Newspaper Page Text
Neur Neura of Sen Sponsor for His Father Horn Paid Mertta Helped H * Err fcar rwiri P»r*r! When Cere end Of fered urn LitUf a Paetfo.ro ta Hi* Cop.net »i*r j la Use vtater of !99J J Sterl hs* KurU* at Krlrfooka. a A* lujud«-d at \HeaiU CMy ike tartt o*»»i>at>er to to j-a’ in tod in tto *Ut*. uU •u «m* mcrt»g (oinvor of U><- lee-: in.rj at Kehraaba. and DrtBJTttic far goreroar after the terri tory hod tors adapt* d U> tbe I m. n. rec. 11H from a ciaae pereoaal frtead of Kr.ultefekd t.rarer OvrliBd a letter ta efclcl II *a> raid tltat Ur. CVvetaad aaMitd be glad to aee Ur. Men.* a the temporary huae occu pied to Mr Oerelaad at I^bewood. X i Tklfr appeared far tr lui other eapiartlka fir tats in» lla'ioo tfcu that Mr Orreiisl had la miad the of fartag «d eoae cAre ta Mr Morton The < .*suatraflac perpiuod Mr Uortoa a J»e He had aot to- a num tor- 4 uaai Mr. (Irrrlttd'i western fr .»£, .a *«i Mnrwner. he !rad de anted liaiiB etdatlirlji to agrira! tare tar aber thirteea yean. II.-a rtn Mr Monoa felt that It mow'd to weft*** for hlai ta arcej •. tbe larlta Vjub. and oa antltod hie correspondent Ob lue mar wt Mr Morton met the late Pui Mortaa, his eoa. then prom ise- a an* a la tbe railroad and fuel m. ”**; c uU tt* tUMr. "you know I as? «-*7 rusty about politics I ntm j U! : - *rh esparteaee tm tt except lb« IW’ w I rained vkrt I *u la Nfbmki , '•** aad a candidate (or gou-r nor I fad that I would hardly know bom tm bear attdf if I should be feroacfct tat# personal toack alLh the eastern |el!11ria*i vbn I call upon Mr C e*eland I wowid tor murk easier , la ter wrtnd J yam would accompany j Paa’ More* toad aa le’oltlv* belief . tlai Mr OirlitJ wasted to offer tots (after the post of secretary of i{ri n..'ore a&d because be mas extreme | ly asxsuas ttoat suet aa honor should ootae U> his father toe consented to j d-'to toasiacaa and accompany him east T«jr!ttf father and sue—because the ferae* Insisted—ea the appointed Ct> sett to the eottife at l^kewoud ; • * t-a toad become familiarly kaowa as •”> ttle Wiitt House." so-called be caure Mr. Cleveland was making there all of his arrangements for his return to the office of president. Mr. Cleveland was looking forward to meeting the father alcn«. but when he beheld the senior Morton's embarrass •.tient at their exchange of greetings he < utckly understood the situation, •it: 1 as though everything was just as he ha.l expected, he began to speak < f Mr Morton’s high authority as a tinner and of the valuable work he had done In that field In Nebraska. In the first pause, me elder Morton, not trusting hi;i self to reply, looked Mmldly towards his son. who instant ly took up the thread of the conversa tion. giving the proper answer. After th-.t the president-elect, though speak iu:; to the father looked steadily at the son. He realized that the younger man »aa standing sponsor for the older. At last Mr. Cleveland tendered the secretaryship of agriculture to Mr. Mo-ton substantially in these words: "Mr Morton, this interview has de •ermined me to ask you to accept a : !ac* In my ca* net as secretary of xgnrulture. and 1 shall be very glad :f you will accept it.” By this time Mr. Morton's embar rassment had well nigh overwhelmed him. and he felt himself in no ccndi lion to trust to bis own judgment. Again he looked in the direction of his son. Ke caught ail encouraging and alf.rmative expression cn the yotiug man's free nnd. assured, he turned to the president-elect. "Mr. Cleveland.” he said, in his sole speech of the interview, “1 greatly ap preciate the honor, and 1 shall be glad to accept the offer you have made me of a place in your cabinet.” Mr. Cleveland extended his hand to Mr. Morton and led him to the porch of the cottage. Paul Morton remained behind, looking at the chair in which Mr. Cleveland had sat. After awhile he hunted up Mr. Nathan Straus, own er of the cottage. "Mr. Straus.” he said, “my father has just been offered a place In Mr. Cleveland’s cabinet and he has accept ed the offer. It is a very great honor; I appreciate it more than 1 can tell. 1 am very anxious to secure some visible memento of this event, and I am going to ask you if you will let me buy the chair in which Mr. Cleve land sat when he offered the cabinet appointment to my father. Our fam ily will cherish It as an heirloom." "No, you cannot buy that chair.” re plied Mr. Straus, "but I shall deem it an honor If you will accept it for a gift.” In that way Paul Morton secured one of the most treasured of his mementoes. (Copyright. 