Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 43, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 January 1910 — Page 3

GREAT LOVE STORIES —— OF HISTORY — By ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE W Miles Standish and Priscilla Mullens

- The bero of this jove story did not ! warry the Bcoibe. That.was pot bls. (asit. He did bl Dot 0 win hor Ho was Miles Btandish. military captain of the ittle band of iigrima” wbo etis io the Mayflower in 1620 The duighter of two of those same Pik Many Englishmen in the carly years of the sevenlesntl contury were dis. gnated &fiifi%*’%@;hflr country s af wtrictions placed upon religlous wor whiip These people wanted fair laws and the. right f 0 wordbiy God 10 ieir own way Failing to find fastice at home, they salled to Americn to etart s colony there. They landed at Piy mmflfim%fim ,{f_t‘};fii:i(};{‘?ii A weltie wient, They were harsh, simple Godtearing lolk, these Pligrim Pathers, mostly of the farmer and laborer class, used to hard wark and privations For their new home was bisok and (hos pitable, infested by Indlans, and de voiul of comforts Vet here the PiL grimk established the hirthplace of Ay ffitifi’fififimxu”" L owhios emild Ahr iy Wfi%&%fifi‘k‘hard it pu s th f‘% s W mfis?tiz,%y%@fimmfi mit foreser 1o & l”rgig}fi;\zgfimfifi IYranny e : mgw,ggwfggh‘ A shart Brong, thickeet soldier, wak <hosep wilitary captain of (he endony. e was & mid I!l*\&gffi&§fiifia : had {uined the o 3 it g@fig;gfiifigam& Hase who disd Standfuh s closest fricnd among the Pilerims was yuung Joho Alden, conper By frade. who had been engaged on repairs upon the Mavfower in Euglebs, anl who had become in tarexted in e eolony wcleme to the point ttfg;grgfiifighimml{ in £ Per s D hkne the fact that K Wwffifiifi? Priscilla Muilens : #m": _was to sail ap the same ship had snmething to do with his resolytion. Alden was youngest of the men wio bodrded the Mayfower, betng: only 21 He was destined to outlive all ks fellow ploneers” He is band to ket foot on American soil at Piyolasls e Th*fiflgfwm so of life in the new land wis oo full of cxcjtement, toll nm&‘fiw%wwflm Standish to brood much over hix wife's death - A% wilitary lsadir he was forced to gubrd the colony against s Indian foes Once when pews came that a savage Aribe W{fi destroy the whale

Louis Xl\'.'zmd Mme. De Maintenon

g {5 the jove story. of & girl who! w borsr In Jatl and who ived o uiag ryv.the King of France =he W Francoise d Aublpgn nd historians cannol agree g tn whether she was 8 saint or & ¥ery wily adventaress The king she married was Lounis XIV of Fran# Fle was the moat dissipated man of Bis eentury. Tirlng of his wild Hte at the age of 5O b married Francoise hecause she seemed so good and so unlike the other women of his acguaintance It was & iove alory which, oddly enough, had tremendous fnfluence on America s future Francoise was the daughter of a worthless French nobbs who with his wife was casxt into prison and who later died in Martiniqoe, where he had gambled nway Gis fortune. leaving his family penniless Fruncoise grew up in poverty and neglect, vet managed L 0 procare a good education and to bhecome a brilllant talker When she was 15 she attracted the interest of a Parisian poet. Scarron, who was old and hideously deformed. Searron of fered enither to pay for her admis ston to a convent or to marpy her. She cleverly chose the latter ceurse. For ten years she was at the head of Scar ron's household, attracting the bright est men and women of France to her salon and reigning as queen of her deformed husband's small literary world From her Greole origin she was affec. tionately nicknamed “'The Little In dian.” : Then Scarron died, and the government pension that had supported him was cut offt Francoise, at 25, was once more in poverty. Louis XIV was at this time King of France. He it A Governess Who . " 10 Jpinesa Marfied a King. o - \"nntmm- ~thq~ pension. (o Scarron’ widow, Louis was a vain. pompous, extravagant little mian, who strutted about in high heels and an enormous wig, and he taught his courtiers to look upon him as a sort of Divinity. He was lucky in surrounding himself (as had Elizabeth of England) with wise and great men in all walks of life. These gave to his court a luster. that won him the nama of “The Grand Monarch.” ~ _ : _Through powerful friends Francoise was appointéd governess to some of Louis’ children. The king at first could not bear the sight of her and kept out of her way. But as time went on he began to noticé this grave, beautiful, pious woman, who took such good care of his children and who treated him with such gratifying deference. She was a wondrous contrast to the gay, hot-tempered beau‘ties of the court. Louis began to like her. He made her Marquise de Maintenon. The king was reaching the age when the pleasures of youth began to pall. " He was abjectly afraid of death and trembled at thought of a future punishment for the wild, dissolute life he had led. He sought to mend his ways and to atone for the past by going to the opposite extreme. Instead of a young profligate, he became a middle-aged hypocrite. For at heart. as history shows, he remained as much of a blackguard as ever,. Mme. de Maintencn eagerly encouraged Louis in this new phase of conduct. He looked on her as his good angel and learned to rely upon her advice in every emergency. She

