The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, August 19, 1909, Image 8
gjr;^'
Proverbs and Phrases.
Rape furnishes no weapon.
In prosperity no altars smoke.
He that hath a trade hath an
state.?Franklin.
A pood man's pedigree is little
hunted up.?Spanish.
He who helps the wicked repents it
before long.?Phaedrus.
Midsummer reports indicate that
the Chautauqua crop is also above 1
normal. Bo. 34-'09.
Where Horror Reigns.
Berlin, By Cable.?The story of an
isolated arctic district in Siberia, '
where a few mil it Son I -? 1 - '
, VdllVO UIC Ul- *
tained, was told by Harry de Windt 1
in a lecture at the Travel Exhibition 1
at Olympia. The place is Sredni 1
Kolymsk, and its existence is prob- '
ably known in Russia only to the <
Russian secret police, who have sole '
charge of it. '
"At Sredni Kolymsk," said Mr. 1
dc Windt. "1 witnessed such scenes 1
of indescribable horror and misery '
that I cannot even now recall them
without a shudder. 1 doubt whether 1
the existence of such a place is known '
to the Czar."
Wlw.. *?? A\*:
........ uit. nt- lllltl VISIT (Ml 1110 "
place lie ami his companions were the ;
only white people not exiles who had '
ever been there, with the exception 5
of a couple of shipwrecked sailors.
At Sredni Kolynisk there have been '
ten suicides in seven years, although
no more than a score oi' political
prisoners are there at a time, it is
situated well within the arctic region,
at the extreme end of Sibera, D.(KH)
miles from St. Petersburg. It take* j
the exiles three years 1?> make the
journey, and owinjr to the swamps
surrounding it the plaeo can only be
approached in winter.
The last part of the .tourney is
done by the exiles in reindeer sleiirhs,
wit' shelter lie.ts evevv mil
Tin- nearest settlement to this forlorn I
prison is 170 miles and the nearest
town is thouamls of miles away.
Cause of Leprosy.
A new tuhereular theory as to
leprosy was suggested some time ago
by Dr. ('has. K. MacDonalil. of the
army, who notieeil in the Philippines
the same facts as to fish diet which
have long been held by Hutchinson
as the cause. The present idea is not
that the diet itself is at fault, but
that there is an infection from tuberculosis
tish?rather startling to bo
sur . hut not at all improbable.
The matter is of timely interest in j
view of the difference of opinion as |
to the transmission of bovine tuber- j
miosis. The vast difference between
bird tuberculosis and th human va- <
rirty lias long been known, and it
raises the suspicion that there may
he very many kinds of tubercle ,
bacilli, some of which produce in man
othi r conditions than tuberculosis as
we now consider it. 1
now Consumptive Cured Himself, j >
"While In a small Arizona town 1
recently," said Henry S. Friel, of St. !
Louis, at the Tulane, "I met with a 1
man who had lived for one year on '
the plains without clothing or shel- 5
ter. He tried the experiment of liv- '
ing the life of a savage in the efTort '
to rid himself of the dread disease :
ot consumption. The experiment was 1
a tough one, hut successful. To-day *
he is sound and w< lh He lived in *
the open. Herbs, game and fruits *
lutuiMUHi nun nourishment. He slept '
right out on the ground and now 1
weighs 170 pounds. When he first 1
went out to Arizona from an eastern f
city he weighed less than 120 ?
pounds."?Nashville Tennessean. t
The new York lawyer whose life 1
was saved by a fount in pen probably ?
feels that the pen is also mightier
than the bullet. So. 3-1-'09. t
Poor maids have more lovers than s
h ' :rtds.?John Webster. i
_ 1
BAD DREAMS 1
Caused by Coffee.
"I have been a coffee drinker, more
er less, ever since I can remember, <
until a few months ago I became |
more and more nervous and Irritable, (
and finally I could not sleep at night,
for I was horribly disturbed by
dreams of all sorts and a species of
distressing nightmare.
