The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 28, 1921, Image 3

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TAKES CADE
OF 5 CHILDREN
Mrs. Taylor’s Sickness Ended
by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Roxbury, Mass.—“I suffered contin
ually with backache and was often de
spondent, had dizzy
spells and at my
monthly periods it
was almost impos
sible to keep around
at my work. Since
my last baby came
two years ago my
back has been worse
and no position I
could get in would
relieve it, and doc
tor’s medicine did
not help me. Afriend
recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg
etable Compound and I have found great
relief since using it. My back is much
better and I can sleep well. I keep
house and have the care of five children
so my work is very trying and I am very
thankful I have found the Compound
such a help. I recommend it to my
friends and if you wish to use this letter
I am very glad to help any woman suf
fering as I was until I used Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”—
Mrs. Maude E. Taylor, 6 St. James
Place, Roxbury, Mass.
Backache is one of the most common
symptoms of a displacement or derange
ment of the female system. No woman
should make the mistake of trying to
overcome it by heroic endurance, but
profit byMrs.Taylor’sexperienee and try
LydiaEf. Pinkham’sVegetableCompound
-
1
(tad accept no
Awful
With
Estonia
“I have been awful sick
writes Mrs. W. H. Person,
Eatonlc is all I can get to give me
relief."
Acidity and gas on the stomach
quickly taken up und carried out by
Eatonic, then appetite and strength
come back. And many oilier bodily
miseries disappear when the stomach
Is right. Don't let sourness, belching,
bloating, indigestion and other stom
ach Ills go on. Take Eatonic tablets
after you eat—see how much better
you feel. Big box costs only a trifle
with your druggist’s guarantee.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Remove* Danaruff-f topsH air Fal tins
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray aad Faded Half
63c. und $1.00 at I>rn Krista.
THppds: Phcm. WKb. Patchplug, N. Y4
HINDERCORNS Kamovna Corns. Cat
looms, etc., stops all pala, ensures comfort to 11:0
feet, makes walking r.-\, I3u. by mall or at I truer
slats, HlscoxCbamicel Works, ratobusua,K.Y.
Garden Spot, Anyway.
A Boston geologist and philologist
says he Is convinced that the Garden
of Eden was located In the area now
occupied by the state of Ohio. Wheth
er right or wrong, Ohio is certainly a
garden spot when it comes to raising
presidential timber.—Brooklyn Slumi
erd-1 7nion.
Samples Not Impressive.
“Why couldn't you secure it cook
from the employment agent?”
“I didn't like his samples.”
Spite enables the fool to believe he
Is happy in Ills unhappiness.
If eccentricity were genius all mad
houses would be universities
IlSTRIKE//
WW'S TOASTE^/#
Cigarette
No cigarette lias
the same delicious
flavor as Lucky
Strike. Because
Lucky Strike is the
toasted cigarette.
I j
Cross Examining Nature.
Sir Francis Gal ton was responsible for
Galton’s law of inheritance, which is
as follows:
A person owes one-half of all his an
cestral influences to his two parents, or
one-quarter, 25 per cent, to each par
ent; one-quarter to his four grand
parents or one-sixteenth to each, or 6.25
per cent; one-eighth to his eight great
grandparents, or one-sixty-fourth to
each, or 1,5625 per cent to each.
Or, stating it differently, there is one
chance in four that a child will have
his mother's eyes; one chance in 16
that he will have, let us say, his grand
mother’s eyes; and one chance in 64 that
he will have his maternal grandmoth
er’s mother’s eyes.
When we consider all the. features
taken together tl:e question seems com
plicated.
Later views arc to the effect that in
h^ntanco is far more complex than Gal
ton’s law would indicate. The human
being develops from two cells ore male
and one female, but these in turn are
each composed of 12 parts, 24 in all,
and inheritance depeids on how these
12 parts on each side combine with each
other.
