Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Custer County Republican. (Broken Bow, Neb.) 1882-1921 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1901)
Custer County Republican . Mi AMShtiKKY , IMItor itm ! rnhtUhnf _ _ ft f n I i - - . - - _ _ _ _ J . , , 0ROKEK BOIT , N CoWlanpy of purpiw Is only on-- luartor ; continuity of effort Is the oth- Ir llircu-iliftiftcrs. Modern life needs a pte'rillzed itterillzed literature and sterilized aoci- > ty afl much as it needs sterilized milk. Of course It's barbarous for the Kill- jlnos to hang permim vvlm gosslp-and ret there's a oertnln anniction In some barbarous The maln"dllllrull.v wUJi "tlio blghcr ducatloii" Is Hint it unfits woman for animal. Oilco rlcwtng innn as a superior man guts out of focus the case la hope less. The lynching bell Is utterly lacking In liability. It inovcH from Xtiito to State with remarkable celerity. "In fact , It may lie Mild tlmt the lynching now fol- IOWK the crime. Mr. Justice Brown of the .Supreme Court once said , In addressing a class f young lawyers , that the verdict of a Jury In a criminal case IH a decision not upon the question whether the man on trial Is guilty or not , but upon the ques r tion whether he shall he punished not. An Important distinction. It shows the element of human Interest , Inde pendent of legal subtleties , which tin- jury system secures. When n monarch pies culling on n representative of another monarchy it Inetlquette for hlniMo wear the uniform of the crown lie desires to compliment. When the Czar visited the United States training fillip recently at a Una- ilan port hu wore the uniform of the German navy , because he had just been VHIIL' | | | n Kcloii of tlin rolunlnc hoiisn of Germany. The etiquette has never been extended to Include this republic In Its application. The uniform of the navy of a free people would prove a lorry misfit on the person of a mon arch. Ktlquette gives way occasionally to facts. t ? Europe , which Is , next to the United Btatcs , the most highly civilized dlvl- ilon of the earth , has for about thirty real's had no wars except thonc which it has Inlllctcd un the other divisions of the world. It has not kept the peace it home because of any great love for It , but because It Is so terribly , so murder ously prepared for war that It fears to let its demons loose. There can be no doubt that sovereigns , statesmen , pub licists and the common people have been wondering a great deal whether these nations , fearing one another , fear ing their own terrible enginery of war , fearing their enormous debtR aud the nightmare of taxation , might not seize Uie opportunity to decree a disarma ment. * Juvenile courts and the system of probation for young offenders have proved HO successful In eastern cities , especially In Hostou , that much good was expected from the Introduction of the plan In Chicago. The results are disappointing. The fundamental Idea of the system Is that for a lirst offense A young lawbreaker shall be placed on probation , during the term of which ho la to be under the care of suitable per- ions. In Chicago at least twenty-live probation olllcers are needed. The city appointed only live , each of whom has sbargc of about . ' 100 boys , and the whole 1,500 are herded together In a reforma tory school which does not reform but corrupts. It IK a pity that American cities are so slow to learn that any thing which prevents an Increase In the number of criminals Is a saving In dol- Jars and cents , to say nothing of the moral gain. ' When a man and a womaii sin It IH the Avoman that milTcrs , while the man goes froe. That Is a favorite thesis of moralists , on and off the stage , hut It suffers a hard knock from such an Inci dent as that of the ex-army olllcer and the music hall Mar of the Ilrltlsh aris tocracy at San Francisco , Young Strong's career Is ruined. He had ob tained the rank of Captain In the reg ular army ao much younger than is cus tomary among men who go through the West L'olnl routine that In the natural courses of thlngH lie would have become a llrlgadler or a Major Ueneral. and perhaps would have reached the eom- mund of the army. lie was established for life. Now that prospect la all gone and his patrimony Is going. And ho may expect to be thrown overboard by hlH companion IIH soon as Ids last dollar lar Is spent. As to ( lie woman , says the vuiriluiiii , inn [ Ho ni-i'i ? ! iini uot Injured In the least. She has se cured an engagement at $1uG ( ) a week on the strength of the scandal , and she will have no trouble in picking up an- "other Strong when she tires of this one. None of our historical novelists or character delineators or dialect prose or verso writers has fouiul In the decline' and fail of that old Western ciiHtom , the charivari , a subject worthy of his pen. And