The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, July 21, 1910, Image 2

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    loap City Nartlnrfsteri
X V BCE1X1GH. Fubhsfeer
LOUP CITY - - I MEMUIU
- MAPRIAOC AHO D VORCE.
**. cicnal u»d etrM.
la** trad «• wo* It *a4 km bJ«4
ad ark at th«
i£ tkt cesn* kata for
of the trams**
fraud* **ti
with Maraita ta
tawn di*
»itb ee*era] public seeti
la tbe
**Uty cu* ts r«*
TV*
adttica'id by tka Audcboa
€ tka fiala of Jia* York,
"-tea *a.e tret :t.t state
ft «f act * lid lord »U.-S
ekia Near Tad ka<
ttw _re tad ia laMltf
»<e«ars siecatur* We trast it
raeeaa* lats apjeeral. say* Eorbes
**- Herald For tasgry year* tbe Aadu
la* MdKM* bare iaUord useeaamc'.y
to adacav tbe yr>f> of (kK state to
* web as tbe sesti
mm lord me Tfe-ir
feu be** aery sk?a Tbe runl
of tie* state, atai tbe
Irttt-itsistoc aeetioets of sestet* Xas
Tut. base bee* aflictai with aiiuast
•■credible towratee of the asefaloees
of birds. Fwus* boys oftes rob
bird*' tests of tbt-ir .-ja and amuse
*b«w:*** by aaui:* tbeir ly at
*oired krnnu at birds of taoy trad
than a sard of ce&sare is
k is
Lewrd !r<* tbe roaie par**t. sbate
F°autr tbe fosaf teiH.' - suer L*
baotejsao* to destroy
A imrmm pix»'.-r ««rb !>.• is come
;hrrr <( a is the nntii«
*•*•*-7 »» A irtii.fi m i!wci«
to**. X. T, Is (Ar possessor of iku
»»haiiu4e article ui be is ztost to
•eoa « to the trim* iiry detpartmemt at
Yachingrcm to be redeemed. Tbe
» tethy druggist <u troubled »Jtb a
latw uncfc *xd had bis mile apply tbe
planter The lady i.i not airier a fid
Ida »a.<-b ber feuUU bad placed cm
a irr»KT in their room, and the bole
«ao sticking to the piaster mb»m the
laeier mat pot mhere tt might do the
■scot good. There mac tsach mywery
OBd a km( boot before the tdU ia>
Wxted. hot no* plaster. tdli asd ail
he cent to the government oS
«3aJc at-d ~aoatetb.ac Just aa good'
wUl he substituted.
A Chicago doctor hac arranged to
C**e the d‘«s a drink this cummer
He has bousht a thousand t mo-quart
tads* and the CHjr council baa al
krsed ha to ikcrliou tVa about
the city la trout at stores and bouses,
pod the tenant* m ill be eapected to
aoe that they are kept filled m;th ma
ter for the benefit si the does. The
doctor gut the muss {rota the City of
Mexico, mhere storekeepers are re
quired to keep sack basins at their
doors the Idea Is a good one. and
•humid reduce the number of mad
dog scares in Chicago this summer
There will be leas hydrophobia If the
d<<* can get mater mbeneter they
mant tt.
CauMtlcst Is traflitioBallr *he la&4
<* »t«4j ksliu. sad prrkipt a “«feop
P«r" of a Safe ftgry cocJac frua tfeat
Saarser «U! *r*. non rmltstt tbaa if
It «1(iau<4 la a aan »taf ol wum
Aarvar. • roaMcat of Wtasiefl state*
tfeat fee focal a flak la Ms wen. aatf
•fee* fee feoofeefl H fee fliscocered tfeat
It *as a txoat so *ar*e tfeat tfee sell
car* feafl to fee tncottl Mart tfee fisfe
caail fee ktcM oat. Tfee ara* put
of tfets flsfe tale la tfeat tfee aarrator
floes set atteait to (Itt tfee aelckt caf
tfee Master catcfe
tfee KolactlN
' la sp«a at tfedr irairtc efforts tc
keep nan. Para *af Ecssdcr are afe
laaefl a (■ M Mating faces at aae
It Is cair a afeert liataare frena New
Tor* to Philadelphia. feat Artator
Ujupttiot ftt faitkcf H**!
Toe caa bsj Puaca hats all tfee
as; 'rots t> ta flt. hot it la tfee pre
MONTANA BAD Will
MEETS HIS NATCH
HOW -TUCK" MATTHEWS LOST
HIS LIFE IN A GUN FIGHT.