Kvery now and then we find a child
that has some characteristic of a grand
parent, say its maternal grandmother,
although that characteristic is not
found in either of its parents or in any
of its brothers and sisters.
The mathematical probability of any
such happening H. H. Laughlin has
worked out by algebraic formula and
methods. Any man of mathematical
bent can turn to articles by Laughlin
in the Journal of Heredity and in Gene
tics and learn how to calculate the
chance that hl» prospective child will in
herit the beam in the eye found in the
material great grandparent of the girl
he saw in church last Sunday and whom
he is thinking of taking for a moonlight
rido in April—object, matrimony. For
instance, if a defect was in the girl’s
mother’s mother, there are 4,095 chances
In 4.096 that the girl has not a vestige
of the quality in what are called her
tih J Oil! - -* """ *
pass it on to her children, even if she
wishes.
A very interesting study along tnis
line is that of Davenport on the color
of the skin and of the eyes and of
kinking of the Hair In crosses between
whites and blacks. In Jamaica among
other classes they have what they call
"pass for whites’* and "fixed whites."
When two individuals of the fixed white
class marry the children are all white.
When two grades of the "pass for
whites" marry Borne of their children
are dark.
Davenport says that when a grade
with less than 10 per cent negro blood
marrfes a person of the same grade or
with less negro blood, ths offspring are
always white. If there is more than 10
per cent, in either or both parents some
of the children are likely to be dark.
The yellow color of mulatoes is due to
yellow pigment in the skin of blacks as
well as of grades, but covered up by the
black pigment in the skin of the for
mer. The shade of the skin of the ne
gro is light at birth, turns dark at once
on exposure to light, and gets pro
gressively darker until the age of pu
berty and after that becomes lighter.
The color of the eye is a quality apart
from the color of the skin; likewise the
kink of the hair. Two parents, neither
of whom have kinky hair, cannot expect
to have children w ith kinky hair. There
are several conclusions resulting from
Davenport’s study.
Laughlin, however, after giving the
various mathematical formulae for de
termining the possibility or probability
of a given inheritance, tells us that
there are certain factors which cannot
be mathematically rated. Among those
are the phenomena known as mutants
or There always is .the pos&i
oiaty IHI'a rSSShutuAzoi$ne%kk.r WfTf
be born in a family where there is no
chess or mathematical genius, or an
Abralitm Lincoln in a family of people
all ordinary, and for these phenomena
there is no mathematical law.
Interpretation of Asia Minor.
From Humanite.
The eastern question will not be set
tled this time. For months there will
be talk of Thrace and Smyrna and the
straits, and the adventure of the Sevres
parchment, torn up before ever it was
put into force, will remain one of the
most comic episodes in history.
But it is more useful to throw .some
light on the very curious underside of
affairs. Greece and Turkey are not the
only litigants, or the real ones; behind
them stand the great powers in conflict
with one another.
When M. Calogeropoulos demanded
the maintenance of the Sevres treaty
intact, he was not speaking solely in
his own name, lie would not have
shown so much daring if he had not
felt assured of the watchful support oi
England, Greece, whether under Con
stantine or Vcnizelos, is the man-at
arms of the United Kingdom in the
Levant and Mr. Lloyd George wishes
Greece to keep Thrace and Smyrna in
order that he may keep a tighter hold
on Constantinople and the straits.
When Bekir Sarny, spokesman of the
two Turkeys—the Sultan’s and Kcmal’s
—claims the restoration of Thrace and
Smyrna, Constantinople and the straits,
the statements are the more categorical
for his knowledge that it has the* sup
port of France and Italy. Italy objects
to Greek expansion, as she always has
done, because it thwarts her own. Of
ficial France under Briand does not
think as official France thought under
Clemenceau, because the preseue of
public opinion is making the evacua
tion of Cilicia inevitable*.
So Mr. Lloyd George has commis
sioned his agents, M. Calogeropoulos
and the Emir Feisul, and M. Briand
and Storza are sheltering themselves
behind Bekir, Tewfik and the rest.
