The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 30, 1908, Image 3

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    A SURGICAL
OPERATION
If there is any one thing that a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
We can state -without fear of a
contradiction that there are hun
dreds, yes, thousands, of operations
performed upon women in our hos
pitals which are entirely unneces
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E, PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters.
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“ For eight years I suffered from the
most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an operation was my only
hope of recovery. I wrote-Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made mo a well woman.”
Mrs. Arthur It. House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes:
“I feel it is my duty to let people
know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound has done for me. I
Buffered from female troubles, and last
March my physician decided that an
operation was necessary. My husband
objected, and urged mo to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulce ra
tios;, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Ingenious Johnnie.
From the Delineator.
Mother had a bright red apple which
she wished to give to the children, at
the same time teaching the little broth
er a lesson !n generosity. Johnnie had
a peculiar fondness for apples.
Calling hint to her side, she said:
“Now, dear, mamma has a nice, rosy
apple to give you, and she wants you
to be generous.” That word was not in
Johnnie’s vocabulary, so he said,
“Mamma, what do you mean by being
generous?”
"Oh dear, that means you are to
divide the apple Into two parts, and
give sister the larger.”
Johnnie was silent. Suddenly his face
brightened, as he handed the apple
again to his mother, saying, “Mamma,
give it to sister and tell her to be gen
erous.”
Cheap Affection.
Mrs. Telllt—That Mr. Gey is the mean
est man I ever saw.
Mrs Askit—What's he done now?
Mrs. Tellit—Started suit against a man
for alienating his wife’s affections, then
•ettled for $5.
Workers Who Want Work.
The Free Labor Bureau of the Bowery
Mission has. within the past four months,
pent over 1,300 men to country districts in
response to the appeals of farmers for
field laborers, but still has on hand many
hundreds of common laborers, farm hands,
general handy men, and mechanics skilled
in almost every branch of industry.
The Bowery Mission carries on this im
portant work absolutely free of charge
and without regard to creed or national
ity. All who are in need of workers for'
the harvesting should at once communi
cate with John C. Earl, financial secre
tary of the Bowery Mission, 64 Bible
House, New York city.
DAISY FLY KILLER larSWatitS
cl*an, ornamental,
convenient, cheap.
LaMd all RCD»on.
Absolutely harmless;
will not (oil or in
jur* anything. Guar
anteed 6 ffoctiv*.
All dealer* or
■nut preuald for ‘.*0c.
Jlnrold Homer*,
14# IlcKolb uve,
_ Brooklyn, N. Y.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body j
•ntisepticslly clean and free from un- j
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, j
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin
fecting and deodor
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex
cellence and econ
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug and toilet
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY ' BOOK BENT FftCK
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
SIOUX CITY P’T’G CO, 1,253—31, 1908
/
Genuine Indifference.
From the New York Tribune.
"Jack" Abernethy. the Rough Rider,
can catch a wolf alive by grabbing Its
lower jaw with his bare hand.
Mr. Abernethy, on his last visit to
Washington, was asked by a reporter
for his opinion on a certain political
question.
"I can’t give you an opinion on that
question,” the Rough Rider replied,
"because it’s a question I pay no atten
tion to. I am indifferent to it—as in
different as the backwoodsman’s wife.
“That lady, you know, looked on
while her husband had a fierce hand
to-hand tussle with a bear. She said
it was ‘the only fight she ever saw
where she didn't care who won.”
WII>OWS’UDaer NEW LAW obtained
..Aa eliwvc by JOHN W. MORRIS.
PENSIONS Washington, D. a
A Competent Witness.
Justice Maule is regarded as the lead
ing judicial wit in England. He had
doubts as to the credibility of a wit
ness on one occasion, and the man de
clared that he had been “wedded to the
truth” from infancy, says the London
Tatler.
"That may be," said Judge Maule,
"but the question is. how long have you
been divorced?”
A little girl was a witness before him.
and he proceeded to ascertain whether
she knew the nature of an oath. The
child, in answer to questions, said she
would go to heaven if she told the
truth, but would go to the other place
if she told lies.
"Are you sure of that, my dear?”
Justice Maule asked.
"Yes, sir; quite sure.”
"Let. her be sworn." said the court;
“she knows more than I do.”
Wliat m Poultry Mho Says About 20
Mule Team Borax.
