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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1921)
THE SEE:' OMAHA', SUNDAY,' AUGUST. 21. 1921. 8 D THE CYCLONE Continued rrom lui Oae. put on the paperperhaps they reached Edna'a heart juat the same The long years of her waiting had not been easy for Edna. Her father Lad never ceased his reviling of Lon and ugly comments upon her foolish ness. As time wetit on his anger be came constant and harassing. At first Edna, living in her own world of happy dreams, heard him indiffer ently. She spent her spcre hours in preparing against her oridal days the daintv things no real girl will give up. She pieced quilts, sewed carpet tags, she saved feathers for her pil lows and bed; with her mother's aid she-accumulated bed and table linen. Gradually her trunk and box were tilled to overflowing. After the third y ir her father in sisted that he would have no more of thisjionsen.se. "Here's Lem Kan tiall ready to marry ye ft the won' He's got 320 acres as good land as there is in the slate of Ioway, anil 1 II give him another quarter when you are married. You take him and git into a home of your, own, I tell you." - "Lem thinks a lot more about that quarter section of laud than he does shout me," Edna retorted "You can give him the land ifyou want to, but I'm not a prize package to go with it." v. He swore at her. "Why ain't you seifeiblc like Milly and Grace? Look at Milly. Ed Beeson has just bought a new farm that makes him a hull section nigh all clear. He'll be a rich man before many years." "Yes. And look at Milly 1 What good does his land do her? He won't evea buy her a washing machine. She's an old woman at 33." Edna re sponded with spirit. - "And what do you think you'll be, slaving for a man without a cent?" ; "Lon will never be as mean to me as Ed is to sister.' He will never let me milk 10 cows." ; In the strength of her sure love and hope it had been easy to defend her lover and herself. Her father's most, savage attacks, the sneers of her sisters, the questioning or pity ing glances of her girl friends, all passed , her by. But as the years slipped away it was only "the. deep, strong current of her love and the steadfastness of heh nature that held Edna up under the hardness of her life. Goodrich, when he found that Edna would not consider Randall, nor accept the attentions of other men' tentatively offered, declared: "Well, if you think I am going to keep on supporting you in idleness tintit Lon Baxter can make enough . to feed two mouths ye're mistaken. Hatty can go and you can do her vork "But, pa," Mrs. Goodrich pleaded anxiously, 'it takes all three of us to feed and clean, after four men, and take care o the milk, and the chick enns, and the garden, to say nothin' 'bout feedin' pigs and calves. We all o,' us Edna does mor'n her share by rights now we all o us work hard the better part o' 14 hours a cav." - Yet, though "Ma Goodrich," by l-er weight and her rheumatism, and her long years of service, was en titled to relief rather than new bur-, V dens, her husband carried out his vthreat. Hetty, who had "helped" since Edna was a mere child, was v dismissed. .,-' Mother and daughter were compelled to the drudgery that eats the vitality out of the most ro bust body and the most hopeful soul. - Lon had no suspicion of what life liad come to be to the overburdened and much harried girl. She had been pretty and popular, had sung in the choir of the Baptist church, and been counted in for all merry makings. He thought of her still as the village hclle, before whom he had trembled. He was etitl wondering how she had ever come to favor the b'g, awkward lout he felt himself to be. - In her own heart of late Edna had found herself fearing that Jon had changed that he no longer wanted her.- It was In despair that she had determined not to answer his last hurried note. She would put him to this test: if he did not speak she would admit that it had all been a blunder and try to gather np her life and- make something of what was vleft, after she had torn her one love out of her heart. Day after 'day psssed with no letter. It was the feverish, hurrying time of harvest and she had few spare moments nor had Lon. she told herself. Yet, with fclowly dying faith, she waited and feared and tried to hope . - One night her father, with a con temptuous snort, tossed her. a letter he had brought from town. " 'Pears like' your man ain't in no hurry about writm these days," he observed, acidly... ', She made no answer. Sh