The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, February 09, 1910, Image 3
r
vi ac jl rs i~
now iyiosi reupie
Maintain Wrong Belief.1
Everyday Matters in Which
We Are Usually in Error.
If we start an inquiry along an
particular line we very soon discovt
that our authorities are uprootin
and utterly doing to death some c
our most fond little beliefs; we fin
not only that we have been negativt
ly in the wrong through lack of an
information, but that we have bee
positively, and often assertive!:
wrong, having taken our stand o
what develops to be absolutely raisir
formation. This holds true with re!
tn oil thing's both animat
and inanimate, but in no line is i
more striking than with regard t
ourselves, our bodies, our senses, ou
foods, and our diseases.
Meet ten averagely well-informe
persons and ask each to locate hi
heart. At least nine, and probabl
all of them, will place their hand
well around on the left side or on th
left breast up toward the shouldei
Of course, every one knows that th
heart is on the left side! But it har
pens that it is not. The most muscu
lar chamber, the left ventricle, is o
the left side of the heart, and th
largest artery, the aorta, arches ove
to the left, and the point is directe
toward the left, and these condition
make the beating of the heart mor
readily felt on tne ieit siue, uu
should we carefully slice ourselve
directly through the centre of th
breastbone a larger portion of th
heart would go out with the rigb
side than with the left.
We may assume that each of u
**# belongs to that more fortunate clas
which dines every day, and we havt
therefore, had in the course of th
past ten years about 3 6^0 dinners
Counting out the day we dined alon
Dh the railway train, we have, thee
heard in the past ten years no les
than 3649 times the remark, "Isn'
It peculiar that a person weighs n<
more after a hearty meal than be
fore?" It would be peculiar, very, i
It were true; but It isn't. If you ea
two pounds of dinner you will, im
mediately thereafter, weigh ver
nearly two pounds more than you dii
Just before, as any good scales wil
demonstrate. The reason that yo^
would not weigh exactly two pound
more is that the body is constantl
losing weight, whether one is eatin,
or not, by perspiration and by th
moisture and dioxide gas exhalei
from the lungs. A man of averag
weight will lose about two pounds i:
i Turkish bath.
Almost every one has more know]
edge of the Scriptures?particularl
of the first two or three chapters o
Genesis?than of anatomy, and i
ready with a quotation to prove tha
9, woman has one more?or, rathei
that a man nas one less?riD man
woman. An examination of a nor
mal skeleton wil convince him of hi
error. Both men and women ar
duly fitted out with twelve pairs o
ribs.
On the other hand, most of us wh
are very wise smile knowingly whe:
some one makes the foolish assertio:
that one is taller in the morning tha
In the evening. But try it. Betwee:
:he twenty-four vertebrae of the back
; bone are little disks of cartilage, an
these in the course of *he day are con
jiderably compressed by the weigb
Df the body, expanding again whe
the body is in a recumbent positior
In the case of a heavy man of goo
average height the difference in hi
height at morning and evening si
usually about a half inch.
How many times have we bee
solemnly informed that "fish is
brain food"? There is no foundatio
whatever for the belief that fish con
fcains any particular elements whic
adapt them especially as food for th
brain or which support mental efforts
The value of fish as a food to person
engaged in mental labor is found i
the fact that fish do not contain larg
quantities of those materials whic
demand much physical exercise or e?
ertion for their complete consumr
tion. As the brainworker is seldox
physically active, the value of fish a
food for him is due to what is nc
contained in the fish.
"Don't go into the water until yo
have become cooler!" is a cautio
frequently given intending swimjnei
and bathers. The kindly cautionei
are not quite sure just what woul
happen if, when heated, a perso
should plunge into the stream or sur
but it would be something very dreac
ful, in which they disagree with th
Royal British Humane Society, whic
urges: "Bathe when the body i
warm, provided no time is lost in ge
ting into the water. Avoid bathin
when the body is cooling after pei
spiration."
