The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, February 04, 1915, Image 2

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    A Big Influence
It is surprising the won
derful influence good
digestion has on your
general health. It not
only promotes strength, i
but also keeps the liver
active and bowels open.
Therefore, watch the
digestion and as soon
as any weakness is
manifested resort to
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
llllllllll
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit.
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restorm* Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
60tv and $1.00 at Druggists.
Students Study Grading of Grain.
How the grain markets of the coun
try handle and grade the farmers’ pro
ducts is being studied in a course
which was started at the Ohio state
university last year. The students
taking the course are seniors in the
department of agriculture.
The students are given lectures on
market distribution and study the
field crops of the world, In the labor
atory they study the grading of grain,
testing it as to weight, color, percent
age of moisture, quality, soundness
and kind. Samples of ear corn and
grain are received from farmers in
the Franklin county and from grain
exchanges in the primary markets.
GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA
TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR
She Made Up a Mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur to Bring Back Color,
Gloss, Thickness.
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome. Nowadays,
by asking at any store for “Wyeth’s
Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy,” you
will get a large bottle of the famous
old recipe for about 50 cents.
Don’t stay gray! Try it! No one
can possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as it does it so naturally
and evenly. You dampen a sponge or
soft brush with it and draw this
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time, by morning the gray
hair disappears, and after another ap
plication or two, your hair becomes
beautifully dark, thick and glossy.—
Adv.
His Place.
“That dancer is wall-eyed.”
"Then introduce him to the wall
flowers.”
Two of the hardest things in the
world to get rid of are colds and
creditors.
No smart man ever tries to convince
a fool that the fool is foolish.
Beauty
Is Only Skin Deep
It is vitally nec
essarjr there
fore, that you
take good care
of your skin.
ZONA POMADE
if used regularly will beautify and
preserve your complexion and help
you retain the bloom of early youth
for many years. Try it for 30
days. If not more than satisfied
you get your money back. 50c
at druggists or mailed direct.
Zona Company, Wichita, Kan.
CALIFORNIA FARMING CON
DITIONS TRUTHFULLY TOLD
by the FARMERS PROTECTIVE BUREAU.
Reliable fare about the Sou, Water. Prices of land.
Climate. Health conditions. Highest and lowest
temperature, ^Average site of farm. Prohibition.
Sports, Wages paid farm help, whether farm help la
plentiful or scarce, etc. Send Stamp for FREE Ust
of questions answered, statltui what section you are
Interested In. THE BUREAU HAS NO LAND FOR
SALE. Address Farmers Protective Korean,
EOS Monadnock Bldg., San Francisco. Calif.
For Tatting
Our rumI
varieties of
HARDY Footer
Mother Root Apple Graft* make
-ly bearing, heavily
vigorous, early
fruiting, clean hearted, long lived
trees. To prove their worth, we
offer 6 Grafts (rooted) for testing, if
you will send 10c to help cover cost
mailing expense. They will bear
lie upon barrels of apple* In a few jean’
Catatacue tailing about other Blluard
Balt fruits, FVFRBXARINQ PTRAWBAR
RIES, ate.. FREE. Writ# todav.
TheGardaar NarsaryCe^ Box 8t>4 Osageyla.
AGENTS pair silk
HUCnl J HOSE FREE
State size. Become agent for beautiful line,
direct from mill to wearer. Gift to every cus
tomer. Large profit. Easy work. Write today.
TRIPLE WEAR JMLLS. Desk K
113 So. 13th St. Philadelphia, Pa.
POTATO sHSs
Sailer's Pedigree Potatoes helped put Wisconsin way
on the top with its enormous potato yield. We can
do same for you. BIG SHHD CATALOG FBHH.
John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box 704, La Crone, Wlo.
Nebraska Directory
THEPAXTON
HOTEL
Omaha. Nebiaika
..._EUROPEAN PLAh
Booms from 81.00 op single, 75 cents up double
CATS PRICES REASONABLE
BUSS * WELUUn
Live Stock Commission Merchants
204-858 exchange Building, South Omaha
ail stock consigned to os Is sold by membersof
i" mil employees hose been selected and
ffiU&euianott which Uaw do. Wrltmsa-e *l»g
NEW8 EPITOME THAT CAN SOON
BE COMPASSED.
MANY EVENTS ARE MENTIONED
r*ome and Foreign Intelligence Con*
denied Into Two and Four
Line Paragraphs.
