OCR Text |
Show 7F THEY LIKE ERUPTIONS. MOTHERS TO of Chicago, jrs. J. n. Haskins, Arcade President Chicago III., (Inb, Addresses Comforting Words to Women Ilegarding Childbirth. ? $ r u dbab Mrs. Pixkham: Mother after they not dread childbearing of Lydia 12. Pink-AaVegetable Compound. Snow the value ms flhile I loved children I dreaded the irdeal, for it left me weak and sick ST V S3 1 X i;r.3. J. H. HASKINS, after, and at the time for months I thought death was a welcome relief; bnt before my last child was born a iroodneirhbor advised LydiaE.l'illk hams Vegetable Compound, and I used that, together with your Pills and Sanative Wash for four months it brought before the childs birth; I hardly had an me wonderful relief. ache or pain, and when the child was tea days old 1 left my bed strong in health. E very spri n g e nd fall I now take abottleof Lydia E.Pinkhams Vegetable Compound and find it Veeps me in continual excellent health.Miw. J- II. Haskins, 3248 Indiana Ave., - Chicago, 111. not genuine. f 5000 forfeit If about testlmo-Hall- e Care and careful counsel Is what the expectant and ould-b-e mother needs, and this counsel she can secure without cost by writing to Mrs. Pinkliam at Lynn, Mass. 'Col. Codys Illustrious Descent. claims to be a lineal descendant of Mllesius, king of Spain, the famous monarch whose three sons, Ileber, Ileremon and Ir, founded the first dynasty In Ireland. The Cody family comes through the line of Here-mo-n Col. Cody KI.LUI1IK ASSA4S. .75 6) (ioUl ami bilver.........$ 0o)d ! ) Lead i, Silver am Copper 1.60 PROMPT RHTIHNS ON MAIL 8MPLHS. L4uhSt CO. ASSAY OGDEN LIVE AL3NF? mnoiublo women who wish to x&rry, tuul 5 ptiulo for uq. Heart A UaudeKAOSsa City, WHY BOYS WHO MAKE HONEY In a dainty little booklet, 35 out of some 3000 bright boys tell in their own way just how they have made a success of selling THE SATURDAY EVENING POST Pictures of the telling how they built up a paying busi-- I ness outside of school hours. GOT SOMETHING .OF HIM. Hawaiian Interesting stones of real business tact. We will furnish you with Ten Copies the first week Free of Charge, to be sold at Five Cents a Copy ; you can then send us the u holesale price for as many as you find ou can sell the next week. If you want to try it, address Boys Department Tfcs Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia Pray for Volcano to Become Active. "In Hawaii we pray for ML Kllauea ta become active, and the more eruptions there are the better we like It. said Philip Peck, a hanker of Hilo, at the New Willard last nighL "An eruption does not harm," he added naively. Doesnt do any harm? Well, It appears that Mont Pelee did plenty of harm. "That was a different kind of an activity from ML Kllauea. In Hawaii, where ML Kllauea has not been disturbed for two years, the eruption is of slight consequence. But it is a great signt to see the great lake of lava boll over the sides of the crater and push its way down into the bowllike valley which has been formed by eruptions more violent in the ages Colored Preachers Presence of Mind Good in Emergency. Uncle Buck Taylor, a veteran negro preacher, who i3 q character in Rappahannock county, Va., is the hero of story that sent the column from Linden, that state. In the midst of an Baptist meeting in Crooked Run, he was interrupted in a terrifying description of hell by a pretentious young negro, who held that Uncle Bucks ideas were unworthy of Intelligent consideration, and told the congregation that education had killed off such notions of the hereafter. The old man recovered himself, however, and, when his opponent had resumed his seat, went on: Leme tell yo one thing all ub yo' ahre mo worthy of Hebbln an mo shuah up it than that semnary past nigger. Pared to him, we ahre all one Is unusual an such The sight that it causes a great influx of visitors as shuah ub hebbln as I am shuah to each year, and that naturally is a good kill dat fly! The thing for the island financially. Thats hand pulpit shook as his big, black descended on the ible. He why we like the volcano to be active. Kllaueas crater is the largest in the peered forward, looked scared for a world. People used to go and sit by moment, and then, a boyish smile the edge to watch for an overflow of spreading over his face, the old man the lava. The guides could tell al- genially explai jd: Damf he didnt done git away most to the minute wnen these overI I got his but eyelash, brudders and flows would occur. sisters! In 1882 there threatened a great eruption, and the natives were afraid Sustain the Foot-Easthat the town of Hilo would be in- Supreme Court Trade-Marjured. The Princess Ruth, of the in Justice Court, royal family of Kamahameha, went to Buffalo, has ordered a Supreme permanent Inlava the which