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THE YALE EXPOSITOR, THURSDAY. APRIL 6, 1916. ELDERLY WOMEN SAFEGUARDED Tell Others How They Were Canned Safely Through Change of Life. Durand, Wis. "I am tho mother of fourteen children and I owe my life to Lydia E. Pinkham a Vegetable Com pound. When I was 45 and had the Change of Life, a friend recom mended it and it gave me such relief from my bad feel ings that I took several bottles. I am now well and healthy and recom mend your Compound to other ladies." Mrs. Majiy Ridgway, Durand, Wis. A Massaeliusctts'NVoman Writes: Blackstone, Mass. "My troubles were from my age, and I felt awfully sick for three years. I had hot flashes often and frequently suffered from pains. I took Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound and now am well." Mrs. Pierre Cournoyer, Box 2C9, Blackstone, Mass. Such warning symptoms as sense of sufTocation.hot flashes, headaches, back aches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu larities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and dizziness, should be heeded by middle-aged wemen. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has carried many women safely through this crisis. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt ReliefPermanent Cure LAK I LR 5 LITTLE S3 LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta- Ji-1 ble act surely v Carters but gently on L I 1 . fllTTLE 5ton after U IYER PILLS. dinner dis- h tress cure indiyp;tinn 1 improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature M:j HAIR PACKER'S BALSAM firepimition of nifrit t ,1 Hi'lp to Talicto ilandrud. m T7 , a i or neircnng v.oior ana B'firn Beauty toGr.y or l udad Uir Lad of Seven Saves Sister's Life. The presence of mind of Archie Burkett, seven years old, in throwing a piece of carpet over his sister, Laura, fourteen years old, probably saved her life recently when he found her clothes a mass of flames. The girl's injuries were not serious. The boy explained that he did Jast what his mother told him to do in a case like that. Pitts burgh Gazette. ThWi Will Interest Mothr. Mother Cfcir'a Swfet Powder for Children for KeverisTmts, Ilemliirbe, B;il Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and rfjrulate the bowel and ileitroy worms. They break up Colds In J.'4 hours. Thry are so j,lf:iiin t to take chlhlrcn likii them. t'Hfd bv MotlnTd for 2H yeara. All Drupists, 25c. 8.itnie HiEE. Ad dress, Mother tiray Co., Le Hoy, Xs'. V. The cream of society is composed of people who have money but are un able to remember how they got it. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Tellets nre the rijzinnl little liver pills ut up A) years go. Xlicy regulate liver and bowels. Adv. Sometimes it is a man's cowardice that keeps him from getting in bad. Stop That Ache ! Don't worry about a bad back. Get rid of it. Probably your kid neys are out of order. Resume sen sible habits and help tho kidneys. Then, kidney backache will go; also the dizzy spells, lameness, stiff ness, tired feelings, nervousness, rheumatic pains and bladder trou bles. Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Thousands recommend them. A Michigan Case Mm. Chas. Ilar r!fr, ?.10 Mackinaw St., Durand. Mich.. Bays: "I had pain In my loins and over my kidneys. It was very severe If I caught cold, for It was sure to settle In my back and then I could hardly straighten. If I overexerted myself or did any heavy 1 1 f t 1 n e through the day, I felt tired and worn out at nljcht. I used Doan's Kidney mil and they completely cured me." Ct Doan's at Aay Stor. 60c a Bos DOAN'S "rVLIV FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. YOU NEED to aid nature occasionally when your liver is sluggish, your stomach dis ordered or your bowels inactive. Let this safe, mild, dependable remedy regulate these organs and put them in a sound and healthy condition. BEECHAM'S PILLS Un-t SaU oAy Modicl la WarU. U verrwhor. la bos. 10, 25. A. telita tl-f PATEfJTSS too R.Colona.WafiT (tun, U.C Uookurrw. High- nfMOfioa. Boat rauua. (fflEATESTSra the I i - j&SZ4r iZK&r V-,aM H THtVAlNFLD DCSCKT TIE GREATEST thing in the world." That is a large phraso and an overworked one, and hardened travel ers do not take it lightly upon tho tongue. Noticeably it is most glibly in use with those who but lately, and for tho