EFFORT TO EV‘CT RANCHER
Frank M«rd rj. a Tho-ough Western
er. “Fires From the Hip” and Kills
Assailant Who Boldly Tries to Get
His Land.
Helena—In tbe '?•'** I was drifting
•boo* Montana, working at whatever
tap;* ned to come along, just staying
in one place and at one occupation so
luesg as my erring fancy dictated.
in this way I wandered from Idaho,
though the Yellowstane National park,
into Wyoming, and from there across
the line to Montana with a trail herd
at cattle to the Milk river country.
After that I went into the Little Rocky
mountain*, where 1 took i p a small
ranch for rattle raising on i<_ck creek.
Here it so happened 1 became the
nearest neighbor and chum of the
principal actor in the following inci
dent
The “Little Rockies" is a small
cinmp of hills situated in the eastern
end at Choteau county. Montana, ly
ing hke a green island in the center
c4 a east plain At the southern end
of the range begin the Had Lands of
the Missouri, a region of broken-up
ndg s entirely unfit for cultivation.
The Little Rockies contained a small
-rattermg population uf miners and a
f*-w small ranchers Mixed with
these were a few tough cases whose
private addresses sere badly wanted
ty sundry county sheriffs into this
particular part had drifted Frank
Harding. a thorough westerner.
' raised" o® the prairies. He had man
£t d to save a little from com punch
's. t- rd to: and teaming, anu he took
p a rank a few milts from me.
- hit a Lad b-en deserted by its for
mer owner, fie settled down »o real
hard work, e-'t.ng his property fenced
and Improved.
A f»w mile* distant, on Moose
ct~* k. l:v«d a family of four brothers
named Matthews
< m* of the brothers who was called
“T k" had lost an arm in a pistol
f- • lec not being at !e to work was
try g to sustain his reputation of be
ing a "bad man."
<»t di" soon after Harding ar
rived Tuck rrde over to Deer creek,
where Harding's ranch was. for the
'
1
F'red From the Hip.
it :able purpos** of scaring Frank off.
He found Harding away at the end
farthest from the cabin, busy getting
host* for the fence. Matthews was en
tirely unknown personally to Harding,
t t after saying Hoi do?" be calmly
toid the astonished I Yank tbat he
would have to skip, as he (Matthews)
wanted the place himself, and had
meant to take it up before Frank had
eeer struck the country at all. Of
course, that was no argument, but it
lufficed for Matthews. Harding, when
be Lad recovered sufficiently from bis
surprise at this cool Intimation, in
formed his visitor that he had taken
the place up quite legitimately and
“^ant to held It. Tuck heard him
out In silence Then he told Harding,
with many picturesque oaths, that he
would give h m nine days to clear out,
and If t* was not out by that time
he would put him past taking an In
terest In anything earthly. Then he
rode off
©■ the ninth day the young rancher
was sitting eating hts dinner, when
he hard hoof-beats cutside the door,
which was standing open on account
of the beat. Nest moment a revolver
shot rang out. and Matthews' voice
•touted: "Well, you son of a coyote,
ao you won't get won't you. ehr
HardSag canted his shotgun up and
Sred from the hip. without raising It
to his shoulder. Immediately be had
pulled the trigger he stepped back be^
hind the door The snot was fo.lowed
by a thud and a sound of galloping
hoofs
Lookirg through the space between
the wall and the dow. Harding saw
fc»s enemy lying stretched on the
ground—stone deal.
Harding was aacquitted and had no
further trouble. " He is now living
peac< fully on the ranch with Lis wife
and children
KILLS A HORSE TO 6ET
CINEMATOGRAPH FILM
OLD ANIMAL DRIVEN OVER A
PRECIPICE WHILE CAMERA IS
SET TO CATCH PICTURE.
Paris —Since cinematograph shows
have became a popular form of public
entertainment, all sorts of devices
have had to be resorted to to obtain
suitable films calculated to move the
patrons of the various exhibitions to
mirth or tears. In several parts of
Paris there exist grounds where enter
prising impresarios can arrange any
thing from a battle scene to a ship
wreck. and which, when protographed.
have all the appearance of being the
real thing.
Recently one of the firms which
Horse and Vehicle Were Made to Dash
Over the Precipice.
make a specialty of supplying film*
pushed its enterprise a tittle too far.