‘‘As I am in the poultry business, I
had ten white chicks to wash and pre
pare for a show. I used ‘20 Mule Team’
Soap for washing the birds, and 1 can
say from years of exi>erienee, washing
white birds, never before have 1 found
a soap or Borax that cleaned my birds
so fine and easy. I bad a great deal
of comment on my birds being so
white.” J. A. Dinwiddle, New Market,
Tenn. All dealers, Ms, 1 and 5 lb. car
tons. Sample and booklet 5c. Pacific
Coast Borax Co., Chicago, 111.
Another Food Fad.
From the New York Sun.
In New Y’ork’s Mexican colony they
were praising at a recent dinner Pedro
Alvarado of Parral, who had just given
($2,000,000 to the poor.
"He was poor himself," said a broker.
“That is why he is now kind to the
poor. A splendid fellow. Whenever I
go back to Mexico I look him up.
"Alvarado likes to tell the quaint ex
periences of his days of poverty.
"In Mexico City he once pointed to
a bakery and said to me:
“ 'You see that bakery? Well, as I
looked for work one morning early, I
saw a tramp on hands and knees at the
grating above the ovens.
"A policeman appeared. He tapped
with his stick the seat of the tramp's
trousers.
" ■ "Here, you, move," he said, stern
ly.
“ ’That’s inhuman, mister,’ whined
the tramp. I’m just inhalin’ my break
fast.’ ”
A TERRIBLE CONDITION.
Tortured by Sharp Twinges, Shoot
ing Pains and Dictiness.
Hiram Center, 618 South Oak street,
Lake City, Minn., says: “I was so bad
with kidney trouble
that I could not
straighten up after
stooping without
sharp pains shooting
through my back. I
had dizzy spells, was
nervous aud my eye
sight affected. The
kidney secretions
were Irregular and
too frequent. I was
in a terrible condi
tion, but Doan's Kidney Pills have
cured me and I have enjoyed perfect
health since.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
HOW BEECHER GOT EVEN.
Made a Woman Who Slammed a Door
in His Face Wish She Hadn’t.
Two preachers not long ago were dis
cussing .the men who have been shin
ing lights of the metropolitan pulpits,
and as a matter of course Henry Ward
Beecher led the procession of reminis
cences.
"Beecher was never a conspicuous
example of a preacher and pastor com
bined,” said one of the men. "He made
the preaching end of the week his
chief concern, and left the flock to be
pastorlzed by his assistants.
"But once in a while he would de
cide that he owed It to his parishioners
to make a round of calls. He himself
told me the following story of an In
cident which had occurred on one of
these expeditions.
"He had made out a list of names,
had got the addresses from the church
directory—perhaps an old one—and was
taking them in their most convenient
order. This brought him to a house in
which, according to his list, lived a
Mrs. B-.
“It was a very modest house, and
when Mr. Beecher rang the bell he had
to wait some time for a response.
When this did come It was a very irri
tated one in the person of a woman,
who was evidently just from the wash
tub.
“ 'Is Mrs. B-in?’ asked Mr.
Beecher in his bc-st manner.
“ ‘Don't live here!’ snapped the wo
man, and slammed the door in his
face.
"Mr. Beech°r waited quietly on the
doorstep unt the woman had certain
ly had time 1 < go back to the basement
and to resume her washing. Then lie
rang the bell. After a while the door
was again opened by the sudsy female.
“ ‘Who said she did!’ exclaimed Mr.
Beecher, and went down the steps and
off up the street.
" ‘And I’m Inclined to think, he
chuckled, as he told the story, ‘that
woman will treat a civil question bet
ter the next time she meets one.' ”
Let Something Good Be Said.
When over the fair fame of friend or foe
The shadow of disgrace shall fall; In
stead
Or words of blame, or jiroof of thus and
so,
Let something good be said.
Forget not that r o fellow-being yet
May fall so low but love may lift his
head;
Even the cheek of shame with tears Is
wet
If something good be said.
No generous heart may vainly turn aside
In ways of sympathy; no soul so dead
But may awaken strong and glorifleu.
If something good be said.
And so I charge ye, by the thorny crown
Anil by the cross oil which the Saviour
bled,
And by your own soul's hope of fair re
nown.
Let something good be said.
—James Whitcomb Riley.
Ready for the Dollar.
From the Delineator.
