The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 27, 1913, Image 6

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    FOR mm MAN]
NEWS EPITOME THAT CAN SOON |
BE COMPASSED. j
MAI EVENTS ARE MENTIONED j
Home and Foreign Intelligence Con.
densed Into Two and Four
Line Paragraphs.
WASHINGTON.
I
President Wilson has sent in many
diplomatic and consular nominations,
among them that of Henry M. Pindell,
to be ambassador to Russia.
• * »
Charles F. Brooker of Ansonia j
republican national committee- i
man from Connecticut since 1900, has i
announced his Intention of resigning {
from the national committee.
* * •
A bill to bar convict made goods
fr »m interstate transportation, but
still preserve the opportunity for con
vlc' labor on highways, has been in
troduced by Representative Carey of
Wisconsin.
• * • v
To meet the cost of naval construc
tion Representative Bailey of Penn
sylvania has proposed a superior tax
of 5 per cent on all incomes of'$2,000,
however derived, collected on the
same regulations as the regular in
come tax.
* • •
Senator O’Gorman and a delegation
from Rochester, N. Y., asked Presi
dent Wilson to speak over the
|)hon9 to a banquet of the Chamber of
Commerce of that city, December 10,
where telephones are to be arranged
for each diner. The senator said, the
president promised to do so.
COMESTIC.
Fort Smith, Ark., authorities the
►ther day lined a circus company for
omitting an advertised street parade.
• • •
The death toll on the great lakes
Sue to the storm of November 8-10,
ranges from 251 to 300, the latter fig
ares being nearest the actual loss of
life.
* • •
Harry D. Todd, was sentenced to
three years in the federal penitentiary
and fined $1,250 in Kansas City after
being found guilty of misuse of the
mails.
• • •
Ralph E. Jossman, defaulting cashier
at the E. Jossman State Bank of
Clarkston, Mich., has been sentenced
to serve from seven to twenty years
m state’s prison.
• • *
Although there ar§ nearly 53,000,000
sheep in the United States, they rep
resent less than 6 per cent of *the to
tal number pf domestic animals on
the country’s farms.
mm*
Ar the Ohio state experimental sta
/ tic* at Wooster, the crops have aver
aged, for a term of years, about twice
as much to the acre as the usual
yield of all grain fields in Ohio.
• * c
Mrs. Ida Von Claussem, who gained
notoriety several years ago by threat
ening suit against President Roose
velt for $1,000,000 damages for not
having her introduced at the court of
the King of Sweden, has been declar
ed to be insane.
• * *
Charles S. Mellen, retired railroad
president, says that $25,000 a year is
as much as any general officer is
worth to a railroad company. If a
railroad company insists on raising
the limit the general officer may pro
test, but not resign.
• • •
Protest against convict labor was
made at Chicago at the convention of
th-* National Association of Garment
Makers. President I. Cohen of De
troit. Mich., declared that it was the
Intention of the association to stamp
nut the “evil.” One hundred manu
facturers from various cities in the
v tst aud middle west were present.
• • •
Charles Hill and his bride, Dothe
Bartzen, both of Kansas City, are on
n honeymoon trip of &.000 miles from
the old home to the new home in Ar
Igentina. where Hill has been sent as
buyer for a Kansas City packing firm.
* * »
In spite of his belief of a week ago
that he was suffering only from a
slight attack of bronchitis, George E.
Waddell, famous as a baseball pitcher,
and known everywhere as “Rube"
Waddell, has left Minneapolis to be
gin a battle with tuberculosis at San
Antonio, Tex.
• • • ’
' William Hayne beavell, who will be
the next minister to Guatemala, is a
Presbyterian clergyman. His home is
at Carrollton, Miss., where he has
taken considerable interest in public
v affairs and is well known in his state
• * *
It has been announced that the
case of President John P. White of
the United Mine Workers of America
and seventeen other officials of the
V organization under indictment for
' alleged conspiracy in restraint of
trade would be called in the federal
court of Charleston, W. Va.
