Plymouth Tribune, Volume 10, Number 4, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 October 1910 — Page 3
Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine tines In ten when the liver I right tha stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly coiapel a lazy liver to CARTES do iU duty. c Gets Con ITTLE IV ER PILLS.
( atipation,
Indigei tion, Headache, and Distress after Eating. Small Pill, Small Dom. Small Pric Genuine miatw Signaturo for Coucws T Colds
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E M E M O E R "
; taousmng a speed record, nouses It will neer rain roses. If we want ; Hashed dizzily by, and the main stem minore roses we must plant more trees. J of the little burg unfolded r.s a dirty George Eliot. qiray ribbon to the unsophisticated ; roadster who was even then making TJuv Mrs. Autir Famous P...-kwhoat , his initial visit to the trade. Flour, fine or breakfast, all groiTi. j . gpeed on, McDuff, " misquoted We surety owe to men the same ! he commercial man. and leaned haprintv as vp owe to nietures to try ! fdly back to dream his omnipresent
and see them Emerson. in the best light. Constipation causes and avrgravates mnnj serious dii-eacs. It i thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierre's l'lea.-ant Pellets. The favorbe faTnily laxative. The Difference.. "I don t see any difference between j
Vou and a trained nurse except tha ! unifnrm. said her sick husband.
I "And the salary," she added, ; f thoughtfully. Harper's ttazar. j i rrnpertant to Mothcra ! Examine carefully every bottl of ; CASTORIA. a safe and sure remedy for m m -a 1 A 1 A I A.
mianis ana cnuurcn, anu see luui i i 1 1 tr
; Signature of
In Use For Over SO Years. ; Tte Kind You Huve Always Bought.
E.asy for Her. An extremely corpulent old lady was entertaining her grandchild at luncheon when she found occasion to reprimand the little girl for dropping some food on the tablecloth. "Yju don't see grandma dropping anything on the table," she said. "Of course not," replied the child; "God gave you something in front to stop it." "SPOHN'S." This Is the name of the greatest of all remedies for Distemper, Pink Eye, Heaves, and the like anions all ajres of horses. Sold by Irc:ists. Harness Makers, or sonl to the manufacturers, f.50 and $1.0) a lotth Acents wanted. Send for free book. Spohn Medical Co..' i;ec. Contagious Diseases, '(Joshen, Ind. j Fable of Part of Biscuits. A Vassar girl married a Kansas farmer. Two weeks later a cyclone made the happy pair a friendly call. It cavorted around the premises, ripping up the fences, scattering the haystacks and playing horse with the barn, but when it looked through the open window it drew back In alarm. There lay the bride's first pan of biscuits. "I ain't feelin very strong this morning," murmured the cyclone. And with another glance at the terrible pan it blew itself away. SUPPLY ALWAYS KEPT UP. If babies come down from heaven,' mamma. There's one thins that's sur I declare There's s many babies that come down each Cay, j There can't bo rare suicide there. i So They Say. Stranger I say, my lad, what ia considered a good score on these links? ' Caddie Well, sir, most of the gents j here .tries to do it in as few strokes ! as they can. but it generally takes a j few more. Scottish American. ; No Hurry. are you in such "W'hat a rush about r "Promised to meet my wife at three
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o'clock down at the corner." j little diftsnce away. "You and I want "Well, there's no hurry. It Isn't four t to get together. TT;ore's some roHo'clock yet." ! t-Ve here. You evidently take mo for 1 some one e-ce. I am Arthur Damon. Old Oaken Bucket. t a cfgar salesman, and I'm in yor Doctor (to typhoid patient) Do you l 0id burg on business and rot to nn'l remember where you drank water? i off box'ng bouts with er athletic Patient (an actor) Oh, yes! It was I instructors."
back on the dear old farmyears ago! Puck. -twenty When It's "What for Breakfast?" Try I oasties Serve with cream or milk and ever member of the family pir.g" good, be surprised ..-ii e iamiiy wm say ripAr.d they don't a second he! "Tho Memory linger z 1 1 robturn Cereal Cor-irany, llallle Creek, Iiv.-li-Lt.
Post
Ol CiRitfül
By STACY
(Copyright, 1:U0, by Associated Literary 1'ress.)
