FAMOUS DOCTOR'S 2 I J 7 III VcncnQlA r cat lababl 9 1L-J u "' 1 h f M. a I- . f r-. . - Uitv , H DAISY FLY KILLER tZlTi -J BalOU tOHIBI a ' l u rai a-a, CET A SAW MILL from Lombard Iron Workt, Augus ta, Ga. Malt monej iiwing neigh bor' timber when gin angina is iala after the cropt ara laid by. fjr C' n',:r'!' n, I:arr)i"-.'i. f:onvu:iP( Colir, vii s'-.ruii-h, . J' Jyc-tr-, s U'jrmt, A fcyfc lr..hTi- ftr.'l C'. '!. It A 1': 4 UwM tnn. It .'.Tar-i Tj(,-.', ,- I'r ,B3'-te Ciicer Li3W ai.C J-iociu-.n .Natural .tp. Martini and Sparrowi. T'o rr;ir!n houi-'f-s 1'-,J In Wavr.'Viro ro takn poe sffsion of bv a 'oV.r.y of Fntrlih bj arrows last fall v!,fTi 'ho martins vaa'4 thf-m for thr-ir vlr.'r Rojoum In BtinnT E'j'i,vi. Tlit martins r-tirn"l on Fa tir'!;iv Inst ar.ti inira(r"l In a pltfhfd T)nt'r fnr pr.Ksr.sirion of f h -l r former rfs'lrf plaf-n. Al'bouch th martins wrrp fiutriurnb'T''l th'y matlt tip th rl"fi'priry In avolr'lupols, anl this m.'n!" ' fi'ht nil th" rrnji Interest In?. Tho fonflt't not onW warm in V.ly Mois b'lt th no'.sfl tna'I'i as HlmoFt d'-afnlr.ii at tlmrn and fi"rrf tr-1 many persons In tho tnlchhorhoo'! to tho Rrn of trouf'lp. Th" n.-.r-'r," -v n out In the conten tion ar.'I rr:'!i''"l Tiocs'-pslon of thlr bomoc I'h!::i '!'.:.,!. ! a Uc-'ord. GoIitj Back on Hia Colort, A Harvard fi.-.'h;ll plHyt-r aftr-r th recent uiifort.iir.i'ff -r.Tjiintt-r with Yolo thouxlit he wouH -rcapo the tulllc fye by cutting u-rorg the Colds. A bl(? bull, v hl' h lookd as If 1t could do good work In a maps play, bobbi-d up and cast, an evil ye upon tho Jr-rspy of tho 'Harvard crlmuon. '""by didn't I take my futht-r's ad tlce," the youni? man reflected, "and to to Yale! Thla la no place for a Harvard man." Succeaa Magazine. Somu of the wlg?st of men have what Ir. Holmes described as Idiotlo areas In tbelr brains. JThcrc is a reason Why Grape-Nuts doe3'correct, A weak,' physical,' or & Sluggish mental condition.; jrhe food is highly nutritious And is partially pre-digested, iSo that it helps, the organs ?of J the stomach) "To digest other food.1 It is also rich in the Vital phosphates that goj ' Directly to make up The delicate gray matter Of brain and nerve centres. Read;'Thc Road to,WeUviUc ln pkgs. , "There's a Reason.' POSTUM CF.REAL CO.MP.V.W, Ltd.', Jiattla Creek, JlitW A V 'S': I 7 , V 3-Kir- -K-A f" all Mca. -WW" 1 MEKB3 E as TRDE "'' Aa'l THE DODO? A - ki x ze SCK. IN" 'I Hi-. :.u mi- MAVjaTits. The avo: lies ::. t:. St: .' I lent of geography ia:.d of Mauritius Ocean, about (.'! i-uascar, and That It Uior.i-s w E.'.fland. but be rjiizht not ' te ali;.. to tell' whether Maurit; .-: Is eoti,;y iJi-'Ins'ifj'hcd from a score ot ; ether iflar.Od lini In the southern ' her:,I-.,-,:. ere, although the nr:n.e Mau r!'.lu all up before two tlasH- of r.-.;r,I- I'Mnres almost ac vivid as does the fateful names of Kii-a or St. Hcr.a. I f,:.ri of tfcwe elaspes ronsUts of the lver-: of ion. antic literature all over the world, to whom the r.an.e Mauri tius' E'jgiteiits the tender and ;athtlc Idyl of -I'aul and Vlrpifila." of which this island was the theitre. 1 The Fccond, and r:.u'h smaller . class, are the paleontoioi'i.'.t?, or ttu-j der.ts of extinct animal forms, to . whom Mauritius is memorable as the f last home of the dodo, a protefque 1 and clumsy bird, with only rudlm.eC-' tary wini.'S, which ajij ears to have, been ettirrat-d atjout the rear 1.50. In ar. elaborate and cos'ly work on the dodo, published In London In 114, under the jatronai'o of Prince Albert, is found the folluwfr.g quaint ( description of th'' dodo, taken from Sir Thomas Herbert's journal of his j visit to Mauritius In 1 020: "The dolo comes 11: st to our de F'rij.tior.. Here (and nowhere else that ever I 'on Id see or h'-are ofi is cer.era'ed the dodo 'a Por.usruUe name It I-, and his references to her eln.iler.es i . a bir ! which for shape and rarenet.se niiirht be called a Phoe nix 'wer't in Arabia i; her body is THE UOIJO. Fac-sirille of a dri-.'