' * It is when we happen to get coi
trol of another person's body that w
prove most conclusively wnai a uiits
of misinformation we have acquiret
For instance, when some one has bee
drowned, or nearly drowned, we sei?
upon the poor, cold body and rub
vigorously with whisky, under th
impression tha'; we are warming i
Logical, when we consider that whe
fever is reaching a dangerous heigf
w.e rub the patient's body with alcohi
to reduce his temperature? The in
portant thing to do 33 to get t"he bod
of the drowned person dry and warn
not wet and cold, and whisky is undi
niably wet, and its rapid evaporatic
makes the body cold. To pour spiri
of wine or any other volatile flui
upon the hands of the most health
person will make his hands instanti
cold. It would be far more sensib!
to rub the drowned body with a pie<
of dry flannel or the bare hand.
And when it comes to childrer
How mariy parents espose their chi
dren, when very young, to infectic
of "children's ailments"?measle
wboopiDg cough, chicken pox, etc.with
the idea they are quite likely 1
lifirp these maladies at one time <
another and that it is better and saf<
to have them while young? Thei
ar9 hundreds of thousands who d
and thousands of unnecessary deatl
result. In the first place, a mild ca:
may give rise to a serious one, ar
there is not the slightest reason i
assume that the child must necesssa
ily have the diseases at any tlm
One attack does not necessarily a
ford protection from another, raor
S over, and, science and statistii
against ancient crones, the fatalitii
among children are almost alwa:
greater than among adults. As
child grows older the liability of a
tack diminishes rapidly. Sixty p<
cent, of the deaths from measles o
y
cur during the first two years of lif
r seventy-five per cent, during the firi
^ three, and over ninety per cen
* among children under five years <
age. With respect to fatal cases <
whooping cougn, iorty per cent, ocli
* under one year, seventy-five per cen
f under two years, and ninety per cen
under five years.
n And do not put cobwebs on a cut I
stop bleeding, as you are likely <
give the patient blood poisoning c
;e lockjaw, cobwebs being infested wit
11 all kinds of disease germs. And d
? not hold a burned member near a fii
r to "draw out the inflammation."
does nothing of the kind. The thin
d to do is to exclude the air as quick]
18 as possible, and for this any soothin
y oil or cold cream will serve.
s And the worst part of it all is tin
c we are convinced every day of tfc
truth of the assertion that "to ui
e learn is harder than to learn."?Ne
York Times.
in
RECOMMENDS FISH POXDS,
e
T Following the Lead of a New Tor
^ State Expert.
e If Professor Dyche succeeds in coi
t vincing the farmers of the State, c
3 a large part of them who have tb
e requisite facilities at hand, that a fis
e pond on their premises will be c
t quite as much value to them an
their neighbors as many of their vai
3 ied enterprises, his services as Stat
g fish and game commissioner will t
}( of untold value to the people of tb
e commonwealth.
5. As Professor Dyche so well said i
e an interview with him the other day
lf "The existence of well stocked pond
s all over the State would be of in
t mense food value to the people.
0 How true such a condition of affaii
i_ would be of the present day, wke
f all kinds of meat are selling at fane
t figures? Most people are fond of fis
if they can get hold of any. Its m
y tritive qualities are great, and it is
3 most welcome change from a moi
[1 or less steady diet of meat.
L1 There are no indications that tb
s price of meat will ever be much lowe
y in this country than it now is. Tb
g chances are it will keep gettln
e higher and higher. So if Professc
3 Dyche's suggestions in this regard ar
e followed it will not be many yeai
n before the people of Kansas can prat
tice considerable household econom
[. by calling on their fish ponds to mak
y material and satisfying additions t
f their food supply.
s No reason exists, either, why sue
t ponds should not be sources of coi
. siderable revenue to their owner:
a The number of fish that will live an
thrive in a small body of water is sui
s prisingly large. In the course of
e iew years auer me esiauusumem, *.
