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The Huron News-Record, 1895-01-23, Page 6
si INFLUENZA. epi - lemic, a isralwayslimo a or less preh valent The is Ayer a Cherry for complaint Pectoral. a "Last Spring, I was taken down with La Grippe. At times I was completely p ;rated, and so difficult was my breathing that my breast seemed as if confined in an Irnn cage. I procured a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and no sooner bad 1 began takit,;: It than relief followed. I could notbe- 1:eve that the effect would be so rapid and the cure so complete. It is truly a wonderful med- tene."-W. FI. WILLIAMS, Crook City,. 'i• YE 3S a.• tl t7erry ecto a Pr©BTNPttOa0t,"31(1r0t0c. re f. 7 (he Huron News -Record 81.25 a Year -31.00 in Advance WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23rd, 189:-. MR. BOWSER A SPELLER A QUINTETTE OF RECIPES THE ACCOUNT OFA SPELLING MATCH AROUSES HIS ENTHUSIASM. A VAST MONTE CARLO, The Gambling Spirit %Vhtoh Rules In the HOW TO MANUFACTURE FIVE KINDS Mining stater -Lassos par Exceed QF WOMEN. the Gains. A Good Deal of Spica w Each-MethodsFor every dollar's worth of goldyro duced it is estimated that $2.7_ is of Compounding. the Smart Lady, the spent in Inliling and prosper Ing; and Divorce Lady, the Young Lady, the in silver the comparison is even ' more alarm, Soolety Lady and the Little Lady. When we are told that California Christmas, dear lady Betty, writes alone in 18113 produced gold to the value 657 Linkman ill London Truth, is snpp_sed worof th, we begand in tof lrealiver zet�he vast to be the season Irr good cheer. With- sums of money that have been mis- out further explanation, then, I submit sp.'Iit and the energy misdirected. In- to you the following recipes: In- asmuch as More than GJ per cent. of the A "SMART" LADY. money spent in mining is practically To three quarters of a pound of frivol- thrown away,it follow, that considerable ity add one quarter of a pound of vui- • more than. Myren the amount of the garity, also a tonspoo►ful of paint, half above. sure as expended. in these itt- a teaspoonful of enamel, end a table- dustries in Colorado during, the past epoonf�ul of powder, sprinkle lightly ys;ar, showing a loss ot milieus rather with intelligence. cover all with extra- than a gain to the country, vagantly new clothes, arrange with The question arises, where does this strawberry leaves around, and souse in money come from if the mines do not scandal. support the mea who work thein ? It is A "DIVOROL" LADY, a question that can best be answered by asking every loan you meet in Colorado, Take a girl, baste with selfishness "Are you interested in mining?" At and vanity, add a husband, mince as the Denver Real Estate Exchange a few much principle as will fill a teaspoon, weeks ago 1 heard the chairman alt dredge with paint and powder, add everyone present who was directly in• somebody else s husband, run) through terested in mining to stand up. Only the Divorce Court. then serve up hot olio man remained seated, and he said Of Course, Ile Loses Ills Temper�Mr'', Bowser Tries to Encourage Hlul, but, as Usual. She Is Informed that She Is Ignorant. "Well, by George, but what a man that was!" exclaimed Mr. Bowser, as he looked up from his paper the other evening. "What is it, dear ?" queried Mrs. Bowser. "Why a husband and wife living in Iowa attended a spelling school. It seems that she spelled him down, and he was so mad about it that after he got home he killed her." "Is it possible ?" "If I'd been a neighbor of that man do you know what I'd have done I'd have soeu that he was strung up to a limb before the officers ot the law got hold of hien. Where's the diction- ary ?" "On the lower shelf of the bookrack in the library. What word is it you want to find ?" "I just