• • •
For the tenth time, Josepr Dennis,
*aid to be the oldest mayor in the Uni
ted States, has been re-elected to the
chief position in .-Findlay, O. He is
g7 years old and has held some pub
lic office tor twenty years.
• • •
William Moeller, who joined the
Denver police force recently, stands
Bix feet seven inches and weighs 204
•wounds He has been successful in
many different forms of athletics,
from football to swimming, and when
being examined for the police force
received a mart of^ 100.
The long lived controversy between
1 ue to*»e, t and their con
railroads ) n 0yCr the latters’
doctors and trainmen oy ^ ended
demands tor an increaa,
r-SKSSm’ - -*■
Jersey City will add a bacterlo
ogist to its health department.
* * *
About $13,000 is earned annually
by the boys in industrial course in
the high school, Fitchburg, Mass.
* * *
Investigation of the United Cigar
Stores company by the house judiciary
committee was asked by Representa
tive Reilly of Connecticut, in a reso
lution seeking information whether
the company does business in viola
tion of the anti trust laws.
• • •
With the price of beef steadily in
creasing in Argentina, despite that
country's preparations to enter the
American beef market in competition
with the home raised product, Alber
to and Carlos De Ibarra, representing
the government of Argentina and per
sonal interests, have come to the
United States to study hog raising.
• * •
The enforcement of the new law
regulating the employment of women
in Pennsylvania may result in hun
dreds of women losing their places
in Philadelphia hotels. The main
feature of the law is that women can
not work more than fifty-four hours
a week or more than ten hours a day;
nor can they work more than six days
in any one week.
• • •
For nine months of this year United
States imports were a trifle less than
a year ago and exports $117,000,000
more, resulting In a balance in our
favor of $407,000,000, or $124,000,000
more than a year ago. For the last
twelve months the imports were
$79,006,000 more than a year ago, and
exports $263,000,000 more.
• • •
Gen. Venustiano Carranza will not
consider any means of accomplishing
peace in Mexico not predicated upon
the absolute elimination of Huerta,
says a Nogales, Sonora, dispatch. The
constitutionalists’ political and mili
tary leader issued the following an
noucement: “We will recognize no
body who succeeds Huerta by the pow
er which he has usurped.”
• • »
A precedent was broken at Harvard
university when Miss Helen Todd of
San Francisco, chairman of the lea
gue of Western voters, spoke on wo
man suffrage before students of the
university. It was the first time that
a “votes for women” advocate has
been allowed to speak in a college
hall. The privilege was refused Mrs.
Emmeline Pankhurst two years ago.
• • *
President Wilson, Secretary Tumul
ty and the members of the cabinet
will have Kentuck turkey for their
Thanksgiving dinners. South Trim
ble, clerk of the house, will furnish
pedigreed bronze turkeys raised on
his blue grass farm. The president’s
bird will be a yearing gobbler. The
others will weigh twenty-five pounds.
They have been fattened on celery,
chestnuts and red peppers.
• • •
“I expect to be doing my regular
duty as a police officer when I am
100 years old,” said Oliver Houghton
to friends, who congratulated him on
his ninety-third birthday, Mr. Hough
ton, who has served continually on
the Weymouth, Mass., force since the
civil war, is probably the oldest police
officer in active service in the United
States. He was chief of police for
twenty years. At his own request he
was relieved of that position in 1902.
* * *
That Colombia hereafter will grant
no monopolies, either in oil conces
sions or of any other sort; that the
proposition now pending, of the Pear
son syndicate of Great Britain for oil
concessions will not be granted; and
that the South American country is
anxious to see American capital come
there was the message brought to
Washington by Robert Anclzar, just
: arrived from Bogota to act as secre
I tary of the Colombian legation here.
FOREIGN.
Reports from Panama that in Au
I gust there was not a single death
i among the 12,481 white American
men, women and children in the canal
zone add another evidence of the won
derful success of Colonel Gorgas as
a sanitary officer.
* * *
Brigandage in China has spread un
Til some robber bands has assumed
the dignity of small armies, says a
Peking dispatch. They muster both
foot and calvalry and are as large as
two American regiments. No prov
ince is free from bandits.