As Damon approached, suitcase in hand, the driver of the great car chugging restlessly by the curb bounced eagerly down from his sent and relieved the youth of his lug"Fur a email town, thi3 Rlissvillo has them all beat," ruminated the young cigar salesman, leaning back on the rear cushions. "Blissville for .nine, hereafter, at every opportunity. Must be a peacherino of a hotel when It sends an automobile after its guests.-' In all truth, the chauffeur v.-as esdreams. On and on went the car at an everIncreasing pace. Damon's eyes opened to contemplate a picturesque building just ahead. Four stories high, it flared to the very sky several gaudy gables which a color-lov- ! ing owner had caused to be smeared with all the colors of the rainbow. "fiep!" murmured the astonisncci i vouth as the car slowed suddenly Jown to turn m at a green-neugeu roadway leading to the spacious porch that connected with the institution, "mine host must suffer from ,n acute attack of coloritis. This is t3 "I Hope It Will Be Your Last." the happiest looking plant I have ever stopped at." The machine came to a slow stop, and the active driver jumper! hastily down and opened the door for Damon to alight. A fussy little person canw forward and grasped the youth's suitcase. You are here, I see," he bellowed m a voice that told, of no lack of lung power. "Just so," acknowledged Damon. He eyed the man curiously. "I suppose you are the proprietor. This is my first trip through this section." The equal, monkeylike person stared. "I hope it will be your last." he rumbled. "No. I'm not the boss, but I take his place when he's gone. Pm the general athletic instructor. Mulqueen Is my name." He seized the soft hand of the labor ignorant drummer and squeezed it to a beating pulp. Arthur Damon had rorae experience with hotels, big and little. In fact, the youth's income had allowed him to see something of life on a most expensive plane, and this move In the capacity of a cigar salesman had nothing to do with needing the money. There were other reasons. But in all Damon's experience an athletic instructor for the guests of a hotel was unheard of. "You aro a what?" he gasped. "An athletic instructor." roared the j strenuous voiced one. "I give 'em 1 their bumbs. I do." He summed up ! tho broad frame and the erect shoul-ders-back attitude of the youth bei fore him. "You look as if you could ! go some," he volunteered. "I have ?et your try-out for 2 o'clock." ."Me." gasped Damon. "Not me. my I friend. I have other buriness to ati tend to. They were now on tb Inside of a large welT-furnicrod oce. "Where is your register?" demanded the cigar salesman. "Yo'j don't have to regis-ter." loudly assured the athletic instructor. "Everything Is O. K. We have had your room reserved for you for three days." "Fay!" preluded Damon, taking the stocky one by the arm and leading him toward a cushioned seat at fome "You think you are." calmly came from the other, "but as a matter of fact, you are Andrew Dimoling. of New York, suffering from a nervous breakdown caused by too much burning of the candle at both ends, and you are here. v-nt.le stranger, because papa telegraphed for 2 mite for you. explaining the many little mental UNS T ABILITY Deep Sea Is Exceedingly "Wabbly and There Seerrs to De No Spetniu i'-t ocdiioMic-jj. In the joyous vacation season many
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f u:-: go down into the sea In ships, and 1 Ho:5t dociora think it arises from a . istrneo in tho face of the new comshore would be many more of us if nervous attempt to adjust the balance petition, have yielded their nrernca-
r ; the bounding deep were not so eonioundod wabblv at tiir.ei It s all very r.ell to j i:ig of a life on the ocean svave. but th. re isn't a lot 01 fun to it (vhen the r e;m wr.vo is as big as a douse and as steep as a roof that I?, lo a gror,t man;lifr.ee th Lint that on ?very ::U'- v.l tins Mmo or year: i. there any i.-pf c'fir; for rea'-ickneys?" Moit doctor:-- : -. i- t h it there is ro: although cn or 1 . o r: n; hav: b'-f-ii pr. pnr'd v. h'-h .'-Iii:'? v nt the -..!'. : ' f.-r.p!o to think ih y rjn ,; the sr.mo dA:r',. 1'or 1 cot i-.tant! "ilv r..r."--i v there rro I vt two oh;t Rays of avoiding sc-aslckit : h"!p pre or caure j - h r,!'-;:r ; j ..n- I ih- ! :-" 1 y e rt;:in j One i:i I .13 remain on land; the other, cover
rdswKiUSSanux tarn w f Biff vT&att