thought of something. Wait a minute. Now you take the book and give me a lot of words to spell. I don't claim to be away up in ortho- graphy, but I scrape along with most of tem." "Please let it go till some other even- ing," replied Mrs. Bowser, fully realiz- ing what would be the result. "Never mind about some other even- ing. I feel particularly good to -night, and I'll bet two to ono you don't catch me on any common word." "But if I do won't you--" "What's the matter with you? It's come to a pretty pass when you and I can't sit down tor half an hour without A HANDSOME PUBLICATION. In every well regulated business, printer's ink -judiciously distributed - has n prominent place, and the most successful. men in all branches of the 'bade find that the increase or decrease of b e:hoses depends largely on the (pan i.ity and quality of the advertising. I,. is a nece1Saly, however, to have .L good i hing I o talk about before discus- sio�, it with the public, but with the gen ttr•Ienesn of the article assured, the Ina; .'s ,sale of the sales depends to a very great extent on the manner an which it is placed before the people. The Dr. Williams Medicine Company of Brockville are among the m.,:;l, ori- giulil advertisers of the day, and as ,I result their business is increasing rapid- ly. Tim;: 1 •,i e.g, publication settiti fes eh L,le eseelence of their prepitra. 'Co es, poetii;it' lily Pink Pills, is ver: h t.ul •.o,ne v 1ii decidedly unique. T. fie t I).',•'i of the cover con, Mini per tee -1, • 0;' ea,,; e•ientatives of four genera• tine 1 of ftoy.;,lty-Her Majesty Queen `r :.x i••. l.,s,i. Prince of Wales, the D s'.'•. of •Yo'•!.., and Baby Prince Ed- w,L .1 oil s• e. -h, while the last page lasts. a asii .1;10 G, at package of the wp'1 dello! 1)100(1 builder and a nerve tonic. A Bony or iJ,; , handsome pamphlet. will o 5 u),til,e.:,*see to any o% our res+1- erti wb0 wet : • id their address(pl,ti•t'.y w,•L;..0') ort . post card to the i)r. Will;,t..n: 4I' a•: ins Co., Brockville. Ont. Ayer's Hair Vigor is certainly 11 remarkable preparation and nothing like it has ever been produced. No matter how .wiry and unmatna;grabie the hair inay pe, under the influence n. this iacdinparable dressing, it become • soft, silky, and pliable to the comb and brush. The Halifax Board of Trade have passed resolutions favoring the idea of conducting all Canatlian commerce by way of the Canadian railway and steamship lines. RELIEF IN SIR Boo its.—Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hour. by tbe''NEW GREAT SUUTII AIt:aICAH KIDNEY CURE." This new remedy is a great surprise and deiigbt to physicians on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the blat'der, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in p a ling it almost im- mediately. It you want quick relief and care this is our remedy. SOLI by Watts &Co, Druggists. Mr. S. R. Callaway was Met week elected president of the Nickel Plate road. SHILOH'S VITALIZER. 1) Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanoogat Tenn., says : "Shiloh's Vitalizer '.SA VPJD MY LIFN:' I consigner it the best remedy for a debilitated system I ever used " For Dyspepsia, Liver or Kidney trouble i excels. Price 75 cts. Sold by J. Hi Combe A Piccadilly street girl recently re- fused to climb a hill for fear her breath would come to her in short pants. Al'1'ER LA GRIPPE. After It' G ir)pe obstinate coo ;' lung .rouble, e, •., frequently folio,.. There is; no ,•e.uedy so prompt, told t the ue time effectual and pleesent, n, M1,'' n as s Cod Liver Oil Emulsion wiLn W 'd Cherry and Hypophosphttes, which. is tee latest and hc'.