Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 01, 1913, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEE: OMAHA. TITFRSDAY, MAY 1, 1M.1
The (ee' rre y aa z, i re p),a
Oh! It's Great
ivr-irr's, -gT n- veu..Aw .. Mill r ) OVEMEA
the came ' --gf H If Vho in thf E DEA'E .o v ,($ V "T vmt t- v w . .
D(1 n. I Nli.ni no., . - i-r ta , F l! II I L I "WILLIE A (VXl i . I L ". , ' I '
' WHEUE IT'S r AU TKVT RACKET' ' ' 0p NOISF TME II Vt? fc'lS
' Wfi J . J "7,l STAMD
Letter to
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX
To a Young Bride:
Your letter, full of happiness and
homeyness, was a delight to read.
It Is good to know you arc so deeply
Interested In your
home; and that you
have started your
married life with
such an Ideal In
stead of wasting
the first year In a
hotel or boarding
house, or on the
dangerous Bohe
mian style of living,
so often popular
with young mar
ried women.
Home Is my Idea
.of the ante-room
to' heaven, and
should be patterned
on that plan. You
say your homo Is tiny, but that Is all
the better (or a beginning.
There Is so much to think about In
home making, and If you learn to have
perfect details and to keep perfect order
In a small homo. It will become a simple
matter for you to carry out the same
system when your abode enlarges.
You are ho pleasing to look upon that
It will be like a jewel In a box, If you
mako your little house pretty In every
department.
I know you have great tasto In colors,
and that everywhere your curtains ami
rugs and walls nnd draporles will bo
beautiful In tone, and there will bo no'
clashing or glaring colors.
And I can Imagine the happiness of
your husband when he comes home and
sees you tastefully garbed waiting him
in your pretty room.
Remember the need of a man for a
room all his own. Arrange such space
for him even at the sacrifice of some
luxuries you might enjoy otherwise
An English woman writing about
American homes Justly criticised thorn
for this very lack; and the correspond
ing lack In the heart of tho wife, who
did not realize tho fact that every .nan
on earth wanted a room which was all
his own. One Into which no other per
son entered unless Invited as a guest.
One where he could sit quite u'ndlsturbtd
and be alone If the mood for solitude or
a quiet smoke seized him.
And be auro If such a mood seize your
man, to leave him to its enjoymont; und
do not Imagine he has ceased to love
you, because he may like to read nts
paper there or smoke his cigar or take a
nap, maybe, alone by himself.
I hope your little domain has a pleasant
kitchen and maids' room.
If this part of tho house has been
neglected by the architect, try to brighten
it as much as possible In your treatm?nt
of It. For when you think ot the Im
portant part a good domestic plays In a
home, It should seem an Important thing
to give her as much comfort and con
venience as possible, and to give her
Men Welcome
Mother's Friend
A Duty that Every Man Owes to Thoso
who Perpetuate the Race.
It is just as Important that men should
know of progressive methods in advance of
motherhood. The suffering, pain and dis
tress Incident to child-bearing can be easily
avoided by hiring at hand a bottle of
QJotfcir'a Friend.
This la a wonderful, penetrating, exter
nal application that relieves all tenaton
upon the musteles and enables them to expand
without tht painful strain upon the Hp;
tnents. Thus there la avoided all those nrr
tous spells j the tendency to nausea or morn
ing sickness Is counteracted, and a bright,
sunny, happy disposition Is preserved that
reflects wonderfully upon the character and
temperament of the little one soon to open
Its eyes In bewilderment at the joy ot bis
arrival. You can obtain a bottle of
"Mother's Wend" at any drug store at
1.00, and It will be the best dollar's worth
you ever obtained. It preserves the moth
er's health, enables her to make a quick
and complete recovery, and thus with re
newed atreogth she will eagerly devote
herself to the care and attention which
mean so much to the welfare of the child.
Write to the nradfleld Ilegulator Co., 120
Jjunar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., for their valu
able and instructive book ot guidance Tor
expectant mothers. Get & bottle ot lloth
r s Friend to-day.
to Be Married
a Bride
pretty and attractive things to please her
rye and train her taste to an understand
ing of beauty.
If your husband belongs to a club make
tho hours of his going and coming jh
pleasant as he was accustomed to find
them when a bachelor. Before ho mar
ried you, quite possibly he guvo up many
club evenings to be with you; but now
that ho lias you all the time. It Is quite
natural ho should want to bo with Ins
men friends occasionally.
Do not play tho martyr or act the rolo
of the neglected wife.