first time, have wandered be yond their native state or county. Yet in every sort there is, of course, somewhere "the best thing in the world" of its kind. There is and can be no dispute that the term applies literally to several things in tho immediate region of tho Grand canyon of Arizona. As has more than once been said, probably no other equal area on earth contains so many supremo marvels of so many kinds so many astounding Bights, so 'many masterpieces of nature's handiwork, so vast and conclusive an encyclope dia of the w orld-building processes, so imrressive monuments of prehistoric man, so many triumphs of man still in tho tribal relation as does what has been called tho "Southwestern Wonderland." This includes a large part of New Mexico and Arizona, tho area which geographically and eth nographically we may count as the Grand canyon region. A few wonders are: The largest and by far the most beautiful of all petrilled forests, with several hundred square miles whoso surface is carpeted with agate chips $RAND CMtiOU TROO 'and dotted with agate trunks two to four feet in diameter; and just across one valley a burled "forest" whose huge siliciiied not agatized logs show their ends under fifty feet of sandstone. The largest natural bridge in tho world, 200 feet high, over 500 feet span and over 000 feet wide, up and down stream, and with an orchard on its top and miles of stalactite cave3 under its abutments. Tho largest variety, and display of geologically recent volcanic action in North America, with CO-milo lava flows, 1,500-foot blankets of creamy tufa cut by scores of canyons; hun dreds of craters and thousands of square miles of lava beds, basalt and cinders, and so much "volcanic glass" (obsidian) that it was the chief tool of the prehistoric population. Cave and Cliff Dwellings. The largest and the most impressive Villages of cave-dwellings in the world, most of them already aban doned when the "world-seeking Gcno eso" sailed. The many-storied cliff dwellings, castles and forts and homes, in tho faces of wild precipices or upon their tops an aboriginal architecture as re markable as any in the land. The 26 strange communal town re publics of the descendants of the "cliff dwellers," the modern Pueblos; some In fertile valleys, some (like Acoma and Hop!) perched on barren and dizzy cliff tops. The strange dances, rites, dress and customs of these an cient peoples who have solved the problem of Irrigation, six-story house building and clean self-government, and even women's rights long before Columbus was born. Some of the most notable tribes of savage nomads, like the Navajos, whose blankets and sliver work are pre-eminent, and the Apaches, who man for man, have been probably the most successful warriors in history. Greatest Chasm In the World. At the head of the list stands the Grand canyon of Arizona; whether It Is the "greatest wonder of the world" depends a little on Our definition of "wonder." Possibly It is no more won derful than the fact that so tiny a fraction of the people who confess themselves the smartest In the world have ever seen it As a people we go 'abroad to see scenery Incomparably Inferior. Out beyond peradventure it Is the greatest chasm In the world, and the : 5.:; H. : - V. x-- . . ;s. k : . : :. ?. ;; lV ' ' "v ) : v V' . J : I most superb. Enough globe-trotters have seen it to establish that fact. Many have come cynically prepared to be disappointed; to rind it over drawn and really not so stupendous as something else. It is, after all, a hard test that so be-bragged a wonder must endure under the critical scrutiny of them that have seen the earth and the fullness thereof. Hut never has tho most self-satisfied veteran traveler been disappointed in the Grand can yon, or dared to patronize It. Tho quebrada of the Apu-UImac is a marvel of the Andes, with its ver tiginous depths and its suspension bridge of wild vines. The Grand can yon of the Arkansas, in Colorado, is a noble little slit in the mountains. The Franconia and White mountain notches In New Hampshire are beau tiful. Tho Yosemlte and the Yellow stone canyons surpass tho world, each in its way; but if all theso wero hung up on tho opposite wall of the Grand canyon from you, the chances are fifty to one that you could not tell t'other from which, n5r any of them from tho hundreds