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Show ' THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE. UTAH VMIII ' 'People who are too fresh are alwmyl T-letting into a pickle COULD HARDLY Drink Denisons Always pure and deJlcloua. Coffee. STM Because of Terrible Backache. ReGered by Lydia E. Pinkbams Vegetable Compound. . Fhaadelphia dipiacemSt -- ba-cau- Hard to Please eur bean Mr r An-M- ) jT. idea, and terrible I backache so that I could hardly stand. I took six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkhams ' - d, nay amount of work, sleep good, eat good, and dont have a bit of trouble. I sod the paison as he sur-w.iu- ri tulMine belt re hint vu m.Oit ,lum me the b an 0,1 tl'r More Useful. a slianre the wav ou two nli r voting nun on ou reallv should 'tell the Ntru.T? which one jtnt t ri f r " "No, 1 .believe in maintaining a HeMe. i do v. e 4 cH? ' ' hf.VOi Vegetable and now I can . 51 ut 1 era? vl ou the tike to get-oaim ng tie foghorns Pa. I suffered from and jnfltmmihnn, and had such pain in my Com-poun- ' Hit Location. fan' a ou No YOUR SKITJ ITCH AND If your skin itches and krrna wlCt eczema of any such tomen'J , mu- disease, skin simply j tTo sightly S sore places with resinol soap at water, dry, and apply a little ointment. The Itching stops INStaJ, . LY, you no longer have to dig ani scratch, sleep becomes possible, and healing begins at once. .That is the soothing, antiseptic resinol medication strikes right into the surface, arrests the action of the disease, and almost always restores the tortured, inflamed skin to perfect bedlth quickly, easily and ai little test. Prescribed bv doctors for twenty years, and sold by all druggists. Adv DOES Tvv'v m It ke p those The rule is that those who shave thnuselves hear less basebalL strict is ITPqutred. . Laziness is born in a man; industry recommend Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound to Mrs. Hass? every suffering womam. Fmxn.l62S Dountoo SC, Nice town. Pa. What is Castoria ASTORIA is v harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drop and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. Ifi destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it haa been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind It .regulates the Stomach Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Childrens Panacea The Mothers Friend. ' The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over SO years, haa borne the signature of Chaa.ll. Fletcher, nd has been madeunder hia personal supervision since its in fancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. are but Experiments that All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-gotrifle with and endanger the health of Infanta and Children Experience against Experiment Another Womans Case. I cannot speak Providence, R. I. - too highly ef your Vegetable Compound as it haa done wonder- - for me and I would not be without iC I had a dis- placemenCbearinr down, and backache, until I could hardly stand and was thoroughly run down when I took Lydia E. Pinkbams Vegetable Compound. It helped me and lam in the best of health at present' I work in a factory all day long besides doing mr housework-s- o you can see what it has oone for me. I give you permission to publish my name and I speak of your Vegetable Compound to Mrs. Abel Law-BOmany of my friends; 126 Iippitt SC, Providence, R.L N, Danger Signals to Women are what one physician called backache, headache, nervousness, and the blues. La many cases they are symptoms of some female derangement or an inflammay matory, ulcerative condition, whichPink-habe overcome bv taking Lydia E. Vegetable Compound. Thousands of American women willingly testify to its virtue. The average man erage wages. Is always paid av- Drink Denisons Coffee. Always pure and delicious. HANDS ' LIKE VELVET Kept 80 by Dally Use of Cutlcura Soap and Ointment Trial Free. On retiring soak hands In hot Cutl-cur- a soapsuds, dry and rub the Oint- ment into the hands 'some minutes. Wear bandage or old gloves during night This Is n one night treatment - for red, rough, chapped end sore hands." It works wonders. Sample each free by mail with Skin Book. Address Cutlcura, Dept XT, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. 