1911. by E. J Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) Refused to Become a Diplomat Preacott Wu Offered the Poeltion of Minister to Holland, but Declined on Account cf His Partial Blindness. Uecently I told of the half fulfilled prophecy made by the famous pub Usher of Longfellow. Hawthorne. Lowell. Emerson, Whittier. Holmes -nd other great writers of that "gold* n ag«~ period regarding the coming of the present-day school of writers on The life of the west. Today I tell of Mr Field's opinion of the historian Prescott and a little known fact re lating to him. as they were told to me by Mr Fields. Of all the great writers In the English language with whom Mr Fields had intimate personal as aocta’ion. it seemed to me from his scanner wfc. n he talked to me of Pres cott that he held that well-nigh blind portrayer of American civilizations of other days in highest personal esteem. "Ah. he was a grand character," said Mr. Fields, a day or two after he had returned, in the late seventies, from what was to be his last trip abroad. "He was as grand a charac ter personally as he was intellectual ly. 1 once asked him if It were true, as 1 had heard, that when he learned that Mr. Motley, the historian, was writing a history of the rise of the Dutch republic he at once abandoned the purpose, which he had long con templated. to write a work of that character. He told me in reply that he had collected a great deal of ma terial for and had outlined the plan of such a history; but he learned by mere chance that Mr. Motley had al ready begun a similar work, so he abandoned his own plan and ofTered to send all of the material he had col lected to Mr. Motley. That was some time before Motley set sail In 1851 for Holland to continue his researches for the history that has given him lasting fame. i asKed Mr. Prescott if he did not think there was room enough for two histories on the subject. His reply was characteristic: 'Mr. Motley was first in the field; he had the right of pre-eminence.* "I have always thought that was as ! noble a thing as any man of letters ever did. And I have sometimes re gretted." continued Mr. Fields, whose eyesight, peculiarly enough, was de- ; fective. as was both Prescott’s and Parkman's. whose publisher he was, I "that Mr Prescott was not willing to listen to the hint that If he were will ing to accept the offer he could re ceive appointment as our minister to some one of the European courts. "When George Bancroft, who some years previously had published his 1 great history of the United States, en tered Polk's cabinet as secretary of the navy In 1845. he was most am ■ lous that American literary achieve ment should receive some official recognition from the new administra tion other than that conferred upon him. To that end he talked with the president, and was authorised to con- ' vey a hint to Mr. Prescott that the ! president would be glad to appoint him i to some personally satisfactory dipltv i matic post in Europe. But when the j hint was taken to Mr. Prescott he made it clear that however greatly he would appreciate the compliment of 1 an appointment, it would be Imprac ticable for him to serve In any po litical capacity. “It was not so much his fear that a i position under the government would interfere with his literary labors that : kept him from looking kindly upon j the hint. The thing that stood In the ■ way in his mind was his partial blind- j ness—he could see but dimly. I am sure that he was afraid that that af fliction would prevent him from doing his lull duty by his country. And I am also sure that hut for his afflic tion, which he bore with sublime pa tience. he would have been very glad and happy to serve as United States minister to Holland.” (Copyright. 1911. by E. J. Edwards. At Rights Reserved.) How Burnside Got His Toga Cc ispoo il W ' m Sjaj.n Fin*n col Mim C*»m4 Hu Ret ft»tnt •nd Left Vacancy That tho General Fii.ed Or a3 ike an of oiliun' renoan *—: '< :* the Ovtt ev wfao *rn«d Is the . n.ted Stales ceaale Jurine tbe tea dr aU« I olio* m* Appocaltti. l«s>- attracted sauce Urtliot than did AK*im> t: libras:de at Bbcdt I* Lr< Vu ’in to tfcr galleries never to iii Oast Jots A Lucan and Oct-*! R_r**ido be pc f.d oat to lbs lie. s. ««eo spectacular Sjarn ts ike arna.tr. bet .a a diSerent way Ut.t with bis laartfcy rumpleaion. lose black fcair and droop! Tie black aaratt. hto India* cast of coaster, ace* and Ida Ovscltj sad energy. »u Lb a aw* tag pictare epos tbe floor oi tbr arsste. % few arais assy from tbe one occa fhed by G-neral Loris sal General Sarwmde He was easily recognized fir - os. trued u wear tbe fa mil tar side • Labers wb*rfc. ta war tide, caused (Li fora of beard to becomo uniter •aTj vpokea of as “Burnsides.