PAGE 8. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1913. I Ml II I Ml I HI Mill Children Cry for F'efieher's i,W&mf Mil V ai The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has hcoix in use for over JiO years, lias boruo the signature of and has been made under his ner- fflyi-jF-. ' sonal supervision since it.? infancy. 6CuZ, Allow no one to deceive von in this- All Counterfeits, Imitations and Tjist-as-roodL lire hut i:periniciits that trifle with and endanger the health of Jul.tiits and Children Experience against Uspc-riiucnU S3 Castoria is a harmless snhstittito for. Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. Ifc 'contains neither Opium, Morphine nor otlicr Narcotic Kuhstanee. Its are is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverisimess. lr more than thirty years it lias been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, I'lalulency, "Wind Colic, ail Teething Troubles and Diarrlnea. It regulates tlie Stomach and llowel assimilates the Food, Kivinjf healthy .u:d natural leei. The Childrcnts lmacca The JIo tiler's Friend. FOR! A GENUINE r ! A ALWAYS Bears the Signature of N m . ni AT. 4t a Tie Kind You Have Always Bo In Use For Over 30 Years. 2 Ss-N'ir.xJi.C nrw cfk T C i: NTAUP COMPANY, FINE PBOSPraB 11 FALL FESTIVAL IN PLAnSMOOTH and lake i : 1 4 in Iho fe fill' occ;ir.iii:i. l.-!s he rolh'nu aiul mak" tin k'ug l )" r.'ii!iMili'i'itl eer nay Hi" llijil -I i it ics ! Hi.' I. ill Clll Hill- ami a ill in f anv ! ganial inn spin' I by MP iMMIIVIll . hal slinws the public ui'llinu behind f S i - Suffered From Mon1."yv i ;. Tin' irojn'cN al seem to In' ilv. !..! f.-sii-nuicli I li . 1 l"; a fall val seem to lie gett i rj sr Ju iulitiM' ami il is lh' expoc lliat in a lioi t linn' one of lliij liK-al organizations will take up! 1 1 mailer if 1 1 a n 1 i i t i lt the pro-! position. ; i m . i J hoy have the rnat-j lei- uinlej' cmiideral imi now amlj are JiMikiiiK t I In lit 1.1 with a M'ew of securing a snilalile af Iraelion fur the ovenl. Tin' idea of the f'-tivll -eefiis In" he mr-el- ing witli general approval ami if the organization which is -.m-siil. iiiii: lite inailer i.-fable to M. t cure the attractions they will! make il a rousing ucce-.s ami one !oil-r to lie r.'lilcttllif I'l-.l In' e'.evv- oiie in the city. Tile other li.wnsie.l m the county h:ie all heen ho.l in'- I heir celei.ral i..,is ami the llel.l will he clear h the first of Sep leiiiher to put on tin- climax of the s.a..ns ceh 'lual inns in this city, aihl cei v seel inn nf the coiiuty Wnul.l he ileliihle.l In visil here Seel 1 1 s Eczema Fifty Ncw Well'. a loutr lime I. Years t .'!"; DR. liltire iwlul liurn inu ilchiiiu-, smart-skiu-tlisi-ase knosn as t- inolher name lor Kczema. ns unoil In realise, also, that KOSSON.S ECZEfwlA OIWT- 1VIE?JT has proven a per fee I cure. .Mrs. I ' I,. Kenue.ly wriles: 'T cannot siiiTicieut ly express, my thanks lo you for y..ur ir. lloh snn's Kczema ointment. It has cui'e.l my letter, which has Irnuhl .l me fm- ner lifiy years.' All ilru.cuisls, nr hy run i 1 , .iic. PFE1FFER CHEMICAL CO. St. Louis, Wo. Philadelphia. Pa. lepar ris Maru'aiet In:i"lau this u:nCi I i I!-' ' nil ,i llasl iiiirs, where she will uet of .Miss .Varisrci 'onii a simri nine. .Mrs. .j. . i),, I i fm- j lii'PUl ; aiul ?t!is 'eri:a l.'-nuanl accmii 'panii'ii Miss - l)..ne'an. :s far as l.iiicolu. w here I liey will isii wiih friends. pm If . Vila 'M lf mil If N Jf mm- ' ) . 7 p gfr) -L?& -, On the Rural Delivery Hy OLIVE EDN'A MAY mm oeoFOOT. Tli Cran'd Promoter !n Difficul ties About Loan of $3. IMward 1'artlctr, on route No. -1, free rural ilclivf-ry, was driving hi rattle tran hucrsy alor.r tin? ral loolijnj.; over the letters to he nut in the nest mail lioxi w I Ji-ii . lie encountered, Geortre Ir wiu walking. "Anythu.ir f..r ine, Kd?' asked Irwin "If there is you'll get it in your box, replied the postman. "I in poin.tr out or town; on my way to toe slatioii now. It would be an ac- ! eonimoilation if you would fdve it to rue now if there's auytljin fur me. Otherwise it'll have to he forwarded." J'.ntlett pnileil mi. Irwiu drew near him. arul while the funnel- looked over a handful of letters the latter leaned forward to see the addresses himself. "inere it Is;" lio exclaimed, making a prah fi,r one of the letters, and hi interference resufJcd in the spilling of some twenty of tlieni .on the ground. while a dozen more fell within the bug- fry. Irwin apologized, and. picking up the letters scattered noar his