OCR Text |
Show CONGRESSMAN To Tlio WILBER serious of Kidney ills. The first slg-- Wandering Alaskan Indian Astonished at Beasts of Burden signals in Prospectors Camp Dog Teams the Only comes Traffic Carriers Known to Him. from tbe back with numer- The Only One of the 30, COD Inhabtants of the Unfortunate Qty of St Pierre Who Escaped with Life After the Eruption of Mt. Pelee. CongTsssman D. F. Wilber, of Oneonta, If. Y., writes: The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen "Persuaded by a Mend I have tried your remedy and I ban. almost tully recovered after the use of a few bottles. I am fully convinced that Peruna Is all you claim for It, and I cheerfully recommend your medicine to all DA VID F. WILDER. wbo are afflicted with catarrhal trouble. Parana Preventive and Care for Colds others who are similarly afflicted to try - Edward Laws. Mr C F. Given, Sussex, N. B , Vice Peruna.e President ot The Boating Club, A Promlneut Singer Saved From Loss of Voice. writes; Whenever the cold weather sets in I Mr. Julius WeMitz, 176 Seneca street. have for ears past been very sure to Buffalo, N. Y.f is corresponding secretary a severe cold which was hard to of The Bargerlust, of New York, is Un? throw off, and which aontd leave loading second bass of the Kangerlust, the on my constitution the most of the inrgent German singing society of New winter. York, and aUo the oidet. The Ssagerlust celebrated its JLast winter I was adviser! to try Parana, la broken cold within was live days the and fiftieth anniversary with a large celebraI well was more a in five and uiau New in York City. The following is tion up days I recommended it to several of my irieuds hjj testimony t it. for all and AoOut ttfd years ago I caught a severe speak the highest praise There Is nothing like Peruna for catar- cold while traveling and which settled into rhal afflictions, It is well nigh infal- catarrh of the bronchial tubes, and so aflible as a cure, and I gladly endorse fected my voice that I was obliged to canIn distress. cel my engagements. was it C. K Given, ,w " advi-e- d to try Peruna, and although 1 had never pwed a patent medicine before, I sent nve New Life and Strength. for a bottle. Words but illy describe my surprise to Crown jJjJ'Ta'nl Laws, Point, Ind., Mr. find that within a few days I was greatly writes the following: relieved, and within three weeks I was 1 must tell you wbat a grand help Peruna 1 nevqj without it bftt rl8n ta me. For over two years I entirely recovered, suffered with Catarrh of the luirfrs an4 Sow, ahdtak$ 32 occasional dote when I throat, nd although I doctored foP ft, feel run pwn, "Julian Weissut. If you do not derive prompt and satisfacnothing brought me relief until I tried Peruna. One bottle heiped me greatly, tory results from the use of Peruna, write and three more effected a complete cure, at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statewhile at the same time it gave such new ment of your case aud be a ill be pleased to Ufe and strength to mv whole body that 1 give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr Hartman, President of The feel like a new man aud ten years younger. I hope that my testimonial may induce Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, O, t IL BARICE, the negro who of the 30,000 inhabitants of St. Pierre was the sole survivor of the devastating eruption of Mount Pelee, has arrived in this country. Cil Barice doubtless was able to reach the United States mainly through the kindness of a party made up of Chicago physicians who have just returned. CM Barice acted as guide for the Chicagoans and when his duties were over they made up a substantial purse for him by means of which he was able to reach New York. In the party visiting Martinique were Dr. and Mrs. D. R. Brower. Dr. Brower took- more than 200 photographs of the scenes of destruction about the base of Pelee and interesting points In Martinique. One of these pictures is that of the exterior of the prison in which Auguste Cil Barice was a prisoner at the time that his fellow citizens perished. "Cil Barice is a most interesting He is a fellow," said Dr. Brower. negro of full blood and is a muscular, athletic fellow. His story of the days that he spent in the dungeon before relief came, with his burned flesh torturing him and famine gnawing at lis Past-tnu- after-effect- ' DRUNKENNESS CURED. .... Thousands of homes made happy every year by this treatment. Host thoroughly equipped Institution in the west Modern and up to date in every respect Cures positively made. For terms and literature, address .... THE KEELEY INSTITUTE. iee aaar sirst south st.. salt lakb oitt, utah. Fakirs Have Easy Thing. The natives of India never allow a fakir of whom there are 3,000,000 who live by begging to starve. Beware of Ointment for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, mercury will surelr destroy the sense of smell end completely detanve the whole svstem when entering it thiouxb the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be u,sed except on presenp tions from reputable phwinan. as the damage the wilt do is tenfold to the good von can possibly derive from them H.tli s Catarrh Cure, manufactured bv F. J Chenev & Co. Toledo. O., contains no meirurv and is taken internally, actinu diiectlv upon the blood and inucmis surfaces of the svstem, In buying HaU s Catarrh Cure be sure you It is taken internally, and made get the genuine n Toledo. Ohio, by F J Cheney & Co. bold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. Halls Family Fills are the best. As THINCJ,bi rn y&W&t Libbys Natural Flavor Food Products These delicious preparations allow of all sorts ol impromptu spreads without the impromptu appearance, and permit the hoateae to enjoy rather than slave. Our booklet, "How to Make Good Things to Eat." free to housekeepers. Libby Atlas of the World, containing 32 new maps, published rimsfily (or us by the largest ioap and at!a publisher in America, is weadynow. Indexed, and gives new maps JpA China. South Africa, the Philippines. Cuba. Porto Kica. and is of as much practical use as any atlas published. We mail t H to any address lor stamps Libby. McNeill & libby. Chicago The WarWi Oreateit Caterer. TOAST CURE FOR OYSfEPSIA. Resultant Benefits Said to be Immediate and Lasting. Many families that number dyspeptics among their members are now taking wbat might be termed the toast cure, toast being substituted for bread at every meal. In many cases the good results have been rapid. A woman of my acquaintance has been steadily improving, with fewer and fewer attacks of Indigestion, since her doctor recommended this simple the toast However, experiment. made In the ordinary way, that Is soggy within and scorched outside, will not benefit The bread must be thoroughly dried out In the oven before toastipg, then brought to a golden brown. Perhaps more than one dyspeptic sufferer could trace the misery back to Even "second day soggy bread. bread is not dry enough for a delicate stomacb, and contrary to an erroneous Idea held by many, toast (properly made) does not cause a sluggish state of tbe system or work any other evil. Croker Has Fine Racing Stable. Speaking of the racing stable of a distinguished American the London "Mr. Croker has got World says: together a very useful stud, and It will be surprising if his colors Yale blue jacket and cap with gold tassel are not frequently seen to the front during the next two or three years. - PRESIDENT JOS. F. SOTS WIFE BATS OF THE PERFECTS Three Crown Baking Powder. "We always use Three Crown Baking Powder. We buy it in large (5 lb ) cans. It gives perfect satisfaction. By using it onr pastry and pies are made excellent." DOES VOUR WIPE 8 AY THE SAME? BOLD EVERYWHERE. 25o PER POUHD. HEWLETT BROS. CO. THE KEST COOKING vitals, is a thrilling recital. He owed his escape to the thickness of the walls of his prison and to the fact that the entrance did not face the volcano. His escape, probably, has no parallel in He was there alone with hia history. torture for three days when help came. When we reached we attempted to get transportation overland to St. Pierre. No diver could be found willing to attempt the jourThe awful fear of a repetition ney. of the catastrophe of May 8 is still One cannot blame them upon them. for the feeling. With the memory of 30,000 men. women and children annihilated in the twinkling of an eye fresh in their minds little wonder It is that they are still timid. Add to this memory the fart that Pelee Is still smoking and that the air is charged with sulphur fumes and youll see that there is yet apparent cause for fear. The members of our party I think I can speak for all of them believe it was superheated steam that brought death to the inhabitants of St. Pierre. Three of us found skeletons in the ruined city. They were in exactly the same conditions as are the skeletons prepared for medical use by boilThe condition of the bones ing. makes it seem fairly certain to me that superheated steam, and not gas, was the cause of the fearful loss of life. "The experience of Cil Barice in the dungeon of thd city jail, goes to bear out this steam theory. He was