-inj mi: o',d to have made from lit-: bv Zitin. round and extremely fat, her slow pace begets that corpuleneie; few of them weigh lessi than fifty pound; better to the eye than s'ornack; greasie.appt- tltes may perhaps commend them, but to the Indifferently curious, nourishment but prove offensive. "Let's take her picture; her visage darts forth melancholy, . s sensible as nature's injurle In framl g so great and masslo u body to bo olrc-cted by such small and compleinentall wings as are unable to holse her from the ground, serving only to prove her a bird; which otherwise might be doubted of; her head Is variously drest, the one half hooded with downy blackish feathers; the other perfectly naked; of a whitish hue, as If a transparent lawno had covered It; her bllfls very howked, and bends downwards, the thrill or breathing place Is In the mld itof It; from which part to the end, the colour Is a light greene mlxt with a palo yellow; her eyes be round and email, and bright as diamonds; her cloathing Is of finest downe, such as you see In gos lins; her trayne Is (like a Chinese beard) of three or foure short feath ers; her legs thick, and black, and strong: her tallons sharp, her stom ack fiery hot, bo as stones and Iron WOLFE'S MONUMENT ON THE 'liii: last home ok the dodo. are eaaily digested In It; In that and share not a little resembling the Af.lc oestriches." But one living Bpcclrnen of the dodo was ever known to have been etn outbids of Mauritius. This one was brought alive to Europe by a !ut'h navigator, and exhibited in London in l;.'i9. The evidence of this Is contained in a manuscript In the British Museum by Hamoc L Es' trance, and I" as follows: "About 1C3S, as I walked London streets, I saw the picture of a stranee j fowle hong out upon a cloth and my- I ife with one or two more then In 1 mpany went In to see it. It was kept In a chamber, and w-as a ?reat j fowle somewhat lUrer than the ' largest t irky cock, and so legged and footed, but shorter and thicker and of a more erect shape, coloured be fore like the breast of a young cock feFan, and on the back of dunn or deare colour. The keeper called it a do do, and In the ende of a chymney In the chamber there lay a heape of larze pebble s'or.es, whereof hee gave it many In our sight, some as hicee as nutmegs, and the keeper told us shee tats them (conducing to digestion)." A distinctly plaintive note in all the literature extent concerning the dodo excites curiosity and compas sion. In his introduction to the dodo book, from which these extracts are taken, this feeling is appealel to by the author as follows: "'e cannot see without regret the extinction of the last individual of any race of or ganic beings whose progenitors col or.iz'.d the preadami'e earth." An analysis of the reason for a specially compassionate interest In i.e dodo vtould seem to show that It !.- founded on the strikingly gro-te-quo character of the bird, taken with the fact that nature had been cruelly unkind to her In the matter of equipment for self-defense. She could neither run nor fiy. but was, as one traveler expressed It, "a speci men of gigantic Immaturity, a per manent nestling clothed with down Instead of feathers, and with wings and tall so short and feeble as to be utterly unsubservient to flight." Of this cruelty of nature the dodo herself appeared to be sensible, and to show It In "her visage," according to the account of Sir Thomas Her bert. At any rate, it made the ex tinction of the dodo, after the dlscov pry of the Island of Mauritius by the Portuguese about 1505, 30 swift and complete as to give it, to one inter- ested. a flavor of tragedv. The last of the fifteenth century and the be- ginning of the sixteenth made an era of geographical discovery, when every . j R.a was filled with the barks of ex- plorers and marauding buccaneers In search of new worlds. To these ruth less food hunters the dodo fell an easy prey, while the domestic animals which accompanied civilization wan tonly devoured her eggs. In the narrative of one of