yet It has .been dying slowly by IncMes. a it were for fhe lust quarter of a ( ciitiiry , until in districts where It as nntvohiuivc'l with almrxu religious devotion It N becoming wholly cxthujt. The clmrlvarl , or the "slilv- veree , " a.s thi gentle h.u-Uuuodk folk were wont to cull It. had many pleiis-lng features , not among the Unst of wh'ch was the opportunity It afforded the s tu ple-minded people on the outskirts of , elvllbuitlon to b * to\v ue.Uhborly utiuii- tloim on lho.ie of their iiu libui-s who happened to become en.angled Iu the mushes of. wuvihuony. A. > . -.iiuj of the good old pattern conalHted of the vlnltallon by the cons of the Rcttlcrs from inlloB around to the home of Ilia newly married couple , whore they blow tin horns , llrud off shotgun * , broke In i he dooi'.s and windows , dragged the ( loom Into the "elearltjit , " compelled i him to drlilk heavily from a jiijf or bottle tle , made liltn dance a Jig for the r nimiHoinonl * ami indulged In other llfle i pleawiutrltS of a more or less delhnie nature. The Indlnposltlon of jcioonm hero and there to Hiibmlt to the LMH.OHI had the effect of lessoning If * ob-erv- aiK-c aflor a time , particularly ax this Indisposition manifested | L-elf In a most Inhospitable way. The groom fell Into the habit of providing lilmcelf with a wedding trouweau , which constated mostly of slx-shioter ) , and It was uilit er n tame charivari parly In Mlmnurl , Kentucky , or Arkansas for a number of years that did not result In several largely attended funerals. , Now at-d then , even 111 our time * , llght-hearled aplrlts , seeking for something to relieve the tedium of ( Mistoral life , Indulge n what they call a "slilv\erre. " but It Is only a mockery of what It usul to be. The Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court has rendered a de cision In the Abigail KnhcrHon picture c.'iKe , which should be of Intercut to all pretty girls and to all linns using pie- lures of living persona for advertising pupones. The case Is noteworthy In that It eonlmdlclH the doctrine that In juries to feelings are not actionable be cause the feelings are not property. A Itoehestur company secured a photo graph of .Miss Itohcrton without her consent and made lithographs from it for use In advertising a brand of Hour. She brought suit for iLTiKMJ ( damages. A demurrer entered by the defendant was set aside by a lower court , and the Appellate Division has alliruied this finding and decided In favor of Miss Hobcrson. Justice Kumsey , who wrote the opinion , liases his decision upon the broad prlnclple < tlmt every per son has a perfect and complete right of indemnity from all interference with hlmsell a right lo he let alone , lie holds that the plalntllf Is entitled to . damages because she lias been made to Buffer mental anguish and because she ban an exclusive property right in her , features which the law Is bound to pro- tect. The court llnds no distinction In the principle between Injuries still'eied through llbelous words and Ihosc caused by the printing of a picture which diminishes the respect In which , the person Is held and "tends lo bring ' her into unnecessary and unwarranta ble notice. " Justice Uumsey further holds that , since the features of a beautiful - ! tiful woman may be profitable to thu possessor , they constitute a right of property , though the woman may never care to use such poperty rights for pecuniary gain. This case establishes a precedent that should be heeded by i ambitious advertisers who are looking ' for photographs of handsome women' with which lo decorate their labels or advertisements. It Is only the women of noticeable beauty who will have cause for suit of this kind. The others are safe from .such Invasion of their property rights. Perhaps some with plain faces would be willing to take the risk of seeing their pictures on Hour Imrrols or soap wrappers If they had their choice In the matter of beauty. Further experiments and tests of Kdl- son's new storage battery appear to leave no doubt in the minds of electri cians that he has finally attained the greatest ambition of his later ycats In the perfection of a device that will be revolutionary In Its effect upon the arts and Industries of man. Its possible ef fect upon street railway traction and other forms of transportation has been widely commented upon. It is easily seen that It will .work . revolutionary change's In the manufacture of antomb- blles. In fact , there are electricians who go so far as to predict that It will ultimately displace the present sys tems of fixed tracks , by whlclr street cars are confined to a certain Immov able course In particular streets , with electric buses or carriages which may pick I heir way through smoothly paved highways , regardless of other vehicle's , In all quarters of a