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Show I 5?. OUTERalee TO HIS WIFE. WEAKNESS LINCOLNS " . Cr. Williams' Pink Pills the Tonlo That Most Peoplo Nasd for ngj Blood and Nervoa. j, terui la winter the air of the close rooms la we spend so much of the time (fa svcl-ir- h ll'&Ka not furnish enough oxygen to the jong' lung to burn out the foul matter in the ,W Wood, In the cold season we do not exer. as much aud the skin and kidneys do be throw oft the waste matter as freely not iing usual. The system becomes overloaded lent ry.jjj with poisouous matter, and too feoble Relief can be had only to , to throw it off. n m. through the use of a remedy that will purify and aj promptly aud thoroughly and the one best rrof , atreugthen the blood,' is the great s L Adapted for this purpose , T' blood tonic known as Dr. Williams rink as, DEEP HUMILITY Pride o! Place or Power Never a Fault of the Great President They tell us that Lincolns favorite poem was that familiar hymn, so simple, so generally neglected by the mass of mankind, "Oh, Why Should I the Spirit of Mortal Be Proud?" Do there is something most y0U J Think touchingly pathetic In that? 0j the position Lincoln occupied the m08t exalted in the world. Surely It Jg that. No man is born to the presl dency of the United States. He 13 rill. there by no accident of birth or otherThey acted like magio in my case, wise. He Is there by the deliberate Mrs. Clara L. Wilde, of No. 377 choice of the 1,000,000 sovereign peoMich. I ple who have the choosing of a head rarnsworth avenue, Detroit, un!i was weak aud thin and could not sleep. for a nation of 8,000,000 of the most rve8t and nerves were out of or- Illy stomach der. I cant describe how miserable I intelligent, progressive and prospernote j I dragged through six ous people on earth. None but great really was. men ought to be exalted to such a lad In mouths of feebleness, growing weaker 11 the time until I finally hndutstrength that place. None but great men have been exalted to it In 12 years. It Is . . erre enough to leave my bed. ,, 1111 the h'fihet distinction among ? DrlWilliams Pink Pills. 1 began Think of the humble origin 18 Mueufeel me made away. strong right 'They I rom which Lincoln rose to fill such e tit fjiy appetite came back, I took on flesh a Is place. How unexpectedly the honor f land the color returned to my cheeks, must have come to him. How great of tt People wondered that these pills did for e me what the doctors couldnt do. I took I the temptation to be proud must have aCK only six boxes and then I was perfectly I ieen weu. If I had not found this wonderful Then think of the time In which t , J Vli I Placf 1 sreat "8 History was being made ""ea these pills saved my life by tho strength distinction. 6 every second of the time history so which they gave me at a critical momentous In Its bearings on the fu tt ment, I unhesitatingly recommend thorn ture of the human race as to overFret- toothers, Dr. Williams Pink Pills coutain no shadow all other events. In what we d m lh7- atimnlaut but give strength that lasts. usually call profane history." The They may be obtained at any drug tasks to be performed, the perplexities storv to be met were stupendous. The fate sre t ; of armies, aye, the fate of nations, in. it Wise Words by Pope. deed the fate of the race hung In the the i to ashamed never be A man should balance and depended on whether this s Bli own that he has been in the wrong: man should perform the tasks, meet nei', which is but saying, in other words. the perplexities, 6olve the complex re was than he that he Is wiser problems of the hour aright, or blun.l)ut K yesterday. Pope. facot der and fall In his administration of i CC0KcABY COVERED WITH SORES. his high office. He must have been keenly conscious all the time of his name, the name he wrote so often, the speak Jy0ujj Scratch and Tear the Flesh Un-name so familiar to his eye and ear, Toe, ' . Would Tied Were Hands ,6i the name which had been his when a ne Cuticura. L' Have Died But for when a boy as well as when r & f. about when year child, "tly little son, "Abraham Lincoln," was President, tr8di and a half old, began to have sores.. to appear in the pages of the worlds 'come out on his face. I had a history as long as men should read clanJ treat him, but the sores grew history. That name was to stand out hlng i worse. Then they began to come on a ad, t his arms, then on other parts of his like a beacon light on the top of was This all before mountain ages. ed a body, and then one came on his chest, to be so whether he succeeded or fall- worse than the others. Then I called Still he grew another physician. worse. At the end of about a year LINCOLN IN and a half of suffering he grew so bad 1 had to tie his hands in cloths at glmer nlght t0 eep him from scratching the 16 ilt sores and tearing the flesh. He got to he a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. My aunt advised me to I try Cuticura Soap andandOintment got a cake