Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, May 07, 1903, Image 2

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    THE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT
M. KICK , Pnb.J.her.
TALENTINE , NEBRASKA ,
, Thirteen new * men sit in the United
States Senate. Is the hoodoo upon the
Senate or upon the country ?
Dr. Parkhurst had better take a
tight grip on what religion he has If
he Is going to run a newspaper.
Probably some men are unable to
Btand upon their dignity because their
feet are larger than their dignity.
Some men arc so suspicious that they
always feel for their pocketbook when
ever their wives are kind to them.
President Francis must have had an
unusually fine line of stories to keep
the kaiser listening for fifty minutes.
Mr. Marconi Is beginning to insti
tute suits for infringements on his
patents. There ought to be something
In that
It is a mortification after being away
from home for a considerable time tq
be compelled to introduce the subject
to Intlma-te friends.
An authority on words says that
"manywhere" is correct. Just drop It in
anywhere to show that your conver-
eatlon is up to date.
From the investigations of the New
York department of taxes and assess
ments it appears that Gotham is not
ft city of millionaires.
Since Grover Cleveland has praised
him , Henry Ward Beecher must occu
py a pretty low place in the estimation
of Colonels Bryan and Watterson.
France has freak legislators , too.
One of them has just evolved a bill to
tax torn cats because they wantonly
destroy the song birds in the parks.
The Duluth man who goes up and
flown pulling people's teeth against
their will should not be too harshly
condemned. That Is not so bad as
pulling people's legs.
Dr. George Sauerwein , a German
philologist , writes peotry in thirty-
eight different languages. Dr. Sauer-
xveln may as well be given up. His is
9vidently an incurable case.
Since a great many society ladles find
that they cannot belong to the order
of Daughters of the Revolution , let
them get up a new organization of
"Mothers of the Next War. "
A Texas man "would place a tax
on the impecunious nobles who come
to this country looking for wives. But
Just what punishment would that be
b the nobles ? The unfortunate girls
would have to pay the tax.
The Austrian archduke who gave up
his title and hereditary claims a few
weeks ago in order to elope with a
music hall singer has been deserted by
the latter. Without his title and for
tune he probably seemed like a differ
ent man to her.
Is there to be no disconnection from
care on hind or water ? Ships go down
to the sea only to be called up inces
santly wltli telegrams. Now the rail
road flyer is to be fitted with a wire
less apparatus and even flight Is not
to be unbroken rest , i
Instead of oats , they are feeding hay
sweetened "with molasses to "work
horses in New York , because the
horses , when standing in harness at
noon , do not chew their oats prop
erly. A veterinary surgeon says there
Is more nutriment in molasses than in
oats , and that it is a better food for
horses. It is only in recent years thai
the food value of sugar has been un
derstood.
An Englishman gives his impres
sions of Boston In the New York Inde
pendent , and suggests that Bostonians
need never hesitate to display Revo-
hitionary relics to their English friends
from any fear lest those reminders
of national defeats may awaken pain
ful feelings. He says his countrymen
are hardened to that sort of thing ,
for they cannot even cross the Eng
lish Channel without remembering that
Calais was a British possession for cen
turies.
Qulntin Hogg , the founder of one
of the largest trade-schools for young
men and women in the world , who
died recently , said in discussing college
athletics when on a visit to Chiago
in 1901 , "Pile up at my left hand all
the broken coUar-bones , fractured
limbs and sprained wrists that have
resulted , from football scrimmages ,
and at my right let me put all the
bodily wr ckav and physical degener
ates that ow their weakness to noth
ing else than lack of proper exercise ,
and I'll tell yon that your pile of football -
, ball Injuries will look like a mole
hill and my gronp of weaklings will
be the mountain. " He knew that the
jmen who have done the work of the
world have , with few exceptions , had
strong , vigorous bodies , made so or
kept so by exercise of the right kind.