Km E. BAKER vagaries of his promising son as ho j did so. Now, my boy. you just leave it all to tlx Don't worry. Physical ; CUltl groj bac thai sani tarium this "This. Riv lad. is a health resort Wc hand you an ample abundance of the vital spark here at so much per j spark. Your board is paid in aavai.ee. youngster. Don't worry." I it n " r-Miio frnm Drimon. who was now beginning to understand the j situation. "Don t interrupt. Just pre- j tend that you believe me, you know, . and I'll entertain you for a few brief j moments. I "In the first place, I really am -who j I say I am. I have no empty rooms in my belfry, and I haven't the least idea what made your driver bring me here unless it is that my initials. A. I)., N. Y C. are on my suitcase. Anyway, to get down to the. subject. t i . , r . a... uu ..mm-" inan me mere tenuis m nsaib .u :1 1IJ't' u in-law.is at tho hotel in M.ssviue-and l nect mm and discuss , T . . .1 i . l f prospective papa-m-iaw.is at. me r-ici the real hotel am supposed to meet cr-certain things. : "Which you won't." bellowed the I other, and with a click of his stern I jaws. "I wouldn't dare let ;-ou go while the boss is away, and. besides. i don t nciicve you. i "It will be an easy matter for you I to establish my identity, if your thick , head is capable of assimilating rca- ! son," snapped Damon. "Just ral up j the hotel and verify my statement." I . "Why should your prospective father-in-law bo here?" asked Mulqueen suspiciously. "He is at the head of the cigar combine," explained Damon, impatiently. "I am to mnm his daughter if I can prove, by sticking out on the road and selling cigars, that I have enough business ability to support her. I have a million, more or les?. that tho pater left me, but Mr. Coxton wants me to prove up. He telegraphed me this morning that ho would meet me in Blissville today?" "You don't mean John Coston?" asked the athletic instructor. "Yes' "Yes." "Well, my boy. either you aro one i of the most imaginative burs I have seen for some time, or else you are telllnfc the brand of truth thr.t is stranger than fiction. Anyway. John Corton owns and controls this institution. and if he h in Blissville. as j you say. ho will be out here, and you j will have a chance to zee him and j prove your story." j "I'll prove it all right." Damon assertcd grimly. j And this was easily done, for to the dying whirr of a suddenlystopped motor Coxton entered the office. "Mr. Coxton!" Damon arose eagerly and strode toward the man. The stout, middle-aged one. with the florid cheeks and iron-gray hair. turned in surprise. "Tou Damon!" he ejaculated. "Just Fo." ventured tho youth, extending his hand. "Kindly assure your er athletic Instructor as to my sanity I was kidnaped by the driver of this sanitarium, and this gentleman wants to keep m here." "This is Damon. Mulqueen." came from the cigar magnate, crisply, "and he Is all right but I don't understand this complication. Explain" Damon speedily explained Coxton laughed at the completion of the tale. "Well, anyway, you're here and unhurt." he ventured. ,'T wanted to see you and tell you that vnur sales tin to date have proved that you can make good. No use in covering these tank towns. Ill accept your resignation, if you like, and you can go home and prepare for an early autumn wedding." "Sorry v.-e can't have that go." ventured Mulqueen ns some time later the youth was leaving the institution. "I'm not." grinned Damon, surveying critically the husky frame of the man. "I'm in trainh-c for a bout with Hymen, rnd I don't care to take on anyone before the great cent. Makes Them Run. Ptubb There goos a man who has more women ru ining after him thin any man in town. Penn You don't say! Regular Beau P.ruinmel, eh? Stubb No, motorman on a street car. He r.ever slows up until he ir a b'eck away from the place a woman signals. 1 ' Echoes From the Fair. . r- r.l I armer Crowfoot uy gum. .rKf? says he seen an incubator at the county fair that could "cluck" like a hen. Farmer Hardapple That's nothing. I taw one that could chase a hawk and bring the chw-l-.ens out . of that pond when they followed the ducklings. Like a Funrrrl. "Yhen a girl celebrates her thlrticth birthday " "She never door,." I "Never does what?" "Celebrates her thirtieth birthday she sort of conducts It." OF THE OCEAN. to go to sea except when it is calm a thing more easily said than done. r vnn will cn Ii you will go to toa you suouin romembor lhat while tea: ickr.oss is tea: ickr.oss is Lut, little a matter of the stomach j automatical!: yci ;-re likely to suffer ' w-s arid more hrb.-Hv if vou take pretty : good care of that oran ior ;i day or ; two bei ore sailing. ALo, i"o;;lo who ; He In their berths end do not let '. the?r ijcs psr 1st th -;.' in observing thy un.-t:-.LI!ity cf thi?- s :re iiUcly to pa.V. or-!.:,! much And more coiri'ortably n!:u:ty 01 fresh than c',hur: air helps. 3i.ect-.clci. ? brvo toM y;u; , f ti ;'par:r'.nl who .:iys :';t lo ' e.. .. fl. rr; ' :!-.' ;-. r I i- ;', .; . ; .!.' I;-s when j ;:it. t V y r.ii-t ! t- .- ; .!'.'. In ! e irr ,t of )--y j 1. 1 ) i:i:" J :. :ij-'V'-f ii-y ti uuhlcs '!1 I can. Ilobi ert Southey.
