Not Difficult. As a vnst majority of poultry own ers and growers nro not profcsional and keep tlio poultry Incidentally and in tho main for tho uso of tho family, it is not surprising that bo fow poul try owners undertako to caponlzo tho cockerels. Hut if all poultry owners wero awaro of tho Increnso of profit that capons pay over tho ordinary , poultry i uunK n great many moro would learn how to perform tlio op eration nnd caponlzo all tho surplus males overy fall. Even It it wero dono only to sup ply tlio uso of them on one's own ta ble It would pay well, says a writer In an exchange. As almost all farmers thomselves emasculato all their sur plus boars and bull calves, nnd some even tho male colts, it is evident that ' with a little moro skill they can omas-! o..ln thn nnnWnlB nnd In mot oiBOa can sell them for from a half moro up to twlco as much as tho cockerels would bring In the market. As caponlzlng requires n keen eyo and steady hand, as well as tho apo dal tools for doing tho work, It would bo well for ono without oxporlence, It he can get the opportunity, to sco somo ono who Is export at tho work and then make a fow trials himself. In ordor to mako tho Job easlor I think It will bo well to etherize or chloroform the chicken, so that it will bo absolutely still. However, If ono knows how to do tho Job nnd has tho tools It takes but a little whllo, and thero Is no reason to believe that tho suffering will bo great, GIVE THE TREES MORE ROOM Question of Space Should Be Regu lated Largely by Circumstances Opinions Differ. Tho question of how nvich spaco to leave between tho trees 1b ono that occasions much argument. This should be regulated largely by circumstances. If tho trees nro to bo kept well pruned back they may bo as near bb four yards apart, while thoso which aro to bo allowed moro freo growth in tho topa should bo at least 20 fcot apart. Tho question of dlstanco depends en tirely upon tho system of training ajid richness of tho soil. Tho common system of keeping tho orchard In sod practiced by many ap ple growers, Is not In favor among pench growers, and except in very rare cases, among small growers la prac tically unknown. Thorough cultiva tion Is necessary to develop tho pench crop as tho tree during the tlmo of bearing requires extremely largo amounts of moisture and plant food. Growers differ widely upon tho sys tem of cultivation but all aro agreed that plqwlng aB early BB-pbs3lblo In the spring, thorough cultivation during tho first half of tho summer soason nnd tho growth of a cover crop of somo kind during tho fall and wlntor are essential to tho propor care of tho peach orchard. Tho disc or spading harrow Is hot ter than tho plow In most cases a tho side extensions enablo much clos or work without Injuring tho trees. In the caso of gravelly or hard heaw soil the disc or sprlngtooth harrow Is necessary during summer cultiva tion, whllo the light smoothing liar how is required on soils that aro in a lino stuto of tilth. CONCRETE OR CEMENT SILOS Material Gaining Rapidly In Popular ity Where Permanency Is Desired on Live Stock Farms. Tho concreto and cemont block con structlon Is getting very popular In so far as silos aro concernud; especial ly Is this truo whero pormanoncy It, doslrod, such as established stock farms, etc. In tho past tho high first cost of this construction has boon tho chief factor agulnst Its moro oxtonslvo uso, but this has beon duo to our Insula dant knowlcdgo as to tho best and most economical methods In handling material. Tho prlco of lumber has boon Htoad Hy ralBlng, whllo that of tho good Port land comont has beon decreasing, and good qualities, can now bo obtalnod at fair prlcoB. It peoms, thoroforo, to bo generally concedod that tho concreto or comont block silo will bo tho silo ol tho future. ftOME TOWi HELP5 HARD TO MAKE OVER CITY Experiences of Centuries Old Towns Should Be Lesson to the Builders of Today. Tho most hurried travoler along tho tourist routes of Europo allows him self time to noto with a smile that tho "gates" which woro onco tho vor ltablo cntrnnco through tho walls Into tho city aro now In tho very heart of tho city's bustling ltfo. Who does not know "Lud Onto"' In London, now Ludgato Hill? Lud Is tho namo of a mythical king of Brit ain. Tho legend haB it that this Lud laid tho foundation of London. Shakes peare preserves his memory In "Cym bollno;" "And on tho gates of Lud'a town set your heads." This Btrong gato in tho western part of tho city is far enough removed from tho west and 1b ono of tho busiest streets lu tho