"Some men are born great , " said an
envious son of tbj Bast , "others are m
born in Ohio. " At a recent reception
'of..the Ohio Society of New York to
the Secretary of State , Mr. Hay , al
though he claimed residence in Ohio ,
declared that he had suffered all his
life under the handicap of not having CC
, been born there. "When it cornea to
' pull and prestige , " he is a man without
a State. In his own words : "I was 1
born in Indiana , I grew up in Illinois ,
I was educated in Rhode Island. H
learned my law in Springfield , my pol-
itlcs in Washington , my diplomacy in
, Europe , Asia and Africa. I have a
1 farm in New Hampshire , and desk-
room in the District of Columbia. The
first ancestors of whom I ever heard
were a Scotchman who was half-Eng
lish and a German woman who wad
half-French. My mother was from1
New England , and my father from the'
South. In this bewilderment of origin
I
and experience , I can only put on !
an aspect of humility in any gath
ering of favorite sons , and confess T
am nothing but an American ! "
It will be a dull world if the tlma
ever comes when women are too busy !
to be pleasant. "Is your wife enter
taining this winter ? " said one man to
another. "Not very ! " replied his witty
if disconsolate friend. Under the bril
liant repartee lies a melancholy confes-j
sion. Unhappy the busy man whoso
wife is not "entertaining" this winter
and all the winters ! The empty-head
ed woman is certainly a trial. Slid
grows less common every year. Bui ;
her place is too often taken by the wci
man with head and heart filled to over ]
flowing with the problems of modern ]
life , and she may not be much more
skillful than her silly sister in dealing
'with ' the every-day needs of husband
and children. A tired doctor , coming
home from fourteen hours of tussla
with a typhoid-fever epidemic , cannot
be refreshed by conversation on civi-J
reform or on the enrichment o th }
high-school course , or even on theJatJi
est German theory of the Homeric au-l
thorship. If he is not heartened wiseljj
for his next day's work he is too likely ,
to become himself a victim of the di
ease , and he may well have as his ep'
tnph at the hands of his inconsiderata
wife , "At rest till we meet again1' !
Intellectual grasp and moral enthusi
asm are glorious possessions for any
woman. But there are others not to ba
despised by her , and one of the chief
of them is the power of being amus
ing.
The case of the man Knapp , recentl3
arrested for murder , is one for tha
study of criminologists as well as of
psychologists. He has confessed to
having murdered five women and gir.'s ,
each crime having been accompanied
by shocking cruelty , and he may be
guilty of others not confessed. Of
course the man Is a monster , a degen
erate of the worst type , but the ques
tion Is , what made him so ? Was it
heredity or environment ? Was he born
with an irresistible tendency to crime
or was it first implanted and then nur.
tured In him by environments ? Is ha
himself wholly responsible for his
shocking degeneracy or are his ances
tors and society responsible for it in
any degree ? Could he have become a
decent man under any circumstances
or was he predestined to a life of horri
ble crimes ? No amount of speculation
can solve the mystery. We know that
heredity and environment are the mus
ter influences of the organic and ani
mal world. They have made all of ua
what we are and are still ceaselessly
playing upon all our lives , but whicl }
one exerts the dominating influenci
none can tell. The crimir.olog/'st will
not lind any tiling In this rase to sup.
port the theory that punishment pre
vents crime or reforms criminals.
Knapp had served time in four peni.
tentiaries , terms of considerable length ,
and yet in each instance he returned
to crime as soon as he was released.
No doubt some criminals are improve 0
by punishment and a few are reformed ,
but the germ of reformation was in
them at the beginning. Mtst confirm.
ed criminals are beyond the power of
reformation. This man never should
have been liberated after his first crime ,
Releasing him from prison was simply .
turning loose upon society a nionstti
to commit the most horrible crimes. If
society could have known the true sit
uation it would have been justified in
imprisoning him for life. His punish.
ment in every instance was a farce ,
He was tried , convicted and sentenced
with all the solemn dignity of the law
but It was time and money throwi
away except that during the period o
his imprisonment he could not pre ;
upon society. The whole scheme <
a
punishment in this man's case was . - ,
dismal failure , and the question recurs 1
may it not be so in many cases ? ScJ
ciety does not seem to have got at thf
root of the matter.