TrILEN AL BRI Aod e Sasd fsh, with cight followers, wont to the tribe's viliags, Killed its two troacher ous chisfs and put 1o rout its leuvest warriors AEP that there e peace for & tipe and Standish bad a hince to turn M‘»Wt‘ maiters He was desperately losely. and pro eeedeid “Z‘M‘Wfih preity Pris f‘fflh gfifiéfié’%‘?fimihk Hora, whn had f&r¥«\§3%fi@rwd hastile In diank, Jacked the courage fo projose He wax ‘W%ifi soiony. and had every reasos 1o (nk that any of its matdens W&fi%&%"m b beovtme s wife Yot ba deted not ask Priscilia Al ‘Wh%%éw B scheme fof summoned Bis frlend. young Jokn Al den. and f’%{m?mfifi go tn Pris rilla nod woo Bef for Bim: M was an Hond nfl%m slonarnt man 1o do hix "%@&' Rl The idea seemed edcellent John Aldes secording fo the story, helievod | *”%’:W nothing of his own unapoken lose for ber Bt Priscilla, fifijfi;“%;mkqw girle under the *fim“fié@%mxm knew it per foctly wvffim She was amazed “ - When Alden called : B“'w“n k%%%gg}&;\nw »h“l“?fl Bt oA Lgyfl%ga;’;f”flmfi Bis own st but to fell ber how brave snd good A man Standish was Her astonistment ronehid iifi:w%‘h!n Ihe oung R Wfiu.fiéj%f%ifmmfi;“ axking her o marry x :fiixd‘f';r}'fi}: by, femiatae AR vll i‘mn”x‘“{wwf%&fid lovaity that wax ““‘E%W%fiffidfififi heain | Bhe captatn by sEkiag 000 "Why dont you speak for yourself, P!Q&i‘ifia Wg%j%%fif endéd then and the mission Bad failed and that Pris cilla wax betrothed to Aldin. be was furfously angey and accused John of base {t"“%“fifim himaelf Hut Eifl‘flt“hagfi%&ffiflmmfid down, he Asked f‘}fgfl‘myd*fia hecrine onea . The marrigge of John and Priscilla soon followsd Alden later becaine & respected mAElKtrate of the . colony and ““"fi%?mm“r than oy other ”m“%} ped in the Mayfowet Standish died 30 years earlier, {“ having conoled Bimself by marryisg E;_&jmirt’gfiig %fi?fifih 0 -