32-- Pennsylvania Nature 8tory. Arthur Neefe of Sweden, Bradford county, set a trap in the woods, and on account of the snows was unable to get to it Last week it was visited and a lively fox found therein. The captive had been sustained by his fellows during the imprisonment Within reach were a gray rabbit a white rabbit, four' mice and a woodchuck, some of them partially devoured. Imprisoned, be had been visited and nourished by bis own tribe. He was taken into further captivity, and other than the loss of the foot by which he had been held In the trap, appears none the worse for his experience. Philadelphia Record. , Babys Bedroom. The room in which a baby sleeps should contain no upholstered furniture or heavy curtains on which dirt nod germs can find a lodging and breeding place. The walls, it possible, should be so finished as to allow frequent wiping with a damp cloth. The. temperature of the babys room should be kept not higher than 68 or 70 degrees In winter and In summer should be kept as cool aa possible with awnTbe windows ings and shutters. should be kept open day and night. In summer and la winter tbe room should be aired two or three times a day. A Left Hand. No matter how many times a girl gives her band In marriage to a man." remarked the Observer of Events and Things, "the always has one left. Probably the biggest thing about a Jealous woman la her suspicion. GET POWER The Supply Comes From Food, If we get power from food, why not otrive to get all the power we can. That Is only possible by selecting food that exactly fits tbe requirements of tbs body. assigned "Not knowing how to select tbe right food to fit my needs, I suffered grievously for a long time from stomach V noman of eighty-eighPainfully she hobbles from cot to cot, giving a flower here, a pat and a word of encouragement there. In appearance she. is no different from-an- y old lady . eighty-eight- , unless the keen ob. of server may see that she has suffered great and enduring sorrow. The aged woman is Eugenie de Montijo, for seventeen yean. of the empress French, wife of the Emperor Napoleon HI aud mother of the prince imperial, who was killed in the English war against tbe Zulus in t. 1S53-1S7- d 1879. The old woman of sorrows has been an empress of romance as well as of France. Granddaughter of an Irishman named Kirkpatrick and a Spanish lady, with her mother and sister she'-roved the rities of Europe for seven years, looking for a great marriage. Scarce of noble birth, though her father was known as the count t Teba in Spain, a petty title at besV her chances for a grand union seemed vague indeed. At the she "achieved a notable-i- f not age of twenty-fiva grand marriage No doubt it is a very great thing to be empress of the French and reputed one of the most beautiful and charming women in the world and to set the fashions of the universe. For it was to Eugenie .that the world owed the terrible crinoline or hoopskirtsand the dre&dful chignon of the sixties, previous to the birth of the prince Imperial, Eugenie, very vain of her figure, assumed the hoopsklrt. The .world of women followed suit to the great amusement and derision of their daughters and granddaughters. Yet Napoleon III was far from being a gTand man, though he was emperor of the 1 French. In the early, fifties the countess of feba and her two daughters, the elder a dark Spaniard, the other a type of northern beauty, chestnut hair, violet eyes, a perfect complexion and lovely oval " features; ' appeared at various "European" capitals. The mother lived a semibohemian life at hotels, something which was not approved of those days, when grand ladies believed that a lady should live at home and visit only at the houses of her friends. The girls were of an age when they should have been In a convent. So, attractive aa they were, and popular, it was noted that many more men than women called upon the Spanish countess and her daughters. Women Viewed the attractive Spaniards with lifted eyebrows of question and suspician. The daughters of the oountess of Teba were beautiful, -rarely so. They were not of great accomplishments. and icannot be said that they were respected in the fullest sense of the word. They were interesting, they were lovely, but in the early fifties it was held that ladies of rank should not lire at hotels or be seen at public dining , rooms. However, both girls made brilliant marriages. of The elder-marri- ed the duke of Alva.-owne- r title. This marriage was regarded as a triumph for the managing mother. A wit said that the duke was unfortunate in that she did not choose to marry both daughters to him by papal dispensation, the Implication being that not even the pope could withstand the blandishments of the countess. No one, however, imagined that the lady would be successful beyond ber wildest dreams and see her younger daughter .an empress, received with honor by the courts of Europe, especially by the Intensely proper Victoria of England. Eugenie bad been. It was said, a good deal of a femme gallante hr very" forward lady In love affaira 'She had thrown herself at the beads of two young noblemen. At one time she bad a violent