OCR Text |
Show r .. i 1 Getting AdxJice Make Marks Net to I3e Outdone, and Weaken Hsblt of Virtue. Prof, S. Clifford Allbutt, M. D., D., M. A P. R8., ete, Regius Profes aor of Physics at Cambridge unlver-- . Blty, delivered on address the other day to the students at the opening of King's College hospital In London, in which he sold: "Remember, If you are ever bored with your own self there Is something wrong with you. Physiology tells you that you must always be building or degenerate; no Impure, petty or rancorous thought but ntukes a mark not to be outdone and weakens the habit of virtue. It has bren said, and with some truth, perhaps, that men of are apt to forget we cannot play curiously with base and shameful things and then wipe them away ns If we had never been occupied with them. Upon those physicians whose pulnful duty It may lie to turn over psychological garbage rests the heavier responsibility of a Jealous concern for the purity of their own hearts. i In my affairs, (Special Correspondence.) In Berlin you are In the newest of noblest results that the art of religLew Germanies, at Augsburg or Nur- ious painting has ever produced. It Is difficult to get a emberg you are In the middle ages; Dresden provides an excellent com- good view of the picture. It is hung promise. This In a double sense not In a room by Itself and the room Is only has Dresden not yet quite given always crowded by Americans. up being old German, not yet altogether made up her mind to become Really Two Cities. new; her chief Interest centers someDresden, then, consists of two cities where between the seventeenth and one which Interests the American Gereighteenth centuries, when old tourist ana one which docs not. The many was at yet not altogether old, former takes up very little space. It and the rise of Prussia was already clusters around the Augustus Brucke, heralding forth the new. There are the old bridge near the Elbe which of most Dresden and tho these parts has heard the of many armies, important from the foreigner's point for all that It (ramp now gives passage to of view where a man can never feel so many electric tramcars. Facing altogether at home without a nicely the bridge Is the modernized Royal powdered peruque, an amply skirted castle and next to It is the court 'oat (preferably of peach color), knee Roman Catholic church. On the opbreeches and silk stockings and a posite side of a big square is the gold billed sword by his side. Then, Zwinger, which Is a large quadrangle, again, there are other parts, where filled by flowerbeds and surrounded by buildings of tho Baroque persuasion, which were to have been only a part of a palace. This house, the picture galleries and part of the other collections, hlstor-lui- l, ethnographical and what not. The rest are behind the Bruhische Terrace, which starts from the bridge, following the river bank In the opposite direction. On yet another side of the square is the court opera house. Cashmere Shawl Patterns. The patterns which adorn cashmere shawls aro copied from the leaf of the begonia. Just Wonderful. Vestry, Miss., Jan. 1st (Special) The case of Mrs. C. W. Pearson, who resides here Is a particularly Interesting one. Here s the story told by Mr. Pearson, her busbnnd, In his own never-finishe- words. Ho says: wife's health was bad for a long time. Last July she was taken terrible oad with spasms. I sent for the doctor, and after making a thorough examination of her, he said undoubtedly the cattso of her trouble was a disordered state of the Kidneys. Ills medicine didn't seem to be doing her much good, so as I heard about Dodd's Kidney Pills,' I got her a box Just to give them a trial. Well the effect was Just wonderful. I saw that they were the right medicine and I got two more boxes. When sho had taken these she was so much better that sho had Increased thirty pounds In weight. Fho Is no-.- quite well, and we owe It all to Dodd's Kidney Pills. "My WAIT LONG FOR J, J' Royal Picture Gallery. factory chimneys cluster thick, and strange manufacturing smells assault the nose, where such a costume would seem absolutely out of place. Guide books tell you that Dresden Is the headquarters of the baroque and the roccoco. To me It Is the city of compromise and of the Amerlcdn tourist. Never was there such a meeting place for Americans. The porters at all the principal hotels have added to their list the national American drink or what they take to be such. They spell It "cherry gobler," which is to my mind a decided Improvement. Of course, there are other things besides Americans In Dresden. There was one Englishman besides myself when I was' there. He came from Manchester which the local papers spelled Manshestcr. VINDICATION. Terrace on Bank of the Elbe. There are some good shops where they sell Dresden china and picture fhotographs and a few other things that