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,ro and a total abstinence from r -
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k on your feet agnin. and you will ! WföW lfe
,k the DhssvtHe l'.ysical ..uuure Xs
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I3li,svillo Physical Cultttre sani- ; M-X Itfl
I" reiterated the youtn. "isn t -l;hT " ' 'T?T S I ! T. ' 'J ?! 'ä'
a hotel?- , imvsr yäKmm m?M$ii
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B Vi. Ji 4 AsicTAyr .v 'Sz:SLr FTTOHU district school must so ri m.i c.rurttire at H The familiar little structure at H (fce country crossroads is N doomod to extiRCt0n. Twohunthougand of thcm srrcad ...... .... frorj OCRan to ooean and from border 1n,dor. arc marV;cd by the hand nrcc T,. i.pvq have already been turned in tho doors of several thousand, to be opened no more to thfi mirnosos 0f education' ;ountry youths, Tno nnf do7en families ho sent lnejr children to tho district school ?acn morninp. who watched them frudce down the country roads in all kinds of weather, and who gathereü m Friday afternoons in the littlo schoolroom to hear the "speaking." nave come to realise that what they :ould not do by themselves they can io In co-operr.tion with the families Df the ncx) district and the surrounding districts. The one-room neighborhood school aith one teacher, ia passing away. In ts place is coming a new factor in rountry life, a scleral six or eight :imes as hrge. with three or four teachers of training and ability; a ;cho ;1 prepared to bring to the country boy or girl an education that rromises to revolutionize the rural 3evelo:ment of America. The country school nas passed the point where it constitutes a playroom for the country lad when there is no work to be done on the farm. It has :aken cn more importance than as a rendezvous for hobsled and hayrac-!: parties, box suppers and ice cream 'estlvals. Education for the Farm, A remarkable movement is under way in tho United States, almost tin-, noticed by the general public and Tit'le appreciated by many of the farmIng communities themselves, bur lestined to play a most important P."t In tho education of the 7.000.00) rountry children of school age, and of the generatio: that are to follow '.hem along the Jevious road of learn ng. N Yesterday tho country boy tolled through indifferent roads and across plowed fields to the district school. Today a big carryall, full of rollicking ;hildren and drawn by excellent horses, rolls up to the farmhouse gate ?ach morning with the regularity of ;he rural mall carrier. ' The children pile in. the van moves on to the next farmhouse and accumulates more children ' Through the winding roads of a district, often rorty miles square, a half-dozen of I thoso blS wagons, maintained at pub- ! 'lc fxpense. are bringing hundreds of j children every day to a two-story s-hoolhouse. such as the country I '"'P11 of a tcxr years ago never i reamed of. At night tho wagons roll back over the morning's route, depositing children at their own door?teps. The country 1", thus solving the "back to the farm" problem. It has found the means to stop the great out pouring of sturdy boys and girls to j -'y schoqis. w nere mey nave been j educated "away from the country" ! 11 has 'ieeded in bringing Into the tlTU.fl 1 V . -m j rountry. almost to the farmhouse ioor, an education for the countrv youth equal in its general features to that of tho city school, and supple mented by a vocational training for permanent life on the farm. It i3 an ?ducat!on for the farm, not for the j pilgrimage to the city. I New Consolidated School. ! The new school is known for want of 1 better name as the "consolidated rural school." The name fails to describe this great new Institution of rural life. It is more than a consoli- ! graded sohool. a high school, a manI A f f , um training scnooi. agricultural FChcoI. domestic sconce school. almost a miniature university. . It Is an Institution that is turning out country pupils "fin shed" as to education, and fitted to do greater and better work on tho farm. It Is a social center about which the interests Df an entire township aro beginning to revolve. It is a model experimental farm, a dairy farm, a forestry school. horticultural school. It is an institution wlioe keynote of education is: "Educate the country youth for the world; but give him at least an equal education for the farm. Teach him the interesting and important things of farm life, and he will generally choose tho farm as his home." In nearly SCO communities, chiefly : in Indiana. Massachusetts, Ohio. Flor- ! Ida end North Dakota, the new j Fchool3 are besieged daily by the j BCOre of children tumbling from the Incoming carrvalls. Several thousand j 0f iimi dletriet Kobonta .,nMo to offer a vasonable excus fnr pt1 tives to the united institution, end h?.ve boen gathered under cious roofb. Its spaYouthful Hungarian RoLbers. A well orsanh-td band of boy robbers, lid by a ferocious chieftain aged thirteei, have just betn captured by po ice of Sc;.;-cn, Hungary. The ban: c ) .:vi f n lads, r.gcd from eisht to thirteen years, who had left fln f,.?Jif.0f rC;U"r: the 1 months .have comn.itted ' 123 it uU :; .: pr.d onu marJcr. la th? cave Lcoty to $25,Cüi) v.ai found. Tlu value of young chK'i- ' tain, who fchot and serlout-ly wounUcd