The Distance We Dance.
From the New York Post.
Many persons, not only of the so
called weaker but of tho presumably
stronger sex, think that walking a half
dozen blocks on some practical errand
is entirely to great a physical effort,
but think nothing at all or dancing
a good portion of the night, it is in
teresting to see just what dancing
amounts to in the way of exercise.
The average waltz requires a dancer
to travel over 1,300 yards and other
dances average around 850 yards. Danc
ing from 9 o’clock into the following
morning necessitates taking 33,000 steps,
or a total distance of over 11 miles.
Fancy the feeling of a girl if invited
to take an 11-mile walk, even if it were
proposed that she be accompanied by
music?
“Our girls are dead, morally,” is a
phrase in a letter smuggled out by way
of Reval. written by a woman to her
nephew' in Wrangel’s army. “1 am kept
alive only by the hope of seeing you
again. Never return here with your
-children. If they survive famine and
disease.- the bolshevists will make ani
mals of thetn.”
The Chamber of Commerce of Pitts
burgh will direct a practical demonstra
tion of wireless telephone on railroad
trains. A complete radio equipment will
ho carried and the train will be iu
touch by wireless with every station and
ship at sea within a rwdiua ef 3.000 miles.
| Story of Colombian Treaty. j
From an Article in t h© Kansas City Star.
Eighteen years have elapsed since
that little international drama was
staged in Panama whose moving in
cidents paved the way for the build
ing of tlie great canal and inciden
tally, as a belated aftermath, for that
troublesomo diplomatic rag baby
known as the Colombian treaty.
When the treaty was under consid
eration some seven years ago, Theo
dore Roosevelt called It a "blackmail
treaty."
The treaty as it was then framed
not only provided for the payment to
Colombia of $25,000,000 as indemnity
for the loss of Panama, but carried in
its opening article a tender of regrets
by the United States and their ac
ceptance by Colombia.
When its terms became known, Mr.
Roosevelt, in the press and on the
stump, denounced it as a bald attempt
at blackmail on the part of the Co
lombians and ns an abject confession
of guilt on the pari of the United
States government. He did not mince
words in dealing with' its proposals.
He said:
The proposed treaty is a crime against
the United States. It is an attack upon
the honor of tl;e United States which, if
justified, would convict the United States
of infamy. It is a menace to the future
well being of our iieople. Either there
is or is not warrant fo.r paying this
enormous sum and for making the apol
ogy. If there is no warrant for it—and,
of course, not the slightest vestige of
warrant exists—then tho payment is sim
ply the payment of blackmail. If tVuc
is warrant for it, then we have no busi
ness to be on tho isthmus at all. The
payment can only be justlrled upon tlie
ground that this nation has played the
part of a thief, or of a receiver of stolen
goods. As a matter of fact, every action
we took was not only open and straight
fnru-nrd .bur mowrendered nhsohdolv
M
cordance with the highest principles of
national, international and private mor
ality.
The treaty, with its apologetic pro
vision, died in the Senate. In its re
vived foim it lacks the apology but
still provides for the payment of the
$25,000,000 indemnity, the payment of
which, as Mr. Roosevelt has stated,
can only be made upon tin? basis of
atonement. Lot us turn back the his
torical page fof a moment, then, and
see what we have to atone for.
The building of an Inter-oceanic
canal had been an international dream
for more than half a century. A pri
vate French company had attempted
to build a canal across the Isthmus
of Panama and had failed after ex
pending millions of dollars. Theodore
Roosevelt believed the canal could be
built, and should be controlled by the
United States.