badly burned, but he detected no odor which would suggest a burning gas. His clothing did not take fire, yet beneath it bis back was badly burned. I have photographs for which the negro posed and which show the nature of hia Injuries. "His case is unique in other respects than in his escape from death. He was locked In the city jail waiting trial In practically an instant for murder. the judge, the jury, the prosecuting attorney and the witnesses were de- - , THE 1 prep-aiatio- n TOWER ei-ryda- IF J PENSIOJ TOMdiraagEgT! In this once thriving seaport. "I picked up a ladys watch, a cork screw, a door lock and a fused goblet Several of my companions found silver coins, and I discovered a partly de atroyed bank bill in the ruins. I think t tt the mountain is not yet through with its work, though it may not send forth such a volume of destruction as it did in May and August last. It was only the direction of the wind which saved The oeople of that city can never bs assured of absolute safety. In the book recently 'written by Angelo Heilprin on the eruption of Mount Pelee is told the story of the escape of Cil Barice, and then Mr. Heiprin says that it was believed that another negro, a shoemaker. Leon Compere-Leandrby name, also The story of I.eandre'a experience is given In detail, though it was mostly hearsay. Dr. Browpr says that It is now said that in the story of escape is untrue and that Auguste Cil Barice is unquestionably the only one of the thousands of St. Pierre residents who went through the fiery ordeal and lived. Angelo Heilprin was the first man to reach the crater of Pelee after the eruption of May 8. He visited it again In August, on the day when the Morne eruption which . destroyed Rouge took place, narrowly escaping with his life. Mr. Heilprin says of the prisoner Cil Barice's experience; "So unique a record is perhaps not to he found in the pages of all history, and even from the lighter vein of romance it would be difficult to extract anything that has more extraordinary sphere who never saw a horse. said Quartermaster John F. Rice at the Normandie, but such is the case. 1 well recollect when with the expedition iu 1899 we found orselves one Sepfmber night several hundred miles from nowhere. Just as the sun was sinking over the Alaskan range the camp was startled by the report of a rifle. "We sprang to onr feet, prepared for any emergency, when our native guide discovered across the narrow valley an Indian who had just brought down a caribou. By the use of signs and signals he was Induced to come, into camp. After we had tanked him up with strong tea and loadod him to the guards with pork and beans his tongue limbered up and, through one of tbe guides, he informed us that he was a Matanuski, by the way, the fiercest tribe in Alaska, and that he was hunting caribou. At the time we discovered him he was 150 miles from the encampment of his tribe, which shows that the fellow had hig nerve with hint. He had never seen a horse and our pack animals excited his curiosity and wonder. He declared that no member of his tribe had ever seen a horse, all transportation in his coun- e e vvosk atroyed from the face of the earth, and Cil Barice is free with no one to lay a charge at his door. Out of the 30,000 dead at St. Pierre only 4,000 have been buried by the hand qf man. The volcano buried most of the rest of the victims, though the skeletons of some are still lylrg under the shattered houses. Undoubtedly there is treasure In St Pierre, the property of those ho perished, but as whole families dipd the heirs to the property went to death with the owners. As late as the time we were at St. Pierre there was only one man who had proved his claim to what property might tie found In the house of one of the victims. He had moved to another island some .time before and coming back after the catastrophe proved his right to heirship to the authorities, and while we were at St. Pierre we found him digging in the ruins of his kinsman's house. The searching of that one man was the sole evidence that we saw of attempts to recover y from 10,000 to 15,000 bells every year, and they are shipped to all parts of ihe country through the wholesale hardware houses. To several great cattle ranches of the West were sent recently a lot of the bella tuned in sets of an octave each, so that the bell bearers among the shifting herds answered each other in musical chime. Ranchmen say that bells echoing In tunes across the plains deter wolves from attacking the herds. The metal for the bells is received at the factory in large flat sheets of thin