',. . . ' "r DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD wmmvmmtmwm mmminjmMrwmmmmwmr$ ft r 4 3 ? 0 RUB OUT SORENESS, SPRAINS, BACKACHE WITH OLD ST. JACOBS OIL Hnek hurt you? Cnn't straighten up without feeling sudden pains, sharp itches nnd twinges? Now, listen I That's lutnhngo, sclutlcn, or maybe from a strain, nnd you'll get blessed relief tho moment you rub your back with sooth ing, penetrating "St. Jncobs Oil." Nothing else tukes out soreness, lame ness nnd stiffness so quickly. Yon simply rub it on nnd out comes the pain. It Is perfectly harmless nnd doesn't burn or discolor the skin. Limber up I Don't suffer 1 Get a small trinl bottle from any drug store, nnd after using it Just once you'll for get that you ever had backache, lum bago or sciatica, because your back will never hurt or cnuse any more mis ery. It never disappoints and has been recommended for 60 years. Stop drug ging kidneys I They don't cnuse back ache, because they have no nerves, therefore :uu not cause puln. Adv. Vaccine In Whooplno Cough. Itcports on the use of vaccine in 403 cases of whooping cough have been collected by an Itnllnn physician, showing excellent results In n large proportion, but in 100 other cases there was no apparent benefit. Inv provenipnt, with a marked lessening or disappearance of the spnsms, was the rule when the Injections wore made In the first ten days of tho dls ease. In ndvanced stages, a few cases showed great benefit, but Improve ment was mostly only transient. HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD Says Cream Applied In Nostrils Opens Air Passages Right Up. Instant relief no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up; the alt passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hnwking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness No struggling for breath at night; your cold or cutarrh disappears. Get a small bottle of .Ely's Cream Unlm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream In your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air passage of the head, soothes tho Inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes Instantly. It's just line. Don't stay stuffod-up with a cold or nngty catarrh. Adv. Not Kidding, Either. Carl .Tube, who for several years has sold newspapers ut Washington and Meridian streets', nnd who Is nlwnys available when Inquiring strangers ask any directions, was accosted by an out-of-town vlUtor the other day. The stranger Inquired: "Where does Edison keep his phono- graph shop?" "The man wasn't kidding, either," Jobe said. Indianapolis News. Transients. Griggs So you've struck it rich nnd are able to keep several servants? Briggs Alas, no only to hire them. Life Is a school. When we stor. learning It Is time to stop living. Don't think thnt every fool Is en ' pnhle of writing a farce-comedy. A Kansas Woman Testifies Mulberry, Kans. "My son, at tho age of 10 years, was taken with pneumonia. we had three doctors. Then ho took chicken-pox and measles and last typhoid fever. Ho got thrqugh them all In one winter, but it left him with such a cough I feared ho could not get well. I got Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Dis covery and gave it to him; It cured him entirely I lived near Monroe City.eMo., when my son was sick." MRS. JANE S. CARROLL. All druggists. No alcohol Pro pared In both liquid and tablets. SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi culty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world's etandard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL M4-:JM.-il?1) bring quick relief and often ward off deadly disencos. Known as the national remedy cf Holland for mora than 200 years. All druggists, In three sizes. Laok for tbn uamo Cold Medal od citrf bos ti accept no imitation MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREH IlellfTe FererUhneHS, Constlpa tlon.Colds ADd correct disorder. of the utomnch and bowels. Uudh tlolhirt for irptr iontrt. All DrUB- eUtH. Sample mailed FItKK. Ad' ""ui. dreits Mother Graj Co.. te Roj, N. Y. A 126 MAMMOTH JACKS I hare a bartiin for 70a, com qnlck. W. I- Jlef'LOW'H J.U'K FAUM Cedar Itapldi, lent a FRECKLES gSS POSmV'lYRrMOV'DbrDt ll.tr. 1an.n1 ivr aru.fii tr ba.k Dr. C. H. B.fr Michigan Avtftu, Ctncf. W. N. U., SIOUX CITY, NO' 11-19 f ffrsrlafri .&ili Qit F i s. rax"C''?