Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 24, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 September 1909 — Page 2

Yhe NEW IDIVORCE GENTRE, | : f/;/""'\\ | e g i ’;/j/ ; AL . /' _ . S (K,)fi:f/(l,i/"d‘kfflf/ay,/ /Z 13’/1//101; 2 : | / N\ Laberits thel. 1) Year Llstimated 4 e \“‘\\‘ { g= \ .f'-zS}'/jzzi,xffZ;Z// S\! % /Jf venie @ /-g g ' e S 0 L) : : L ' : s 8 T wOO \\ Juddustryt N el o I BT - = \ ( Ad | ==l o Thason| |BO ¥ ] \\ 72 = // > - | o B /)

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. _ et At N T it " g - L e A e . ¥ £ F b ;é‘ .;"'..; »“‘ = sgt 5‘5; : L 3 ;~ i; e V%%' s 1 9 l : 4 € A T ERL BN R 0 ey, PE et &%, - o w%:»@ P '.g v‘fl{\ ‘ifix-., N»3 £ Vo /s o B B ol g’ TR b e . - S PR € e B . ] ‘ b o iy , _,,,,,«“"’ & : A A g % S e %’?"}"_: f&7 | k) N(i ¢ ' e. < PR CANENT £ wit 8 = RSR L o, | 3 ! ey N ™ ’%\ ; o N R sR b - L e -‘@:T S ' q:gm i i S e g A : it P Lo A o o 5 = ENLL 5 ¢ | ‘ Jreiealrg Ll { i] ; |\ Aesiiianr-4 (AR T Rewerrvoos v | q%fi;fi.fl / ok Meara) s e ‘\\1‘"““‘“"””‘"“"""‘ ———_ \‘w"’/ to restdend Por Retoe has saceecded (o IHe eminence A ; sofe TR aheateq | 3 t ity the Nexgda vveral yoeuars a; 1l Hell b got out azain 4 g s By heloht, elast) Y Ko n . ¢ trimoiinb o, toakt not b Lrpassed anye Bt 3 sy It Wns eipun :fi ¥ Ihe Sonth Dakota o 3 . e fEaay 18 for the tlase holne

Bat evervibing conios 1o him that walis, and when the people of Soisth Dakota arose in :h-v%:‘_' wrath last November and. by a referendum vole declared that an¥ ene whao desired db gt a 4t voree iu South Dakets weuld bave 1o Hyve there 4 year tnstead of Blx manths, as had ben the re quirement ;ti'o-v!n-';z:vl.}‘. the sooker od reilef from present matrhuonial ties began to take the long journey westward to Nevada, where it takes but a six months residence to be 1y a position o go befere "the courts of the state as platnil® (o a divorco guit. .‘ . - ; _' ; . W H. :«'»,!mi::vr. A Reno divorce spocialis(, has. written a (reatisg on divorce raciics angd pro cedure, {1 which he throws an {haninating tay on the wherefore of the popularity of Reno as a divorce center. He save: = “While the laws of the ecastern and middle western suites generally eontain some provigion for -the dissolution af the marriage tie, it Is ot vious to the rémder (hat in cases whers exirene cruelty, desertion, and failure to provide form the basis of the grievance, the law in such states olfers no substantial rellef to the agerieved party, because the requirements of proof, duration of coffense, corroborgtion of plaintift and. procedure under court rules are so exacting and irksome that the desired relief sought by the applicant is rendered impossible of attaimment. Sumwming up the situation as it exists In the eastern states respecting the domestic relation law, the client when counsulting local counsel is almost invariably advised that upen the facts submitted he or she Is without remedy. Here In Nevada the applicant,- without deception or fraud, upon almost any charge from which lack of harmonious relations may be reasonably inferred, may apply to our courts and secure prompt results by decree of absolute divorce, valid and binding in law,” : : e | While there are about 54 cases now on the docket of the district court, there are in Reno to-day over ‘350 individuals establishing a residence for divorce purposes, a majority of whom are women, . e ' ' ~ The charms of Nevada as a divorce center have only just begun to percolate into the consciousness of the outside world. ( Reno has no objection to the present status of affairs. It is-estimated that the revenue of the town f{rom the divorce colony at present is close to $1,000,000 a year, and that it will rapidly increase from this on. To a community of but 18, 000 population this is no small consideration. Why Reno is preferred to any other community in the state as a place of residence by those seeking ‘divorces is because of the manifold ad-