- He «a> v-ry seat as bis dress, bests*, ’a tort, ooe of tbe best dressed men of (be senate while 1> *at always am* (be roaveatlcsal black frock cost iLrtfdr sometimes sat taro-gb an en tiro suslno of tbo oenaie without Itav to* bis seat. I' was ta tbe winter of JtfL tbe year o' bis dootb. that I m General Bum aide I toob occtskit to etmgratulxte bus epua hts re-elect son aa senator, aad 1 said to bias “It Is aa interest In* fact that yon. tbe *reat military leader abe cane from Rhode Island in tbe CM! war. sboold have su-reeded Senator S''Ham Spr **'-*. a bo vt> tbe ooly gorente la tbe east dune* tbe war to assume rtssoud of Mate regi wrUi and tabs them into tbe fleM “ *1 bare sometimes thought." said Senator Baras ids, “that as dramatic aa tor ideal of tbe war as ary that I be came familiar with was tbe manner la which Governor Sprague mobilised tbo Srst Rhode Island regiments and de poned from Providence at their bead oaiy four days after f'resident Lin coin* proclamation of April H. 1S61. was issued Vou know, he became gov ernor -l Rhode Island when only 29 years of age. that was in 1S60 He was a slender yourg mu of medium height, wore a faint black mustache and was at very fair complexion. I have heard it said that no young man in the fri'ed States bad a greater public -T- or in the future than he. As you know, :.e made a highly creditable r* ord at the froct from the first I:; K:n through the Peninsular cam Pairs. while still governor; he declined a ommuuon as brigadier general, and w _s boson t'nited States senator in wren in his thirty-first year. The Noli year be was brought more close ly. If possible, to the notice of such rata zs Lunc'-in and his advisers by ■ is marriage with the brilliant Kate f'i-sse. daughter of the secretary of the treasury Moreover, he was thought to be oae of the richest of the tr.anu far-urers of the I'nited States. He and his brother Amasa were the own ers of great cotton mills. ‘ Hut here 1 am in the seat that he formerly occupied, snd all because at an - expected incident, the sud iet ' ■ :;«« of Senator Sprague's po litical career. "Thcr*- has always been a good deal of astonishment expressed at the ab «naiaatioB of Senator Sprague's put. ir '-•rey. and a good deal of spec ulation. but the facts are simply these, as all his old friends in Rhode Island know well: With his brother he had d-v* .Jed a great water power over •he line in Connecticut, and built what at the time was the longest cotton mill in the world—I think a little over j feet in length. It proved a most unfortunate Investment. It was a heavier burden than even the great Sprague house could carry. Senator Sprague felt keenly the humiliation occasioned by the resultant bank ruptcy He determined to abandon all thought of a public career and de vote himself to the rebuilding of his property That and that alone was the reason why be gave up public life, and how. in 1875. I came to enter the t'nited States senate." I tCapprtght. »n. by E J Edwards. All Rights n«frvp<l.) tor Clwrcar Eirptrw. TV Ckim- <VitUut about a *ara rear* xo {wesra’rt ihr toa a*rr rmprras with a mrlmt ropy of lb* Script ur*o translated iato Chi •it a Bar at mod tif tbr wrttias br.n* or. tbr «i»m of tbr DIM* belec of tt’iif Tbr (tft was pirKwilr rrr>:«<d aad brr majrsty rrad tbr Tbis rsritrd tbr rmprror • dty aad br ordrrrd oar of tbr to obtain for bits a ropy of T« part of tbr loot 0f tba Ft Odra City ta 1MB. Tbr a ekmm stadeat of tbr arbteh ni frerly an by hi* Tbr UibJr was • tbr — prrrs' rbatabrr and tbr Ti af~r‘ to tbr «*prror» study Tbr fat are rulrr baa berc prrsratrd «tt1 saoibo aod less prrt ration* b«t this har coat £SM Tbr la arorptiag tbr sift at tbr of tbr Ataorteaa mlalster prom tbr taaatrrrd his »v»tl study tbr sacrrd rudi arrtt Cardinals’ Number Reduced Merr.be'-ship at Catholic College Is No* tt.e Smallest Recorded in Centuries Tfce Catholic Coileg of Cardinals lias now the smallest membership re ' carded in centuries, and the smallest proportion of Italiant ever known. The traditional membership is sev enty. and by the recent death of Car dinal Cavlceblonl it is reduced to . forty-cine It is .hree and a half years since any cardinals have been ; created, and it Is ■ kely to be a year before a consistory Is called, where at alone new cardinals are pro claimed A doren of the forty nine, and especially of the Italians, are in effective by reason of advanced age, j Cardinal Oreglla, the camerlengo. be ing eighty-three this coming July. Twenty-eight cardinals are