iron, direct Irom the rolling mills, and la passed under a steam-drivecutter, which turns out the properly shaped pieces like patterns for a ax. Then a ring for a clapper is fastened into the center of each n o the bells, ranging in size fiom the little three-incsheep belli, to the inch cow bells, are placed with a mixture of charcoal and brass filings between them, in plumbago crucibles, whose lids are held in place by a plastering of wet clay. Then these are immersed in the fire until ready for the final touch. Within the crucibles the brass spends itself in a thin coating over the imprisoned bells and the hell obtains its clear note. All that need be done afterward is to burnish the bells, which is done by throwing them, with a few leather scraps, into a big revolving cylinder, in which they polish themselves. The bell tongues are made in foundries and come with wire attached ready to bend on. seven-- h Some Old Cures for Rabies, 325,-oii- Powdered Crayfish and Laying Hens Prescribed by Physi, Doctor Had Various Methods of cians Old-timDealing With This Dread Disease. e - Dr, Stephen llradwell in the earliest known English book on first aid to the Injured, called by hint Helps for Sudden Accidents" (1633). endeavors to shuffle out of the serious discussion It. of mad dog bite by His method Is familiar even now. "Although, bays he, in this our country of England I have neither seen nor heard of any such terrible dangers happening to people by a mad dog's biting as in other regions, yet I have seen dogs mad. Cure, according to him, is easy and His own method of profrequent. cedure partly follows Celsus. "Labor to draw the contagion out of the wound by cupping glasses. He also advocates the use of the cautery and of sublimate, but departs from the common sense of antiquity when he suggests an application of pullets or pigeons that lay eggs," scarifications, leeches and drawing medicines. From the days of Galen to those of Rhazes and onward powdered crayfish was recommended as an antidote. Compliment President Francis of the St. Louis exposition was a busy man in his suite of rooms at Claridgea hotel in London. He was besieged from morning A till night with visitors. young American tourist quoted recently a story that Mr. Francis told at a dinner party to the Prince of Wales. The tourMr. Francis stated that two ist said; clergymen had exchanged pulpits for a Sunday. One of them, after he had finished preaching before hia unfamH liar congregation, was accosted by an old woman. 'Wherev sir, she said, is our own preacher? He has exchanged with me, said He is preaching to the clergyman. my people Well, they'll have a treat, she muttered. d g SHE CHOSE THE WRONG MAN. Tale Told of a D. A. R. Who Prided Herself on Ancestry. An amusing story is told by the New York Press of the wearing of A newly rich woman miniatures. who had seen her triends exploiting and grar.d-aunton ivory, blossomed forth with an amazing portrait, surrounded by emeralds and pearls, and dangled her ancestor at the end of a costly chain. Mrs. Suddendongh glibly Informed her friends that the man with the inspired eyes and the shook of glowing red hair was her paternal One day she was in a grandfather. gathering in Boston and exultingly displayed the portrait, telling the old story. One bespec tacled dame stared deSuddendoughs and, after Mrs. parture. she of the glasses said, What do you think of that? It was Patrick Henry's portrait and he was a bachelor! s new-foua- n Clover. Has Produced The botanniral papers report that De Vries, the great Duteh experimental evolutionist, has, by selection, produced a variety of clover which has normally four leaves. d Dislike Pictures of King. Native feelings in India have been hurt by the new rupee because the king appears on It without his crown. ig repugnant to To he the Oriental. Wanted an Improvement. said Col. A. K. Two countrymen. McClure, the president of the Clover club of Philadelphia, came to the Ity many years ago. anil wandered about, seeing the sights. Late in the afternoon they weie observed prowling aiong the river front, at a point wheie into the several sewers emptied saw the stream. A longshoreman taller of the two pause and lean down at the mouth of the ?ewer. Then he heard him call to his friend, who had gone on ahead: Hey. Bill, heres another spring." Bill called back : Well, ef taint that other one, I be durned ef I'd drink a drop of it ef I wuz you.' bare-heade- d Patents. patents covering apparatus for wireless telegraphy were Issued in the United States last year, making the total number IDS. Wireless