It would be well If you Jolnod a club
of your own; and If you are musical It
would bo wise to arrange a little evening
of music at home the night ho goes to his
club or lodge.
Nothing keeps a man more Intercsl'-d
in a woman that the knowledgo that she
can Interest herself, and that she can
call about her an agreeable circle Instead
of sitting at homo moping.
Tako up somo study early In your mar
ried life.
Your husband Is n wide-awake man anil
In touch with the outer world, and you
must keep abreast of tho times.
Learn i new language or pursue some
linn of reading natural history would be
fxcellent for when your babies come
fas I hope they will) all you learn In
this mutter will be of Inestlmablo value
to them.
The mother who can begin in the small
years of her boy's life to tell him the
beautiful nnd interesting things about
bird and insect nnd animal life will never
find him wanting to bo a killer of dumb
things.
Such a mother was startled recently by
having her llttlo boy say, "Mother, I
want to go hunting birds." Then ne
added, "Please buy mo a camera; I want
to hunt with a camera.:, and take pic
tures of my little friends myself."
Watch yourself after the honeymoon
wanes", to see that you do not grow care
less In regard to your personal appear
ance. Some brides fado with the wedding
finery; and lose all Interest In appearing
attractive because they feel they have
attained their goal; they nre married;
and settled; and there Is nothing else to
work for. But to win Is ofttimcs easier
than to keep what we win.
Advice to the Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
Tho (Slrl 1h ItlKlit.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 23 years old
and am keeping company with a young
lady three years my Junior. I love this
young lady nnd my love is reciprocated.
Lately her mother found fault and for
bade her entertaining me, causing us to
meet on corners. I know I will never
care for any other girl and she will never
part from me. , .
I am heartbroken, as the girl now re
fuses to meet me on corners.
it Atvi Lit VV
Go to the girl's mother, Insist on know
ing her objections, and give her every as
surance that your Intentions are honor
able. If your conduct does not meet her
approval, change It.
Do not ask the girl to meet you on
street corners; that would be gratifying
your desire to be with her at the expense
ot her reputation for good sense and
modesty.
Until Were Wronic.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am secretly en
gaged to a girl three years my Junior. I
am 25 years old. I am deeply in love with
her and am sure my love Is reciprocated.
While at a party one evening she called
another young man pet names, such as
"dear" and "darling, oniy in a jone,
which, of course, made me feel bad.
Later I told her I did not like it. She, In
turn, told me that she had only said It In
a joke, which I ought to know. That was
not It, I tola ner u aia noi nouna nice
and If we were openly engaged, waat
would the people think?
She seems to think I am In the wrong,
and when I left her she barely ald good
night to -CHARLE3J V HEELER.
Her nctlor. was not In good taste and
she no doubt feels It and regrets It.
But you have placed her in a wiong
position by making your engagement
secret Let It be known and In future
she will confine all terms of affection to
you.
Not It You Love Htm.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young girl
of 19 years and am deeply in lova with a
gentleman 20 years my senior. This gen
tlemfan calls upon me every evening, and
Is always very affectionate.
I am engaged to this gentleman and
expect to marry him some tlm next
month. Do you thing the difference in
age Is too great? DOLLY.
The difference Is on the right side. If
you were 20 years his enlor I would urge
you not to marry, him, but the years are
so much harder on a woman than on a
man that this difference between your
age and his will grow less every year.
fopyiiRl.t.lMMntNTifittonftl News Service
By ELBERT HUBBARD.
Copyright,1913,
International News Service.
Before tho days of Jamlo Watt all
manufacturing was done In the homes-
The word "wife" means weaver, 'the
woman made the fabrics and she mailt
the clothes.
Man power was
tho only power
known.
The steam en
gine revolutionized
the business of
manufacturing and
transferred tho
factory from the
home to a sepa
rata building.
With tho aid of
tho joint stock
company and In
creased capital
manufacturing be
came a business,
separate and apart
from tho house
hold Industries.
The Increased
demand for food from factory towns sug
gested a hotter quality of forming, and
so horse-power came In to replace hand
power. Farming became a western busi
ness. Instead of the hand-reaper, told of In
poetry and legend, we had the Inventions
of Cyrus MoCormlck and James Oliver.
Maud Mullcr wasn't in it.
Constantly Increasing, from a machine
that roqulred one man to drive and one
to rake off the sheaf to bo bound, we had
a machine that not only cut, but bound,
threshed and bagged at one time.
But horse-power was the motor.