Best Known of All Coins

United States Cent Well Described as the Universal Money of the .~ People. The universal money of the people in this country is the cent. The child does his earliest business thinking in terms of cents. The hobo holds up the passerby with the request for a few cents to relieve the pangs of hunger. It is the unit of coinage. On the other side of the continent ahe

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come bhack for several davd - It might be men tHoned in this cornection thatl the divores colony’ " Basx Lrossht 16 Reno over 100 motor cars - The lesding hotels are alwuys crowded. and the ronds for cotiages have approciated, on e _average, 1o the extent of 50 per cent in the iast #ix months. In some insgtapees the increaze has teen much gregater One coltage that rented for $6O o month In January Inst, pow reéturns s own er & revial of 3100 a nionth : Peraps the obe thing ‘that endears Reno fo the vislthng divoreee more than anything elie I 8 fts procimily fo San Frauciseo. One may boasd a train In Reno and be in the Pacilic coast metrop ois In ten Bours. Deaplts s man Hold attrac tions, Hie g Reno is likely to wear {rksome upon those who hive been used to existence in larget centers. and the visitors, to a great ¢xient gooner or laler during their stay, take & trip or hald a dozen frips over the Slerras to the ity by the Gailden ‘:;’J\_ir_’n : 3 ; - Buch yisite while affordipe rellef from the monotony of life in Reno, do not fmpair the rest—dence quaiifications necessary g the obtatning of a divarce. To again quote the Nevada divorce authority already mentioned: > i “Under the provisions of Section 22 of the Marriage and Divorce act, the plaintiff must reside in the state for a peried of at least six months. This i{s not construed to mean that in order to fully comply with the statute the party - must remain here continuously for said period. So, if a party comes to Nevada, and, in good faith, takes up a residence, the party may leave the state at any time after establishing residence, may go and travel when and wherever the party chooses, and may return to the state whenever inclination prompts, and yet such temporary absence would not in any wise affect the legality of the residence established, but the party would be ~entitled under the law to bring suit any time after the lapse of six months from the date resi dence was originally established, notwithstanding the party's absence from the state during said period.” ’ : : Biased somewhat by the financial seductions of the situation, and yet to learn the lesson that such a state of affairs can only Tesult in the moral degradation of the youth of the community—a ~ lesson which caused South Dakota to reform her divorce laws—Reno appears to be perfectly contented with things as they are. : 4 But Reno is busily engaged in cleaning house, and it is felt by the most reflective observers that the divorce laws of Nevada as now written will ‘be a thing of the past in the near futuré. Not in

contempt for it is rapidly being over come and the mints have to take a constantly increasing demand for it into their reckonings. The appearance of the new Lincoln cent is one of the most interesting additions to this coinage that has been produced. For praetically the first time it substitutes the real for the ideal, or, rather, the fanciful; but it is evidently regarded as something of an experiment, since the proposed 150,000 will not go far

known as “"Rick'a™ which (& the floral “Monte Carlo " Hicks har all the eonvenl encén foir those who desire to make g stay, and fregquentiy partiog whe go thero to spend 8 few hours forget to

;toward supplring current needs. i Perhaps no other monetary denomi- | nation has undergone so many changes | of design. Since the republic was [ born there have been almost annual | changes in the character of the cent. ' Most of. these have been trivial, | though some have been radical. The | cent of 1792 bore a bust of Liberty, ! with flowing hair and the legend, | “Liberty. Parent of Science and Indus- ; try.” The next year what was known }as the “chain cent” was produced, i showing on the reverse a chain with