•tt contl)5,•,,. Lion of iti-consuDlpt'vl• seme•lie.. Prise .. ' • a .id 141 1.111) per h )tile. ng THREE OUT OF FOUR. a row. Hold on. I'll give you twenty words and then you may give me twenty. I shall beat you away out of sight, but we'll only laugh over it. All ready now. As a starter I'll give you 'casuistry.' " Mrs. Bowser spelled the word cor- rectly, and lie skipped around to "fold- Spath090," "spagyrist," "rondeau," "quantitive" and various other words with a "catch" in .them. \\'hen he had finished with the twenty words, she had missed three, but he patted her on the shoulder and said : "You needn't be ashamed of that record, my, dear. 'Now you take the book and give ins some regular old sockdollagt'rs, and if I don't matte old Noah Webster look pale then I'mn a goat." Mrs. Bowser looked all around in a helpless way, but as there was no escape she turned over the leaves and gave out the word "primordially." Mr. Bowser tackled it, with a senile of self confi- dence, but missed. She then gave hire "pleuriticai," and he missed again. He hit "inaltmuvrti" all right. but went to pieces on -inexplicability." "You have missed three out of four," she said, "but it you wish to'— "Three out of four," he shouted as he struck his favorite attitude. "Mrs. Bowser, don't try to make out that I'm a dolt. I inay have got slightly mixed upon that first word, as I hadn't seen it for three or four days, but I know I spelled the other correctly." She knew he hadn't, but she let it go and gave him "nitimeetation," "fossili- ferous" and "cataclysm." "You missed them all," she said as she closed the book. "WhatI missed every one?" "Yes, dear. You missed six out of seven words, but you needn't feel' — "Six out of even words? Never !" he shouted, as his ears grew fiery red. "I may have mixed that first word, but as for the others i know I had 'urn right, Why, woman, do you suppose 1 was born in A swamp sand brought up in a barn? That's the way with you. If I ever start out to have a pleasant even- ing, you hunt for sir to excuse to spoil it. "You don't want me to say you spell- ed the words right when you didn't, do you?" she asked. "But I d d spell 'cm right." hn per- sisted. "You were sitepl, determined to collie out ahead on the record. Mrs. Bows+•r, I am thnnktnl that the Lord did. not D1AIO; me with your disposition." "I had to deride atrrord1ng to Web- ster," she quietly r••pli d. "And who is Webster ? ' he loudly de- manded. "Ilecauee old Noah Webster went at it all'5 collected a lot of words and spelled the nl to ;:Lease himself, does it follow that his spelling is torr'et? Have , h + rest of us got to follow him like a flock el' sheep? I say I spelled a ' six ot those right, V(.b. te.r or no \'l eb- ster !Bu ' "t you said I missed three. Why don't 1 claim I sp. lied the whole twenty correctly ?" "As a fact., Mrs. Bowser, as a matter of truth and fact, you missed about fourteen words, but 1 didn't want to hurt yourfeeliugi, If you hadn't be- trayed your ,jealous feelings i shouldn't have ani(1 a word about it. i know, and you know, that 1 car, epee forty words to your oma, but we'll end the matter right here." "You might try :ignite were a little excited." "Not another try. When you saw me feeling good•na1urt(1 and happy, you made up your mind to sit dnwil on me and spoil the evening. 1'„u have suc- ceeded. I take beck what 1 said about that Iowa hnsleied. I now understand that sen" sort. of a• low ,:iy,t trick was lased on bite, soot the i,eu, struck with all accompaniment of Liberty dra- peries, Japanese fans, screens and heavily shaded lights. This is an agreeable autumn dish. A YOUNG LADY. Young ladies come out in May, and from that time until the end of season are always available for balls, parties and afternoon teas, Pick fresh, strip off half a yard of clothing and wash very carefully, plunge into society and stew in hot rooms, let simmer. remove modesty, amiability and good breeding, mash and pair, then serve