OCR Interpretation


Milk River Valley news. [volume] (Harlem, Mont.) 1904-1908, October 19, 1904, Image 8

Image and text provided by Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85053174/1904-10-19/ed-1/seq-8/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

Anthony Hope's now novel, "Double
Harness,” deals with marriage uu<l is
dosdrilsni tia very modcmy with char
acters that are''smart, up-to-date peo
ple."
"Kooks Condemned to Be Burnt,”
written and Compiled by J. A. i’arrer,
will contain dt record of Clio books
burned In by order of civil
courfs or the church in the sixteenth,
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Stanley Weyinau, who In his story,
“The Ismg Night," mude use of Inci
dents In the history of Geneva, has
received a gratifying pp'seut from
several prominent citizens of that city
In the shape of an address and a
bropzb statuette of Calvin.
Peter Nerwell, the well-known illus
trator and author, is making the pic
tures for Myrtle Reed's new volume,
"Studies in I'miaturul History," a
satire on the recent animal liooks with
tlielr almost human characters, which
G. P. Putnam's Sous have lit press.
Katharine P. Wormeley, the well
known translator of Balzac, la putting
Into English 0. A. Sainte-Beauve’s
"Portraits of the Seventeenth Cen
tury, Historic and Literary,” and G.
T. Putnam's Sons will bring tie work
out In two volumes, with about thirty
Illustrations.
Doubleday, Page & Co. has obtained
the American rights of the Great Mas
ters series, published in 1 >union with
such success by William Helnemann.
These n-pruillliTiolls are mailt' by a
new process invented by Mr. Bendtx
-6011, one of the reputed inventors of
tile phonograph.
In “The Burns Country," Just pub
lish'd J»y the Macmillan Comi«uuy,
Cfharles 8. Dougiill lias given the re-'
suits- of many leisurely pilgrimages
through;Caledonia. The I took Is illus
trated with fifty full-page pictures
from photographs, chiefly of pictur
esque and uiiumilior spots.
Mine. Albaueis, the author of "Su
sannah and One Other,” Is a great fa
vorite with the court circle In Eng
land. Recently at a philharmonic con
cert in London Queen Alexuiulra. see
ing Mine Album's! in the audience,
seat for the author In order to tell lier
what unprecedented pleasure she had
found to rending her novel.
Dr. Oarl Schmidt of Heidelberg,
after seven years of hard labor, bas
succeeded in piecing together
small fragments of papyrus and trans
lating the contents from the Qiptic.
Dr. Schmidt 'claims that he Is tints en
abled to give to the world the first ac
curate account of the actß of Paul.
The papyrus Is thought to have been
Inscribed In 180 Anno Domini. ;, !
Three editions of Rose E. Young's
novel of Missouri life, Henderson,
were ordered of the publishers In ad
vance of publication, and it has been
very favorably received by the critics.
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat de
scribes It as "a series of tlie most
graphic pictures—realism mingled
■v*)th beautiful Ideals. Miss Young de
serves to stand with Miss Alice Brown
for her exquisite literary equipment”
An excellent and entertaining story
l| “Hnldah,” by Alice Macgownn and
(jrace Maego-wan Cooke, (The Bobbs-
Jterrtll Company. Indianapolis). The
ierolne, with her cheery optimism, the
collection of children she has gath
ered, and a good marry of the other
people that come Into the story are
thoroughly alive and natural.' The
reader will be glad to make tlielr ac
quaintance. The Incidents are not
forced, though the life described is
that of Che wild cattle lands of Texas.
"SENSATION” IN VILLA ART.
Wonderful Effect Gained ut Villa Pllnl
anu by C’ngeil Muuutnin Torrent,
Jußt neross the luke, in the deep
elinde of Jpe wooded ellfTs beneath the
Plzzo dl Torno, lies another villa still
more steeped In the Italian garden
magic. This Is the Villa Plinldua,
built In 1070 by tlie Count Angutssola
of Piacenza, ii/id n pw the property of
the Trotti family of Milan. The place
takes Its name from an intermittent
spring lu the court, which is supposed
to the on# described by Pliny in
one of his letters; nnd It is further cel
el>rated as lieing the coolest 'villa on
Como. It lies on a small bay on the
east side of tile lnke, anil faega due
north, so that, while the villas of Cer
nobblo are bntlied In sunlight, a deep
green shadA envelops It. The house
stands on n narrow ledge. Its founda
tions projecting Into the lnke. nnd Its
buck bfrllt against the nlmost vortical’
wooded cliff which protects It from
the southern sun. Down this cliff
pours a foaming mountain torrent from
the Vul dl Culore, just beneath the
peak of Torno; nnd this torrent the,
architect of the Villa IMinlntm Ims cap
tured in its descent to the lake nnd
carried through the cent vat «|m rtment
of the villa.
