anaheim-gazette 1901-12-26
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MANY PRETTY WEDDINGS
Young People of Orange County Plight
Their Troth at the Merry Christmas Time.
Miss Hortense Yorba, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vlcente Yorba, was married to Porfrio Palomares of Pomona at the church at Yorba on Wednesday, Dec. 18th. The bride was handsomely gowned in a traveling costume of heavy cloth, with underwaist of white cashmere trimmed with white applique. A tan hat with a beautiful white plume completed the costume. A rosette of white chiffon on the side of the high collfeur was the only ornament or head dress.
The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Mattie Yorba, costumed in an elaborate pink silk dress trimmed with white silk shirring. She wore a rosette of pink chiffon in the hair. Shower bouquets of white and pink flowers were carried by the bridesmaid. The groom was attended by his brother, Frank P. Palomares. During the ceremony soft music was played on the organ, and afterwards during the mass a number of selected and appropriate pieces were rendered. At 4:30 the newly wedded couple took the train for Los Angeles. They will visit the northern part of the State before returning to their future home in Pomona.
Miss Mattie Moody and Frank Wayman were married at Garden Grove Wednesday morning, Dec. 18th, at 8 a.m. Miss Mamle Sanford was bridesmaid and Archie Moody groomsman. The bride wore a costume of blue trimmed with cream-colored satin and applique. Wedding breakfast was served, after which the happy pair started on their wedding tour to Los Angeles. They will settle in Garden Grove, where they will be at home to their many friends after the first of the year.
Henry Bortz and Miss Lillie Meats were married at the Olive hotel yesterday afternoon.
Hollister A. Brown of Villa Park and Miss Jennie E. Crawford of Olive were married in the Presbyterian church at the latter place on Wednesday evening, Dec. 11th, in the presence of a large number of relatives and invited guests. The ceremony was performed by Rev. R. H. Jackson, pastor of the church.
The bridal party entered to the strains
But They Were Mistaken.
Fullerton Corr. L. A. Times.
When the "Greater Fullerton" people first announced they would petition the Supervisors for an incorporation election including Fullerton, Placentia and Orangethorpe districts, it was given out that there would be but little opposition, but they were mistaken. It is now reported that Placentia will vote almost solid against it, while there will hardly be a vote cast in Orangethorpe in favor of "Greater Fullerton." Petitions from both districts will be presented to the Board of Supervisors protesting against being included in the boundaries, and it is said indignation meetings will be held in both sections at once to take steps to keep the Placentia and Orangethorpe school districts out of the twenty-six-square-mile boundaries.
Later Intelligence.
Fullerton Tribune.
It is now known that the residents of Orangethorpe and Placentia will make a big fight against being included in "Greater Fullerton," holding that a city would be of no benefit to them, but would greatly increase their taxes. They will protest against being included in the boundaries when the matter comes before the Supervisors.
DISTRIBUTING THE OFFICES..
From the same paper, same date, "lifted" from the L. A. Times.
The whole topic of conversation here now is the Incorporation of Fullerton. It is being discussed daily in Fullerton, Orangethorpe and Placentia. It is reported that Placentia will be offered two City Trustees, Orangethorpe one, and the other two will come from Fullerton, and that there will be two tickets in the field for the Board of City Trustees and the other elective offices. Many fruit growers who opposed incorporation six weeks ago now favor it. It is not believed there will be a bitter warfare carried on like there was at the last election to vote on incorporation, so long as the liquor question can be kept in the background.
A change seems to have come over the spirit of the incorporators' dream.
Folly of It.
Santa Ana Bulletin.
The people of Fullerton will soon petition the Board of Supervisors to let them vote on incorporating that village and take in twenty square miles of territory. This it is claimed will give the town a population of 2500 people.
Head of Kitchen Cabinet.
Continued from First page.
motives can be readily judged by public acts.