A . .Latertttac m
n
d
P
o :
He You said once you loved mt
iore than anything else In the world hi
She .But that , my dear , was befort
found Fido. '
Germany's , Export * .
Germany's exports grew , from
)6,000 ) In 1901 to $114,495,000 in 1902' Jt
! 'l JUDICIAL DECISIONS
S nl " "
!
Substantial damages are held , in
WesternU. . Teleg. Co. vs. Church
( Neb. ) , 57 L. R. A. 905 , to be recover
able for a breach of contract to trans
mit promptly a telegram which the
company knew to be addressed to a
physician , directing him to come to the
sender's house at once.
A contract with a foreign insurance
company made in another State , in
which it is valid , but in direct viola
tion of the laws of the State in which
the property is situated and the in
sured resides , is held , in Swing vs.
Munson ( Pa. ) , 58 L. R. A. 223 , not to
be enforceable in the latter State.
A claim arising out of an illegal
transaction is held , in Singleton vs.
Benton ( Gn. ) , 58 L. R. A. 181 , not to
be a legitimate subject-matter for sub
mission to arbitrators , and an award
founded thereon is held to be a mere
nullity. With this case is a note as to
effect of ward upon claim arising out
jof illegal transaction.
j An electric light company is held , in
Snell vs. Clinton Electric Light , H. & P.
[ Company (111. ( ) , 58 L. R. A. 284. to havi
no right to make payment for a trans
former a condition of furnishing elec.
tricity to one whose building is wired
by a third person , where it furnishes
transformers free of charge for build
ings wired by itself.
A statute giving the right to an ex
ecution for the unpaid balance of a
judgment against a non-resident , as to
whom jurisdiction is obtained only by
attachment and publication , after ex
hausting the property attached , is held ,
in Kemper-Thomas Paper Company vs.
Shyer ( Tenn. ) , 58 L. R. A. 173 , to be
void as in violation of the due process
clause of the federal constitution.
In Reindl vs. Heath , 91 N. W. 734 , it
appeared that the defendants contract
ed to deliver a certain number of logs
ito be sawed by the plaintiffs , and the
plaintiffs agreed to saw for no othei
parties during the season. The Su
preme Court of Wisconsin holds that
the fact that the plaintiffs sawed foi
other parties during the season , such
sawing not interfeVing , however , witu
their work for the defendants , did not
justify the defendants in refusing further -
ther delivery of logs , it being merely
the breach of an independent stipula
tion. Compare Proprietors vs. Hovey , >
21 , Pick. 437 , and Tipton vs. Feitner ,
20 N. Y. 425. h
An indorsement a bill of lading n
of the final destination of freight tendered b.
b.o
dered 'for transportation , which is be b.t
yond the termination of the carrier's t
line , and a stipulation that it shall gc t
"on fastest passenger train service , " is P
held , in Taffe vs. Oregon Railway S P
Navigation Company ( Ore. ) , 58 L. R , o
A. 187 , not to render the carrier liable
for carriage to destination , but only
to deliver the freight to the connect
ing carrier , where the bill of lading expressly - S
states that the ti :
pressly carrier will nol
be liable for losses beyond Its own lin <
and the blank for destination in the
body of the contract is left unfilled , in
accordance with an express direction ii
iiC
that it shall not be filled by a point C :
"not on the lines of this system. " bia >
a
Knew the Real Thing.
'I was in London a few years ag < '
with a northern Michigan resident , ' ' _
.said a Detrolter the other day , "and f ' (
we had many a laugh over the English w
fop as he minced his way up and down
Piccadilly of an evening. At length tir
my friend , whose years had not given r r
him any sedateness , rigged . himsell
out as a parader. He had the clothes ; tl
the hat , the cane , the eyeglass and th <
jkangaroo gait and off he went. I could 8l
see nothing lacking in 'Cholly , ' bul 8lat
there must hav * been something at
wrong , as he had not gone far wher atdi
policeman stopped him and said : diw
" 'Come , now , but you must let up or w
this. '
" 'S o , ' drawled my friend as h
looked Bobby up and down.