waited entil she was in her owri room, at the end of a scoring day's work. Her lips were white as she slipped the sheet from the envelope and read the words that had conje from Lou's heart. . She fad the letter over again with v quickly responding spirit. But the sparkle and glow of love's first hap py hours had been sorely dimmed by toil and disappointment. Once more, with a new season, the resurrecting force of spring pulsed in Loo's veins. The man who drops seed into freshly stirred depth of Mother Earth cannot help counting on the harvest, however . often or bitterly she has flouted him. This "jrar . the winds were gentle, rain came at the right moment, the sun was tempered. The yield was ,so abundant that the one railroad could not move trains fast enough. That fall Lon Baxter bought and ha'iled lumber. . Through the winter, with his own hands, he built his house. The home for Edna ias ready. Lon rolled a window shade back and forth . with touch of pride as be remembered the green paper shades manipulated by a- string and si ways tipping one way or the other which had hung before the windows iu his childhood. He settled bis overcoat on bis broad shoulders and "sent a last appraising look" about the ,oom. It was square and bare: a -. ; door and window to the east, a dou m be window to the south, through which the April sunshine flooded, gilding the yellow paint to the floor. The" open "butt'ry" door showed clean pine shelves, the new cook stove . ahone with nickel and mica. The big, black.wood rocker, which had been the one luxury of his dugout, stood nearf a -mall . cane-seated rocker. Ed na wojrld sit her to sew. or perhap t by and by she might rock and J. sing lullabys. He laid a caressing hand on it at the thought. He looked at the tiny bedroom its walls covered with the cheapest of paper a trailing vine pattern, with pink and blue flowers. Somehow that had seemed to belong to. Edna. The bedsteead and the dresser were of the tiniest they had given up the wedding at- home to pay for that "suite." "It'll look scrumptious when she gets her little gim-cracks around," he told himself with, a smile. As he moved toward the door he spoke out loud: , "It's convenient and comfortable " he glanced around once more; "and she'll make it beautiful 1 And it'3 all paid ' for there ain't any mortgage, or debt, thank God!'' His thanksgiving was so devout that he took off his cap and paused, a somber light in. the steady eyes.- - "She shau'f. never work herself to death the way mother did," he was , thinking. '"'Slt's been --hard all-fired hard for both of us, waiting, so-Ionc( five years 1 But I'm glad I stuck it out. Now we are beginning right, anyway!" At this moment he was surer thin ever of that. The fixity of the frozen plains was in the sturdy form and strongly blocked face of the man, as he jogged ever the half-thawed road. Yet his thoughts were leaping forward tu multuously. Tomorrow, Edna' would step from the train to his arms.! To morrow, Edna would be his wife! Tomorrow, she would come to the house he had built for her In fhk hour, the past that had been so long and painfully prepared or hinderea the way for tomorrow, counted for nothing. Tomorrow, for the first time, he would begin to live. It was 3 o'clock the next afternoon before Lon and his bride left tii Prewitts and started home, her trunk, sewing machine nd big box in the wagon behind the seat. "As the scattering houses of the village were' left behind, Lon put his arm about Edna and searched her eyes. "At last)" His voice shook with the marvel of it, "Oh, Edna!" "Yes. We are on the way home, at last," she whispered, her eye-lids drooping, to hide tears of joy and of sadness. . .-.,, , ,,, , In this moment, the culmination of so many postponements, of such scathing delays, they had not many words to say. They rode on in si lence, while flocks of silver-flecked clouds sent shadows chasing across the wide naked prairie. To the west ward, a black drift hung on the hori zon. Once Lon remarked that it looked like rain. "If it waits till we get home, we'll not care let it rain." Edna's laugh rippled with -new happiness ," as he laughed with her. Suddenly she lifted her head from his shoulder to glance about and cry, "Why Lon, I didn't know there was a railroad near here!" :- "There isn't." Then he, too, caught the roar and rumbling of a mighty train. He turned quickly: From the west a dense, black cloud was sweeping toward therri with the speed and the scream of a demon train. "Yes, it's a cyclone," he answered