So seriously do some of the policymakers in the various States, especially in the South, regard the reason that the President is trying to dismantle Hanna organizations, that they come to Washington they quiet put themselves in line to worship rising sun. The corridor of the floor of the Senate wing, outside room of the Committee on the Pines, tells the story. Senator I is chairman of this committee, apologizes Southern politician, who always keeps where to light when he comes to Washington, goes there as frequently more so now than he does to Cream-White House' on Laffey Square, so named when it became home of the late Vice-President Bart, and which is now the residence of Senator Hanna. In his pleasure office room on the ground-floor of house, entirely separated from the living rooms upstairs, Mr. Hanna been in the habit of receiving historical visitors in the morning before Senate meets and in the afternoon it adjourns. In this room he has tied many a tight political knot; will probably untie many more, but less something is done to convince Southern Republicans that Secretary has not become the political successor of Senator Hanna, the pillar to the Philippines committee room grow in number.
There are, of course, many Thomasases among the Republica Congress, and while they admire Havelt, they keep a sharp look-out for break with the Senate which they are bound to come. He is so strenuous they say, so active, so original, so phatic, so inclined to do what he is do instead of what somebody wants him to do, and, moreover, determined to have honest men in that he is bound to have a row with Senate. Roosevelt's friends say ever, that he is something of a philanthropist and diplomat himself, and actually proof of this is found in that while he has "turned down"eral Senators, or at least their dates, there has been no open criticism of him yet. He is on good terms Burton of Kansas, Platt of New York
Henry Bortz and Miss Lillie Meats were married at the Olive hotel yesterday afternoon.
Hollister A. Brown of Villa Park and Miss Jennie E. Crawford of Olive were married in the Presbyterian church at the latter place on Wednesday evening, Dec. 11th, in the presence of a large number of relatives and invited guests. The ceremony was performed by Rev. R. H. Jackson, pastor of the church. The bridal party entered to the strains of Mendelssohn's wedding march, played by Mrs. C. Lyon. The bride leaned upon the arm of her father, D. P. Crawford. The groom was accompanied by the pastor. The bride wore a gown of white organdie, with trimming of chiffon and ribbon and carried a bouquet of white carnations and ferns. She is a beautiful and stately blond, and was perfectly self possessed during the ceremony.
After the ceremony a reception was held at the Olive hotel. Refreshments were served later in the dining-room, to which about 175 guests sat down. Mr. and Mrs. Brown have gone to housekeeping at Villa Park.
Says He Was Tortured.
"I suffered such pain from corns I could hardly walk," writes H. Robinson, Hillsborough, Ill., "but Bucklen's Arnica Salve completely cured them." Acts like magic on sprains, bruises, cuts, sores, scalds, burns, boils, ulcers. Perfect healer of skin diseases and piles. Cure guaranteed by all druggists.
The Act of Dying.
The popular idea that the act of dying is a painful process often causes a fear of death. But death from even the most painful mortal diseases is usually preceded by a period of cessation from suffering and partial or complete insensibility resembling falling asleep or the pleasant gradual unconsciousness caused by an anesthetic.
The common phrase "death agony" is not warranted by what occurs in natural death, which is a complete relief from all pain. When death is owing to heart failure or syncope, it is sudden and painless—perhaps pleasant. Death by hanging, there is reason to believe, is attended by a voluptuous spasm. Death by decapitation or electricity is only a momentary shock, hardly felt.
Death by poisoning varies in painfulness according to the poison employed. Opium and other narcotics probably give a painless, perhaps a pleasant, dreamful death. Hemlock, as we know from the account of the death of Socrates, causes gradual insensibility from below upward. On the other hand, arsenic, strychnine, carbolic and mineral acids, corrosive sublimate, tartar emetic and other metallic poisons inflict slow and torturing death. Prussic acid and cyanide of potassium cause quick and painful death.—Humanitarian.
Willing to Oblige.
The young man was from town and was spending a Sunday in the suburbs. He knew far more about horses and carriages than the local livery salesman, and so his interview with the latrion six weeks ago now favor it. It is not believed there will be a bitter warfare carried on like there was at the last election to vote on incorporation, so long as the liquor question can be kept in the background.
A change seems to have come over the spirit of the incorporators' dream.
Folly of It.
Santa Ana Bulletin.
The people of Fullerton will soon petition the Board of Supervisors to let them vote on incorporating that village and take in twenty square miles of territory. This it is claimed will give the town a population of 2500 people. Why not take in Anaheim and have 4000 to start with? Every man of common sense in the proposed townsite ought to vote against the proposition. In less than a mile of the center of Fullerton, as it is built, the jack rabbits and coyotes sit on the hills and howl nightly from pure lonesomeness. The absurdity of taking in twenty square miles of territory is not worthy of an argument. If the proposition should carry, the men who vote for it will see their folly when too late.
