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Show 1930 raftnly doCtor's instead of harsh purges; trial bottle free THE LJTrLE HARES Jo~ Wi!\.ihrop ..cca ec ,.._ ••••IIV" (lcca •mcrA......,. teu Jkca,....._ •.&.a 8y ELMO 8COTT WA't80N averace school h1Jto17 ~... her ODlJ a brief para· John. Cotto"- ll'&Ph and the ebuee. are that not one AmeriC!IUl Ill tea could tell you wM abe wu or when abe Uved or what waa bet Importance 1o hhltory. Wherefore lt the more remarkable ·~==:J . S. that wlthlD recent weeks '"' tllelo h'aTt aPI*&red no leas than tiiNt ...., boob. an cleallnc with the Itt. Ill ~ Ratclllll80n. Who ud what lbe _.. 18 10cgested by the tWel of two ot the.m-"Unafratd• !.at. of .AJm.e ButchlDIIOD," written by wa.nl:tred Klq Bug and pabllahed •hchtOD Mlftlln compauy, and • .Ap Allled.C!IUl lezebel-The lite of .A.JaBe llltehlDioo," whleh waa written b . _ AuiQI" and publtahed by BreD· taDo'L Where abe lived-and the Jlfc'le Of ., :Wew Yorlr county In the 1IM;t that llle once dwelt there, even ebuettl claiiDH a rreat· ~ • ,.,. of Jler (!U'eel'-ll ladleated by De faet tlaat the Weatcheater Coanty Pfrtrtlfal 10det7. Jn laauJnc Volume Ita publleatlou, choae Otto 'fD ·::'1!ltl•pldta aeeount ot "Anne HatchiD· _.1 w .-..... M••.. aa Ia tbe Wllderaeas" -:~-.t~=~attlele for ~ volume to tl pve the title of "Anne ~~~--~ and Other Papers." ,... ..lnne Butchloson? Let Run In the lotro~=:e:~ K1n1 to 1f.er boelr "UnafralcJ" an· t ·-~~W Q....UOD In thae words: .&.- Rotclllaloa has been et'lN b7 man;r name~~. AD the .., 'hiD "the N.., England lese~ -. Prototype of .Joan of 1"118 the eplthetll whole-heartQp)leiJ by eaeml• or frlenda. , . . . . . Ue euclll*bels u ''tllat that .A.tball&h," "a '==~.._= IMIIP'Miter," "a dQncer· II] lililtniiawiDt ot the Devell ' 11!1il*ill ap b~ 8atbaa," "a Breeder Bel 111-." "a perauulve advoof tM rlcht of buHTidoal ,...,_.t.~~t "a abe-Gamaliel," "a 4llilQ lldllt Ml"\'ant and of God." ~ , _ ~ her husband speak· Poor man, he nffered more aeeeant tbaD &DJ one el8e !) AaDe BotehiiUIOn'8 plaee ID - ·. . . blopoapher a18o . . lD tbelle wei'Cia: WI-..&JuteB11tchfDIOD stood for • ·.'U.IthiB' ndo& tor eumlnlog wu one ot the ·~:~==~She of her clay. She 'f 1ra1t. eiBellce the dub kl .A.mertea. ltel4 Ia her house, for rell$88 ID· .... a. toNnaaDen ot ot ~of meetCWIIerfterwoatthemeelT4111 WOl'lcl.. The ltoot at ) Isabel waa the oniJ one of 1ft's. Barela cbllclrea who had .aped dan· pra ud Uved, ao Mrs. Hare wu trJ· In& to il'Ve ber aDd the otbera around some lood advlee. "MJ deliA" abe said. "a bare baa the advantap that few anlmale laave -except poeslbiJ a 1lraffe-and that Ia the power of aeelnl more than what Ia just In front of the ~-" "It sounds terriblJ contullnc, moth· er," said Isabel. "It does to beeln with," 11ald Moth· er Hare, "bot wbeD I have explained It all, you will anderstand" The UtUe harea looked very mach puz1.led. "We would Uke to understand." they said. "And ~ ln the world are we like ctratresr asked Isabel. "A rtraffe la a creature belonging to a zoo or the clrcua or tbe wilds somewhere. Isn't be? "Hasn't the giraffe an enormously long aeek and long legs'l Isn't be very, very queer-looking! Surely, Mether Bare, you don't think we are queer-looking. do your• "Ha.. ba," lauglled Mother Hare. "l don't wonder you ask how you can be like a praffe. "Yes, the creature you describe Is the giraffe. "But all the same, though we are not related at all, there Is one thing about 111 both which Ia alike.'' Isabel began to feel of her neck. She thought that pes-hapl!l It might suddenly spring out Into a great long neck or that her legs might suddenly grow and grow and that she would find her he~d somewhere In the clouds. It she had only stopped to think about It she would have reallzed that she had never seen bares with enormously loq necks or with long legs, J4l\ne Hutehin.sol\. Ste~tue, Old Dr. Caldwell's prescription cannot fona the cathartic: habit. It caa be given to the child whose tongue is coated, or whose breath is fetid, or has a little fever. Or to older people whose bowela are clogged. Ita iugredieata stimulate maac:alar action· and tbua aid the bowela to more aormaJ fuoc:ticminc. Cakhreu.'