"Finally, after hearing the experience
of numbers of friends who had
quit coffee and were drinking Pos- ,
,tum, and learning of the great benefits
they had derived, I concluded
conee must t>e the cause of my trouble,
so I got some Postum and had it
3nade strictly according to directions,
i "I was astonished at the flavour
mod taste. It entirely took the place
of coffee, and to my very great satisfaction
I began to sleep peacefully
and sweetly. My nerves improved,
afid I wish I could wean every man,
woman and child from the unwhole- ,
tome drug?ordinary coffee.
"People really do not appreciate or j
realize what a powerful drug it is and
what terrible effect it has on the human
system. If they did, hardly a
pound of it would be sold. I would
paver think of going back to coffee
again. I would almost as soon think
mi putting my hand in a fire after I
had once been burned. | '
"A young lady friend of ours had I
Stomach trouble for a long time, and |
aould not get well aa long as she
aed coffee. She finally quit coffee
and began the use of Postum. and is
pow perfectly well. Yours for !
health."
Bead "The Road to Wellrtlle." la i
fhgii "There's a Reason."
Beep read the above letter? A aew
-?/
KINGDOM OF KILLING "
RULED BY ARMOUR
NINE MILLION CARCASSES
A YEAR.
_____
Mostly Animals Meet Death Stupidly
and Without Resistance- -What
Becomes of Their Lives?
The soldiers of the modern king
are standing armies of worklngmen,
not armies of fighting idlers. Rorkp
teller's millions and Armour's millions
are millions invested and reinrested
in labor, in building, in adding
to the actual visible wealth of this
country. That wealth belongs to the
:ountry and to the people of the
:ountry. It is subject to this disposition
by taxation or otherwise. It is
fortunate for the people that these
Icings, unlike the old kings, do not
waste human labor with courts,
retinues of servants and organized
dissipation, do not waste human life
In wars, but use their energies simply
rlong the lines of organizing industry
mil increasing tangible wealth. It
might be worse with a people as
supine as our own.
It is a fact, of course, that Armour
Joes net really own this grmt world- j
ivide butcher business. The stockyards
own him. He was born with .
the big load linon ?- *-??
_ ... nK iviis I
you quite simply: "I inherited this;
business; I did not create it. I have
tried to do as well as I could with it.
It just happened that I had a smart
father and a rich father."
In so vast an industry, bigger than
nil the men that manage it, suggestions
seem rather foolish coming from
outside. But there are some things,
it would seem, that Armour and the
other big packers could do easily, at
or.ce, and without unreasonable sacrifice.
They might make the prices of
beef to consumers uniform and reasonable.
No women or children should, under
any conditions, he permitted to
witness the killing of the animals.
It is a dreadful thing to see long
lines of little hoys and women and t
little girls walking through the
slaughter houses, watching the sticking
of pigs, the stunning of steers,
and all the horror of blood. The effect
Is brutalizing on the children,
and for tbo -c ?
. ui .in unuorn |
child to witness so horrible a spec-1
tacle is a shameful crime.
Some legislator in Illinois should '
start the movement to prevent this.
The packers themselves would do it.
but they say: "if we close up our
slaughter houses, or keep any part
cf the public out, we shall be accused 1
of having things to hide."
It is a great kingdom of death over
which Armour rules. There are huge
buildings for killing, surrounded with
pens in which the sheep, hogs and
cattle are confined, waiting for the
fatal hour. -In one place hogs in thousands
are driven into pens. Below, 1
bidden under a platform, there is a
cracking of whips mingled with ;
squealing and grunting. You look ! i
lawn and see a man, black from head i
.o foot with mud, rushing about J
imong the half-crazed swine. He
las a huge blaclt^nake whip in his ' i
tand, with which he drives them to |
hn *
.... m<uu? euirnnce that leads to:
heir death. In the last pen there Is |
t great revolving wheel. Each hog i ,
s seized and hooked by one hind leg. j
The turning wheel lifts him in the J
ilr; he is passed on to a wheel that j
dides along a rail, and then comes
>ne knife thrust and death. \
The killing of the sheep, fortunate- ,
y, is hidden; it is too pathetic for the
light even of modern civilization. ,
The killing of tlio cattle is less noisy
tnd shocking than that of the swine.