Italians, twenty-one the non-Roman world Cardinals Moran of Australia. Gib bons of America and Legue of Ire axid represent the English speaking race. France has three, Germany two. Spain four. Aus’rix six and South America, Belgium and Portugal one each. The late Patriarch of Lisbon, put out by the revolution some months ago, now lives in strict re tirement. The curia, the cardinals stationed in Rome for work in the congregations and other general ad ministration. is crippled for lack of numbers. The cardinal who has just died, a member of curia, gave active days at seventy-five years of age to congregations if the cons'storial, sacraments, councils, both branches of propaganda, index, rites and studies, and on the commission for the codification of canon law. the last named exceedingly onerous and im portant. Here’s a tip for you, young man: “Be sure that the old gentleman will come across with the obese veal be fore you attempt the aole of prodigal son.” HISTORY AND SYMPTOMS OF DESTRUCTIVE SHEEP SCAB One of Oldest Diseases of Animal, But Cause Not Discovered Until Middle of Nlneteentli Century—Proper Treat ment Will Destroy Mite and Renew Growth of Wool—Dipping Is Highly Recommended. (By EDWIN S. GOOD.) Historically, sheep scab is one of the olJest diseases of sheep, but its cause was not discovered until about the middle of the nineteenth century (1835), when the agent producing the disease was found to be a very small mite. This mite is light gray in color and the female is one-fortieth and the male one-sixtieth of an inch in length. In general appearance the mite re sembles a tiny spider. It has four pairs of legs, the last being very small, and the third pair having long thread-like appendages which .are longer in the female than in the male. The mite crawls very slowly, showing that its power of locomotion is weak. A female will lay from ten to twenty eggs during her lifetime. These eggs are so small that they cannot be dis tinguished with the naked eye. The period of incubation is from four to ten days, depending mainly upon tem perature. Gerlach. a noted authority, estimates the descendants of a single female to be 1.000,000 females and 500,000 males at the end of 90 days. He estimates the average number of eggs from a single female to be 15, ten of which hatch females and five males, and allows 15 days for each generation. The first symptom that attracts one’s attention to the aJTected animal is Its rubbing certain parts of its back, sides or tail against some object, or biting at these parts, as the bites of Female Scab Mite. the mite cause intense itching. The irritation is much more noticeable when the sheep are warmed up by driving than when they remain quiet. Infection generally begins on some portion of the side or back, and is usually confined to these parts of the body. The infected spot first consists of a moist, yellowish, dandruff-like sub stance, often no larger than a pin head, and unless careful examination be made, may easily escape detection. If this place is scratched, the sheep will respond by a nibbling-like mo tion of the mouth. Large patches are formed either by small infected spots located on different parts of the back growing and uniting, or by the gradual enlargement of a single spot. In ob taining their food, the parasites in these patches irritate the skin of the sheep to such an extent as to cause i the secretion of a large amount of serum which, in drying, first takes ! on the form of dandruff, and upon extended irritation the dandruff is re placed by thick scabs. Where the scabs first form, the wool seems to be more firmly attached to the skin than bejore infection, and stands out in tufts, giving the fleece an uneven appearance. In time, however, being deprived of nutrition, the wool loosens and drops from the skin; the sheep loses flesh and presents, on the whole, a very uncanny appearance; and eventually, if untreated, dies. Proper treatment will, however, destroy the scab mite and renew the growth of the woo!. Dipping in a reliable dip is the proper treatment for sheep afflicted with the scab. The federal government has done a great work in reducing the number of scabby sheep in this country, but In spite of its efforts there are plenty of them in the United States today, a condition of affairs not to be won dered at when we consider the gigan tic task of stamping out such a com municable disease in as large a coun try as ours. There are states, how ever, where no scab exists, the farm ers and the state authorities having aided the federal to eradicate it. Culture of Currants. For