The second Hay-Pnuncefote treaty,
ratified December 16, 1901. after
Roos.velt had acceded to the presi
dency, gave him the necessary au
thority to proceed. Two routes were
under consideration, one for a oana!
at Nicaragua, the other to go through
the Isthmus of Panama—that is, to
finish the construction begun by the
'•'tench Panama Ctt.nu.1 company Af-cr
many vexing delays and discussions,
an offer was received from the French
Panama company to -ell its rights
and equipment for $40,000,000. On
June 28, 1902. the Spooner bill was
signed hv President RruMevgU and:.be
came a law. I.t authorised (be par
chase of the rights of the French
Company and the acquisition from the
republic of Colombia of a canal zone
through the Isthmus of Panama. In
case the negotiations for the Panama
route fell through, then the necessary
steps were to be taken to construct
the canal through Nicaragua.
To understand the Colombian end
of the deal, it will be necessary to
outline briefly the political situation
there at that time and the relations
then existing beween Colombia and
the state or provine of Panama. The
government of Colombia was practi
cally in the control of one man—J.
M. Mnrroquin—by title president, in
actual power an absolute dictator, by
virtue of a coup d’etat. Colombia
was a loosely knit confederacy of
states driven together by force and
military usurpation. Panama was a
perpetually Insurgent state. By a
constitution to which it had sub
scribed in 1803 it had been invested
with "absolute and unqualified sov
ereignty." But in 1SS6 Rafael Nunez,
president of Colombia, arbitrarily de
clared (hat "the constitution of 1803
▼ 4
4- LIKE PASSING SHADOWS ON 4
4 A WALL. 4
4 Henry Giles. 4
4 And thus does life go on. 4
4 until death accomplishes the 4
4 catastrophe in silence, takes the 4
4 worn frame within Its hand and. 4
4 as if it were a ilried-up scroll, 4
4 crumbles it in his grasp to ashes. 4
4 The monuments of kingdoms, 4
4 too. shall disappear. Slid the 4
4 globe shall move: still the stars 4
4 shall burn; still the sun shall 4
4 paint its colors on the day, and 4
4 its colors on the year. What, 4
4 then, is the individual, or what 4
4 even is the race in the sublime 4
4 recurrings of time? Years, cen- 4
4 tu ries, cycles, a"c nothing to 4
4 these. The sun that measures 4
4 out the ages of our planet is not 4
4 a second hand on the great dial 4
4 of the universe. 4
♦ 4
♦ ♦ 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
The Onion Conquered.
From the New York Herald.
Should the advice to eat more onions
be largely followed it might not only
result in exhausting the old crop but in
creating an eduring demand for a high
ly and agreeably flavored vegetable,
which, the doctors say, is one of the
most healthful, but which some, too
dainty, scorn. A small cup of black
coffee drunk after eating onions will,
it is asserted, overcome the one great
objection to the humble bulbous rooted
plant boiled, friend, roasted or raw.
Robespierre.
From the Kansas City Star.
Robespierre, whose name is one of the
bloodiest in the history of France, was
rot always the bloodthirsty monster lie
became rnder the Terror of the Revo
lution. Within a few short years of the
time that his name grew to be so feared
he ifrlsued Ids office In a fit of remorse
at l aving condemned a murderer to ex
eci.it' m .
He to a criminal; no doubt." Robes
pierre kept groaning to his sister, "A
criminal, no doubt, but to put a man to
de.tth!"
It we * more than he could endure.
Yet half u dozen years later, in laris.
no lot,per existed,” rushed his troops
into Panama, aud robbed Panama of
every vestige of self government.