city. The Tltts- burg Times calls attention to a possible mliy.itlmi ! : of this now battery , \vhlch has not been exploited at length but which promises to ho vVn more revo lutionary than Its effect upon traction systems. The Times believes It \\Ill bring about "the era of the electric , farmer. " Says The Times : "The w linl engine on the farm may be kept going whenever there Is any air , and , being coupled to a small dynamo , It will churn out and store power that may be drawn upon nt night to light the house or at other times to tun any one of the many machines that are necessary lo thi' conduct of farming operatlnns ; or It tll'l V 1 \l liumt fill * ttiik line 4 lii. , . * ! > , . B . house or the cooking of the food. If I here Is a niuall water power near by it may be kept working a dynamo all the time , and there may he enough power - er to drive an automobile plow or cul tivator. " This may seem like a wild stretch of optimistic fancy , but as a matter of fad there IK nothing Improb able about It. If electricity ean be stored In the manner indicated In Mr. KelNun'f , description of his Invention there is m > reason why every brook that flows through a meadow may not yield enough electric energy to reap a farm er's grain , hind It. haul It to the barn and thresh It for market. Indeed , such n battery aa Mr. Kdlso1 * uppcnni to i have deviled mny be lined to haul the j grain over good highways fo market. Kngiii' Kutliiluc. The * nulling of xugar was Invented In Antwerp In the nlxteenth century. How readily people ride a Tret' tier > .e when tkejr gut n ehiuVf ; Are you do- lug any uf thU Mirt of ndlii ? CAREER OF MISS ORMEROO. rrr O the girl or woman who mm- II plains that the farm offers tn > fa- < * * dlllles for Intellectual or HI leu- title pursuits , the successful and hon orable career of Miss Eleanor Ormenid , who died a few weeks ago at her lesl- donee , Torrlngton House , St. Albiins , Kngland , Is an effectual reply. Miss Ormerod was a famous entomologist , than whom'few men , and no other woman , over did as much for the b-ii- eflt of the ] { rlHtsh | farmer. Her re searches saved millloiH of'damages to the crops from insect posla. Mlas Orme rod began to Interest hernulf In ento mology as far back as ISoIt , and In 1SUS WIIH awarded a medal by the Iloyal Horticultural Society for a collodion of specimens , drawings , models , etc. , Illustrative of insecl depredations. From that day onward Miss Ormcrod'a studies of economic entomology and her services to science and agriculture j were persistent. In 18SI she accepted the ollice of special lecturer on econ- Mf > H I MCANOll OIIMKUOI ) . omlc entomology at the Iloynl Agrleul- tural College , and became consulting entomologist to the Royal Agricultural Society In the following year. Among the most Important of the books she published may be enumerated her "Handbook of Insects Injurious to ( Jr- cliards and Mush Fruits , " her "Heport on the Warble Kly , " and "On the Insects - sects Causing the King or and Toe Disease - ease in Turnips and Cabbages. " and 'her "Textbook of Agrlcultuial Knto- mology , with a Practical Means of I're- venting Insect Ravages. " A busy , nso- fill life has now come t6 an end , but her work will remain , a benetlt to agri culture and to science for all time. How Out.-Woman Vu'ccsnO MM ! 1 iicome. This year I have added another branch to my business. I have had a number of pretty aquariums made ac cording to my ideas , and propose stockIng - I Ing them to order. I have bred other little animals suited to aquariums In my pools , and as 1 will have quite a num ber of them to sell this season I look forward to a big business and larger re ' turns than over before. The llrst year i ' that I sold tish , before I really began , to raise them for the purpose , however. | I cleared J ? , " > 0. The next year my profits mounted up to ? iiOO. Last year , the second year of my venture. I made $ lr > uo. That was a snug little Income for a woman who has a house of her ' own , and consequently no rent to pay ; j but 1 am ambitious lo make two thou sand , and unless the unforsocn hap pens I will make that amount thU sea son. son.As As to advising oilier women to take up the breeding of goldfMi ! ls n llvuli- hood I should ( hid It dlllieult in know just what to say. Klsh , like other liv ing creatures , should be studied to be successfully managed , and unless a wo man is willing to learn their habits what is good for them and what Is not silo should not attempt It. Lafayette MeLaws in the Woman's Home Com panion. Tills Is a Virot hat. It Is of strips of jwhlte felt , each overlaid with white mallnes lUack velvet drapes the brim and the wings are In black and white Slmpl" 1 otlotM to Vii'ITV the k-n. The difference In constitutions is so great and the predisposing cuin's : so