The effect prodtteed| Is unlike nny
tjiing else, even In the wonderland of
litullini gardens. The two wings of
the lauile, a plain nml somewhat mel
anchily} looking structure, are joined
by nn t open arcaded room,'against the
line!; null of which the torrent pours
Mown', over stone work tremulous with
truss nml ferns, gushing out again be
ne itit the .balustrade of the loggia,
nil »*Vf trf
glittering whiteness lu the dnrk-grcen
witters of the lnke. The old house Is
sul urn ted with the freshness and
r— e
drenched with the flying spray of the
Cajed tdrrent. The hare vaulted rpqtiis
reverberate with it. the stone fours
ttnpt green with Its dampness, the ipr
qvjß-ers with Its cool incessant rush.
contrast of tills dusky dripping
loggia, on shaded 1 bay,
with the blazing blue waters of the
lake and their sun-steeped western
shores, is one of the most wonderful
cChs-ts lq yensjuthui that the Italian
‘vljji tfrt Junt»evif* devised.
The architect, not satisfied with ill
verting a part of the torrent to 1 cool
Tit#' hfjuso, has led the rest In a fall
down the cliff immediately adjoining
the, villa, nml has designed winding
paths through the woods from which
one may look down mi the bright rush
o|' tjie waters, (in'the other side of
the house lies a long bnlustradeil ter
race, between the lake and the hanging
woods, and here, on the only bit of
open and level ground near the house,
are the old formal gardens, now much
neglected, but still full of a melancholy
charm.—Century.
n #
;; A PROMOTER IN ABYSSINIA. t
O £
Oonsul-Gencrul Skinner, who has
concluded a treaty with Menelilc II of
Abyssinia, was not the first American
to visit Unit monarch, says World's
Work, and to establish friendly rela
tions with him. William 11. Ellis, a
Wall street promoter, preceded Mr.
Skinner, and was equally well re
ceived.
Mr. Ellis, who Is a colored man, met
ITiriee lias Makonneii In London at the
time of the coronation of Edward VII,
and was urged to visit Abyssinia. He
learned that the African kingdom need
ed a new currency and a new nntiomrt
bank, new bridges and many oilier
tilings, so he determined to go thither.
When the expedition of Mr. Skinner
was decided on, Mr. Ellis hastened his
preparations In order to gain prestige
by being the first to arrive. He>hud fc
a Mexican saddle mnde lit a cost of
thirty-five .hundred dollars, and several
JowClfcd revolvers for King Mene'lk.
He pneked up plans for a new bank
and several, specimen coins, and set out
on-; Ills travels. Ho marched Inland
from the seacoust with a retinue of
two hundred, and traveled In great
Btnte. i
Menellk was greatly-pleased with the
American Ethiopian who could talk
big enterprises with him in an under
standing way. Tlielr appointments
were made by telephone, which Mr. ■
Ellis found much in vogue in the
Abyssinian capital. He found also
that there were two cities
which lmd a large trade aud,
which needed many American good-,
and made n list of more than a hun
dred articles for which-a market could
be found. He proposes to make nnotli
qr trip soon In similar style to further
business interests.
ARE WE MATERIALISTS.
,Tlit VeA lievllopiilcnt' flic Cfrantry
* ttet-niM t o Kojiutc.tlie; Clurlm.
Nothing is mote common than tho
charge that the American people are
too materialistic, snys Is-slle's Weekly.
That was Matthew Arnold's chief In
dictment against us, and nearly every
othi'r critic of American life, before
Aj;uold's time and since, lius said the
same thing. Dickens described us as a
people who eared for nothing In par
ticular except to eat pork and chew to
bgcco. That we are hh a whole a set
of sordid money-grubber* seems to be
Tn fact, n very, general Impression
among the cultured men and women of
other lands. But the Impression Is a
false one. Hamilton W. Mnble. who
spends not unadvisedly on any subject.