• • •
An Odessa dispatch to the London
Daily Mail says it is reported from
Kiev that the police have found an
important clue to the Yushinsky mur
der, which is likely to lead to the ar
rest of the actual murderers.
• • *
! A report prepared by the Vienna
Chamber of Commerce on the traffic
of the municipal street railways in
1912 shows 165 miles of route, 153 of
which were electrically equipped and
twelve miles operated by steam. The
electric lines carried 309.484.129 pas
sengers, the revenue being $9,863,076.
• • •
The demand of 100,000 employes of
the British postoffice for higher pay
was rejected by Herbert Samuel, the
postmaster general. He sweetened his
refusal by making some concessions
in working conditions, but he pointed
out that an increase of 15 per cent in
- wages meant Increased taxation.
• • •
Mis OMve C. Purser, the first to ob
tain a scholarship at Trinity college,
Dublin, after women were admitted tc
the university, has just been appoint
ed temporary lecturer on English his
Tory in the institution.
• e *
The Russian Crown Prince Alexes
Xicholaievitch, who has been an in
valid for many months, was thrown
from an automobile in which he was
driving, with a sailor attendant, ac
cording to a dispatch from St- Peters
burg. The little prince escaped witb
only a few bruises.
• • •
Canadian Pacific trainmen from all
over the system in western Canada
will meet the general manager anc
division superintendents in Winnipeg
on December 1 to finally close ar
rangemente for a n-»w sea's <»f wages
WEDDING OF MISS JESSIE WILSON AND FRANCIS B. SAYRE
am*.
Mr. and Mrs. Sayre and East Room in Which They Were Wedded.
Washington, Nov. 25.—Jessie Wood
row Wilson, second of President Wil
son’s three daughters, was married to
Francis Bowes Sayre at 4:30 o'clock
this afternoon The ceremony took
place in the east room of the White
House, and was performed by Rev.
Sylvester Beach of Princeton, N. J.,
the president’s former pastor and the
close friend of the Wilson'family for
many years.
The entire affair was very simple,
as had been requested by the bride,
and the number of guests was rather
small—distressingly so to many per
sons in official and social circles of
Washington who had expected to re
ceive invitations but were disappoint
ed.
Miss Margaret Woodrow Wilson,
eldest of the three daughters, acted
as maid of honor to her sister, and
Miss Eleanor Randolph Wilson, the
youngest, was one of the bridesmaids,
i The three other bridesmaids were
Miss Adeline Mitchell Scott of Prince
ton, daughter of Prof. William B.
Scott; Miss Marjorie Brown of Atlan
ta, Pa., daughter of Mrs. Wilson's cous
in, Col. E. T. Brown, and Miss Mary
G. White of Baltimore, a college friend
of the bride.
Dr. Grenfell Is Best Man.
Mr. Sayre was attended by his best
man, Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell, the fa
mous medical missionary to the fisher
men of the Labrador coast. The two
men have long been fast friends and
: Mr. Sayre spent two summers help
ing Dr. Grenfell with his work.
The UEhers were Charles E. Hughes,
Jr., son of Justice Hughes of the Su
preme court and a classmate of Mr.
Sayre in the Harvard law school; Dr
Gilbert Horax of Montclair, X. 3., who
was a classmate at Williams college
in 1909 and now at Johns Hopkins uni
versity; Benjamin Burton of New
York city, and Dr. Scoville Clark of
Salem, Mass., who was Mr. Sayre’s
companion in Labrador and Newfound
land.
Wedding Gown of Ivory Satin.
The bride's gown was of satin, of
a soft ivory tint, trimmed with beau
tiful lace, both old and rare. It was
made in New York and the women
connoisseurs declared that it was a
masterpiece. The lingerie in the
trousseau is of the most dainty mate
rial and is all hand made. The maid
of honor and bridesmaids were beauti
fully gowned and all looked their best.