WAb NEWS.
Twelve hundred rebels under Lieu
tenant Colonel Maritz have attacked
Upington, Beechuanaland, British
South Africa, but were repulsed.
* • •
The forty-fourth anniversary of the
capitulation of Paris to the Prussians
finds a Prussian army again on
French soil and only a comparatively
short distance outside the gates of
the capital.
The German emperor's birthday
was celebrated with much enthusiasm
throughout Germany. The emperor
at a religious service at his head
quarters delivered an address ex
pressing his satisfaction with the pro
gress ox" the war.
* * *
Although Germany has ordered
seized all stocks of corn, wheat and
flour in the empire, in order to con
serve the food supply, the German em
bassy at Washington has notified the
state department that the order of
seizure will not apply to foodstuffs
sent to individuals in Germany from
the United States.
• * •
The professors of economics in the
University of Berlin have issued an
appeal to the German nation stating
that it is the duty of everyone to frus
trate the plan of the English govern
ment, which hopes at the end of the
harvest year, that hunger and want
will compel Germany to conclude a
dishonorable peace.
* * *
I’ope Benedict, in an allocution at a
consistory expressed sorrow’that there
was nothing to presage an early end
of the war. He had done everything
to terminate the struggle that the lim
itaetions of his apostolic office per
mitted, he said. The pontiff declared
the holy see must remain perfectly
impartial in the controversy.
* * •
Chief interest in the war so far as
this country is concerned, centers at
present in what action Great Britain
may take in reference to the cotton
ship Dacia, about to sail for Germany
from Galveston, and the food-laden
Wilhelmina, now on her way to that
country. Washington expects both
ships to be thrown into prize courts.
The operations in the Carpathians
are attracting much attention at Pe
trograd. where it is believed the pro
posed expedition against Serbia has
been abandoned, and the German
forces which were intended to take
part in this expedition have been
united writh the Austrians, bringing
together a total of 300,000 men with
the object of holding back the Rus
sians moving through Bukowina.
* • *
A British squadron composed of
powerful and swift battle cruisers
patrolling the North sea encountered
a German squadron, presumably
bound for the British coast, and won
what is considered in England an im
portant victory. The Geramn cruiser
Bluecher was sunk and two battle
cruisers are reported to have been
badly damaged. Together with a
fourth German battle cruiser, the dam
aged vessels found safety In their
home waters.
OENERAL.
Seven hundred stevedores went on
strike along the Delaware river front
at Philadelphia, demanding a 100 per
cent increase in wages. They now re
ceive 30 cents an hour.
• • •
Ralph W. Schirtzinger, owner of the
Peekskill, N. Y., Evening News, under
going treatment at an Easton, Pa.,
sanitarium for a nervous breakdown,
jumped from the Delaware river
bridge while walking with a nurse,
and was killed.
* * *
Recommendations that Mayor Har
rison revoke the licenses of seven
Chicago theaters were made by the
city council judiciary committee as a
result of reports of detectives that
they had found evidence of collusion
between the theaters and ticket spec
ulators.
• * *
Speaking at a "dinner of optimism”
at Memphis. Secretary of Commerce
Redfield declared the European war
presented an unparalleled opportunity
for international trade, permanently,
in favor of the United States.
• • •
The Philippines are capable of pro
ducing enough food and wealth to sup
port comfortably 40,000,000 people, ac
cording to President Waters of the
Kansas State Agricultural college,
who has investigated agricultural con
ditions and possibilities of the
islands.
Telegrams were sent to wool grow
ers all over the state by C. B. Stew
art, secretary of the Utah Wool
Growers' association, at Salt Lake
City, advising them to hold their
clips for higher prices.
* • »
“I believe a trade commission should
be appointed to fix minimum wages
for the different localities and the
different industries,” declared Louis
D. Brandeis of Boston, in an address
on “minimum wage legislation,” at a
luncheon given by the New York City
club.
• • *
The Canadian Northern railway is
now completed from Lake Superior to
the Pacific coast. The last rail was
laid recently at Basque, a village on
the North Thompson river, 200 miles
east of Vancouver.
The Colorado public utilities com
msston will investigate, with a view
to readjustment the passenger fares
of all railroads in Colorado.
• • •
The first “Jitney” bus in Des Moines
made its appearance on the streets
and announcement was made that sev
eral lines of motor cars would be in
augurated next week.