Marjorie, aged 9, had not been hav
ing very satisfactory reports from
school. Her father finally said, “Mar
jorie, for the first hundred you get I’ll
give you a dollar.” Time went on and
the reward could not be claimed. One
day the child was taken violently ill.
Her mother sent for the doctor. When
he had gone Marjorie said, “Mamma,
am 1 very ill?"
“No, dear; your temperature is a lit
tle over a hundred, but the doctor
thinks you will be all right in a day
or so."
Smiles broke through Marjorie’s
tears.
"Now, mamma, I can have my dol
lar. Papa said he would give it to
me if 1 could get a hundred in any
thing.”
The Dreamer.
The dreamer dreamed, and the busy
world
Passed by with a mocking smile.
As It went in search of.the world’s rc*
wards,
But the dreamer dreamed the while.
He saw the world as the world should b«
When longer years had run.
And the world but paused in Its work to
ask:
“Pray, what has the dreamer done?”
Yet ever the dreamer dreamed his dream,
Until, in some wondrous way—
As the water, springing in deeps of earth
Finds passages to upper day—
The dreamer’s dream found the man of
power—
’Tis strange how men’s lives are knit—
Who knew not the dreamer, but took hia
dream
And transformed the world with It.
The world bows down to the man of
power—
Forgotten the dreamer dies.
Yet the dream he dreamed is the secret
force
That lias forged men’s destinies.
—The Bellman.
Oregon, Willamette valley lands. Write
for descriptive matter. Olmsted Land Co.,
Salem, Ore.
The Smell of Cities.
The man with a nose always recog
nizes the smell of any place. He has
only at land at Calais to smell garlic.
London’s smell—when the Londoner
returns—is just soot and fried fish.
Paris always smells of chocolate and
wood-smoke. Florence Is violets and
sewage. But so soon as you get to
Russia the smell Is quite different.
Moscow, the city of fruit, that comes
from the Crimea, has a special smell of
the cranberry (which has various
names) in late summer. And you can
not land In St. Petersburg without no
ticing—instantly—the smell of the
place.
On the last visit to St. Petersburg a
young man was driving with a young
Englishwoman to the hotel.
"Have you noticed the smell of the
city?” he asked, having wondered long
what the mysterious perfume was.
"Why. yes," was the answer, "it's old
boots.”
And SI. Petersburg follows you with
the smell of ancient leather, as Sitting
bourne and Faversham, England, keep
their memory In the mind of the man
who has smelt their brick fields.
Why Southern Illinois Is Called Egypl
From the Albion Journal.
The year 1824 was very wet. Heavy
rains fell frequently. Corn on flat lands
was a total failure. This year the
weevil destroyed the wheat after It was
harvested. The next year, 1825, there
was a remarkable growth of thistles
on the branch bottoms. The winter ol
1830-31 was known as the winter ol
deep snow. The snow was of a depth
of from two and a half to three feet
on a level. It drifted much and was
very destructive to fruit trees. The
weather was Intensely hot. Both In
1831 and 1832 the early frosts so Injured
the corn as to entirely render It worth
less for almost any purpose.
During the years between and Includ
ing 1824-32, so nearly corresponding to
the years of famine In the days ol
Pharaoh and his ruler, os he made Jo
seph to be, the people of Illinois, de
pendent upon the southern part of the
state for so much grain, particularly
corn, that people In remembrance ol
the bible story began to call the part
of the state which had been so helpful
In time of need Egypt.
The Sole Proviso.
From Puck.
The Worshipper—Doesn’t the talk at
a musicale annoy you dreadfully?
The Great Person—Not If they talk
about me.
A motor vehicle purchased by the
English Lown of Tynemouth can be
used as a prisoners’ van, ambulance or |
fire engine.
HEALTH AND INCOME.
Both Kept Up on Scientific Food.
Good sturdy health helps one a lot
to make money.
With the loss of health one’s Income
Is liable to shrink, if not entirely dwin
dle away.
When a young lady has to make her
owu living, good health is her best as
set.
“I am alone In the world,” writes
a Chicago girl, “dependent on my own
efforts for my living. I am a clerk,
and about two years ago through close
application to work and a boarding
house diet. I became a nervous Inva
lid, and got so bad off It was almost
impossible for me to stay In the oflio*
a half day at a time.