Wishing to depict a tragic episode
with something of its real horror, it
arranged for the photographing of a
scene which was to end with the
crashing of a horse and vehicle over a
precipice, and to this end it was quite
prepared to sacrifice an ancibnt ve
hicle and an equally ancient horse.
A suitable precipice was found at
Greix. in Brittany, and everything was
got ready for the picture, but the pop
ulace hearing of what was going on.
and feeling disgusted at the cruelty
which was involved to the animal,
hounded the cinematograph operators
from their quiet resort.
The operators, however, simply
moved on a few miles, this time tc
Ploemeur. and at this spot the horse
and vehicle were made to dash over
a precipice, photographs of the spec
tacle being taken. The horse was ol
course killed and the vehicle smashed
to pieces.
When it was all over the police ap
peared and served summonses on .
those concerned.
For a long time the summonses could
not be heard, the operators having
gone to Africa to find another sensa
tional picture. Finally, however, the
case came on before the 1 .orient police
court, and the judge, whose comments
were more caustic than the punish
ment. Inflicted the maximum fine pro
vided by the Grammont law. which
however, was only a matter of three
dollars.
The cinematograph company was
declared responsible for the costs
while the photographer who actually
took the photographs was acquitted.
Hand-Painted Slippers.
Here is good news for the artistic
girl. I>et her get out her paint tubes
and set to work on painting kid slip
pers to match her summer frocks. A
white kid slipper of the latest vogue '
is adorned with painted forget-me
nots. Naturally small blossoms are
the best to select for reproduction, but
some of the larger flowers might be
convt ntlonallzed and worked up Intc
good 6lipper subjects.
Very artistic, too. are the slippers
of brocade outlined with dull gold or
silver threads. The clothof-steel slip
pers are equally pretty and may be
worn with a gown of almost any color
Black velvet pumps are one of the
novelties of the summer for wear with
lingerie gowns By the way. the new
pumrs have ankle straps which make
them much more comfortable than the
old models, which kept slipping oft j
Laced sandals will be used for dress
shoes They are fascinating and have
a tendency to decrease the site of the
foot because the toes are short.
I
How Could She?
'Td like to see Miss l’assay," said
the man at the door.
"You ran t." replied the maid, "she’s
got the toothache."
"Impossible, for I’m from her dentist,
and .!’ve got her teeth here In this
package."
Lightning Change.
"Tou should dress according to the
weather." said the physician.
“I try to.” replied the man with a
cold. "But l’m not quick enough to
keep up with the thermometer."
Marvelous Sense of Smell
?S
at the end* of the olfactory nerves tn
the nose bear the most delicate little
hairs, and it is believed that these
hairs are the active agents in produ
cing the sense of smell.
Tet when we come to inquire into
the manner of operation of these celts
and hairs, we and that it is more
wonderful than the delicacy of the
mechanism itself
WILL RULE INDIA FOR BRITAIN
mjjppinge
77*5 MON LffPY Happ/MG?
SIR CHARLES HARD1NGE, who has just been made viceroy of India, is Cfty-tw©. entered the diplomatic
service 30 yeans ago. and has had a most distinguished career. Amongst other positions he has held
are^ those of charge d'affaires at Washington, at Sofia. at Bucharest, and in Parts. In 190S he went
to St. Petersburg as secretary to the embassy. Five years later be came home, to return to St. Petersburg
J? ~f fo‘1^>winS year an ambassador. Hon Lady Hardlnge. whose marriage took place in IS SO. was Hon.
inifred Sturt, daughter of the first Lord Arlington. Her only daughter. Diamond, was bom fat 1900. Sir
Charles may be said to have a hereditary interest in the vice-royalty of India, as his grandfather, the first
\ Iscount Hardinge of Lahore, was governor general of that country from ISM to ISIS. The news of hia
appointment has been warmly welcomed In India.
RUSSIANS LIKE U. S.
Emigrants Favor This Country in
Preference to Siberia.
Problem Engages Attention ct Able
Muscovite Writers and Econo
mists. Who Advise Authori
se to Check Outflow.
