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Show ... V- 1 -. THE PRO VO HERALD w $3.50 Recipe Free lryealr;nidheys. . FIGHTER DONS LEATHER MASK IN TRAINING THE Most elderly people are mare or less troubled with a chronic. persistent constipation, due srgely to lack.of sufiRclent. exercise. 'They experience difficulty in digesting even light food, with consequent belching of stomach gases, droslues after eating, headache and a feeling of lassl- tude and general discomfort. Doctors advise against cathartics and violentTmrgatiVeSor every KTBcly Vecommending. a mild, gentle laxative tonic. Uke Dr.' Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, to effect relief without disturbing the entjre system. Hr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin Is the. ;n action, cer- - ' perfect laxative,-eastain In. effect and, withalv pleasant to the taste. It" possesses tonic properties that strengthen the stotnachilver and liowels and is a remedy that has been for' thousands of families, and should be in every family medicine chest. It Is equally as valuable for enildren as for older people. . Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Caldwell's Syrup I'epsia in LOc and $1.00' bottles. If you have never tried, it send yomr name arfditdtlress ta'Dtwr" Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache, Straining",. Swelling, Etc , -- . StopsrPain rta rthb "BsM&t Kidneys and; Back, : " y . a. week or so forever to the oadiri)i7arHbiing, straining; or too passage bt urine; the forehead- and il backj-th-licM- d kchtii tlie utitcht a pains In the sack; the growing mus-- le teaJmejii-apot-befskin; sluggish bowels; swollen eye- -, tias or ankles: tramps; unnatural short aleeplesimess and the despondency? twath; 1 have, a recipe for these troubles that on. and if you want to paw make a aaick" recovery, you ought to kvnta and gel a eopy of It. - Many ti doc-- " tor would charge you fci.so just for writing this prescription, but I have it and will be glad to send it to you entirely fri. Tiist drop me a line like this: Dr. A. Kk Vo(uian't It be nice within to bsiato say t -- good-by- .V e mi Fe J a, v. rt ' 3 ! Zi i Htn iiKI : -' ' l.-- ... . .. .. - . - t t ' ' ' CN. " ' can-depe- nd y -- HoUBson, Luck Bu Md i rig, T j In a plain envelope, Ag- you wilt sen when get It, this recipe contains only pure, yo" healharmless remedleajmt it has grea . '' and ing It will quickly show Jib power once you, what tie U, so I think you had bttwr It is without delayi'Twill send you a copy free you can use It and cure yourself at - Kiwt-r- ' ' - Cornered. 'Lord ' Cullforq . tells ! t : f1 ' SwW a. stars., oi ..a young lady's resources at a bazaar. - Business was la full swing when a young att strolled. arauniLliie various - ' - ' Lome. - Jng anything. As he passed a larger beauttfully decorated stall the young Jady seller detained him, "Won't you buyriclgarette holder, sir?" she allied. c"No, thank you, I don't - amoke," was the curt reply. ''Or a Tu wlper worked with my own Jiands? ' 'T don't write." "Then do . have this nice box of chocolates." "I -- 7 lon'teatsweetBf- - The -- young lady s patience was exhau8iedlJ!SlrI she ald- - grimly, "will you buy this box of soap ftThe young man paid up. . - . Uncle Sam'a Representative. Senator John Sharp Williams tells of a negro lad in a southern town who was not, the least zealous of Uncle : Sani'saervaKtgOnedar e when-th- mail bag for that town' was thrown from the train the pouch was caught tip by. ibis, diminutive courier, who started off; as was his wont, on a brisk trot to the postofflce. - As he was rounding a corner of the tatton he encountered, a. larger boy, with the result that the little, courier was upset. ' When the latter got up nd jeadjusted himself he turned upon ! .A the other exclaiming: "Look beah! Yo' wants to be keer-fu- l . : . 