of other canyons which rib that vast gorgo. If tho falls of Niagara wero installed in tho Grand canyon between your visits next time you stood on that dizzy rirarock you would probably need good field glasses and much patience before you could locate that cataract which in its place looks pretty big. If Mount Washing- NEAR PRIMA POINT ton were plucked up bodily by the roots not from where you see it, but from sea-level and carefully set down in tho Grand canyon you prob ably would not notice it next morning, unless its dull colors distinguished it in that innumerable congress of larger and painted giants. All this, which is literally true, is a mere trifle of what might bo said in trying to fix a standard of comparison for tho Grand canyon. You may com pare all you will, eloquently and from wide experience, and at last all similes fail. Tho Grand canyon is just tho Grand canyon, and that is all you can say. It Is no mere cleft. It is a terrific trough 6,000 to 7,000 feet deep, ten to twenty miles wide, hundreds of miles long, peopled with hundreds of peaks taller than any mountain cast of the Rockies, yet not ono of them with its head so high as your feet, and all ablaze with such color as no eastern or European landscape ever knew. And as you sit upon the brink the divine scene-shifters give you a new canyon every hour. With each degree of the sun's course the great counter-sunk mountains fade away and new ones, as terrific, are carved by tho westering shadows. The Grand canyon country is not only tho hugest, but the most varied and instructive example on earth of one of the chief factors of earth-building erosion. It is the mesa country the land of tables. Nowhere else on the footstool is there such an example of deep-gnawing water or of water high carving. The sandstone mesas of the Southwest, the terracing of canyon walls, the castellatlon, battle mentlng and cliff-making, the cutting down of a whole landscape except its precipitous islands of flat-topped rock, the thin lava tablecloths on tables 100 feet high these are a few of the things which make the Southwest wonderful alike to the scientist and the sightseer. Just the Man. Merchant (to applicant) What we need is a correspondence clerk who Is a rapid writer. By the way, what have you been working at? Applicant I've been a movie actor, sir. Merchant You have? Well, say, if you can write letters for us with half the speed you movie actors do In those picture scenes, you're Just the man we want BLIND WORKS AT HOUSEWRECWKG Loss of Sight Is No Serious Handicap to This C fornia Man. WORK IS WELL DONE Tears Dovn Buildings Without Much Aid and Piles the Boards and Takes Away the Refuse Does Aston ishing Things. Berkeley, Cal. Blindness is no se rious handicap to Gerald Cloutman of 2207 Ellsworth street, housewreck cr, who has not seen tho bright sun since ho was three years old. He graduated from tho California School for the Blind and started out to make his own living. Now ho daily aston ishes thoso who know of his afflic tion by climbing steep roofs, detach ing lumber from" tho most precarious positions and always coming back to safety unscathed. Ho is at present wrecking a house at Sixty-fourth street and San Pablo avenue, doing all of the work himself, and even ex perts can find no fault with the way the boards are aligned on the side walk and waste is neatly plied away. Thinks Blind Can Do Anything. To thoso who express their aeton ishment at his skill, Cloutman replies that a blind man can do nearly as much as anybody gifted with two see ing eyes. "Hut blind peoplo aro never given a chance," ho complains. "If people would interest themselves in indi vidual cases and uso patienco and compassion, many who now are a burden to their communities would become useful member.! of society. More is being done now along thoso lines, and tho time will como when a blind man will have no moro difficulty in securing a position than anyone else. Sclenco may help some, but those who must grope their way ?T Does All the Work Himself. through life in darkness entirely will be benefited moro by the exerciso of sound common sense." Wife and a Homestead. Cloutman' was married six months ago. He is about thirty years old. For several years he has spent the sum mer months in Calaveras county, where he claimed a homestead and makes a living