The big, heavy, fattened steers walk 1
slowly inio pens. Heavy hammers
stun them, and a3 a rule, they bleed !
to death without regaining consciousness.
The Bleed Could Be Heard. i
But there is certainly room for improvement
in the killing. And if the
Improvement can be made it should
be made?if necessary, under compulsion.
Out of every ten steers slaughtered
one or more invariably require
more than one blow for the killing.
ThiB means suffering, and it is unnecessary.
The spending of a very
little extra money, two or three cents
a carcass perhaps, and probably less,
would pay for the fitting on each head
of an apparatus that would make the
doath blow absolutely certain.
Study of the animals as they go to
their death woukl disturb the calm
belief of the individual who thinks
that an animal has no soul, no real
life, no thought. It is truo that a
great majority of the animals die stupidlv
and without resistance. Among
the swine, whose shrill squeallngs
answer the cracking whip and the
upward turn of the fatal wheel, there
appears to be, fortunately, little or no
conception of what death and danger
mean. It Is not always so. One day
the harmony of the "killing bed" was
vastly disturbed by one small, black
pig. Huge creatures, double the black
pig's size, were walking through the
door, resisting only feebly as the
chains were put around their hind
legs and they were jerked up to
death. This little black pig had
Dther ideas, another character. No
hero in human life ever fought more
desperately for his life than did that
mall creature. As aoon as he entered
the,fatal pen he dashed at the
man In charge, flew at his legs, drove
him out of the pen, finally climbed up
over the backs of the other swine,
Jumped out of the pen himself, and
dashed at the man with the long
downward. Half a dozen men combined
succeeded In killing this rebellious,
anarchistic disturber of the
packing house peace, and they killed
him in not at all a scientific manner.
If a human being had made so plucky
a fight for his life against such odds
he would be talked of with admiration.
The stockyard butchers, men that
should know, are firmly convinced
that the different animals that come
up to them for killing are as different
in character as human beings are.
Fortunately, however, they are all
agreed that not one animal in ten
thousand has any idea of his coming
fate. Death is a surprise to them all,
and therefore practically painless.
Amid all this lowing, squealing and
struggling there arises constantly the
thought: What becomes of the life
in those animals? What becomes of
that consciousness which has animated
them, protected them and directed
them? In what way is it different
from the consciousness within
the two-legged animal that stands
there covered with blood from head
to foot, stabbing relentlessly each
living creature as it comes before
him?
We know what becomes of the nnt
mals' bodies. T ie tenderloin goes to
the rich man's house, the shinbone to
th? poor man, the head to the immigrant
from certain foreign lands; the
tongue, prepared with spices, is sent
often far away to India. The hide
is made into hoots, chauffeurs' coats,
harness. The bones are cut up into
buttons that fasten the workmen's
shirts, or are changed into the foolish
little things upon which babies chew
when their teeth are coming. A part
of the body makes pepsin for those
that lack digestion, and the indigestible
parts go to those that later on
need the pepsin.
In all directions the bodies are
scattered, but what becomes of the
nine millions of lives , the nine milllnnc
nf *
wi ^iicimt; consciousnesses that
Armour scatters into space every
year, as he feeds the millions of
thinking, meat-eating animals??Ar?
thur Brisbane, in The Cosmopolitan,
WORK OP TEREDOES.
Rapidity With Which They Demolish
Wooden Piers and Caissons.