do not matter. Then there is the Brulsche tarrasse. It is a high terrace, running along the right bank of the Elbe, which, at Dresden, Is something else wide than tho Thames at Westminster. It was built by a minister, named Brulil, as part long-dea- d of his private gardens and It proves him to have been a man of taste. From It you can get the finest possible view of the city unless, indeed, yon go up one of the hills which border Ihe Elbe valley and from It at night jou have a glimpse into fairyland. I grant that when a plaintive American complained to me that It was not nearly so fine as the view of New York at night, as you come In from the seaward, I had not the heart to contradict him. Nor Is It finer than that of the Thames embankment from the Surrey side, but on the Surrey The you have not the Belvedere. Belvedere Is a restaurant with a garden which looks over the Elbe from the end of the Tarrasse. There you may sit and sip cooling drinks of a summer night and listen to good music Dr. Wadd, the author of "Mems, Maxims, and Memoirs, frequently visited the Dryden Tress wearing silk stockings and a sword, and was "constantly taking snuff, kept loose In his waistcoat pockets; and so profusely was his manuscript that the office snuff-bowas often replenished oy shaking out the copy." The Academy. x Generally That y He Heard Too Much. Tho public is invited to sympathize with a quiet and retiring citizen who occupied a seat near the door of a crowded Green Lake car last night when a masterful, stout woman entered. Having no newspaper behind which to hide, he was fixed and subjugated by her glittering eye. He rose and offered his place to her. Seating hen t f la Not the saya, "which I became satisfied were likewise largely due to the roffee I drank. Six months ago I quit Its use altogether and began to drink Postutn Food Coffee, with the gratifying result that my headaches have disappeared, my digestion has been restored and I have not had a recurrence of chills and fever for more than three months. I have no doubt that It was Postutn that brought me this relief, for I have used no medicine while this Improvement has been going on." (It was really relief from eongcxtlon of the liver caused by coffee.) My daughter has been ns great a coffee drinker as I, and for years was afflicted with terrible Blck headaches, which often lasted for a week at a time. She Is a brain worker and excessive application together with headaches began to affect her memory most seriously. She found no help In medicines and the doctor frankly d her to quit coffee and use Post-tin- . t ? ' J l t high-pitche- d Trouble. Persons with a susceptibility to malarial Influences should beware of coffee, which has a tendency to load up the liver with bile. A lady writes from Denver that she suffered for years from chills and fever which ut last she learned were mainly produced by tbe coffee she drank. "I was also grievously afflicted with headaches and Indigestion. she A .t the Heart of Dresden. Dresden, as known to the Dresden-er- . stretches for miles along the river filling the valley with white villas that climb the hillsides or cluster along the banks peasant suburbs, with pleasant houses, bowered In lleasant gardens, where a man may live a very happy life on a very small income. Then, In the heart of the city are still left old streets and squares which speak of the past, quaint old houses, with gables, that seem to lean together. Tartly for mutual support, and partly to whisper together of the fine times they had In the old days that are gone. They are not very healthy, perhaps; certainly they are sometimes a little fragrant with a fragrance that Is not of roses. But for those who do not live In them they are eminently picturesque. They are rendered all the more so by the fact and I wonder the town council does not advertise it as among the chief residential amenities that there Is scarcely a street from which you may not obtain a distant view of blue hilltops dominating the chimney pots. Thus, then, Dresden Is always a city of compromises, lingering between the old and the new her factories and (within a few miles, though out of sight) her collieries, her broad white streets and modern villa residences, face to fare with her memories of the past, and her memorials of eighteenth-centursplendor. Capital of an old state, which is yet but an item of a brand new empire, she Is old and new, provincial and metropolitan, crtistlc and Industrial In one. And, above all. she Is the setting for the Fistlne Madonna. In Printers and Snuff. MALARIA! d afore-mentione- d Woman's Innocence Discovered After Six Years In Prison. One of the strongest of stories of false imprisonment comes from France. A woman was sentenced to Imprisonment for life for having caused the death of her husband and brother. The three lived together at Malaunay, near