varied that u Is impossible to give a 'remedy ' for ono that .hall suit all. A | simple and harmless one consists of : | I'reclpitiitct of sulphur. , . . . .ciiio ilnirhm 1 TiiKtnru t.t' camphor HID dmchiu ( ilyceriiiL > one dnichn . Itoso watur fontoutU'C - > Apply tit uctfcluj. I A sulphur mixture taken Internally Is effectively tiFed In combination with above lotion. The proportions are as follows : I'tmdcrud aulphur two ounces Croixm of turtxr one ounce Mulas ics one pin Mix until very vmooth. Take n table- tnoonful three ? uiorulugu lu t then omit for three mornings and take again for three more , until the mixture has been taken nine mornings. After a week or fen days the doses may bo re peated. Sulphur opens the glands of the "kin and ehaws Impurities to the Hiirfnc.- . . therefore It IH wise to wait until set tled warm weather before taking thN old-fashioned reined } ' , as whc'ti the pores are open colds are more easily contracted. "Green" ( or potash ) soap Is frequent ly employed lo wash the face In severe cases of pimples. The strong alkali con tained In It neutrallx.es the oil of the skin. It will parch and wrinkle a dry skin , but a few applications often ma terially help to eradicate persistent comedonesuid acne. A llttlo toilet vin egar used after It will counteract the smarting if too severe. Steaming the fae-e Is to be commend ed In case of pimples and blackheads only never for wrinkles. Its tendency Is softening and relaxing , therefore it induces the pores to yield up their hardened contents. After the skin has been thoroughly cleared of the blemishes tinder discussion - sion massage is often necessary to re fine the skin and close the enlarged pores which have been distended by the retained secretions. A little simple tincture of benzoin , dropped slowly in rose water until It becomes milky In appearance is excel lent as an astringent : Stella Stuart In Ledger Monthly. Saving Thine * . " There Is an elel saying , "Three moves are as good as a lire , " in the filtering out of household goods and the lessen ing thereof. Applied to the multiform savings of the attic and cellar the sen tence is literally true , for no one , how ever courageous , can move often and carry along the vast accumulations which the saving man or woman will heap together. The sensible woman Is the woman who will consider Jill these tilings when any article from kitchen to drawing- room Is about to be banished from its original use . All the tenets of economy will arise before her " " aud cry , "Save. but , on the oilier hand , she should mar shal an array of common-sense argu ment , and she should never , however great the temptation , yield to saving anything which has not at least half its usefulness still undisslpated. Velvet lirncvlcti Wirri. Fifty years ago the belles of Paris used to wear coiiuettlahly a black vel vet bracelet , and no one who did not possess one could be considered fash ionable , The ultra-fashionables of the present day have revived the style. The up-to-date bracelet , however , Is a more stylish affair than Its predecessor , hav- ing loops and ends edged with diamond , or pearl ferrets hanging from the left ' wrist , while a bizarre ornament clasps the hand it.solf close round the arm. Nothing shows off a white band better than black velvet and the same may be said of the black velvet neckband which is also in favor , stuelded with Jeweled ornaments or art nouveau ( lowers. French women rarely appear leeollctle without pome form of a baini i round the throat , usually a tucked ) leco of tulle or velvet the same shade is the dress. lie I'uiprsriM'cy Girl. The emergency girl is a valuable ad- llllon to the camping-oul parly. It Islet lot always necessary , In these days of nnch distribution in print of good sug gestions , to be original In discovering a way out of a dilemma , so much as to be observing and to remember and apply what one gathers up. Such a girl at a camp cotftigc recently distinguished herself by evolving ie-e cream with the ild of an old nail keg , Ice and a glass fruit Jar used as a freezer , says Har per's Ita/ar. To be sure , she had to take the' freezer out of the Ice every little while to stir It with a long-bladed knife In lieu of anything better , but In he end a delicious Ice was evolved that , eaten In the1 heart of the woods , was pronounced perfection. p' A generous supply 01 witch hazel should go Into the outing outfit , partic ularly If one's destination Is the sea shore. Its use- for thu sunburn that eomc's from sea' bathing is especially valuable. Bathe the face and arms freely with It , Its properties being not tmly to relieve the llrst burn , but to harden the skin , making it less .sensi tive to future similar Inflictions. A lo tion recommended for ordinary tan Is made from a pint of rosewater , half an OUIICt ! 