$K- CONDENSED CLASSICS & r DAVID A COPPERFIELD By CHARLES DICKENS Condensation by Charles F. D. Belden, Librarian I I Y V Y Y C wuofcwu ruunw wiuiaijr Boston Public Library Vi:.x.x-:-::.:.x:x:H'K':toi ChnrlcM Dlckrtu lived In ninny houaca, nnd aotue of them were uIy. Hut to liim they were oil Uoroea. lie vrns hnppleat perhnpa In Devonablre Terrace, London, and at GndahlU l'lnce in Kent, where he worked and enter tained with n furlona enerjry. lie had to force lilnmclf to begin n novel, for the work of starting was n verltnblo torment to him. Hut once the Drat chapter wna flnlnlied he wrote with nhecr dcllitht. lie would nit nt hla denk for houra, living with hi character) ns hla pen went back nnd forth ncronn the white pnper. After thcae nrduoun conQnciucntH he found rclnxntlon In walking, prowling for houra through London afreets or beat ing hla way ngalnnt the Inahlng wlnda along the Kentish conat. lie loved hla homes and he loved England, but he nlao loved to travel, lie found out-of-the-way nnd quaint villages In England, where he settled for weeks nt n time, but he often rnn acrosa the channel to the continent nnd aomctlmes mode long stays in Paris, Switzerland nnd Italy. Twice he Journeyed far In the United States, In days when luxury In travel was hardly known nnd when only those who really loved new scenes undertook such hard ships. Much as he enjoyed these restless Sittings to other lands nnd his pro longed lingering" In such favored plnees na Genoa or Lausanne, he was ever eager to be back In England, "O F ALL my books," writes Dickens, "I like this best. It will be easily believed that I nm n fond pnrent to every child of my fancy, and thnt no ono can ever love that family as dearly ns I love them; but, like many fond par ents, I have In my henrt of hearts n favorite child, and his name Is 'Dnvld Copperfleld.' " The world In the main agrees with the opinion of the grent, kindly deline ator of humanity, for 'David Copper Held' nnd 'Pickwick Pnpors' hold first nnd second choice with most lovers of this English author of the middle of the nineteenth century. The reason Is not hard to discover. The memory of the sad childhood of the writer forms the basis of tho novel and provides the personul flavor. It is in many re spects his ablest and clearest book. The narrative, moreover, moves from beginning to end In full swing with mingled pathos and humor. The spirit throughout Is kindly, sympathetic, and, above nil, human. Mr. G. K. Chesterton, writing of 'David Copperfleld' nnd Its nuthor, says: "He has created crea tures who cling to us nnd tyrannize ove"r us, crentures whom we would not forget if we could, crentures whom we could not forget If we would, creatures who nro more actual than tho rann who made them." The novel begins with the birth of Its hero, David Copperfleld, six months after the death of his father. An ec centric great aunt, Miss Betsey Trot wood, Is present In the house, but de parts quite as suddenly ns she ar rived when she learns that the child Is a boy and cannot bear her name. David's mother Is quite alone In tho world with the exception of plnin I'eg- gotly, her devoted serving woman Peggotty, with no shape at nil. and soJ very plump that when any little ex ertion Is made after she Is dressed, some of the buttons on the back of ner gown fly off. Being however youthful nnd pretty, Clara Copperfleld soon marries the stern Mr. Murdstone, who proves to be not only stern, but hard and cruel. On the occasion of his mothor'.s mar riage David Is sent with Peggotty to visit her brother at Yarmouth, where he, with his niece, little Emily, and nephew Hani, occupy n superannuated old boat now converted Into a most delightfully cozy home. Little Emily with her winning ways grows very dear1, to Dnvld, ns do the honest flshecfolk with wnom she lives. j Returning home, David at once be comes an object of detestation to his stepfather, and In consequence Is pack ed off to school. Here his misery con- tlnues under n master, or rutner bully, Creokle, whose chief zest in life con sists in the Infliction of pain on some helpless victim. The one bit of bright ness In school life Is attachment for James Steerforth, a handsome, deb onair, dashing lad, with tho faculty if mnklng everyone his friend. But school days are brought ta a sudden hnlt by the death