,f one of them, the yield of fish th?
would be ready for the frying pan c
0 the oven would be much larger tha
n any one family could use, regardles
a of its size. The surplus would fin
a a ready market in the immediat
a neighborhood of the pond at price
that would more than recompense tfc
j owner for all of his trouble in keej
l_ ing it up.
t Professor Dyche has pointed 01
n another way in which Kansas ca
, take the lead and show the oth<
3 States of the Nation a desirable pat
s to follow. It rests with her peop]
s whether or not they take advanta^
of it. If they do not they will on!
n be taking a considerable slice o
a their own noses.?Topeka (Kan.
n Capital.
[_
h Tragedy of the Stew.
e Among the many Americans wh
; spend the winter regularly at S
g Moritz, the luxurious snow mantle
n Swiss village C000 feet above the se;
e no one is more popular than Williai
h J. Orthwein, the noted America
c_ curler.
Mr. Orthwein, at the last meetin
n of the St. Moritz Curling Club, to]
~* Tr?*c?"h etow
g nil cUIlU^lUg SIU17 U1 au ikiais. Obv IT.
)t "Wo were playing davos," said tt
ruddy and robust American. "I to!
u the men not to bother about lunchi
n or unacks; 1 would have a supei
,s Irish stew sent down from the Kult
s The Kulm, you know, is famous f(
^ its Irish stews.
n "Well, the stew arrived before tl
f match was finished, and to keep
warm three or four topcoats were la:
e over it.
u "Then play ended, and we all ha
j tened toward the great pot of fr;
grant stew with joyous hearts. Bu
g alas, on lifting the coats we four
r_ nothing beneath them but a rour
hole. The pot had melted its w?
through the ice, and lay hidden undi
j two feet of cold water."?Washiu
ss 1 ton Star.
Got the "Beggar's Money.
n j Once while Bishop Talbot, the giai
"cowboy bishop," was attending
meeting of church dignitaries in ?
ie Paul, a tramp accosted a group <
churchmen in the hotel porch ai
n asked for aid.
11 "No," one of them told him, "I'
31 afraid we can't help you. But yc
see that big man over there?" poin
iy ing to Bishop Talbot. "Well, he
3' the youngest bishop of us all, ar
e" he's a very generous man. Yc
in might try him."
ts The tramp approached Bishop Ts
bot confidently. The others watch<
>y with interest. They saw a look
'y surprise come over the tramp's fac
'e The Bishop was talking eagerly. T1
:e tramp looked troubled. And the
I finally, they saw something pa
1 from one hand to the otner. tj
1- tramp tried to slink past the groi
>n without speaking, but one of the
s, called to him.
? "Well, did you get something fro
to our young brother?"
)r Tho tramp grinned sheepishl
ar "No," he admitted, "I gave him a dc
re l.ir for his new cathedral at La
o, amie!"?Everybody's.
is:
se I Reinforced concrete boats ha'
id proved so successful in Italy that fi
to vessels, each of 120 tons or large
r- have been built for the navy.
t! I MONEY WIZARD WORKS
e-! WONDERS WITH ?7.50 PER
a
iS
? Brennan, Who Built House and
rs j '
a > Raised Family on It, Complains
I. j Wife Tapped Bank Account.
21 ' "On $7.50 a week I raised a famr>
; 1/^nrn VIAWQ OTIrt Tlllt TTlHrfl I
W II V , IJ u 11 t 111 J V TY 4J. 1AVSU.4V IVUU w .
e? than $1000 in the Queens County
3* . Savings Bank at Flushing," said Ter*
1 rence Brennan to Magistrate M. E.
Connolly in the Flushing Police
Court. "But my wife does not want
ir me to save money, and I want you
to advise me whal, to do."
t* | Brennan had his wife summoned
' to court because she drew money
:o from the hunk. Mrs. Brennan
:c claimed she used the money for
>r household expenses.
h | "I give my wife nearly all my earnlo
ings/' continued Brennan, "but she
e is not satisfied."