The double dealing of the Colom
bian government in connection with
the canal treaty finally created the
opportunity for a successful venture
In which, aided by the strained rela
tions between the Colombian and the
United States governments, Panama
finally came into her own. Panama
wanted the canal built, and when she
saw the great undertaking in danger
of indefinite postponement or utter
failure so far as Panama was con
cerned, she took the bull by the horns
and placed herself in a position to
deal as a nation with the United
States. In all of the former revolu
tion? the authority of the United
States had been thrown in favor of
Colombia, upon the theory of pre
serving peace in the prospective canal
zone. This time the United States
intervened in favor of Panama and
promptly recognized the Panama re
public upon its organization of a de
facto government. Here is what had
i happened to bring this consumma
I tion about:
Immediately following the enactment
of the enabling Spooner law, President
Roosevelt instructed Secretary Hay to
open up negotiations for a treaty with
Colombia, on the basis of the United
States taking over tho rights of the
Panama company and proceeding with
tile construction of the canal. The ne
gotiations ended in u'hat is known as
tho Hay-Herran treaty, which was
signed on January 22, 11*03, Dr. Ilerran,
Colon*bian charge d’affaires at Washing
ton, signing with tho authority of the
Colombian government. Tills called for
the payment to Colombia of $10,000,0U0 In
gold and an annual payment of $4,000,000
to begin nine years after ratification of
*■**« i**iiij- uut >Hrwnl» MMtotttwtlto*—
gota politicians got to scratching their
heads and palms and started playing
both ends against the middle. First
they tried to get anoilier $10,000,000 out of
the French company for the right to soil
its concessions, and then they laised the
ante on tlie United States. As the price
of ratification by the Colombian govern
ment, (Jen. Rafael Reyes, tho govern
ment's spokesman, notliled- Secretary
Hay that the deal would be oft unless
: two amendments were inserted in the
I Hay-Ilerran agreement—one that the re
tiring Panama company should pay $10,
,000.000 in gold, and tile other that the
payment of the United States should bo
increased to H2.000.000. Roosevelt and
Hay stood pat on the original agree
ment. Then President Marroquln con
vened the Colombian congress—the first
one in live years. It was a hand made
body, at Marroquin'.s beck and nod. It
began immediately to do business. It
rejected the Hay-Herran treaty, demand
ed the $10,000,000 bonus from the old Pan
ama company, and then suddenly con
ceived another brilliant stroke. It dis
covered that the last extension of time
granted to the old company was invalid
and that therefore the Colombian gov
ernment could foreclose on the Panama
company in about a year's time and It
would then be In a possession to ginb
Coat $10,060,(RO the company was to get
from the United States and sweep It,
with the rest, into the Colombian confers.
: No definite action, however, was taken
' bv Marroquip's congress—it was their
II ollev evidently to sit by and wail for
I the day of foreclosure.
j Then things began to happen at
' Panama. The Panamanians aided and
! encouraged by Bunau-Varilla, an of
! fleer of the French company, speed
| tip trie revolution. Colombian troops
! v. ere landed at Colon and threatened
i to open fire on the town. Tho United
ybfn,, wariiaer fib-iTiV.'lJr. *>*WfWb >e*i$
Peer, dispatched with other vessels to
Colon b.v Presidtnt Roosevelt on re
I ceipt of the news of the revolution,
landed a company of marines, 42 in
! number, to protect the lives of Ameri
cans who had been gathered into the
i shelter of a railway shed. Tiic C olmn
' bir.ns withdrew, after firing one shell
: which killed a Chinese—the only life
! lost in the revolution. Acting on an
! order from the state department, tho
: United States commander served no
* tioe on the Colombians that they
I would not bo allowed to transport
' troops across the isthmus. The Co
j lombians withdrew, Panama quickly
i organized its de facto government and
: proclaimed its independence as a na
‘ tlon. The formal declaration of in
; dependence was made November 4,
i RiOli. Three days later the republic
I of Panama was formally recognised
I by tire United States. One of the llrst
acts of the provisional government of
j Panama was to appoint Phillippe Bu
tnau-Villa envoy extraordinary to the
I United States with full powers to con
! duct the diplomatic and financial ne
gotiations necessary to a construetio*
lot the canal.
] when the guillotine was busiest, an acv
1 quaintancc approached Robespierre &( t
house where the French statesman wa*
j wont to be entertain, in order to plea*
j for the life of a relative, an innocent
i n an, who was condemned and await
| trig execution on the following morning,
j Robespierre amiably inquired at what
j hour the man was to die. "At 9 o’clock
I sharp.” was tho answer.