of David's mother, crushed by her husband's cureless tyr rany. Peggotty, is dismissed and Bar kis, the stage driver, whose courtship has consisted In tho singular message sent through Dnvld of "Barkis Is will ing," flnnlly succeeds In making Peg gotty willing nlso. After months of utter neglect Dnvld Is sent to London, where he becomes, at ten years of age, a little laboring hind In a dilapidated old warehouse, In the service of Murdstone nnd Orlmby, wJne merchnuts. Half starve., wearied by long hours of lnbor amid rcpulslvo companions, Including Mick Walker and Menlly Potatoes, David's life Is a continued torture. He lodges with a Mn and Mrs. Wllkins Mlcnwber nnd their numerous progeny Mr. Mlcnwber, always In pecuniary difficulties and always expecting something to "turn up" and always in possession of a fine flow of oratory, Is alternately buoyed up by n conviction thnt fortune is nt last about to smile upon him, and re duced to the depths of despair by her sudden and unaccountable withdrawal. David comes to have a genuine liking for, the couple, so much so that when the Mlcnwbcrs, having fulled to meet certain financial obligations, are oblig ed to move to prison, and David .to seek new quarters, he feels such a sense of loneliness that he determines to run nway to his aunt, Betsey Trot wood nt Dover, an aunt whom he has never seen, but of whom he remem bers to have heard. The aunt adopts him nnd sends htm to school nt Canterbury, where ho boards with his aunt's lnwyer nnd man of affairs, ti Mr. Wickfleld, nnd his daughter Agnes, whose serene good- nnS Itorotnoq n rnnstnnf Insnlrntlou to ness becomes a constant Inspiration to Dnvld. Here nlso he comes In contact , with Mr. Wlckfleld's clerk, Uriah Hecp. .' , mM r0nn on individual i a very 'umblo person," an Indlvldunl with n caduverous face and n head covered with curroty stubble, red eyes, which have n curiously unshaded ap pearance, nnd which seem to David to bo censelessly watchful. Ills groveling humility and clammy hand grasp fill David with uneontrollnblo lonthlng and distrust. Having graduated with honors, Dn- I vld decides to become a proctor and , u m. c. . . .i t , enters the omco of Spcnlow and Tor- , 1UI15. XXV UL UilUt; JLUU9 IlUilU UW uvuio in love with Mr. Spenlow's distracting ly pretty daughter, Dora, who returns his nffectlon. On henrlng that Peggot ty's husband is dying, David makes n hurried visit to Yarmouth to comfort his old nurse. While there, Emily, with in n few days of becoming Ham's bride, little Emily, tho precious treas ure of her old uncle's heurt, disappears nnd with her Steerforth. Carried away by his gallontry nnd persuaded that he will make her "a lady," Emily Is none the less distracted by a! sense of terrible humiliation nnd of degrada tion, for which she Implores her un cle's forgiveness. Dnvld, overcome by the thought that it wns he who first brought Steerforth to Yarmouth, re turns to London, to find that his aunt has lost the greater part of her for tune. This makes It nccessnry for Dn vld to add to their Income by using nil his spare time In literary work. I Dora continues uppermost In his oie(1 pnrts of tnu H.nlnsuln In the old thoughts, although Mr. Spenlow op- Unys ,efore the gringo came or Im poses the match, nis sudden death fon, t, World learned that a mag leaves the timid, trustful, artless Dora, I inCent landlocked and hill-sheltered to the surprise of nil, nearly peunl- j i,nru0r nearly 100 miles lung and fioin less. David's Income, though slender, I three to six miles wide- lay snugly be pcrmits of their marriage. nimi that narrow silt In the hills, but' u With nil his love for his child wife, ,ie mi im ulghtli In width, forming us she calls herself, ho llnds that her 1 tjL, picturesque western ocean portal gay Irresponsibility results In nnythtng but a comfortable home. After vainly trying to develop her childish nature he uncomplnlningly ninkes the best of it nnd continues to admire her bewitch- , Ing ways. Meanwhile Uriah Iloep has managed by deceit to worm his way Into partnership with Mr. Wickfleld, after which he proceeds to gain full control of the business. Considering Mr. Mlcnwber likely to be a useful tool, Uriah hires him In the capacity of clerk, at such a meagre salary that Mr. Mlcnwber Is obliged to borrow sums of money from neep, who takes I advantage