feet, he handed them to Hart let t. "Did you take the letter addressed to jotiV" asked tlie hitter. ".No. It wasn't l"r me. I thought it was, but I Avas mistaken." "Now, see here, "eorge Irwin, here after when I'm handling my mail you keep vour bands oft' it. The next time you do a thing like that I'll have you forested for Interfering with a govern ment etlicer in the discharge of his du ties." "Sorry. Kd. I didn't intend to inter fere." Hart let t drove on without making a reply. At Deacon Warder's box .he found Susie Warder, tin; deacon's daughter, aged eighteen, waiting for him. There was an intensity in .her face that indicated anxious exieeta tion. Hartlett had often delivered let ters to her addressed in a mnscnlliie hand, and by the way she hugged tliem t her heart and ran into the house with them he had surmised that they, came from a loer. Instead of putting the mail in the box he hand ed it to her. She looked over it and her face fell. "Nothing more?" she asked, looking up at the postman despairingly. , "That's all. Sorry I haven't one for you today. Miss Warder. Perhaps I'll bring you one tomorrow." "No. you won't," replied the chi, tears starting to her eyes. "If it was to come at all it would have come today." Hartlett sighed sympathetically. Dur ing the rest of his trip over hLs route his mind was more on Susie "Warder than on the mail. Her words "If it was to eome at all it would have come today" remained with him, and he couldn't banish- them. What did they mean? That the expected letter was to have been from the lover he could not doubt. Our minds now roll smoothly from one train of thought to another, and again they jump aps. And yet there is doubtless a connection between the two sides of the gap b-o Subtle for us to distinguish. Itartlett's mind turned from Susie's disappointment to rieorge Irwin's grabbing at the letters. Then he made a mental jump, for there was nr connection between his two thoughts. Susie's letter didn't come, and pet-haps George Irwin when he Iicked up thos that fell on the ground retained one for Susie. Though he kyew of no reason for siieh an act, he couldn't dismiss the suggestion. It occurred to him to turn back and charge Irwin with pmloining a letter, 1 rusting to have struck the correct Iheorv. lie looked at his .watch. It was 4 o'clock. He had net tleorge about .'!:2i". There was no train either wa' out of the station between '.'.:'2t and 4:4). Ho remembered to have heard the whistle of the 3:25 train w hile he was talking with George. The man had doubtless made his state ment about going out of town falsely and for a pretext to steal the letter. When Hartlett reached those' induc tive conclusions he had finished his de livery. He drove rapidly back to the vil lage, occasionally a.-king one he met if he had seen George Irwin. Presently he found a man who had seen him and gave tlie postman a clew to And him. Hartlett found his man on u road w here no one else was about. "Give me the letter you took!" he said resolutely and coniidently. letter I took! What do AM UNEXPECTED VISITOR. While Waiting by the Wayside on the Path to Prosperity the Major's Mus ings Are Momentarily Inerropted, The Great Pie Syndicats. Oopyrisl.t. Ey QUAD. I.ltr-rary hy Arsociatfcil A.TOH CliOFOOT had ,3 1 cents in his right hand trou sers pocket. He had '.) cents in his left hand trousers pocket. Eleven and m'ne,are twenty even in Africa. The major had counted and counted. but could make the sum total neither more nor less. It represented his total cash- fortune. It stood between him and the condition of being busted. Just an ordinary lunch and there wou'dn't be a cent left to jingle. "If a sucker doesn't come lu today" He had got that far when a man walked' through the open door and stood before him. It was a man whom he hoped was dead. It took the major fully thirty seconds to remember he had borrowed the money for only a couple of days and had pledged his honor to return it and to realize that it was about to be "called in" w ith or without a row. Hy George, Stevens, but this is sin- gular-mighty singular!" exclaimed' the major as he gut his feet down and extended his hand. "Nojt two min utes ago I was Wondering why on can ii t never met you or wtiv von didn't call. I've had a cheek for vou for months. Heen out of the conn try. eh'." , ' .... ... , ... r . lieen joonnig ior you; solemnly re idied tl'.e caller as ho took a seat and mopped his brow. 1 or me! Why, I've been right here for a year, except at