at a wedding. As a general observation, it may be added that it, when done, the principles appear unaltered, the lady is unfash- ionable. . AN ORDINARY "SOCIETY" LADY. Take all the clothes of' the back of a middle aged married woman, add a sprig of refinement, season with a tea- spoonful of fashion, rub in two table- spoonfuls of insufferable worldliness and twice as much inaniuity, sprinkle Tight- ly with respectability, truss in preten- tious surroundings, baste continually with spite, and let simmer down for a quarter of a century or noro. A dish very popular with the male dowagers. A "LITTLE LADY." The little Indy, a favorite with the French, is BOW much cultivated in Eng- land, and forms a pleaC:u1t addition to our feminine fare. Pick a daughter of the people, trim and wash thoroughly, dress expensively, put into a theatre, pour money over her, stir round. the town, then serve with supper and cham- pagne. If required to be preserved put into a bijou fiat, and add a liberal allowance, which will effectually pro - serve her tor some weeks. Continue to add money. W. . In the ease of Rev, \\ . H. Little, rector of Trinity Episcopal Churc;r. Susje:r, N. 13., the ecclesiastical court, finds Mr. Little guilty of making false statements concerning Rev. J. Roy (;arnpbell, reeler of Dorchester, and de- cides that he he clesposed from his of - flee in the church. The finding is al' - proved by Bishop Kingdon. Notice of appeal to the Metropolitan of Canada has been given. Heart Disease Relieved in 30 anisettes Dr. agony's Cure for the Reart gives perfect relic( n all nava. of Organ o or Sympathetic Heart Die -nee la dd minutes, and speelfly effete a cure. It is a peerless remedy 1'r Palpitation, sit 'auras of Breath, i(mothtrtng Spell., Pain in Left Side a,)d alt eymtomi of a Diseased heart. One dose convinces. Sold by Watts & Co. Jn')n i[n^•gart at least deserves Pres':i 'or this -thathe was the first Gans',8:e.,1 Minister to place a clause in a cont,aet rgeiast. the employment, of alien.: on lsrhlic works in the Dominion. Tie r Nes Almannt', whieh you d"uF;;, si, will gladly hand you, a n mots n:1 , wonderful cures of rhea inetis,15, c: iarrh, scrofula, dy14pcpe er•.oin.l, debility, humors, and sore, by t, to u•'e of Avet'a Sarsaparilla., the (oily ri, ( r.Irilbt admitted at the Wold I think you beau', 1;:0nsr• TOP, .Airs. 1il,tv'ser. hut I have -ear a 1,1 ii, '01110 ;n alt•• library. If i shouldn't l ee, you sed old Noah Wehs'er 1,go n :his ey mita., 1 bid you good ni:eht nasi r'ea,A t dreams." Asserting His Rights. SEEKING AID. Thousall s in Dire Dis- tress, MANY ARE he had only recently disposed of his alining properties. It is the same all over the State, and probably all over the silver and gold -producing States. Ninety-nine of every hundred men are, or have been, financially interested in mining. Necessarily the majority of them have lost money, and during the crisis of 1893 hundreds,. yes thousands, of these suffered privations as a direct result. The logical conclusion is that Colora- do and the other mining Status are a vast Monte Carlo, where everybody be- lieves that luck will come his way. But the adds are in favor of the house, and old, Mother Earth is the house that swal- lows up all the profits and considerably inore. Only the losses of actual capital have been mentioned ; but there is muels greater loss in the vast amount of labor that should he directed into the proper channels. Atter the years of toll and hardships and privations, the average miner dies (though romance never tells of it) and leaves nothing to show for his life's work. There is not only nothing for his family, it' he had one, but there is no Account that he can give when summoned before the bar of heaven to show that his life was not an absolute failure. Mr. Henpeck -My dear, will you go to bed uew ? Mrs. Henpeck -Certainly not! Mr. Ilenpeck-Then just sit up ! I'm going to show you that I'm boss in this coucerll ! IT IS STILL UNSETTLED. NEAR DEATH. T SUFFERERS SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO PAINE'S Mts., Wats. and $1,OO Bottle. One cent a dos. TRIO Ga:AT OouGUU uan promp ly cures where all others fail Coughs, Cioup form, Throat, lIoarscnena, fail, Cough and;' Asthma. For Consumption itr U0 rivals has cured thou .aada, and will YOU Ir takenin ti•.na. told by 1)ruggl ,a on a guar ntee. For n Lame Back o Chen use ILOi3'DD LLADOPITIA,F'LASTE .RSQ. e W,11 ,®1 u, .. ut ATARR1 11._ eyr 4.277— i�r Lvs) sin t:uuir.'t! Y el is reties-tyioguaraue,' teed to euro you. Peke, sects. Injector frees Sold by J. H. COMBE. 4:ersa )law -- --mssow- - MOVIILIWIROORIWYEIT CELERY COMPOUND. OBSTINATE COUGHS. M DUr ANT IS CURED. At the pi t '-('n: tine there are thous - a ids of t:.l . s' ' 1 ren in jcop:tidy in u•.,,' ..a 1 •i.e,l :sad W"li1Od : 113C•• it i.';' 11. help. Malty I, 0 . • ilio ' t.• :nit in deeI) dis- t„',t. h I • : ,tt, I ger comp mate, 1•” ti• - (Iv i le esitt. illdigehl lull 1' , ! , itemise, •.n b"50 to ' httnilny to ,:• t. 1r' ;,, n' 50e ',•a1\•e, llenttti n.r5Rle 1 :':, I,' ' l,' 511 dot 1" and the 2 , ',' t' -f In'. . . id deur ouch 1) is , 0 , 110 \'i1' „ill. Or itg_ny Russian Peasant Philosophy, Near to the Czar, near to horror. When the Czar laughs the bellies of his ministers shake. When the Czar has the smallpox ,tle country bears the [narks. When the Czar takes snuff the people should sneeze. \Vh;'n the Czar catches cold all Rus- sia is seized with the grip. When the Czar dies the moujik will not change plates with hint. 'When the horses refuse to go even the Czar's carriage stand still, When the Czar presents you with an egg he will ask for a hen in ex- changes • He who reckons upon the favor of the Czar doss not despise the benevolence 01 his favorite valet. Even tl• • Czarina's lien does not lay golden eggs. Whenever the Czar wants to cut a strap the peasants must furnish their skins. When 1L little Czar wants rids. tresses he can find them among honest women. The Question se to Why the Cat Knows How to Tumble. "H'mph !" ejaculated the exchange editor making ajab with his sheers at an item in a scientific exchange. "'Why does a cat always alight on its feet?' That's too easy for anything." "A cat," said the financial editor, "al- ways falls on its feet because of the claws in its constitution that—" "Seat !" exclaimed the other. "If you can't treat the subject with gravity dropit." "That's exactly what I was about to do. 1 was going to drop it on its feet." "A cat," resumed the exchange edi- tor, raising Isis voice, "always 'lights on its feet—" "Because it has a right to take its turd—" "Paws ! You don't tumble to it at all." The finitely editor caste to the scratch again. "Flow do year know a cat always does light on its feet?" '•That hasn't anything to do with it. Th • question is—" "Whose cat are you /talking about, anyway?' "Why. does a ('at, when ho falls, al- ways alight on its feet? If you can't answer It, say so." "Well. why does it?" demanded the finaueinl ,•tlltnr, the real estate editor, the railw'sy editor. the obitnnry editor and 111 - en'wer to•queries editor, rising as en main and standing over him. "ll•',•. ase," answered the exchange editor' defiantly, "because it is a cat's nature to get its hnek ftp." \\'her •upon the meeting broke up in great e ,n. u.iou, with the question still nits: tti- d Obstinate Coughs yield to the grate- ful soothing action of Norway Pine.: Syrup. The making, persistent cough, of cousnmhtivee is quickly relieved by this unriyefled throat and*ungremedy. Pt ice 27,c. nod :,0t'. - An inquest was held at Vancouver, 13. C., on the body of George F. Ash foram, who murdered his wife and chit on December 22nd, and, after killin theta, put a bullet into his own head Although the medical evidenc adduced showed that the belle was imbedded one stud one-half incite j in Ashford's brain, the man lived an.. had the full use of his faculties fo tluee weeks. 