selling brooms. In winter he plica his trade as wrecker in thi3 city. BABY WEIGHS BUT 24 OUNCES Infant Is Perfectly Formed and Is Fed With a Medicine Dropper Expected to Live. Tlltonsville, O. The women of this town are interested in a tiny mite of humanity which arrived at tho home of Joseph Benson, who is . twenty-four years old, and whose wife is eighteen years old. The infant, a girl, is formed perfectly, but weighs only 24 ounces. Mrs. Benson's wedding ring can be slipped over the baby's hand and down to its elbows. The child is fed with a medicine dropper. Tho attending physician believes that if the baby's life can be sustained for seven months, it will have no more trouble than a normal child. MAKES HIS HOME A HOTEL Charge Brought by San Francisco Woman Wins Her a Divorce. San Francisco. Gretchen H Best has been granted a divorce from Otto Best, a Los Angeles chemist, because he considered his home a hotel and his wife an unnecessary encumbrance. That seems to be a prevailing weak ness nowadays, said the judge who tried the case. "Too many men con sider their homes merely a place to sleep and eat and their wives as serv ants, and if the wives refuse to be merely servants then they are con sidered nuisances." Killed by His Own Trap. Austin, Tex. While setting a wolf trap on a ranch near here Alfred L. Cook accidentally shot and killed him self with the weapon he intended to use against the wolf. 1 ' THE EUROPEAN WAR A YEAR AGO THIS WEEK April 3. 1915. Germans repulsed French In for est of Le Pretre and west of Mul hausen, but were checked near Lassigny and In Upper Alsace. Russians gained In Carpathians and Austrians In Bukowina. Turks repulsed British landing party at head of Red sea. Smyrna forts bombarded. British government took control of motor manufacturing plants April 4, 1915. Germane took Drie Grachten from Belgians. French captured village of Regnieville. Austrians retreated from Beskld region. Germans repulsed Russians near Augustowo. German submarines sank British steamer City of Bremen and other vessels. Three German steamers sunk by mines In Baltic. Turkish cruiser MedJIdleh sunk by Russian mine. German taube bombed church near Ypres, killing 12 women and an abbe. April 5, 1915. French captured trenchec In For est of Allly, but were repulsed In Argonne and Le Pretre forests. Reims continuously bombarded. Russians made steady gains in Carpathians, Bukowina and North Poland. Turkish squadron sank two Rus sian ships. America's demand on Germany for reparation for sinking of the Frye made public. April 6, 1915. French made fierce attack on St. Mihiel. French occupied Gussainville, but were repulsed east of Verdun. Russians advanced on Rostok pass, but were repulsed in effort to cross the Dniester. Austrians bombarded Serb towns on the Danube and Save. German submarine caught In net off Dover. April 7, 1915. French made gains In Woevre district and other points. Austrians bombarded Belgrade and gained ground along River Pruth and crossed the Dniester. Russians entered Artvin, Ar menia. Prinz Eitel Frledrich Interned at Norfolk. Austrian aviators raided Podgo ritza, Montenegro. April 8, 1915. Russians captured Smolnik, east of Lupkow pass. French ship Chateaubriand sunk by German submarine off isle of Wight. One Austrian aeroplane beat three Russian planes in midair. Germany offered reparation for sinking of the Frye, but Justified the act. Belgians reported west side of Yser canal freed of Germans. April 9, 1915. French announced complete oc cupation of Les Eparges. Desperate fighting on heights of the Meuse. Germans retook Drie Grachten from Belgians. Great Austro-German army con fronted Russians In strongly for tified lines on southern slope of Carpathians. Use of alcoholic drinks forbid derf in French army of tho Vosges. CHUNKS OF INFORMATION Farming and pig rearing are the staple Industries of Serbia. In Russia the people are divided Into three "stocks," Great Russians, White Russians and Little Russians. British vital statistics show that there has been more marriages and less births since the war has been In 'progress. Apparatus Invented In England for 'preserving fish In carbonic acid gas under pressure is said to keep them perfectly fresh for at least six months. For retail dealers there has been Invented a machine that will take coal from a pile and