sent to the drug store e i! 0t the Soap and a box of the Ointment, and at the end of about two guedo months the sores were all well. He tie has never bad any sores of any kind iri f Pr since. He is now strong and healthy, 3. E and I can sincerely say that only for my i grov your most wonderful remedies from died have would child eye precious Mrs. Egbert tf he k those terrible sores. T Bi rom if V mo-5- anxiety, of great deeds, of events that stirred the nations, of achievements whose echoes ran around the world to the last syllable, and must of recorded time, why should the spirit of little men be proud? The human race has done great things. But! the race did them, not the Individual. Our share In any of the great achievements of the world Is small. The part of the greatest man Is small in them. The part of any generation Is small. We are not so great after all, that any one of us should feel undue conceit In anything accomplished by the race, still less of our part In It. Man In his higher stares of development, the highly organized human being, civilized man, lived at least C.000 years on the earth before he discovered the fact that a load will move more easily if the vehicle which carries It Is placed on a steel rail and set above the mud than If sunken in the soil. The Baltic as she plows her great bulk through the seas Is certainly a wonderful thing. But It required a great many generations to get to it. The use of the electric current Is amazing, but It is the result of thousands of years of human thought and effort. Tennyson Is right We men are but a little race. , to-da- y 1 801 physl-l.,rfe- ow. i filing ng wo' itirrii. es tin Jen t sler knot Kit ! 5e, tl b' e IS I V It !S, y ev life, , ich betK boar Sheldon, R. F. D. No. 1. WoodvlUe, Conn., April 22, 1005. Moncure D. Conway In bis reminiscences relates a story that was told him by Helen Taylor, the stepdaughter of John Stuart Mill. While in Scotland she called on a poor woman who had lost her little son. The mother to be consoled, saying: refused What troubles me Is they bo all men folk up there in heaven and wont know what to do for him." It appears, therefore, that the New York preachers who have announced that there are no women angels can not be accepted ns the discoverers of this great and Interesting fact i Important to Mothers, Xxsmtne carefully erery bottle of CASTOlttA, aafe and aura remedy for lufanta tad children, nd aea that It Bean the Signature of II Vie Ilf For Over 80 Ycara, The gitut yon Have Alwiyi BoochL f i xst i vi ;al. r ; rest li tt-- Tt. uls'v It". It h ir te, cere on o! ch osrt j COl lit, pf. ntm WI! tf I rbeit tiw i i kua wit! hr te iibll onf nd 9 It , Not Otherwise, A woman's proper place Is at home, when she is needed there; not otherwise. Why should women be expected to play the part of an lndoor-growcabbage, while we men are free, butterfly-like, to roam the worlds garden on wings? Coulson Kernahan In Ideas. Many Children are Sickly, MotherGray'a Sweet lowdcrs furChtblren, vaed by Mother Gray, a nurse la Children's Lame, New York, cure Feverishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders, Break up Cold and Destroy Worms. At all Druggists ,2fio. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Foods Good for the Body. Qrspos and raisins are nourishing and fattening, and apples eaten dally ensure clear, bright complexions. T-- k a toLAXernr At VK It I rm.n 1110 IN 'Mil uiilnln OVIK BAY llU, K.Dmf. W. rfmi4 ittoitxy If It fall o cure. elgiMkiireUeaechls. Ow. Not the Right Time to Discover It "This chimney," overy woman says, when she lights the lamp, "needs cleaning." Atchison Globe, rst Tin FAMora Fed Ctom Ilall lllim. t,arg In, parka I The lius Company, South Ikud, luil. ouois. inf omc arcs IBS dir rid jr n Women's Work In London. of the women Nearly one-hal- t la occupations la London, England, are domestic servants, of whom there is one to every twenty persons t the population. an-ttg- , e1 4 -At, ij'v, !. " - iJ tJ !$ . - t'V - ' ' (TV--v K ? . ... . v r ' ' - H . ; o Suppose I send her a bunch of posies, Some violets or a box of roses A dollar apiece, you say? Good Lord! She would ask me what I meant By spending so much on sentiment And flowers, anyway 1 I might write for her a little rhyme, And I really would if I had the time And knew what 1 want to say; But tho grind of work has dulled my brain! Besides 1 have got to catch a train, So I'll write no rhymes gloves 1 Eh, what? Her size? Great heavens, I have forgot I Now am I not a dunce? Alas, that a man should grow so stupid I Give me an inspiration, Cupid 1 I used to have them once. Ah, well I It is useless trying to think! Bring me my check book and pen and ink. Hang sentiment by the neck Whats the use of St Valentine's Day? Ill settle the thing in the same old way. With a forty dollar check I New York Press, -- Wonders of Science. If we no longer live In an age when in Lord Beaconsflolds famous phrase, Young men prattle protoplasm," It Is only because of the