* * *
The announcement was made at
Omaha that a Jitney bus service would
be started soon. Omaha and its en
virons, as well as South Omaha and
Council Bluffs, la., will be served. A
local banker is the financier of the
new concern.
• * •
President Wilson inaugurated the
first transcontinental telephone system
by speaking directly to President
Moore of the Panama-Pacific exposi
tion in San Francisco. The president
extended congratulations on the
achievement.
• • •
A Vienna newspaper declares the
new Austro-Hungarian foreign minis
ter has stated he will refuse territorial
concessions to Italy and Roumania
even if such a refusal should be the
cause of their entering the war on the
side of the allies.
Prof. W. F. Allen of the University
of Minnesota was released by the Min
neapolis police after the Hennepin
county grand jury had absolved him of
all blame in the death of Karl Nyrall,
who was shot and killed in an alleged
attempt to enter the Allen home.
• * *
Orders were issued by the H. C.
Frick Coke company at Oonnellsville,
Pa., to immediately fire 1,000 coke
ovens, that have been idle a year.
About 1,000 men will be given em
ployment five days a week in twenty
plants scattered throughout the re
gion.
• • •
Eighteen million dollars would cover
the normal increase of payrolls of
western railroads if they granted the
demands of the enginemen now being
arbitrated at Chicago, according to a
statement made at the hearings by
Warren S. Stone, of counsel for the
men.
* • •
The New York Board of Educa
tion voted to reinstate Mrs. Bridget
Peixotto, a teacher who was dismiss
ed after she absented herself from
her school to become a mother. All
charges against other teacher-moth
ers under suspension were ordered
dropped.
• • •
Three million acres' of desert land
have been made to bloom and produce
good crops since the government in
stituted its reclamation department in
1902, C. J. Blanchard, statistician of
the reclamation and forest conserva
tion service, told the Southwestern
Lumber Dealers' association in conven
tion at Kansas City.
• * *
Eleven thousand dollars’ worth of
radium bromide, refined from Col
orado ore by the new simplified pro
cess worked out by the federal bu
reau of mines’ laboratory at Denver,
was formally turned over by the gov
ernment to Dr. Howard E. Kelly of
Baltimore for use by the National
Radium institute in treatment of
cancer cases.
WASHINGTON.
The official board which will repre
sent the Philippine Islands at the San
Francisco exposition, headed by Dr.
Leon Guerrro. called on President Wil
son and Secretary Garrison and in
vited them to visit the Philippine pa
vilion at the exposition.
• * *
A bill drafted by a committee, rep
resenting 20,000 members of the In
ternational Congress of Farm Women,
was introduced in the house to cre
ate a farm women's bureau in the
Department of Agriculture to solve
the domestic problems of country life.
• • •
President Wilson has vetoed the
immigration bill because it closes the
"open door" and because of the liter
acy test and other restrictions. Oppo
nents of the bill are confident that
the measure cannot be passed over the
president’s veto, but its friends say it
can.
• • •
President Wilson issued an execu
tive order directing that the work of
the Maskan Engineering commission
on surveys of the proposed govern
ment railroad in Alaska be performed
under the control of the Interior de
partment. The bill providing for the
railroad authorized the president to
construct it.
• • *
The Interstate Commerce commis
sion has further suspended from Feb
ruary 2 until August 2 the operation
of certain schedules increasing rates
on bituminous coal in carloads from
mines in southern Illinois to Omaha
and to certain poines grouping there
with. the operation of which was
suspended from October 5 until Feb
ruary 2.
• • •
Senator Clapp of the senate commit
tee on Indian affairs, has made a fa
vorable report on Congressman Ste
phens’ bill to place the construction
of roads through Indian lands in Ne
braska in the hands of local authori
ties.
Abolition of the "plucking board,”
for years the dread of naval officers,
is one of the chief provisions of a new
naval personnel bill, drafted by a
board headed by Assistant Secretary
Roosevelt and transmitted to congress
by Secretary Daniels.
• * *
The proposed investigation into the
alleged artificial rise in the price of
foodstuffs that the department of
justice is making will never find the
real "nigger in the wood pile,” accord
ing to Representative James Mana
han of Minnesota, until it compre
hends thd evils of trading in futures.
* * *
Palmer of Pennsylvania has intro
duced in the house a bill to amend the
fur seal laws so as to prohibit the cap
ture, possession or shipment of Alas
kan seals except under government
regulations.