pour It Into bags for handling at a rate of 25 tons an hour. Two cities In Colombia on opposite sides of the Andes mountains will be connected by a steel ropeway more than 37 miles long which will trans port both passengers and freight The first white woman to be mar ried In what is now the city of To peka, Kan., and who still lives there at the age of eighty-eight. Is Mrs. Hattle A. Bunker. She was a native of Wo burn, Mass., and went Into the terri tory of Kansas 61 years ago. - is)' )i-Si'SiiS)"'"". "f Hopes Women Will Adopt This Habit j As Well As Men I Glass of hot water each morn, ing helps us look and feel clean, sweet, fresh. Happy, bright, alert vigorous and vivacious a good clear skin; a nat ural, rosy complexion and freedom from illness are assured only by clean, healthy blood. If only every woman and likewise every man could realize the wonders of drinking phosphated hot water each morning, what a grat ifying change would tako place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking men, women and girls with pasty or muddy complex ions; instead of the multitudes of "nerve wrecks," "rundowns," "brain fags" and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy cheeked people everywhere. An inside bath is had by drinking, each morning before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea3poonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweeten ing and freshening the entire alimen tary canal before putting moro food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particularly thoso who have a pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from any drug gist or at the store which will cost but a trifle but is sufficient to demon strate tho quick and remarkable change in both health and appearance awaiting those who practice Internal sanitation. We must remember that inside cleanliness is more important than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to contaminato the blood, while the pores in the thir ty feet of bowels do. Adv. To Prison for Making a Wish. At rortsmouth, John Christopher Green, llfty-four, a laborer, was sen tenced to twe months' imprisonment under the defense of the Realm act. The prisomT, who said he was the r,on of a clergyman, but had become practically a dipsomaniac, pleaded that he had no recollection of the offense fif stating in a public house that he .oped a certain British warship would i;e torpedoed. London Globe. CLEAR RED PIMPLY FACES Red Hands, Red Scalp With Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Trial Free. , The soap to cleanse and purify, the i Ointment to soothe and heal. Nothing i better, quicker, safer, surer at any j price for skin troubles of young or j old that itch, burn, crust, scale, tor- j ture or disfigure. Besides, they meet i every want in toilet preparations. I Freo sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. A Beneficent Influence. "Why do you keep pestering me to go and have some more pictures tak en?" inquired Mr. Growcher. "Because," replied his wife, "the photographer Is the only person I know of who can get you to make an effort to smile and look natural." Public Officials' Bonds. We bond moro people than any other company in the world. Maintain a special department for bonding pub lic officials. Agents everywhere. Write for rates to Official Bond Depart ment, National Surety Company, 90 West St., New York City. "America's Leading Surety Co." Adv. Next Step. "If inventors ever do succeed In making rain, what do you suppose they will try next?" "To make the rain dear." Sudden Death Caused by Disease of the Kidneys The close connection between the heart and the kidneys is well known nowadays. When Sidneys are diseased, arterial tension is increased and the heart functions are attacked. When the kidneys no longer pour forth waste, uremic poisoning occurs and the per son dies, and the cause is often given as heart disease, or disease of brain or lungs. It is a good insurance against such a risk to send 10 cents for a large trial package of "Anuric" the latest discovery of Dr. Pierce. When you suffer from backache, frequent or scanty urine, rheumatic pains here or there, or that constant tired, worn-out feeling, get "Anuric" at the druggist. It's 37 times more potent than lithia. dissolves uric acid as hot water does sugar. I? IIC 3IIG ttl ICS! WE PAY CASH FOR MEDICINAL ROOTS, HERBS, LEAVES, BARKS, ETC. i We buy over two hundred different kinds of Medicinal Roots, Herbs, Leaves, I Barks, Seeds, Flowers, Etc., for which we pay net cash on arrival. I We make a specialty of Cinieif. CMea Sal RmI, Scotia Saaka Kaet, Star Root, Z Star CRASS RmI, BMswaz, Etc W pay Up cask prices. 