Inexhaustible resources of science, which have distracted our attention with later discoveries. Nowadays the public mind Is prepared for anything and therefore the announcement that a practical process has been discovered for extracting nitrogen from the atmosphere, and for making It available ty agriculture as the basis of a cheml--ca- l manure, will probably only create a mild sensation. The announcement, If It be substantiated, la of the utmost consequence, however. It solves a problem which has long disquieted both agriculturists and scientists. The fertility of the soil Is by no means inexhaustible, and the supply of fertilizing material from the Chilian nitrate fields Is also confined to easily calculable dimensions. "Wherewith then shall the earth be Baited?" Is the question that presents Itself, and It Is a questlofl which certain Norwegian experimentalists claim to have solved Combination Cabinet. If tt chance to hit the white, You will meet your fate All alone your years will mellow, Should your arrow meet the yellow. If the dart go wide astray, You will throw your heart away. It la an absolute necessity to have a cupboard and refrigerator In every household; but an added advantage Is to have both In combination with a The housewife will recogcabinet. nize the advantage of having a cabinet In close proximity to the refrigerator, as many articles of food can Should it pierce the heart of gold, be placed In It and still be near Joy fur you, and love untold! enough to the Ice to be kept cool. The If you have a Valentine day party piece of furniture shown here, devised you will serve refreshments, and the by a Canadian, Is made In three parts Idea of the day of hearts and love must be carried out as far as possible In everything arranged. A very pretty way to send your is to have guests to the dining-roosome pink flowers In two separate baskets, pink carnations for the boys and pink roses for the girls, for pink Is the special color of the god of Jove. Write beforehand on small cards the names of some famous lovers of history and fiction, fastening the cards with the names of men to the carnations and those with the names of Such names women to the roses. should be selected as Romeo and Juliet, Orlando and Rosalind, Hamlet and Ophelia, Petrarch and Laura, Dante and Beatrice, Leicester and Queen Elizabeth, John Alden and Priscilla, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, and so on. Then as each boy takes a carnation . 5 V arlat-te- r 8 Into two lower the refrigerator and cabinet and the upper section, or cupboard. The refrigerator Is again divided into a cooling box and an ice chest, both being closed by a door. The cooling The King of Hearts and the Fortune-tellinbox has a number of perforated Target. for supporting articles. Exshelves of buttons, or a little work basket, as and reads the name on the card, he tending the entire height of the be will have to learn the use of them must find the card with the correcupboard at each side Is a tier of sponding rose card; that Is to say, drawers, the remainder being divided In his bachelorhood. Another game appropriate to the Romeo must find Juliet, Orlando muat Into shelves. Tho door consists of Cut out cf find Rosalind, find so on, and they go day is Broken Hearts. three sections hinged together, the matched In that red cardboard as many hearts, about to the dining-roothree opening downward and forming six Inches across, as you will have way. the top of a table. When It is desired decorations should to arrange the furniture as a table or The dining-roopairs of guests. Then, with sharp shears, cut each of these Into many be In pink, and as far ns possible, workboard a brace extending from small pieces, square, crescent shaped, heart shaped. Pink crepe paper can the shelf Is drawn out and the door wedge shaped, and so on, keeping the be effectively used to give the shape of the cupboard let down and allowed The ice cream to rest on the brace, which supports pieces of each heart separate from to all the dishes. the others by putting them Into an should be served In heart shaped the outer end and also preveuts the molds or In the form of two doves door from sagging. By arranging the envelope. colored different billing and cooing, and the cream several parts In combination the Inpapers from Now, and of two ventor has provided several conveniput might be pink in color. each, cut small hearts, Pink hearts, with little love versed ences In a very compact form, the them Into two bowls. The players then select one each, the girls from attached, should be placed at the combination being especially useful la 'one bowl, the hoys from another, and guests places, and these may be taken small places where room Is at a the boys then find their partners In away as souvenirs of the evening. tho girls who have hearts matching Following are a few verses that might Turbine-DriveLocomotive, be used: In color those they have selected. So successful has been the turbine The envelopes are