St- Petersburg.—On the question of
emigration and immigration a consid
erable change has come over the
world during the last forty years, new
countries being more careful about the
sort of immigrants they receive and
old countries being more concerned
about the sort of emigrants they part
with. Forty years ago the British
government looked on emigration
much as the doctors of those days
looked cn blood-letting. Now it looks
on emigration, even from Ireland, as
the doctors of these days look on
blood-letting. Russia is now beginning
to do the same, judging from a series
of articles entitled “The Future of
Russian Emigration to America."
which has been appearing in the
N'ovoe Vremya of St. Petersburg, from
the pea of Julius XelidoB. Mr. Xe!i
doff, who has personally investigated
Ibis problem for many years in Amer
ica. thinks that the Russian govern- !
meat should do all in its power to get
Its stream of immigration directed !
toward Siberia instead of toward
New York, and that if a section of
the Russian immigrants insist cn go
ing to America in any case the Rus- ;
sian authorities should do all In their
power to make that section consist of
men who will come back and in due i
time enrich their fatherland with the
experience, the money, the knowledge ;
of agriculture and of industry which
they have picked up abroaj.
He fears, however, that the stream j
of emigration irliich is Cowing Amer
seaward cannot he stopped and he cal
culates that it will soon consist of
half a million persons yearly from
Russia alone- As he also calculates
that the British, German. Italian and
Austrian emigration to America will
shortly fall to insignificant figures, i:
‘ :s probable that this great wave of
Slavonic immigration will be the last
great billow of the kind that will
strike the United Starse. It would be
interesting, therefore, to speculate cn
the efiect which this addition of Slav
blood will have on the ultimate Amer
ican type. It will probably make that
type more dreamy, philosophical and
artistic, and consequently improve it.
but >!r. XeiidoS does not deal with
this aspect of the question.
He sticks to hard facts and these
show him that while the emigration
from Russia formerly consisted chief
!y of Jews. Pirns. Germans and Letts,
pure Russians now- take the first place.
Poles and Lotts occupying the second
in 1907 our Russian writer found on
Ellis island Russians from the gov
ernments of Smolensk. MogileS. Cher
nlgaff and Velinsky. Xow he Ends
them from the central governments
and even from beyond the Vcdg. The
emigration is kept up by tke emigra
!ioc companies- who are as active in
Moscow as they are in Tokyo and who
have behind them American manufac
turers. hungry for cheap labor.
Casts Real Pearls ta Sert-e.
St. Louis.—A second valuable pearl
found around Hardin. Calhoun county.
111. was discovered by James Ontis
in his hog pen. It is what is called a
high-button pearl and weighed 54
grains.
Mr Ontis sold it for $S>0 in Hardin
to S L. Fitts, a pearl buyer, who two
weeks ago purchased for Si.000 a
pearl from two sheUers which was
found near Hardin.
Ontis. who is engaged in shelling cn
the Ildnois river, near Hardin, feeds
the clams to his tegs. The pearl tad
Vvidently been thrown with the clams
into the hog trough.
Cut Pacific Coast Forests
They Wiil All Dissppeir in Thirty
Five Year? If Present Rate Is
Maintained.
Seattle. Wash.—From the reports of
all the counties in the timbered sec
tion of Washington it is shown that
•here are 213.00-1.0*>0.000 fo-et of stand
ins timber in the state. The reports
were made by cruisers for taxation
purposes and are believed to be ac
curate.
This immense forest is being made
Into lumber at the rate of S.000.1VV*,
0©0 feet a year. At the present mar
ket price the lumber made last year
was worth $15 a thousand, making
the cut for 1909 valued at about $9o.- ,
Tidal Effects on the Land
Delicate Seismcgraphic Instrument
Shows That Buildings Salute
Twice Each Day.
London.—As a result of a series of
experiments recently carried out by
Professor Milne, the pioneer of moti- j
ern seismology. It is now known that i
twice each day at high tide the build- j
Ings along opposite sides of tidal bf-1
=ins salute each other.
The experiments were carried out
at Hidston observatory, near Liverpool,
one and a half miles from the sea.
with a modified form of seismograph
designed to record tidal effects and
the more minute movements which
other seismographs would not or not
Dften record. The Instrument re
corded photographically, a tilt on the
plilar supporting It causing a definite
deflection on the film.
From the very first the Instrument
gave very clear and definite records
of the strange effect of the tides.
Twice a day the recording needle
swung in one direction, showing that
the steepness of the hillside on which
it rested was Increasing.
At high tide the be dof the Irish sea
became depressed from an Increased
load, and the effect of this was to pull
the shores together. The amount of j
this change was not very great, al
though much greater than might have
been expected. At Btdston the amount
of deflection was about equal to one
Inch In sixteen miles.