Is entirely right In denying that Ameri
cans nrq luatetialists. It Is true, us
Mr. Mable says, that if we were asked
tj< name |j£e highest types of American ,
life. It would not be the leaders of
commercial life, but the pioneers of the
WesL men of the ohl South, sturdy
New Englanders—idealists nil; men not
of the selfish and sordid order, but
dreamers of splendid dreams that have
had n glorious realization. It required';
a noble Idealism to lay the foundations
6f a nation like ours and to develop
and maintain It ns It exists to day. A
land of churches anil schools, of more
noble philanthropies and magnificent
churltles than any other land under the
Bun—this is not the product of that
gross materialism unjustly ascribed us
our,chief characteristic, an estimate
of life in which nothing Is counted us
of value or of consequence that does
not make for the filling of the purse.
This view may prevail among ug more
than it should, but It distinctly Is not
the view of the vast majority of the
American people.
Essentials of Hospitality.
If only tlie people wdio ask us to
their homes would realize that this Is
the most subtle compliment which cun
lg) paid a visitor, tlu re would be fewer
amphltryous wondering why tlielr en
tertainments have so little "go" nnd
why tlielr guests seem pleased when
Monday morning arrives. A tranquil
manner, an avoidance of tlie showman
spirit, a real, not nil assumed, pleas
ure in gathering .lielr friends about
them, are the essentials without which
no mortal, though ho hq the owner of
tlie most splendid establishment and
have the wit of tho de Mortemarts, can
ii'blovo real success as an entertainer.
—Century.'
k When n mini leaves for another
town, announcing that he has a better
Job, It Is humiliating to come hack;
It Is almost us humiliating us to at
aud tjiu Jiyinped pvt-
It la hard to get a good washwoman
hut then It Is mighty hnrd to wash for
a living
" I' ■
' >wf W >
“Halt UMiekccel run from 20 to 25
cents, according tb size," said the jgro
ecryman. “The big fat ones cost lfwre
than the little thin ones. They'rf as
easy to catch, but they cost more Inst
the samq, No, 25 cents ain’t a|hlg
price whim you come to fliink howpew
there are of ’em. A pair o’ mackerel
don’t raise more*n 19,000,000 young
ones In the course of a year, and [that
naturally makes ’em scarce. A* for
the market reports, yon don't want to
believe everything you see in the pa
pers.”
"You needn’t trouble abput the
mackerel,” said the pretty cook. "If
I have to pay that price for ’rro, I
don’t want 'em.”
“Tnke some anchovies, then," sug
gested the groceryman. They’re Just
ns Ashy, and they taste ns salty, and
you get more of ’em. No? Weill Just
as you say. I wouldn’t want to force
you to tnke 'am If you don’t want 'em.
The only kind o' fish I've .got any use
for Is an oyster crapker. If yon eat
an oyster cracker with cheese you
don’t hardly notice the tiiste. Want
any berries?"
“What linve you'got?”
"Straw, rasp, black, blue, ernn or
mul. All fresh except what’s canned.
I've got some nice raspberries at 15
cents.” -" t, . ~e—Wj?
"A bqpr' ;• *
"?yO, a emjg £hey come at 10 by
the- box?—lOLAents hploce. Beaches?
Plums?”"
"I wish you'd stop talking a min
ute and letj me think what I want,”
said the pretty cook, crossly.
“I was tryin’ to help you,” said tlie
groceryman. “We don’t any of us
know what we want until we see it
or somebody tells us about It. t'ntil
I saw iyont I hadn’t got the least
idee-j-”
"Dll, litlsh!" said, the cook, knitting
her brows. s ’W|iatinre peaches?"
"They’re sutliin' nliout the size of
a apple," explained the grocqryman.
‘They grow on trees, like apples, only
they’ve got a harder core. Every
spring the crop gets killed off by frost
regular,* and along about now you can
buy all you want of ’em for 5 cents
in ■ ’ 1
The Prince of Monaco Is u first
class lectiironon deep-sea life.
I,ord Justice Vaughan Williams
owns flourishing butchers’ shops.