of this indebtedness to force' Mr. Mlcnwber to assist him In his dis honest, practices. At the end of a year Mr. Mlcnwber requests nn Interview with David and his aunt nt Canterbury. They find him filled with righteous contempt for Uriah Heep, the hypocritical plotter, nnd prepnred to moke n s'vecplng ex posure, which he forthwith proceeds to do In his loftiest style which results In tho recovery of Betsey Trotwood's money, full restitution to Mr. Wick field, nnd, In Mr. Micawber's own words, the final pulverization of Hecp "Blossom," ns David delights to call ' Dora, proves as frnll as the uome, nnd . In spite of his tenderest care she J liroops and nt length Is gone. As ut other times of trial, It is the quick sympathy of Agnes Wickfleld ' thnt softens the puln, and through her Influence David plans to go abroad, for n time. Meanwhile out of gratitude to Mr Mlcnwber for his service In the recovery of her money, Betsey Trot wood offers to help the Mlenwbers to inalco a new start In Australia. Tho family Joyfully accepts the proposi tion nnd prepare to sail on the same s,lIl with Emily and her devoted un cle, to whom she hns ut Inst returned, nnil who Is accompanying her to the distant colony to begin life anew. Be fore, bidding these good friends fare well, David visits Yarmouth once more nnd witnesses tho Inst scene of Emily's tragedy. A raging tempest bents n ship to pieces Just off the coast. One living person Is seen still clinging to the mast, and the Irony of fate sends Hum to Ids denth In Ills efforts to rescue that creature, whose body when wash ed ashore proves to be that of Steer forth. After three years' absenco abroad, David returns to England, and gradu ally comes to realize that Agnes Wick field has always been his guiding star and held sway In Ids heart. Betsey Trotwood, fearing that David may still bo blind with regard to tho feeling of Agnes towurd him, guilelessly men- tions thnt she has reason to believe thnt Agnes is to bo married. Where unon David is determined ut whatovor eoHt to his own feeling, to tell Agnes of his Joy In any happiness thut may come to her. He soon discovers that she lins never enred for nny otlior than himself and that her future hap piness will be his as well. As tho years pass nnd a group of children Is ndded to their home, David continues to find Agnes his Inspiration as of old as of old. Copyright, 1913, by Post Publishing Co. (Tho Boston Pout) PuhllnhAil by npcrliil arranccment with tl MrCluro Newspaper HyndK-ato. AP rlchtf. remit veil. HILLIEST OF WORLD'S CITIES San Francisco, With Its Many Eleva. tlons. Outranks Any of the Cen ters of Population. As to the question of the seven seas, perhaps it is contributing a little to slmlllar geographical Information to refer to the seven hills of Koine and to say that many descriptions of San FrnnciMo incorrectly speak of "Ssin l'rnnciM'o on her seven hills." As n matter of accuracy, says the writer f a letter to the editor of the New iork Herald, San Francisco Is the hllllcst of the world's large cities. Occupying the end or a fifty-nilte-long peninsula, which Is Hanked on the ocean side iy the Pacific and on the '"- sl "ir the southern arm of i"1 ''lnclsco bay, the city llsell COV- trs " "mpled, hilly urea of approxl H"', wo acres, as compared wltl t "-WO --ros of Manhattan Island. The city contains not Just seven hills but u totnl of forty-four. The highest of them, Mount Davidson, Is 1)57 feel Two ut the apparent end of the lunln business street, under which the tlmroughfuro passes by long tunnel, are 72s nnd TH'-i feet and are called Twin Peaks, to the summit of which there Is a scenic automobile drive. -' " -". l"1 .""",. " V, en tiate park, which Is a third larger Jn Xpw cVmn( c? l.fll t.. .1 t.l.ll.. ..,' f'.O.t- , . . m . .. r 1.1..1. .....r t in u vim 11 (Jin 11111 i-.u it'ui iiiii, 111111 it Is girdled half way up by a pleasure lake, while Lone mountain, famed these last eighty yoursus the site of a mass ive sixty-foot cross upon Its summit, also is 120 feet high. Practically all of the forty-four hills of San Krunclseo are almost twice as high as any hill In Rome and nearly all of them are about twice as high as the Acroplls hill in Athens or Wash ington Heights In New York 01 the river bluffs of Hoboken or West New York on the New Jersey side" of the Hudson. Except for