Edna's gasping word, while he used both hands to hold his plunging team. He turned again toward the hurtling mass whose ravening breath was already brushing their, faces. . "Get out and lie flat on the ground," he directed. Before she could obey, the cloud veered and roared away to the '.northeast. "It's gone over," his voice was wavery. ' , "Is it gone toward home?" she questioned anxiously. "In that direction," he admitted. "But a vagrant twisten like that never does any harm. It'll .hit the ground somewhere, or peter out in thin air" Lon drove mprt rapidly after this. He pointed out the Prossers' house as thty passed a dim light within. ' "I must go and see Molly soon," f)dna said. "I feel as if I knew her already andrthe baby, too." At last the team swung into a swifter trot of their own accord. "We are almost there," Baxter spoke tensely. He had felt all the time that he should not be sure this was bis own Edna the woman of his hopes and desire until she had crossed the threshold of their home, until he had heard her first words of understanding and appreciation. Edna, looking 'ahead eagerly through veiling twilight, made out the bulk of the barn. Then Loi drew up the horses so, sharply 'that she was almost pitched out of her sea. Dropping the reins, with an in articulate sound that made her heart stop beating, he leaped from the wagon and ran on ahead. After a confused, frightened moment, she climbed down and ran after him. She stumbled over a board; her feet tripptd on scattered brick. She stopped beside her husband, before a jumbled heap, above which a wavering, , broken column was silhouetted 'against the sky. "Oh, Lon, ' she breathed, ; 'the house where is it?" r "There!" He thrust out a clenched fist. "There! The cyclone the cy clonethe house is gone! Our home I PICES CAUSE (MANY DISEASES Experience trove heme-i gore tttm. ud Surgery i terous. Ne matte t without ItNaHl o i Experience prove hsme-remsdies do est is nana m tia- t yao nn tried i ) Man haTayoor rUesjCvel!V.sstSergery Ke knlft; M tikiny M "rod hot" iron: Be Chloroform are goaeral enaettietie By DaL MeCUtAB VS JU1J4 Sermra-Uk Treatmcat ta r.or trn t.OOO am. what umu errr mmi mti Br. MtCIaary Muds hart la thta ei. We do Bet liMitoiotoitcBueBVkia MO hit lone Inibto- tion. A?oo wonting farther IcfomstTae oay rit, u..Geasaawe!th Kaitoeal, Goe C tj KoHeeol. Colombia .otioui. Homo toot, -., Coatral E :hsaao Kadtael, tad Trod; J Ksdooal. rTn'.-o tad j ft fVes toofe liB-'rf tt ie nrtd v fim taiHv tr.i aornsfitnfjft n.1.I.... ClUilnm I anticwv aauiifiiutu iargoo IftotNoMM la ojw Wortd Troatiac Woetal Hiooaoa botuoholir. 10C4 PMto KANSAS CITY, M. , T Ladies in Waiting. is goncl" The- words were ' jerked out mechanically, from an upheaval too deep for expression. - :- They stood together before the ruins of their house, stunned, frozen by the , catastrophe. At last Lon spoke again: "It is the hand o' God. The hand o' God has struck us, like it did my folks! Five years gone it's the end!" Despair, cold, blank' despair had shut down upon his soul. Edna did not speak. All. the btrain, all the dullness, all the suffer ing of the years seemed lumped upon her heart. In that moment the last trace of sweet girlishness died in her face. But she was here, beside her man. His salvation was m her hands. The rich womanhood of the pioneer mothers of our race blossomed into fullness. "No, Lon," she spoke quietly and she reached up and laid protecting arms about his . stiffened shoulders. "No, dear,: it is not the end! It. is only the beginning the right begin ning together." - , ; A sob tore up .through the man's body. He dropped his head .to her breast. He gave himself to the com fort of her touch, of her Hps, as they murmured broken words of love, as they kissed his tear-wet checks. "That's right," he whispered hoarse ly. "That's right! I have heen wrong all the time. Ednat Oh, Edna, can you ever forgive me?" Presently, in the humility of one who has been chastened into recogni tion of his own jiniteness, he went on: t. "Tomorrow I will go to the bank and ask for a loan enough to build another house." "No, you won't, Lonl" Edna slipped a hand into his and drew him away from the wreck, across the rough ground, until they reached a dimly outlined block at , the rear. They paused before the blackness that marked an open door, and Edna finished: "We will not mortgage our place now, Lon. I've always wanted to live in this dugout, you know. And now I'm going to have my wish. We will just be contented here together