That the teredoes in the vicinity of
Fort Mason are the hungriest and
busiest and equipped with the most
effective augers of any of their kind
to be found in the bay has been demonstrated
by the contracting concern
that is building the new army transport
wharves at Blackpoint. The
company has paid a fancy price for
its knowledge, and incidentally and
at its own expense has demonstrated
the wisdom of the all concrete construction
advocated by the present
Board of Harbor Commissioners.
The new army wharves are to rest
on concrete piers and the plans call
for the construction of a concrete
breakwater to provide shelter for the
troop ships that may be tied up at the
wharves. In the construction of this
breakwater great wooden caissons
uuui ana sunk, to be pumped
out later and filled with concrete.
A temporary wharf was built of
preen piles and on this were erected
the concrete mixing machinery and
other gear essential to carrying on
the work. A few weeks ago this
wharf tumbled down and an investigation
showed that the teredoes had
eaten the green piles as easily as if
they had been young onions. The
wharf is now being rebuilt with creosoted
piles.
In anticipation of the early restoration
of the temporary pier an examination
was made yesterday of the
wood yesterday of the wooden caissons,
and to the contractor's grief it
was discovered that they had been
practically consumed by the teredoes.
The chewed up caissons will have to
be replaced and then it will be a race
between the concrete miters and the
teredoes, with the betting on the
worms, if in the meantime thev
should eat through the creosoted piles
that support temporary wharf No. 2
and cause another delay In filling the
molds with concrete.?San Francisce
Call.
Mystery in Snlnrt Dressing.
In Washington the recent death of
George W. Harvey, known since Lincoln's
day for the rare food of his famous
"oyster house," has recalled
the following anecdote: "On one occasion
Mr. Harvey visited New York
and his praises were sung by some of
the prominent men who were his
friends. A dispute ensued as to the
merits of certain dishes, and a contest
was arranged between Mr. Harvey
nnd several famous New York
chefs. The competition centred upon
the mixing of a salad dressing. The
Jolly, fat judges watched the preparation
carefully and observed that Mr.
Harvey as a finishing touch took from
his pocket a tiny vial, carefully uncorked
It, poured a few drops into the
dressing and set it before the arbiters.
They tasted each dressing in '
turn, smacked their Hps and puck- I
ered their brows. Then they declared I
that nil ?-? "
?. w u.vDnui^a were very line,
the most delectable that they had
ever put to palate, but that about Mr.
Harvey's dressing there was 'an?ah
?Indefinable something' which
caused them to award It the prize. '
" 'George, what was it you put in
that dressing?' asked one of Mr. Harvey's
friends later.
" 'Only water,' he replied. *1
knew a little myatery would catch
'em.' *'?Chicago Post.
It is said that In the la# fire years
the membership In temperancs societies
in Oermany has mors than
/
i Sfe
INTERNATIONAL IJCSSON COM*
ME NTS FOR AUGUST 22.
Bubject: Paul's Third Missionary
Journey?The Riot In Ephesus,
Acts 19:23 and 20:1?Golden
Text: 2 Cor. 12:0.
TIME.?A. D. 58.
PLACE.?Ephesus.
EXPOSITION. ? I. A Riot In
Ephesus, 23-30. Paul had wonderful
success in Ephesus (vs. 10-12;
18-20). He must also have testing
before he leaves. It might seem to
us that It would have been better for
Paul to leave in the full blaze of his
success; but God looks at these
things quite differently from what we
do. The GosdgI W#v i? ?n tn
a stir sooner or later. Men do not
realize all its bearings and all its demands
at once, so they receive it
quite calmly. But Demetrius will
wake up to the fact that it touches
his business. The Gospel faithfully
and fully preached will stir up any
community, at home or abroad. It
is not necessarily a bad sign at all
when things begin to boil in city, village
or church. It may simply indicate
that the fire is getting hot. The
stir came because the new religion affected
business (v. 25). Reforms
and revivals are all right if they do
not hurt anybody's business. If they
do, why, of course, "business is business,"
and the reform and the jrevival
must go. "The love of mnncT"?
what a prolific mother of evils it is
(comp. 1 Tim. 6:9, 10, R. V.). The
Sunday newspaper may be a great
cursh, but then the Christian merchant
must advertise in it; for
you see, "by this business we have
our wealth." There are many applications.