" 'Yes , you'd better get off. '
" 'But why shouMl I , ye knaw ? '
" 'Because you are making yourself i
hobject of ridicule and ridicule is next
to misdemeanor. '
" 'If I am a hobject of ridicule then
what do you say of that thing ? ' asked
my friend as he pointed to a dude
ihead of him.
" 'That ? Why , he's no hobject oj
ridicule. ' ,
" 'What is he a hobject of ? '
' 'He's a hobject of the son of a lord
md worth 20,000 a year , and if yor !
lon't'get hoff the street In five minuted
ny hobject will be to take you in. ' "
Amen ! Amen !
"The day isn't far distant when the
nan in the flying machine will look > A
town upon the automobilist , " said the
jrophetlc soal. ' i
"And let us hope , too , " replied the L
veary pedestrian , "that he'll fall dowu
in him. " Philadelphia Press.
Now They Don't Speak.
Bffie Yes , Charlie asked me to b
Js valentlse.
Olive Indeed ! Why , I thought
'comics" had gone out of fashion.
liUadelphia Bulletin.
It is easier to talk like a fool than
IB not to be on * .
Backache is a 'forerunner and
one of the most common symp
toms of kidney trouble and
womb displacement.
READ " BOLUAN'S EXPERIENCE.
" Sor.i- time ago I was in a very
weak condition , my work made me
nervous and my back ached frightfully
all the time , and I had terrible head-
aolics.
" My mother got a bottle of IJydia
E. Piiilcbam's Vegetable Com-
poU7il for me , and it seemed to
strengthen my back and help me at
once , and I did not get so tired as
before. I continued to take it , and it
brought health and strength to me ,
andI want to thank you for the
good it has done * me. " Miss KATE
BOLLMA.X , 142nd St. & Wales Ave. ,
New York City. $5030 fr'fcit if original cf
above Istter proving gctriirsencss cannot be produced.
"Lydia E. Pinkbani's Vegetable
Compound cures because it is
the greatest known remedy for
kidney and womb troubles.
Every woman who is puzzled
about her condition should write
to Mrs. Pinkham at Ijynn , Mass. ,
and tell her all.r .
PUTSAM FADELESS DYES cost
but/10 cents per package.
Ask Yonr Dealer fr.r Allen's Foot Ease ,
A powder to shake into your shoes. It
rests the feet. Cures Corns , Bunions ,
Swollen , Sore , Hot , Callous , Aching ,
Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails.
Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight
shoes easy. Sold by nil druggists and
shoo stores. 25c. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmstcd. Lc Rojr. N. Y.
When you see any one get mad.
doesn't iblead you to vow you will
never lose your temppr ?
Very soon after a boy has finished
suiting his teeth , he begins to use
the dub ever his mother that If she
3oescl't yield to his wishes , he will
iei7e home , and instead of telling
3im to leave , she weakly submits to
jis tyranny. AD Atchison boy. tl-e
neighbors say , has everything his
wn way. "If you don't do it , " be
will say , "I will leave home. " If he
eft , he would soon be back , and be
noie appreciative of his parents , but
iis mother is unwilling to face the
rdeal of a separation. The boy who
ihreateiis to leave home is a greater
/rant than the sixteen year-old
princess , but mothers do not com n
jlaio of suns and no one ever Sods it
mt. ij
;
Feels Younger and Stronger.
Festus , Mo. , May 4. Mr. January
5. Lilly , a highly respected old gen-
leman , aged 70 , and whose home is in
Festus , says :
"For many years I was failing in
lealth. My kidneys were weak and
fave me no end of trouble. I had pains
n my back and hips so bad that I
ould ( not sit up straight without
racing my back , and could not sit only
few minutes in any one position.
"I had touget up during every night
'ery frequently to relieve myself.