down the mountain acwith and full a costs, junction, had begun to run. With her she carcounting of sales, to issue against ried several chickens and one or two Paul B. Hudson, the manufacturer of other animals. Standing by the edge the foot powder called Dr. Clarks Foot Powder," and also against a of the crater, she threw up her head retail dealer of Brooklyn, restraining she was one of those imperial-lookinDr. women and weighed about 40u pounds. them from making or selling the Foot Powder, which Is declarClarks HawaiiShe called out, addressing the ed,, in the decision of the Court, an an god: imitation and infringement of Foot-Eas- e, the powder to shake into your Pelee, you promised never to hurt Hilo; now I come to remind you of shoes. Allen S. Olmsted of Le Roy, N. Y Is the Owner of the trade-mar- k your promise. Similar suits will be "With this she threw tne chickens "Foot-Easothers who are now into the lava. The next day the dis- brought against Foot-Eas- e on tradethe infringing turbance somewhat subsided, and the mark and common law rights. natives attributed to the princess the credit of it. Washington Times. Deserved His Name. said the old man, pensively, Yes, Plso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used him Oregon. we called WM. for all affections of the throat and lungs. Because he rolled high once in a O. E.ndslev. Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10. 1900 while, we suggested, for we were familiar with the works of William He Wanted His Dinner. Cullen Bryant. A visiting Englishman who attended No, said the old man. because he a dinner given recently by a New two seasons wet and dry when had York hostess whose hospitality is nohe was broke and when he wasnt. toriously inadequate, xnaue a reply to Not having the gift of repartee, our her that it will be difficult for her to comment was Oh! only live down. Her dinners have been referred to as samples, and invitaCure a Cold in One day. tions are not accepted with alacrity Take To Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Ail the second time. The Englisnman druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25a was a big fellow, whose family had been kind to the hostess whea in LonMcKinley Chime Dedicated. don. The dinner served merely as an A chime of ten bells was dedicated appetizer to the hearty Englishman, to the memory of William McKinley but the hostess did not notice It, and in Lincoln, Neb., last week. They are Now do tell placed in the spire of the largest said to him amlcaoly: me when we may have the pleasure of church in the city, St. Pauls MethImodist. They were dedicated with imhaving you dine with us'again? mediately, madam, immediately," was pressive services, after a sacred conhis unexpected reply. cert from the bells. McKinleys favorite hymns, "Lead, Kindly Light, and Nearer, My God, to Thee, wer Sharp Trick Stopped. played. A new Catholic church at Heidel berg was almost finished when work Hall'a Catarrh Cure stopped and entrance was forbidden. Is token internally. Price, 75a It appeared that certain busts of the apostles above the high altar In the How Flies Convey Poison. choir, having large patriarchial beards, The corps of investigators from th were suddenly visited by the parish authorities and their beards rudely Liverpool School of Tropical Medinow working in West Africa, pulled, came off, being cunningly cine, formed of plaster of paris and then has discovered that an insect resemrubbed to resemble the rest of the bling the one which is responsible heads. The busts were then seen to for the fly diseases In horses, coneffect-ivelbe portraits of the architect, the veys malarial poison to man as as the mosquito. builder and the sculptor. e g e. 9kkkkkkokokhchkkckkkk Amusing Things Noted in Streets of Boston 6ookkkhkkkko' The Boston policeman wears a do-- ; lichocephalic helmet. Dolichocephalic is elang respectable and anthropological slang, to be sure, and hence as pleasant to a Boston palate as a baked bean. It means and the piece of head-gea- r which tops the Boston policeman Is not but hlga only crowned. No matter what may be the nationality of the wearer, it gives an air of seemly and official recognition of the intellectual traditions of the town. The policeman and his scholarly helmet are quite typical of present-daPoston typical of the compromises which this staid old town has made with the modern conditions which have seeped in and percolated to its very core. Such changes are not expected the ordinary by visitor who gets off at the Boston terminal. He expects Revolutionary relics and bits of family skeletons displayed at every turning. Usually he is not disappointed, for the old school Bos-Dolichocephalic. Ionian keeps up pretensions. You go into a restaurant