PREDICTS PRESIDENT IN SPEECH
AT WASHINGTON.
ORDER AGAIN AT MEXICO CITY
Carranza Forces Now Occupy Capital
and Feeling of Confidence
Prevails.
Washington.—Another confident pre
diction that the country soon will en
ter upon a new era of enterprise and
prosperity was voiced by President
Wilson in a speech before the conven
tion of the American Electric Rail
way association. Speaking to busi
ness men and through them to the
world of business generally, the presi
dent outlined what the democratic
congress has tried to accomplish
through its trust legislation, and de
clared that while a test period would
be required to determine whether the
correct remedy had been applied, he
believed the “maze of interrogation
points” which had checked enterprise
for twenty years had been cleared
away. With a common understanding
regarding business reached he said,
henceforth nobody is going to be sus
picious of any business just because
it is big. He gave some of the “rules
of the game,” which he thought ought
to be followed, heading the list with
publicity—"not doing anything under
cover.” “1 have alwa>s maintained
that the only way in which men could
understand one another was by meet
ing one another,” said the president.
“If I believed all that I read in the
newspapers 1 would not understand
anybody. I have met many men
whose horns dropped away the mo
ment I was permitted to examine their
character. It seems to me that I can
say with a good deal of confidence,
that we are upon the eve of a new era
of enterprise and of prosperity. En
terprise has been checked in this coun
try for almost twenty years, because
men were moving amongst a maze of
interrogation points. They did not
know what was going to happen to
them. All sorts of regulations were
proposed, and it was a matter of un
certainty what sort of regulation was
going to be adopted. All sorts of
charges were made against business,
as if business were at fault, when
most men know that the great major
ity of businessmen were honest, were
public-spirited, were intending the
right thing, and the many were made
afraid because the few did not do what
was right.
Carranzaists Control Capital.
Mexico City.—The capital is again
in the hands of the forces of General
Carranza who. while acting as the pro
visional president of the government,
was forced to leave Mexico City early
in November under the threat of the
advancing troops of General Villa and
Zapata who disagree with his policies.
The new authorities have re-estab
lished order and a general feeling of
confidence prevails. It has been es
tablished that the shooting which oc
curred in the main plaza, before the
National palace, when General Alvaro
Obregon, at the head of the Carranza
forces, reached that place, was done
by snipers who were hidden on the
roof of the cathedral, General Obregon
said that the shots were undoubtedly
directed towards him and that it was
an attempted assassination. The per
petrators have not been captured.
Three soldiers were killed and a num
ber wounded during the firing,
Ask for Live Stock Probe.
Washington, D. C.—The divergent
path of prices of live stock and
slaughtered meats, have roused the
suspicious of Representative Ander
son of Minnesota, who has offered a
resolution for an inquiry by the de
partment of justice into the forces
which are alleged to be manipulating
stock and meat prices at the present
time. Mr. Anderson states the price
of fat cattle recently fell $1.20 per
hundredweight and of fat hogs, $2.20.
At the same time, the price of meats
has advanced.
Armies Entrenched in Snow.
London.—Conditions in the Car
pathians are such that both sides are
entrenching themselves in snow, as it
is impossible to dig into the earth,
says the Petrograd correspondent oi
the Daily Mail. "Austria has sent on
this desperate move all that remains
of her army except the forces on the
Serbian frontier, on the Nida rivei
(southern Russian Poland) and in
Revenue Cutter Discontinued.
New York.—The United States
revenue cutter service, organized
when Alexander Hamilton was secre
tary of the treasury, has passed out of
existence and has been replaced by
the United States coast guard.
Wants U. S. to Buy New Shell.
Washington. — Representative Brit
ten of Illinois will propose a $ 100,001',
appropriation in order that the United
States may acquire exclusively the
Isham submarine shell, which, fired
from a battleship, will torpedo any
enemy ten'miles away.
> -—
Fled From Apartment House.
Omaha, Neb.—The fifty-two families
in the Angelus apartments were driv
en half clad into the thirteen-degree
below-zero temperature when fire
.threatened the structure.
Philippine Pearls to be at Fair.
San Francisco—Charles R. Morales,
representing the Philippine islands,
has arrived here with 500 cases of ex
hibits for the exposition. These in
clude pearls, representations of the
forestry, mining and agriculture of the
islands and of the arts.