that fourth of San Fran cisco's hills which have beifi complete ly built upon or changed by man, this Interesting fact I have observed 011 the summits of some thirty of them wild California yellow violets growing and a-blooin in spring, lingering suggest Ions perhaps of the, llornl abundance that my lmv0 cimructerl-ed the least fuv known as the tlolden Cute. Twins and Quadruplets. Once In a while one reads nbout a birth of quadruplets. Very rarely quintuplets are horn, and there have 1 even been Instances of sextuplels. When four or more babies come Into the world at a birth, almost never do more than three of them survive. A tendency to the production of twins Is undoubtedly hereditary; It rtins in families. A woman whose mother and grandmother have borne twins may fairly be expected, If married, to bring one or more pairs Into the world. That curious armored mammal, the minii- dlllo, common In Texas and .Mexico, nearly always produces four young at a birth ; and the most remarkable thing about them Is that they are "Identical" quadruplets I. e., pro duced by thespllttlng of u single fer tilized cell. "The phenomenon of split ting Is known to occur only In the nr nmdlllo and In man. Identical human twins (produced by u single tell) are very exceptional, but not extremely 1 are. They are in effect duplicates of one Individual, and mlghl almost be said to bhnre 11 common Identity. Or dinary "fraternal" twins may be more or less alike, hut Identical twins resem ble each other so closely that It is hard to tell them apart. Improved Palnt-Spray Guns. Painting or varnishing by the spray method has so clearly proved Its ad- , vantages that Improved tools for Its iim are or general Interest. A spray ing nozzle, of automatic-pistol form, new being made In Missouri, handles all kinds of liquid coatings. Including lit .ivy asphalt paint, Willi prolines of xo pounds and less. One model Is nude to fit the top of an ordinary . rew-tnp Jar or metal container, .lars eiiiitaluing different colors may lie In-tn-changed in about iW second, tluj jii'.zle being chimed by blowing kt'Wi si ne mid ulr through It. This method ccivers up to .'10 or !() square feel of ! ",fce u minute, while u linger type in ranged for connection to u special pi insure tank, covers as much as s'i An Important feature Is its euv adjustment .from fine shading to in uvy-llow coating. Popular Meeliaij' i Magazine. The "Drys" of Bombay. Mohammedans in ISuiiilui.v lime siurled un untl-drlnklug i-iiiiipalun to leform" their co-rellglonlsts. They ire picketing the liquor shops and Hie i VI'lt'"n i'"ilK ""t have ilielr fuees ' ,''"l'',", ' i"-'' inarched through i "'l' H,,'t"- n,lf' '" f""'"' ' I va ,,'l,"'l with a "imrland" of old I 'l,0,'s "' was taken round Die city by mi escort beating empty oil tlup. London Mull. I Corrugated Cardboard for Insulators. I Corrugated cardhoifrd of the kind ' used for packing cum can be used for Insulating buildings aguliist the cold, "! JiiMiilntlnn being particularly de "lrnm ," lmrilM m"1 P""'tv house, ''n(' hexes are opened along the JohiIh and lluttened out, the material hen; ipplled with short nulls ami tui wish ' i-h, siuh as used for the a) pi. i-, en of roofing pnper, ARRETTE IELL5 OF SPLENDID RESUL Prominent New Hampshire Woman 'Says Tanlac Brought About a Won derful Change in Her Condition. "Tanlac Is a grand medicine, nnd I think every suffering woman ought to know about , It,", was the statement made recently by Mrs. Aurore Har rette, at her residence, 1!W Second Street, Manchester, New Hampshire. Mrs. ltnrretto Is a well known and highly respected 'resident of that city. "1 have not felt nt all well for the past year or more," she continued. "1 haven't been sick enough to be In bed. but I was far from being a well woman. At times I thought I had kidney trouble, for I suffered almost constantly from severe pains across my back, Just over the kidneys. When ever I tried to do any housework nt nil thnt dull pain would be there, nnd If 1 attempted to stoop over it Just felt as though my back would break. I would get so weak nnd worn out I would have to sit down nnd rest several times n day, and I felt tired all the time. "This condition made ine awfully nervous, so thnt I rarely over slept well at night, luul every now and then I would Jump In nry sleep, as If In a fright, and my