It | Magistrate Connolly advised the
ig couple to go home, saying Brennan
ly l deserves great credit. Brennan has
g be*;n working in a lumber yard for
i about fifteen years.?New York ~
it ' World.
ie
i- Important Financial Question. fu
w The reformation of our financial 8l]
and banking practices is the most im- w
portant economic question that has Wl
ever confronted the world.
The financial resources of France 0
k in 1803, when the Bank of France f
' . ., f
| was estaonsnea, were cuuiiJaruuveiy
x_ small. So were the bank resources
)r ; of Great Britain small in 1844 when
e.|the bank act, under which the Bank
2j ! of England is administered, was
){ I passed.' Nor can it be said that a
jj ' comparison between the banking conditions
of the German empire and
e ! those of our own country can be reaie
sonably instituted, so vast is the disie
parity from every point of view.
j The significance of our problem ben
comes most impressive when considr.
; ered in the light of two comparisons,
[g I First, Great Britain has only 120,.
000 square miles; France only 204,.?
i 000 square miles; Germany only 208,.s
000 square miles; while the United
n States has 3,200,000 square miles.
;y i Second, the banking resources of
b ! the entire world, including the United |
j. j States, were only $15,900,000,000 in I
a I 1890; while the banking resources of L
,e ' the United States to-day exceed $20,|
000,000,000, or are twenty-five per to
e cent, larger than the banking re- tv
,r sources of the whole world were, less w
e than twenty year3ago.?Hon. Charles ve
_ ! N. Fowler, in the Atlantic. sr
,g Trust Legislation To-day. h(
s Much of the anti-trust legislation sa
> ! of the various States and many of the sr
y remedies recently proposed, are a mis- tr
e application to private businesses of w<
o regulations which are properly ap- ot
I plicable only to public-service busi- n?
h nesses. This was the defect of the su
a. Hepburn bill, proposed in 1908, and cr
s. is the defect of the numerous State hi
d anti-trust laws that forbid the sale of re
goods at prices above or below the Bi
a ordinary , cost of production. The
)f duty to serve everybody without disit
crimination at a reasonable price that 1
)r may be regulated and determined by
n the State, is properly enforcable upon
ss railroads, lighting and watering cornel
panies, and other corporations which
;e perform a public service, and in most
>s cases enjoy exclusive powers from
ie the State. This duty arises from the
p. fact that the business of such compa-;
| nies is naturally and unavoidably a
it monopoly, in which competition does
~ nnt prist and. in fact, should be dis
>r couraged. This duty and these purh
poses are best fulfilled by State regule
lation. In the great majority of btisis
;e nesseB, however, no public service is
|y performed or professed, and no exff
elusive powers are obtained from the
) State.?Gilbert H. Montague, in the
Atlantic.
Forbid Cows to Chew Tobacco.
l0 The domestic cow is one of the oi
t most persistent tobacco chcwer3 in
1(j the world. In many of the tobacco
3 raising States where cattle are alm'
lowed to run at large, statutes havo ?
n been passed to prevent cows chewing
tobacco. That manufacturer of tobacco
who allows a Btray cow a bl
"chew" is subject to penalty under oi
" * -'i-- fvi T
1110 Jaw, SHyi> LUt? v^mi;a5u inuuut, [e
Naturally the manufacturer of to- pi
ld bacco doesn't present her with any fl<
fancy leaf tobacco, or with any of hie ~
' fr best or moat inferior "plug" product.
a Simply after the stripping o? the
stems from the leaf was accomplished,
he was disposed to dumtf
Je wagon loads of tobacco stems someit
where in a vacant lot, there to rot
U and enter again into soil.?or into the
family cow.
s- "
The Record of Raindrops.
4 It is by carefully noting small and
i ' apparently insignificant things and ,
facts that men of science are enabled J
to reach some of their most surpris- !