Coming right in the midst of the
chrysanthemum season, this was
made a chrysanthemum wedding and
that flower was used most profusely
in adorning the White House. As the
bride’s favorite color is mauve, that
was made the prevailing color In the
decorations. The east ro. m, and In
deed all the rooms in the president’s
mansion, were beautiful indeed.
Depart on Tl.:ir Honeymoon.
After the ceremony wac completed
and the couple had received the Con
gratulations oi the guests, refresh*
ments were served, and then Mr. and
Mrs. Sayre departed for their honey
moon. Their plans include a visit to
the home of Miss Nevin, Mr. Sayre’s
aunt, at Windsor Forges, near Church
town, Pa., where they first met. After
January 1 they will live in Williams
town, Mass., for Mr. Sayre is to sever
his connection wit> the office of Dis
trict Attorney Whitman in New York
and become assistant to Harry A. Gar
field, president of Williams college.
There was one disappointment for
those who attended the wedding, for
the gifts were not put on display. It
is known that these included many
beautifpl and valuable articles sent
by relatives and personal friends of
the bride and groom and of their fam
ilies and by admirers of President
Wilson. Handsome presents were
sent by both the senate and the house,
that of the latter being a diamond la
valliere which Miss Genevieve Clark,
daughter of the speaker, bought for
the representatives in New York.
Guests Limited to 400.
Those who \£ere invited to witness
the wedding were mostly personal
friends and the number was kept down
close to four hundred. The list was
pared and revised several times, and
as has been said, the operation result
ed in many heartburnings. From the
house of representatives’ circle, "'for
instance, the only guests were Speaker
Champ Clark, Mrs. Clark and Miss
Genevieve Clark, Marjory Leader Un
derwood and Mrs. Underwood, and
Minority Leader Mann and Mrs. Mann.
As might be expected, the streets
outside the White House were as
crowded as the police would permit
with curious persons eager to watch
the arrival and departure of the guests
Gift of the House.
This Is the diamond lavailiere which
was the wedding present of the house of
representatives to Jessie Woodrow Wil
son.
and trying to obtain through the win
dows a glimpse of the doings within.
The police arrangements were admir
able and nothing happened, in the
White House or outside, to mar the
happy occasion.
Immense Wedding Cake.
Jessie Wilson’s wedding cake was a
triumph of the pastry cook’s art. It
was two and a half feet tall, counting
the white orchids that were placed on
top of it, and weighed 135 pounds.
The first layer was four inches thick
and 22 Inches across. The cake con
tained 19 ingredients and its cost was
about $500. Over the body of the
cake was molded a thick white icing
scroll work, on its top was a design
for the initials of the bride and groom,
done in silver, and around the sides
were lilies of the valley in white
sugar. This delicious confection was
distributed in 2,000 dainty white boxes
tied with satin ribbon and each of the
proper size to go under the pillow of
the recipient to bring dreams.
Mrs. Sayre was bora in GainsvHle,
Pa., twenty-five years ago. She at
tended the Women’s college at Balti
more and was an honor member of
the class of 1908, being also elected a
member of Phi Beta Kappa. For two
years after her graduation she en
gaged in settlement work in Kensing
ton, Pa., and she is a member of the
executive board of the National Young
Woman’s Christian association. She
has delivered several excellent ad
dresses in public.
In appearance she does not resem
ble her father as much as do her sis
ters, having rather the features of her
mother’s family, the Axsons.
Something About the Groom.
Francis Bowes Sayre is twenty
eight years old, and was born at
South Bethlehem, Pa., a son of the
late Robert Heysham Sayre, who built
the Lehigh Valley railroad and at
one time was assistant to the presi
dent of the Bethlehem iron works,
since known as the Bethlehem steel
works. He was also once president
of the board of trustees of the Lehigh
university.
Francis Bowes Sayre graduated from
Lawrenceville school, Lawrenceville,
N. J., in 1904, and from Williams col
lege in 1909. He entered Harvard law
school and graduated “cum laude.”