Returns Land to Government.
Los Angeles, Cal.—The United
States government has won its find
case against the Southern Pacific rail
road to oust that company from min
eral land filed on by the railroad.
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 and cause a sick,
sour, 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 pleases 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 fifty
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. i
SATIRE CONTAINS A MORAL
Demand Than Those One
One's Real Qualities May Be More in
Makes Pretense Of.
Among the clever satires in Barry
Pain's new book, “Stories Without
Tears,” is one which relates how a
publisher went to an employment
agency to secure a clever writer.
The agency man told him it would
be easy to fill the order.
“ ‘We’ve got 480 clever writers on
our books,’ he said. ‘I’ll send a few
dozen of the best around to your office
this afternoon and you can pick one.
That do?’
“ ‘Nicely,’ said the customer, and
rose to go, when he remembered some
thing. 'By the way,’ he said, ‘I also
want a boy who can be trusted to take
charge of the stamps and petty cash.’
“Then Mr. Agency threw down his
pen. He did not book that order. He
gave a sigh like a high-power suction
pump. 'Do you?’ he said in a melan
choly voice. ‘Well, if you find two save
one for me. I want one myself.’
“Oh. my poor friends who are trying
to be cleverer than you are, remember
that the world also wants honest men.
“And, as things stand at present.
Patent Tills with the Unmonkeyable
Lock are a better market than Brain
Fertilizers containing Free Phos
phorus.”
Answered.
Juvenile wit sometimes is doubly
pointed.
“How many bad boys does it take
to make a good one?" a tactless social
worker once asked of a class of lively
street urchins.
“One if you treat him well.” came
the quick reply.
Must Be.
“You say that she is sending youf
letters back unopened. Then you may
be sure that she has given you up.”
“Why?"
“Well, it slio^ . that her contempt is
greater than her curiosity.”
More Effective.
First Father—Do you turn out the
lights when your daughter's beau
stays too late?
Second Father—No—I turn out the
young man!
The croaker generally has little to
say. but is willing to keep on saying
it.—Indianapolis Star.
The wise wife never insits upon hav
ing her own way. She merely has it,
and says nothing.
HE TOOK THE HINT
Why Young Man Broke With His
Lady Love.
Considering the Circumstances, He
Was Hardly to Be Blamed, Though
Some Ma> Think He Was
a Trifle Dense.
“Well, old boy, if you have any girls
staked <^ut to whom you can Introduce
me. I am your man.”
“What, you?”
"Even me!"
“What’s the matter with little Miss
Mabel and you?”
"There’s nothing the matter with
Miss Mabel that 1 know of, and I am
quite certain there is nothing the mat
ter with me. Take us individually and
we are all right. 1 am just not going
to see her any more, that’s all!”
“You are not going to call upon her
any more?”
“Never again!”
“You are not going to throw her
down?”
“Well, if you call it that!”
“That beautiful little girl with whom
you fell in love at first sight?”
“The very same!”
"The girl whom you told me was the
only girl in the world for you?”
“I may have said that about her. but
can't a man change his mind?”
"You were one man whose mind I
thought would never change. Why, 1
remember the first time you saw that
girl!”
“I remember that much myself. It
was about three and a half doors this
side of your house, on June 1?. at 25 Vi
minutes after four in the afternoon.
Oh, you can’t tell me anything; I re
member all about her myself!”
“Do you remember that you asked
me to hold your hat while you chased
her?”
“Yes, I remember that. I remember 1
how long It took me to engineer an in
troduction to her. I remember my joy
the first time she permitted me to call,
every look of her eyes, every intona
tion of her voice, every clasp of her
hand!”
“Some memory, old man! And in
spite of that you are goir-g to turn her
down?”
“I am going to cut her cold!"
“What particular reason have you
for that?”
“I have several very good reasons
from my standpoint. One evening I
had tickets for the theater, and she
knew it; and had promised to go, and
when I called for her she had forgot
ten all about it and gone with some
one else. The next time I called upon
her she was fussy all evening. I just
thought she was nervous, and paid no
attention to it, but remained as late
as usual. Then when I went away
for my vacation, and she had prom
ised to write to me, she never wrote
me once. She said it slipped her
mind!”
"Maybe it did!"