fancy for the Spanish count di Galva-antried to commit suicide by swallowing shoe blacking when he made It plain tbat he did not desire ber. Women ganged her as a wild and undisciplined girl, a sort of Lydia Languish, Becky Sharp and Lady Teazle combined, a girl calculated to fill the mind of even ardent .suitors with misgivings as to ber conduct as a wife. She was always Spanish and never understood the Preach. She bad great personal courage and feared nothing. She waa a meddlesome matchmaker and in after years earned tt unenviable .distinction of having married the famous Adelina Patti, ta the marquis of Caui. a marriage which turned out moat unhappily. She waa superstitious, dealt with mediums, would was always cold and emoflirt audaciously tionless within. who This waa the young ldy of twenty-fivappeared in Paris ia 1851, just after Louia Napoleon, president of the republic, bad accomplished the bloody coop d'etat in which his troops shot down handreds of innocent persona along the boulevards of Paris. - But Napoleon caused himself to be reelected president for a term of ten years, and later, in 1851. had himself declared emperor of the French. Tbe previous life of the new emperor had bees rather a discreditable one. He bad been a constable in London, a penniless exile In Hoboken. N. J, he had made several futile and ridiculous attempts to restore tbe empire, bis reputation was that of a silly, impracticable dreamer. He had had many disreputable love affaira and it was known that aa English woman whowas enamored of him had financed his successful Soon afterward he effort in tbat direction. caused her to be deported by the police. Though he bore tbe magical name of it was doubtful tbat be bad a drop of K. song-stree- t, ,et e, trouble," writes a lady from a little Western town. It seemed as if I would never be able to find out tbe sort of food that was best for me. Hardly anything that 1 could eat would stay on my stomach and Every attempt gave me heart-burfilled my stomach with gas. I got thinner and thinner until I literally became a living skeleton and in time was compelled to keep to my bed. A few months ago I was persuaded to try Grape-Nut- s food, and It had such good effect from the very beginning that 1 kept up its use. 1 was surprised at the ease with which I digested it. It proved to he Just what I needed. AH my unpleasant symptoms, the heart-burthe inflated feeling which RUN FOR HER MONEY gave me so much pain, disappeared. LONG My weight gradually increased from 88 in Bag Ssatchtd Bi lb- - my figure rounded oat, my It Was Only 20 Cents Gives Woman hut Thief, came by utrength back, and I am bow able Chase. 4o housework and . enjoy, it Grape-Nutdid ItV A tea days trial will show A young woman walking up First anyone eome facts about food. avenue. New York, waa near SevenName given by Postum Co, Battk teenth street, when a yeath slipped up Omsk. Read. Tha Road to behind her, snatched her handbag and i fi;- - "There's a Ceaaoe." ran. Scream tog yht panned him. The youth swung west la Seveng - - - v.t teenth street and - dashed through Stuyveeant park. A co wd now waa n choulil have i lumen oi.e Of their couutrv women However in the eTiit Eugenie was received In all the courts of Europe a Napoleon won Victoria of England, and EugeiiU vcr.v conservative queen ietoria a hue ,made a conquest of Franco and England hand, Albert in the Crimea Russia fought against Napoleon and Eugenie visited Ism don and the man who tjad been a now police officer on its si roots was received with final honors and de. larod an emp ror b .the grace oi The beautiful women who hud God run tile gamut of life in everv large swal city of Europe and who had lowed blacking In an attempt ut enl Cldc was now an empress, welcome She was thrice made everywhere when her husband of France regent She repie was out with his army sented France at the opening of the Suez canal in 1 s(5H. Slu had l lie ea cort of the hhodive at the first per Alda, for fornianhe of the opera francs 80,000 Verdi which got writing In many wise she hail been her bus She had uiged hand's evil genius him to set up Maximilian as emperor of Mexico that she might patronize a people speaking her , native tongue When Maximilian fell the star of Na poleon also waned It was the empress party" In the chamber of deputies that forced the war of 1870 upon France, though Na not pre poleon knew his country was After war with Germany. for pared Urevelotte and Sedan he would hae returned to prepare for the defense retreated after the , of Paris as Jtvffre Charleroi, Ia of Mons, defeats IJege, Catcall and Maubeuge, but Eugenie reImperiously commanded him to field'. Then In the trieve hla fortunes she- - disobeyed his most