until you get another crop and can build again." Lon Baxter straightened up. The revulsion came: ' "And that will be this year!" he cried, the strength and courage of youth and love which Fate cannot conquer, thrilling through the words. "Working together like we ought to have Been doing al! the time we'll beat this country yet! We'll build another house next fall, sure." CopTlght: 192): By Hose .1 Ellerbo.) AMUSEMENTS. How Yeast Vitamon Tablets Put on Firm Flesh , InertaM Yur. Energy, and Beautify th Complexion Easy and Economical to Take Results Quick Thin or run-down-folks will find this simple test well worth trying-: First weigh roufsetf and measure yourslf. Nert take' VITAMON two tablets with every meal. Then weigh nd measure yourselt again exh week and continue, taking V7TAMOX regularly until you are bust. f"'r I Am' . tOC f f V ' J7!S wkur-1 .-'' 2! J own story. A two weeks' test will surprise you. . ' IMPORTANT! "While "the amasing health-building value of VITAMON ban been clearly and positively demonstrated in cases of lack of energy, nerioas troubles, anaemia; Indigestion, constipation, skio eruptions, poor complexion and a generally weakened physical and mental condition, it should not be used by anyone who OBJECTS to having their weight increased to normal. Be sure to remember the name VI-TA-MON the original and genuine yeast-tablet there la nothing else like It. At all good drugglsta, suchaa Sherman & McC'onnell, Adams-Haight, Alexander Jacobs, J. L. Brandeis, Burgesa-Xash, Hayden Bros. VI-TA-MON Denver Honors Buffalo Bill With Museum Rustic Building Atop Mount Lookout to Display Trophies Of Indian Fighter Near ing Completion. Denver, Aug. 20. The rustic mu seum building atop Mount Lookout, erected for the purpose of display ing the famous .trophies of Buffalo Bill (C6l. William F. Cody), 'is near ir.g completion, and ,. the structure, which will be. called "Pahaska Te pee," is one of the finest in the Reeky mountains.' , The memq.rial museum is close to the grave of the late "Wild West" idol and has been built "in the rough." Giant Lodgepole. Giant lodgepole .pines from the slopes of Mount Evans nearby form the foundation and principal support of the big structure. Not a piece of planed lumber cad ,be found in the building. Carpenters employed axes almost exclusively in building the tepee. Oregon redwood shingles, split by hand,' cover the rough ex terior of logs. The building is 130 feet long and :38 feet in width. The ground floor contains a large reception room, with one of the most magnificent and rugged fireplaces to lie found in any . structure in' the . mountains of the west. Remarkable View. The room that will be used for the exhibition of Buffalo Bill relics is lo cnted at one end of the structure, on the ground floor. . A balcony surrounds the reception room,, and the building ha3 a num ber of artistic porches, the finest of which is a large veranda at the front. From this: veranda a remarkable view of the surrounding mountaians and plains below may be had, with the city of Denver within the range. The memorial was .built by the city - of Denver, and the museum room will ' be presided over by "Johnny' Baker, foster son of the late Buffalo Bill. . The smallest species of women is found in Lapland. They average four feet nine inches in height. ADVERTISEMKNT satisfied with your gain in weight and energy. VITAMON contains highly . concentrated yetst-vitamines a well as, the two other. -still more important vitminea (Fat soluble A and Water soluble C all or which Science says you must have to bo strong, well and fully devel oped. It Is now being used by thousands who appreciate Its convenience, economy and quick results. By-increasing the nour ishing power of what you eat. VITAMON' supplies Just what your body needs .to , feed the shrunken tissues, strengthen in ternal organs, clear the skirt and renew shattered nerve force without upsetting the stomach or causing gas. Pimples, bolls and skin eruptions seem to van ish as if by maeic and the com plexion becomes radiantly clear and beautiful. Bat it Is not only a question of how much better you look and feek or what your friends say and think the scales and tape measure will tell their li frtHmlf Guru toes' te set firm Flna mti bcrrta Escrty vim Tokos WHk Ettty Mail or Nasay lick. Standing on My Rights By JAMES J. MONTAGUE , j ' - - I; once read somewhere I think it must have been in the Bible that all human beings have certain in alienable rights, among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of