He was a member of the Sigma Phi
fraternity, Gargoyle society and the
Phi Beta Kappa at Williams. For the
past year he has been working in the
office of District Attorney Whitman of
New York. During the summer he
was admitted to the bar of New York
state.
Mr. Sayre's mother is Mrs. Martha
Finlay Sayre, daughter of the late
William Nevin, who was president of
Franklin and Marshal college at
Lancaster, Pa. She is a descendant of
Hugh Williamson of North Carolina,
one of the framers of the Constitution
of the United States, and is a sister
of the late Robert Nevin, head of the
American church at Rome, and a cous
in of Ethelbert Nevin, the composer.
Other White House Weddings.
The wedding of Jessie Wilson and
Francis Sayre was the thirteenth to be
solemnized In the White House. The
first was that of Anna Todd, a niece of
Dolly Madison's first husband, and
John G. Jackson. Then Mrs. Madi
son's sister, Lucy, was married to
Judge Todd of Kentucky. The third
wedding, that of Maria Monroe, daugh
ter of President Monroe, to Samuel
Lawrence Gouvemeur in 1820 marked
the first social use of the east room.
Eight years later John, the second son
of President John Quincy Adams, mar
ried his cousin, Mary Hellen, in the
blue room. While General Jackson
was president there were three wed
dings in the White House, those of
Delia Lewis to Alphonse Joseph Yver
Pageot of the French legation; Mary
Eaton to Lucien B. Polk, and Emily
Martin to Louis Randolph. Many
years passed before there was anoth
er marriage ceremony in the presi
dent’s mansion, the next being of Nel
lie, the only daughter of General
Grant, and Algernon C. F. Sartoris.
In 1876 Emily Platf, a niece of Mrs.
Hayes, was married in the blue room
to Gen. Russell Hastings. The elev
enth of this series of weddings was
that of President Cleveland to Frances
Folsom, and the twelfth that of Presi
dent Roosevelt's daughter Alice, to
Nicholas Longworth.
Dog For Golf Links.
A golf dog has been discovered. The
animal, a rough-haired terrier, is quite
self-supporting, and he helps to sup
port the house painter and his fam
ily with whom he lives. He has root
ed out as many as ten good golf balls
on a Sunday night, and in one week
brought home 22.—Manchester Guard
ian. *
Never Despair.
Never despair, but if yon do, work
on in despair.—-Burke.
Trumped.
“I wish I had never learned to play
cards!” exclaimed a man who had
been unfortunate at the game. "You
mean you wish you had learned, don’t
you?” was his wife’B sarcastic re
joinder.
Moonlight.
The light of the moon is the time
from new moon to full moon, and the
dark of the moon is from full moon to
new moon, or throughout the waning
period.
i
Something Worth Seeing.
A four-year-old youngster on hib first
visit to a city saw a ferryboat cross
ing the river. “Oh, mamma!” he ex
claimed, much excited, “come and
look! Here’s a choo-choo car in swim
ming!”
' Wealth Has Its Trials.
In an apartment of 34 rooms and
eight baths, such as hac been leased
by a New York man, the job of trying
to remember where you left your pipe
seems indeed appalling.
. 4. ' ....
PROPERTY IS SAFE
" j
AGUILAR PROMISES TO GUARO
FOREIGN INTERESTS.
BLUE JACKETS READY IQ LAND
Admiral Fletcher At Gcene Piepared
for Prompt Action If it B*corres
Necessary.
Washington. D. ('. (tear Admiral
Fletcher, commanding the American
fleet, on the east coast 6f .Mexico, has
cabled the navy department a mes
sage lie had received from General
Aguilar, the constitutionalist leader,
who has occupied the vicinity of Tux- |
pam, giving assurances that Ameri
can and other extensive oil interests
in that territory w'ould be protected.
Admiral Fletcher is under orders to
take such steps as may be necessary
to protect foreign lives and property,
reports from Tuxpam having indicat
ed that the constitutionalists were
threatening to destroy the tanks of
British oil interests.
Thin led to talk of the possibility
of the landing of marines or blue
jackets from the American battle
ships and developments in the situa
tion have been awaited with intense
interest.