• 'fbe.pare ....,.,. and ~~~lcrbs .jQ SJf'IP Pepsin are cood for the system. So do DOt baitate to ose it whea there'• bilioumaa, beadlches, or aay sign of constipation. Yoar druggist baa thia worlct-famoua preacriptioa in big bottle.. Or, "'"'' JIHiietiZD, IU., tMd ca Dr. CtJlda!elf1 Syrw, fr" lritJI bolt/# will k Mil ~ ~~ »r. p,,n., lUI,_ ---·- ·--.----------------A-cleat Nencla CitF He'cl Swallow n... Senator Sackett of Kentucky 1r11 crlt~l1dng a tlnaBcler. 01 Power hu made blm ruthless," laid Senator Sackett. ''He thinks he can ride down everybody. Be has thrown caution to the tour wloda. ..A friend of his wu advising him to go slow In his dealings with a certain great Industrial leader whose ' aiJUiatlons were ""'ide. "'Remember,' hll!l friend cautioned lllm-'remember on whleb side your brea1d Is battered.' " 'Bosh,' said he. 'Don't I always eat both sides?' • Uamarriecl lriahLeadlng the world In uomanied residents, 80 per cent of the men In the Free State between twenty-fh•e and thirty are unmarried. In northem Ireland, the correili)Ondlog figure Ia 62 per cent. .. 'be reOJalos of a new "lost city" have been diaeo,oered lo the Moapa Talley, Nevada, by repreaentatlvee of the Southwest museum. The new lost city, the discoverer said, wu about two and one-half miles long, and belonp to the postbasket-making period dating back at lenst l,liOO years. It II believed to bave had a population of about 10.· 000 persona. Excavatlonl!l thus tar. he said, have brought to light pit houses, turquoise necklaces, rings. braceh!ta and beads. Pleat:r Caaae "Daddy," said Bobby, "that sign W@ Jnst passed said, 'Cross Roadl!l.' Wh&t makes them cross?" "Being run over so often, I guess," replied his dad with 1\ smile. Thiak It O.er The great mKu Is he who In the A warped Idea of what constitutes midst of the crowd keeps with perself-sacrifice and coodness Is to be a fect sweetness the lndepeodenee of cloormat. solitude. An Ailing Bostol'beglontoc was dominated by bls stroog-mladed wife. During the first 22 years of their married Ute she bore him 14 children and during those years the energy which later waa to be spent mainly lo religious controversy wu tully occupied with bousehold cares alld the upbringing of her family. But during that time she traveled repeatedly to the nelghborln,: town of old Boston to hear Rev. John Cotto& preach In St. Botolph's church. Cotton became a sort of an Ideal of hers anct when be was forced to leave Enllancl because of hla nonconformist vlewa and emigrate to .America, Anne decided to follo\T. What WOllam Butcblnso}l thought of tbla uprooting of his home and family It not recorded, but he bad probably long since.. leamed not to oppose bls wife's decisions. So In 1634 to the new Boston In Massachusetts Bay colony, a raw little town of less than a thousand Inhabitants living in rude one-room log cabins and fragile frame houses, on the edge of the wilderness. came the Butchlnl!lona. Within a few montlul Anne became the "social lender and Lady Bountiful" of the l!lettlement. She waa a constant companion of John Cotton, who basked In her admiration for htm ; she became a close friend of the governor, Sir BeDl':J' Vane, the younger, and abe became a recognized leader In the reUgtona dlaeoaslou which occupied so much of the colony's attention. In ract It wu then dlscossloDS whlch brought about her downfalL The heart of the Puritan religion was a belief that Gocl'a Word was In the Scriptures. The cardinal slo aploat auch a religion waa the belief tllat God's Inspiration ~old be transmitted directly to buiiWl belnp. So whea there arose In the colony a taction. called "Antinbmlana" (people not llvlq bJ tbe letter of the law of God, and bellevtng that God revealed biB lawa directly to them), wb~n this lac· tloo grew under the leadershlo of .ADDe Hutchinson, wbea