Let us see if we cannot finrl
one that will hit ourselves. Demetrius
uttered a very striking and
truthful, though entirely unintentional.
commendation of Paul (v. 26).
Would that we had more Pauls who
will persuade people and turn them
away from the worship of lalse gods
"to serve the living and true God;
and to wait for His Son from heaven"
(1 Thess. 1:9, 10). The first and
chief danger was injury to business;
but there was another; poor Diana
was imperiled (v. 27). It is doubtful
if Demetrius really cared much
for her; but he knew that an appeal
to religious prejudices would carry
many with him whose co-operation
he greatly desired. There are many
to-day who become very enthusiastic
religionists if they can coin money
out of It or get into an office. His
statement that all Asia and the world
worshiped Diana was hardly consistent
with his professed apprehension
concerning her; nor was it exactly
true. Some were enraged because
they saw their business going to
pieces; some because they saw tlieii
religion going to pieces. And then
there was a concert of action to re-establish
business and religion at the
same time. In unison they opened
their mouths and yelled: "Great is
Diana of the Ephesians!" This way
of proving a point has not gone out oi
Use. even in nnr rlnr Tho
_ , ?... . ?UC tlUtYU wilt
can yell the loudest are quite sure
they have proved their point and carried
the day. But somehow or othei
Diana of the Uphesians lost her hold
on men from that day on. thoiigt
they screamed for two straight hour3
Points proven in that way do not staj
proven. There was a rare combina
tion of fearless courage and humble
common sense in Paul. The mad
mob awakened the manly Are in
Paul's soul. He wished to go into the
midst of the riot and proclaim Jesus
But he yielded to the entreaties ol
the disciples and the persuasions ol
his friends who were in place of power.
Paul will have the opportunitj
of facing a maddened mob furthei
on; the time has not yet come. Mobs
are always Irrational and mob law
always Insane. There was a babel ol
voices, one crying one thing and an
other another. There was utter con
fusion and the majority knew no
why they were come together. Th<
ortginal cry (v. 28) is taken up again
and with one voice they shout It foi
two hours. What a strange sight, i
preai concourse snouting steadily foi
two hours, "Great is Diana of th(
Ephesians " If shouting could prov<
anything, surely this proposition wai
proven. But shouting, no matter how
loud, how long or how unanimous
proves nothing. The probability h
they did not altogether believe it
themselves in their inmost souls, ant
were rying to convince themselves ol
It by yelling the louder.
II. The Mob Quieted by the Town
clerk, 53-40. The townclerk was t
sensible fellow. He told them thai
there was no use in yelling so loud ti
prove what everybody believed. He
also put in a protest against mob law
He told them there wag a legal waj
of having difficulties settled and
crimes punished, and that they were
In danger of getting into trouble
themselves by raising a riot. Men
who incite a riot or set in motion mot
law ought always to get in trouble
themselves. The advice given the excited
citizens of Ephesus is good advice
for us all?"be quiet," do nothing
rash." Paul and his companions
had respected the rights even of idolators.
He seems to have used his
strength rather in npo?olil??r ??"
than in attacking error (v. 37).
Always a Pilot.
We are never without a pilot.
When we know not how to steer and
dare not hoist a sail, we can drift.
The current knows the way. though
we do not. The ship of heaven guides
Itself, and will not accept a wooden
cudder.?Emerson.
TO EXTRACT A SPLINTER.
When a splinter has ben driven
deep Into the hand It can be extracted
without pain by steam. Nearly
All a wide-mouthed bo'.tle with hot
water, place the Injured part over the
month of the bottle and preaa tightly.
Tbe suction will draw the flesh
down, and In a minute or two the
steam will extricate the splinter and
the Inflammation will disappear.-*
Boeton Post.