positive Injunction and summoned parliament. She refused to allow the king of Italy to enter Rome, though he promised to lend France his army for the She estranged Italy and offended Ausprivilege tria, which might have Joined Napoleon agatiiBt visitors to the hospitals the English wounded are is a bent and pallid old e Another thing sadly needed by the men is a hose supported that will shun notoriety. MISNG the in which n, s - ' - Bona-wart- f Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of PLAYS HAVE LIFE FEW WAR Writers Seldom Successful In Producing Dramas That Long Hold . FOR OLD AND YOUNG Tatt's UvtrPUU acta kindly aa tha ckH, th Ur lie t fraui ar lalirai aid as, M thr vtroran man. J Public Attention. 8 Fills To write a long list of plays which stv taaa ta tha waak at and haio In their da figured as war plays bawd, l&lner atrangth and Madder.. would neither prove nor disprove anything except this- - that they were so DAISY FLY KILLER written aa to deserve recognition from . kats all posterity, or not; If they, were they on. were If tt. and badly done, got they awl, etilapinrr Wo out ot M W nri nobody remembers them; certainly I ajar aajtklaf the fact that they exploit a passage at inmim IH arma, u battle of war. never kept bad M far ILM mpraa limbo of a tbe forgetful- iuou toiizM, im play out of twuin. a. x ness. Dryden's enormous product Includes WHEN YOU THINK at least two dozen war plays, and they sil IIIH ut in, FUGS Think ol Factory Prico are the deadest In our literature, acThon wrtto to a for otaloeoo cording to the Theater Magazine. He AMERICAN FLAtt MFO. CO., Kaoton Far poleonic blood in loves alarms and excursions, but while bis veins. He was one ode devoted to them In a spectacu- HOWARD LBU3TCX WAIiA brave, personally GoM, Mver, Laod, tt OiL lar way is spouted by evory schoolboy, Sprrlmra prior 7br ; Gold, &0ri Xlor orOoppar.lt. Maittaf he established a thr plays of thlapoet iu which war Mltrr, otreipranad fall pHrellMaant on applteatlmb brilliant court at aa a spectacle figures even more Lend vlllw. Colo. enrhoot hW n tw the Tuileries and all to are lost quite grandiloquently RHEUMATISM promised to revive but the bibliophile. iMrkly vrUrvMl; kau.tr a Sarin mUltmi ration, ft. or tail, tSwak the Napoleonic gloiwnwy . The- first war plays tbat naturally t mrmmktr AmninainitrO. ty prrfmtr fcamrlm; Muanf Sark asmnvn. II rartuw for anasaai ries of France in mind are ImV recur to the Hf tl Inionuailon, rrll, do It now rr Uo peace, not in war. histories. These are tl. a, t.nsiw,si.u4kaur.ausri.,aki Shakespeare's But he had had-- an war plays, Indeed, if any exist In Eng- IIOHNK OWN It tut I ruarantrr Saiiad ra illegitimate son in America, he bad been arrested in an evil resort in Paris, lish. Armies march and countermarch from my rrrlpr Na tmrar toe eld, Prtro (Oc It. HU KI.R, Will) art a, Oklaham. be had been promiscuous in his love affairs, he through them, battles are joined, lost had an unattractive personality bad skin, poor or won, cities are besieged and taken, HI M HKVKI orieit Pro. Csmrraa at wt Writ rails. Bsatsn Co., Omaha; Mats eyes, poor carriage. Yet he attractive to thq sight and aounde of sixteenth cen- prim. a . - ... ' women who did not think he ivef'wohld be Bn ''fTmnktiy. heard and are constantly warfare tury No. e' Her N. W. Lake declined. Sait Ur City, star of Eugenie Quickly-themperor. seen; they are perhaps tbe model war He was fascinated by Eugenie and made love husband waa taken prisoner at Sedan and rushed plays of our lunguage; and ShakeVictims of Clrcumatancta, to her in an informal, manner. But into Germany. The parliament she had sum- speares free hand waa the only hand Prisoner, you are charged with loL moned against his order dethroned her and her to deal with them. he tried hard to marry seme princess of an esThe glittering empire fell In a tre tering about town in n very auspicious tablished dynasty. No woman of royal rank emperor. manner, and with not having any vial Her life was threatened by niendous crash-would accept the adventurer. Had anyone Harmless. ble means of sustenance. What do yoa In digulse, Doctor her willingness to do so Eugenie had never Apaches on the boulevards. was excited. commuter The plainly ber do for n living?" American helped famous been empress of the French. the dentist, Evans, He pounded the seat cushion In front Prisoner wiped a tear from bis eye, It Is said that he at first offered her a morlo sneak out of Paris to the seaeoast, where s of him as he spoke, and hla voice rote and turned n haggard face to the mg British yacht conveyed her to England. Stripped high above the rattle of the wheels. ganatic marriage. This she refused, .and also iatrate. of her glory In a few