“A friend suggested to me the Idea
of trying Grape-Nuts, which 1 did, j
making this food a large part of ut
least two meals a day.
‘"To-day I am free from braln-tlre,
dyspepsia and all the Ills of an over
worked and improperly nourished brain
and body. To Grape-Nuts I owe the j
recovery of my health, and the ability I
to retain my position and Income." i
“There's a Reason."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle j
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well- '
vllle,” in pkgs.
Ever rend the above letter? A !
new one appears from time to time. !
They are genuine, true, and full ol j
human interest.
SIMPLE METHODS TO
IMPROVE COMPLEXION
Parisiennes Eat Oranges All
Day and Wash in Juice—
Rub Face With Oil.
■—
If you cannot ciuluro herb teas or
sulphur and molasses, try oranges for
your spring medicine. Fashionable
Parisiennes have gone crazy on or
anges. They are the first thing they
jeat In tho morning, and the last thing
ilhey take at night. Then. In addition |
to eating them all day long, they cut
'them up In slices, let them stand In
water over night and use the liquid as
a face wash. Its action Is very
strengthening and It makes the skin
white and takes off tan, to which the
Pnrlstenne has a great objection.
Then pure castor oil Is rubbed Into
the skin. The high priestess who has
spent her life In acquiring the secrets
of the fountain of youth will not tell
you that she uses castor oil. She will
call It a wonderful beauty elixir or as
sure you that It Is a priceless potion
known only to the favorites of the
sultan of Turkey.
But the truth Is that the basis of :
the treatment of the most successful j
.beauty specialists in Paris today la |
nothing more or less than castor oil. i
It must be very pure, and when rubbed
Into the face In very Bmall quantities
Us effects are magical.
Most beauty specialists have a cream
of their own preparation containing
cleansing properties, and when this is
rubbed lightly onto the face and then
rubbed off again It Is positively black
with the Impurities of the Bkln.
No woman who cares for her per
sonal appearance washes her face In
pure water, nor does she use soap. She j
employs "sachets de toillette," which,
when put Into water and squeezed, give
It a milky hue. The "sachets” correct
ithe hurtful qualities In the water.
-»-4444444444444*44444444444
4 4
4 WHEN THE TIDE IS LOW. 4
4 — 4
4 Some time at eve, when the tide 4
4 Is low, 4
4 I shall slip my mooring and 4
4 away, 4
4 With no response to a friendly 4
4 hall 4
4 Of kindred craft In a busy bay, 4
4 In the silent hush of the twl- 4
4 light pale, 4
4 When tho night stoops down to 4
4 embrace the day, 4
4 And the voices call In the wa- 4
4 ter's flow-— 4
4 Some time at eve, when the tide 4
4 Is low, 4
4 I shall slip my mooring and sail 4
4 away 4
4 Through purple shadows that 4
4 darkly trail 4
4 O’er the ebbing tide of tho un- 4
4 known sea. 4
4 I shall tare me away, with a dip 4
4 of sail, 4
4 And a ripple of waters to tell 4
4 the tale 4
4 Of a lonely voyage, sailing away 4
•4 To mystic isles, where at an- 4
4 chor law 4
4 The craft of those who have 4
4 sailed before, 4
4 O’er the unknown sea to the un- 4
4 known shore. 4
4 A few who have watched me 4
4 sail away 4
4 Will miss my craft from the 4
4 busy bay; 4
4 Some friendly barks that were 4
4 anchored near, 4
4 Some loving souls that my heart 4
4 held dear, 4
4 In silent sorrow will drop a 4
4 tear; 4
4 But I shall have peacefully 4
4 furled my sail 4
4 in moorings sheltered from 4
4 storm and gale, 4
4 And greeted the friends who 4
4 have sailed before 4
4 O’er the unknown sea to the 4
4 unknown shore. 4
4 4
READING IN BED.
Sometimes Has Beneficial Effect on
Over Wakeful Brain.
From the Family Doctor.
Reading In bed. like most luxuries,
can be overdone. In fact there seems to
be only one excuse for this fascinating
way of ending the day. Certain people
find that their worries accumulate In
their brains after bedtime; their nerves
are at high tension and their minds are
actively at work trying to solve prob
lems that should have been left behind
In the city.
Going to bed with the brain In such a
state means that with nothing to dis
tract the thoughts, hearing nothing and
seeing nothing In the darkness Imagina
tion has full sway and hours of wake
fulness may be the result. Such a man,
we think, will find half an hour's read
ing in bed a great help.