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it is a powerful force that Is aligned against the 'little schoolhouse in the lane." Prof. Willet M. Hays, assistant secretary of agriculture and a leader in the new education movement 1 says: "The desolate rural school, standing on the bleak plain. Is too un-American to endure the changes of the times. It must be transformed into a part of our beautiful outdoors, and it must be made more efficient In general studies. In culture, and In vocational training for country life." Soil Analysis and Stock Judging. So education seems to have taken on a new meaning for the parents of the country children. The new system teaches all that the old one did. all the important studies that the city school offered; all the phases of literature, art. history and science needed to round out the American citizen. But It does much more. It adds to these sudies. the "vocational training for the farm." The new schoolhou3e. instead of standing on a barren lot at a wind-swept four corners, is sur rounded by a carefully platted farm of ten acres or so. In the more ad vanced of the schools experimental buildings have been erected, small 'ruit.and forest tracts laid out, miniature dairy and poultry plants constructed, and experimental work of ill kind3 launched. The boys are taught stock Judging, breeding, crop rotation, scientific analysis of tho soil, the keeping of farm accounts, and kindred subjects Contests are, organized between rival groups of students to see what results can be obtained in the experimental Hats, and also in practical work on the farm at heme. The boy carrie-: away from the school not a confused mass of information that he cannot apply to his daily affairs, but a specific Idea that certain things can be evolved from the piece of land he has been working on for j-ears. He becomes Intensely interested In hi work and studies, and his eyes are opened not only to the "knowledge" of the world in the ordinary sense but to the great possibilities of tho land with which he is most familiar and in daily contact. The. new school has 200 pupils. In stead of 20. It has a lecture hall where spelling bees, class programs and amateur plays are carried out and where the neighboring farmers' families gather for "community' meetings, lectures, and entertain ments. There are lunchrooms for the chil dren who come In the vans each morning. In some of the schools there are gymnasiums as well equipped as those of city schools o like size. There Is real baseball in the country now, not the ,"one old cat" of former days; for the new schools have enough pupils to en courage American ideas of class sports and athletic contests. The girls are educated in the new scheme, not simply to be "educated.'' but to make them capable farmers-' wives and mothers of sturdy farm children. The district school could not teach home economics, home management, sewing, cooking, and practical home training. The big combined school, with its staff of three or four trained teachers, can and does teach all that a small domestic science school would. It introduced new ideas of lifo into the farm house. It edu cttc3 the girls to improve the home rather than to get away from it bocause of its shortcomings. The whole neighborhood, often em bracing 00 farms, becomes an im Wense laboratory for the school, lu the experimental farm surrounding the building plats are laid out to re semble the leading farm of the neighborhood. (Ireat co-operative enterprises, sue: as creameries, bakeries, laundries, as well as the churches and the townshif buildings, it is predicted, will in th near iuturo pe located about thf school grounds. The giant successor to tho district school brings into the country twe full years of high-school life, and ir the ninth and tenth grades the eldei pupils put in six months of each yeai upon their own farms in practical farm work. In many sections the farmers an! their children furnish the conveyance! to carry the neighbors' children t school; but in the majority of dis tricts It has been possible to