POULTRY
cufertflL
<111"
Toultry Notes. \
Protect your poultry from spring
rains.
1 Sour table scraps are not good for
poultry.
Whole corn Is good for laying hens
| during cold weather.
Hens do better If kept In separate
i lots of twenty-five each.
' Give the laying hens fresh water
1 slightly warmed three times a day
1 during cold weather.
Large breeds should never be kept
in the same flock with small breeds.
[ Table scraps should be cooked and
t given to the laying hens.
When hens acquire the feather'
pulling habit they should be sent to
market at once.
Feed the laying hens at daybreak
and sundown, and keep them working
the entire time between.
Roosts for poultry should be placed
i on a level, so that there can be no
preferred positions.
Lice always attack poultry more
when they are in an unthrifty condition
than when they are well fed and
properly cared for.
If hens are confined to the poultry
house on cold days, see to it that they
do not have to stand on the bare
I floor. Use straw, rnmctniiro
I husks or other dry material for a
I floor covering. Hens with cold feet
will not lay very many eggs.
Although turkeys will eat snow
they should not be permitted to do
so, but should be given plenty of
fresh, clean water.
When raising turkeys for market
medium sized ones will be found bet,
ter than extra large ones.
Save a few of the old turkey hens,
' as the two-year-old is a better breeder
than the young hen.
Turkeys should not be housed with
i chickens, as they require different
i conditions.
A Trio of African Geese,
s African geese are popular with
many who kfcep geese for the market.
[ They are large enough and are good
layers. They are hardy and will
t thrive where other breeds will die.
r In a way t..ey resemble the Toulouse
i goose, their distinguishing feature
? being a kind of horn just over the
" upper part of the beak. They are, as
f 4?_________
a rule, more sprightly than the Tou!
louse, and are considered better layers.
, All gray colored geese are considered
favorites for the table, and this,
f in a measure, is why the African geese
t are preferred to the white or dark
- colored breeds. They are being bred
r more generally each season, which in
J It6elf proves that they have merit.
r
f Alfalfa Meal For Poultry.
We .ind that, as a rule, our hens
" fed on alfalfa meal lay very fertile
eggs, which produce strong, vigorous
and healthy chicks. We also find
r that they will moult quicker in the
i fall and commeiff; to lay earlier In
r the season. For laying hens we put
3 several quarts of alfalfa meal into a
} closed vessel, then pour boiling water
s over the meal until it is thoroughly
1 moistened; place a cover over the
j vessel and let the mixture steep for
t a while.
1 Just before the feeding dash a little
f cold wntpr nvor tho fooH TV,l? <
out the green color, and the whale
presents a very pleasing appearance
and Is as near grass as any feed can
be. Some prefer to mix the meal
with table scraps or grain, both of
which add palatablllty and variety
to the mash. Bone meal and moat
scraps make excellent additions to
alfalfa or clover meal, both of which
are concentrated feeds and great egg
producers.?A. L. C., Iowa Agrlcul'
tural College.
Keeping Egg Record.
For keeping account of eggs received
I hang a calendar with a white
| background near the door of my
I nnultrv hAMBO ?rv ?
a ...j Uv>uo^>, b\j hum un returning
from a visit to the hens the number
of eggs may be marked each day with
the pencil attached. In thiB manner
a daily, weekly and monthly account
is kept, and I know what the average
is per hen for any length of time.
From this it id easy to calculate how
hens pay. It takeB only a few bcc?
onds a day for the record.
Skim-Milk For Plumage.
Nothing will give a better gloss to
the plumage of exhibition birds than
sweet skim-milk. When milk is plentiful
It should be used to mix the
mash Instead of water.
For the evening meal, a good feed
tot whole grain; more corn in wlntisr
' than in summer. The corn may bs
I given them on the cob, as they are
leas apt to eat more than they really
need If ted thus.