' ing and interesting conclusions. In I
" many places the surface of rocks,
which millions of years ago must have
formed sandy or muddy sea beaclies,
is found to be pitted with the impressions
of rain drpps. In England
it has been notice- that in many i
cases the eastern sides of these depressions
are the more deeply pitted,
I(j indicating that the rain dro~>s which 1
formed thein were driven before a ~
west wind. From this the conclusion I
)U is drawn that in the remote epoch '
^ when the pits were formed the ma,.g
jority of the storms in England came |~
1(j from the west, just as they do to-day.
y ?Harper's Weekly.
For Others* Sake.
"Ought to have gone with me last
pj night; there was a fancy Cakewalk of
a blondes, ten of the cutest Bacchantes,
1(J a lot of living pictures, and?"
n "Great! What theatre?"
Sj "Theatre? It was the society en/
10 tertainment for the benefit of the Lit.
jjj tie Orphans' Home."?Puck.
01 i So Stylish.
_ ' "There's Mrs. Nuritch," said the
first woman at the reception. "I un?
derstand Her nusoana is at aeainra i
(1. door."
_ "Sh!" cautioned the other woman,
"I believe she doesn't say 'door,' but
j 'portecochere.' " ?Catholic Standard
and Times.
i
jr ; An Indian stream, the River KisM u"
' nah, 600 feet wide, hfcs the longest gl'
! scan of telegraph wire In the world.
I
HOW CROOKED SUC^
"? ? ? rr r* r\ T>TT
WUftiVmJ D I.
'.POO CONNECTING SCALE. WITH
''THE MJvChtNr OF THIS
v WnCN jUOAft IS PLACEI
^1 =
ItJL
GOVERNMENT WtlCHC*
Two Bags in One.
How often have we stood thought-*
illy In front of a pile of clothing, a
lit case and a valise and wondered
hich bac to take. The shirts
ouldti't go in the valise and the suit
ise wouldn't hold it all, so we were
dised to take both or a trunk.
4J
I
Two Chicago men got their heads
gether and decided to combine thp
to and get a patent on it, so now
e have the combined suit esse and
ilise, which will hold as much as a
nail trunk and can be carried about
ith ease. The illustration shows
)w the two are combined. Necesrily
the suit case used is onf of the
caller sizes, as otherwise the conivance
would be so bulky that it
ould discount its convenience in
her directions. With this combiition
a man may feel sure that his
lits and shirts are lying flat and not
easing and at the same time he will
ive all the smaller articles he needs
ady to hand in the valise on top.?
Dston Post.
Sherlock Holmes Again.
"Do you know your chickens come
rer into my garden?"
"I thought they did."
"Why?"
"Because they never come back."
-New York Telegram.
The peat bogs of Sweden are capae
of producing ten billions ^f ions
' air-rlied neat, suitable for 'uel.
liis quantity, as compared with
esent import of coal, vnuld He v.if:ient
for a period of 1500
IN THE Ci
UNITED STATICS GOVER.VHWNr
Tronic is a Burean.
One of the chief objectiijus to "livp
a trunk,'' as travelers out it is
n?> <cz>
v. lucuxiveuxeuce 01 gulling ai uit
uff packed there and the trouble of
^.R SCALES WERE,
CROOKED WEIGHERS
WEIGHING PLATFORM?
ROD IS UPWARD
3 ON PIATFORM)
..." f
?n I
PRE^'siNO
Ij 'C *\ ON SCALS
COMPANY CHECKER
Brigham Young.
Brigham Young had just been presented
with his hundred and fifth
son. A careworn look came over his
brow is "he news was broken to him,
and he sighed deeply.
"T don't know what 1 shall do if
this tb'.ng keeps up," he said. "Looks
to me as if sooner or later I'll have
to start a fresh air fund."?New York
Times. Keeps
Spoon in Place.