America has 25,000,000 homes. We havo
more horses than any other country In
tho world. We have more horses than
Germany, England, France nnd Spain
combined.
Also, the cost of horses today is higher
than It has ever been before.
Little Bobbie9 s Pa -;- f c?mmu Jf N
Far from the City's Uproar
By WILLIAM F. KIRK
Isn't It grate that we are up In the
country for a few weeks, Bed Ma. It
sems so good to be away from the mar
ot the city & the grocer & the butcner.
I haven't felt so peaceful, sed Ma, since
before I was married. Jest think: how
my dear girl trends will enjoy them
selves when they come here tonlte.
What girl trends, sed Pa. I hoap It
lsent any more of them club wlmmen
that used to pester the life out ot me In
the city.
Well, scd Ma, they arent exactly club
wlmmen like the ones you didn't like.
but It Is a kind of organlzshun, the name
they go by Is The Sisters of Bpring.
Onst every week they meet at some
trend's home In the' country and talk
about the butlcs of nature. It Is my
turn to entertain them finite. Ma sed.
You will find evry one of them a doer i
girl.
Pa's face got kind of long rite away.
You called all of them other old hens
deer girls, Pa sed, & when they came
to the house they looked like, the j
wlmmen that used to ride air the
horses In the old time Circus Parades,
all them Hps A cheek bones, Pa sed, I
suppoaa this will be a case, sed Pa, of
history repeetlng Itself.
Not at all, sed Ma. When ypu see the
Sisters of Spring you will see some reel
tlpes of American luvllness. Some of them
Is so pritty, sed Ma, that their husbands
la all the time Jealus.
Then Pa and me went out to take a
little walk & Pa sed to me. Bobble, I
feer the wurst Yure mothers Is always
a grate descrlber wen she tells about
them club wlmmen, but after they git
to the house. Pa sed, thay at nt ever a
bit like her plans and spe-l-fl-ca-ahuns.
I no what they are going to do, Pa
sed. They are going to como to the
hous and talk all after-noon about
spring's first flowers, Jonquils, daffydlla
and trailing arbutles.
And then Pa sed thay are going to
pitch In the dinner and eet all the -nice
vegetables that I brought borne yester
day to last us all the week. That Is sed
Pa, they wood If I wood let them but I
have a skeem. Heer is 25 cents which
you can use for spending rnuny. I want
you to go rite over to Andy Cook's house
What the World Needs
Most of All
There are three processes In civiliza
tion. One Is to dig, the next Is to carry
and the third Is to manufacture.
Wo havo discarded horse-power In the
mattor of transportation. The steamboat,
the locomotive and tho automobile do
our lugging.
Hut we are still digging by hand, or
with the aid of animal power.
Tho man with the hoe and the slanted
brow Is simply a man who has been un
able to tako advantage of mechanical
power In his business.
All of his vitality, all of his potential
ability to think, goes Into the eternal
labor of digging food out of the ground.
Janiea Watt applied mechanical powet
by the use of steam. Fulton applied the'
principle to water transportation. Steph
enson Invented the locomotive. Har
greaves Invented the spinning Jenny and
prnctlcally solved for us the question of
manufacturing.
But farming is still lagging a hundred
years behind, pulled by man-power and
animal power. -And the Dukhobors plow
with woman poWer,
The farmer cannot hope for redemption
through electricity, because the farmer's
business Is to move around over ft space
of perhaps several miles and he must
carry his fuel on his back, so to speak.
No stationary engine will anower his
purpose.
The first move In the dlreotlon of using
mechanical power on tho farm was when
we ceased to uso horses for thrcanlng
grain.
Tho horse-power, where a dozen horses
were driven round and round on a sweep,
Is something that all of the graybeards
born In the country remember well.
The steam traction engine, which
threshed for a score or more of farmers,
was n great move In the direction of
economy and oo-oporatlon. It did the
work at ono-half the expense that horses
could do It.
However. In the neighborhoods where
coal was scarce and water was not right
at hand, there was a deal of dead lift
an' ask him if he will send me over a
nice big mess of leeks.
So I went over to Mr. Cook's on' got a
big pall full of leeks. The bottom of
them looks like little onions. Wen I got
back to the house all the Sisters of Bpring
was there. I took the pall of leeka
around to the back door and gave them
to Pa. Then I went Into the parlor with
Pa & llssened to them talking.