hap piness. ' - From that time forth T insisted on getting them, and I am forced to admit that this insistance has got me into a lot of trouble. Still, I am doing fairly well. I still have life. I occasionally have liberty, and I continue day by day the pursuit of happiness, although up to date I have not noticeably gained on it. . Of the rights I have spoken of, liberty is the most difficult to obtain-continuously that is. It ' is particularly difficult to ob tain in the state ci Connecticut, where I recently went, no other place to go occurring to me at the moment I started. All went well enough till I reached what was probably a village a little after dark, and was stopped by an elderly man with a kind face and a blue coat, who wanted to know what was the matter with me. 1 assured " him that as far as I knew, there was nothing the.matter with me and inquired if he. asked the question because he was a physi cian or a quarantine, officer of some thing. He said he was neither ' of these things, adding that his question was inspired by the fact that I didn't have the right kind of lights on my car. - . T then asked' why. he didn't in quire what was the matter with the lights and added that in default of this question by him I would ask it. "What is the matter with the lights?" I said. - "They ain't regulation," he said. AI ERTIf EME.NT Reduce Your Fat Without Dieting This is turning , an old phraoe face about, but . modern methods of reducing fat nave made this revision possible. If you are overfat and also averse to physical exertion during- this warm weather, ' and likewise iond of the table and still want to reduce your flesh sev entl pounds, do this: Go to your drug: eSt or write the Marmola Co., 4612 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich.) and give him (or send them) one dollar. For this modest amount of money the druggist will put you in the way of satisfying your am pitlon for a nice, trim, slim figure, with out fear or harm even on the hottest sum mer days. He will hand you a full-sued package of, Marmola Prescription Tablets (compounded in accordance with the fa--mous Marmola Prescription), one of which you must take after each meal and at bed time until you beign to lose your fat at the rat of two. three or four pounds a week. That is all. Just go on eating what you like, leave exercising to the athletes, but take your little tablet faithfully and without a doubt that flabby flesh will quickly take unto itself wings, leaving be hind it your natural self, neatly clothed in firm flesh and trim muscles, -; .. v. A "CAREER in a professional field that ia uncrowded, re munerative, legitimate and ethi cal is open to men and women. For particulars write for booklet. The First Institute of Podiatry , 213 West 125th St. ' New York City ADVKKTISKME.NT Gallstones Dr. F. G. Paddock, a physician of Kansas City. Mo., is giving away Free, -an illus trated book that tells how hundreds . of people . have obtained wonderful . results from a simple home method of treatment in cases of Inflammation and catarrh of the Gall Bladder and Bile Ducts as asso ciated with Gallstones. Just send name to Dr. E. E. Paddock, Boa OB-201, Kansas City, Mo. .. . IF job ore aonoas, dooaosdsnt, wosk, rati down, thraoorh exeooo or other eoosoo, wo wont to tooil oo ear book which toll ebeat SEXTOHlQUt. a restorative roooodr that wul coot foe nothioa If yea era aol earod or boaesta). Ever? saoa aoodiof a tonic to oisfmoi ponooal weokasos, etc., teaald got this froo book at ones. CUMBEXLAND CHEMICAL C0MFANT : MO Berry Block, NashviU. Tonn. ftffiNXWMEN i - ! "All right,"' I said, ""thanks" for the information." ' ' 1 "That ain't the pint," be told me. ''You gottai get out. You're under arrest." ' "For what?" "Fer not bavin' regulation lights." "Will I be -fined or something?" "I ain't the one to answer that." "Who is?" - "Thejedge." "Where is the jedge?" "He's in prayer meetin' right now." "Would you "mind calling him out and asking him .to. fine' me and let me go?". - "I wouldn't call the jedge out of prayer meetin' for you . or 10 like ye."' ' "When do you think he will come out?" "Can't tell. He jest went in. Some times they last three-quarters of an hour and sometimes an hour and a half, according to how - interesting the experiences is." - "But I can't wait here an hour and a half." ; "Ye can't heyi" "No I can't." "Why can't ye?". '. . "Because I am in a hurry, and it's getting late, and I don't like this place." "What ye got agin' the place?" "Well it's