weeks, Eugenie settled In refused to see him again. Chance drove Napos view earlier No matter what my , Your worship," said he, "I am ena modest home given her by Victoria at leon Into the marriage. Hia uncle,' Jerome, forIve exclaimed, ha changed were," in manufacturing smoked mer king of Westphalia, circulated a rumor that ' gaged England. Three years later Napoleon died radically. I'mfor lhe Red now glasses -- - there of cancer of the stomach. for viewing eclipses an init he was Incapable-o- f is Bismarck. marriage. all comers. entails that It seemed as If fate, which had lavished all Its against protracted period said, believed the story. To disprove It. Napoleon dustry A timid little man across the aisle of enforced leisure, favors on Eugenie, waa now bent upon her deasked Eugenie de Montijo to share his throne. ' hla seat and of out quietly struction. Bereft of empire, husband, honors, edged tbe conductor. They were married January 30, 1853, at Notre sought bitterBut brim. tbe to full the seemed her of a seventeen cup Practice Makes Perfect, Dame, Paris, and began reign It's an outrage, be exclaimed. "An est blow of all waa yet to fall upon Eugenie. Her avowed An of the regular trmtf years, in which good waa intermingled with much anarchist like that" fellow eon. Prince Louis, whom sbe brought up as belr evil. in wanted tbe a park spearing bite n job In to allowed ride be not to to the French throne, was killed In a petty war ought Their positions were hard at first Not .being of paper and other debris with n ahnrp conveyance." public of royal blood,, royal families looked askance against savages In South Africa. He was an Hes no anarchist, said tbe con- stick. 1 with amiable, attractive youth of twenty-threDo have to take n civil aerview upon them. They circulated all sorts of stories He's a chicken with n grin. ductor excellent parta, when a Zulu assegai found his .about them.' In his marriage proclamation the ha asked the district examination? bis now Just hes expreealng 1 heart. Tbe gay French had mocked when be had raiser. on emperor said: hope that she will revive tbe leader. Rhode of tbe merita vlewa tbe been sent to South Africa. They felt that Euvirtues of Josephine. Cynleal Paris roared. It I guess not, said the man of influIsland Reda, the beet little layers In genie was making a play to their remembered the easy virtue of Josephine before ence. "Just bring me n letter' from states." seven love of martial glory So In' tbe cafea chkntants and after her marriage to the great Corsican, A your captain stating that yon are prothey sang: ficient ia bayonet drill That ought postcard bearing the picture of the empress had In the War Zone. Loulou, Loulou, this sentence upon it: to convince the commissioner that vilta How the far Wenry Cyclist He ebaaea Zulus." .The portrait and virtues of tbe empress ajl youre qualified tor the Job. from here? of Poppelton But evea the French cry of mockery turned lage . for two sous." Native Its ten miles the other ro an agonised wall of sorrow when tha prince None tbe less Eugenies influence waa great. Couldnt Put That In Print. way. ama down in' wasstrickea savage She urged her husband to undertake many enImperial But That last ease ban made mn Doctor last the sign Cyclist Weary buscade. It was a ead death. The party had terp rises tbat proved dangerous to bin empire, diIn waa I thin miss the dinner this evening te said it big post passed but for twenty years France wan successful in.,, knowledge of tbe coming of tbe aavagea and rection. I Professor Jay. Its the distinguished proceeded to mount tbeir hones and gallop away. peace and in war. The court glittered. Every Native Yes, but you see We turned too late now. 1 had Engthe that bit mounted, . farm of pleasure was encouraged. The dmprtl prinee Thinking so aa to foot them Hia 7 Wife Never mind, dear; thn lish companions galloped off. Alas, the horse the poet around bone with the supreme radiance of womanly speeches will be published. used by Eugenie's only son proved restive and Zeppellna. fascination. Paris was the center- - of Interng-Doctor Yes, hut the dinner wont. ran away, leaving hie ridey to the mercy of tbe tlonal society. Whatever Eugenie did waa done Willing. by tbe women of all tbe world. Sbe wore the t savages, a bo did not know a prince from a pauBo you know haw many gallons of Worse Yet. per and who gave no quarter. ridiculous crinoline sad huge, fantastic chignon. In landlord. Theres tww are consumed Look here, liquor of wbo women Intoxicating Tbe world once tbe bad dressed Tbe world wore them. too. 8be bad Hsussman In our cellar. water inches the asked of thin every year?" country with Eugenie now mourned with her. It was tbe remodel and rebuild