Telegraphy Seventy-on- 'Goo-Go- on Star. Cowbells that melodiously chime on piece and it Is spanned with a little the western plains, sheep hells that iron strap for a handle. dingle on the big American sheep Finally the piece is bent down Into ranches, bells for grazing horses and the familiar bell shape, and its sides mules and all kinds of bells for the riveted together on the anvil. The bell farm and ranch are nearly all made is in shape then, but it still lacks tone in one factory, which stands on a hill- and ctoor. These are g lined by a side street in the little town of Co- coating of brass and a bath in a fiery llinsville, Conn. The factory turns out furnace. In nests of four nr five each Four-Leave- d Laotcas at To-nig- Collinsville, a Little 1 own in Connecticut, Produces Supply lor Nearly Entire Country Many Sets Made to Ping id Musical Chime, Condition Denounced by Man Who Has Studied Them. ' In no other city in the world outside of of New York are the conditions life so frightful, says Louis Veiiler, of the Tenement House commission, who has made a study of them. New York, he continues, is a city of disease, poverty, vice and crime, where the marvel is not that some children grow up to he thieves and worse, but that any become decent men and women. It Is a oily of ceaseless toil and endless privation, with no possible end for thousands but the potters field; a city where the great white plague reigns supreme, claiming its victims at the rate of 8, ODD per year; a city which has given 25,000 children to the state asylums and in which millions are annually expended in charity. The connection between these conditions and the condition of the tenements is very close, and in no other city are the people so badly housed. Ot ter cities can have light and air and space, but in New York we have dark rooms, without a window ot any kind. The lack of sanitary conditions produces conditions so shocking that I cannot in the faintest way describe them to you, and reporters from two of the most sensational newspapers in the city after looking at some photographs that I showed them said it would be impossible to publish them. Yet the wives and daughters of respectable workingmen have to live under such conditions. A pack dogs in summer. What amused him most was to see the animals eat grass, and every time thvy would grab a mouthful of forage he would almost go into convulsions, he thought It so funny. In an ethnological sense the Matanuskis resemble the Apache Indians of onr plains. They subsist on the flesh of the caribou ami brown bear, the counterpart of the Rocky Mountain grizzly, and quite as ferocious, and aie greatly feared by the other tribes in Alaska because of their fierce disposition and warlike nature. Our guides, who were shore lndiaiiB, seemed to he afraid of the newcomer, and he Heated them with haughty contempt. Whenever he would shoot a fierce glance at them they would quail like whipped curs, and slink away from bis sight. "We found the shore Indians quite a jolly lot of fellows. Compared with the Matanuskis they were quite sociable and inclined to be obliging to white people. When camped on the Yukon quite recently I heard a small band of them singing the familiar song. Therell Be a Hot Time In the Old Town and that other tender ditty. Eyes. "Washingt- Where Cow Bells Are Made , LIFE. Names for New Battleships. Of the five new battleships authorized by Congress the three 10,100-tovessels will be named Vermont, Kansas and Minnesota and the two 13,000-toMissisvessels will be named sippi and the Idaho. CONTEST. WtsHviiP ous aches and It la hard to believe that there are try being conducted by dog teams pains. hemihitched to sleds in winter, and by persons living in the western The second Fruit that Causes Blindness. Strange cases of permanent and been have lately total blindness traced, in the Cairns and Townsville districts of Queensland, to the eatfruit known as the ing of a wild "finger cherry," with a long red berry. A young man, aged twenty-threat Cairns Hospital hag lost the sight of both eyes. The blindness, caused by the destruction of certain nerves, is said to be incurable. POMMEL SLICKER Right in the Family Kitchen. IN WORLD Tbe ladies have a champion Interested in the betterment of family cooks. $7,600.00 in cash has been donated by C. W. Post, Chairman of the Poa-tuCereal Co., Ltd., to be distributed between now and July next in 7S6 cash prizes to stimulate family cooks Ac .11 our waterproof to better service. coats, suits end hats Less burned and greasy meat, and for all hinds Of wet