General Aguilar's message, sent in
reply to Admiral Fletcher’s demand
that no harm should come to foreign
ers of their property, said:
“I am governing on a constitutional '
basis, my attitude being to guard the
interests of all foreign and domestic I
oil corporations existing in the terri
tory I occupy, fulfilling in this man
,ner the demands of civilization.”
Officials here think this means
there will be no trouble—some com
plications as a result of Aguilar's oc
cupation of the oil fields territory.
Destruction of the tanks would have
endangered the lives of. many Ameri
cans and other foreigners. Two Brit
ish armored cruisers have been order
ed to the scene, but in the meantime
the United States had been asked to
j guard British interests.
Favor a Peaceful Adjustment.
Seattle, Wash.—The American Fed- j
I eration of I^abor refused to adopt a j
I resolution condemning armed inter j
' vention in Mexico on the ground that i
such intervention might be justifiable
and desirable.
The convention unanimously adopt
ed the following resolution:
“The American Federation of La
bor condemns attempts being made
by American and foreign corporations
and certain jingo newspapers to
force armed intervention by the
United States government in Mexico
and.urges upon the president of the
United States the continuance of a
policy looking to the peaceful adjust
ment of the conflict among the Mex
ican people, and - that the president
and secretary of the American Feder
ation of Labor be Instructed to trans
mit the position of the federation
upon that matter to the president of
the United States.”
U. S. Mail Cars Kill Many.
New York—The right of the United
States government to operate its
mail trucks in city streets regardles®
of speed restrictions that may be
I prescribed by the board of aldermen
was defended by Joseph Stewart, sec
ond assistant postmaster general, be
fore the aldermanic committee ap
pointed to consider, an ordinance
withdrawing the mail trucks from
the class of vehicles now exempt
from speed control. Fourteen persons
| have been killed here this year by
| mail carrying automobiles.
Bandit Loots Bank.
Laurel, Miss.—Unobserved, except
by his victim, a robber entered the
Bank of Heidelberg at Heidelberg, j
Miss., held the cashier up at a pistol j
point, got about $2,000, locked the |
cashier in a vault and escaped on a
freight train that was passing. The
cashier was liberated within half an
hour and gave the alarm.
Goethals Silent.
Panama.—Colonel George W. Goe
thals, chief engineer of the Panama
canal, has declined to make any state
ment in regard to the offer that he
become city manager of Dayton, O.
Cold Soup Starts FighL
St. Louis, Mo.—A bowl of soup,
served cold, started an argument in a
restaurant hero, which resulted in the
killing of one man, probably fatal in
jury to four others and the arrest of
half a dozen uninjured participants in
the general fight which ensued.
Trying to End the Strike.
Washington.—President Wilson is
giving serious consideration to the
many questions involved in the Col
orado coal strike, with a view to a
settlement through federal agencies.
Medicine Man Sent to Jail.
Des Moines, la.—Dr. George H. Mo
Call of Chicago, who was indicted by
the last federal grand jury on a
charge of using the malls to distrib
ute fake medicines, was sentenced to
the count jail for thirty days by
Judge McPherson here.
Food Now at the Highest.
Washington, D. C.—Retail prices of
food were higher August 15 than at
any other time during the last twen
ty-three years, according to figures
1 of the bureau of labor statistics.
i -
/
Loss of a Lake Steamer.
Winnipeg. Man.—The Algoma Cen
tral steamer Leafield was lost In Lake
Superior with her entire crew during
the recent great lake* storm, accord
ing to the version of Captain Baird of
the Harmonica, who has arrived here
from Fort Williams.
To Prevent Cholera.
Washington, D. C.—Representative
Booher of Missouri has asked the
house to appropriate $200,000 for ex
periments toward the prevention an4
' cure of hog cholera
INDIGESTION,
OR 6RDST01GH
Time it! Pape’s Diapepsin ends
all Stomach misery in five
minutes.