In thus securing a measurement of :
the deflection caused by the tide Pro- I
fessor Milne has succeeded where
others have failed. Many years ago
he showed that our ordinary, appar
ently stable English valleys opened
when the sun fell upon them and con
tracted during the night. He also
showed that apparently the whole of
the Isle of Wight tilts up at high wa- '
ter owing to the greater weight of the
water in the Eng'ish channel as com
pare! with that in the Solent.
His latest work is the complement
of earlier research and tends to show
that the earth is a great deal more
elastic and responsive to pulls and
strains than is commonly appreciated.
Hunt for Dinosaur.
New York.—Barnum Brown of the
American Museum of Natural History
has left town with two associates j
bound on a hunting trip for game
3.000.000 years old. Their quarry is to
be the dinosaur, of the cretaceous pe- ’
riod. or all that Is left of him. and es
pecially and particularly the great :
horn dinosaur, whose skull, seven feet !
long. Mr. Brown brought home two
years ago.
To find the other bones of this mam
moth creature and set them up with
the skull in the hall of dinosaurs is
the primary object of the present trip
The destination of the present ex
pedition is Glaseow. Mont. Thence
they will work their way down into
the Bad Lands some 40 miles south
along the tributaries of the Missouri
river.
It Is estimated tb.it fully two
thirds. or SK.iXH|,(h*oi represents the
amount of c oney paid to labor.
According to the latest statistics.
Washington leads in the fn>daMio3 of
lumber, and during IS • • shipped 45,
'►>.» cars of shingles and S5.«») cars of
lumber. The lumber and shingles to
taled 1.SOO.OOO.OOO feet. Over 1.200.
**■>»'■ .000 feet of lumber was sent to for
e tgn parts and to coast towns, and
this, added to the home consumption,
or l.S'1’),WO.WO. makes the annual pro
duction of lumber by the sawmills of
the state total over 6.000 000.000 feet.
One-half the urea of the state of 35,
tv» square miles is timbered. The
timber of the state would make a
plank road three inches thick and 500
feet wide around the earth It would
load 10,000.000 cars of IbiO.OOO feet
each 45 feet long, equal to S5.227
miles of trains. These cars would
reach nearly three and one-half times
around the world.
A six or eight-room house for five
people each requires about 40.000 feet
of lumber. The timber of this state
would build 5.000.000 such houses,
which would be sufficient to house
one-third of the population of the
United States.
The density of the forests of Wash
ington is unequaled in any other sec
tion of the world. In Clallam and
Chehalis counties, according to offi
cial estimates, the entire timbered
area runs 20.000.000 to the square
mile. The stand on smaller areas Is
phenomenal. In Clallam county one
acre was recently found to have 300.
000 feet of standing timber.
A Pacific county mill cut 500.000
feet of logs from a little less than
two acres. The logs average from
12.000 to 15.000 feet each, and would
present a serious problem to the mill
equipment of the timbered section ot
the upper Mississippi region.
War on Rinderpest.
Oakland. Cal —Dr. William P.oycton.
once a star fullback on the football
eleven at the University of California,
leaves on the steamship Siberia for
the Philippines to stpdy rinderpest
and other animal diseases which have
decimated cattle.
The work will be under the con*
bined agencies of the war and agri
cultural department
Courted Eight Long Years
Mew York Attorney Who Would Not
Accept “No" for Answer. Fi
nally Wins Bride.
Wellston. O.—ASer a courtship of
fight years, through six of which he
ras repeatedly rebuffed. Attorney
rhomas C. Riley, of New York, form
erly of New Metamoras. O.. has mar
ried Miss May Sellers, daughter of a
capitalist of Wellston.
Eight years ago Miss Sellers was a
student in Denison university. While
there she met Riley. She told her
friends she didn't like him. but he
could not be turned away. Finally she
left Denison and went to Wooster uni
versity. He followed her.
She left there and went to Oberlin
college. Again he followed her. She
told her friends she was not going to
run away from him any more and
openly asked him to let her alone.
She finished her college work and
graduated from Oberlin.
Riley returned to Denison, then
went to Rochester, where he pre
pared for the ministry, but changed
his mind after graduation anJ took
up law. Throughout the seminary
and law school days Riley continued
to write to Miss Sellers. She ig
nored his letters.
A year ago she was teaching in In
diana. away from her people, and she
grew lonesome. She answered one of
his letters and that was the begin j
ning of the end.
“LOST 40 YEARS. IS FOUND
Woman Sees “Hackersack" in Print
and Remembers Then Sister
Lives There.