When the number of kitchen uten
sils and helps invented is compared
with the number of inventions in
other lines, the percentage of the
former is nothing snort of remarkable.
It will not be loug before the
cook will be eliminated entirely and
the dinner will be cooked by a series
of wi~es. weights and pulleys run by
the kitchen clock.
One of the latest devices to help
the cook is the spoon rest, designed
by a New York woman. This consists
of a single length of wire bent
to form vertically arranged hooks,
*'bich fasten over the side of a pot.
A long end with a loop to it extends
I.
out iroui me oilier side ot me pot. In
cooking some dishes it is necessary to
have a spoon always handy to stir the
contents. Heretofore this spoon has
shown an annoying habit of falling in
or out of the pot at critical moments,
but with the rest just described the
handle can be placed in the loop and
the whole kept In place by the lid of
the pot, or even without it.?Boston
Post.
Street Railway Fares Abroad.
In the cities of Great Britain the
population of which is 200,000 or
more the average rate of fare for
street railway travel is 1.1 cents a
passenger mile. In the cities of Contlseavil
Europe the average rate of
fare paid for urban transportation is
one cent a passenger mile.
Ou the overhead and underground
railway in the <'it/ of Berlin, Germany,
?he average rate of faro paid
j is ?..$?> ^ents a passenger mile. It is
; quite ^pp^rer.t fbut the people of Euj
rope?In aplte o1! the general iiupresI
sior; lem to the coutrary?are paying
! a hip her prteo tor a poorer perv>ce
1 i.hau rfre the people of th<? United
i -States.?-P-Iwp.v -^nd Engineering
j ^e^w.
\NAL ZONE.
fel:7
Hf.tWl'i.U A ; COl/Jrs PANAMA
' {.'fickle *nd unpacking wherever you
| tapper, :o itop a while. Thl* has
vec .rfCTCome by a New ?ork mac,
cho .las- .aventfirt what might b"
.era&ed a 'bureau trunk,' a? dlife:
i<u!nted f/om the convenient ware
obs aunk. The New Yorker'? In
'ention -jag a series of drawers -which
-lido >.n -ind out iust as the drawer? o'
a oureau. The corner? have heav*
posts on them, and In che iront post*
are grooves in which mIk? front of th?trun'-r
slides up aud dowu When th<
lid is down, of course, the front section
stays in placo but. whet ch?? li^
is open the front can be drawn out
and there- is a regular bun?uL. th?
drawers of which slidr easilv out anc
give access to anvthinr ir them with
out the r.ccessitv of clawing up every
thing else on top The advantages o'
such a trunk can be seen at a glance
? Tlnstnn Pn=st
Billiards and doo! on chipboard arc
now possible through the recent in
vention of a self-leveling table whic*
accommodates- itself to every movei
ment of the vessel.
The Society's Wide Scope.
"This society differs from many
others of Lts kind," exclaimed a 03
speaker at a club dinner, "in that we w
not only embrace gentlemen, but also in
ladies!" Loud applause and laughter h<
caused the speaker to think that he ai
bad said enough. ?
The Hour Gloss.
The hour glass does not keep perfect
time for the reason that In hot fa
i weather the glass expands, thus mak- ti:
Ing the neck larger and allowing the m
sand to run faster. al
Good Easiness Transaction.
In one instance in the West a
ranchman found gold "color" in his d(
valuable orchard. He figured that u]
he could make more money gold min- ai
ing than by fruit raising, so he in- ?r
stalled a dredge in his orchard. The ?