'boutdisfhilel When yo'jars me Jars de gov'ment of do United States. I carries do mail!" yo Clara't Little Hint curate wanted to a Christmas pres-cngive His but could not make np bis mind what It should be; so the next time lie called he frankly told her the difficulty under which he was laboring. "Want to make me . a J. present !" A.""eeKR(fl young lady-lov- e t, Clara exclalnfed, In well-dlsgust- you' for- "Why, Charley, get yourself." . The curate took the hint, and himself on the spot .,- v Uncertainties. . "A number of men who get to the front are mere aeqldents. "Yes " responded Senator Sorghum; "I someUmesthljkjharhaypur. government most needs Is Borne rell- ble JprpLfit gccldenUnsurai " . Womanlike. Crawford How did your wife come to buy you all those suspenders? Crabshaw 3 think sbe wanted-t- he rrettf boxer they came ln.Wudge. Guarding the Money. "Why was he guarded by the lice r-T- - "They "were afraid somebody would get his money. else r The Promise . Breakfast .v-.- : . ,. . is fulfilled if you start tie meal with Post loasiies ,; Sweets crispllfluffyj bits of.toasted.cOrn :Toady td'ser'airect; from the pachage with creafxv and su cjar : ' Please - People "Tls ."Ilenory Lingers Orl Company." Battle Creek, M4hk&tAT. slu-h- . timltea, .. . ; . ' Amsotf) ftsVAlUJ $ t)C'Vrf)t 'W .r''INh : B. Caldwell, 201 Washington St:, and he will oe very glad to send a sample bottle for trial. ; ;; . Mpn-llcell- 111., easy- - to miss the front lur of Montenegro If one were not on the lookout for it. It is marked by a row of paving stones set obliquely across the road and a post painted with the Austrian black and yellow. Then we turned inland and covered the level mile to NJegush. This Important village is the cradle of. tbepreseirt-dyimtrantrth- e blrTIF Place Nicholas I. It lsir-ee- r tile spot. and. like all the cultivable land of Montenegro appears to be the basin of a long dry lake. We were too "high now for the vine, the olive . and the orange. Not even the wild pomegranate, so plentiful In Dalmatla, could follow us here. There were fields of rye and potatoesar-eart- h pears.- - -- We ranched lightly at the Inn on excellent rye bread and cffee one can generally rely upon these, and the wine being good and when the horses were rested drove on through the valley, oyer a pass and then down zigzags to Cettinje, which with its 2,000 Inhabitants. Is the smallest;, capital In r WOULD be j of-Kl- ng Eu-rop- The streets are wide and well met ailed. The houses. are small, but they looked well built and comfortable, and there are dwells at various corners, where thepeople draw water" in the evening. None of the Montenegrins. is greatly rich of greatly poor. The Independence of the Individual is as remarkable as that of the nation. We pnly bsw two beggars In Cettinje. a crippled woman In a wheeled chair and a blind man who sang to the gusla. This Is the national instrument, a one stringed fiddle carved with a horse's bead. There are villalike palaces for the royal family and various rather imposIn the maid both ing legations,-b- ut houses and churches are very modest In appearance and do not lay claim to any great antiquity. It was the people who Interested us chiefly. The Dalmatian slouches, He Is for a rest, and though he falls Into the most graceful positions upon a doorstep,' against a tree or dowa upon his mother earth one gets tired of his picturesque Idleness. The Monten egri n has s qu arer shoulders and a stlffer back. He walks as If he wLBb8Jtaarilva somewhere- - and looks upward and Outward like an eagle. Peasant Life In Montenegro. The peasants wear long coats of white feiyike cloth with bright sashes and all have or pouch coma" mon throughout .Dalmatla. It Is a big leather contrivance, handy receptacle forBtor,-lc- nl resrWe The women are very comely, quiet eyed," dark haired. They wear handkerchiefs or lade veils over their beads and loug,''eleevele88 coats of. a pale color, Just touched with embroidery, a becoming dress for old and young. The Montenegrin wife does not have a very easy time. She does nearly all the work and srjon grows old. On the night