Do some foods you eat hit back—
taste good, but work badly; ferment
into stubborn lumps a~d cause a sick,
soar, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's
Diapepsin digests everything/ leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach is disordered you
will get happy relief in five minutes,
but what pleaseB you most is that it
strengthens and regulates your stom
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
You feel different as soon as “Pape's
Diapepsin” comes in contact with the
stomach—distress just vanishes—your
stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch
ing, no eructations of undigested food.
Go now, make the best investment
you ever made, by getting a large lifty
cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from any
store. You realize in five minutes how
needless it is to suffer from indiges
tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv.
Speaking of men, there is a vast
difference between bigness and great
ness.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of <
In Use For Over 30 Tears.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Cynical.
“Why do they call pretty women
peaches?”
“Because they are the fruit of mis
chief.” ™
ERUPTION SPREAD ON FACE
810 East Elm St., Streator, 111.—“A
running sore broke out above my
right eye, which spread over my en
tire face. It started as a small pim- ,
pie. I scratched it open and the con
tents of this small pimple ran down
my face. Wherever this ran a new
sore appeared. They itched and
burned terribly; I couldn’t touch my
face it burned so. It disfigured my
face terribly and I couldn’t be seen
for everyone was afraid of it. It
looked like a disease of some kind; it
was all red and a heavy white crust
on it. Everybody kept out of my way,
afraid it would spread. I lost rest at
night and I couldn’t bear to have any
thing touch my face, not even the pil
low. I had to lie on the back of the
head. I was always glad when morn
ing came so I could get up. It was
extremely painful.
“At last I thought of Cuticura Soap
and Ointment and I commenced using
them. It took three weeks to com
plete the cure.” (Signed) Miss Caro
line Miller, Apr. 30, 1913.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
Short of Winning a Battle.
Short of winning a battle, nothing
could have more delighted the Kaiser
than the news that of all the ten
various liners which hastened to the
help of the Volturno, the largest num
ber of its passengers were saved by
the Grosser Kerfurst (or Great Elec
tor). But the name will have recalled
to him the greatest disaster that ever
befell the nascent Germany navy. This
was the ramming of the ironclad Gros
ser Kurfurst by the Koenig Wilhelm
off Folkstone in May, 1878, and the
sinking of the vessel with a loss of 280
lives—the rest of its crew of 497 being
picked up by the Folkestone fishing
fleet. Two days later, when suffering
acutely from this catastrophe, the old
emperor was shot at and wounded by
the Socialist Dr. Noiling. — London
Chronicle.
Should Have Laughed.
Newlywed—Did you spend as much
money as thi3 before I married you?
Mrs. Newlywed—Why, yes.
Newlywed—Then 1 can’t understand
why your father wrent on so when I
took you away from him.
Affirmative Answer.
She—Has Jack's auto got him into
any serious trouble yet?
He—Well, I understand he has be
come engaged to the girl he’s been
taking out in it.—Boston Evening
Transcript.
FULLY NOURISHED
Grape-Nuts a Perfectly Balanced Food.
No chemist's analysis of Grape-Nuts “
can begin to show the real value of
the food—the practical value as 6hown
by personal experience.
It is a food that is perfectly bal
anced, supplies the needed elements
for both brain and body in all stages
of life from the infant, through the
strenuous times of active middle life,
and is a comfort and support in old
age.
“For two years I have used Grape
Nuts with milk and a little cream, for
breakfast I am comfortably hungry
for my dinner at noon.
“I use little meat, plenty of vege
tables and fruit, In season, for the
noon meal, and if tired at tea time,
take Grape-Nuts alone and feel per
fectly nourished.
"Nerve and brain power and mem
ory are much improved since using
Srape-Nuts. I am over sixty and weigh
155 lbs. My eon and husband seeing
how I had improved are now using
Grape-Nuts.
“My son, who is a traveling man.
eats nothing for breakfast but Grape
Nuts and a glass of milk. An aunt
over 70, seems fully nourished on
Grape-Nuts and cream.” “There’s a
Reason."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellvllle,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above lettert A ant
one appeara from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and toll of human
Interest.