meetlnp were held In her home to dlseul!8 and erlt· lclze the sermons ef the Puritan minliters and when they lli!ISerted that --- of the Boston ministers were under a "covenant of works" and were b'Jiq to be saved by religions observaac., 1t waa only a matter of time 110W ·..lnlle ahonld find herself lo tn-.ble. Tile climax came In 1637. Winthrop and the other Puritan leaders had fled from Bncland to escape rellrtou ~ toleranee, bu~ u so often happens, tlaoae who sotrer from IDtoleranee are the ftrat to become lntoleraJit. So the7 pot Anne on trial for bereay, a trial that hu been compared to that of Joan ot Are at Rooen. Under the teatlmony and cpsestloDIDI btoapt aplnlt her, abe proved he.,. self - . . tban a mateh tor her pros. eator& Bot just at the moment when lt .-emed that abe had defeated ber aeeuserw. she burst forth Into a long speech tlescrlblng God's revelations to her, So abe convicted herself. 8be ,... ba.~atabed from the colon1 and went to Jlbecle Island to make her home. ~ft a widow ID 1842, slle aet forth with ber ehlldrea apia In aeareh of a .11e1r Jaqme. ll'lnt she aettJed on Lon1 Island &JKl theD Ia what ls,.ow WestJ .ellle!Biter ~UDty, N. Y. Here her tor~!!Dt caner ume to a lraglc: eM. urlTed Ia the Dateh coiODJ at a WMD the Iadl•v, lafarlatecl bJ crc•• Dutch deception and rreed. were engaged lo periodic attacks on the whites. It was In one of tbese attackl!l that Anne HatchlDSOD, with 11.1l of her children but one and several ot her neighbors, alxteen peraoDS lo all, were killed. Belen Augur In ber biofl'llphy ot. Anne tells a dram11tlc story of the events of that dreadful da:v: In September, 1648, 4nne Hutch· loson stood In her doorway look· lng at the fields of corn, tawny Ia the momlng sunshine. She was thinking of what ODe of her neigh· bors had said the day before "When the ~m Ia ripe and barvested, the Indians will break their truce." AlJ she stood there, a group .of Mohegans padded softly They exchanged friendly up. greetings, and then the Indians walked through the house and grounds, as If looking to see It there were any strange men about. Bat everything wns quite al!l usual ; William Collins and Franels were at work In the field, and tbe children were at lltUe tasks about the fteld and garden. The Indians nodded farewell, and went away. In the afternoon they came back, only thlll time there were more of them, and there were strange faces amonr them; ADDe Butchloaon wondered why they had put on so much demenlc paint. Perhapl!l they were off on some strange Indian ceremony, for they seemed excited. The dogs began te bArk at the strange apparition, and the Mob~ asked to have them tied up, for they were afraid they would bite. The dop were tied up. Uncu' men whipped out u.etr tomahawks. .Anne Butc!hlnson I!I&W four demona rub at her IODI. Bread of adversity, water of af· fllctioo-ahe had lived out that promise, but God Dever warned her of this horror. WOllam ColUna and Francis were struck down, their skulls croahed and blaedlq. Anae Colltu fell beside her buaband Mrs. H'Btehlnson caught Susanna to her breast to abut ont the sight from the acreamlnc chlld. Katherloe wu half over a tenee. but a Mohegan caught her by the hair and draglled her back to a stomp. Aane Botcblnson heard the alckenlng blow; abe aaw · Mary and lltUe WOllam rub lObo bing to her, u If abe could aave them. Then two Indiana were upon her, and the child wu tom from her breast. A tomahawk felL Anne Hutchinson was dead. And for a Anal epitaph of bet "American Jezebel," Helen .Aupl writes: Boston has 1lnally made up Ita quarrel with the woman It cut out aa "unsavoury salt." Her mon· oment atanda before the Massa· chusetts statehouse, with a fervent Inscription to thlll "Courage. ous Esponent of Civil Liberty and Religious Toleration.'' There ahf l!ltands, with a Bible In her hand and a ehUd anugled apl.nst her New England's heroine. For civil Uberty and relllloua toleration the p;rlnclples tor which abe sur fered ~e and death, a-re wrlttet JAto the