estab lish :egular carryall service, main Mined at public expense. Indiana leads the way at present in the progress of tho new school movement. In almost every county in tho state the school wagons are bringing crowds of children daily to the central buildings, and the "Hoosier schoolmaster" Is of a different type than a generation ago Massachusetts is second. Ohio third and Florida and North Dakota contest for fourth place. In ulmos. jvery state, with tho exception of some ol tne jjhi". u-iucLi western ones the farming districts are either experimenting with the new system, or have iven it a complete success. the policeman who was sent to arrest iiiui, has been sentenced to ten years' confinement in a reformatory. Where Ignorances Is Glics. Who ever hea.-d of a man whr. .. ln bi3 eight or twelve hours a d-v in I Physical effort. actual muscular work, having time to bother about hi insides; most cf thc:n ar-j unaware cf the fact that th-v h-.ivo ariyttln beneath their thin brides a Lciut ! ;.i,d a fctoiuaea.
INEBRIATE IS DEAD WEIGHT Progress Is Pushing Drunkard to One Side With Relentless Force Old . Order Was Kind. If conditions CO, 70 or 80 years age were considered, the decrease shown in inebriety would be most striking, one drunkard being found in a thousand where formerly there were probably 20 or 30. In the early days of the republic, whisky was an article of wide consumption, made so because it was the only alcoholic stimulant easily obtainable at a distance from the sea coast, and because large quantities of grain could be profitably converted into liquor in the interior communities. Economic causes have operated powerfully to diminish hard drinking. Fifty or CO years ago ' there were thousands of communities in which professional men could drink to excess without suffering in public opinion. Now euch offenders would quickly lose their standing, and not only professional men, but workers in all the trades especially those in which machinery is employed, are obliged to keep sober in order to hold their places. The inebriiite is a dead weight in modern society, says New York Tribune. The older order was more than kind to him, but the newer is relentless. The younger generation has accurate views on that point, and the proportion of ':oung men handicapping themselves with drinking habits is becoming smaller every year. Young men nowadays are too intent on other things to be greatly attracted b;' the cheap lure of dissipation. All progress In the past half century has helped the cause of moderation. Legislation has been appealed to both to end the sale of liquors and to regulate it. But economic and educational pressure has done more than legislation to put a rigorous ban on lnebriet3 THEY ARE SOBER ENGINEERS Stringent Rules Against Drunkenness Enforced by Brotherhood One Notable Example. tt is safe to say that no other union, club or organization of any sort applies quite such heroic treatment to undesirable citizens as the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. One thing that the brotherhood most strenuously insists upon is that its members shall not drink. Thirty-five members were expelled for getting drunk in 1909, and their shame was pi4blicly proclaimed in the Journal. The treatment does not stop here by any means. The brotherhood will not risk the lives of Its members and the general public by permitting a drink ing man to runan engine, writes Charles Frederick Carter in Century When a man has been duly convicted of drinking and punished according to the laws of the order, the facts are laid before the proper authorities on the road that employs him, and his discharge is demanded. In one notable instance the engineer of a fast train got drunk during bis layover and disgraced himselt. He was tried, convicted and expelled, the management was informed, and the offender's discharge requested In regular form. But as the engineer had been a good man, the railroad company demurred, saying that he had not been drunk while on duty. "But," said the brotherhood, "there Is no telling when a man who gets drunk off duty may take a notion to get drunk on duty", and we do not Intend to take any chances on having a drunken man tearing through the country at sixty miles an hour, endangering the lives of others. It is unfair both to the efployees in your service and to your patrons." The culprit was discharged. He can never be employed on a railroad again. PASSION FOR GInTÖRINKING Historian Lacky Says Liquor Never Ceased to Be Counteracting Influence on Morals. In his "England in the ISth Century," Lacky, the historian, says that about 1724 the passion for gin drinking aiTeeted the masses and It spread with the rapidity and