How buttful is the days Just before
summer sed one of the ladles. Everything
seems for to be a-throb an' pulsing with
life, she sed. The little Jonquils look up
at the blue sky an' seems to revel In
the shear Joy of living, and the trailing
arbutles trails and trails dreamily, send
ing Its sweet fragrance to the stars
above Do you think so? sed Pa. I never
paid much attenshun to spring, Pa sed
excep that I always like April on account
of the Polo grounds opening for the
seeion. I expeok to see Mattle have one
ot his grate years Pa sed.
Do you meen to tell me, sed a other
of the ladys, that you never roam alone
In the forest to sen nachurs carpet I've-
decked . with springs farest .flowers. 1
havent been In the woods since I was a
little boy sed Pa, oxcep during the hunt
ing season.
Then a other lady sed, O my deer sir,
surely you wud be moar n love with
nachur & spring time If you had ever
hurd the little poem I rote, a year ago
for our local paper. It Isnt very long
she sed, so I will reeslte it to you. then
she reeclted:
I sat upon a mossy log,
All springtime spread befoar me
The tender crooning of a frog
Away in yonder marshy bog,
Rose to the heavens o'er me.
The little calf, the little colt
.Frisked In the pastures green
Spring Is the finest time of year
Vs mortals ever seen.
Pa looked kind of sick after the lady
had reeclted her poem & he sed I will
leeve you ladys to yourselfs for a while
till I go and preepare some of our nicest
spring vegetables. My wire will tell you,
Pa sexl, that I 'no- moar about cooking
vegetables as most chefs. That is rite,
sed Ma, he Is a deer, good boy. He does
most of the cooking sometimes & washes
the dishes always.
Pa went out In the kltchun & I had to
ttay tn the front of the house with Ma
Drawn for TheJBeeJby George McManus
and labor In hauling. I have noon two
teams ot horscH working steadily, one
hauling water and one coul. In order to
keep a thresher going.
Wood, as a fuel, Is now practically out
of the question. Coul Is lioavy, cumber
miino and often scarce, (las cannot be
transported, and hns other limitations.
Gasollno Is volatile, Is affected by tem
perature, cannot ho transported In
wooden barrels, has to bo stored under
ground and Increases fire rll(. Besides,
Its cost Is more than double Unit ot
kerosene.
Kerosene olt seems tho best, cheapest,
most easily obtained, most condensed
and most valuable fuel known.
A pint ot kerosene has more potential
power In It than the snmn quantity of
dynamite.
Dynamite has n, wonderful power to
destroy. But a mushroom nan lift Just
as much as the same weight ot dynamite,
provided you give It time. A lichen
growing In the crevice of a rock can split
the rock.
Keroscno Is nature's own fuel. '
Tho business of searching for oil In the,
bowels of the earth, aml pumping it up,
Is practically In Its Infancy. All we have
endeavored to do, so far, Is to bring up
just enough oil to supply our nerds:
The problem yet In transportation Is
to get an engine that will carry Its fuel
on Its buck. Tho smallest quantity ot
fuel In point of bulk and weight Is what
the world demands.
Tho fuel now that gives the quickest
results with the least loss Is kerosene.
The engine that Ignites kerosene In
stantly nnd that liberates Us power so
that It Is used at once tills Is the princi
ple of the oil engine.
The great need Is an oil engine that,
In clean combustion, regulation, dura
bility, light weight and control, will
equal or better the best steam or gas
engines.
And the next need of this country Is
that the government shall at least con
ttol tho supply of crude oil, or control
the price ot nil petroleum products.
and the Sisters of Spring llssenlng to n
lot of talk about spring flowers A little
trouts sprlligliiK out of bropks &. all
kinds of spring stuff. I pretty near went
to sleep but Jest then Pa came to the
door and sed dinner was ready. When
we went In the dinning room thera was a
grate big dish full of boiled leeks In the
mlddel of tho table & a plato for each of
the Bisters of Bpring.
Mercl, sed all of the ladys at onct, what
kind of vegetable Is that? that In leeks
sed Pa, the greatest vegetahle in the
world to cleer up the blood and give one
a butlful complexshun.
I gess the Sisters of Spring thot their
complexshuns was butlful onuf, becaus
they all held up their nozes and walked
out of the dinning room with Ma. Pa &
me alt all the leeks, but urtr h ui.,.
of Spring was gone Ma talked to Pa for
hat a our befoar he could say a wortl.
She would hav scolded him ftVn WnrHA
only tomorrow Is pny day, but anyway
in. aim going to rw eny more leeks in
our hous.
The Misogynist
By C. W. M.