fook guick adlvantage of fiig il change «of gature and soon had ace guired a baundiess Influenee over himn Fhen inie Ber reward When legia was o 0 hix wite fdied By this time he was wholly under M do Mainte non s conlrod Apainst the wishes of i family e secredly married the ex ;T‘jw Pl For nearly o 0 yvears, unti] Louis death the girl who had been hirn in prisos raled axs e rowned gueen of France ladiis thought she was supernaturally wirge and disinte: Rt Wise she wuas P asinterested she certainly was not she persuaded the king 15 pr ‘T:V‘.H'x her personal friends o high officex and to remove her envimiva from the positions that !:.-..\r.,\ cof them were holding with credit. Even as Logis was bher abedl énl slave so was she the slave of cer tain of the clergy. At their command she induced louls . R.“'O‘"“mn of to iake many “Edict of BEEEE" startling - changes in the government By far the maost important of these ehanges brought about by Mme de Maintenon and the elergy who prompt: ed her was the revocatiaon of the edict of Nantes, in 1685 Thiz edict had been framed by Henry of Navirre and granted personal and political liberty to all French Pratestants. When the edict was revoked and the Protestant churches burned and their ministers banished many thousands. of Prot estunts left France, Large numbers uf them came to America, where they helped to bulld up the colonies here and greatly strengthened. the growing power of the new world . As the vears passed on Louis” early triumphs changed to dofeats His f\\‘i.h\'.«' meddling with politics i which ?sho‘ did not understand) helped to undermine the nation. The king. feeble, embittered and shorn of "his old-time glory, died in 1715, Mme de Main tenon retired, with an enormous state | pension, to a convent she had founded There, four years later, she died at }the age of &4, leaving to future generations the task of deciding whether Eshe was really an adventuress or a saint. - { Electricity and Grapes. There is no denying the enterprise of the persevering Dutchman. One grower at léast bas sought to improve his output by the aid of electricity. In the vineries can be seen live wires, which run along the interior of the building. These do not come into cantact with either the vine or the soil, but their presence is believed to be beneficial. Experiments were made with two adjoining beds of spinach. In the one case, where the electrical effect had been tried, the vegetable was ready for marketing at the same time that the other had barely commenced to sprout from the ground. This latest development in fruit and vegetable culture is as yet in its infancy. What will be the outcome of the ingenious idea it is impossible to foretell.—Dun[dee Advertiser, | A Married Man's Problems. A local woman is suing her husband for $30,000 borrowed money. Next thing will be the arrest of the head of a household for burglarizing the ‘baby’s bank for car fare.—New York 'Bvening Telegram.

CYCLE OF COCCIDIUM, TURKEY’S DEADLY FOE In ported Bird Spreads Deadly Germ Which Cause “Blackhead'’ and Cannot Be Cured by : Any Known Metbhod. — - —— > A , i ' A B ! 5 & e / . o - ? i * Y 2 ;. Fol Show R: — LS"g p NS ] . . | L - ”% C N = D t 4 ;"i ; ,'_.. ; - 1/‘rv Mt ‘,...-'} i !L t [ ',I % v 2 : TN /{ L [ N¢s; d 4 ! “ > i Z :\9 ’; "“T‘-",' t}; “ v v L e b”' 2t ¢ o ¥ & i ™L< 4 e ¥ . 5 Yy - ‘:’\‘ o § A “» o o‘s } i K:/ u; T,". }THE P IVIEAL ETTIVING NEW CTils 9,5»“._;;‘ D \.“\ N Wed ST oF : - L 65 - '?ak,,\'_?' "‘vr . » i . - %, " ity , — - “,‘«‘)' ‘_.’“ - v:: :1‘ Clrs ”‘,vy-:“‘, O . R a 3 % CA\ 4 —‘: ‘: ~ : e" ,*. o \ J : , Cx . - }‘%\ v E LR R /,\H y . 2 iy $144 f \ ¥ W o S J ,r \ - { N f: - ?l \( ")v'\.v \\ | \ p F — Xy ; 3A-»{ 7 X i i J: ; ifim s o ’f; “{ % b’&\ sl » e eXN ™R\ 1 isS, ?f é\\ F G i -.“A ) , |Yy r i/ | = g G " g ‘ | | Life Cycle of Coccidium, Turkey's Deadly Foe. ‘