violence of an epidemic. "Small as Is the place which this fact occupies in English history, lt was probably, if we consider all the consequences which have flowed from it, the most momentous in the eighteenth century incomparably more so than any event In the purely political or military annals of the country. The fatal passion for drink was at once and Irrevocably planted in the nation. Physicians declared that in excessive gin drinking a new and terrible source of mortality had been opened for the poor. Retailers of gin hung out signs that their customers could be made drunk for a penny and dead drunk for two pence, and that .draw was provided free." The latter referred to the custom of having straw in the cellars on which those who had grown too drunk to get home could sleep off thel- potations. He goes on to say that, "from the early years of the 18th century gin drinking has never ceased to be the main counteracting influence to the moral, Intellectual and physical benefits that might be expected from Increase commercial prosperity." Temperance in Germany. The cause of temperance is making steady progress in Germany, and ac cording to the latest statistics Just published there are over 140.000 members of the different temperance associations throughout the country, the most important being the International Order of Good Templars, with 40.000 members, the Blue Cross associations with 33.000 members, and the Salvation army with S.000 total abstainers. The greatest number of converts have boen made duriing the last year, in which time the International Order of Good Templars Increased Its membership bv nearly 400 per cent. Watch Your Temper. A kind-hearted person's rage soon cools when he looks into the terrorreflecting eyes of a child or a dog. and vees what wonder, what fear, what protest, his storm has awakened. He sees the Injustice of his display of feeling. Each one can discover a recipe for anger-cooling and each one should et:ickly discover and speedily apply it. Mcst Ce Mutual. I l ino mannet s need tno support ui i fine manners in others. Emerson.
HARDY.
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Mr. Heavyweight Well, Willie, why 3o 3-011 look so studious? Willie I was wondcrin' if you ever married sis, if I could be able to wear yer cast-off clothes. TRY MURINfc EYE REMEDY for lied, Weak. Weary. Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c. $1.00. Murine Eyo Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 2."c. $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Wrong Guess. It was exhibition day at No. 3, and as the parents of Jack Grady, the dullest pupii. were listening hopefully, the teacher tried her best to help the boy. "How did Charles I. of England die?" she asked, assigning the easiest question on her list to Jack, As he looked at her. with no Indication of a coming answer, the teacher put her band up to her neck. Jack saw the movement and understood its meaning, as he thought. "Charles I. of England died of cholera," he announced briskly Youth's Companion. DR. MART EL'S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for Women's Ailments. A scientifically prepared renie of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent. For sale at all Drug Stores. S Her Tribute. Randall How did you like the military parade, Ida? Miss Itogers Glorious! I never saw enough men in all my life before. Harper's Bazar. Pcttit's Eye Calve Restores. No matter how badly the eyes may be diseased or injured. All druggets or Howard Uros., Builalo, X. Y. There are some rich men who have made their fortunes honestly. Also you may have heard of the needle in the haystack. Mrp. Austins Famous Pancake Flour. Delicious light cakes, all grocer?. True happiness is found in great love manifesting itself in service. Thoreau. Beware of taking kindness from others as matters of course. Gladstone. Sir. V infiinw-li.Soothlnt; Sy-TOf. Forchildrru U-i run. s-ft'iis I lie ii.riiä. numeral HumwaUunjlijyLi.vn.d.rL'tiwiiiiico,!CV jaUiU' . The want of fear leads to the fear of want. Be fearful to be fearless. Cox. Buy Mrs. Austins Famous Buckwheat Flour, fine for breakfast, all grocers. "When the patient man is once aroused he makes up for lost time. "vVhen woman
silent secret suffering she trusts you. Millions have bestowed this mark of confidence on Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. Everywhere there ere 'women who bear witness to the wonderworking, 'curing-power of Dr. Pierce's Faro rite Prescription which saves the suffering sex from pain, and successfully grapples with woman's weak
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tie rdW tow Dr. Pierce's Pletsaat Pellets Induce T-'I'VSi-'yJ ' mm