Coutltutloa ..t &be UWt.eo "But I Must Give You All This Advice." and that no bare had ever grown to a huge sl1.e In a moment or two. Still she didn't stop to think. Sbe only thought how puzzling and con· fQIItlg It Wal!ll ''Do tell us quickly, mother," she managed to g:tsp. "A glruft'e," c.:ommenced Mother Hare, while all the little hares looked at ber, hoping the words would come taster, so that they could know sooner and bave all thll!l strange talk explained, "has only two eyes, but they are 8o far apart and each one Is placed 80 he can see, as it were, arcMIDd the corner. "'That Is how he can fight with hll!l feet and knows just where to strike btl blows. ".Abd our eyes are placed In such a W8J that we can see far to the side aact almost around to the back. So, we are like the giraffe In that. -But I must pve you all this advi~ '".Always keep your eyes on the look· out for danger. "When cruel people are hunttor Ul!l ud when they have made their bunttoe dogs chase us, look-always look aD4 don't close your eyes for a moment. •You can see the dop coming from behind you and you can burry to escape." And all the little hares ~~aid that they would take Mother Hare's ad· vtc,oe. PUZZLES What Is a chipmunk? A sport model IIQulrrel. • • • When Is 0 oaucbty 'I When It ll In cUscrace. • • • What Ia an tsJand'! A plece of lud oat for a awlm. • • • What aort of horae Is no use for pulllog a cart 'I A clotheshorse. • • • Wby Is aD empty purse always the Because there Ia no change sat~~et In lt. Are you prepared to renCJer first aid and quick comfort the moment your youngster has au upset of any sort? Could you do the right thing-immediatelythough the emergency came Without warning-perhaps tonight 't Castoria ia a mother's standby at such times. There is nothing like it in emergencies, and nothing better for everyday use. For a sudden attack of colic, or the gentle relief of constipation; to allay a feverish condition, or to soothe a fretful baby that can't sleep. This pure vegetable preparation is always ready to ease an ailing youngster. It is just as 1iarm1ess as the recipe on tlie wrapper reads. If you see Cbu. H. Fletcher's signature, it is genuine Castoria. lt is harmless to the smallest infant; doctors will tell you so. You c,n tell from the reciPt 011 the wrapper how mild it is, and how good for little systems. Bot continue with Castoria ·until a child is grown. Truth and Nothing But, in Doctor's Statement Deterred "Did you propose to the lady edttor?' "No; I saw her reaching for ·a Ill asking for the appointment of rejection slip." un unknown man for a rather lm· portant federal appointment In bls When you make political predicstate, ReDRtor Borah said: tions tllank 70ur stars that people "The position calls for a natural- forget most .,f tJMnn. horn diplomat and that Is what I <'onslder Doctor Blank to be. ·A suc<'ea&ful eonntry doctor has to be 1 diplomat or he won•t survive. "One day, this chap I've recom· mended was rallln• on a cantakerous old man who had collapsed while plowing. •• 'You say my heart Is weak,' rasped the old IDllD. 'Do you mean that It's liable to give out on me any timer " 'Bless you, no I' exclaimed the diplomat. 'That heart of yours will last a lifetime.' "-Los ~es Times. Comecl:r Statf "Why did you quit?" "Tbey wanted me to demon.strate a clgar lighter." When one Ia Insulted, he Is never prepared All lgnoranc& 11!1 not blll!ll. f.'ANISOAP auto.,.,,., paint, iM, vime. ·etc., lrom latJauJa NIIIOI1a .......................... .&.OKMTII W.&Jft'KD Kill Moths or They Will Cost You Money Get Your Flit and The Speclal Flit Sprayer Today! • • • It Mary had six eggs and ased six egga, wb11.t would she huve left? E::g· shells. • • • Why are the middle ares railed the Dark Ages? Because there were so many knights. • • • Wbat Is the dltrerenee between a new th·e-cent piece and an old-fasbloned dime? Five cents. • • • What Is the difference between a story book and a donkey? The story book baa Its tale loslde. and the don· ••• F |