Rouen, In a cottage, the lower part of which was used as a wineshop. When the woman was sent to prison other people took the wineshop, but the new tenants suffered, the man from fainting fits, his wife from nausea, from which she died. Another couple tried their fortune, but they, too, were overcome by the "spell of tl;e accursed place, as they thought It. They were subject to fainting and loss of memory. At last a scientific examination of the Then It was premises was made. found that adjoining the Inn was a lime kiln. In the wall dividing It from the cottage wero many fissures, to that whenever lime was burnt monoxide of carbon escaped Info the Inn. This was the secret of the deaths for which the woman was suffering. She was brought out of prison after elx years of servitude. V ' M General View of Dresden. "For more than four months she has not had a hcndacheher mental faculties have grown more active and vigorous and her memory haa been restored. "No more tea, coffee or drugs for ao n, Name long ns we can get Post urn." given by Posttim Co., Rattle I ' Creek, Mich. Theres a reason. book "The Road to f Read the little Wellvllio" In pkgs. Exp al t expensive exacted ai DONT DESPAIR. THOUGHTS THAT LEAVE STAINS i end watch the lights twinkling along tho curve of the river and the tram-rar- s (what an effective adjunct to a right effect are the colored lights on a distant trnmrnr!) slipping across tho bridges and the red and green lamps on the boats passing beneath them. To most people tho name of Dresden recalls only Dresden china (which Is not made at Dresden at all, but at Meissen, some miles up the river) and picture galleries. One might enjoy Dresden without even looking at s picture; It Is true that one would miss one of the greatest pictures In the world Raphael's Slstlno Madonna. Everybody knows It from photographs and reproductions, but until you have seen the original you hare no Idea of the reality. The face of tho Madonna and of the child she hojds In hot arms are, I suppose, the self without thanking him she exclaimed In tone that reached to the furthest end of the car: "What do you want to stand np there for? Come here and sit on my lnp." "Madam," gasped the man, as his face became scnrlot. "I I fear I am not deserving of such an honor. "What do you mean?" shrieked the woman. "You know very well I was speaking to my niece thero behind you." Seattle Fostlntelllgcncor. Effect of Panama Canal. The cutting of the Panama Isthmus by means of a ship canal will mingle the snlmnl life of the two coasts where thero are marked difference. Scientists think that n thorough study of the fauna of the Isthmus ought to be made hefore the waterway can be completed Read the Experience of a Mlnne,J ) Woman and Take Heart i If your backache aches, and you lnTern sick, languid, weak and miserable towing at after day dont 3i 26, Doans Rial degree of ry. Pills have cured thl Other fee sands of women Inti, fleers, ve same condition. n-- of scarvei A. Helman of Stut- 2l. 6d. hi ter, Minn., says: "Bi 101 4s. for Doan'g Kldne Ing to Pills I would not k amounted now. living the scat Thsj cured me in 1899 it! charged I I've been well slot, don Tit-- I I used to have such pain In my bacl that once I fainted. The kidney i cretlons were much disordered, and! was so far gone that I was thought tt be at death's door. Since Doans Kid ney Pills cured me 1 feel as if I hat been pulled back from the tomb." ! Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a hot Foster-Mllbur, Co., Buffalo, N. Y. both large and small, ,' sxuu pnvo Dont itiv.se Chicago News. m (&m Heaven n Seville li Winter. (Copyright, 1905, by Daily Story Pub. Co.) knows why we took Sco- eyes and the droop to field along on that camping expedition rather than any of the other young bachelors In town, unless because he was a powerful swimmer, an excellent angler, the possessor of a good voice and could pick a guitar. Collectively they made up for the lack of a wife, Nor do I know why you understand. I should have been the only one of were the party whose suspicions aroused by Scofield's attentions to Mrs. Simpson. Maybe it was because I understood bis sullen, melancholy moods better than the rest. At any rate, that strange look, which cri. t Into his eyes occasionally at night as he sat gazing across the blazing camp fire at Mrs. Simpson, put me 111 at ease. It was not the same look of admiration which most of us men cast In her direction. There was more to It. Scofield would so far forget his surroundings that he had to be spoken to twice before be heard. And he seemed to take a ferocious dellgat the corners of winter. It is as dry as a bone, and her mouth that she had suffered dur- there Is never a day which Is not ITO MAI sunshiny from dawn to sunset. Gout 4000 el ing the night. Scofield, In the meanare unknown and time, had discovered some