these ex- plorers, William van Wert Zanen, who visited Mauritius in 1602. he speoks of killing fifty dodos and tak ing them on board his ship, where they were salted. Assailed thus, both In front and rear, what wonder that the dodo's visage "darted forth mel ancholy," or that It gave up the un equal struggle? The cut, here shown accompanied Zanen's narrative, and is supposed to be from a drawing made by him. The scanty relics of the dodo, amounting to little more than frag ments of a head, a leg and a foot, can be found only in the treasured collec tions of nations, while the paintings made from life of this despised and martyred bird by Iloelandt Savery are beyond price. From Youth's Corripanlon. PLAINS OF ABRAHAM, QUEBEC The Lake Skipper. By RALPH D. PAINE. There was a alt water ear.tala who. for reasons of bis own, accepted a bean aa first mate in a bin passen ger steamer on the great lakeB. He was a capable seafarln? man, but he did not know what "bustle" meant untiUhe went aboard at Eufalo. Tho lake skipper to whiin he reported for duty reri'Sikel la the most casual manner: "Just give her a coat of paint this morning, and, if the sun stays hot and she dries in good shape, give her a se.'.ond coat this afternoon." Tho salt water r.iate staegered la his tracks and male anazed protest. This was a COOO-ton vessel, and giv ing 1 -.r two coats of paint was sev eral .days' work by his- reckoning. The lake skipper was a person of dis- j comment, wherefore "he bad pity on i his new mate and lore'ore to deal harshly with him, explaining with a tolerant grin: "All rislit. I suppose you'll have to learn to move lively after snoozing around salt water all your life. You Just pass that order along to the fco'sn and tell him it's gat to be done, and then you kit up and take no tice The bos'n took the order calmly, as If it were in the day's work, and by nightfall the big steamer was spick and span with two coats of paint from her water line to her guard rail. The sailor from deep water had learned his first lesson In the ways of the great lakes during the naviga tion season, when the hard-driven shipping must be forced to do twelve months' work In half a year. Ralph L. Paine, in Outin; Majazine. A IIOISE OF CEMENT. Hotv a Maine Man lias Made Himself a Good Home. In Belfast, Me., there is a house, built by Frank Hoa?, believed by the builder and citizens of that place to be the only one of the kind on earth. Aside from the blasting and dig ging for the cellar, the bouse was built by Mr. Hoas himself. The en tire outside Is of cement, the mixing of the component parts being under taken after a long study of the sub ject. Mr. Hcag finished the Inside of the house first. This being done, he lathed the whole outside with wire screen stuff, such as is used for fenc ing chicken pens. Thi3 was firmly fastened. The studding was close, and when the wire was on It gave a rigid surface on Eides, ends aud the Elopes of the roof. Over this layer of wire he spread a first coat of cement. It was well pressed on, so that It ooied through the meshes of the wire for a clinching hold. When this first coating was thoroughly set another and a heavier one was spread over the surface. Shingle effects were fashioned on the gables and on the root the cement was shaped and lined, to give an ap pearance of slating. Then over the whole outside was laid a finishing veneer of cement paint. The house is as tight as a bottle. j 11 Impervious to heat or cold, or i Ieak of raln: and, as lt3 foundation Is a solid ledge, It can defy the frost to wrestle with It. Mr. Hoag says the cost of building was about tho sama as wooden construction would have been, but he says there will bo no great number of repairs. Ec Globe. Two "Green" reporters. The Inexperienced reporter Is likely i to have an undeveloped "news sense." Every one will recall the story of the Journalist who was sent to report a fashionable wedding. Ho returned aa hour or so later empty-handed. When, asked what happened, he said. "Noth