150(1 ins. 10'1 .,lir0',. 1 t• 1,1 the ti. .If rill who know what .•, f'eke i tm00(.11.nl has; done in t U ' 1)••••a. L;t • ,0 P'• r' s' SO I1'1' el' to give it ; is is, it ll('L 1••'•1; Il, mission is to cal :': •1"5a'\P. 1111 S. Genrge 1)...tnt. at laxly I'ving in Mina, I), tides ('ti., Onl.,. ss.is 0.e.l of liver and 6.il los .i nobles oiler the 1'!Hove of tie. , phyeiciatl, ; she \\•silos ah lu;lnt\s - "herul;t. nye to 0-0 ,1 ",y tehtimony in ,'.5501• of sew,. .' , Wien, nrepai:'tion. 1 .., �,,,.', (`,'{,• , 1't,u,l)(+lull. i','' 11(1(115 yea 1 h;r i N 5)ren a 1411 '('Petr 11'0151 liver end I, •i• ley 5, '':)les, and Int .e (100to, • ed lvilil ,ere•. 1 l.h\s'r'•5ns, but. only fou{µ, •, e.' Gu a• ve y strnt t time. 11 ,y tiesietr d Oil ..sed ale to LI v your ('olnpa:oat. l 11;ii so, and foo0.1IN much r,•:'"f f nen the ti -s6 that, I Iron, '1:1('14. nod urn now using the third thistle. Your Compound has done Mare for me than any phyte ei:5n. For 551(1(1Lhs bei ore using the Com- pound I never had one night of scud sleep : but now I can go to hed and sleep soundly and natu.ally, and feel like a now creat.n•e in the morning." ' Childhood's Simple Pleasures. The exultation with which Mrs. Kate Douglas Wiggin feels over her real childhood, with its copper toed shoes and rag, doll, in her chapter on traininn children, will find an echo ill the breasts of many city mothers. It is what many of them fight for for their children as they tight for health in the city's microbe and bacillus laden air. "Ilow can a real child keep her happy. enjnythcnit in simple pleasures?' said a woman, discussing this point recently, "when every influence to which she is subject is against it? My little girl had a birthday lately, her tenth, and she was thrown into an ecstasy of delight over a little silver pin an aunt sent her. "She rushed over to show it to her other s;•it', the Tittle neighbor over the way, AIM returned 1 , a few minutes with the serpent in her F..d:•n. I saw the cloud and soon found its cause. "'Mamma,' she whispered, coming Close to me, `Kitty thinks my pin isn't sterling. What is sterling., mammal?' "That's the whole thing in a nut- shell. Everything to•dny mist represent so ninny defiers, or it has no value. The atmosphere of life is so surcharged with this strife for the high priced that even the babies absorb it, and child- hood. with Igo discrimination, is tor- mented by it. It makes my heart ache to think that the birthright of my little ones --the capacity to enjoy without knowing -is being stolen from them, and I must stand by powerless to pre- vent it." -New York Times. 1'r,•nrh and German pun. SIP' (inline:'lltly)--1t1a11d5Cape! Na - tore, indeed ! Wil , it's no more like Nature than I ata !-'-1' igaro. Our Children.- A little girl, busy working a pair of slippers as a birthday prl,eet I't r her grandfather, said to a little p'tsynsato : "Ali ! You are well off, youit,(\; ;our ,rnuddnd has only one leg ! 11Ltsgne de Fur. n iV•+r'. - Younir Lady-Tf you will let ' ' • It v', those rases, I will give you n hiss for a, h of thein - but why do yet .tie I:\wn•, 001151117 ITow rude of yon (•tats:;1 Ono moment• 1 nal going for Rohe morn roses!