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which can be kept at full or low heat for a short or long time. Four quarts of oil will give a glowing heat for nine hours, without smoke or smell. An indicator always shows the amount of oil in the font. Filler-cap does not screw on; but is put in like a cork in a bottle, end is attached by a chain and cannot get Ipst. An automatic-locking llamc sprcadci prevents the wick from being vurned high enough to smoke, and is easy to remove and drop back so that it can be cleaned in an instant. The burner body or gallery cannot become wedged, and can be unscrewed
nan iwsiani lur rcwitfciug. riiiihiicu made, built for service, and yet light and Dealers Everyuehtrt. If rof el io int neartst
Standard Oil Company (larcrronlttd)
W. 'L. DOUGLAS
3 s3- & $S4 SHOES Iv?o!3IK Doy3'Shoes,$2.00,$2.50&$3.00. Best in the World. IV. L. Uot'nlrm $3,OCP $3.50 tnrJ $4. CO r frees fo pottlely tho bmst mado xncf mcrt gtrpufar chmiB tor tho price In Arrrzrictif and nrct t!irt mat cccnonica mhoes r xitiu in h i
Tin you realize that my slio-8 have 39 ye:irn, tliat I make jvikI t.ell more
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A Perennial Mystery. Average Man These Sunday papers just make me sick! Nothing in them but commonplace personal Items about a lot of nobodies no one ever heard of. Friend 1 saw a little mention of you in the Sunday Gammon. Average Man (half an hour later, to messenger boy) Here, rush around to the Gammon office and get me forty copies of the Sunday edition.
A woman hates her enemies longer than she loves her friends. OiEl By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Black Duck, Minn. "About a year ago I wrote you that I was sick and could t:Dt do any oZ my housework. My sickness was called Iletroflexion. When 1 would sit down I felt as if I could not pet up. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and did just as you told me and now I am perfectly cured, and have a biff babv boy. Mrs. Axx a Andekson, Box 1?, Black Duck, Minn. - Consider This Advice No woman should submit to a surgical operation, which may mean death, until she has given Lydia E. Iinkham'3 Vegetable Compound, mado exclusively from roots and herbs, a fair trial. This famous medicine for women has for thirty years proved to be the most valuable tonic and invigoratorot the female organism. AYomen residing in almost erery city and town in the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. lHnkhanvs Vegetable Compound. It cures female ills, and creates radiant, buoyant female health- If you are ilh for your own sake as well as those you love, give it a triaL Mrs. Pinkliam, at Lynn, Mass Invites all sick women to writo her for ad vice. 1 1 er advice is f reo and always helpful. Tomorrow A. M. too late. Take a CASCARET at bed lime; get up in the morning feeling fine and from ccsr-eating and drink' ing. They surely work while you sleep and help nature help you. Millions take them and keep well. CASCARETS toe a box for week's treatment, all drufrgis- Eisest seller in the world. MilUoa boxe a month. rDCC nUIIDM rutin butter 3 mind. AbsornCC U nUn ll luu-icaanmiee. I to lOyal. rap. nly one f rr in Tonr townMnm. Be&rct. Mumou Mfg. Co., LK-pU '-, Cxunlou, . ui?:ri Thcmptoa't E;s Water DEFIflUCE Cold VatcrStarch makes laundry work a pleasure. Id oz. pk. lln. W. N. U, FT. WAYNE, NO. 44-1910.
WOMAN
Honored by Women
spcks of her
nesses and stubborn ills, IT JUAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONd IT HAKES SICK WOMEN WELL. No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her confidence misplaced when she wrote for advice, to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y.
mild amtunl bowel movement one m dsy.
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on tne side or tne nouse wnere winter blasts strike hardest always has a lower temperature than the Test of the house. There are times when it is necessary to raise the temperature quickly or to keep the temperature up for a long period.' That can't be done by the regular method of heating without great trouble and overheating the rest of the house. The only reliable method of heating such a room alone by other means is to use a
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SMOKELESS T9 4 Ahsolately tsiaifeUss and odorless in japan it mc&ei, strong, auraoic, Wellornamental. Has a cocl handle. yours, write fjr dsscriptlvt circular agency cj tne the ftnnla-il lor over I . - ! t:;.tK), CX.IO btkI J!.K S' ; : 'rV-v no for you (, iMir- r p f '.- ptr:-; Jj hmo .vCnJVTKO '-. .1 Ji)VK ! r-IT.lt'ofi V ... il MIL. "'tTAliE i JC SUDSViTUTE 1 dt la"i;
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