’l_h‘nt the, turkey ralsing industry c-!z the United Hiates is on n perious deciine and that the noble Thanksgivfng hird reaches a higher price in the marketl each succeeding year are {acts clearly recognized both by those ‘}'z-'f bave tried to raise furkeys and by those who have sought in vain for & plump Rhede Island or Verimont tur key to grace their Thanksgiving table at the old time price e v What, it may be asked, in the cause for this deplorable condition in the turkey ralsing industry of the voun try? It is nothing less than the great turkey epidemic disease, blackhead, which was first poted In Rhode Island some time previous to 1883, and which has now all but annihilated the tur key raising industry in New England. Hut what is worse, the disease is rapidly spreading to the flocks of the western states, and there it will, un less checked, destroy the (pdustry of the west as thoroughly as it aiready bhas done that of the Eastern states, experts declare _ ' A careful study of the pathological conditions and of the causative organ: fsm was taken up- in 1907 by Dr Philip B. Hadley, chief of the division of biology at the Rhode i(sland sta tion. The results of this investigation reveaied .an organism called a coe cldium This parasite is row regard: ed by Imr Hadley as the sole cause of the great turkey disease, and s discovery has furnished a basis for work on the prevention, and per haps the treatment of biackhead. In turkeva the disease affects: eith. er the caeca ithe blind pouches of the intestine) or the liver In many cases both are affectéd, and in some intlances other orguns of the body The Hyvers usunlliy become more or less en. larged angd covered (o .8 greater or less extent with cireular vellow ab scesses. The caeca also became great Iy enlarged and thickened walle thelr delicate epithelial lining consisting chiefly of small cells, through the medium of which the nourfshment 1s absorhed from the food into the body, is largely destroyed in many places, thus aceounting for the great emacia tion af the diseased bird. ~Often the sores on the intestines and caeca open into the inside of the body, and thus cause what 18 known as septic peritonitis, “which has invarfably a fatal temination. : All these diseased conditions are brought about by the coccidium Hving and multiplying in the intestines, caeca and liver of the Infected birds. It is seldom that a turkey once infected recovers. e . _After the coccidium (A) has enter ed .the body of the turkey it divides into four minute, pointed bodies called gporoblasts (B}, then into the sporo rottes, or real spores (Ci, which arise from the lattér. These spores, after ‘having been lberated in the intestines by the action of the digestive fluids, quickly look about for the small cells which line the inside of the intestinés. and then, by means of a slow, squirming motion they forcibly penetrate these cells (D). Here located and living at the experse of the protoplasmic contents of the cells, they grow rapidly, and soon become

CHEAP SHED TO PUT MANURE Fertilizer Shouid Be Glthered from Cow Lot Every Few Days and Taken Care of. - Of all things upon the farm the question of how to get the best out of manure should be foremost with us all. The picture shows a shed Bxlo feet, seven feet to the eaves; ‘sides four feet high. The end boards are held in place by stakes at two corners ~I|l||||ln.\\\\\ | e T e el ——————— e v e e o A Cheap Manure Shed. while one side is movable and may be jeft out until shed is partly filled.