With earelul attention paid to the
quality and position of the light so that
without flickering It shines over the
shoulder and directly on to the page
the much maligned habit of reading In
bed has sometimes a very beneficial ef
fect on a tired and over-wakeful brain.
A Cheap Homemade Barometer.
A weather man described the other day
a cheap, home made barometer.
He said It was only necessary to take a
piece of string about ID Inches long, and
to soak It several hours In a strong solu
tion of salt and water.
After being dried, the string should have
a light weight tied to one end, and being
hung up against a wall, a mark being
made to show where the weight reaches.
The barometer is now' complete. It Is as
accurate as a $100 Instrument. The weight
vises for wet weather and fall for fine.
I
He Suffered, Though.
Mr. Wise.—I suffer awfully from
rheumatism.
Mr. Conn.—You surprise me. You
look healthy.
Mr. Wise.—I am, but my wife has
the rheumatism.
THE KNOWING^ MULES
OF OLD MEXICO
Apparently They Have a Labor
Union to Tell Them What
Constitutes Day’s Work.
"Everybody knows that all mules are
brainy, but thv mules of old Mexico
have something on other mules for q
sort of prescience of their own,” said
a man who has spent many years In
the neighboring republic. “A Mexican
mule will do Just so much work and
not a bit more.
'The riding mule, for Instance, Is
fully aware of the distance, down to a
rod, he Is supposed and required to
traverse In the progress of one travel
ing day, and all the sharp sticks os
goads or dynamlto on earth won't get
him to do a bit more than what ha
knows to be the correct distance. Tho
Mexicans have a peculiar saying In
connection with this characteristic o<
the Mexican mule. You ask a Mexican,
for Instance, how far It Is by mulebacH
to such and such a point.
" 'Two days Journey If you are not
rushed, but three days If you are In q
hurry,' the Mexican will reply.
”Hls meaning Is that If you don’t
ask any more of your mule than you
should ask of him tho mule will be
able to make the trip In two days. But
If you attempt to drive the brute he'll
soldier on you, and In consequence the
Journey will take you three days:
“Now for the prescience of which l
spoke. I don't know what else to call
It. The latest Instance I saw of It was
when I was riding through the state ot
Sonora a month or so ago on nn old
gray mule that knew every turn nnd
twist of the road I was taking so
thoroughly that I let the bridle reins
hang and permitted him to go It alone.
“Along toward evening a terrific
thunder Btorm canto up. The air was
heavy with tho fumes of sulphur--,
something I had heard about but had
never experienced before—and tho
crashes were deafening. The road was
rocky and bad and there was only an
occasional scrub pine alongside.
"The old gray mule when the storm
reached Its height stopped his Jog of
a sudden and stood In tho middle of tho
road, peacefully enough. He wasn’t
worried apparently, but he considered
that that was a pretty good place to
stand during tho continuance of tho
tremendous electrical storm, for It was
out In the open.
“For myself, I wanted to get under
tho shelter of a pine tree about 100
yards ahead of me. But the mulo
couldn't and wouldn't see that. Him for
open, and there ho stood.
“I prodded him with the spurs, but
he merely looked around at me In a
disgusted sort of way. Then I dis
mounted and tried to lead him. Noth
ing doing. He wouldn’t budge.
"So at length, giving In to him that
ho knew more about it than I did, I
wrapped my poncho about my head
and stood at his head, waiting for the
storm to pass. I hadn’t stood by the
mule In that way for more than three
minutes before a saw a couple of balls
of red fire playing around the trunk of
the pine tree that X wanted to get un
der the shelter of. Then there came a
deafening crash, and when I could see
again there was that pine tree
stretched across the road and a good
part of It In kindling wood.
"I suppose maybe that old gray mule
didn't know. I give It to him, anyhow
that he did." _ _
Squelching a Warbler.
From the Washington Star.
Jacob H. Schlff. on the way to Egypt
on the Caronia, waa criticising In the
smokeroom the tenor singing of a
young man who gave, all by himself,
a little muslcale every night after din
ner.
“With a voice like that,” said Mr.
Schlff, "one Is npt to meet with extra
ordinary experiences.