brief Interva Is, and I should have been rejoiced to see you I'm not a man to forget old friends Stevens. In the days of my adversity. when I hadn't even money enough to get my laundry, yon stood by me like a brick. You were one of the few w ho believed in me." A Hot Rejoinder. Never!" replied Stevens. "No, I novo believed in you: l knew you were a deadheat the first time I saw you! 1 want that $:)!'' "And when a man believes in my in tegnty, continued the major, when a i: :i ' IV The fascinating river, every wood, every turn of the road invites your Kodaks to fit tlie pocket and the purse. ,Ve will gladly assist your selection: We carry them in stock and instruct in their use gratis WE YRICI1 & H ADRABA "Tlie meaii'-' "I mean that when you picked up those that dropped on the ground you kept -one." Irwin stood at bay. Presently he Hid: "Vou have no right to accuse me. If yon know I took a letter, sure ly you know to whom that letter was addressed." "I do Susan Warder." Irwin turned white. Hartlett must have evidence against him that lie did not know of. "Y hat'll you do if I give It up?" V "111 tell you what I'll do if you don't give it up," said Hartlett,' jumping out of lils buggy. "I'll break every bone In j our body." Irwin was cowetl. Tremblingly he put his hand In his pocket, took out the letter and handed it to the postman. Hartlett Jumped back into his buggy and w hipped up the horse for" Deacon Warder's. On giving Susie the letter she opened it. and her face lighted up with joy. Hartlett told her all about the remov al of the letter from the mail, and stie told him that her lover and George Ir win were rivals. He;needed no further explanation. lilt. STEVENS iniiKW THE MAJOR DOWN. man trusts in my honor and helps tne out of a hole, he makes no mistake. I'd sell the shirt off tuy hack to repay the loan he made me. Yes you believed in me when others refused to, and it warms the cockles of my heart as recall your conduct. One day you forced into my hand and would not let me even thank you. lou are a nar, ana i want my money!" i was in the depths or despair for a few weeks, but then the jade called Fortune began to smile on me. When she turned in my favor she couldn't do enough. I promoted and Heated com pany after company and trust sifter trust and faked .11 fortune after for tune, and today, Stevens today I can draw my check for millions. If it had not been for vou and vour I mh'ht y I not be able to buy a sardine. Yes. sir. it was your push upward that enabled me to reach the pinnacle on which I stand at present, and I am not the man to forget it.' . "Come down with my three!" whis pered the creditor as he looked over the major's head. "Months and months ago I made out a check for you. In return for your ?:i I made out a, check for $3,000. Hut. alas. I could not lind your address! Providence seems to have guided your footsteps today. Some men might stop at returning i?3.000 for $3 and think they had done a good thing, hut I can't do it, Stevens can't nossibiy do it. When I think of your sublime eoti dence in me" "I never had auy!" 1 The Encomiums Heap Up. "Whan I remember how jou forced that money into my hand and said I need not return it for a thousand xears I realize that I can't do too much t show my gratitude. Confiding, trust ing friend. I appoint you vice president of the Great American Old Fashioned Pumpkin Pie company, and the salary will be $20,000 per year. Ill also pre- Ktnt you wrth a block of etock worth ?10,Y)0, and rf the (Tiv.nTonas are not ar least 15 per cent per year I'll make 'em up to you. Let me congratulate jou, sir let me congratulate you!" "I have called for my $.".,'' was 'the quiet reply as the creditor arose and removed his coat. ' ';vnd what is the Great American Old Fashioned Pumpkin Pie compa ny':" queried te majWr as he walked to and fro with a tender si'.Q on his face. "As its narno indicates, it is a corporation for the manufacture and male of the pumpkin .pies of our grand mothers' day.1:, the pie which encour aged the minute men at Lexington and stood behind the patriots at Hunker llill. It was the old fashioned pump kin lie which cemented and built uf this Union and brought .-ibout the pros perity of a nation. I Tad we stin k by the pie which stuck by us our ini'.u ence and prosperity would have been twice what thrv are now; but. alas. Ave nit it behind us for floating islau 1, iharlotte rusee and strawberry shortcake!" "My said the creditor as he rose and loosened his vest. To Nationalize the Pic. "Hut we are about to return to the halcyon pie to nationalize it mire more and make it a bulwark of liberty. I have organized a company, with $',- (!