dirty, and the streets How I I Won Lost Dempsey sayi, Nux&ted Iron used by him as part of his training was in his opinion an important factor of his phenomenal victory over Carpentier as he believes it materi ally helped to give him that mighty power to withstand Carpentier's hardest hits and that it also helped to put added punch behind hit own blows. In the grest fight Carpentier lilt Dempsey i believe it was an im tv ith swift powerful blows that had the speed portant factor in help- of run Are. The yellinr mob saw him land his famous right on Dempsey'i jaw, yet Dempsey never flinched but relentlessly he tore after the Frenchman with his old rip- pins; tearing, merciless power, landing ter rific punches on head, body and jaw until Carpentier quickly weakened and . then another powerful punch and again Dempsey showed himself to be the superman of the age the greatest Champion the world bat ever known. The London Dally Mail, of July 4th, quotes Carpentier as saying "Dempsey is the most! powerful man I have ever met in the ring. He is incredibly strong.- To hit him It like hitting a mountain. To take his punches Is like feeling the wallop of tn avalanche. If I were asked w hat lead ta my defeat, I would say the two tremendous blows Dempsey landed on the nape of my neck. I was not the same after that" ' Dempsey isyt. "I feci I won through greater power, endurance, fighting skill and strategy. 1 took Ctrpentier't hardest blows on ray chin and while they knocked me back they did not dafe me in the least. I am sure Carpentier ' ha, not the endurance to stand the hard blows that I can stand, neither has he the strength to deliver them. I understand his methods of training are entirely 'different from mine. While 1 believe in scientific box ing still I never lose light of the Important fact that other things being equal it it the man who has the greatest strength, power and endurance that it going to win. In build ing up these three most important things there l nothing like Ailing youf blood with good old strength-giving Iron. In preparing for my great fight with Wlltand I used Nuvsted Iron at part of my training, and I felt that It was such benefit to me that after wards I used It, whenever I felt I wat not quite up to the mark, to help restore my ttrength. energy and Tigor: and when I commenced training for my fight with Carpentier, the supreme test of my life l again took Nutated Iron and LjMiT)Mii PIANOS TUNED AND REPAIRED A. HOSPE CO. All Work Guaranteed 1S13 Deuglaa St. Tel. Doug. 8588 flHIPfle By CHARLES DANA GIBSON. Copyrltht, Lira Publishing- Co. Published by arrangement with Life. are muddwy, and I don't like the company here." , "Meanin' me?" . "I said the company." . "Perhaps you'd ruther wait some where else?" . "I would, a lot rather." . . "All right, come along with nie." I went along with him. Wc walked side by side, chatting pleas antly about "jedges" and . prayer meetings till we came to a small square brick building with bars on the windows. "Ugly little shack that," I com mented. "What is it?" "Calaboose," said my companion. "Anybody in it?" . "Only a couple o tramps as yit." "Expecting more?" "Yep." . "Who?" - "You." So I was locked up. The "jedge" when he came out at the end of wht must have been a most interest ing meeting said. I shouldn't have been locked up and fined me $10. I told him my rights had been violated and he agreed with me. I said I would sue the city, but he said that couldn't be done. I would have to sue the constable who arrested me. "Has he got any money or prop erty or anything?" I asked. "On the contrary he owes every body in town and has five or six judgments for false arrest against him already." So I didn't get my rights after all. Copyright, 1921, by tha Bell Syndicate, Inc. And How Told By Dempsey and Carpentier ingme to win soeasily 'my great victory and I would advise people who are in a weakened condition to try this wonderful strength and blood builder." When man to strong and physically tt as Dempsey uses N'uxated Iron, how much more important It It that thousands and thousands ofothera who so greatly lack physical strength, power and endurance. should avail , them selves of it benefits. Nutated Iron not only contains strengthening organic iron for the purpose ef enriching i the blood but it also j contains the principal chemical constituent. of active living nerve force in a form which most nearly resembles that in the brain and nerve cells ef man so that Unrated Iron may be said to be both a blood and I Bene food. If