then distributed, Oh. theres nothing half o weet In IIX for stationary , snd marine engines Moore. one to each couple, and they must A Love's young dream. that It Is not strango that efforts try to put the pieces together to form Fnln of lova be weter far should be made to use it In connection a perfect heart. The two who first Than all other plensurea are. Drydan. with locomotives. It has been prowith crowned are and stand do this up posed to mount a steam boiler and red roses made of paper, as this was For love is heaven, and heaven la love. Bcott. turbine on a locomotive, and use the bestowed honor Cupid, upon a classic power to drive a dynamo which would the god of love, If you prefer, tho girl 'Tl better to have loved end 1nt to have loved at all. never Than and roses the with supply current to the motors similar crowned be may Tennyson. to those of an ordinary electric boy with a laurel wreath. Prof. however, besunry In the love thnt cen be Recently, This diversion Is especially good There'sreckoned. Shakespeare. School Technical of the Royal Stumpf, of cardboard, fun. Get a sheet heavy For toasts, those who remember at Charlottenburg, Germany, has inor thirty Inches square, twenty-livas other quotations about love may vented a locomotive where the tur-- . a heart as It on any large and draw out recite them, or each guest might read bines are directly connected with the you can. Then cut the heart to muslin white aloud, between the times of serving, axles. with It cover and There are three driving axles, and strengthen it; It may also be braced the quotations on the heart shaped the plan Involves using the steam In cards. at the back by strips of wood. Above the table a bow and an ar- successive stages In the turbines, Around the edge of the heart paint driva border In green, about three Inches row might be suspended, or a cuptd, which are placed outsldo of each Introduced Is steam The wheel. both. or the ing of courso, gives you wide, which When the guests have come ba$k Into the first turbine on one side outlines of a green heart. Inside this to the parlor, through a pipe direct from the boiler, from the dining-roosame width, of the black heart a paint little luce edged and then passes successively through and again a third In yellow, a fourth hand to each one fifth In red. and In tho cen valentine, with a pencil attached by; the second and third turbines on the In blue, of gold paint, leaving means of a narrow pink ribbon, and same side. It then goes to a set of tor a bulls-eyon the back of which the following turbine on the other side of the locoa space of white unpointed. as motive, from the last of which the exarrows questions are written. The answer Having prepared as many with tha all hausted steam passes Into the stack begin there are guests and a glided Cupid's to the questions through the exhaust blast nozzle. The outcome of the new Invention will be awaited with Interest, not only on account of the extension of use of the turbine, but also for tho fact that the modern atenm locomotive Is an uneconomical piece of machinery, requiring rest-larggiven quantity of pow er. Mont amounts of fuel to generate a, Herald. Is divided sec-tion- g , V 1: B , i 4..V it . . ' "V V , J ' iSMSHs ' W, t" v- r ' 'i'y; it Jt V Reproduced Fiom Oil Painting. ed in the performance of bis task. or other, Mr. Lincoln said No" to Come what might, his was to be one them, but In a very engaging, pleasway. of those Immortal names that were ant and While this play was going on before not horn to die." Think of this; and was It not pa- him, the Spanish minister entered, acthetic that the great, patient, grim companied by a couple of admirals or figure should sit there with the great other high officers of the Spanish events of civil war surging around navy, to pay tholr respects to the Preshim, with hosts of men marching past ident, and they walked directly toward his windows, going "to do or die" for Mr. Aldrich. The President saw what d was going on, and he nodded his head their country. .Great generula, and begrimed with the mud earnestly, so that Mr. Aldrich underof the war, bloodstained with the lash stood his meaning, and he arose, greetof battle, cast down by defeat, or ed the visitors, said a few words exHushed with victory, bent before him. pressing appreciation for the call, and The .statesmen of the nation, the they departed, under tho Impression greatest sons of all the soil, stood to that they had spoken to President hear his commands, and every wish Lincoln, the latter having carefully he expressed was a command to the screened hinmelf (sitting down), bes at his greatest of them; statesman or war- hind the squad of end of the table. rior, whichever It might be. And there that grim, gaunt figure When It came his turn Mr. Aldrich sat, and in all his weary, lonely hours said: "I came here, Mr. President, to of all that prolonged struggle, the ask you for an appointment in the uppermost thought In his mind, out- army, but, after