varieties the President Wildet is probably the best liked as It clings to the bushes the longest. The Cher ry. Fay’s Prolific and Perfection art also very good varieties. The soil for currants should be very well prepared and enriched. Practice deep plowing before planting the currants and ther put them 6x4 feet. Practice shallow cultivation and mulch if need be. Pul in a cover crop the first of July such I as buckwheat. This can be cultivated luto the soil in the spring, thus keep ing up the amount of humus in the | soil. As one and two year old wood I produces the best crops, care should j be taken to see that no wood is over | two years old. Prune out old wood as soon as berries are picked out. Big Missouri Fruit Yield. The orchard of C. R. Woodson, con sisting of 260 acres near Agency. Mo., last year produced 60 car loads or marketable apples, netting nearly $20,000. The trees were sprayed sev eral times during the season by gov ernment experts sent from Washing ton to make experiments. Value of Cherries. Cherries pay well in this section on our gravelly soil and hilly lands. We set trees on land which has been well manured two or three years for corn. We have crops in the orchard for two or three years, then let the trees have the land. Bells on Turkeys. Turkey breeders who have been troubled by their charges straying are recommended by the London Agricul tural Gazette to put a bell on a few of the leaders, old hens by preference. BELGIAN HORSE IS POWERFUL An Antwerp correspondent of the . Kansas City Star sends a photo graph of a pair of the great Belgian horses that do the work on the docks of the rapidly growing Flemish port. ! An extract from the letter follows: "These Belgian horses are in blood i the same as some that are often ex ported from the lowlands to the prairies of Kansas. The pair shown tn the illustration is typic-. of thou sands in use every day on the great wharves here. Each of these can easily draw two and one-half tons and they are as gentle as kittens. The driver—he's more of a companion than a master—controls them by means of one little cord, hardly as heavy as your mother's clothes line. The trucks look like small flat cars. He treats them like the good chil dren they are to him. At noon the wife comes down to the docks with lunch, and she and the husband sit on the truck and eat, while ..he horses are having their own food. And. strangest, each horse is given, in ad- ! dition to grain and hay. a great long loaf of bread. The driver holds it as the horse bites It off in hunks. They i seem to enjoy R just as we enjoy \ our dessert. “They don't need a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals here —at least, not so far as horses are concerned." EXCELLENCE OF CLOVER FEEDS While Most Farmers Recognize That Red Clover Is Admir able for Swine Few Under stand How to Utilize. (By WALTER B. LECTZ.) Clover Is the greatest pasture for hogs—provided it is not allowed to make pigs thrive at top notch. The clover blossom Is a very pretty flower but It is about as much out of place in the hog pasture as a rose bush in the corn field. While most farmers recognize that red clover is an admirable food for Bwine, few of them, comparatively, un derstand how to utilize a clover pas ture for hogs. We make this asser tion in view of the fact that clover is, in many instances, allowed to blos som in the field devoted to hog-graz ing. If the reader will bear in mind for a moment that the purpose of every riant is to flower and “go to seed" he will understand that when the flower and the seed have formed In succes sion, the season's work of the plant is practically over and plant growth gives place to plant ripening, and de cay. "Soon ripe soon rotten" is an old saying and it indicates what we have in mind in this discussion. What we are after In pasturing hogs ; on clover is feed net posies. If the clover plants are allowed to ripen the food-producing capacity of the plant is reduced. If, on the other hand, the plants can be prevented from blossoming to any great degree, they keep trying to blossom right along, provided suffi cient rains descend and in doing so the hogs are fed. In districts where clover luxuriates, and we find such places in many parts of the country, swine of the right age may be pastured upon this green food from about June right up to early fall, should timely rains maintain a steady growth of the clover plant. Don’t expect the ducks to grow un less they have proper care and feed. Real satisfaction in every glass—snap and sparkle—vim and go. Quenches the thirst—cooia like a