SJbby's Cooked
Cornod Goef
i ; There's a marked disrinc11
o n between Ubhy*m
O o ok a d O o r m a d
I . Boat and even ;the best
> that's sold in bulk.
Evenly and mildly cured
~ and scientifically cooked in
Ubby>m Groat Wbtta
Kttchan, all the natural
flavor of the fresh, prime
beef is retained. It is pure
wholesome, delicious and !
11
I ready to serve at meal time,
Saves work and worry in
gammer.
Other Libby "Healthful"
Meal-Time-Hints, all ready
to serve, are:
P&G**lo99 DrBod B&of
Vienna 5ansago
Voal Loaf
Eva&oratotM MRSr
Calred Saawta
I OBaovr Ohow
IVIIxoti PJc&foa
"Purity goes hand in hand
with Products of the Libby
brand".
Write for free Booklet,? [
|( "How to make Go o d
If Things to Eat".
Insist o n
LBbtty's a t
your grocers.
Ubby, McNeill
The Ideal DAI AT At ACreamof
[ Cathartlo Castor Oil
CHU.PKKN LICK THE SPOOS. lt.H.vr. PUtul.ncjr, Cornets
?rlplB?, AMI DMlltloQ. 2 So. ALL DKUGOlbT*.
Waterworks in a Desert.
There is a largo <|iiantity of water
in the great desert of Chile, but more
that either human beings or stock
can drink. Science, however, has
come to the aid of this rainless section
of the country in the form of an ^
ingenious desert waterworks, consisting
of a series of frames containing
120,000 square feet of glass. The
panes of glass are arranged in the
shape of a V and under eacli pane
is a shallow pan containing brackish 4
water. The heat of the sun evaporates
the water, which condenses upon
the sloping glass, and, made pure
by this operation, it runs down into ?<
little channels at the bottofh of the
V and is carried away into the main j#
canal. Nearly 1,000 gallons of fresh
water is collected daily by this 40
I means.?From t lie Mexican Herald.
...
Does It Pay? ~
If you don't just like everything
you see in your paper, go around the
streets and howl. The editor is if?
never supposed to make a mistake
and of course could not do so. Other
people can but not the editor. If
you can't see a good point, don't
fail to see a bad one. If a thousand
pleasant things are said of people,
hunt for something unpleasant. If
you don't find it, howl some more;
if yon do, howl anyway. Never mind
I your own business; watch for something
to find fault with in some other
man's business; this will make you ^3
great.?Ex.
^
A certain father who is fond of sg?|8
putting his boys through natural his- *
tory examinations is often surprised
by their mental agility. He recently '
asked them to tell him "what animal
is satisfied with the least nourishment."
<?
"The moth!' one of them shouted
confidently. "It eats nothing but
holes."?Youth's Companion.
' '9
Jack Binns, who has gained lasting
fame for his I). 0. T messages that
brought recue to the Florida is
suing to stop moving picture concerns
from belittling his fame in putting
the presentation on the canvass. He
asks $25,000 damage from the via*
graph company.
DISCOURAGED WOMEN.
A Word of Hope For lk-s pairing ^ if
Kidney trouble makes weak, wi- f, NkI
worn women. Backache, hip paint.
dizziness, headaches, nervousness, 4H
languor, urinary troubles make wornI
en suffer untold mis- <flM|
't?j"!g- I ery. Ailing kidneys 'B
are ttie cau9e> Care
them. Mrs. E. O.
(VVw Corbln, 84 X. Depot
St., Dalton.Ga., says:
"My body was racke<1 "^fli
T.! . w,th kldney aches
??? pwiM, >uu tuur* Ml
times my arms were numb. I was
dull and miserable all the time and edf?
hoped for death to relieve me. Doen's 4S
Kidney Pills soon brought Improve- -wOmB
ment, and finally made me a well
woman."
Remember the name?Doan's. Sold ^4?
by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foe- I
ter-UJXburn Co.. Buffalo. N. T.