! the so-calied schizonts (E) _ In thene bodles after & time new :%spn!u are formed (F), and thése spores are finally liberated from the ' host cell in order that they may énter vmfw cells, (G In these fresh host | ~¢lls the spores which have entered %nafiy new elther form another gen- | eration of schizonts, like those from | which they themselves arose, or they may do something quite diferent, and i this last phenomenon is the method |by which the coccidia perpetuate themegelves, : At a certain time the spores begin 'to develop into male and female ele Cments, the socalled macrogametes, ‘ and the microgametes. Thess bodies | also arfse inside the cells of the host { anlmal, but -aré soon liberated into | the contents of the intestines or | carca - Here the male elements unite . with the {emale elements in the pro | cess of fertilization. and the result is i the new whole individual, the oocyte, { which at once developes into the ma- | ture cyst stage, with which we started. 4 This part of the developmental cy- { ele insures the life of the organism f«m.n‘aldfl of the turkey, for these en;r‘)‘fil(‘d formus of the coccidium are i tenacious of life and are able to lie | for a long time dormant in the soil of { the poultry yard, awaiting thelr turn ‘to be taken in, slong with the food. | by other unsuspecting birds All these | stages of the rcoccldlum mentioned i above are to be found, at some time i within the intestines, caeca, or livers | of the infected turkeys. where they | produce the severe lesions and cell i changes which are characteristic of { the disease and which eventually pro | : duce death : : | It seems probable, am 8 result of the %many experiments which have been t conducted by Dr. Hadley at the Rhede i Istand station, that no medicines 1 which will kill the coccldia can be ad'l ministered to turkeys without also | killing the turkevs. This is due 1o féthv* fact that the mature stage of the |§r(l~ccid£‘um fs very resistant to disin | tectants of all kinds. - It is not one bit i lezaed by weak solutions of corrosive | sublimate, formalin or carbolic acid, | and 1t flourishes n a ten per cent. so- ¢ lution of potassium bichromate, which lii_: considered & very strong disinfect i {snt : | These facts go to prove that very Eofllc!«m germicides are required to | kill the coccidia, which are numerous -{ in and about nearly every large poul: i try yard. These disinfectants canpot, | of course, be given to turkeys without , l killing them. Therefore the success imz treatment of blackhead is bound i to be a very difficult matter, and is ,} perhaps wholly impossible. But while | there is the least hope sclentists will | strive toward this end, using all the | modern methods that are available. .{ In this case; however, as in many .| others, it fs probably true that pre- | Yentlon is the better part of cure, | This inciludes chiefly the following: 1 (1) To keep the turkeys on wide ' | ranges of fresh, uninfected territory; -1 (2) to have the breeding stock free | from disease: (3} and lastly, but most ' | important of all, to keep them iso- | lated from common fow! and all oth- )| er species of domestic birds.

! If all manure is gathered from the cow lot every two or three days ard all sods and forest leaves about the place gathered carefully together and { mixed with the stable manure and the | suds from the week's washing put on the manure and all forked over fre. quently, farmers who are now trudging along life's rocky road with only one suspender and a twine string for a bridle rein could be riding in autoimobiles and private cars. It's the little leaks that sink the ship and its the manure that’s leaked out and wasted that bankrupts many farmers. ‘ Feeding Young Lambs. o A good flockmaster holds that for young lambs wheat bran is most excellent to begin with, and after they become stronger the bran should be mixed with cornmeal in equal parts, says the Indiana Farmer. He says that oatmeal, or oats when they can eat it, should be added to balance the ration, for oats is nearly a balanced food itself. After growing a little they will shell and crack their own leorn.lf:lven.tptimanthocot’.