"Our doctor said I had Kidney and
Jiadder Inflammation. I have suffered
'or over five years in this way , always
verse at night
"I could get no relief and was get- ,
Inu worse till I used Dodd's Kidney '
'ills.
" After I had used a few boxes of O
his remedy I felt stronger and better
han I have for years and years. My p
.
tains all left me and I can rest and g
leep.
"Every old man or woman who feels
B I felt should use Dodd's Kidney f : '
Mils and I nm sure they will not be
Disappointed. They brought me out
rondorfulN. " n :
hi
hiZi
Zi :
Ziei
HJKH eie
There fs no satisfaction keener eiP"
thai } being dry and comfortable P"ai
when out in the hardest storm. aiei
SUkE OF Tfflfr
YOU Y/EAK
'
- ' 5 ci :
ciot
ot
WATERPROOF aiw
1LED CLOTHIN < Bt w
MADE IN BLACK OR YELLOW
_ . . _ BACKED BY OUR OUARAN nc
.l/A. J.TOIVER CO. . BO3TON.MA5XUJJI. I b ?
IOHER CANADIAN Ctt.UMITEIUOmTD.CAHi
. . .
A. - L O UR T"K. . At . * fc A th
It he wl3 not aupply you
tor our frt catalogue of roento and hata. I thw
COca
Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever ;
. T. TEUrX GOUKATJD'8 ORIENTAL *
CKEAU , UU MAGICAL BEACTIFXJEK.
Retnores Tan , Pimples , Freckle * A
Moth Patches , Hash , and Skin
dltaies , and every blemish on ca
stood the teat of 61
rears , md Is to
harmless we lasts It
to be rare H Is prop
erly made. .Accepl
no counterfeit of
dmil&r name. Dr. U
A. S yre cold to i\
lady of the haat-ioti CO
( ap fent"Aayoi |
ladle * will ne them , Cll
I recommend "Gour-
aud' Cream' as U ) th
lent harmful of aJI thte
the EUa prepara te
tion * " For sale M
ne
_ Po ii n la tbe U. & , Canada * and Enroj
T. HOFKOT. Prop * . Tt OrMt JOBW ft , K.T.
FROM A "PROBLEM" NOVEL.
Scene in the Conservatory Torn Be
twixt Love and Duty.
A step Tvas heard upon the onyx floor
Df the palace.
"Sh-h ! me hoosban' ees comeeng ! "
tvhispered lovely Lady Sorrentinia de
Lake View , struggling -weakly in the
fiery arms of Lord Clairmount de Mon-
leiville.
"I love you ! I love you ! " burnlngly
hissed Clairmount , the heir to Oakdale
bullions , according to the Pittsburg Dis
patch. ' *
Plis curly hair waved about his fair
head like a shimmering halo wrought
of silken starbeams.
The woman stood , trembling , beauti
fully , like a frightened doe at the edge1
of the forest.
"Ting-tank , ting-tank , ting-tank ! " re-
moiselessly purled the little clock in
the coaservatorj" the timepiece of the
flDwerets.
"Ah , Cleermint , Gleennint ! " came the
rich i French -whisper , "you know not
what ' you do. I in dangire am ! '
She thought of her drunken husband ,
who at this moment might be leaving
the ' ballroom if , indeed , he were not
uancing I a minuet with that coarsa En
glish | girl , whom she hated. Every del
icate j fiber in the woman's body revolt
ed at the thought of her husband pay
ing attentions to that violet-eyed minx ,
while she would she flee -with this
tKautiful boy to his villa overlooking
the | Adriatic ? A thousand temptation" ,
a thousand wrongs , the endless and un
happy vistas of her past shot throug'i
her mind in the twinkling of a start.
She had preserved her beauty through
.
It all. What a preservation ! * * * Her
womanhood triumphed.
' Release me , my fren' , " she sa'd. with
calm grandeur , rising to a full height.
"I vill your leetel seester be forever ! "
A step was heard upon the oynx flooii
of the palace.
"It ees me hoosban' , " the woman
murmured , frigid with terror.
Lord Clairmount released her hastily.
His face , which the woman saw , was
as white as moonbars are.