The catalogue of orchids in the Kow
Gardens of London liesijlbes 22CP, spec
imens. • « ’ “’ -i
The North German Lloyd lias fifty
one stenmers qh fourteen lines In East
Asiatic \\%tertc a • . ►
Before Huntley Wright became a
leading comedian he was a heavy vil
lain In melodrama.
Contracts have been let by the
Grand Trunk Railway for a new
300-foot ferry to lie used at Toledo.
In the Brazilian State of Rio Grand ;
do Sul about 400,000 entile are annual
ly slaughtered for jerked beef alone.
Sir Gilbert Parker, the eminent nov
elist, has been a clergyman, professor
111 a deaf and dumb institute, deacon,
editor and playwright.
Italy has 10,700,000 trees bearing
oranges, lemons nnd pomegranates. Of
last year’s crop 814,329 hundredweight
went to Great Britain, 720,327 to North
America.
King Edward VII. once wrote In a
confession book that the person he dis
liked most was "the man who points
at you with Ills umbrella and shouts
out, ‘There he Is!”’
It Is estimated, that nbout 4,500 trav
elers from the Vnlted States have vis
ited Greece during each of the last
four years, and have nyfilially left
about $1,5!K),000 111 the kingdom.
A (i or mi n photographer, Kunwnld.
when taking a picture of u woman of
doubtful age plnces sheets of celluloid
between the negative and the prlntlug
paper, thus producing a very softening
effect, which hides the marks of age.
The Australian government has or
ganized an expedition under Captain
Ilarrtay to explore the region, com
prising 00.000 square miles, between
Eyre lake and the western boundary
of Queensland. It Is a desert of the
worst type, which has cost thcdlves of
several explorers.
A Russian ophthalmologist affirms
that contrary to generally received
opinion the electric light Is less preju
dicial to the sight than the other varie
ties of artificial light. lie bases this
affirmation on the fact that diseases
and affections of the eye are directly
proportional to the frequency of wink
ing. Now he has shown that winking
occurs with candlelight (1.8 times n
minute; with gaslight, 2.8 times; with
sunlight, 2.2 times, and only 1.8 times
with the electric light.
The largest station for wireless
telegraphy Is belpp plans! near I’lsa,
Italy. On Its Completion,- by the end
of this year, It .Is expected to afford
direct communication with all coun
tries of Burope, us well ns the United
States aud /mu with all ves
sels on the aTcufterrancah. Indian and
Atlantic Oceans.
According to the United States cen
sus In 1S1X), there were s'j.ibo members
because they ain’t good M ripe, and
you don’t want many, ijtvy'vc got
nice complexions, nnd the wen at tho
fruit stands make ’em wear*pink veils
to keep ’em from gtitfin' freckle*.
That’s one kind o’ peach. ’ Tfiere'g an
other kind wears a blue sttilptj cAltcker
dress with the sleeves rilled up an'
has got flour on her elbows and a little
soot on the side of her nose."
The pretty cook applied the corner
of her upron to the feature referred
to nnd tlio groceryman laughed.
“It's off now,” he said. ) "'You've
moved It over to your cheek. Here,
let me show you where ft Is.”
“You keep away froifl me,” strid the
the pretty cook, threatening the young
man with her rolling pin. “You can
send me half n peck of peaches, and I
want a bunch of parsley, two pounds
of creamery butter nnd a five-pound
can of lard. I want some potatoes,
too. Have you any good ones?”
“Sure!” answered tho groceryman.
"Put up In fancy baskets, tlqij with
brown silk ribbon, and evpry. potato
wrappped In paraffin paper and tin
foil. Say, I can remember the time
when potatoes wns as common as
oranges. Almost any family felt as If
they could afford to eat,- potatoes.
Down on Sonth Water street you’d
see 'em piled up in sacks and bushel
baskets without any protection at all,
nnd nobody would think of wanting to
stenl ’em. Why, you could get a whole
bushel of ’em for from (50 to 80 cents,
nnd they served 'em In the restau
rants with a meat order without any
extra charge."
“How much are they this morning?"
“Forty a peck. A peck? All right
be careful how you peel 'em. Say,
Evelina, to-morrow's Thursday."
“What about it?” asked the pretty
cook.
“Well, It's our afternoon off, fhnt’s
all, nml I've got the pasteboards for
a picnic at Downer’s Grove. Want to
go?”