01 | I1II M-l l/.I'Vl 1IU1.IA , IIIIII ill ! ounce of strained lemon juice. With this mixture the .skin may be freely bathe-el after exposure to the sun. 11 trli IlrHn a Menaces High heels , which are considered to bo responsible not only for corns and bullions , but also spinal troubles and other disease's , are no modern inven tion , lllgh-heeled shoes werejlrst worn at the court of l ouls XIV. , and as the he'c'ls were as much as live inches high walking was not only difficult , but painful. Then , a.s now , women knew that "pride must be pinched , " aud , ac- cordliigly. they stuck to their high heels and bore the pain with a brav ery which was worthy of a belter cause. Not tin Your Life. Kveu th woman who Is a chronic bargain-hunter doesn't select M hu.v band wh Is reduced. LONDON'S ROMAN BATH. Two Thousand Year * Old nnd Hni Hrcn in CnuMtiint UHM. London , England , lias a remarkable cold water plunge bath which is a re minder of ancient times , when ( lie Ito- tnatiR held sway. It Is to-day Just what It was li.OUO yearn ago when London wa but a name. Situated Iu n narrow court known as Strand-lane , opposite the church of St. Mary-lo-Strand , It Is naturally a great object of interest to the traveler. The remarkable thing about It is that It has been In constant use from the time of the Romans elowi ) to to-day An amazing fact Is that HO far back iiti tiny records can IK- found the supply of water bus novel ceased. The only change- noticed in recent times occurred some time ago. when extensive building operations were goIng - Ing on in the neighborhood , and for n time the water came through a dark color. This lasted for some throu months and then the flow became clear igaln. The water comes In through the old llonmn brickwork iu several places , particularly under the stone steps leading down into the bath , and It is curious that although the supply varies from time to time , it is usually greater in dry weather than In wet. The ( low of water has never been traced to'its source , but some have declared j clared that the spring rises in Ilamp- stead and readies the bath by a sub terranean stream. Of this , however , there seems no evidence. A now and Illustrated edition of "A Short History of the English People. " by John Richard Green , gditcd by Mrs. J. II. Green and Miss Kate Norgate , has been published. i \n Important work on Balzac is soon to he issued in France , tt will give the history of Balzac's youth , from 1S25 to 18128 , wlicn the great author carried i u business as a printer and type-founder. An important work on Spain , "Thi Spanish People , " is Just issued as tl.c" llrst volume of a "iJre.it 1'copU- . " , Bories. It is the work of Dr. Martin A ' S. Hume , who relate.1- the story ol' the revolution of the Spanish people from a new point of view. The Norwegian poet , HJorustJerne Bjornson , has jitbt linislied n new drama , "Laboremus , " on which he lias been at work for several years. It will be published by the. Danish lirm which prints the works of Ibsen , Lie. Slrind- berg , Drachman and Georg llraudes. Douglas Sladen's new novel , "My Son Richard ; or , The Great Company , " will give an Intimate sketch of Thames summer life , and deals with'the sub ject which Is uppermost In nearly every Englishman's mind-the changes in home life made by the rush of young men into the army. A woman who lias made a study ol the subject , finds that the Bible ret.iltu Its ancient place of honor in old fash ioned households , and that a gorgcoiu cook book , equal to a volume of the encyclopedia in size , queens it in world ly houses. Sometimes , In addition tc the thin little magazines of the oarlj seventies/there Is other paper covered literature. This Is generally on the lower shelf of the table. Batteied cop ies of "The Woman In Whlto , " "The Duchess" and the like arc seen on the gucht room table all of these were .seen in houses where the library showed no lighter modern literatim than \Irs. Humphry Ward. Soiling Hot Men In. One aspect of the food problem 1ms assuredly been solved by a company iu New Haven. Conn. , which undertake ! to serve hot meals to all and sundry wjthin a radius of seventy mile : froic its headquarters , and that from 'J. pei cent to Ml per cent cheaper than thojt can be obtained elsewhere. These meaU are sent out in wagons with com partments for each article. The meals are placed in the different compart mentfi smoking hot. and are kept at n high temperature until placed on tin purchaser's table. Tom a Fragment. There was once a lad turned Tom , Who bought him a d.uumite bomb. Must listen , you boys , And hoar this for n IIOKI > " And now they're collecting young Tom - Boston Journal. A good many women wear % Mg'i heeled BUOCR who d t have a hlgV A conceited poison nuver Improved because he IsjL1 ! ! 