(Hl.(KH) paid UP capital. The shares ire selling at par value 'today, but, the lirst whiff of the lirst pumpkin pie which reaches the nostril of the pa triots of America wiil ""-ounce tlnne shares to Sli. We shall have the old fashioned pumpkins, the old fashioned molasses, the old fashioned ginger cake. We shall turn out pies which will melt in the mouths of the gods iinl lift the sons of liberty off their heels. On' the face of each pie will be tamped the !oddess of Liberty, an 1 on the back will be the American eagle holding the stars and stripes in his laws. While the eater devours pump kin pie he is at the same time tilling up on freedom." "My :'!" said Stevens as he removed his cuffs and pushed up his sleeves. "And j ou are to be .vice president at a salary of $2,0n a year!-' smiled the major. "In the days when the world was against me you forced $.1 into my hand and showed your confidence and trust. Do yon think I can rest con tent by simply repaying the loan or even by making it $.'",00? No, never! Monday morning you shall enter upon your duties, and if you want your sal ary for a year in advance you shall have it. In time that $.1 may grow to .'!. h"m,i (00. and no one will be more gratified than yours truly. Once tlie pumpkin pie is replaced on its pedes tal of greatness, once the" 1 The Major In Difficulties. Mr. Stevens grabbed the major and shoved him against the wall, but did not disconcert him. It was only ten .seconds before he went on: "I was making out the papers before you came in, but found that I lacked the sum necessary to file them with the secretary of state. If you happen to have a five dollar bill about you" . Mr. Stevens banged the major's head igainst the-wall and growled at his cheek, but it was no go. "As you ;;o oat you may look for of fices, a sin? in some hrst class loca tion, and it would be well if you step- 1 into some bank and introduced yourself. There will be nothing cheap ihout this affair. I'ven the ovens, in which we bake the pies will be nickel plated." Mr. Stevens threw the major down and banged his head on the iloor and choked hi:ii and called him names, but when he had finished the grand pro moter rose up and continued: I have figured it down close, and we shall sell o.OOO.OOO pies per day the vear round. lhe probe on each pie will be 4 cents, and the sum total what! doing? Well, it Is- a busy day for both of ns, but don't forget to call on Monday. I shall, want you to start out the first thing and con tract for SuO.Oiio pumpkins and" Hut the creditor gave him one long. lingering look of chagrin and contempt and stalked out. -ami the major sat down in his old o.sition and winked at the calendar on the wall and began dreaming other dreams of wealth and tower. i HEALTH CONGRESS AT BUFFALO I IMPORTANT EVENT I WILL BE JH Then Wa Came In. Little William, ensconced on a has sock, was engrossed in the war news. Hut after quite ten minutes silence, broken only by the sibilant hissing oc casioned by the spelling aloud f cer tain words "a trifle longer than the oth ers, Master Willie attacked big Wil liam, who was trying to write letters. "l'apa!" he called urgently. "Well, my lad." said the patient par ent, "what is it?" ' "Papa, it says in this paper that when the Servians started out tp fitxht the Turks they left their wives behind them. Now why did they do that?" "Hecause. my son." replied big Wil liam, absently, "because possibly it was the first time they had ever had a chance to Hello, darling! I didn't see you.. What were you asking me. Wil lie? Oh er yes. probably because the ladies couldn't get their luggage to the station in time. Now, do he quiet; I'm busy!" Pittsburgh Press. T rViil Discuss Bcrnicious Con i ditions in Publjc Schools of the United States. THE most important health con ference'that has ever been held in the United States will take place in Huffalo, X. Y., Aug. 25-30, when the fourth international congress on school hygiene' meets in that city. Jt Is the most important conference, because educational ex ports have come to realize that the most potent factor in dealing with the neaitn problems of any nation is the education of the people to know and understand the laws and influences which govern individual and public health. Many important public health and hygiene conferences have been held in this country