DON'T GAMBLE, SAYS GATES Great Piunger Goves Texas Pastors in formation 1o Be Used in Sereions Galvesten, Tex —~John W Oates the soted Wil sireet specuinior sipeatred s A& new jlght 3 ke Tl Insirics Methodist Episcopal coniferenoe It sos o 2t Pors Arthagr what Be addressesd £ gatbering of chgerSton iwi Inyen, warning them agains! speoouiation and All other forgis of pambiing The "Het You & Milllon™ plunger. whoe 18 probabiy the most famoss Epecuiator to go from the west and invade Wall atroet dolivered his warn Ing with an earnesl esprossion on bLie | rountenanoe snd tu o slowly chisen worids, He srpiained thet be dide") meah anvibing personal, i sddress Ing ‘he prea Mo ry bt wEs merely sug gesting u tople for sermons He sald: s N ’ ; e & 5 /A f " e NS e = , v e 7 . 4 % 3 { : A Q\' A 3 1 i £ > o ?«' -x..“- ; \;,‘ } { ¥ \ BN / . NN g AN \\‘\;‘,‘ \\:. ~“‘ , ' John W. Gates "The man w he fi«;f culntex on futures 3 gambles for high stalkes by any oth *r mieans becoming otie day 8 pau per. the next day a milllonalre andd ARRIN A& pauper is not happy Hao, burms up his strength and bia life in A fever of excitement, and comes o hix end without haviog ever really en fjosed himself Happiness and contentment be loang to the tiller of thé gotl. Ithe me ' chanle the merchant, who earn thelr money by labor and invest thefr sav ings . wisely to provide themevives a home {or thelr declining yea®s They always know just where they are and thelr lves are sweetened Ly a sense of security “] guess | know about as many stock and graln gamblers as does any man in the conntry. And 1 8o not know one who risks any large per cent "of his fortupe on the market who {3 what vou would term 8 Bappy man [t I 8 foolishnéss for a man to try to be a small gambier. If he has the habit, some time or ofther he wili. make & tig plunge. Then I's all over with him so far as having much ‘loy in life is concerned He will plunge sgain and agaln He may grow wealthy or go bhroke, but the fever has him, and contentment is fled : CHINA'S NEW ENVOY ARRIVES Chang Tang Who Succedds Wu Ting Fang Prepares for Great Campaign in Society, Washingion An Important and sig nifficant change in the diplomatic cir cle will be the establishment of » new and imposing home by the new Chinese mindster, Chang Tang, who has arrived in Washingion It wiil be Independent of the official Chinese res Adepoe built some years ago on Nine tevnth stree! Mr. Wu's successor who arrived here in time to take his place In the formal! opening of the T2\ /£ X 3 (] ' A , (’;; e '.‘,gr;,“. ”~ -~ - . 4 y \ s be :/ Ay \ o e Qr{*’)" v ¥ 5 ‘a,\fn f/ b 5 \ P i W S \ . KUt h \ N Afl' Jaly ] \\ ‘.\‘h , ~ ':;:.;" . / l" IN g a N *4(% 2[4l ) : Chang Tang. New Minister. searan New Year's day, has leased the home of the late Mrs. D D Colton on Connecticut avenue, just north of Du pont circle, and will oceupy it with bis family Fhe offices remain in their present quarters which also served as a home for Ministe Wy and his prede CeßEOrs China maintains the Inrgest stafl of any legation in the United States, hav ing at present! no less than nine sec retaries and attaches. This staff is likely under the new envoy to be still | further increased. Mr. Chang Tang, - who is accompanied by his wife and a large retipue of servants, came di rect from Peking. He has served his. country in Tibet and has made several visits to the United Statee. He lsone of the progressives of the present government and likes soclety. : i . The establishment of a home in the smart residence district and his known _desire to strengthen the bonds of! friendship between his country and the Upited States is taken as evidence | Euut China will enter into an active ! social campalgn this winter in which the diplomatic circle will play a most | ;conspicuous part. § i R s i ~ In the Footsteps of the Fathers. ! One has to be careful when attend. | ing a prison service or even when | singing before convicts, as the titles | of the numbers too may need carefu] | selection, as witness the story of the Rev. F. B. Meyer. : i ~ He once attended a prison servicag ' at which one of the hymns was “We | Are Marching on the Good Oid Way.g the Good Old Way Our Fathers) %Trod." Archdeacon Sinclalr capped | this with a story of a bishop whe opened a prison service with the ob servation that he was delighted to see s 0 many present. '