" : " R i % . = ety AAEREL JURE e SR LasES A E &F Iwr Oy £ s r— e e vory near faturedor e Bext 5 ; saril . Yo vy SRR EIRTTY ¢ 54 meel Al 2300 mry oat Inid There wyw dbets who point (o the expering G Seasth s i e ; : o', whilvh far 24 yeare fougkl the L i divivoe. lawas Defore & e beal was setured, and shy that Ihe Eoaraiiaty of Nevadns Bave an o odinsily * % g 3 ! % % - ¥ ¥ w : ar s iaxk e ¢ them BUI e Yaox o} CRHOBEITE DBonss in o ihe et A SOER Io6¢ Jepianiute Biter ganIng being permiliodd for 46 yaars wilh Cokuizance of daw. & Uil sballahing gl g was pasied-the aet th lake Eleot N maber of 152 and i is Lejivved that §f thal could be dand the kK varce law sak be moare Cal oy Sy Send I 12 fanthye the hotel men and. Loty fetiiara &‘ by Baßag Ihe :& Yar IRwyers wiil wrady siq MEaioo faul Patleian tollettes and 60 Borus Isiwer xid Bilew Wil Sash st cart . 3 £3 > % ¥ fint’ 53 - sW¥av wall 2y i faer wwhiard B a4l @ix ol hpvirs Mot and warmes will continae (o beirone e ot N JYanan on o 8 sivuani! resbdebce -amd 1 . T ¥g ¥ ¥ :.v % v % it o¥ § . B e e ogtaty gy Heoddae sfirr BECRTIRE (her gbyor GECTRes Frolics of a Real Qu

“‘M quesns are vory, human be . Inms after all f 8 evidencad by thelr delight in the outdoor pleasures Dl it eDR Lol gl Ry R e e e

Sel RTR MMER C WMILDIGRE .SR IRCTN WAY enjoy. The roval lady of a European court no longer sits in regal wplendor in her paluce. sur. rounded by ladies n waiting ready to minister to j;;y—figz*mcyfl‘:fimkggum wish, but you may meet her metloring in the, codntry or riding. horseback in the park It ix an excellent exaniple they are #elling for their country women in this respect. fi:}fl”fl Aiaxandr:s is a devotes of catdour ”-ff?..,‘ In%m 'g};gé;‘gmribmm Eeeping voung. and enioy.

all parts of her farm at leas! once a day. This is miite of A plessure than a task because alis usnaily amuses herself on the wav by isnking KuApghote with her camerk or pliving with one or fmiore doge. Pond though the gueen i of autdoor life. she avolds hard exercise. Yuchtifig and driving ehe enjuvs but she never has plaved polf or put a ball over & tetinds net Persistent automobiling, she believes, offera the guickest miedns known for gelting rid of a nice comploxion and gaining 10000 wrinkles Quoen Aloxandra beticves so much in fresh air HRG exercipge out of doors. that she has gomnetimes £ept in A temt she bad put up for her at Sas dringham = Oneg asked how sl mabaged to kean voung, she suld: “Froedh alf and exercise are the best elixirs of youth ” AQuwen Alexandra's partieular hobhy s ';‘xhcibg. raphy and that takes bher oul.of doors 8 great deal. She Is gald now to_possess alburms contAin. g over 10060 photographe, &1 taken by her own hamds, representing roval and important personRges, places and festivais in all parts of Europe. For a period of 16 years pow the gueen has been a devotee of the camera She possesses five cameras. L , . . Wherever the queen goes—be 1t a cruise in the royal vacht, to her liome in. Denmark, or a ride ACross country in the Highlands—she {s pever Without her camera. That she uses it well is evident when it is stated that during one of her Medfterranean cruises she secured 1400 photographs in six weeks. Then it is very seldom, too, that the gueen throws out a picture or destroys a negative because the subject is not up to the mark. . In her way of going to work she is most methoddeal. Mer photographs fill many albums and under each photograph her majesty has written a description of the picture and the date whem taken. They include a great variety of subjects, from the king's stud horses taken in the old days at the annual sale at Wolferton to portraits of her grandchildren on the lawn at Sandringham and the ruins of the Parthenon. The phomsrapha of her grandchildren fill three albums alone and now amount to several thousand. They depict them at their games, romping with each other, and one, that made the king roar with laughter when he saw it, has caught two of the younger sons of the DPrincess of Wales, each endeavoring to exert his right to a certain toy by the free use of his fists. - What she rezards as one of her best photo graphs of the king is that which depicts him talking to Lord Suffield in the grounds of Marlborough Howee : S |