and abroad, but hereto fore all these have dealt principally with adult or infant life. When the individual has leached adult life he has attained an age when health edu- j cation has to be forced upon him, while in infant life the Individual is too young to receive a lasting impression. It is with the school children, then, that the most effective and lasting work can be accomplished in dealing with the health problems that confront humanity. Therefore the assertion that the fourth international congress on school hygiene will be the most im portant health conference ever hold in the United States will find few to con tradict it. . The Importance Realized. The congress is being conducted un der the patronage of the president of the .United States and is being support ed by practically e very civilized govern ment in the universe, showing that at' last we are coming to recognize the value of having a proper foundation upon which to build and support the health of the individuals who form or support the various governments. For the period of time within the recollection of any one living at the present date the .health of the armies and navies of the world has been pre sided over by the most effective corps of medical and liealth experts possible to secure'. Jt is but recently, however, that the governments of the world have begun to learn that those who are to bo their future citizens should receive the same care and considera tion that is given the armies and na vies. The health of the school-child Is, In deed, far more important to the nation than that of its lighting men in the next generation at least. Many governments, like our own. make it compulsory for children with in certain age limits to attend school, but until the recent past little thought or consideration was given to the con ditions which surround the public school children of the country from the health standpoint, except tiat which was exerted I iy the boards, of Hlucation In the different communi ties. Tuberculosis In Schools. It is only when such startling reports as the following from the Michigan state board of health becoiae current that the governments, municipal, state and national, become active in dealing with these problems: "in making a study of the occupa tional relation to tuberculosis one can not help being impressed by the fre quent occurrence of tuberculosis among 4 i-M-v Conferencs Takes Place Aug. 25-20, Under Patronage of President Wiiscn. EUGENIC MARRIAGE FAILS. schoolteachers. A careful study of tN following table will give a very, com prchonsive idea of the situation: "Over a period of years .VJ. 1 per cent .of the deaths among schoolteachers between the ages of twenty-live and thirty-four were due to tuberculosis, while only 2o.S per cent of the deaths among all persons in Michigan be tween the ages of twenty-five and thirty-four were due to this disease. Among schoolteachers of all ages 27.0 per cent of the deaths were due to tuberculosis, while among all persons of all ages only y.-l per cent were duo to this disease. "This is a matter which should en gage the active attention not only of teachers, but of the patrons of the pub lic schools. It would appear from our data that the conditions under which public school teachers labor are condu cive to tuberculosis. This is, in a great many instances, an easily established fact. Now, this ought not to be. Thu schoolteacher, who should be consider ed as the most valuable factor in tlm establishment of an efficient citizen ship, should not be required to worts under conditions which are relatively more conducive to the -occurrence of tuberculosis than other professions. Precautions Necessary. Extreme precautions should be ol served by school commissioners and boards of education to prevent teach ers who are affected with tuberculosis from continuing in the service. This should be done in the interest of the teacher and in the interest of the pu pils. The solution of the situation, however, should not rest simply with the attempt to prevent infected teach ers from being employed. The school officials and the patrons of our public schools should be united in an effort to remedy the existing conditions, that the public schoolroom can in no sense lie considered as a' place In which one's health is subjected to unfavorable conditions. A more active interest In considering the principles of proper construction, warming, ventilating and lighting of school buildings will go a great way toward remedying