work, potatoes; less soggy biscuits, cake, it is often mutated tut never equalled. etc., and better coffee, Postum and tea N SALE STALL Made in blacK or yellow is the motto. REUAftlC ttALR and fully guaranteed y The girls are fo compete In the 57 ICR TO THfc C0 VmkmKiiUtHl, AJ tirMnsTua non. mitodiww of good, dishes and in general cookery. Probably Grape-- 1 Nuts and Postum Coffee will come in .rfil'wVsiHTJ for some attention incidentally, but BICKPIIKU, wulilncmn. I. C.. the the tests will be conducted under the will quirk rrpllm B5ihNH.ol 10th Corn. Protccutiu Claim mote IB 7 daily direction of the housewife and 735 cooks will win varying cash prizes When An.wering Advertisement. from $200.00 down to $5.00, no one is required to pay anything whatever to Kindly Mention Thi. Paper. enter this contest and each winner W. N. U., Salt Lako-N- o. 16. 1903. will receive a large certificate or diploma with the big Postum seal in gilt, a badge of distinction much to be sought after. Particulars can be bad 3 C9iEi turn xu fin nuis. Bass Cough Hynip Tumi Chiod. Us by addressing Cookery Dept. No. 349 In time Soidbydrtigirietii. pi Battle of Postum Cereal Co., I.td., Creek, Mich. n 1 what was lost NEW YORK TENEMENT X - are There two Xodicino Co., of Colombo, 0. Po-ni-- TWO SIGNALS. Had Never Seen a Horses CIL BAR1CE IS HERE SAYS e American Money Spent in Paris. Americans bought in Paris last year $25,000 worth of goose liver pie, $28,000 of human hair and $120,000 worth of mushrooms. Dr. Bertenson, one of the physicians at the court of the czar, also professionally attends Count Tolstoi. bet-ter- n Weight Elephant Can Carry. . can carry elephant three tons on bis back. A i The ci aj fish were to he gathered when the sun was in a certain house and were to be cooked alive. There are five general remedies for the bite of a mad dog in Thomas (1659). Two rec"Manuscript ommend Btrong ale as a chief Ingredient in the medicines to be adminis- signal in ney comes the tions. Kid- secre- The urine Is thin and pale, or too highly colored, and showing . "brick-dus- t like deposit. Urination is infrequent, too frequent or excessive. You should heed these danger signals before chronic complications set in Diabetes, Dropsy, Bright's Disease. Take Doans Kidney Pi"s in tiro and the cure is simple. J. F. Walnwright, of the firm of Bones & Wain wrlght, paluteis and contractors, Pulaski, Va., says: "Four or five times a year for the past few years 1 have suffered with severe attacks of pain in my back, caused from kidney trouble. During thes t spells I was In such misery from the Xmstant pain and aching that it was almost impossible for me to stoop or straighten and it really seemed as if the whole small of my back had given away. At times I also bad difficulty with the kidney secretions which were discolored, irregular and scalding, and I was also greatly distressed with headaches and dizziness. I used a number ot recommended remedies hut I never found anything so successful as Doans Kidney Pills. When I heard of them I had an attack and procured a box of them. In a few days the pain and lameness disappeared, the trouble with the kidney secretions was corrected aud my system was improved generally. I have every confidence in Doans Kidney Pills." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Wainwright will be mailed to any part ot the United States on application. Foster-Mi- l bui n Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists, price 50 ferns per box. Years Gifts to Charity. Some curious facts in the matter of largo gifts for charity during last Annual. year are given in Appleton Of the immense amount given for were educational purposes contributed by persors still living, while of the total for ram work missionary foreign through bequests. The gifts and bequests, allowance being made for the breaking of some wills, aggregate $68,346,789, divided as follows: Edu' cational $20,127,525; institutions, church and Young Men's Christian Association work, $7,588,820; foreign missionary work, $263, 5u0; benevolent societies, $4,364,724; hospital museum and asylums. $26,480,958; and art Institutions, $6,372,422; SoNew York Historical $942,440; ciety, $50,000. ' Religious Condition of England. While tbe Church of England is inof schools sisting upon thousands maintained from public funds being converted into preserves for the inculcation of its particular dogmas, ail churches are losing their hold over the masses, and the national religion Is becoming a vague agnosticism. People may regret this, but regret does not alter fact, and nothing is sained by