and find that the waiters are all young women. The head waiter wears spectacles and has probably written a monograph on beans. You had expected beans on the bill of fare and you are not disappointed. The Boston day is divided into five periods, breakfast, luncheon, dinner, tea, supper, and you need not be disappointed about beans at any one of them. On the whole the Boston car service is good. The Bostonian knows it. the stranger knows it, the individual in blue and brass who opens and shuts the gates at the underground stations knows it. He occasionally reveals his notion of its importance by shutting the gate when a family is half way on and putting it asunder regardless of the scriptural Injunction. This unseemly haste is made up for elsewhere, how'ever. Out on the boulevard for instance, the cars run in re-i- t starts up while you are alighting to catch It. This gives you ample time to rest for the next car, which Is due in half an hour. In this way a trip is made with minimum fatigue. When a passenger drops his hat, the motorman stops and holds the procession till the hat is recovered. Out across the marshes beyond Chelsea, where the haycocks are put up on stilts to keep them out of the Atlantic ocean, the conductor goes through the car warning people to hold onto their hats. That is a delicate little attention and is especially appreciated since the rage for Panama hats. You can see these everywhere in Boston and the better grades of straw look like a halo when set around the Puritan cast of countenance which vegetates in the Harvard yard and up and down Milk street. They look like the withered ghosts of the old affairs of the time The city line takes you to a street station where you are transferred to interurban cars and so on. A car stands in waiting until your car reaches the street station. Then grim Fathers, and it is possible that some latent instinct has something to do with their local popularity. It Is not an uncommon thing to have a street blocked by a crowd gathered Panaaround a display of mas. But then, that is not such a difficult thing in Boston. The streets are so narrow that they have to stretch ropes along to get a procession through. A few days ago a row of men in front Df a dry goods store window reached quite across Washington street. Just why they were standing there and just what they saw did not appear to the passerby. The merchant. It seems, had wished to advertise some especially fine lingerie. Now the good taste of Boston forbade his displaying it broadcast in his window. The pieces were slipped over his best wax model and a dressing gown long-heade- long-heade- y gastro-nomicall- broad-brimme- y Pil-lay- s. d two-doll- Health will come with all its blessing to those who know the way. and it is mainly a queswith all the term implies, but the efforts whiclAtrengtlien the system, tion of the games which refresh and the foods which nourish arc important, each in a way, while it is also advantageous to have knowledge of the best methods of promoting freedom from unsanithat the tary conditions. To assist nature, when nature needs assistance, it is all important medicinal agents used should be of the best quality and of known value, and the one remedy by of which acts most beneficially and pleasantly, as a laxative, Co. the California Fig Syrup With a proper understanding of the fact that ljiany physical ills are of a transient character and yield promptly to the gentle action of Syrup of Figs, gladness and comfort comecon-to the heart, and if one would remove the torpor and strain and congestion attendant upon a from the aches and stipated condition of the system, take Syrup of Figs and enjoy freedom bowels. In case of of the to due and headaches the inactivity and colds depression pains, the laxative is required any organic trouble it is well to consult a competent physician, hut when a follow cooperation wUh will results most personal remember that the permanently gratifying the beneficial effects of Syrup of Figs. It is for sale by all reliable druggists. Price fifty . cents per bottle. Tho excellence of Syrup of Figs comes from the beneficial effects of the plants used in the and combination and also from tho method of manufacture which ensures that perfect purity the of AH members the family laxative. a in essential family of perfect uniformity product needed and from the youngest to the most advanced in years may use it whenever a laxative is is the remedy or of only claim not do that We Figs effects. beneficial Syrnp share alike in its acts laxatives it that over gently all other known value, hut it possesses this great advantage from every oband pleasantly without disturbing natural functions, in any way, as it is free effects it is always necessary to buy the jectionable quality or substance. To get its beneficial Fig Syrup Co. is printed on the front of every and the full name of the right-living- 1, is-S- yrup Figs-manufa- ctured package. STOW W. N. U.. Salt San Francisco, CaL Wain I m Beat Cooffh ftwnr LSI FAILS. Good. SEBEGEESZEE r tin time. EMd fry druggist. 