ing at all; the groom didn't come." A' writer la Llppineott's Magazine re counts an Incident not dissimilar. At a certain scnool or journal. is- i part of the practical work Is to do regular reporting. One time a stu aent was sent in naste to cover a railroad wreck at a town a few miles away. It grew to be almost time for the paper to go to press, and still no word from tbe young man on the assign' ment. In desperation, the dean of the school telegraphed to , ask why the story was not forthcoming. The re ply was: "Too much excltenentl Walt till things quiet down." Her Red Hair Spoiled Elopement. Her pretty red bair.and the. tele phone proved the undoing -of four teen-year-old Grace Smith, who with, Calvin .Bodkins eloped from Batlx County to Harrisonburg, whore they, expected to take the train for Hagers town. The girl's father, John M. Smith, telephoned Constable Revcrcoinb to Intercept the lovers and hold them' until his arrival. The constable rec oguized the couplo by the girl's hair and held them at Ills home until ber pp.pa arrived. Bodklus, who Is eigh teen years old, dented that they were, the persons wanted, but Papa Smith arrived within an hour and took his daughter back to their Bath County home, fifty miles away. Harrlsburg correspondence EaUlm re Sun. A Packase waned Free on RMue&tof r llla!Unili i t I) PAW-PAW PILLS . T;ie b'!t Stomach mfl Liver h,;:, i,noWB -; a positive ar.d cure for Con-iipi, ladigestljn. Jauniid' B. hoc sr.ess. Sour Ston,: nch. Heartache, am , ailxcr.ts arising froa. disordered stomach v Eluftrish liver. Th ccntain la coccen. tratarf fnr Kn .. Tlrtues and Talues of M itiyon'- ps! Paw tonic and are made' frott tbi' Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit, j hesitatingly recommend those iiliii u being the bast laxative and cathariio eer compounded. Send us postal or letter, requestius a free rackajo of Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw ban. tlte Pills, and we will rnall same ! of charge. ML'NYOX S Hr iMOEO PATHIC HOVE RKMEDT CO., 53J aud Jefferson Sis.. Philadelphia, Fa, TERRIBLE PICTURE OF SUFFERS A Terrible Picture of Suffering Drawn by Mrs. McElroy ol Clinton, Ky., Points ' Its Own Moral. Clinton, Ky. "I was a surTcrcr for six years from female troubles, t could not eat and could not stand oa my feet without suturing great pain. "I tried three of the bc-t doctors is the State of Kentucky and they sail I was in a critical condition ar.d going down hill. "I had lost all hope cf ever being better. I was so weak I had to b ; helped up and down. I hal neuralgij, dragging sensations and such awful hurting, low down in my right side, I could hardly bear it. "After using Cardui, for one week, I found I was getting belter, so continued to take it ar.I in four months time I felt better than I had in six years. "I advise all suffering women to take Cardui. I got more bcnci.t from $3 worth of Cardui than from SIM worth of doctors' medicines." The only way you can get the bene fit of the genuine Cardui herbs, is by buying a bottle of Cardui at your drug gist's. He does not keep the crude, drug, as it is not in the pharmacopoeia.l Fifty years' of proof of i'.s mtrit, in actual practice, has convinced us, and those who have tested it, of the value of Cardui in female weakness and disease. Why not test it for yoursclt? Food I Products Neter Vary in Quality or Teste Because the utmost care is taken by Libby'i Chefs to select only thechoicest materials and prepare them in the same careful manner every time. Ycu are thus assured of uni form goodness, and this is the reason that the use of Libby's gives such general satisfaction to every housewife. Try LiLby. Dried Beef Mexican Tannics .Ham Loaf Chili con Came Vienna Sausage . Evaporated Milk . For luncheon, spreads or everyday meals they are just the thing.' , ' " j . Keep a" supply in the House. You never cap tell when they will come ; . ' ;; in handy. Ask for libby's ana be' sure you get Libby'i. ' Lily, McNeill m m in i m w r II aal llimill inn