"I have a friend with a voice like
that, a young broker. For his Christ
mas holidays my friend made a little
tour of New England, visiting many
quaint old houses, many picturesque
churches.
“One Sunday he went to church In
Salem or Gloucester or some such place
and lifted up his tenor voice In the
hymns and responded with a fervor and
force that made the congregation stare.
“Pleased with the attention he at
tracted my friend threw back his head,
puffed out his chest, and, abandoning
the lust vestige of restraint, sang with
all his might and main. A high note
was approaching. He collected his
powers to meet It. They were staring
now—well, he wou'd give them some
thing to stare for. What a glorious
thing this congregational singing was!
He must have more of It every Sunday
on his return to New York.
“A heavy hand fell on his shoulder.
He turned with a start and saw ths
sexton, an old, bent man, glowering at
him.
“ 'Here, young feller, hold your
noise!' said the sexton In a wheezy
whisper, audible all over the building.
'We pay people to do that here!”
His Plea.
Tom P. Morgan in Smart Set.
“Yassah, I 'knowledges dat I steals,
yo’ honah—now and ag'ln," confessed
Brother Bunkum, who had been
dragged up before the bar of justice on
the charge of embezzling sundry fowls.
“I steals, sah, but on’y dess part o' de
time—not all de time. De rest o' de
time I sawtuh projects around
amongst de dlffunt 'ligious 'nomerna
tlons, eatin' dinner wld ’em and uh
makln' out like I waa mlglity nigh on
de keen edge o' J'lnln’ deir church; and
I 'umble soinely axes yo', sah, to lemme
down easy of yo' please, uh-kaze I does
muh hcenyusness dess some o’ de time,
as I says befo', and .not all de time,
like dese yuh trust gen’lemen dat we-all
yeahs tell so much about now-uh-days.
And. 'sides all dat, yo' honah, what'd
dese yuh good folks, dat’s alius tryin'
to 'suade me over to deir way o' thlnk
ln', do wldout me? If I was to go to
Jail dey wouldn't have nobody to prac
tise on; and yo’ organizes yo'se'f, sah,
dat dey kaln't keep well less’n dey has
some rlpperbate to be everlastln'Iy uh
jilckln' at," -
* “Our Barbarous Fourth.”
Mrs. Isaac I>. Rice makes out a strong
case against “Our Barbarous Fourth” In
her destructive and constructive discus
sion of the national holiday’s abuse and
possibilities In the Juno Century. Figures,
she says, show that during the celebra
tion of five national birthdays, from 190(1
to 1907 Inclusive, 1,153 persons were killed
and 21,530 were Injured! Of the Injured
83 suffered total, and 339 partial, blind
ness; 308 persons lost arms, legs or hands,
and 1,067 lost one or more fingers. But
these figures, startling as they are. con
vey only a faint Idea of the suffering, both
physical and mental, which went to swell
the total cost of these five holidays; In
this we must also Include the weeks and
often months of anguish of the Injured,
the suspense of entire families while the
fate of some loved one hung In the bal
ance, the horror of a future of sightless
years, the pinching poverty now the lot
of many because of the death or maim
ing of the breadwinner.
Slam Is the'land of temples. New
ones ure constantly being built and
the old ones rarely repaired.
Symptffigs
^X/lixir^Senna
Cleanses the System Effect
ually; Dispels It ilas and. ileaur
ackes duo to Constipation;
Acts naturally, acts truly as
a Laxative. ~ •
Best forMen\^uien and Cmla*
rcn-ybungand Old.
10 jYet its Dene jicial Effects
Always liuv the G lenuiae' wKick
has me Tull name oftne Com
1 ^CALIFORNIA
Fk> Strup Co.
by whom it is maimjacturcd ,pruifc«l en the
front of every* packa&o.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS*.
one size only, regular price battle.
Handicapped by Her Husband.
From the London Globe.
Lady Mary Glyn, the wife of th*
bishop of Petersborough, wae recently
sitting In Peterborough Infirmary by
the bedside of a maid servant who had
been taken from the palace suffering
from burns. At a neighboring bed ai»
evangelist was speaking to another pa
tient. Mistaking Lady Mary for th*
girl’s mother, he approached her with
a handful of tracts, and tho words;
"Are you saved, madame; are you sura
you are saved?”
"As nearly as a bishop’s wife can
expect to be,” was Lady Mary's reply.
-.a . ■
Real Fishing.