15 links. There were mapy imperfect dies in those days, but the imperfections have not infrequently made

thesm precious to coin collectors. A g&e 1799 cent has been among the pleces most prized by the numismatist, since they early became very scarce. . This was said to be due to the enterprise of a Salem firm that

secured several hundred thousand of them and sent them to the coast of Afrieca, where, punched with holes, they were hung as ornaments on the necks of the nativea

ONE OF THE VETERANS OF THE GAME oy = : {; : :§ . : e e 4 E ; . ‘;";fi’m a ‘ - o o : A ¢ - ,_.}3' ; i ¥ oo ? P . > 4 | e : ‘fi‘? 3 3 % -~ ! i 4 & ’_" - = & ard “ 7 ok ‘? : e = J B \ ) ¥B3T 2 B e 7s‘e 0 b N ~s W AN, £ = § &“ o : s Yy . ] AN Y N\ e ":‘#' ; : \‘ 1 il 5 !',- SR Y (“ K{ : - . g . §Zeßp : E p } NS -. 0 - - s "' T S - ¥of ! R el o M, kB -:-B w } - ? W B U e, 4 B ® o 8 9 ™ e e y 5% ¥ L ; T ¥ 4 {:’ i *\ - L ’ » . R i? e v i 5 s e Bai > gV .5 i S e o R : v‘ L o % % g & sl 5 ' ¥ f;* TS . ’ F ik Pl P e R ese B ¥ h:i,'i!»:‘. - i - - , ¥ r . b S o hE e S : e W BAR e R 2 N : ) = L 4%M0 ’ o # i ST T e, e o v‘i s 4 B L R e T *“’2~§%‘¢* ST GTRR L 2 “Ginger” ([Clarence H Beaumont, ,of the game. advancing age has outficider of the Bogston National siowed ki up somewhat, byl ke ia league team, has played the game for .st abile to hoid his own with the several years In his. prime Beaw younger piayers both in the feld and mont was considered ane o the stars at tne bat

SPIT BALL DIFFERS FROM ALL THE OTHER CURVES Elusive Saliva Twirl Regarded as Difficult to Control, as It Makes Sudden Break. Afl 1 i W Haye piaved ball Kbow that the ordinary cur thrown by grasping th bali Ughtiy, and thea Epinning 1L off the end of the fingers 1“ h | " tl bu )':. ',i:> 'i : Mi ¥ curve ball, therefore, always gets the ger raaving been ' ixed by the The spit ball is just the roverse of this A spot on the ball about the alzs aof & siiver d ir 18 molstened wilh saliva. This spot i made so lubricant slip off without the lesst friction. The the apposite side of the ball, and be neath ih Dail s thrdgwn with aBii: the andg the DAI UAKes 4 s 1y W '\l‘:~:4r: The spit ball 8 natyrally very hard the piste 11 makes a sudden “hreak and will drap either L 0 oD e ather The plicher himself can not gB} ways lel]l which way it 18 going 1t } wiille the pitehers had great dificulty in getting up speed on the gpit bail, bul now they can throw {1 almast a wiftly as the ordinary CATCHER FOR CINCINNATL ot - 4 ad v‘ o & 7'- £ a 5 b i 4 ¢ : ‘V" g ’Q"?f: ."';’\).s4 “:-.?},, K é‘_‘(“a si" b vl st R o T ol L 4 " ’,\.;’% ; v e 2 2%, “fi\ o o i‘ " - S .l,‘ Frank Roth, one of the catchers on the staff of Clark Griffith who has shown to good advantage in the games he has played in thus far this season. - “Peaches” Graham. It's “Peaches™ Grabam. While with the Minneapolis team in the American association he played about every position in the in and outfield and was rated as a pretty good pitcher. ; | Feminine Notes. When a woman's face is her fortune she shouldn’t bave much trouble in getting through life on her cheek.— - New York Times. | The Happy Mule. ~ To be poor and lowly has its sol ~aces. A horse would starve to death in a field of thistles, while a mule - would have the time of his life. Of Mutual Assistance, . “Let me see—didn’t you tell me to remind you to get something when we got to town?” “I Dbelieve I ‘did” “What was it?"—Judge. |