t,his sit uation." "Mouth Hygiene Instruction. The above Is one of the strongest pleas for teaching mouth hygiene that has been published by the health de partment of any state In the' Union. The writer has also contended that the. public schoolteachers of the country are not pani salaries wmcn are com mensurate with tfie obligations that are placed upon them in the fulfill ment ef their duties. If practically three times ns many schoolteachers are dying from tubercu losis in this country ns are people in oilier walks of life, because of the con uirions which surround the teachers, what must be the effect produced upon the schoolteachers of this country by the various other germs which are Just ns readily, transferred from Individual to 'individual a3 are the germs which produce tuberculosis? And what must bo the influence upon our boys and girls who are compelled by the various governments to attend school from six to twelve years under the same condi tions and surrounded by the same in fluences that surround the teaching profession? VENISON MAY REPLACE BEEF. A Dull Boy. "Thomas, you have disobeyed your grandmother." "Xo, I didn't, mother." ."Yes. you did. Have you not been in sw imming?" "Yes. mother." "Didn't I hear her say to you no! to go in swimming?" "Oh. stie didn't tell me that She only came out and said. 'Hoys, I wouldn't go in' swimming.' ' and I shouldn't think she would, an old rheu matic woman like her, but she didn't say anything about our going In swim ining." Kt. Louig' Post-Dispatch. Husband Accuses Bride and Compan ion of Kicking Him Out. "Eugenic marriages are a failure," according to Edwin Ferron of Lynn. Mass., the first eugenic husband in Massachusetts, who nursed a lnully bfuised face while he denounced his assailant and his wife. Perron was married about a month ago, both par ties producing physicians' certificates as to their fitness to marry. Perron told the police that he re turned home to find his house in dark ness, lie said that when he entered his room a strange man who was with his wife leaped at him and hit him. knocking him downstairs. His wife and the stranger fled, according to Perron. Perron said he and his wife had ejuarreled frequently. "I thing eugenic marriages are n failure." reiterated the eugenic hus band to the, police. PREPARE FOR NEW FLOOD. Natives of Panama Are Building an Ark, Imitating Noah. Word lately arrived in Panama from Penonome, a town In the interior of the republic, that Segundo Sanchez, a native of that section, has proclaimed himself the Messiah. He has predicted the destruction of the world by a deluge In a short time, and some of his eighty adherents are engaged In building an nrk, while others are busy collecting in pairs ani mals of all Epecles found in their .re gion. . His followers also have armeel them selves, and In view of this fact, the Panama government Is taking steps to avert possible trouble' by them. Possibility of Using Reindeer In Alas ka Is Being Investigated. It may be that the purchase of a reindeer steak or roast will be possi ble not very long hence in almost any meat market in the United States and that venison, now reserved for the wealthy, will be within the reach of every family. Iteindeer are multiplying so rapidly ou ' government lands in Alaska that T. X. Conway, manager in the north west for Armour & Co., ha3 gone to Alaska to investigate the possibility of shipping the meat to the United Ftates. P.efore ging Mr. Conway said the suggestion of using the reindeer as a food supply was made by govern ment representatives to J. Ogden Ar mour. Mr. Armour believed that, with the existing transportation facilities, it would not be possible to sell the meat t retail in eastern cities for less than to cents a pound. lie referred the question to Mr. Conway, however. Mr. Conway is investigating along the arctic circle and along the shores of the Bering sea north of Nome, where the herds are increasing very rapidly. It is his opinion' that rein deer, caribou and other animals thriv ing in the great open regions of north ern Alaska and Canada will become an Important factor in America'3 meat supply as soon as railways have been extended farther Into that territory. Appointed Ten Policewomen. Mayor narrison of Chicago Las ap pointed ten policewomen ia accord ance with a recent order passed by the city council. The policewomen "will be assigned to duty at public bathing beaches and dance halls. Their nniforms havenot et.been decided upon. . it it--;