Canton. O.—The chance sight in a
local paper of the word "Hackensack'
has resulted In the reunion of two
sisters who had been separated 40
years.
Mrs. Henry Metxei. when fifteen
years old. parted from her eight-yea r
oM sister in their native home of
Frankfort. Germany. She came to
America, where she married and set
tled in Canton Her sister came to
the United States later and married
John Lamp of Hackensack. N j
Mrs. Metxel hast her sister’s ad
dress and could not even recoiiect the
name of the town where she lived
Mention of Hackensack in n newspa
per refreshed her memory A letter
addressed to that town brought an
answer from the sister.
Kansas Jails Am Empty.
Topeka. Kan.—Kansas has only 5iJ
paupers w#hin its confines, according
to a report filed by the state board of
control the other day. Tweaty^ight
county poor farms have no inmates
at all. There are i] counties of the
state having no prisoners under sen
tenet*, and U with no prisoners of any
kind in their jails These statistics
show a remarkable absence of crime
and poverty in a state of aisue than !
1.500.000 people,
MORE
PINKHAM
CERES
Added totbe
to This Fa
mi
List doe
imedy.
Oronogo. *• I iras samplr a c*r
toos wreck. i cqkIJ not walk' across
my heart flattering
and I could not rren
receiee a letter.
Every month I had
such k bearing down
sensation, as if the
lower parts would
fall out. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound has
done my nerree a
great deal of good
I I , casaisore
the bearing down. I recommended it
to some friends and two of them hare
been greatly benefited br it.” —Mrs.
Mae McKxigitt. Oronogcv. Mo.
Another 11 rateful Woman. ’
St. Louis. Mo—“I was bothered
terribly with a female weakness and
had backache, bearing down pains and
Ciins in lower parts. 1 began taking
ydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Com
pound regular! t and used'the Sana tire
»Vash and now 1 hare no more troubles
that way.”—Mrs. Al. Herzog* 6T2*
Prescott Are, St. Louis. Ma
Because your case is a di5cu!t one,
doctors haring done you no good,
do not continue to suffer without
firing Lydia E- Pinkham’s Vegetable
1 ompound a trial. It surelr has cured
many cases of female ills, such as in.
f animation, ulceration, displacements,
fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic
patns, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, indigestion, dimness, and ner
vous prostration. It costs but a trir'e
to try it. and the result is worth mil
lions to many suffering women.
F II P P Send postal for
P K Is ^ Ppe* 1>a^age
■ IB !■ Sb of Pax tine.
Better and more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOB ALL TOILET USES.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Gnt* one a sweet breath; dean, white*
g^rm-free teeth—antisep ticc.I!y dean
month and throat—purities the breath
if ter snacking—dispel* all disagreeable
predated by dainty women. A quack
remedy for acre eyes and catarrh.
A Ede Paxdae powder «£»
ashred in « sUsj of hot water
nukes a dehj'-.ud antaeptic ao
bxs. posoug ecnacwT
j*T"EJ cjes=s~g. jerc^cal and beaL
a w (4 icg pew-er. and absolutely hus
5^ »4 Iti Try a Sample. 50c. a
brie box at dmgg«£s or by mad.
The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, m.ss
HEAVY IRON CULVERT P.PES
' ' Ani vo-- V ■* jv*t «• ,f tv-*c b *
ikuler l'ipe Co. ItouaumUi, ill.
HE'D GET THE APPLE.
r
7
—Say, mom, give Jessie an ap
pie.
Mamma—Then you'll want one, too
Eddie—Xo. Just give it to Jessie
We are going to play Adam and Eve^
and she is going to tempt me.
Refinement ot Assurance.
Busy Business Man (irately)—Sir,,
didn't ask you to sit down!
Persistent Salesman (settling back
comfortably 1—That's all right—n«
apology is necessary. 1 knew it was
cnly an oversight.—Harper s Weekly.
We live tru!y in proportion as w«
to out of ourselves and enter into the
ulness of the experience of those
shorn we serve, and by whom In turn
ve are served.—Westeott.
r
A Dream
o! Ease—
Post
Toasties
NO COOKING!
An economical hot weather
luxury — food that phases
anil satisfies at any meal. So
gixxl you'll want more.
Served right from the
package with cream er milk.
Especially pleasing with fresh
berries,
“The Memory Lingers**
ftta Uc id 15c
S*** hy Gr»c tr»
Ptetum CereaJ C<v. L.miied
Haaai Crrrk. M.ch.