JICILE SR TR T At A 1 ~ing good health to -this fact . When a - young gir! she was fond of swimming, rowing and driv. “ing. and even now slie never permits a day to go by without taking some cexercise. It the weather is too bad for walking she pusses several - hours at. Blillards : STIPM,' Is wonder “fully skilled with . the cue and s prosd of her game. But in nice weath. ¢r her favarite ex. cercize 8 walking At Sandring hani she vislts

FEW BASEBALL PLAYERS QUIT GAME VOLUNTARILY When They Do Sever Cornection with Popuiar Sport in Their Prime There is Aiways a Reason, The jure of the dlamond 14 so sifong that fow, vi ry few, ;;u'.—;k.;:‘[;_iz "“"._g..: bakdl . players bave . retired froemn the Enmue as Fleldor Jones did, [n the hey dey of his career Jomes, wWhio was the capiain and gnager of the Übi CAKO Alelicans and ondce e thew o VICIOUY 1n 8 world's serfex after win ning the pennant in bis own league. made & compleis renunciation of the Rai ) With Jones §2 was ;-“'::*-fli,v a matier of zvm“:"‘{;! e had intercsts in Ure gon which demanded bis personal at !t"fiiintl Much u.’\. he loved the na tional game and strosg as was the haid on hits, he was firm in Bis inten Hon o say g 1 o the diapwogd. - John Ward was apother of the few who gave up baseball whe i be was on the top wave. He walk mapager and cajtain of the New Yorks when they won the Temple cup {n 1%95 and coulid have served several yedars mare of Gsefuiness both ae manager and & playes He was plaviog wail =t second base when Be retired and was ax sßkillful s ever with tha bat, but e had made up bls midnd that it was e o gel o hiz luw practice. and pothing could induce hLim to stay in the game ; g Dl Latge, who, when he was with the Chicago Nationsls a few ses BOfis 880, was & fine batter a fine Beld ¢r and a fine base runner. Lange was bead and shoulders above the general run of 3'»&23'l‘:s}'!\ He was s good a player that it was a pity that profeanbonal baseball bad 10D Oo%es him Eliw.;z;;::‘:,ui a Uslifornia giri, went :'H'z‘f.u business, aud has not plaved ball since. e, (00, was in bis prime as a player when be slesped down and oL : : : . cDanny Richardson, the forker Gtant: Dave Fultz of the New York Americans: Billy Lauder, last with the New York Nationals, and Hmmy Caliaban of ths Chic 20 White SOx are four more players who gave up the game when they were st the top of their ability. ; o Mike Griffin was a 8 gsod as pyer when ho termingted his canpection with professional baseball. The Brookiyn sold blm te the St Louls elub without bis consent Heé said he'd guit rather than go to 8t Louis under the conditions, and he kept his word, ; - Work of Team Manager. Very few fans realize the trouble and work to which managers are gubjected, and in many instances these team leaders are bismed unjustly for the poor performances of their players. The successful managers of the present day, Chance, Clarke and Jennings, are backed up by such great players as Evers, Tinker, SBheckard, Brown, Reulbach, Wigner, Leach, Gibson, Camunitz, Miller, Cobb, Bush, Summers, Donovan, Mullin and others, but it deprived of some of these stars they would soon demonstrate the faet that a manager without high class tas%ent. cannot win a pennant. : E " Hines, Old Catcher, Insane. Michae! P. Hines, 20 years ago ic;atcher on the Boston Nationals, was ;adjudged insane. Hines, four yearsg ago, fell from a building, and the injuries he received then affected hig mind. Hines, in 1882 on the Boston 'National team, was backstop for Whit. ‘ney, at that time considered the speedjest pitcher in the country. He was with the club until 1885. L ' Practical Romance. ~ He—" Darling, im my affection I give you lots to make you happy.” She—" That sounds good to me. Va cant or improved?” S | In Some Cases, Probably. ~ In some cases matrimony might be compared to autumn. which is preceded by much warmth and followed with frost and storm.—Exchange. Yo Credit's Discredit. = Business will have Its periodical re _verses so long as a man who couldn't pay cash for a wheelbarrow is able te buy an automobile on credit =