world. BIshopsgate tho bishop gato; Aid gato tho old gato; Newgate tho new gate, all toll tho samo Btory. Tho "gatoB" aro found In tho Innermost recossoB of the city. The real en trances to tho city nro many miles away. And what a higgledy-piggledy busi ness it Is! Boxes of brick and Btone, I in bowllderlng squares and parallel I ograms and shapelcBs Bhapcs of every i fashion, Btretch away into dim dis tance, to stragglo, to Jostlo, or to do cay, as fato or fortuno wills. Thoro Is not a city of any ago In all Europe, now touched by tho progressive Bpirlt, which has not been for tho last 3D yearB or will not bo for tho next 30 engaged In tho titanic task of widen ing its old streets and constructing new ones. But at what coat must tho men and women of an unwalled nnd ungated clty todav ,nnko tho nlaco o( thoIr habitation habitable! ADVANCE IN CITY LIGHTING Hanging Arc Lamps so Installed That They Add to Instead of Detract ing From Appearance. Many of tho old Installations of anS arc lariips are even uglier an tho ncnndescentB The old arcs a Usually SUBpoUdod UUOVO tllO Street on a tanglo of wires and cables whoro they glare and Bputter tho lung night through. I3ut modern engineering and modorn lovo of tho beautiful, ns well as tho utility of a lighting system, havo changed all this. Tho now sys tems of arc lighting nro nothing llko tho old. Tho lnmps aro not hung abovo tlio Btroet but crown tho tops of orna mental standards placed alternately up and down tho street. Thoro are no hanging wlrcB In sight, no sharp points of light to dazzle tho eyos, no fllckor and eputtor. InBtead of Bharp, ponotratlng rays of bluish light tho now luminous aro lumps glvo a flood of Boft, whlto light which is many tlmos moio oillciont and more econom ical than tho light from tho old lamps. Tho wire and cables are all under ground, whoro they aro safo and do not mar tho natural beauty of tho Btreet. Shade trees do not have to bo cut down or trimmed until thoy dlo. Hints on Concrete Road Building. Sprinkling tho wearing surfaco of concrete roads during the construction period must' bo practically continuous on hot days, unless theio Is somo mols-turo-retalnlng medium present. Itcccnt observations of a numbor of pieces of roud construatlon, on which contract ors now to the work were engaged, lndlcnto that tho Inspector Is having his hands full in gottlng the "wetting down" specifications properly adhered to. Whero earth Is available a gener ous lnyor thrown on makes an excel lent cover and holds water well. Somo caroful road bulldors in tho West, rec ognizing tno value of curing concroto under water, have mado earth dams along tho edges of concrete roads and divided tho road longltudlnnlly Into a Borlos of pools. Engineering ltecord. ' Boy Scouts Guardln.Q Tree's. Philadelphia boy scouts aro doing yeoman eorvlco In guarding tho trees of the city from the caterpillar pest and othor harm for which laws can bo enforced to prevent mischief to forests nnd trees. Tho same plun Is also ba Ing carried on In Purllngton, vt, It Is nn excellent idea to enlist .he serv ices of the boys In these prosenntlvo methods nnd teach them by thia means to lovo and care for tho trees, which tho nverago city boy only en joys for Bhado or as a convenient ob ject from which to obtain a stick, No Cause for Interference. However bravo tho policemen aro, they are curoful about not breaking tho laws and ordlnunces, A patrn man was kicking his feet down on inn lake front in Chicago, so a Btory runs, when im excited citizen ran up to h.rv and crlod: "Say, hurry up! A man hus JiiBt Jumped off tho pier!" "With his clothos on?" rtBkod tho ofllcor. "Yes fully dreBBod. Hurry!" "What do you want me to do? There .iin't nn ordlnanco against a man swiinmln' as long as ho's prop ily dressed." Seek to Set Good Example. Tho blooBom cannot toll what bo conies of tho odor, und no man can tell what becomos of hiu oxnmple, that rolls away from him, and gooB beyond Ills kon on Us perilous mission. H W. Paecher. Difficulties of Astronomy. "Is it hard to loam the ubo of a tolo scope?" asked the studont. "Not j very," ropllod tho candid professor, Tho hardest thing about astronomy In guessing what something is af''" you manage to boo 1L" 6Jk IN STERLING LIVES A GIRL Who Suffered As Many Girls Do Tells How She Found Relief. Sterling, Conn. "I am a rfrl of M years and 1 used to faint away every month nnd was very weak. I was also bothered a lot with f cmalo weakness, I read your llttlo book 'Wisdom for Wo men,' and I saw how othors had been helped by Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, and