“No, thank you,” said the cook.
"I’ve got an engagement."
"Too bad," commented the grocery
man. "I was hoping I could sell you
my tickets.”—Chicago Daily News.
of tile bar in the United Stntes, -or one
to every 098 of the population. Accord
ing to the census of 1000 the total
number was 114,703, or one to every
059 of the population. Since 1900
there bas been a very considerable ad
dition to the number of lnwvers.
-1
One of the richest bachelors in Eng
land. aud the richest peer In the
house of peers, the Marquis of Bute,
has just celebrated his twenty-third
birthday, and there’s not a young
spinster of high degrei whose family
tvonlcl not like to have her capture the
matrimonial prize. Whoever the future
Uiarohloness.is she must be u Catholic,
and this obligation has iutirfefegd with
his lordship’s choice.
The officials of the Wesleyan Sunday
school. Swlnton, England, lay claim
to having upon their register the oldest
Sunday school teacher In England, If
not 111 the United Kingdom. George
Doxey, who Is now tn his eighty-eighth
year, has been a teacher sixty-nine
years, and bolds the remarkable record
thnt for half a century' he was never
absent from school, and during forty
years be was never once late. Though
eighty-seven years old, be Is able to
read without the aid of spectacles,
SPENCER’S LOVE STORY.
The Great Philosopher Had a Very
I Human Side.
Herbert Spencer never married.
When be was twenty years old be had
something like, a tender affair and he
tells about it in his autobiography.
The young lady’s affections had al
ready been placed elsewhere and she
wns only playing with the budding
philosopher. One day "her young
man" called and they all went out for
n walk. Spencer says: "She, taking
his arm, looked over her shoulder
smilingly and rather mischievously to
see what effect wns produced on n.e,
there being an evident suspicion that
1 should not be pleased. The revela
tion was not agreeable to me, but still
It did not give me a shock of a se
rious kind."
Speneer's only other affulr concerns
George- Eltot Ills account of It dues
not reflect credit on Ms gallnntry. He
gays: “Of course, ns we were fre
quently seen together, people drew
their Inferences. Very slight evidence
nsually suffices the world for positive
conclusions and here the evidence
seemed strong. Naturally, therefore,
quite definite statements became cur
rent. There were reports thnt I wns
In love wlftr lief and that we were
about to be married. But neither of
these reports was true.”
Farther oil Spencer says: "Physical
beauty Is a sine qua non with me, ns
was once unhappily proved, where the
Intellectual traits anil the emotional
traits were of the highest.” Analyzed,
these passages can only mean that the
reason the friendship between Jhem
did not ripen into love uml muqriago
was that the author of "Adam Rede"
whs not beautiful enough to suit the
nuthor of "First Principles." The In
ference is thnt she would liavo "had
him" if he hail asked her.
T _ ‘At,. . .!„■
If a will entertain any ono
waiting bis turn In n dentist's chair,
there need be no further test applied
to IU entertaining powers.
WRITING LOT AND BGHT.
Here Is'an amusing little
that you may play upon unsuspecting
friends. Per imps It would he more
correct to say that they play the trick
on themselves—which makes It all the
funnier. .You tell them whnta to do
and it Is not your fault that they don't
know how to do it. h
Give your victim a slip of stout writ
ing paper nnd the stub of a soft, black
lead pencil, not very sharp. Ask them
to shut his eyes and lay thb paper on
his forehead, holding It there with the
thumb and forefinger aMbs left hand,
one pressed to each while the
Swim of the hand covers his eyes. The
next thing he has to do is to write
his name on the puper with the pencil
held in ills right hand. Writing Is not
easy under such conditional so no one
will expect the signature to be very
pretty or very legible, but everybody,
including the writer, will be surprise^
1 1 " 1 ■■ ■
AS AMI HINO EXPEIUEMCE.
to find It written backwards—that" Is,
If tlie victim has succeeded in 'writing
anything tlinn enn bo made out at aH.
Nine persons out of ten begin to write
at the left eyebrow and wrltentowurd
the right eyebrow. But this Is not
really writing from left to write, fs
writing should be (lone, but from right
to left, because when the pnper is
taken from the .forehead and lpi> on
the table It Is turned end for end.