3 New York, N. Y. Use do narvdus system Suddenly. It Injure it will tell you when to top a it take wy the desire for tobacco. You have no right to ruin your health, spoil your digestion and potoon vour breath by using th filthy weed. A guarantee in each box. Price cure or $1.00 per box, or three boxes for $2.90, with guarantee to Write for us. from direct or At all good Druggists . BACO-CUR- O frbkiet. La Crosss, V18. EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., moneyrefunded. The Demurs Corset Form, a mirror was placed in the further corner, and the model stood up so as to face iL The back of a wax figure in a dressing gown could not offend even fastidious Boston, but at a certain angle the looking glass told a different story. How that line of men collected down that angle and took a turn at first place is a secret of the sex. Whether the merchant sold any lingerie thereby Is a question. But it was certainly a bold step in a shopping quarter where the corset forms wear nose glasses and are the acme of propriety. For severity and general dignity of presence there is nothing that approaches the Boston corset form except the statutes of the Hon. Daniel Webster. There are seventeen statues of Daniel Webster in Boston. They are all counted in th state cen added; TOBACCO DONT STOP to to. th 29. 1902 Lake-N- o. There is a tradition that if ever they do fly off. the seventeen buttons will A revolutionary go simultaneously. society has, it is said, appointed a committee of seventeen dames to sew them on again without delay. The dowager corset forms and the he ventured to the car again, and as These are the stories of his Lord-shithe Snake as related in my pres- he was about to take hold of the ence by four reputable citizens whose brake again heard a hissing noise. words are as good as their bond, says For a moment he hesitated, and then, a writer in the Philadelphia Times. thinking the startling noise came comprise from the engine, he grasped the top These tales of adventure of the brake again with both hands. the output of a sirgle summer. The first story was told me by Mr. The next instant he jumped into the Cosgrove, the Farmer, who relates air and gave a yell of pain. The train was Instantly stopped, an Incident which fell under his observation. He was busy one day re- and the engineer and fireman, rushpairing an old rail fence between his ing back, fiurd him reclining on the cornfield and meadow, when suddenly roof of the car, meaning as if sufferhis attention was called by his hired ing from intense pain. It seems what man to a curious phenomenon about he thought was the brake was nothfive rods away. A large black ring, ing else than a huge blacksnake, fif- some sixty or eighty feet In circumference, appeared to be whirling about in the grass with indescribable of the circle Portions swiftness. would be on the ground, while other parts were in the air; and there was a strange undulation all around the circle. Ancient and Honorables. just It was, said Mr. Cosgrove Hon. Daniel Webster have other ri- like a rubber hose whirling around in vals in the realm of sculpture. There the grass. We went a little closer, iron hitching posts at utterly at a loss as to what It could are twenty-eigh- t the main entrance to Boston common mean. When within a hundred feet and never a procession goes hy that we stopped, and could see that the historic plot but every one oi those ring jvas larger in some places than It was moving so fast, pedestals is occupied by an animated, In others. bright-eyehowever, that we could make nothing boy. It. We watched for fully ten minThey were there a fortnight ago of at the end of which time the utes, when the Rochambeau procession motion grew slower and slower, and rode past and they watched the Bosour ton lancers joggle along in their dinky finally ceased. We then saw, to Wrapped His Tail Around My Arm. s or nine that amazement, eight red riding haDits. They were there teen or eighteen feet in length, that the been had joined together, last week when the Ancient and Honhad coiled itself up on the end of the orable Artillery company of Boston tail of the one being twisted about car in such a manner that he miscelebrated its 264th anniversary not the neck of the one following it. took the terrible reptile for the brake. When they ceased motion, added only the oldest but certainly the oddHe was bauly oitten in three places a man Mr. Cosgrove, my picked up est military company