For two longs years I'd labored hard
For Mopeyklng & Co..
And tried aa well as I knew how
To make the business go.
Td asked him often for a raise,
His answer was tho same:
"If you want to make more money
Just try some other game."
Twas then I met the darling girl
I wanted for my wife;
She said she'd glady come to me
And stay with me for life.
Again I went to Moneyklng
And told him what I'd done.
He said, "I'll raise your salary now
From ten to twenty-one.
"The reason why I'm doing this
I hope s plain to you.
For heretofore you've always left
Before your work was through,
But now you've got a wife at home,
You'll not be on the run,
But gladly you will stay right here
Until your work la done."
The Universe is a
Composed Entirely of Vibrations
By GARRETT 1. BERVIHS.
We live In a world, and Indeed In a
universe, composed altogether of vibra
tion. If there weui no vibrations there
would he no sight, no sound, no touch,
no lire, nnn no
matter, for what
we call "matter"
appears to be only
an effect of a par
ticular kind of mo
tion, taking placo
In an Imponderable,
Invisible, untouch
able medium called
"ether."
Tho ether Is
shaken one w a y
and a blazing sun
shines out; It Is
shaken another
way and a solid world comes Into ex
istence. Other vibrations form animals
and plants to Inhabit the world, Still
others dissipate them Into apparent
nothingness. Everything Is tn a continual
flux, passing from form to form, now
visible, now Invisible; now solid, now
liquid, now vaporous; now nothing at all,
as far as we can see.
Made up of vibrations, wo possess,
while tho atomla combinations of which
Wo nre formed persist, the power to per
colve yet other vibrations, which tell us
all we know of the world and the uni
verse about us.
Out of the midst of this universal
quiver science succeeds In selecting cer
tain vibrations, and measuring them.
Vibrations from the sun, falling upon the
face of nature, come back reflected from
a thousand different substances In a
thousand different colors, tints nnd
shades.
They strike upon a rose, and the rose
sends bank those that undulato at tho
rate of four hundred million-million per
second and produce for us the effect of
the color red. They fall upon a violet,
The Heavens in May
By WILLIAM F. RIGttK.
The day Increases In length almost an
hour during the month, being 13 hours, S2
minutes long on the 1st; 14 hours. 24
minutes on the 1Mb, and 14 hours, CO
minutes on the 31st. The sun rises on
these dates at 6:25, 6:0ft, 4:66, and sets at
7:17. 7:J2, 7:46. It crosses tho meridian
that Is, shows noon on the sun dial at
13:20 or 12:21, standard time, during the
wholo month. O.n the 21st It enters
Gemini or Tho Twins.
Venus Is now morning star and attains
Its greatest brilliancy on the 30th, being
thep more than thirty-six times as bril
liant as a standard star ot the first mag
nitude. Mars and Jupiter nre also morning
stars, Jupiter crossing the meridian on
the 16tli at 4:08, and Mars at 8:1C a, m.
Saturn becomes morning star on the
lath, and, like Mercury, Is too near the
sun to be seen.
The moon Is new on the nth, In first
quarter on the 13th. full on the 20th, and
In last quarter on the 27th. It Is in con
junction with Mars on the 2d and 31st,
with Venus on the 4th, Saturn on the
7th, nnd with Jupiter on the 23d. The
conjunction with Mars on the 2d will be
a very close one, and narrowly miss being
an occultatlon for Omaha.
A rare treat Is In store, the weather
permitting, for those that have
telescope. Op the 2fith tho planet Jupiter
Is scheduled to occult, that Is, to eclipse
an eighth magnitude star. The star will
disappear at 7 15 p. m . and reappear
at 11.67 p. m The disappearance, how
ever, will not be visible In Omaha, a
Jupiter will rise on that day at 10:51 p, m.
HAPPY THO' MARRIED ?
There are unhappy married lives, bnt a lexfe percentajo of 'these Babappy
homes are due to the ilineis ot the wife, mother or daughter. The (aclbi oi
nervousness, the befoed mind, the Ill-temper, the pale and wrinkled face, hollow
and circled eyes, result most often from those disorders peculiar to women. For
the woman to be happy and food-looking she must naturally have good health.
Drein-down feeling's, hysteria, hot-fleshes or constantly returning patns and
aehes are too great a drain upon woman'a vitality and strength. Or. Pieroe'a
Favorite Prescription restore weak and siek women to sound health by reu
latrag and correcting the local disorders which are generally responsible (or tho
above distressing symptoms.
iUs. DiC0Yt. oa reoa'nf pi Jl
Vast Theater
and tho violet sends back those that vlr'
hrato at tho rate ot six hundred million
million per second and produce for us
the effect of tho crlqr blue.