“If id did, and her receiving a letter
from me every day, her mind was
some slippery. It got so finally that
she wouldn't go out with me, even
when she had an engagement to go
out with me, and she wouldn’t go out
with me when she didn't have an en
gagement to go out with me, and after
a time, when I asked her to make an
engagement with me, she would al
ways have a previous engagement
with someone else. Her father got to
treating me gruffly, and her mother
used to come in and sit and look at
me as if she felt sorry for me.”
“And is that the reason you decided
to turn her down? Just because of
those few little things? A young girl’s
mental processes, you know, are fear
fully and wonderfully carried out.
Those were just the odd, unstable hu
mors of a little girl. Miss Mabel isn’t
grown up!”
"She is twenty-one!”
“What’s twenty-one? When you and
I are seventy we shall look back at
For Five Years
I was
Troubled
with a
Chronic
Disease.
Peruna
Cured me
Sound
and Well.
Mrs. Maggie Durbin, 209 Victory
St., Little Rock, Ark., writes: "I was
troubled for five years with a chronic
disease. X tried everything I beard
of, but nothing did me any good.
Some doctors said my trouble was
catarrh of the bowels, and some said
consumption of the bowels. One
doctor said he could cure me: I took
his medicine two months, but it did
me no good. A friend of mine ad
visod me to try Peruna and I did so.
After I had taken two bottles I found
it was helping me. so I continued its
use and it has cured me sound and
well. I can recommend Peruna to
anj one, arvd if any one wants to
knew what Peruna did for me if they
will write to me I will answer
promptly.”
twenty-one and realize that we were
not much more than trundle-bed
trash.”
"That may be, but I am not seven
ty!"
“And you have fully decided to
throw her over?”
“Yes, nothing could change that de
cision. 1 have thought the matter
all out by day and given it sleepless
thought by night.”
“Well, Jim, old boy, you are going
to be sorry for this. You’d better wait
awhile!”
“No, I shall wait no longer. I fully
made up my mind last night, when 1
called at her house.”
“You may break her heart.”
“I can’t help it if I do, she brought
it upon herself!”
“But what in the world did she dc
that’s heinous?”
“She wasn't ready to come down
when I got there and I went into the
parlor and sat down on the window
seat to wait .or her, and among the
cushions I found a morocco-covered
diary. Of course I had no business to
look between it covers, but the blame
thing just fell open in my hand and
I had absorbed the last entry in it be
fore I knew I was looking at it. The
entry read: ‘I was out with Jim last
night and had a perfectly horrid time
I have a horrid time every time 1 gc
anywhere with him and I am going to
tell him tonight that he must never
call upon me again.’ ”
“Gee, that was tough!”
“Tough or not, that's my reason for
quitting her. If it breaks her heart,
all right. She can never say of me
that I couldn't take a hint.”—Houston
Post.
Force of Habit. t
"Ever since you’ve been in town,
said the city relation, “you've been go
ing to a soda fountain two or three
times a day and ordering lemonade.”
"Yep,” replied Farmer Corntosset
“A habit’s a habit.”
“But you don’t drink the lemonade.
"I don’t want it. I'm willin’ to pav
the nickel so as to get a straw tc
chew.’’—Washington Star.
That Tired Kind.
Mr. Biggs—But doesn’t my devotion
arouse in you some sort of feeling for
me?
Miss Hitts—Oh, yes; the sort peo
pie take sarsaparilla for in the spring
A Sure Sign.
"When is a man moon struck?”
“When he says a woman's eyes look
like stars.”
After a man is broke he begins to
entertain a few serious thoughts of
economy.—Commercial Appeal
891 Million Bushels
Harvested
How Much Wasted?
Last yfcfc.r s wheat crop in the U. S. was a record yield, surpassing all expectations.
All ot the nourishment of this enormous crop should go into food for mankind,
bui much of it will be wasted.
In making white flour and many foods, the outer, or bran coat of the wheat is
discarded. This bran-coat contains vital mineral salts, iron for the blood, lime for the
teeth and bones, phosphate of potash for the brain and nerves, etc, etc, all absolutely
necessary to health.
All of these mineral elements are retained in making
Grape-Nuts
Food
About three-quarters of a million bushels of selected wheat are used by the
factories of the Postum Cereal Company, and none of the nutriment of this wheat
is wasted.
Grape-Nuts is made from wheat and malted barley. The food comes ready
to serve and costs less than a cent a dish. It’s mighty good, too.
“There’s a Reason" for Grape-Nuts
Sold by Grocers everywhere.