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Show votf PAINFUL, TRYING TIMES Housework is hard enough for healthy - wom-- T an. The wife who baa a bad back, who Is HOWLAND HENRY" weak or tired all the time, finds her duties PROMISE heavy burden. Thousands of dis nervous, couraged, sickly women have ft VOILOK SIE1M3D Piciuf Telit HiKiy traced their troubles to sick a story have kidneys found quick and thorough relief through using Doan's Kidney Pills. The painful, trying times of womans life are much easier to bear If the kidneys are well. a California Case .Han Mr. Waluh. 149 Tenth Ay., Frncio, I had such sharp, shooting Cal., mts pains that a knife were through my ktdners it seemed Mr back was so lame I being thrust into ui could hardly tUMsp ltoan's kulne? Pills cured roe after doctors failed. 1 bare had Dotroubiesince." Gat DosaU at Any Store, 50c a Boa DOANS- WAV CO- FOSTER-MILBUR- BUFFALO. N. Y. SAW 0PPORTUNITC FQRJQKEL lefts Reply to Request Had Secretary of War on the Anxious Seat. President -- WilMam H. Taft, when he was president, never overlooked an opper-tunit- y for a joke. In the closing months of his adm nistration Henry L. Stimson, then secretary of war," wrote Mr. Taft a very urgent request that he give a' friend of Stimson ft certain federal position. One of our rich men has explained that s Mr. Taft wrote to Stimson as he regards his fortune as a trust, and ; that he Is ever conscious of the respon- I am veryy' sibility of his stewardship. My Dear Stimson:rr sorry I cannot do anything for your If I could by some hook ot CfooTt friend in response to your letter of , a multimillionaire That Is, If peoples Interests might bs entoday. V1 would like to accommodate trusted to my care but it k impossible. Sincerely you, If I possessed a stewardship which X, jourS, somehow, had won from those Who had no wish to let me rule, who WILLIAM H. TAFT. might remain my bitter foes. wrote: Under he tbkt Id hold my fortune as a trust to be reTurn over. turned when 1 was through With all the Joys it brought and when Then Mr. Stimson read on the othmy heirs had finished with It, too. er. side of the paper: I couldnt dp it today because I If I had millions other men had given gave the fellow the job yesterday. up reluctantly, Td feel that God who lyjoweth best had Popular Magazine. In His wisdom chosen me To be a steward and to hold my fortune Telling a Secret. only as a trust. And those who sought to stay my hand is doubtful w hpther the person It Id brand as foolish or unjust, And I would calmly suit myself In finding who asserted that secrets were made to tell, foresaw, even in his most cyni-- ' ways and means through which To justtry my stewardship if I were eal mood, anything like the following very, very rich. onversation in Das Echo: Lottie tells me that you told her If I possessed a trust I, too, would wear the secret that 1 told you not to tell a very pious air, Is practically Identical witbspeople one meets In And let the public aee that I waa sadly anyone. the Btreet every day, and this notwithstanding the weighted down by care; not-t- o she meanl isnt Oh, Id talk and about ms spend stewardship great Interval of time that must haye elapsed Yell I her. that told it you where end when my money Jo asd The YastTyJlifrerent conditions of life now pre- I chanced to pleaee, and covet still the Yes, I told' her that I wouldnt tell he found little vailing. Indeed, that the brain capacgains of poorer men. jrou if she told me, so please don't tell ity (some 1,500 cubic Centimeters) even exceeds And promise that my riches stl should be her that I told you! ' when I was through the present-da- y average. In this respect the skull With returned trusts and stewardships, and when is analogous to that of the Tilbury foesll man, my helra bad finished with them, as brick to which Professor Keith Is inclined to assign too. My dear," said Mrs. Snaggs to her an age of 30,000 years, judging from the position earth, though It will be what is a canard? husband, in which it was found, beneath 31 feet of strata. Inferred that Candid Confession. readily know what a canard is- Dont you Is do to He have bricks What brought you to this? asked also of opinion that the Tilbury man and nothing rather sneeringly. Snaggs, queried his Hailing neighbor are members Pf the same the good woman who had visited the with it. It i but the rain the word itself conveys its own Why, . ox -v&ms ji&a 14000 wash of centuries, the fine race, averaging over five feet in height, strongly jail for the purpose of distributing meaning. a being skulls and a striking ab- tracts among the prisoners. built, with I cant see Does t? Well, sence of of heavy ridges over the eyea, a race which HE village of Hailing, situated on "The hurry wagon and four police- tt. What does it really,dear? with suggest pieces larger, spersed mean, " the banks of the Medway some brick. Overlying this stratum was a layer of Huxley described as the river-betype, from men, proudly replied Peter the Why, a canard is something one its apparent haunts. This type is khown to have four miles above RochesterrEng I could of licked any two of sand with a layer of more recent brick earth believe, of course. canardly lived in paleolithic time, since a akull was lately em, and you can take it from me above It, then red loam, and finally the vegetable land, has sprung into fame to be sure! Why couldatI "Oh, discovered In. .company wlth. pleistocene fossils that they all got chewed up considabout