No Fatalities Reported.
Santa Ana Bulletin.
The ANAHEIM GAZETTE says: "The Turner sisterhood will entertain the members of the Turn-Verein and their families at a 'kaffeekraenzchen' next Sunday afternoon at Turner hall." It is to be hoped the fatalities will not be numerous.
A Woman's Awful Peril.
"There is only one chance to save your life and that is through an operation," were the startling words heard by Mrs. L.B.Hunt of Lime Ridge, Wis., from her doctor after he had vainly tried to cure her of a frightful case of stomach trouble and yellow jaundice. Gall stones had formed and she constantly grew worse. Then she began to use Electric Bitters which wholly cured her. It's a wonderful stomach-liver and kidney remedy. Cures dyspepsia, loss of appetite. Try it. Only 50c. Guaranteed. For sale by all druggists.
A Career Ending Joke.
This is a true story about one of the mayors of Kansas City. He was mayor when the incident occurred, not so very many years ago. Two newspaper men both very good friends of the mayor, were about to leave town, and they asked Mr.Mayor to help them celebrate their departure.
It was a hot day in summer, and after an hour or two of convivial indulgence the mayor of Kansas City was very much under the influence of liquor. The newspaper men were feeling jovial, but they were still able to walk around. It finally became necessary to do something for the mayor. Seeing a fruit wagon pass, one of the newspaper men ran out and hailed the driver. When he drew up to the curb, he was asked whether or not he wanted to make $2. He replied that he most certainly did.
It was then explained to him that a drunken man would be stretched out in his wagon, face toward the sky, and that he must drive through all the business streets of the town and then take the man home.
Not knowing who his passenger was
We are this week sending to scribers a number of statement accounts, and would appreciate favor of a prompt reply. If have failed to receive one of them do not feel slighted, but look at date printed upon the paper's dress, and you can tell at a glance your subscription has become obsequient. By so doing, you may us the trouble of sending your statement next week. All these arrears are politely reminded of fact that it costs money to run papers—great gobs of it. Subsiders at a distance (those in East States and foreign countries) confer a favor upon the publisher remitting all delinquent balances
Willing to Oblige.
The young man was from town and was spending a Sunday in the suburbs. He knew far more about horses and carriages than the local livery salesman, and so his interview with the latter when he sought to hire a "rig" for the afternoon was tinged with a gentle air of patronage on his part. "Oh, have you a trap you can let me have?"
"Yes; certainly."
"One that will hold two?"
"Yes, or 20," from the obliging countryman.
"Oh, really! Have you a stylish road wagon?"
"Yes."
"Perhaps you have a spider or a Brewster buggy, or on second thought I might prefer a rubber tired hansom. You can accommodate me?"
"Yes; all kinds cheerfully furnished."
"Can you give me a lash whip?"
"Yes; with a fancy tassel."
"Oh, well, what kind of a horse can you turn out—a short tailed one?"
"I think so," came gently from the weared proprietor; then in stentorian tones to his man: "Jake, can you give this gentleman a short tailed horse? If not, cut one at once."—Short Stories.
For Popovera.
The value of a recipe lies partly in its being accurately set down and followed. Harper's Magazine has the following directions for making a breakfast delicacy called popovers, as they were imparted by the Chinese servant to a lady visiting in the family.
"You takee him one egg," said the master of the kitchen, "one lit' cup milk. You fixee him one cup flour on sieve, take pinch salt—you not put him in lump. You move him egg lit' bit slow; you put him milk in, all time move. You makee him flour go in, not move fast, so have no spots. Makee but led pan all same wa'm, not too hot. Putlee him in oven. Now you mind you business. No likee woman run look at him all time. Him done all same time biscuit."
The Legend of the Snowdrop.
An old legend gives the following as the origin of the snowdrop: After Adam and Eve had been driven from the garden of Eden Eve was disconsolate. One day as she sat silently grieving an angel appeared and sought means to comfort her. She longed for the flowers, but the fast descending snow was wrapping the barren earth in a robe of white.