seeing that you are side of those of his office, was embod- obliged to say no to everybody, I have ied In the simple lines of that old concluded that I will not trouble with hymn. Oh, Why Should the Spirit of my request, but will bid you good-by- , " Mortal Be Proud?" The great strain and wish you lots of which rested on the tired brain of the I thank you very heartily," said You have thus great President, the awful flood of President Lincoln. sadness that surged through his heart done me two favors In a very brief with every thought of the great war time. I thank you for entertaining and all Its possibilities and uncertain- the Spanish visitors, and I thank yon ties, found relief and solace In those for not asking for an office. Now run lines. They held him heart and soul home quick, or you may repent tho bound to a higher power than earth latter favor." Los Angeles Times. could furnish, to arelianceonahlgher wisdom than statesmen have, to a Lincolns Humorous Comment. stronger arm than wielded any earthone occasion an official letter not On was his. ly sword. The battle and Its results did rot rest at last was received from tho operator at Wilwith him. To do his best, to eior-els- e mington, Del., on tho route of the line all the wisdom he had, to be loyal from Washington to Fortress Monroe Wlat-ruto his duly and leave results wltn The operator's name was Jack In la still who Philadelphia. living One whom he had learned to call the the Iii'd of Wlntrup'a name was written In a bold God of Battles," Hosts." was all he could do, and. play- hand, with the final letter quite large, and ending In a ing such a part as that, not able to almost like a capital, which flourishes of In doubt partly obseries foresee tho Issue, often whether he was doing tho right thing scured the name. Mr. Lincoln seeing at the right time, In the right way, "O, the letter and noticing the peculiar said that It reminded him why should tho spirit of mortal bo signature man wearing a short-leggea of proud?" overcoat, which, as the man Why should It he, to be sure? And out if Lincoln sat ill through so many walked through the snow, wiped his feet. made tracks by lonely hours of dismay, doubt and the Ts.Errr Ill get her some By Jove! to-da- y. fRSffi3GJ.O' Cupboard and Refrigerator. ,v . I used to send her gloves and rings, Bonbons and flowers, fans and things, And kisses to her I carried. But, oh, it was all so different thenl Alas I could we only live over again Those days before we married I constructed In combination and ranged as an upright stand. The , r I want some kind of a valentine, To send to that little wife of mine. Who's waiting at home for me j Not paper Cupids and gilded darts, Nor silly verses, nor satin hearts, But something let me see The first suggestion for a Valentino day party Is In the form of HIS DEBTOR. MADE PRESIDENT a heart hunt. Small hearts, red and paper Short, but He Citizen's Interview should be hi white, Lincoln. Twice Saved about the all den During the civil war Noel P. Aldrich with occasional room, White the visited of Croton, Iowa, or other chocolate House for the purpose of presenting fiere and hearts candy his claim for an appointment In the there. The object Is than much younger army. Although for each person to the President, he resembled Mr. Linthe for hearts, and the one search as well as and coln in height breadth, who finds the greatest number of pafacially. ones, which are the real counters Upon entering the reception room, per in the game, wins the first prize. or fifteen Mr. Aldrich observed that The first prize should bo something more Individuals were ahead of him, of a heart, say a photoform In the be would he and, concluding that a charm, a locket, or a holder, graph obliged to wait for some time, he bonbonnlere. Some of the hearts sought a chair, placed it at the other should be broken Into two pieces if Presend of the long table, facing the candy ones, or torn if paper, and speident, and became a very much Interto those who find . looker-onthe noted lie eager cial prizes offered ested fit that the together. pieces looks of hope or apprehension as tho who finds most hearts Individuals had their turns, and he !ls The player to be the one who will supposed noted the fact that, for some reason To the one who first be married. finds least, a consolation prize should be given. If a girl, a suitable prize EARLY YOUTH. would be a tea cup and saucer, or a worsted kitten, as she is destined to A suitable consobe an old maid. lation prize for a boy would be a card If k.' w; i ( . I ' The Population of Heaven. oweN tt .V OO05FXD Tho Married Men Send, a Valentina dust-covere- office-seeker- good-luck.- p, long-taile- d n loco-motiv- e. e e Entsrrlng a Demurrer. tho lecturer, "Obviously," said "what we need Is a more elastlo cur-rene- y, for the reason" "Not me," Interrupted the stiahbv What I need man In the front row, la a more adhesive currency." Whereat there wss loud applause, tt appeared there were others. |