"At 9 o’clock; but that fs unfortunate*
for thou k no west that I work so late I
| go to bed late, and therefore am late ia
I rising. I fear I shall not be up in tiini
; to save your uncle—but we will see—w*
j will sec,” said the amiable Robespierre,
j for ho was a very polite man.
but—” and the man recounted the in
I * ident later—"it seems that M. Robes
| pitrre had worked very hard that night,
j because iny poor uncle—well. I’m surf
that, had he not worked so hard, h<
would have saved my poor uncle—be
ause he was very amiable in society,
was M. Robespierre.”
Advent of April.
The violets opened dewy eyes,
A bluebird on tho fence
Alighted, preened himself, and flew,
A living larkspur, hence,
j A tulip raised a budded lance
Above the garden mould.
A thrifty daffodil unclosed
A purse of shining gold.
' A cloud above the gilded spire
Discharged a* silver shower,
The sun appeared, a flashing arch
Of Jewels spanned the tower,
Sapphire and ruby, amethyst.
Topaz and emerald shone,
And April o’er the rainbow's bridge
Came tripping to her own.
— Minna Irving, in New York Herafefc
Not Unusual.
From the Houston Post.
Auntie (coming for a call)—Whom t
your mother, Lucille, dear?
Lucille—M amnia left for a llve-r.skw
ute visit with Mrs. Wells about tv%
hours ago.
The ex-kaiser’s yacht is for sale 1m
2.000,000 francs; but it must be mi!
to a neutral, so that the allies can not
claim the money, says the Philade’phb
Public Ledger’s Paris correspondent.
rnmw
67, GAINS 25 POUNDS
Declares She Would Like
To Put a Bottle Of Tan
lac In The Hands Of
Every Sick Man, Woman
and Child In This Coun
try — Never Saw Its
Equal.
"I uni sixty-seven years of age, but
iu all my experience 1 have never
known a medicine like Ttinlac. Think
of It! At my age to gain twenty-five
pounds in weight, but that Is just
what I have done," said Mrs. Emma
Ueifcnsteln, of No. 337 Webster ave
nue, Syracuse, N. Y,
‘‘If 1 had it in my power,” she con
tinued, "1 would put a bottle of Tnn
tac in the home of every sick man,
woman and child in tills country, for
I know what this wonderful medicine
would do for them. For almost two
years I was almost a nervous wreck.
I did not dare to leave the house or
even go up town unless my husband
went with me. I was afraid to even
. cross the street and had u feeling of
Jffii M ilJHS: ......
I My stomach was weak auu easily
upset. For days at a time I would go
without solid food. I could not rest
at night to do any good and felt tired
and worn out all of the time. Some
j days I could hardly drag myself
; across the room and was so weak and
miserable I was ready to give up.
"My health is lino now and I eat
anything I want und uever have a
touch of Indigestion. 1 have never slept
better than I do now. My recovery is
j the talk of our neighborhood, os It was
1 generally believed I could not last
j but a few weoks longer. This grand
MRS. EMMA REIFENSTEIN,
337 Webster Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
In Its praise.''
Mr. J. Relfeustein, tn commenting
on his wife’s statement, said: "Yes,
her recovery has been a happy sur
prise to us all. A few weeks ago I
had no Idea she would he aide to pu!l
through, hut now she Is in better
health than I have ever seen her and
the credit is due to Tanlae. We have
been married fifty-two years todav
and I don’t believe 1 have ever seen
her looking uny better."
Tanlae is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.—Adv.
DON’T LET THAT COUGH CONTINUE!
Spohn’s Distemper Compound
will knock It In very short time. At the first sign of a cough
or cold In your horse, give a few doses of “SPOHN'S.M It will
act on the glands, eliminate the disease germ and prevent furth
er destruction of body by disease. "SPOMN'S” lias been the*
standard remedy for DISTEMPER, INFLUENZA. PINK RYE.