through the discovery of a prehistop eoil altogether four strataaveragin think of that?" burled, in a Derbyshire cave. The laterportlon erable at It was. six feet In total thlckqess. toric manT henceforth the native of the paleolithic period is esthnated to extend of Hailing will be as full of meanThe top of the stratum In which the remains Stung, were found appears- to have been the land surface back, from some 25,000 for at least 150,000 years. ing to genealogists and anthropolDont Tell Anybody. . I want my money back for these This Is In showm race men roan This was lived. of the which the of as Hill or of that age Immeasurably superior ogists Galley "Who," asked the new reporter,' is here socks,", said the man as he handby the fortunate discovery, some 30 yards away, t In cranial development to the race represented the pretty girt at the desk over there ed the clerk a Tilbury of Neanderthal. package, The sign you At first sight the finding of a human skeleton of the charred and blackened remains of preby the Plltdow-- skull, supposing this to be human, in the corner? By George, shes a had up said the socks was guaranteed and unquestionably hundreds of thousands of beuty! Its too bad that a historic fire hearths, fragments of burnt bones strangely like the human skeleton of the presyoung. In- fer three months." ent day some six or seven feet below the surand wood, worked flints and many animal bones. years Intervened between the two. In compar- nocent girl like that has to be out in Well, what's the matter with the face does not appear an epoch making event, but The worked flints have been submitted to expert ing the great brain capacity of the Hailing man the world earning her own living socks? asked the clerk. when the conditions under which it was found that of the neolithic skull discovered near examination at the British museum, where the Thats Hiss' Laurens," replied the 1 wore them three weeks, end only In of be to are carefully considered. It .is just this striking of favor balance which la estimated to be at assistant city editor. opinion appears She runs our I had to take them off and bay another most not more than 4,000 years old, we do not Advice to Mothers similarity to the living type that renders the assigning them to the paleolithic period, or, at department pair because this pair had holeq. In find the development expected, since the latter any rate, to the time of transition between that Hailing man so interesting and valuable. An the toes, replied the man. would a neolithic which ot and their of brain details has the but 1,260 cubic been unearthed which assures array age, possessed place capacity NO REST FOR HIM. the investigators that, they have herelhe remains age at some 15,000 years. Geological evidence, centimeters, whereas the skull of the Galley Hill Sure. of an individual who long preceded the builders man, regarded as the oldest British example (exhowever, dates them still further backfor the Yes, said the Does absence make the heart Gabe -- of of Stonehenge,--a' man who dates back at least side the the oi a has brain Plltdown) yet discovered, cepting opposite corresponding deposits scientist, Ive grow fonder? to what Is vaguely known us the early neolithic the Medway have yielded fossils of pleistocene capacity of between 1,350 and 1,400 cubic centidiscovered anothSteve Yes, of your creditors. meters. Professor Keith, in his work on The times, when the hairy mammoth, arctic fox, reinperiod, but who more prolmbly lived his strenuer germ. ous le under the severe conditions obtaining Ancient Types of Man," notes that In an average deer and woolly rhinoceros roamed the land. The Im so glad When put to the test, some virtues modern man of the Galley Hill skeletons stature have here a paleotoward, the end of the- - paleolithlcagc, warring Inference, therefore, Is that his wife. ere found to be thinly veneered. replied .with the mammoth, the woolly rhinoceros and one should expect a brain of 1,450 to 1,415 cfiblo lithic. encampment, and that the skeleton was Now you can one of the party, who, Judging-frothe position centimeters (and) there are many men in England other aggressive creatures of the pleistocene a good, long, take Tlie famous skull discovered by Mr Charles of the remains, was interred a short distance today, with smaller .brains than the Galley Hill m below the then surface, while some religious Big- man. Haw son in the Weald of Sussex last year belongs These remarks will apply with still more rest, niflcance Is suggested by the body being buried force to the Hailing man. -- Regarding such primi--. totlio firstchapter of the Instoi'y he Triumph future; "Oh. no. The hardest part ia still with the head to the east n tlve types as the Neanderthal, Gibraltar and Jbe discovery made recently ut Hailing yields to be done. Ive got to invent a name materials for a much later chapter the one glv How .did the human remains come to lie in skulls, their antiquity must. tie measured for the thing. this stratum of brick earth? Dr. Edwards obiug an account ot Englishmen towards the close-oby many hundreds of thousands of years, if we a theposition--nf'-tthe pleistocene period Between the Sussex frotietr'whlch"'' 'are that process of evolution has rsemLtronw ' B - This. Only ,... .uni-uIS an Immensely ond remained fast in place, that the skeleton lay on x developed such high paleolithic types directly me not wisdom. Bring from these progenitors, Its back, that all parts of the skeleton Wrere replong