trees were cut down as the dredge
progressed, and soon all the great
orchard had been destroyed by the fr
machine, but the ranchman had been in
made a millionaire, while it was a in
matter of ease to replant his orchard, ar
ff&rX/ti
M7HHV
When shown positive and re
remedy had cured numerous cs
any sensible woman conclude tl
* / ?!-/_?* ! Ijl
also Denent ner 11 sunenn^ wiuj
Here are two letters which pi
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comp<
Fitchville, Ohio,
down, suffered fro
limbs, and conld \i
rfflf ^me* She came
PI prostration, had I
I wk and seemed mela
ijafl <-.J fM$ two doctors but g
II J ' i-kydia E3. Pinklit
j Blood Purifier a
proved so much i
. W//U^:J;;f another girL"? M
r.--. 'I Irasburg, Vera
3ry a few rrords in praise of you
taking ?t I had been very sick wi
bles and nervous prostration. I s
So of ILydia E. Pinkham's Yegetab
greatly improved. My friends wh
a gTeat change." ?Mrs. A. H. San
We will pay a handsome rew
? . .1 t ..
prove to us tnat tnese letters ar
?or chat either of these wome
their testimonials, or that the lc
their permission, or that the ori
not come to us entirely unsolic:
What more proof can any 01
Fop 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham
Compound has Caen tho standarc
female ills. No sick woman do<
hen _lt who will not try this famo
Mado oxcln3ively from roots anc
has thousands or cores to its credj
' Irs. Pinkham invites all
write her for advice
guide 3. thousands to health fre<
Address Mrs. Pinkham,
mB \ JmMflL /T MBB8BB<1 Iai?
if The RAYO LAMP ia
B There are lamps tl
F hlluxevitaitMiJi
LAMP a reaper
THE /^Ai Agency of th<
Stani
i iii 1 tm irHiirrijntwyp
uun i ?
/0$^ ForDISTE
j X'VX Sure cure and poislUvf p
Irmj f I _ <83 \ 1 InfcctiHJ or "exj>?-xt.!J<j
lUlS IR} *1 I *I Olan.lit. expnlo ttio pi<lM>?ou
[*" (? I - W llUI ft"1'Shcp Aui^ Oholera li. Ki
l(n\t *//V( t'r'ppc ?nioii? biitiiXf >w
\ W~ 1W />*./ l>oltl^, ^u<1 $;i> a '
VVA jrSJpfl^k/^l/ who will ire: It *n' .vou.
/ Sp?*cin: a^i>ntji Wiiuted
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., i
Diet of the Old.
A sane diet foi a person of seventy!
or seventy-five should be made up J j
largely of vegetables and fruit, somp l
?~K onniD i.irtrc 51 littlp TdPflt Sl'm-I I
Iirsu, ijwinv. ?? pie
cereals, if there is no inclination I
toward obesity. J
Drinking with one's, meals is not; /
considered advisable, especially ns;
liquids are apt to wash down the foo^
before it is properly masticated TV.-*
quarts of water, or more, should
taken between meals, however drying
the clay. Hot water is especia'i'v
good for one who does not exercise
much, as it flushes out the entire svp-; I?
tem. Stimulants, such as tea and I
coffee, should not bo very strong.? ! C
Harper's Bazar. j ^
Fall Styles i:: Languages. ^
My little Ger.nan maid said to me j
one day, "Susie Jones is going to j ca
shirt to hizh school to-morrow, and lils
she asked me whether she should f g
take German or Lnuu." "What did j _f
you tell her?" I asked. "Well, you
know," replied Mary, "Latin is going gc
out; they don't talk that much any ^
more, so I told her I A'ould take Ger- (.
man."?Success Magazine. tu
- - - cei
At the prevailing increase in pop- j
ulation New York City will bo the C
home of 11.000,000 persons in 1932.1 B
Wliat They Look Like. H
The little boy had been given H
rster stew for dinner. The oysteru
ere unusually large. After peering fl
itently into the bowl for some time
3 looked up into his mother's face 'j
id said, "I don't like hoppy-toads."
-Delineator.
Rome to Have Unique Library.
A complete library of Italian and
ireign newspapers from the earliest
mes is to be instituted in Rome, and ,
ore than 200,000 collections have
ready been secured.
Mixed Metaphor.