0 If yon want to line up with a progressive, growing, booest, cp-to-date concern S who will handle your Roods right, who will keep yon well posted on market conditions, write us for our price list, shipping tags, and tall information. H. R. LATHROP & CO., Inc. X 110-1 12-1 14-1 IS BMlunaa 3trt . . SKINNER'S Macaroni or Spaghetti The Quality Food the tastiest, most healthful and most economical food that can grace your table. At All Good Grocers' Save the signature of Paul F. Skinner on each package and obtain a set of Oneida Community Par Plate Silverware free. Write us for full particulars no obligation and we will send you also a beautiful 36 page book of recipes all free. Write today. SKINNER MFG. CO. OMAHA, NEB. The Largest Macaroni Factory In America (' M il OIIN I im nr I os Any. i . si. any part 3i'-acre 01 a riKo-li min nrov; for cxi-hanK. $1,000 t-r acre. Also control tZSr'0 UlviT Mf f);u-arr h'iC. t:r:i In. n n r-ry . fruit ranch. $2T..nno Ownrr. 211. . VMU VI., l.m nicrlrt. MEN'S ALL. WOOL SUITS Solo Direct From f tory to V:irer for IO.oo Write to unr factory for MtmpleB and tnfruiini"n. 4lBlBU, bOSt A CO.. 11 .V Mil blkkU rlllLibtU'lIU, 14. W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 15-1916. Rotterdam's Trade Grows. The sea trade of Holland's great port, Rotterdam, was Increased tre mendously fiince the war broke out, and it Is now necessary to deepen tho channel connecting the port with the North sea to a depth of 3S feet, which later will be continued to 41 feet at high tide, tho operation involving re moval of moro than 10,000,000 cubic jards of earth by dredging. SWAMP-ROOT SAVES KIDNEY SUFFERERS You naturally feci secure when you know that Dr. Kilmer's Sa nip-Hoot, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, is ab solutely pure and contains no harmful or habit producing drug9. The same standard of purity, ptrengtb and excellence, prescribed by lir. Kilmer many years apo, is maintained in every bottle of fcwamp-Root. Swamp-Hoot is pcienti.lcally compounded from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimu lant and is taken in teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. Ac cording to verified testimony it is nature' great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. If you suffer, don't delay another day. Go to your nearest (Iru'at now and get a bottle. All drug fctorcs Fell it in two sizes fifty cents and one dollar. However, if you wish first to try this preat preparation pend ten cents to Dr. flilmer & Co., l'inghamton, N. Y., for ample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. Repartee. "Beauty i3 only skin deep," sh sneered. "Yes, my dear," retorted the other, "but wouldn't you like to change skins with me?" NEW TREATMENT FOR ASTHMA Relief in Every Rub To quickly ease the strugsle for breath, stop the wheezlntc and briny blessed relief, ask your drupplst for an original yellow box of true Mustar lne which costs about 25 cents. Apply plentifully night and morning', and remember to rub up nnd down only, over the entire chest from the throat to the etomnch. Tru MuMarlne i made by the JSepy Medicine Co., Koch ester, N. Y. It is also fine for Rheu matism, Lumbago and Neuralgia. Get the genuine. Uneasy rests the aching tooth that wears a crown. After Grip Then Spring Fever? This Is the time of year to look out for trouble! We feel weakour blood seems hot no appetite. It's time to clean house! This is when tho blood is clogged and we suffer from what is commonly called a cold. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical D1scot cry purifies the blood and entirely eradicates the poisons that breed and feed disease. Pure blood Is essential to good health. The weak, run-down, debilitated condition which so many people experience is commonly the ef fect of impure blood. "Medical Discov ery" not only cleanses the blood of Im purities, but increases the activity of the blood-making glands, and enriches the body with pure, rich blood. in am . New York Citv. N. Y. Mil