blinking it I omion Truth. five-sixt- Take This In Good Part. If you cant get to sleep count three billions, taking care to pronounce each number slowly and distinctly. If this does not prove effective get out of bed and turn eighteen handsprings. Observe a proper regard for the unitered. fora lty of the thing, and see that One mixture includes ale, garlic, they 'are of the same size and velocsage, treacle and two ounces of ity. If yon still find you are unable administo and is be scraped pewter, to get into the Land of Nod. take a tered thrice daily "by nine spoonfuls walk around the block, and then, if at a time. Another consists of pow- this means falls, go and find a big dered daws of crayfish and a suff- man and tell him be lie. Hell put iciency of treacle, milk, pine roots and you to sleep. the like, and Is to be given to man or dog for tbe dog was then also treatQUIT AND EAT. ed. 3 Madness In dogs, the same author Seme Coffee Tales. k opines, prooeedeth from black Show a woman an easy,, comfortaJuices wherewith a dogge more ble and healthful way to improve her than other beasts aboundeth, but of and she Is naturally inthe actual fear of water he can give complexion terested. no better account than that drinking j Coffee is the one greatest enemy of may product convulsions in the bitten fair women, for in the most of cases and may so come to be regarded with it directly affects the stomach prohorror. Lancet. ducing slight, and sometimes great congestion of the liver and therefore THE PLEASURES OF HOPE. causing the bile to be absorbed into the system Instead of going Its natAnticipation Always More Enjoyable ural way. The result Is a sallow, Than Possession. muddy skin and a train of diseases of An aged Maine grandmother who the different organs of the body long ago went to the land where there which, in all too many cases, develop aie no more disappointments used to into chronic diseases. , A lady speaking of how coffee afsay: Tell the children when you a:o In this fected her says: "I was very fond ot planning something for them. world there is more pleasure to be goc coffee but while drinking it was unfrom anticipation than from fulfilder the enre of the doctor mot of the lment." This homely philosophy is I- time for liver trouble, and was comllustrated anew every year at about pelled to take blue mass a great deal this siason when the seed catalogues of the time. My complexion was bail come around. To a man or woman aud I had a pain iu my side steadliy. who has once had the gardening fever probably In tbe liver. these gayly colored picture books are "When 1 concluded to quit coffee sure to bring on a relapse: and never and take Postum Food Coffee I had is the garden so beautiful or Its fruits it made carefully And from the very so luscious as they are in the imaginafirst cup we liked the taste of it bettion of tbe enthusiastic amateur when ter thzr any of the oul coffee. tbe and the brooks are "In a kb rt t'n.j the pain left my strawberry bed tinder six feet of snow. side and my friends began to comLewiston Journal. ment on the change in iny complexion and general looks. 1 have never seen anything equal to tbe good I got from "Too Far Up the Gulch. this change. President Roosevelt invited Capt making "A young lawyer in Philadelphia Seth Bullock and his wife to the named , whose life was almost a rauaicale at the white house the other burden from indigestion anil its train washerfirst Seth the night, (apt. of evils quit coff(,e some months ago iff uf Dcadwood and bus a record for Coffee. el iu mating many lud :m-from his and began on Postum Food He quickly recovered and is now well, expedient coamunitj by tbe slmp strong and cheerful and naturally of shooting them. He is an old triend loud in his praises of Posium of the Presidio t "Another friend, an old gentleman After the musicalc the Picsid-- nt of seventy, named , who for years said : one could and live, suffer suffered a!( how did "WpII. Seth, you like the and who sometimes from dyspep-imusic?" solute-food- , "It was too far up the gnkh for for weeks con'd cat no bread or or little a weak milk, only gruel me," Seth replied in the vernacular quit coffee upon my recommendation of the West that delighted the PresiHe and took tip Postum. began to get dent. better at once. Now he can eat rich said tbe "Next time you come, I President to Mrs. Bullock, "you'd bet- pastry or whatever he likes and well. perfectly ter take Seth's gun away from him, Names given by Postum. Co.. Batso he wout shoot a fiddler. New tle Creek, Mich. York World. Sen-dall- 's chol-erie- . u, |