Sound waves vibrating at the rate o:
forty per second glvo us tho Impression
of tho lowest note of the pipe organ.
Vibrating at the rate of 4,000 per second
they produco tho hlgcBt note of the, plo
colo. The soul of music dwells between
those limits. All above or below s, for
us, either silence or mere tiolso.
In a fascinating article In the Cosmopo
litan Magazine for May you will read o
the efforts that Thomas A. Edison la
now making to extend our knowledge ot
vibrations, Mr. Edlaon Is deaf, as far as
ordinary hearing is concerned, bm never
theless lie' bus developed a wonderful
Power of perceiving sounds that escapi
others, and he has becomo so much In
terested In music, through tho develop
ment of the phonograph, that ho la now
enthusiastically at work upon a scliem
for the standardization of which, he be
lieves, will be to place musical vibra
tions, tho result of music, for the first
time, upon a scientific basis.
But even more Interesting for thosi
who love to pepr deep Intu tlie yet un
solved mysteries of nature' Is Mr, Edi
son's plan to catch, and turn Into sounds
perceivable by the human ear, a multi
tude of vibrations which are continually
playing nbout us, but whloli go unnotloed
because our ears am not attuned to their
rat 5 of pulsation.
The world, as he says, must he full of
sounds that wo cannot hear because their
vibrations arc too quick. He purposes
to tame some ot these wild sounds of na
ture, and bring them within the range
of normal hearing.
By running a phonograph at high speed
It may be possible to catch records ot
some ot them, and, then, by running the
records morn slowly through tho repro
ducing machine the vibrations may h"
so reduced In rapidity that they will come
within the limited range of the ear.
Thus Innublble sounds will be rendered
audible, as 'astronomical photographs pic
ture Invlfilbln stars.
Like his dream, a good many years ago,
of rendering the roar of sun spots audible
on the earth by means of a glgantla tele
Phone, this latest Idea ot the great In
ventor Is full of the essentially poetic
Imagination that characterizes all his
work.
It should not be expected, however, that
tho captive sounds that are to Issue from
his mystlo phonograph will dlffor, essen
tially, from tho highest notes that aro
naturally audible to us, because when
their vibrations are reduced to the soma
scale they should produco n similar ef
fect. Still, It Is possible that there will
be evident In these transformed sounds
(me peculiar quality that will differen
tiate them from all others, so that wo
will seem to be listening to melodies as
alien tn our ears as the fabled music of
the spheres.
A concert of sounds caught out ot the
apparently soundless atmosphere might,
Judged by a musician, be as unmelodlous
as the serenado of a band of savages, but
heard issuing from the mouth of a phono
graph whose record has bqen exposed
only to open space It would thrill the
thoughtful hearer with extraordinary
sensations.
But. Just as Mr. IMIson rojolces because
his deafness relieves him from a thou
sand sounds that he does not care ta
hear, so, perhiip, when he has enabled
us to hear what the powers of the air
are saying, we may be glad that nature
shut them away from our ears, for whu
can guess what howling and screaming
and unearthly vociferation there may bs
In the seemingly quiet atmosphere about
usT
I. suffered rreethr for a lumber of years and for the past three
year was to bid that life was a misery to me," writes Has. B. P. Dick
ores, cf DUca, Ohio, Route 4. The doctor toU me I would have te
l-o W a hoplul before I wottkl ever be better, A yes ago this wiater
and spring 1 was won than r before. At each period. 1 suffered like
one In torment. I sin the mother of six children. 1 was o bed fot
Are months that I knew tomathlns must be done, so I wrote to Dr. K. V.
Fierce, telling him as nearly as I could how I suffered. He outlined a
coarse of treatment which I -followed, to the Utter. I took two bottles
of rsroriU rrucrlptkn ' and one of 'OoUen Medical Discovery ' and a
nf ty-cnt bottle ot 'Smart-Weo7 and hare never suffered much siaee,
I with 1 could tU vry safTwIng woman the world orr what a boon
Dr. Pierce' medicine are. There is po use wasting time and monej
doctoring with anything lae or any one else."
The Medical Adviser by R.V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo,
N. Y., an were hosts of delicate question about which
every woman, single .or married oi'ght to know, Sent '4
itamn) to pay lor wrapping and maiunconiy,