decided to try it, and it haa mado me feel llko a now girl and I am now relieved of all theso troubles. I hopo all young girls will get relief aa I havo. I never felt better in my ltfo. "-Mis3 BERTlIA A. Peloquin, Box 11C, Sterling, Conn. Masscnn, N. Y. "I havo taken Ly dla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound nnd I highly recommend It Tt anyone wants to writo to mo I will gladly tell her about my case. I was certainly in a bad condition as my blood was all turn ing to water. I had pimples on my f aco and a bad color, and for flvo years I had been troubled with suppression. Tho doctors called it 'Anemia and Exhaus tion, ' nnd said Iwas all run down, but Lydin E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound brought mo out all right" Miss LAVISA Myres, Box 7-1, Massena, N.Y. Young Girls, Heed This Advico. Girls who aro troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-dow n sensations, fainting spells or indigestion, should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. LMSEimB JUST AS AN ILLUSTRATION Yorkshire Man Had HIb Reasons for Desiring Salesman to Repeat His "Selling Talk." A commercial traveler had been talking his hardest, his most eloquent his most per8uaBlvo for nearly nn hour to a Bhrowd old Yorkshire business man. Tho old fellow seemed convinced nnd pleased, and tho travolor thought ho had his flBh landed. Dut tho York shire man said: "Thoro's ma lad, Jock. Ab'd lalka him to hear what yo havo to say. Will yo coom this nftoruoon and go over your talk again?" "Certainly, Blr, with pleasure," re plied tho travoler heartily, and at the hour nppolntod presented hlmsolt again for tho Interview with father and son. Again ho went over tho" points of tho article ho had to sell forcibly, eloquently, persuasively. Never had ho acquitted himself of a finer "soiling talk." When ho hud finished tho old York shire man turned to his son and said enthuslasUcally: "Do you hear that, Jock? Well, now, that's tho way I want yo to sell our goods on tho road." Lovelorn Philatelist. Tho manager of an advertising con cern has mado It a fad to collect curi ous adB, particularly of a personal na ture. Iloro Is ono, which ho culled from the Figaro of Paris: "A collector of postage stamps, pos sessing 13,440 specimens, desires to contract a marriage with a young lady who Is also a collector, and who pos sesses tho bluo Mauritius stamp oi 1847. No other need apply." Surely. Mr. Flatto Don't you think what wo do la reflected In our faces, dear! Mrs. Flatto Yes, William; I no tlco when you aro examining a long bill your faco is also long. More than million tons of coffee aro required annually to provldo a dally jovcrago for halt tho human race. LIGHT BOOZE. Do You Drink It? A minister's wifo had qulto a tus sle with coffco and hor experience is Interesting. Sho Bays: "During tho two years of my train ing aB a nurse, while on night duty, I becamo addicted to coffeo drinking. Between midnight nnd four in tho morning, whon tho patients wero asleep, thero was llttlo to do except mako tho rounds, and It was qulte natural that I should want a hot cup of coffco about that time. I could keep awako better. "After threo of four years of cof feo drinking, I becamo a norvo'us wreck and thought that I simply could not live without my coffeo. All this time I was BUbJect to frequent bilious at tacks, somotlmes so severo as to keep rao In bed for soveral days. "After being married, Husband begged mo to leavo off coffeo for hs fosred that It had already hurt me almost boyond repair, so I resolved to make an effort to releaso myself from tho hurtful habit. "I began taking Postum, and for a fow days felt tho languid, tired feel ing from tho lack of tho coffeo drug, but I liked tho taBto ot Postum, and that answered fortho breakfast bev tttVjSlriittl-Uii'.lil'iifi erage all right. "Finally 1 began to feel clearer headed and had steadier nerves. Aft er a year's uso of Postum I now feel llko a now woman havo not had any bilious attacks since I loft oft coffee." ( Namo given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, Read"Tho Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. Postum comes in two forms: Regular Postum rauBt bo well boiled. lEo and 26o packages. Instant Postum la ft soluble pow der. A teaspoonful dissolves quku'y In a cup of hot wator, and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious bever age Instantly. 30o and 50c tins. Tho cost per cup ot both kinds la about tho same. "There's a Reasoa' for Postum. e-txrid by Grocsrs. q& by 5L1