CATARRHAL FEVER. COUGHS and COLDS for a quarter of a
century- 60 cents and 61.16 per bottle at all drug Mores.
BFOIIN MEDICAL. COMPANY, UOSIIEX, INI*.
PASSED WITH FLYING COLORS
Captain Recognized Prospective Marino
Engineer as a Man After
Hie Own Heart.
They arc so close In some parts of
Scotland that the. lakes can't get
enough water, nnd have to go dry.
A visitor tefts the'story or a Scots- i
man, a prospective- marine engineer, <
who was being examined by the cap
[ tain.
The skipper asked a number of diffi
cult questions in order to confess the
applicant, but the latter was always
ready with an answer.
Finally, in a tone of deepest con
cern, the captain asked:
‘‘Now, suppose the water In your in
lector was working property, your
boiler check was not stuck,>. or your
pipes clogged, but you were not get
ting any water in your boilers, what
would you do?”
The engineer looked puzzled for n
moment, unable fully to grasp (lie sit
uation; then, with n knowing smilo on
his face, he answered:
“I'd go up on deck and see whether
there was any wuter In the lake.”
“You'll do,” said the captain.—Chi
cago Daily News.
Opossums Instead of Cats.
A writer in a nature publication
says: “I kept a pair of opossums in
the cellar of my home. One night
when all was still I was surprised to
hear grunts coming up from the cel- j
lar. I had not known that opossums !
grunted like pigs. These opossums j
] lived In the cellar nearly all winter. 1 !
1 am sure they scared the rats away,
j as no more rat signs were noticed. I
fed them chicken heads, apples, sweet
corn, etc.”
Rare Species, However.
“i’n, what is a good talker?”
“A man who can talk ami make you
actually want to listen to him.”
If you want a tiling well done tell !
the waiter to bring it rare.
There 's More Than Flavor
Many foods,while pleasing to taste,
contain but little nourishment.
Grape*Nuts
combines with its rich, sweet flavor the
full nutriment of wheat and malted barley
which makes it an ideal food.
It has been the favorite ready-to-eat
cereal for a Quarter of a century:
‘There's a Reason"
Easily Explained.
She—“I shall never target how crazy
you looked when *. i proposed to me?”
He—“1 wns er .
Catarrh Can Be Cured
Catarrh Is a local disease greatly influ
enced by oonsdtutkmal conditions. It
therefore reqi rea constitutional treat
the Blood on tbe Uucous Surfaces, ct
he System. HALL’S CATABHH
MEDICINE destroys the foundation cf
.he disease, gives the patient strength by
improving the goneral health and asuissa
nature in doing Its work.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
y. 3. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
Not So Encouraging.
“Your father merely grunted when
I told him I wanted to imirry you.'
“Don’t be discouraged, Alexander.
Father Is 1111 elemental creature iiii.t
expresses pleasure as well ns anger hy
grunts.”
“Yes, dear, but lids’ wns a fortissimo
grunt. In fact, there was so much
power behind it I’m afraid it wns it
snort."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Copper Mining in Alaska.
Tile copper mines of Chitinn valley
are the largest and richest thus IV r
developed In Alaska. Their success,
ful development lias been made possi
ble by the completion of the Copper
Itiver and Northwestern 'railroad,
which affords transportation to tide
water. The recent mining progress
in this district Is shown in a report en
titled “Mining In the Chilian Valley,
Alaska,” by F. B. Moffat. Issued h.v
I he Unified States geological survey.
Department of the Interior, ns Bulle
tin 7J4-U.
Oh, Those Children.
Lillie Eve—Say, auntie, can they
ix people with new tongues since
is they do with teeth?
Auntie—No; what made you tliinlc
hat?
LUIlo Eve—Because papa said yes
ordny you had a false tongue.
When there isn’t much else to do
vitli money, you can save it.