stretch of tune the time necessary for carvbe Though folly vsln; resented, and that' the whole did not occupy Bring me not riches, ing out the greater part of that wide and deep Though poverty's pain; hollow betwetfii the North and South Bow ns. In REAL TROUBLE. more than an extent of three feet in length Bring me not splendor. that time man shed tjie last of .his anthropoid evidence that the body was In the "contracted" Though rags may be Vila, featuies and assumed his modern form for the First Excited Railroad Official Heard the posture at death. A complete skeleton, much Bring me pot glory. t But teach me to smile. one of ourselves, and the Sussex news? weathered and fragmentary, and In a'eontracted Hailing man individual most certainly is not The Impor$econd Same Thing Oh. not so bad. Only posture, could only be explained by supposing Give me not power. dishes delicious Many five killed two of em brakemen. tance of the present dtscovery is that, until now. that It had been buried. The solution of the Though smallness be' mean; . have from disve knew very little of our British predecessors been made First Rut, my heavens, didnt you know that Give me not grandeur. problem became appaFfrnt later. At some - w kh that - vaudeville me But make at the close of the pleistocene period serene;' tance Jrom! Ike site skeleton he along Indian Corn by the skill baggage we were Bring me not homage. extensive remains of, ancient fire hearths. TheMedway half played a parTYii carving out carrying Jungleo, .tfc 1200,000 trained baboon? But leave me obscure. and ingefiuity of the exthe Weald of Sussex; It lias cut the 'bottle-neckThese lay Immediately over the stratum conThe wreck drove him crazy, and the owners If mine be the courage Tn To hope and endure. , the North Iwn8 at Rochester to reach gorge pert cook. taining the skeleton, and under the overlying or getting ready to sue the road for his full value. x the valley of On Its western, bank Puck fourth stratum. This level represented an old -Part of the Business. of these creafour miles above" Rochester, "stands the land surface, and the skeleton was probably. one , But none is oculists it that and "Why optilittlu village of Hailing where the recent discovof the men who. sat round the hearths on that JUST TO TRY THEM OUT. tions excels Post Oast- ' cians always wear glasses? old land surface. That Is the explanation Mr. ery was made Hot ween the village andUie rtvew in die "I ies unless dont know, lies a stretch" of marshland nearly half it mile tempting, palate. its for the Cook suggested at a recent meeting pf the Royal You Require a serious surgical operation." same reason that tailors always wear .in wldtv but s the village is approached the I am not' surprised.- - , Anthropological institute, when he gave. an ac- y Toasties are a lux- - ' Hand rises sharply to form a terrace 15 feet above count of his discoveries: Mr. A. S. Kennard. ..Ah.-yo- u knew then by the way you felt that good clothes. the level of the river. The terrace extends along who Is our highest authority on the age of valthere was something serious the matter with toy that make a delightboth sides of the valley; It is composed of stratiNot In the Same Class. ' ley deposits, regards the strata over the Hailing . you? ful economy. fied brick earths Aren't you and Mrs. TOUnghast ou In this terrace, between the man as late pleistocene In date. Mr. Cook deNo; I expected I would require an operation marshland by the river and the village of Hailing, terms? scribed1 the flint implements, found on the old land when I learned that you had purchased.. new friendly The first package teBs---- its " nr ' surface, but- the skeleton was exposed. .'Gracious, no! Her huafca&4 ypn c belong to-- a type whlch; they The discovery w aa'ldua I t"nTf own story. retail establishment Mins Is In the used by'paleoIilhic"ks well as neolithic menT chanced During an excavation of some wholesale trade. The remains of the skeleton were, forwarded to depth a , LET THE PUNISHMENT FIT THE CRIME. The Memory' Lingers" slip of the friable earth occurred, revealing the Professor Keith of the Royal College of Surgeons, greater part of & skeleton lying in situ as shown Know to Where for expert examination, and, as he explained to They I see 8top. Texas a man has been fined a thousand In the diagram. This landslip also disclosed a ScU by Grocan. Women always chide their the writer, a close scrutiny revealed the surprisdollars and sentenced to two years in the penifact of great importance, namely, that the strata bands for ing fact that we have here a type of man who, but working overtime, they tentiary for whipping an orphan. Above wrere unbroken and level as when depoe-- ? In every particular brain capacity, conformation nd served him right Now I hope the law never spurn the money which la tted in the course of many thousands of Cm C-v-mr, of ekull, long rival face, pointed projecting chin, years. will get after these people who feed their chil- earned that way. Bate Cmtk. MkL. U. & A. There can thus be no question as to the stature (five feet four Inches) and general build antiquity dren parsnips and grapefruit P t fol-low- be-cor- ns -- I, Iasr " - How-Simpl- , ttjpvt&aawrar '' so particles inter-whic- h well-forme- d Lock-picke- r. d - Sh-e- hl n Walton-on-the-Naz- -- 1 w-- e -- uch-neede- of-t- -- v Of Cookery -' I 1 he - "t 1 Util , . Toasties , V;: . ' C'A Pilt-dow- f i d . L. ' i A 1 r of-t- there-were-fou- " s -- T . . - hot-weat- . - ; - f 1 |