Does the writer make the mistake be
cause he says to himself, “Let me see,
now, I must begin at the left,” and
therefore begins at the left eye? 1 Prob
ably not, for if lie stops to think lie is
npt to write correctly. The trick is
most likely to succeed when the writ
ing is attempted, impulsively. wiQ: “t
thinking. So you should not say any
tiiiug about writing, or even show the
pencil, until the paper is held on the
forehead and the eyes closed. Then
slip tlie pencil Intp the hail'd
and tell him to write. The mispikif Is
just one of those queer things Jn liu ; -
mati nature that nobody has yet ex
plained.
The precise directions nhouf’holding
the pnper nml the left hand Mislead
the writer and make Jilm more likely
to err, but their main object -Is to
guard tlie eyes against a possible jab
with the pencil, and for similar rear,
sons a short blunt pencil should be
used. —People's HQine Journal.
“When failure overwhelms you, be
lieve that all will come right and work
for a future success." That Is the
moral to be drawn from a story told
In l.a Nouvelle Revue by Mous. Phil
ippe Bunuu-Vnrilln, first minister from
Panama to the United States.
in 1880, lie says, everything was ap
parently going well ut Panama. After
the great spoliation, or In spite Of it,
the engineers hud done great work.
Much of the excavation lmd been ac
complished, but much more remained.,
to be done. The machines were on tho
ground, the workmen were there; It
remained only for uu honest adminis
tration, making use of these mate
rials, to finish the work. Enough work
huil been accomplished to make a vis
ible basis for negotiating a loan. Then
panic seized the French people, nnd
the enterprise went to pieces.
Two years later, thoroughly discour
aged, tho. engineer was in New York
City, where he consulted JoLiq Bige
low, formerly United States iillnljler
to France.
“What shnll 1 do ” he asked.
“Write a book,” replied Mr. Bigelow.
“But who will read It?" asked the
discouraged Frenchman.
“Do not worry about that," said Mr.
Bigelow. "Do not write It for to-day.
Write It for ten years from to-day.”
Monsieur Bunau-Vnrilla went to
work, utid prepared n concise nnd hon
est statement of exactly what had
been done nnd what remained to do,
with his estimates of time and ex
pense required. He published It in'
March, 1892. Ten years later, in June,
1902, the United States Sennto voted
In favor of completing the Isthmlnn
canal, and the prediction of Mr. Bigee
low was fulfilled. The book of the
French engineer, snne, practical, hon
est, had been one of the greatest influ
ences In turning American sentiment
from Nicaragua to Panama, and bring
ing success at last to the great ditch.
Iter Share in 11.
"Our minister Is very strongly m
favor of Bible revision,'’ said less.
"So his daughter,” said Jess.
“Who? Mae?”
“Yes, her limin' was ‘Mary Cath
erlmf In tlielr faintly Bible until she
scratched It out mid made It ‘Mao
Kathryn."—lTilliidelphlff Pr^ss.
Having passed through tlie Fourth
without getting killed, a mother mny
be pretty well assured that her sons
will live until Christinas, if they keep
sway from the river.
It Is n- question on n farm 111 summer
which will drop dead from overwork
the sooner: the farmer In the field, or
his wife In the kitchen
Mcm System on » Mm-o|W«r.
The messing on board a blj man-of
war Is as complex and complete as
the table service of a big hotel. The
modern war-ship with Its five or six
hundred persons oil board, must be a
floating hotel and storehouse In itself.
■Every vessel of the navy Is required
by the regulations governing tho nnvy,
■to Ibave -a general messing system.
The enlisted men on ship are divided
Into tquads of about twenty each,
forming a mess. Chief petty, officers
nnd ofllcers’ servants are not Included
in this division. Every mesa hug one
or two petty officers at Its table, who
fare like tile men. Every mess lins
Its special messman who brings tho
food from the galley and Berves It at
the tabh. It Is also the messman’s
duty to see that the messtable and
nic«Bgearare clean and In order. The
messes or. board ship are under the
direct sup»rvlslon of the commissary
department which Is under the con
trol of tile pay officers. —Gunston'a
Magazine.
Oil Sfan's Secret
Alpana, Mich., Sept. s.—(Special.)-—
Seventy-live ,-enrs of age, but hale and
hearty Is Mr Jet-ome K. Fournier of
tills place, aid to those who ask the
secret of his splendid health he gives
the good advpe, "Use Dodd’s Kidney
Pills."