In America. near- on the hands and arms and suffering the snake at hurled it and rock Their barracks' are in the third story est us. All of a sudden all heads terribly. of Faneuil hall, The snake began unwinding itselt were up in the air, and a lot of ugly where revolutionand, I as soon as the train stopped, us. at were gazing eyes looking ary drums, some off the car, soon disappeared sliding man said but a my retreat, suggested atrociously In a thicket at the side of the track. he was not afraid and moved nearer paintings and old The brakeman was taken to his home, them. to invitations from and he was remedies were Suddenly three of the largest soon in a fair applied, his royal highness, Ento way recovery. tocame more two at started him, Prince of is the first Calkins this srys gineer ward me, and the rest remained still. Wales, are preI ran, while Jim climbed on a high instance of the kind on record. served in an atThe third story was told me by stump, in a hurry. The two ceased Mr. mosphere Fenton, the peddler, and it is a a in and went me and back, following smacks of patriotstory which is very remarkable of them nine whole moments the few ism and of the for vouched several by gentlemen of I the about ere circling stump. odor of the marthe greatest veracity. It seems that ket stalls below. the daughter of a Mr. From Faneuil hall Golding, a farmer living on the edge the members march once a year to the of the Great Tamarack Swamp, discommon where their drumhead elecappeared from her home. A dozen tion is held. men were sent out in Bearch of her, The Ancient and Honorable Artiland after many hours she was relery company never saw a battle as turned to the arms of her agonized such, but has had some stirring names parents by Mr. Fenton, the peddler, on its roster. At the annual drills who related the following remarkable each member is entitled to wear the facts : uniform due his rank in some other The child wandered away from service. It offers a rare opportunity home at 3 o'clock in the afternoon in for the old war horse to furbish up search of the cow, and, unable to his trappings and show his paces once find it, endeavored to make her way again. Generals in epaulets and old out of the swamp. In doing so she time drill masters in marvellous garb missed the direction, and, night comtrudge along side by side in the ranks ing on, she was compelled to lie as privates. down and sleep at the foot of a large A return visit from the London comhickory tree. All the next day she pany, the parent organization, is exwandered helplessly about, and at pected in 1904 and then hats, even "Like a Rubber Hose Whirling. night slept in a place similar to the of the capacity of those of the Bosone of the night before. ton police, will not be large enough told Jim to be quiet while I ran to The rest of the story is best told the house for my shotgun. for these worthies. New York Sun. "One of the snakes came to the in her own words: As I was sitting on a log, crying, fence and kept watch of me, and Heredity Displayed. in the morning a great big blackcame back I with the he when gun That a boy with a square chin posout of a bush and, raissesses much the same attributes as a dropped to the ground, ran back to snake crawled the others, gave them a signal, and ing itS head, looked at me. I was man with a similar contour was amawfully scared, but did not dare to the whole gang made for the thicket. ply illustrated to the parents o ArThe second story reached me from run or scream. The snake came close thur. That young hopeful came in to to and I did not dare to move dinner triumphantly displaying a four-lea- f the lips of Mr. Calkins the engineer. for me, fear. It looked straight at me a of He tells his incident, queer life, clover. When you find that a while, and tjjen, turning around, kind of a clover its a sign some one while engineer of a freight train on the Lake Shore Tailroad, stating that wrapped its tail around my right arm likes you, he announced, proudly. a man who secured a position and started off. Well, I guess it must mean me. I as young "I held back, but it pulled so haul on his train had suffered brakeman like you, Artie, put in his sister May, from the bites of a huge I had to go. The snake kept on over severely . politely. bushes and across logs for a long blacksnake. No, it doesn't mean you, May, retime, holding on to my arm all the on run was of Calkins the It night turned Arthur, regretfully but firmly. while so hard that it hurt me. We to from Toledo Clevetrain freight means It Marjorie Brooks. went a long ways, and finally came was The land. the weather bad, night But you cant have Marjorie, spoke to a path and followed that right out as was as black darkness, up the elder boy, who was two years