-I)orfliarbier. • • 1 1 ' The case of Charles E11:oss, uh,, get1 with stealin r from the ()hive of Mese 14. ' It has Hardy. Wilkes &-Har(ty, of pot i 3. Thewas Before the police tnagisi.'aic there world. and the defendant was (•ononiLted to a ' higher court, bail being accepted. Stuff lltttrilbt t morhos 5(11 lit p'fni?Ho peculiar For Over Fifty rears itself, and Most, of all, Hood's Sorsa Has. WrN`IL"W'e SOOTHING srael'huo been RANI b). illi cures, If you :u•e sick, it is millions of mother, for thrirchildren wlo•et long% medicine for you to take. I5diatnlbedat,artttand brok.nof)our rest bye. sick. Bydecision of the Supreme Co at (lttawtt the Provincial Uovernnt has Lower to pass a local option i The only way to cure catarrh is prlril'y the blood. niece's Sat:s:►parilt, pnr;tii-s the Wool and tones up th whole 54)' _ ('111. An exchl,n;;e says one-half t tvoi•lil doesn't Luow how the oth half I's est. A small boy 1.1511 into young lady who was co:1 ying a violi ,sox on Dln..dav, knocking It out of h hand end bi earl log it open. It co tained 5\a5u'ti. 3) (IAI"FAIN SWEENEY, U. S. A. S. Diego, 0(S -tie says : "Shiloh's Catme Remedy is the first medicine I ha ever found • that would do me a good." Price 51) cents. Sold by J. Ocanbe. • A chemist hole discovered a meth to keep the t•olo;" on dr ied flower e. the d ,t•ovt•• v ' wild only be made apply to cheeks. hitt fol tune would made. 'Pial. NEWS—EAR Finds Ilood's Sal'sapat'illa, leadi everything in the way of medicines I three important particulars, Hamel Hood's Sarsaparilla has 1. The largest sale in the world. accomplishes 2. The greatest cures in the wor largest Laboratory in child sunerleg and ening ,• i.11 pain or ear 151 l e sen(' at once and get' a• botl'e of 'Mrs. Wtusbow's Sao, hing Si rup" tor,'hi,dren 'teething. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immulintet . Donn' d upon it, northers. there is no 7/,stake ab int it. It em es TOar- rhtea, regulates the Stomach and [towels. mgrs wind (folic, softens the Gums, ,'educes Inflammation, and gives tend and enrrry to the whole system. "Mrs. Wtuskw'.. Soothing Syrurl' tar childrtn teething is plea"ettt to the taste and is the prescription o1 one of the oldest and beat fernalo physicians and nurses in the United States. Price twenty tive cents a bottle. acid by all druggists throughout the world. Be sure and oak for "Masi WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP." I3EYOND I)ISPU'I'E. Tile. 0 is no bets sr, mile • or n 1)'e•• 1' tt ci)ar;h remedy tinnily 1 tin , '•, Pee, ',ill 13a1,n;o. It e, Ito.' - e,ti, So: .''I IMM t. (Jottghs.'.Ct l 0leloi.,:s and all throat a•ol 1 i..'u ttles. Self Dependence. A man must have a reserve of charac- ter and purpose. To the good ntml no harm can come, he he alive 01 dead. He must have a reserve of reputation. Let others think well of us ; it will heli: us to think well of ourselves. Nc man is free who has not his own good opinion. A man will wear a clean con science as ho would a clean shirt if he knows his neighbors expect it of him. Ile must have a reserve of love, and this is won by the service of others. "He that brings sunshine into the lives of others cannot keep it from himself.' He must form the ties of family and tricndship, that, having something at stake in the goodness ot the world, he will do something toward making' the world really good. When every American citizen has re- serves like these, he has no need to beg for special favors. All he asks of legis- lation is that it keep out of his way. He demands no form of special guardian• shfp or protection. Ho can payas he goes. Tho man who cannot has sic right to go. 01 all forms of greed, the greed for free lunches, the desire to get something for nothing, is the most do• moralizing and in the long run most dangerous. Tau flag of freedom has never floated over a nation of dead- heads. -Daviel Starr Jordan in Popular Science Monthly. 0 0 H H0 rn H 0 rd !n rd 4-4 c4 rd TZI i)2 r0 -,-t r° r-1 r� z0 O PqH r4U 0 0 I th r --i lzi O 0 ('W w z 0 W • • • • • • • • • Oi N • 5- • • (yam "0 w • CCS 1-7 EH