through werrr. over work, constant ner- JACK KEARNS Manager for Dempsey vout ttreln. grief er too much excitement your blend has become Impoverished and your nerve force exhausted, you will find that a short course ef Nutated Iron will often pro duce most sprprlting results. It has been used and highly endorsed by former t'nlted States Senators. Members of Congrats, Judges of of t'nited States Courts and many prominent people; even Rome having highly endorsed Its use. It is now being used by over 4,000,000 I people annually Fistula - A mild system ef Rectal Diseases in t i i eration. No Chloroform, Ether or othen general anesthetic ssool. c" urntl ia erery case accepted for treatment, and no money Is to ho paid eatM ved. Write for book ea Roetat Diseases, with names and testimonials of tnoro that t.OOt prominent people who have bwoa permanently eured. ... TAMY aaajsriuas, Peters 5 Essentials of Courtship Defined In London Court They're Love Letters, Pres cuts, Lover-Like Outings, Introduction to Regpeo th e .Families and King. London, Aug. 20. Five essentials of courtship were laid down by coun sel in Mr, justice Lush's court. Mr. S. J. I'. Merlin was addressing the jury for Mr. William Cuthbert Cromwell, motor engineer's clerk, of Brightonroad, -Redhilll, who was sued by Mrs. Winifred Kate Coales, a war widow with two children, for ' alleged breach of promise. - - " In the correspondence, counsel pointed out, there was nothing even approaching what was usually called a love letter, and not a single letter which contained a stronger term than "Yours very sincerely." Not Even a Movie. There was no engagement rinp, and the young man took the widow to no theaters not even to a pic ture theater. There were five es sentials in the conduct of engaged persons to each other which here were totally absent. Mr. Merlin gave the first three love letters, en gagement ring and the introduction to the respective families. The judge then interjected: "I have exhausted them when I think of those three. What are thc-'others?. Counsel said the others were the giving of pres ents and the taking of lover-like ex peditions and outings. "Look back at your own engage ments,; ladies and gentlemen," he urged. ; (There were two women on the jury.) ' . f , "Can ' you say," he asked, "that during that period any oiie of the five was absent?" The jury merely smiled. ' ' ' Sums 'Em Up. The judge, summing upj said he did 'iiot know what the jury, thought of a young; woman who liad been married 16 or, 17 years and had two children who1 within 10 days of hear ing of .the -death of her husband while serving -his country made an agreement to niarry .someone else. Nor did he know; what . the jury thought of the woman if her story was true, allowing a young man to come to her. while her husband was alive and talk about his being will ing to marry her if she were free. After an hur's retirement the jury intimated that they found for the woman, but awarded no damages. The judge: "You must give a farthing; that is the nearest to noth ing that I can. think, of." The House That Stood Back In which a woman's scream stops a man who had start ed out with a wild resolve to paint the town red. A fascinating Blue Ribbon story by A. C. Andrews. Next Sunday Jack Dempsey Super Man of the Age Jack Kearns, Dempsey' Mana ger, says: "Knowing what Nux ated Iron had done for Dempsey in the Willard fight I strongly in sisted that he use this wonderful strength ar.d blood builder as a part of his training for the fight with Carpentier, and I believe it v.as an important factor in build ing up Dempsev'8 superhuman strength, power and endurance w hich were such Important fac tors In winning his easy victory. MltrfCTltas Vnn; Prom tro shove srHe.'o tho reo"ir irnnt not Infer tfcot Kaxa'rd iron on'1 make a giant In strength or s world'n hempine cnt pf the ovroo won: but NinM Iron will rrrot'y Inmooo ttio rl bloml corcutclM onit hi so or lr eraoso your otrenaih, power ud eodortno, and oumly Inrreoood none fmr to the iturvlnf nro cells. on t on trr Nnioted Iron en our aboohito fuirontoe thot If ft does not InerooM yonr streofth. power ami endornpo In two wak'stoo and rWe Joo perfectly ortlsfortory resnlts our ntonej Jill re refunded. Bowsro of substitutes. Look far the word "NuTOtod" ofl over? paebitgo. Nototf Iron for the blood ond cenos Is oold by aJ oruteisro. ilTTs (ITlfiTiTIH 0 Pay When Cured troatmeat that cures PUs, r'tstula aae olaot a short time, without a severe snreieel oov Trust B). (Boa Bldf.) -i . i 3 -e, . ,