and the rain fell Egyptian of the woods. After a while we came at intervals. freely Arthurs senior. Shes my girl. Calkins pulled up his train at a wa- to some haystacks and then a house. Now, see here, Charlie, said ArWhen we saw that, the , snake tank near a piece of tering thur, his square chin getting squarer, woodland. The train heavy stopped for ten stopped, raised its head and let go. It when Marjorie got her hal cut yoq and soon after it started turned around, looked at me again, wouldnt have her cos Bne looked like minutes, was rushing down a steep grade and then started down the path to again a boy, so I took her, and now, cos at a terrific rate of the woods. I went to the house, and speed. her hair is long an she looks like whistled down brakes, they were very good to me. The engineer a girl again you want her back. But and the new brakeman who was in Discourage Irish Emigration. , you cant have her. Can he, pa? the caboose of the train, clambered The Irish Catholic bishops have met New York Evening Sun. the car and stoned the upon along and passed a series of resolutions He train to tighten up the brakes. Baths In Finland. . embodying a powerful appehl to their One of the greatest trials a visitor people against emigration. The flow-- ' In Finland has to endure Is a Finnish of emigrants from Ireland has been bath. The method of procedure is somewhat checked, but It still goes on at the rate of 250,000 every teto unique. ' Divested of outer clothing and attired in a light and airy cotton years, and as those who go are tlhe garment, you are slung in a sort of young and strong and enterprising hammock composed of cord above a the prospect for Ireland, with a population of only 4,250,000 is very serilarge receptacle like the boilers In ous. The United States and Canama public laundries; this is almost filled with cold water, into which, at the get most of the emigrants, anr, though one hears of those who make right moment, is flung a large red-ho- t brick or piece of Iron, which of course a success of their trip across the At-- j causes an overwhelming rush of steam lantic, the record Of failures is never to ascend and almost choke you. Then published. America ia still the land of promise to the sanguine Irish lad, when that process has gone on suffand the only thing that holds back iciently long you are shaken out of your hammock, immersed in cold water, many of them 1b the want of money to and after very drastic treatment you pay their passage and the. necessary resume your raiment, sadder bit over. There haa been founded in and wiser than before your novel experIreland an league, which- - aa yet has token little hold. ience. Nevertheless, opinion is growing on Struck Him In the Face. Was It Worth It? the subject and the feeling ia rising A Kansas farmer, fearful of losing rushed over the roofs of the rear cars, hat those who go are in a way "dehis crop of 500 acres of wheat offered which were wet and slippery, and suc- serters. How far these efforts will ceeded In putting on the brakes of prove effective is beyond the hiB daughter as a prize to the young range man who could cut the most wheat la each ear. When he reached the fourth of prophecy. . rear he balanced himself a specified time. The farmer saved car from the Coming of Earl of Roaalyn. his wheat, but the question is, was it and prepared to tighten the . brake. The Earl of Rosslyn will act In this As hq grasped what he .thought was worth the cost? the brake something struck him in country next season under the name the face, knocking him down upon of James Erskine. He spent a fortune Veteran Singer Still Active. John W. Hutchinson, the last living the roof of the car and nearly hurling of 11,500,000 and has since been church singer, organist, traveling him from the train. member of the famous Hutchinson was He thunderstruck at the salesman and female impersonator. family of singers, was present at the Old Settlers association of Leod ooun-tThe ratio of newspapers issued In strange blow that had felled, him, and Minnesota, several days ago, and for a moment clung to the roof of the the United States hud Canada is as 44 sang "Old Granite State with all the car, tertorstrioken and speechless. to 1, while the population 4s only IB After recavering hid .to l. vigor and vim of former years. , p 5$ d black-snake- bad the that , - . Louisville Ky. to fly off. It is an extremely nervous matter for a good housewife to watch one of the statues for any length of lime. , Co.-Cali- fornia genuine sus to increase the municipal representation. In every one of them the eminent statesman stands with two sturdy fingers straddling a button of his frock-coat- . The impression conveyed is that the button is about n , y, , fi yep 'rrK 'm" Vipqwi f -- j , |