Paris. Tbe great bouleJest think of thv Thats nothing. reformer. once blowa sustained last the of the many by vards pad. s veuves of today are tbe work of the In trenches. They man soldiers the I tbe the with said poor don't" No, beautiful Mademoiselle de Montijo. little old woman who now moves among tbe me e dime have to stand In water up to tkdf lend if but red nose, youll waa said Then her it tbat fierce, Impenetrable loundedin England. . In 1856 an heir waa born, tne little Louis, pride and ambition had lost ber ber son. He Ill go ncrose the street and help the waists all day long. a been good had whose end was to be so tragic. Sbe dabbled in wanting lo marry gentle English girl Tha Idea, and Eagenie wanted him to marry a reigning politics sad offended her husband. She even led "How waa it that Ham fat was Hie Way. a party which opposed him in the chamber of princess. Sbe sent him to South Africa to sepw rate him from bli love. So. tbe blgb ambition Old General Putnam would he n queering the act?" deputies. He found out tbat the love letters "I believe it waa by acting woman the of raised her to this position good man to have in the emergenwhich had charmed him bad been written by the Spanish . In war." monarch and of the queer." this of dropped cies Europe greatest academician. Merimee, Prosper distinguished her to a state so low ly that even peasant women Why aor hired by Eugenie to do tt. When Eugenie had to teu. tom Because he knew how to jump into rocs own dkiogwt write herself, her letters were no better than pitied her forlorn plight. rrr Martaa Bra lUkHXlr for Had. Wa. WaT of one." for No death the been of GiiMiMMl hole Sbe out had n end TfrtlWt; responsible bMk get Im u4 those of a semiliterate peasant girt Asked about tort Irt PBfoyl Write tot Boot ctf t Maximilian, the madness of Carlotta, the loss of God gave her tbe choice be-- , If ateU rim. Mute Iff I it Merimee said: the French empire and for the lives of ber Mighty 8low Pay. tween beauty and brains and she chose beauty." I always pay aa I go. A wise girl never turns down son. and Stayfate and only loved bohemianlsm and laxity Eugenie Your cred- offer, of marriage until she gets Even the wildest French socialists now show Miss Weary (yawning) Handsome faces, a Paris became effeminate. strangle bold on a better one. deep respect for the small, bowed figure, always itors have my sympathy. small gift of epigram, a romantic past, were tbe clothed In deepest mourning. credentials to the, court of the empress. A gradSuch Is the story of tbe little, white, bent old ual decay honeycombed society and the army and woman wbo moves among tbe English wounded. tbe foundations of Sqdan were laid. She is of the past Sbe le a living sorrow. An Eugenie was not popular with princesses wbo old woman, poor in everything tbat makes a .flouted her birth-o- r .with French women who woman rich, aave la sympathy. Her dearest deto bis mind made when th.2 felt up Napoleon sire is to be forgoten. marry a woman of less thar- royal rank he pUte cf hot biscuits - Anglo-Saxo- n , 1 a- 24-19- 18. -- . easy-goin- g . d , , Chisel-hurst- -- e, . well-know- - - -' , work-aloa- g. mu J 4- A bus-ban- Cut tll3 Cc3t of liTlrj! A a cr'eja, c! frei, ncrbsked cake, a lcJ , chasiag him. with the woman leading. street, aa aha examined the contents Patrolman OConnor caught bins at of tbe recovered bag. You got a run for your money. Third avenue, just as the woman Tan O'Coanor. . commented up. street Twentieth police West In the . She told how she had bees robbed himself and demanded to know what tbe pris- station the prisoner describedWinfield. of aa Mudra, twenty, Joseph oner had done with her handbag. Just then a man came ap with the hag and Eats Pia at Midnight, It u8. bonded It to O'Connor. "How much money waa in it? a aid Observing hyglehlc rules at which O'Connor to the owner. doctors stand aghast. MraT Mary Twenty cents, panted the woman, Brand, oldest rsaidsnt of Balmont who described herself as Mrs. Hen- county. West Virginia, celebrated her rietta Noaek, of 327 East Twentieth ninety-eightbirthday anniversary, r- . h iij d and laughingly, predicted that she would at least live to be a hundred. She attributes her longevity to a few ruins,' chief of which la to eat wbat you want, when yon want it Mrs. Brand practices this rule unreservedly and enthusiastically. .She smilingly explained that often the rise in the middle of the night, just to stay her stomach," and that frequently this nocturnal meau Includes pie. . If you're hungry for a thing, that thing won't hurt you," Mrx. Brand , says. rescues any ceil or commonplace, and mere czp am Lever irimed. nut-bree- d, 7hhKQ the powder, ced rrr Theres ccezerr; r: frrn llj - |