of pur arrival In Cettinje khaki coats were being experimented with for the first time, with a view to their being worn by the army. We wondered why they should be considered necessary, for the rough peasant coat falls In with the landscape even better. One streak of grime upon him and the wearer is a stone among the atones, a tree stump In the woods, one sheep of his flock, a bit of broken masonry nder a wall. No kbakl can hide him better than his own mountains he can defy, the eye and the spyglass. The man of means does not wear this undyed material" He has a green, wide skirted coat with sleeves slit near the shoulder, so that he may wear The Montenegrin., type of. face Js short: square, brown eyed, dark haired. It 1 ready enough to smile, to see a joke, but in repose It has a tragic sadness, a look of mourning that matches the black cap brim. What do the Mcntengrlns mourn in their- aunny home? Perhaps it is the Herzegovina, a fairer and more f erttl: land.;: 11 wag once their country, but the tide of Turkish invasion drove them from It and they fled to the Dlack moutnaln and wrung a living from its gray, unfriendly slopes. thereatwithout it - Is warm. And this gives him a strange though very dignified appearance as he walks down the Katunska Ulica, a spare pair of sleeves hanging behind him and big Vstruka, a brown plaid, with snicks cj iolor folded them-wh- -- en ear-pet- y 'etitCllSumrrr rings swinging at every step. Alhalike wear the poetic headdress of their, country, a little round cap, whksla i at one a Irge, a lyric- and a song pi victory. , It has a red top and a brim of padded black silk, which la used as a l.black is mourning for the lost country; the red Is In memory of the blood which has been shed. On the. crown are five lines of gold arrknged like a rising sua they ajfe Tor five centuries.- of glorious ' Independence and ' below them, la the Russian . character, are the Initials of the beloved ruler who baa lately been made king. , - e - . d Freddy dear," expostnlated she, "you inustn't open my door wlth-ou- i been knocking. --J --mighta't-have dressed at all." dy, flrsf'-rJudg- "I looked through the keyhole e. ' The Treaty With Austria! They sowed their seeds in the little pockets of earth that collect in dips and dells in the rock and built themselves - houses of the plentiful stone They grew hardy from the hard life, looked forward to the time when Ihey would have their revenge upon the Turks and kept their weapons sharp and their wits bright against the day. The soli Is rich, but there is very little of it, so every patch is made to contribute Its half dozen potatoes or its handful of grain. "You will wonder," said a Dalmatian friend, "how such a country can grow such tall, fine rnen." He had been is Cettinje in October, 1909, at the time of the ratification of the treaty by which Austria annexed Bosnia and the Herzegovina. He said that war had seemed certain and that the Montenegrins wished to cross the border immediately to attack Woman's Way. "A woman's convention, eh? all-Tig- When Your Eyes Need Care Harry Forbes, Chlcyjo Star. "Comeback." Harry Forbes, Chicago star "comeback" fighter, is now the man behind the mask. The forme bantamweight been stirring champion who ha things up by his wonderful return to form-aftan absence of four years from the ring, finally has overcome what he considers the greatest handicap under which he has been boxing, but not without" the aid of artificial means. In one of his first bouts after his lntj),Jljie, .game Forbes was er y - w n- n ArSPrl What do w;omen-kno- w about enthusiasm? Now ,at the last national convention We men cheered our candidates for "' atf hour." "That's laid his" wife "We threw kisses at ours for sixty-seve- n minutes by the clock." butted in the eye by "Young1 Togo and a big gash was cut over the over the optic. In his training bouts .since that time the old wound several times was reopened. Seeking a way t6 remedy his" troubTe, Forbes, while in New York recently hit upon- the novel idea Of having-mask made which he could wear In training. The mask, made of llaher, is padded with felt around the eyes. It has proved a success. a Try Murine Eye Kemedv. No Smarting Feels Fine Acts Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and liranul&ted Eyelids. Illustrated Book in each Package. Murine is not a "Psient Medcompounded by our icine" but used In successful Physicians' Practice for many years. Now dedicated to the Public and sold by Druggists at 25c and 6Uc per Bottle. Murine Hye Salve in Aseptic Tubev 2ao and (tie. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Pioneer, "Why was Jonah thrown overboard?" "I'm ' not sure, but I've always Ihought he was ' the first man to rock a boat." . A Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put ! fed V.I- - Reconnoitered.' Mamma was dressing when seven-- . year-olFreddy burst into the room with a loud "Bool" ' - - PM-;h- Particular ruotam jssMMtriA ' Of a Good . 4MH JJsssfciJ'if'siUillj;1sBVf the-'tojb- po- -:-;. SAFE UXATIVE FOR ELDERLY PEOPLE HOW FARRELL LOST $15,000 ' 5P0RTD0M AQHS Inability to Determine Whether Wil lie Keeler Had Seen Best - Days Proved Costly. ' up 40 years ago. They regulate and invig- orate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coate- d tiny granules. A few weeks of matrimonial ing will enable a man to predict storms inadvancer - trainbrain- rrr. PIT.K8 CtTRKD IK 6 TO 14 DATS Because It could not be determined Tonr druggist will relund money If PAZO OINTV . MltNT fails to cure any aae of itching, Blind, whether Keeler had seen his best days Bleealng or Protruding Biles to 6 to U days. Itia. or not the New York Americana three The 1911 mile In 2:10 trotters nunv years ago lost a chance to sell the ber 46. When truth gets busy, fiction is apt little right fielder to' the Cincinnati come to feel ashamed of itself. can he Hughie says Jennings club for 15,000 cash. Keeler : had slowed It was thought that back and pull the grass; Soothing- Syrup for Children Billy Papke, who said he had retired 4f ra. Wrnilow's Illness had been a serious handicap reduces Inflammateething, softens the as a has batfive for fighter,, signed come Heeler insisted that he would tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c bottle. tles has sold Southpaw 4 If you would he a ieaderjtfu must" -- Sacramento Thompson to the Albany team of the Bet the pace. New York State league. Montenegrin Soldiers. Helena, Mont, has eigned an infield-e- r named Joe Protto, who comes from the AuBtrlans, so Indignant were they the Spokane City league. . thatthe country which was once AnnlAoA ZMesvilleTcluhjTiwnprirhava theirs, and from which" their prince on First Baseman S warding aa mana- had ousted the Turks, should be given ger to succeed Joe Raidy away by Europe to Austria. Rockford, I1L, has signed a Milwau came in from all the Envoys villages kee semi-pr- pitcher named Matt eagerly asking, "Will there be war .toSurges for a trial In the spring. day?" The standards were on their Fred Clarke, manager of the Pitts way tq the church. One was carried burg National league, baseball , club by an old man over CO, who was told that he was too old to fight He resays he will never play ball again. torted that his. family had held the Football experts, are clamoring to banner-l- or 300 years, and that until return to the old rules. Just as if his" son,1 for whom be had cabled, reMy Husband Also Uses the undertakers are not busy enough. turned irom America he wouldv yield It A government commission to regu Peruna. to none. But the envoys went sadly late baseball In the two major leagues back to their villages to say that there seems more the part of a sensible sug Mrs. - Delia " . ' would be no war. The prince coun.... gestion. May Sim- seled peace and bis loyal subjects Detroit has come Into its own as oels, whose " obeyed him. the greatest hockey city,", says a picture ao- The- - Montenegrin's this simple field, dispatch. It's great to. be first in companiesm onial i test ' equipment hangs in a corner of hls . something. j and '''Who re house... It consists of a rifle and & new . The Tale student who kicked a foot sides at - 358 x ... The pair of "opanka" (sandals. 