From the Atlantic Monthly.
I’ve whipped miles of trout streanv
I’ve played many a husky bass. I’vw
read of the angler’s battles with tarpon
and salmon and tuna; but when I want,
just real fishing, I seek out a quiet lit
tle river I know, dig a can of wormt
get down on the small of my back un
der a willow, and watch my stopper
float and wait for the perch to bite.
CUTICUBA CUBED FOCDSL
leathern Woman Suffered with Fish
in*, Darning (lnsh—Thm Utlto
Babies Had Slcln Troablua.
"My baby had it running art or hk
neck and nothing that I did for tt took
effect until I used Cutlcura. My facer
was nearly full of tetter or aoma sim
ilar skin disease. It would Itch matt
burn so that I could hardly stand It.
Two cokes of Cutlcura Soap and a bol
of Cutlcura Olntmout cured me. Twd
years after it broke out on Of hand*
and wrist. Sometimes I would gw
nearly crazy, for It Itched so badly. 1.
went back to my old stand-by, that
had never failed me—one act of Cut*
cura Remedies did the work. One aet'
also cured my uncle’s baby, whoae head
was a cake of sores, and another baby
who was In the same fix. Mrs. Lilli*
Wllcher, 770 Eleventh St., Chattanooga,
Teun., Feb. 16, 1907.”
A Sure Winner.
Hornn—Did yez tver make lnjr money
buckin' horses, Doran?
Doran—Sure. Ot made folve hundred
wance.
Horan—How did yez do ut?
Doran—Ol backed him down a ctllar
awn thin sued th’ mon for lavin’ th".
door open.
Cash registers are used in a church
in Massachusetts.
Mrs. Winslows bootuikq anus aw TUtlllnw
.•ethingi ^ft.au ths semi, rsdncs. iSI—wlie ee
Wj. pain, ourw min A eolle. 1* oasc ■ botOe
Not Hit Fault.
Prom the Christian Deader.
A first grade boy brought perfect
spelling papers home for several weeks
and then suddenly began to ml— five
and six out of ten.
"How’s this, son?” asked the father.
"Teacher’s fault," replied the boy.
“How Is It the teacher's fault?"
"She moved the little boy that sat.
next to me.”
Muskrat skins are largely used for
the manufacture of the cheaper grades
of fur coats.
Ten Caa Get Alien’s Foot-lTwoo Fm
Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Da Bey,
N. Y., for a FREE sample of Allen's rose
Base, a powder to shake Into your sheen.
It cures tired, sweating, hot, swollen, ach
ing feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy.
A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. AJfi
Druggists and Shoe Stores sell It SSc.
Hospital for Trees.
"The trees of Paris will delight you."*
said the traveled man who waa seeing oiy
his friend. “Every boulevard and ave
nue has Its two lines of trees. Sheltered
from the hot sun, you walk under them
In a cool green dusk.
"That hot and dusty city doesn’t emslty
keep Its trees vigorous and fresh. It
must have tree hospitals—great nurseries
where, with all sorts of liquid p&rasit*
killers and all sorts of stimulating fer
tilizers, the run-down urban trees arm
built up again.
“Continually, In Paris, you eee faded
trees being taken up and fresh trees being
put down, and fresh and faded trees alike,,
in those ambulances which wo call trans
planters, drive continually up down
the sunny streets.”
CASTQRIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the /H?
Signature of
A 8kln of Beauty Is » Joy Forever.
kR T. Felix Oouraud's Oriental
Cream or Magioa! Be a u title r.
Kemo?aa Taa. Plmplaa,
Freckles, Moth PaleLm,
Kash. and Ski* DieraMU,
mad every Nervhfo
on bemuty. and d*
flea detect to*, 3&
has stood th* teeC.
of «o years, mart
la mo hmnaleeo «•
taste It lobe rare 1?.
1» property made.
Accept no oountor
felt ot ain»tt*a
ouae. Dr. L Aw.
Havre maid to W
lady of toe heart
'-“L'yjrsm
Win U9Q these.
_ _ I r*e»
(souriiiid'rt Cream* as the !Aast harmful of all ton
kin preparation*." For sale by all drugs)sta mad Fancy
roods Dealer* la the United States, Canada mod Xttaopau
t£Q3. T. HOPKINS, Pro;, 37 Great Jones Stoat faTa*.