Miss Reel Director of All Govern- : ment indian Schoals. is Doy Paig wap’-*re et HMer €B3 o 0 Rolis of LUncie g,m.,{j,;_._;i-_',_ef . of Chortaw Onie? Rases : ‘Chichers ' W'a BT wefruring. ¢ t Axva itk £ ¥ ¢ gueied @ t g ‘M,A-'-:_“ FELacYy ¥ ihe fnty : P | X il : v peefstioty .nt At i & 3 eßy % ryct e ol Fhe o R B wiind the fEet LhEL xhae the Gig ety eR g B ht: i £ 5 : £TY ’>,. tOwW BAy Paus e FoTere '}v‘ & .. - ~ ¥y = - ‘_-. e ‘)i Miazs K i(\.&a } ¢ 3 native z : . Ry 3 , 5 x"“' s ti Bbx 1 . 5 W Al 30 % ‘\ ‘c : o‘% - 3 Y . i.e ‘ > G T R . X B . -, M ¥ Ay . R i TSI . oB - 5 j - “"3 ‘(,.-:i"l S: -y 4: s é’é »"" ‘ . i e : R s‘ ~ fi.\ o . -"g o o b i ‘ e ‘ . WA Miss Estelle Heel ohslacie was placed in the wiay ¢ Lor eiectiog i ) Yin ¥ ! War paintagd P IAI .Ine tiy & tion of eertait 1 rgrls giavers ment ands o prospective lesas and that this 4 bot b done by a wat 80 Nix BRed] galsd that wa 3 R 854 intier and - that she was edual 10 it Rhe was elovied 1o 4 offre Bugily Quty o B af the it liar VT oW Ceesl £ vr BdAminisirat ' 544 Y 5 4 wrErsrsting an sttondania stuilents there are 2423 dmploves) 570 ment This brageh of Itx service rosts the governipent are than 33 060,000 & vear apd Misg Reel is thi adoinistra and in ihb LT He the year g com preiled to ride hundreds of milles on harseback w\.fi in s'ags» coach to the YAFIUUR reseriit na, many of them be CipE great distances {ram the raiiroad participated sctivs :‘;." in several presi dential campaigns. " She iz & fino gpesker, apd has rnot only appearsd many thmes o 5 the ahanp, but has east her vole at the polls out in Wyaming, where women bave that privilege: ) CThers i & fir fleld 81 Washington for woinen o assert their ability and independence in the world of achileves mient, apd Miss Heed's case is by no weans the voly one where a wWoman has proved her claßn o recognition Her work among ::?/ Indians ix refléct ed in the accomplishments of the clever Indian girl who 18 not in the employ of the Indtan government, but who lives in Washington, hundreds of miles away from her people’s’ home out on the plains. LT L - Sophia Pritchlyn is the daughter of 1 & Choctaw chief and is a princess of i her tribe, but she lives here.in a mod-: est littie home at 1104 Sixth street, Northwest, the back yard of which has been converted into a poultry “farm” | and she has more than three hundred | prize’ winplog singlecomb brown Leg- + horns which bave won blue ribbons in Madison Square garden, Bosten, Balti- . more, Hagerstown and practically | . every other city in the east where | largt poultry exhibits are held. 24 bt oo : A Premonition. i | “That laundress was prophetic,” sob- | i bed the chauffeur’s fair guest as she stood” with damaged finery and -a i broken arm, in the police station. | { “"How s 0?" asked the sympathetic | ! matron, who was trying to soothe her | | till the ambulance came. v j | “She pressed this linen suit I -wag | ! golng to wear on this joy ride with g | i sad iron.” : | i : s s i =5 i : B Health of Mind and Body. | 3 To constanuy live in that attitude ' | where you positively expect better | | and better health, is to train all the | i elements of your system to produce | better health. And, in addition, this | ‘attitude is conducive to normal and | wholesome conditions, both in mind | { and body.—Scrap Book. | ' “Barber Shop Factory.” . z Inspector Legarde of city signs and billbcards discovered yesterday a most peculiar sigm on Calle de las | Artes. The sign reads: “Barber Shoy Factory, Owned by the Same House”