important and rheumatism Baedeker's guide to Spain Is the fa' business which demanded his immediate attention In town. It was the little volume It Is .because there art first time I had ever heard of Scofield so many Sevillian churches and pal aces and gardens, nil xwith a star having urgent business. At lunch time Mrs. Simpsons ab- against them, which are show places sence from the camp was noted. My i wife said she had gone oft canoeing Mr. Wlnilowl Soothing Syrnp. For children teetblnjr, softens tlieirnme, rcdnceit hfcl g by herself In hopes the exercise curat wind coiKj. bottle, would mend her strength. A very good Idea, Indeed, though Mrs. Simp"Eblia Is Arabic. son was not an excellent wlelder of Eblls Is one of the names given to! the devil by the Arabs. He was Aza--l ' zil before his fall. jf I si A GUARANTEED CURE FOR FILES, f Itching, blind, Hleedluic Protruding File. Drug, irutft lire Authorized to refund money If PAZQ U1M MKNT fulls to cure In to 14 day. 5oc. Colors to Kill Germs. The use of colors as germicides advocated by a French scientist, A, Cartez, who says that we may It Dr. rid j ourselves of microbes by painting our walls with particular colors. badgering poor little Simpsun. Simpson Is a little jackass, there is no denying that. But there is no reason on eat why a man should duck a woman husband while they fa j 5100 Reward, $100. 111 are in bathing, not once, but again and again, unless it be to show her what a jackass he really Is. So beavily did misgivings weigh upon my mind that at last I mentioned the subject to my wife, who has always been a sort of a mentor to young Scofield. "Cousin Henry In love wdth Laura! Why, George, hes no more In love with her than the rest of you men. Of course, hes fond of her, and likes to bait her hook and row the boat while she angles, and keep the fire roaring when it's her time to cook. The I Idea! Laura Is perfectly safe. never saw a woman more in love with her husband, dear, unless, of course, It be your own wife. Laura was safe! I had had no doubt of that before. But how about Scofield? My wife, as may be guessed, Is champion of her own sex. Ills peculiar to the heart of man are wholly without her ken. Perhaps that Is the reason I resolved in the future to keep all misgivings on the subject cooped up In my own mind. The next afternoon, while Scofield and Mrs. Simpson wore out shooting at a target In tho woods, Mrs. Simpson was taken suddenly III and reSometurned alone to the camp. thing sho had eaten at breakfast bad disagreed with her. Some of the canned goods, she thought. I gave her some little pills, which were uever known to do any one any good, and were never Intended to, and sent her to bed. giving strict orders for no one to disturb her. Then I went off In the woods by myself. It was quite by accident that I ran across Scofield two miles front camp, sitting on a leg, with dejected mltn. Ills clothing was disordered, and .ils face and hands were scratched by brnmblos. "See, here, Scofield," I said, "where ; There could not be a more beaut! ful climato than that of Seville In The reader, of till, paper will b pieanod to loan i ew one dreaded dlmiui that telenet ftbie tour in 11 lie AUnei, end theft If bbeea Catarrh. 1UU Catarrh Cur la the only poettlr cure now known to the medical fraternity. CeUrrfe j bclofC n conailtu- constitution) dUeaee, tlonal treatment. lUll'e Catarrhrequire Cure la taken to terually, noting directly upon the blood and tnucoui curfacea of (he eyatem, thereby deairoytng the foundation of the d!eae, end giving the pattern trengtb by building up the constitution and t ' Inf nature In dolnit Ita work. The proprietor mUp o much faith in it curative power that they hare offer r One Hundred Dollar for any cue that It fails XQ I Cure, bend for lUt of testimonial. Adilre P. J. CHKNKV CO.. Toledo. 0. bold by all DrutftflAU, 7 c. Take Ueh Family Fill for constlpetloft tntt there The fool was swimming toward the opposite shore. the paddle. No further thought was given to the subject until Just as Scofield was bidding us good-by- , two of the women came running from the river bank with the frightful news that Mrs. Simpsons canoe had capsized In midstream and that she was drowning. I am sure we wasted not a second, and yet by the time Trollet and I had reached the bank and had launched a boat, Scofield, who had plunged Into the water, was halfway to the struggling woman. I think Mrs. Simpson had surely conic near drowning had It not been for Scofield's excellent tactics in the water. Long before we got there he had seized her in his arm and was making rapid progress toward not the boat! The fool was swimming toward the opposite shore! Not ten yards from the bank in the stiff current, we overtook them. I shall never forget the look which he shot at me as he felt the woman dragged from his arms Into the boat. And then, without