breeze. Delicious—Refreshing—Wholesome A ^ Sc Everywhere Jw THE COCA-COLA CO. Attaint, Ca. Here’s toYomr Good Health and Pleasure Come—follow the arrow ’til you join the merry throng of palate pleased men and women who have quit seeking for the one best beverage because they’ve found it— Send for our interest Ing booklet. *‘The Truth About Coca-Cola" Whenever you see an Arrow think of Coca-Cola EXCUSE FOR HIS BLUNDERING Ideal Waiter, True to the End, Had Been Working Under Pretty Heavy Handicap. He was an immaculate servant. To watch him serve a salad was to watch an artist at work. To hear his sub dued accents was a lesson in the art of voice-production. He never slipped, hte never smiled, and his mutton-chop whiskers marked him as one of the old and faithful stock. But one even ing. to the surprise of his master, he showed unaccountable signs of nerv ousness. When the chicken came on, he confused it with the pheasant. He served everything in the wrong or der, made blunder after blunder, and put a final touch to his shame by up setting the salt over the only super stitious member of the party. Then, at last, when the ladies had retired to the drawing room, he touched his mas ter on the shoulder. “I beg your par don. sir," he said in a respectful un dertone, “but could you manage to spare me now? My house is on fire." Publicity Law Badly Needed. Connecticut, District of Columbia, Kansas. Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi. New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont, have laws which provide specifically for the re porting of tuberculosis and which make provision for the proper regis tration of living cases of this disease. In fourteen other states, laws or reg ulations of the state boards of health require that tuberculosis be reported simply as one of a list of infectious diseases. The following 28 states and territories have no provision what ever for the reporting or registration of tuberculosis cases:—Arizona. Alas ka. Arkansas. Colorado. Delaware. Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illi nois, Kentucky. Louisiana. Missouri. Montana, Nevada. New Hampshire. New Mexico, North Carolina. Ohio, Oklahoma, Philippine Islands, Porto Rico, South Carolina. South Dakota, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming. Kissing Breach of Peace. The better half of a respected citi i zon of New Jersey recently had the temerity to hale her lord and master before the court on a charge of having kissed her against her will. For this heinous offense this shameless Jersey benedict was bonded over in $100 bail to keep the peace, and, moreover, was w-arned by the judge never again ' to kiss his wife without first obtaining her consent in due form. If he is any kind of a man. probably he will never I want to kiss her again.—Washington ; Herald. An Unlaureled Hero. Here is a niche in the Hall of Fame j for Seth A. Eaton, a rural mail car- ; rier from the Middleboro postoffice, j who, surrounded by woodland fire, his horse lying on the ground stifled with ; smoke, his own hair singed, his hat j burned and one side of his face and i hands blistered, was still mindful of . duty and saved the mail he was carry- j !ng by burying it in the sand, before j he fought through the line of fire to j safety. Not all the heroes tread the battlefiel is.—Fall River Herald. Hadn’t the Material. *T really never saw such an impu dent man as that Mr. De Borrowe,” said Miss Wrat by. "He actually had the audacity to ask me the other night how I managed to get that lovely tinge of auburn in my hair!" "Really? Well, why didn't you box iis ears?" asked Miss Slimm. "Why, I only had my Easter hat box .landy. and that wasn’t big enough," -raid Miss Wrathy.—Harper's Weekly. How can a man expect his wife to be interested in business when half the time he doesn't know the color of her last new dress'* Charity is too often charily dis pensed. COMES A TiME When Coffee Shows What It Has Been Doing. “Of late years cofTee has disagreed th me,” writes a matron from Rome, Y. “Its lightest punishment being to ake me 'logy’ and dizzy, and it seem to thicken up my blood. "The heaviest was when it upset my omach completely, destroying ray ap itite and making me nervous and ir table, and sent me to my bed. After ie of these attacks, in which I nearly st my life, I concluded to quit the iffee and try Postum. “It went right to the spot! I found not only a most palatable and re pshing beverage, but & food as well. “All my ailments, the ‘loginess’ and zziness, the unsatisfactory condition my blood, my nervousness and irri bility disappeared in short