COUGHED ALL NIGHT 2 Till This Recipe Wias Tries. Cure : Foilowed in § Mours A proginest seedical man, who sut fered with 3 severes oouzd and cold an the e oflen bßelng kep! swalke #il Gight apd weakspesl by loss of sieep,. EBaslly dizcoversd a 8 siinple Trwempyie which will 220 any cough in By nours Uy the clhack it e 8 i ative tanic ooueh svrap whkich can e naade &% Bumme by soyone and Qe formupls I hers piven for the heonefit tf thope who Pass sleepless nights in painiul parcayste Thode who have el 1 osay 1t B mapical and beals sny high priced i{fi acting cough giedivine ever wiid Mix in 8 ditle cnsball cunce fgid wiid che ey hark. one ounee compound espence cAardinl o med thvee Qutovs pxrup white pine oiippound Takse tmenty dropes evere Ball bour for four bonars. Then take e dall to ohie tésaonlyl three op Tour times a 45y ssive ehildres jees anionding o age vhis will tvne oo and £d he sywietn f decpastled coughs every Lime AT LAST. wfi ¥ fl/\"/ / % N 's y T W i ¢ ,#,é’i) \ F(){S LN [y ) S ! Mme X, the fencing pas'sr's wile Bnde some ping loog enoukh for ber hat Where 1a Bessie Hartman? Rosanna and Besste Hariman lved with thelr mather at Chapman, Nebr in 1500, the year that their fatheor was ‘kitled Ly a faliing trew 4l Apada, Mo Thelr mother, an invatkl wing anabis 10 care for them. the gitls wers gon! to Omahs 1o sgboul, belng houwed and mothered by a Mre Smith Finally, In 1581 Baasle, the younger of thé two, was taken In chargs by the Nebraska Children's Home sociery, who refused 1o tell her married s'ater RHosanua, where she s Hessie e catne of age last Pebruary I sl will sond her address to P O Box %68, Omaha, Nebr, it will be for wardad o her alster Bosanna, who Is now Mrs Geo Duerr, Tubercuiosis Death Rates. The death rate from tuberculosis among men empioyed in occupations exposed to ol ‘;,;»“; gand gonsral or gante or street dust i higher than among other eniploved maies, RO rdg to & recent bulletin of the biyreay of labor of the department of Coin weree and labor. The pereentags of geaths trom ConsnpiionG RIDGOHR males ¢xposed to organic dost is 23 while the perceplage for al fr e i the registration area is 148 e percentage of deatha trom tuberculo gig among workers exXposed to metal e dust i very mueh higher For Celestials. ) I once vigited a yery rough boom town in Oregon, pesy Cotiagse Grov In the leading saloog & tuan in a red shirt sald 1o me: Y& wanter cuarry yersei! almighty stralaht jn these parta, sifanger wrong the feast mite and, by crings wao'll Ivhch ye as qulek as look at ye I smiled : “Wonld you I¥nch me” | asked, “if I kitled a dog? “Would we? e snorted Wha gtranger, we've lynched fellevd herwe for killin® Chinamen! ~ . How's This? We ofer Omp Mundred Tuiars Beward for avy R O CRiurh AL T aEml e ruted Uy Ml Catarn s i F L URESEY & (), Yo % Ve, the onlersifoed. have known } T fiey Por Tha LSt OF yeous anel heiwwve hagm jeeTeell - sratie ¥ a Dastvems tranmsrtaves aol Plia ¥ o 0 CarTy out asy ohisniaos nosde L Sren VWathany Bisxss k Mapvis b Whademne Dirggtwis, Thledn T} HallsOatanth Owre B lades Dlernally, asiicg directly i the Diwad s mpeoss pitiaces of tha ey El e Testimaoniia s wot frew Frwe 3 ocGls Dot Botthe. Bt By ad {roecata Take Mads Famiy Via IR, peratipAt . * Provided for Newsboys. Mrse Wil Waldort Astor provid ed in her will that the newsboys of New York should have a Thanksgly ing dinner, as they have had st the expense of the Astor family for half a century, This year at least 2000 newsboys were on hand, the aflternoon papers having suspended work, thus giving the ltle fellows a holiday. limportant to Mothers. Examine carefuily svery bhottle of CASTORIA, asafe and sure remedy for infants and childrea, and see that it - Bears the M EBignature of m . . , . . In Use For Over 34 Yenrs The Kind You Have Always Bought. Cruel, “len't that a good joke? lUs my own.” “Great Scott! are you so old as that?"—Lippincott’s. Quick as Wink. : - If your eyes ache with a smarting, burnsensation use PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, :fi druggistsor Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. During the first six months of his -married life a man pities old bachellors. After that he envies them. BARKING, HACKING, RASPING COUGH B o oy i e ol ot v Wyears. Ask your dmf'anutu. One good thing about a fall that hangs on is that it keeps . back the “beautiful snow” poems. - PILES CURED N 6 TO 14 DAYS. of Tioning, Blind. Rlcoiing or Frotroding Phee in 610 l4daysor mwoney refunded. S, ;i Wine and women may be alike, in some respects, but age improves wine, It's the judgment of many smokers that Lewis' Single Binder 5S¢ cigar equals m quality most loc cigars . ; Remember that a sound argument doesn’t mean loud talk. : mrw.mm For children u%mmm. inSammation, allays cures wind colic. 25ca bottie. When you can’t tell the truah, don't @ll anything. ' ; ;

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