WILL LEAVE JOHNNY AT HOME ‘\el!v"w"e Mother Vists Grandtathee Youngster ia Not Likely 10 ) ) Ascumpany Her. ‘;'z hl>‘g:@‘h:f‘.‘=§ & oi3d ' » 2 $ ] » 3 % : ! ; 2 =y : Ia 3 grapdis ik e 2 i . % + 3 EEE i g A Cul us « ? ¥ ,A;”v' : - if s oy A ; 5 ita % LR _ gul 3 ¥ ¥ OWas s : ’.—‘ i T 12 4 ry y e g 5 ke bßinds 3nd ¥ g i § vRPIEE WANTED THE DATE. } N O - 1 N LS : / R e &P 4 &% © . »;-l_ . 'v_fi w 5 . o 4 ‘;’ s .’L k 4 . PROVED BY TIME. No - Fear of Any Further Trouble.o . s Coridit 1k 1 was in Uin ! i ik ‘ “ ' (A, weak, run .q"""‘" 4 ! to & 9 ‘!,-;»:.jiv 1 ) !. s f3¢ i MY i . - dered. A woek after <y 1 begar ng :_‘ ' Doan's Rid ¥ 3 8 ] ! & var and as ! conti ! my eailll gEradually returned I was 80 fv a 4 3 prient of 1) e Bow gerTen Yot LAYY Beid by ali dealer i box. Fos er-Miiburn Co, Duflalo. N. Y - HMe Was -Well Equipped, A Méthondist bishop was recentiv-a guest 8t the home of 8 friend who had 8580 appear friendly, ealled it “Yeou've got the tght kKind o .I‘;j rhgist w A t Lahersan's 1o " People Becoming Interested. ) Evidence of the populsr iulerest (o the anticonsumptlion erusade is given 1o a slatement made by the Natonal Associatidn for the Stu iy and Preven tion of Taberculosis, 1o the «Tegt that ‘during -the year ending August 31, pearly 3,000 000 peopie have attended toberculosis exiibitions in rarious parta of the country. Besldes the three travelipg tuberculosis exhibi tions of the pational sssociation, thers are 28 exhibits of this kind throughout the Lnited .\.'cl"i“; Four Years ggoo there were only three such dis plays in the entire couniry. ~ . A Contest of Wits, An eminent lawyer Was onice Cross examining o very clever woman, moth er of the plaintiff In & breach-of-prom-fse netlon, and was completely worste ed in the eneounter of wila At the close, however, he turned to the jury j You saw, gentiemen, that even 1 was bLut a child in her hands. What may v ciient have been?” By this adroit stroke of advocacy he turned his faliure Into a success. » THREE REASONS "Each with Two Legs and Ten Fingers, A Boston woman who 18 a fond mother writes an amusing article -about her experience feeding her boys. Among other things she says: “Three - chubby, rosy-cheeked boys, Rob, Jack and Dick, aged 6, 4 and 2 years respectively, are three of our reasons for using and recomending the food, Grape-Nuts, for these youngsters have been fed on Grape-Nuts since infancy, and often between meals when other children would have been given candy. % - “l gave a package of Grape-Nuts to a neighbor whose 3 yeéar old child was a weazened little thing, ill half the tinre.” The little tot ate the GrapeNuts and cream greedily and the moth. er continued the good work, and it was not lorg before a truly wonderful change manlfested itself in the child’s face and body. The results were remarkable, even for Grape-Nuts. " “Both husband and 1 use GrapeNuts every day and Kkeep strong and well and have three of the finest, .healthiest boys you can find in a day's march.” ) - Many mothers instead of destroying ‘the children’s stomachs with candy and cake give the youngsters a handful of Grape-Nuts when they are begging for something in the way of sweets. The result is soon shown in greatly increased health, strength and mental activity, ' : ~_“There's a Reason.” Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, “The Road to Wellville.” Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They : genuine, u-f./ hll of humas