order id my sorely afflicted stomach began lickly to recover. I began to rebuild id have steadily continued until now. ave a good appetite and am fejoicing sound health which I owe to the use Postum.” Name given by Postum >., Battle Creek. Mich. Read the little Book “The Road to ellville.” in pkgs. “There’s a reason.” Ever read tile above letterr A aew ie aaaeara from flaw to time. They «r areattlae, tree, aad foil af kmi lereat. THEIR BUSINESS. ACfcNCY bnma (at matrimonial agent's, look ’ ing for a wife)—From this picture she appears as a woman with a high temper. ’Fraid we couldn't get along together. Agent—That's all right, sir. With every wife we furnish complete direc tions for getting along with her. DOCTOR PRESCRIBES CUTICURA REMEDIES ‘T wish to let you know of a couple of recent cures which I have made by the use of the Cuticura Remedies. j Last August, Mr. - of this city came to my office, troubled with a severe skin eruption. It was dermatitis in its worst form. It started with a slight eruption and would affect most parts of his body, thighs, elbows, chest, back and abdomen—and would j terminate in little pustules. The itch | ing and burning was dreadful and he would almost tear his skin apart, try j ing to get relief. I recommended all | the various treatments I could think I of and he spent about fifteen dollars ! on prescriptions, but nothing seemed i to help hitq, “In the meantime my wife, who was continually suffering with a slight skin trouble and who had been try ing different prescriptions and meth ods with my assistance, told me she was going to get some of the Cuticura Remedies and give them a fair trial. But as I did not know much about Cuticura at that time I was doubtful whether it would help her. Her skin would thicken, break and bleed, es pecially ru, the fingers, wrists and arms. I could do nothing to re'ieve her permanently. When she first ap plied the warm baths of Cuticura Soap and applications of Cuticura Ointment she saw a decided improve ment and in a few days she was com pletely cured. “I lost no time in recommending the Cuticura Remedies to Mr. -, and this was two months ago. I told him to wash with warm baths of the Cuticura Soap and to apply the Cuti cura Ointment generously. Believe me. from the very first day’s use of the Cuticura Remedies he was greatly ielieved and today he is completely cured through their use. I have great faith in the Cuticura Remedies and shall always have a good word for them now that I am convinced of their wonderful merits.” (Signed) B. L. Whitehead. M. D.. 10S Dartmouth St., Boston. Mass., July 22, 1910. That Might Be Inducement. It was during the hot spell and on the hottest night of the week that a South side teacher took a number of her little charges for a car ride. In the Public Square they piled out and were marched to the telescope set up by a man who rends peeps at the heavenly bodies at so much per peep. The children were told that they might look at the moon, a little lec ture accompanying the lesson that the moon was a cold body. • Teacher," spoke up one little South sider, "when you look through the glass does your face get cold?”— Cleveland Leader. Hia Instinct. "I see the family dog slinking out of the room. What’s the matter with him?” "Prescience. Presently there will be a tremendous family row on." "But how did the dog know that?" “Well, so to speak, his nose la something of a storm scenter.” First ano Second Choice. Pncle—Johnny, wouldn't yed like to be an angel? > Johnny—Not as long as there’s a show for me to become a baseball pitcher or a circus clown. JAMES BRAID SAYS: X'o Athlete can do himself justice if his feet hurt. Many thousands are using daily, abroad and in this country, Allen’s Foot Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes. All the prominent Golfers and Tennis Players at Augusta, Pinehurst and Palm Peach got much satisfaction feom its use this Spring. It gives a rest fulness and a springy feeling that make* you forget you have feet. Allen's Foot Ease is the greatest comfort discovery of the age and so easy to use. It prevent* soreness, blisters or puffing and gives rest from tired, tender or swollen feet. Seven teen years before the public, over 30.000 testimonials. Don't go on your vacation without a package of Allen’s Foot-Ease. Sold everywhere. 25c. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent FREE. Address, Al'en S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. PATENTS fortunes are made In patents. Pro ■ W I kll I « tect yotirida-as. Our 64 pag* book tre*. lUxferkldft Co.. Box K. W—kUfton, O. V,