1 JJLJ'S ' mvn V03 Itcnulros no cerlTlleata the profes sional liar Sometimes It IB when a woman i doesn't talk tluit she Is most Intcrer- ' Ing. _ _ _ . Opposition Is frequently an eye- opener as to the patch Inhlch our Inclinations really Ik1. One can never judge by the outsdle of a man , or tailonnado jacket , the condition of the lining. J do not believe Plso's'Curc for Con- fitnnptlun has an equal for coughs and colds. John V. Hoyer , Trinity Springs , liul. , Feb. I1000. . Truth To hi Allur " Dr. Temple , the archbishop ot Canterbury , Is ! i notable personage about whom many good stories are related. Some years ago ti young curate , seeking to be licensed , was. hidden hy Dr. Temple to read a few verses of the bible in order that fit ness for conducting public worship might bo judged. , relates a London' corespondent. i "Not loud enough , " was the criti cism of the bishop when the young- man had linislied. "Oh , I'm sorry to hear that , my Lord , " replied the curate. "A lady In the church yesterday told me I could be hoard most plainly all over. " "Arc you engaged ? " suddenly ask ed Dr. Temple. "Yes. rny lord. " The bishop smiled grimly and said : "Now listen to mo , young man. Wliile you are engaged don't be lieve every tiling the lady lellsyouj but1 , ' he added with a deep chuckle , "after you are married believe every .word she says. " TIKI ) citoss HAM , IM.UJ : Fhonld he In ev-f ry home. Ask yonrErooc ? for it. Large 2oz. package only 0 cents. Now 1'tihllc Survlun. Rpingfleld , Mass. , has been trying in ono distirct the experiment of a weekly house-to-house delivery of books from the public library , with good results. Over one-half of the 350 persons now receiving books In this way did not formerly make nso of the city library. There is u charge for the delivery of > hooks. One may get six weeks' service 1'w fifty cents , twelve weeks for $1. or thirty-eight weeks for $ ; J. Tnis pays the book .user , since the street ear fare to and from the'library once \\eek amounts to more. A dozen persons at the . . . same' address can got books at th& expense of one delivery. A Fearless Physician. Ben ton , 111. , Sept. ISO. Much com ment lias been caused by the action ol Dr. U. ' H. Dunaway. a physician here , who for over a year past has been rec ommending Dodd's Kidney i'llls to those of his patients who Tuffercd from lihcumatlsm , Briglit's ] > i oiBO : , Ditx- - betes or other Kidney Truunles. ' f Dr. Dunaway also published an epee letter last May stating positively that ' ho himself had been cured ol' Di'aboteo by Dodd's Kidney Pills , and that , af ter he had concluded he was going to die. , , He is a well man to-day , aud says h feels it his duty to do a.- , lie has done and is doing because Dodd's Kidney Pills saved his life. Full In T.ovo AVllh a Convict. Many years ago , when Botany Puj was n convict settlement , a young , widow of a wealthy squatter , fell in love with a convict , \\hise terra of punishment had nearly expired , and whom she had obscned horn time to time toiling with the chain-gang. So Infatuated was the fair widow with the convict in question tli.it . she son ! for him directly his discharge was elTccted , and offered him her hand } and heart , together with the super vision of her property A liberal sal ary was to accompany the dual posi tion of husband and overseer , and the lucky man naturally aasscntcd to the proposition without an Instant's delay. The marriage proved a highly successful union , but. l.o the day of the fellow's death , he drew his salary with unerring regularity and to his credit 1)0 it said , he earned every ' penny of if , for he piovod an active j and intelligent manager in every re spect. Aalc Your Dealer mr AMtiiN Knotlna j A powder to sliakt > into your shoes. It4 * rests the fet't. ( Junes Swollen. Sore , Hot. Callous. AchhiK , Swentinx feet and In- pro wine NniN. Corns and Itimluns. Allen' * I'oot hastmaki'B new or tilit ; shoes ousy. U ol.l i ! by . ! . . all . . . : iJniKBlsts i i * > iii ami * . Awe : . stores. . 20c. . . . . . , . , , - IU.IIILMI ruivt'j. . . OliiHted , Lo Roy N , y. The Milking of l'.rr < iiitr . Millions of Mowers yield their petals - als annually for the making of favor ite perfumes. The material for the choicest attar ol roses is found hi a pass of the nnlLin Mountain * known as the Valley e.f Uoses. IIcr& In the blossoming season scores of damask reden the landscape , and tlw air is heavy with fmgi.mcc. 'n,011. sands of peasants an- anemployed to Bather the blossoms. More than half the world's supply of attar of mm * comes from this valley in central Bulgaria , the damask mie attalnlnr Us highest perfection there. Success , like a trolley" " , . , is llabW w strike us nncxpwteillr. When it floes wo want , no fonder , and guara tec there'll be no suit c , uUBt | company.