When asket for Ills reason’ for so
strongly reran mending the Great
American Ivkbey Remedy, Mr. Four
nier related rib following experience:
“I recommetl Dodd's Kidney I’llls
because they elred ,ni(\ pf Diabetes. I
Buffered with ny kidneys for a long
time nml suffers! terribly Worn those
Urinary Troubls that are so general
among aged peolc.
"Then I stnrtd to b'se Dodd's Kid
ney rills and dght boxes of them
cured my kidney, regulated my water
nnd made me fee like a hearty young
man.” *
Dodd’s Kidney Pills make the old
’ feel young bechue they make sound
kidneys. Bound Ihlneys mean health
nnd health Is the ohfcr name for youth.
The Theatrics Super Trust.
The “super’s” saiuy ranges nil the
way from twenty-lflA eotfts to A dollar
u performance,- hut's generally nbout
three dollars and itty cents a week.
His eliance of was former
ly rare, though of itate years a man
with talent stands i very fair show
of climbing. There are several well
known actors who as supers nnd
they nre always polled out'by the
rest of tho profossior|'super) as shin
ing examples, but hr everyone who
succeeds, hundreds fill,,
In olden times it «as the custom In
heavy productions to lave six or eight
men represent a vast oncourso of peo
ple; then they gmduny iuoruasod the
lumber, until sometimes a hundred
were used at one tlmej It .wnq at this
period that the “supe" entered the
dramatie field. It wasthen that the
"nds" lu the papers so, “supers” be
gan to mnke tlielr iiMparaiiee, nnd
nothing In the "Help column
was so well responded tt A call for
fifteen men Invariably brtuglit a hun
dred and fifty, In all stags »f dllapi
,ilation. J
When a manager neoti ■"supers”
nowadays he simply goes t* lie ’phone
nnd calls up the agency liaixftlg them,
states how many and whtfikind he
wonts, nml the agency AIL order.
For example, suppose tie manager
of a large production requi-es:
"Two old men with full (cards, six
middle-aged Frenchmen.Bom Japanese
with long drooping muAule, twenty
well-built young man." t Hu rings up
the extra people’s burejlu mil gives
these Items; nnd the agliioy, after se
lecting ns many as they iiavt on their
V>ooks, sends ont tralneiE assgtants to
procure the rest.—Leslljjs Monthly.
BUILDING FOOD ‘
To Bring the tiabietf Artund.
When a little human wacttbe (or a
large one) goes wrong, nothitg Is so
important ns the selection tiof food
which will always bring It around
again.
“My little boy fifteen monihs old
bad pneumonia, then came brati fever,
and do soooer bud hs got over these
tlinn he began to cut teAth and, being,
so weak, be was frequently thrown
Into eouvulslous,” says a Colorado
mother.
“I decided a change nilglit help, so
took him to Kansas City tor u visit.
When we got there he was so very
wenk when he would cry lie would
sink away aud seemed like he would
die.
“WJien 1 reuehed my stiter’s home
she said Immediately that we must
feed him Grape-Nuts and. although 1
had never used the food, tve got some,
and for a Tew days gitve him Just tho
Juice of Grape-Nuts ami milk. He got
6trongor so quickly we were soon feed
ing him the Grape-Nuts itself, and fn
a wonderfully short time he fattened
right up and became strong and well.
"That showed me something worth
knowing and, when later on my girl
came, I raised her on Grape-Nuts, nml
si. 2 Is a strong, healthy baby and has
been. You will see from the little
photograph I aend yon wliat-a strong,
chubby youngster the boy Is now. but
be didn’t look anything like that be.
fore we found tills nourishing food.
Grap" Nuts nourished him back to
strength when he was so weak ho
couldn’t keep any other fool] on his
stomneb." Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.l
All children ran he built to ■ more
sturdy nnd healthy condition upon
Grape-Nuts and cream. The food con
tains the elements nature demands,
from which to make the softjtray fill
ing In the nerve centers and prnln. A
well-fed hrnln and strong, sturdy
nerves absolutely Insure a healthy
body.
Look In eaeh pkg. for the famous
Uttle book. “The Road to WellTille."

xml | txt