At a service recently the preacher
ilivered an eloonent address on
^lowers as a Cure For Worry." "Wo
e told," he said, "that more die
om worry than from anything else . >
-and yet they will go on worrying!"
The lettuce appears to be derived
om the endive, which is found wild H
temperate and Southern Europe.
the Canaries, Algeria, Abyssinia :
id temperate Western Asia. B
\0/(j
liable proof that a certain' 1
ises Oi icinaic 111s, wuiuuu v
iat the same remedy would
l the same trouble? j
ove the efficiency of Lydsa- ||||
"My daughter was all ran j
m pains in her side,head and* j
alk but a short distance at a , j
very near having nervous ; j
>egun to coogn u ^jb
neholy by spells. She tried.;.
ot little help. Since taking
i-n's Vegetable Compound,
od Liver Pills she hai; imiiat
she feels and looks like
xs. C- Cole, Fitchvilie,Ohio.
out.?U1 feel it my duty to J|||!
p medicine. When I began nl
th kidney and bladder trou- ]
ira now taking the sixth bot- ]
le Compound and find myself . j
10 call to see me have noticed
v?y-?ww? TmsIiiim Vatimnht L,
WVJLMf V w,??. T
rard to any person who witt
e not genuine and truthful
n were paid in any way for ,
;tters are published without ?
iginal letter from each did' \
le ask?
fs Vegetable ^
JIU5UW tAJ IV/ V \V) ^ i* j
us medicine. 7/ 'fa if "? 1
L^herbs, and |X* 7 If
sick women OA - 'I
e> of charge. - "M
Lynn, Mass* ^?BaY'tsj?u3rj!P''\ s ;/.
^ S^UAjgJHMf
a high grado lamp gold at a low price.
iat cost more but tnere is no better lamp
> Burner, the Wick, the Chiuiney-Hoider? ^
js in a lamp; these parts of the RAYO .>*
rectly constructed and them is nothiug
rt of lamp;mikin(f that could add to thi * :.a
AYO as a light-giving device. Suitable for
1 the house. Every dealer everywhere.
1, write for descriptive circular to the nearest
Jard Oil Company I
* (Incorporated) fij
iTiiTD,E'"DPlnkEye'l:Dl200tta 1
1IVL _r EflCsMpp1"^ F'vcr 1
IATAX catan-haj ycver% J
ireTentlTe, no matter now D<>r?e?ai *ny ?* are ' 'vl
old. Riven on thi* tonirue; wu on 'i>* '*''ooc and .{:?
i> *erm? from the body. Oirpo nurenipAr la Duff
n.ilu j. Laric*?i *elllii?r lJve ?toclr r*>n>?dy. Cure* v .'a
iiia. and 1* a Ane Kidney remedy. aOo. -yii #1 a
Uut ibis out. Keep It. Show to your tfruxglst. '.'J
Kre? Booklet. "VIMemper. Causes and Curoa." H
3acterloloelsts. GQSHE1UNM.U j
Save the Baby?-Use
iwt sist w-'aii m (wia\$a?(5u>s
Should be given at once when the '">?
iitUe one coughs. It heals the del- J
icate throat anii protects the lungs j|
from infection?guaranteed safe and
very palatable fi
All Druggist*. 25 cents. 9
lalts and Castor 1
"B?bad stuff? ^ver cure, M
?ifi only makes bowels move be
use it initates and sweats them, 1
:e poking finger in your eye. The best I
owel Medicine is Cascarets.
rery Salts and Castor Oil user should
t a box of CASCARETS and try
em just once. Yo* see. 88*
tit this out. mail it wit i vour ad ;r as to
jrling Kemedy C'omijany, Chicago, ill., an>r? j
vo a handsome souvenir gold lion Bon IvitEC, |
% AT ATAT Tl>c NEW C'ASTOK Oil.. J
l/lu/llnlii! so unlike the old fashioned A
kind that children lick the spoon. Circular tell*
more. PALATAL CO., 34 Ston9 tit.. Ucw York. fl