30 miles to win a bet must' be "re- N. Conde ball St, in t of and does question supply transport lated to the fellow" who rolled a peanut Tipton, Ind., pot' occupy the staff very seriously, half a mile. writes The for a man will live two days on 'a A Georgia Judge rules thatrit Is a Peruna Co., as follows: his fist He piece of bread crime to kill an umpire. Another blow bot rations takes threedays with him to the Inalienable rights of the Ameri- tlesEight of Peruna when be goes out to fight and if he 1 " c m o p e tely ' citizen. x iii canBloomlngton " were asked why be did not take more, ettred - mer of In the " league ca he would answer; "I have enough for wants to land Harry Bay, former Nap tygteinic sev of tarrh either I three days. By that time shall and of late years with the Nashville, eral years have killed the enemy and takenuhla standing, and for Its manager. ? 1 I if my husband food or else I shall be dead myself.". "Chick" Evans of the Edgewatet feels badly or People Courteous and Brave. club, Chicago, is rated the leading either of us amateur golfer 1n ;Amertea"TyCrtlc catch cold we 7 These, were the views held by the " h.m & " -- gtJince-.taPulver of New York. people whom we saw walking arm In Peruna.- "arm in Cettinje in the cool of the HalrrOTlaylind Garry Herrman "Stomach" TrouLIe have agreed on a few minor essentials Mrs. Wilson Robinson, 704 Nessle St, ' already, it Is said. Does this relate' and then one splendid blue and scarlet ' ' Toledo, Ohio, writes: to fines and banishments. unit would detach Itself and stride up feel like a new person. I have no "I Sioux City will assist Denver la rai 'more heavy feelings, no more to another, salute, perhaps kiss, shake pain, don't Ing its Western league pennant next belch up gas, can eat moat anything hands, say a few smiling words and year, thus repaying a compliment ex- Withput'it hurting me. I. want to be We ; were as then - withdraw again. Willie Keeler. , working all the timev ; gained tended by the Sioux City club. ' much Impressed by the charm of their . twenty-fou- r pounds. "; San Antonio a each toward manners other as , by young has, signed "People that see me now and iaw me their untaillng courtesy .to strangers. back!, as fast aa ever, so when Garry catcher named Gus Smithy who makes two- month ago seem astonished. I tell 15,Qt)0 for the his home in Baltimore and has had them Peruna did it. I will say it is" They treat one Another with great af- Herrmann offered the only remedy for spring and all other fection and respect But crack, player's' release the New Tork some league experience In Ohio, '. . ' . ailments." ' folare to was afraid the champions Ait Your Druggist for m FrccPeruna Chicago experts the revolver that peeps out of the red club accept It The leather "torba" Is alawys ready (or use, lowing spring It quickly developed of amateurism, ttt college sports. This, Almanac tor 1912. ..t aurt the blood feud Is a living and a that Keeler had seen his best days is .fitting Seeing there Is bo much dothe dreadful reality, and no mere dramatlo and aa nobody wanted him ha was re- ing In the A. ,A. F, the A A. U, the C C B. a;A. A.the fragment of a dead past Part Of the leased outright President Farrell told BeMOovkSyns. Totei God, I'm say nothlrg to the C Montenegrin's social creed Is that 'he this story the other- day for the. first A. L. N. A., la bsm, Sou by DmrsMs. ""v. C'-.'';; V' time..-A. A.:and Uta L A. who. avenges himself Is blessed." V up,-b- ut - inFranfie,-:-----:--rz-tir----nr- . SYSTEMIC GATARRH RELIEVED -- ' o bvPERUNA. ," . . A -' . , r ' ' - ' the-stie- -of -- I.-I-- I. -- -- - "7" -- ''' . U- ave JL- - W ..-I until! . . ; r L-- r .....".':U----it:-'.,-:.--,'-;- : ti ' 1?. ; 3- -: a |