"I fear nomortal man ! " he hissed ,
huskily fc , remembering his military trainIng -
.
Ing even in that dire extremity.
The step was heard once more.
"Ah , he vill lash me , vit hees glove- !
the woman exclaimed In a paroxysm ol
terror.
Lord Clairmount reached the window
safely. "Mind you , " he exclaimed , feel
ing in his pocket for a sword , * 'I flee
from no man , but absent myself thus
coolly lest the 'magazines of clever
ness' should hear of this ! "
With these tremendous words he
sprung through the window , taking the
casement with him.
The woman stocd alone.
A step was heard upon the onyx flori
bf the palace ? .
THE UNITED STATES IS. "
< 9
'
"The United States is , " or "the United -
'
ted States are. "
For years the contest has waged as
to whether the third person singulai
present indicative of the verb "to be"
should be used in connection with the
noun "United States , " or whether tht
proper form is not that of the present
indicative plural of the same verb.
The battle of the grammarians haj
not been without interest to the genera !
public ; but now they may lay asidt
their arms and enjoy a truce , for th !
Committee on Revision of Laws has , in
reviewing the Federal statutes , decided
that "the United States is. " The singu .
lar present of the verb "to be" will
therefore , be used in the forthcoming
edition of the revised statutes , an < J .
from the legal viewpoint "the Unitet )
States are" will cease to exist.
This change will , we take it , meel
tvith the approval of the people at
arge. There is something sublimely ex
ressive in the phrase "the United
States is , " that cannot fail to be pleas
ing to a proud and patriotic people.
'The United States is , " no matter hoti
r ] under what circumstances tb <
jhrase may be used , is suggestive , E
prompting : the query , "The United
States is what ? "
To endeavor to answer this query ii
oo much for any single individual ,
'The United States Is" so much oj
I
iverything that is good to the eye , tin
nind , the purse , and the physical well
eing and mental equilibrium of civili-
ation that to give details would be ar ,
ffldless task. Hence the value of tin
repressive and dignified singular pres
snt. It tells in two letters all that thi
eople " of the republic care to know . *
tnd many things that other people nev.
IE
dreamed of. IEsi ;
"The United States Is ? " siai
Well , "the United States is" jusj teb
vhatever you please or whatever th ( tedi <
itizens please to make It , , or whatevei di
it
ither nations think it is not when thei t
. , , . ai
ire considering making open or secrel
nc
rar against us. This has been demon !
trated so many times and oft in bust re
less , finance , industry , and at th ( be
layonet's point or man-of-war's pro i
hat we of the United States can tak ( S
he singular present indicative , and
pith serene confidence say , whenevei si :
ontroversy involves us : tn
"The United States is it. "
And with that the story is told In *
inguage all the people of the eartl
an understand. Baltimore American hewl
wl
Cigarette Law Valid. fo
The Supreme Court of Iowa has de nep
ided that -the law levying a tax oj
re
300 a year on cigarette dealers
it :
onstitutional and valid. The court de tin
lares virtually that the subterfuge oj be
he "original package" rule is an at
smpt at fraud , and the cigarette bus } gc
ess cannot be thus protected. thi
Do you like a "peculiar" man ? Cf
The old. Invariable virtue of
St. Jacobs Oil
makes It the king cure for
Sprains
and
Price , 25c. and 5Oc.
WESTERN
CANADA
Is iittrnctinc more attention thtn >
any other district in tbe world
"THE GK.VXVRV OP THE WORLD. "
"THE I YX1 > OP SCXRM1XE. "
The XATCKAl , FEEDIXQ CKOUXDS for STOCK
Area undrr Crop In 1902 1,987.C3O Acre * .
Yield hi 1002 117,0 2,754 Bmhelt.
Almnilanco of Wnter ; Fuol. Plnntifnl. Ohenp Bnlld-
lniMiiterinl ; liood Gr.its..for j iinturesKixl Hay.ft fertile
ion. n sufficient rainfall , ami a climate ( ; mn8 a
nssnred nnd Hiieunute oeaton of jtrowth. llomefltend
2 < und4 of ICO Aorc Free , the only charzo b iin Jll )
entry. Clo-e to Churches , Schools , etc. ; Kaihiajstap
nil Routed districts.