condition wns renlly becoming serious. "Only two bottles of Tnnloc have brought about a wonderful change In my condition. In fact, the results I have received from this medicine have really surprised me. Those terrible Kill That FOR Colds, Cough CASCARA Ef & JK7Lat r Neglected Colds arc Dangerous T1ce no chances. Keep ibis nundard remedy bandy for the first odmmx. Breaks op n cold in 24 houra Relic vrn Grippe in 3 days Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the head Cascara is best Tonic Laxative No Opiate in Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT WHEN JEFFERSON TOOK OATH Early Presidential Inauguration at Which There Was an Abundance of III Feeling. Tho first Jefferson Inauguration hud more" drama about It than its three predecessors. The President-elect was received upon the portico of the new ly completed north wing of the cajil tol by Aaron Burr, whom Jefferson cordially distrusted. And the oath of office was administered by one of Ids bitterest enemies, Chief Justice Mar shall, who hud been appointed to of fice by Adams In the closing days of the administration, an net which Jef ferson regarded us not only an Im propriety but a personal affront, Jef ferson's feelings toward lliirr and Mai'shall were well known. Then the new president was escort ed to the senate chamber, where he delivered his Inaugural address, ono of the most notable of all such speeches, lie was uftenwird escorted to his hoarding house, where he re ceived the congratulations of the for eign diplomats and of tho leadeis of, the popular party, who rejohed over the defeat of the Federalists. Willing to Hold. "I've been reared In the lap of lux ury," said a tiilllloiiulro'M daughter. "Try mine for a change," suggested the Impecunious young man, Haiti more American. The employer who Is lute for work Is liable to bo late when opportunity comes along. r, tween the two evils a kh-ker and 1 knocker- tin re Is small choice, ISungsters Gra.pegN'iits he great body-building ualues J which Natme stores in wheat and barley, are retained in this easily digestible food. The unique, sweet flavor of GrapeNucs makes it a bi$? favorite with both childTen and adults. 41 There's a Reason SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE -u i m .), 6 .BBBBBBBBBBBBBBFt '1?BBBB BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB MBBBBBBBBK JSBBBBBBBBBBBBsffi' . ii?3BBBBBBT JbbbbbbbbbbbbWP?!' ''VSbbbbbbbs tdsBBBBnBBBBBS'Fv. . ' '.i.'JBBBBHBF ESivfeH'viJsSBBBBS? SaMHasBjS-lassssy KFaSsEsasSSBBBBBBr 'SKWIBIBS93laBJBIBS-' MRS. AURORB RARRBTTK of Manchester, New HmpW pains In my bnck which used to tn ble mo every day have almost iWwpi peared, nnd (I am going to keep oat taking Tanlac until they leave ma tiftV tlrely. 1 have'lots of energy how,mC um not only able to do my tunam work, but I get through the day, wtth out feeling the least bit tired. X w no longer nervous llko I was, Mai I sleep well nt night. "1 shall always ho thankfat tme what Tanlac has done for me." Tanlac Is sold by leading drngjlrtft everywhere. Adv. Cold: With tf-fc QUININE 6wrtP AND La Grippe i BUT HE MADE FINE SPEECK Fact That Candidate Didn't Say WhsC He Was Talking About Wu Really Small Matter. "Weil, .luck," asked .Mrs. Monroogfe of her husband, "and what did ye think of tljc speech of our new camtt date fur parliament at the next etaf tlonY" "Oil, Mary, he certainly Is a grcxa speaker!" assented her husband. "That so?" commented his wife. "Dl he speak for long," Jack Monrongh whistled. "Yes. my dear. He could beat eve jour sex at the game," he added hu morously. "He spoke for three se&ML hours!" Mrs. Mourough was accustomed ut her husband's Jibes and she let It nam jiihiiiswch.mI. "What did he talk about?" she ue-. led. Air. Monrongh scratched his hesd ta perplexity. "Conic to think of It," he ntiBwcrefi at Inst, "he didn't exnetly suyr Loudon Answers. Wished "Hnnd Biscuit" Itohert !., age three, hud tasted hlc first "lady finger," and, wishing ubv other, was ut 11 loss to know what te ask for, so ii'iude the following at tempt: "Please, mother, may I huveunotha: 'huiid Iltr-Cllll ? " It limy he considered Impolite (o speak ol the "end-sent hog" at n church wedding. ) It is more honorable to acknowledge our faults than to boast of our merit. grow husky on ii ifnnr ftp 1 t fLii. n - 1 " 1 i 331 u":" tjjJ 9l - uijgu