the slightest warning. before we could lay bands on him, he sank, and though we watched and waited an age he did not reappear. It must have been fully a quarter of an hour Inter that wo found Scofield's body tangled among the roots of some willows a hundred yards below. Dead? Not quite, though we worked over him two hours before he showed any signs of life; and then unothcr two hours before consciousness returned. And when we got him hack to camp and Into a warm hid, I think every one offered up a thankful prayer that things hud turned out as they had. "Henry," said I, that night, after I had driven every one from tho tent where he lay muffled up In blankets, "Henry, that attack of cramps cauo pretty nenrly turning this picnic Into a band of mourners." He looked at me quizzically for a moment, then pressing my band feebly in his own, he said; "Yes; tho cramps and the canucd peaches," d Kronberg Skipped the Lecture. 1 was In Paris I lived at 49 Loulevnrd Montparnnsse, and on the same floor with my simllo John l Sunday evening services Thera la no raaaon on earth why a were held, conducted by Dr. Paxton man should duck a woman's from Philadelphia. As a rule, refreshments were served afior tho lecture, did you buy those canned peaches we Including lcmonudc, cakes, etc. Ono Sunday evening, after Ur. Tax-toate for breakfast? "Where? a look of perplexity crept had finished his talk, several of Into his fare. i.s went In and partook of sorao of "Yes; Mrs. Simpson la down there the refreshments. Wlill I was drinkat camp now, sufierlug from some- ing the lemonade a gentleman cams ever to nm and said "Good evening," thing she ntu this morning. I have never seen such a look of reend shook my hand. I looked at him lief spread over a man's countenance I lit could not remember him, and begas at the sound of ihoso words. ging his pardon, I naked him his "George George," he gulped, "did name. she say It wns tho peaches? He said: "Haven't you been lister-In"reaches or pickles, one; it must to me nil this evening?" have been the peaches," I replied: "No; I only Just cams h Next morning Mr. Simpson wns to get n glass of lemonade. very much better, though It could be We became very good friends after seen by the dark circles under her that. Boston Herald, When Watin-maker'l- hue-ban- n nt ! One Boys Choice. A little lad was asked what he la-- f tended to be when he grew np. Ha pondered over it for a while. "I wm be a sailor, he said, "because U might he drowned. And 1 won't hi a soldier, because I might be shot f I think I'll be a skeleton in a muse- um. Cleveland Leader. The Choice of the People. When things began to go too fast and loose In New York, the people rose up In their wrath, got together and elected a District Attorney who makes life miserable for wrong doers. Jerome flaunted the banner of no political party; he was the people's choice. PiliBbury's Vitos Is the first choice of all people who relish good things for breakfast. It's dainty, delicious and nourishing. Perils of Chamois Hunting. A chamois hunter named Schultz, of Crolre, In the Canton of Grlson, slipped and fell In to a ravine nearly a thousand feet In depth. He was roped to his son, a lad of fifteen, who, with the aid of his ax. held his footing for nearly two hours until help arrived. Ever Hear of "Scotty and His Record-BreakinRide? The story, briefly told. Is this: Walter Scott, the Dcnth Valley gold miner, nindo the trip from Angeles to Chicago last summer on a special train over the "Santa Fe" In less than 45 hours. That whirlwind train cost him more than ffi.otw. it was the fastest long distance run over mountains and plains ever made on any American railway, it demonstrated beyond dispute that tho Santa Fe track, equipment and employees are of the dependable Kind. Probably you wouldn't cate to ride so fast You prefer the luxury of our three trains from Utah ami Colorado to Everywhere East and Southwest. Ask me for ticket rates and litera-tare- . g Is C. F. WARREN. G. A.. A. T. k S. F. Ry. Dooly Block, Salt Lake City, Utah. 411 The Chronic Bachelor. When a young man goes to church with a girl, ho like to Hit In the back sent Not because he's modest, but because he likes to keep ns far away from the altar ns possible. Cleveland Leader. A round trip rate of (50 to California will be In effect nil winter via tho new nnd popular Suit Lake See Route. nearest ngent or write for Information to J. 1 Moore, 1. I. A Suit Lake City Adage Revised, Be lure that you are right, and run the risk of Momehody else getting thero ahead of you. Sometime tt I hotter not to go ahead, anyhow. John A. llawland. I do not believe for Consumption end colds. John F Uotih, Trinity Spring, 1ml, Fob. IS. IUM. h I'Ipw'b Cure sn equal for cough On Good Point "Wa hie flying machine succeei? "Oh, yes; It failed o work before It got for enough up to hurt" Life. j |