Send for Atlns pntl other literature to Superla-
tmident of immigration. Ottawa , Canada , or to
VV.'V. Bennett , P01 New York Life Bldz. , Omah.i.
Neb. , the authorized Canadian Government Agent.
ou with. cartlliczV giving yoc TCdn
IN ITS ADVANCED and chronic
form n cold in tbe head is known as- ,
Nasal Catarrh and is the recognized
source of other diseases. Having stood
thi > test of continued successful use ,
'Ely's Cream Balm is recognized us a
specific for menibranal diseases in the-
uasal passages. It is not drying , doe *
not produce sneezing. Price 50 cents at
druggists or by mail. Ely Brothers , 56-
Warren street. New York.
Give up prejudice and try it.
Messrs. ELY BROS. : I have been
afflicted with catarrh for twenty years.
It made me so weak I thought I had con
sumption. I got one bottle of Ely's Cream
Balm and in three days the discharge
topped. It is the best medicine I hare
used for catarrh.
FRANK E. KINDLESPIRE.
Proberta , Gal.
ANYONE can start pleasant business at
home yielding25 weekly ; no capital required ;
no canvassing or copying letters ; write for par
ticulars , inclose stamp.
AMERICAN SUPPLY Co. , Geneva , N. \ .
Mrs. wjnsJow's SOOTHING SYRUP fr children -
ren teething , softens the gums' ' , reduces imfla-
m ation allays pain cures colic. Price 26c bottio
Notice is served on men that
clever women everywhere are raising
great J sums of money for churches ,
'libraries , club rooms , etc . by1 start-
'ing out on their own hook to earn
the mon = y. There's the husband : >
Why not organize an organization to
help husbands ? If the women cannot
invent scbemes for earning money , or
Siving more , every man will consider
himself a soccial committee to give
hints and suggpst ons.
Speaking of evolution : there is the
princess who was at one time a bare
footed girl , who carried her father's
dinner to him in a pail.
Every bride gets pieces of china
among her wedding gifts that the
groom , couldn't tell the use of to save
his neck.
When a woman has poor luck with
her iake , the family are allowed to-
have all they want.
Answer to man correspondent : A
widow wears as deep mourning for a
bad husband as for igood one. There
may be more stars in a man's crown
if he was good but there will not be
more hem in his wife's mourning
vail.
Ib is the complaint of every mother
if boys that she can't kucp anything
od enough for company in the
house.
IN CONVENTION.
Feachera Learn Something Not in the
Class Books.
A number of joung women attending
teachers' convention at Oklahoma City
tome time ago learned a valuable lesson
hygiene through a sister teacher who
ays : "About a year ago I had my first
ittack of poor health , and it seemed a
errible thing to me. for I had always
een so well and strong. My stomach
listressed me terribly ; it seemed like
was raw , especially after breakfast , ,
ind it would burn and hurt me so I could
tot rest. I was soon convinced that it
vas caused by coffee drinking and at the
equest of a friend I gave up coffee and
iegan to use Postum Coffee.
"The change in
my condition wa *
omething marvelous. I had actually
Iven up teaching because doctors were
mable to help my stomach trouble , but
Ince I quit coffee and used Postum y
roubles hare disappeared and I hav
one to teaching again.
"Some time I
ago attended
a conren-
ion at Oklahoma City and determined to
are Postum at my boarding house-
rhere there were eight other teachers , ,
our of them suffering from coffee sick-
ess. My landlady did
not make tha-
ostum right , -but I showed her how and
all found it delicious. We all drank
the rest of the time we were there and
young ladies in question feh much ,
etter and declared that their heads
rere much dearer for study and tneir
eneral health much improved. I have
ieir names if you care for them. "
tones furnished by Poatmm Co. , Ifcttli
teek , Mich.