As the angel stood and spoke words of hope to the weeping, repentant woman he caught a snowflake, breathed gently upon it and said:
"Take form, pure snowflake, bud and blossom and be a comfort to humanity, now and forever."
In a twinkling the snowflake changed into a beautiful flower, as white and pure as the snow itself, and when Eve behold the newborn blossom gladness and hope came to her heart, and she smiled through her tears.
Having fulfilled his mission of love, the angel departed, but where he had stood there immediately sprung up a circle of perfect snowdrops.
Food Changed to Poison.
Putrefying food in the intestines produces effects like those of arsenic, but Dr. King's New Life Pills expel the poisons from clogged bowels, gently, easily but surely, curing constipation, billiousness, sick headache, fever, all liver, kidney and bowel troubles. Only 25o at all druggists.
Itching Skin
Distress by day and night—That's the complaint of those who are so unfortunate as to be afflicted with Eczema or Salt Rheum—and ward applications do not obey them can't.
The source of the trouble is in blood—make that pure and this ing, burning, itching skin disease disappear.
"I was taken with an itching on arms which proved very disagreeable concluded it was salt rheum and bourne bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. In two after I began taking it I felt better and was not long before I was cured. never had any skin disease since."
IDA E. WARD, Cove Point, Md.
Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills
rid the blood of all impurities and all eruptions.
Head of Kitchen Cabinet
Continued from First page.
Lives can be readily judged by his acts.
Seriously do some of the political leaders in the various States, especially in the South, regard the reports the President is trying to disrupt Hanna organizations, that when come to Washington they quickly themselves in line to worship the sun. The corridor of the lower floor of the Senate wing, outside of the room of the Committee on the Philippe, tells the story. Senator Lodge, chairman of this committee, and the then politician, who always knows he to light when he comes to Washington, goes there as frequently or so now than he does to "The Men-White House" on Lafayette Street, so named when it became the seat of the late Vice-President Hoover which is now the residence Senator Hanna. In his pleasant office on the ground-floor of this room, entirely separated from the living rooms upstairs, Mr. Hanna has in the habit of receiving his visitors in the morning before the date meets and in the afternoon when journeys. In this room he has unmany a tight political knot and probably untie many more, but something is done to convince the then Republicans that Senator Hoover has not become the political successor of Senator Hanna, the pilgrims of the Philippines committee room will be in number.
There are, of course, many doubting cases among the Republicans in press, and while they admire Roosevelt they keep a sharp look-out for the man with the Senate which they say sound to come. He is so strenuous, says, so active, so original, so emaciate, so inclined to do what he wants instead of what somebody else is him to do, and, moreover, so defined to have honest men in office he is bound to have a row with the man. Roosevelt's friends say, how that he is something of a politician and diplomat himself, and apparently proof of this is found in the fact while he has "turned down" seven Senators, or at least their candidates, there has been no open criticism yet. He is on good terms with one of Kansas, Platt of New York, thanks of Indiana, and other Senators.
A Dickens Letter.
George Crawley Fenn is the possessor of a sheet of old fashioned blue white woven note paper, which had its habitation for years upon the bill file of the tradesman to whom it was sent. It tells its own tale:
"Mr. Charles Dickens is much obliged to Mr. Claridge for the offer of Lord Byron's flute. But, as Mr. Dickens cannot play that instrument himself and has nobody in his house who can, he begs to decline the purchase, with thanks. Devonshire Terrace, twentieth June, 1848."
There is no visible mark of a smile upon the paper, says Mr. Fenn, but there seems to be one playing among the words, and one cannot help thinking that when Dickens wrote that he could not play the flute he must have recalled a certain flute serenade played at "Mrs. Todgers' Commercial Boarding House," written by him in 1844.—New York Tribune.
Perfumes Were Popular.
The rage for perfumes reached its height during the reign of Louis XV. Throughout the continent his court was known as the "scented court." It was then the custom when giving a large entertainment for the hostess to inform her guests what particular odor she would use for perfuming her rooms, and each guest would use that odor in making her toilet. At court a different perfume was used for each day of the week. Much more attention was paid to the use of the perfume than soap and water, and cleanliness was not numbered among the virtues of that age.
FACTS ABOUT ANAHEIM.
Sketch of the industries and Resources of this Most Beautiful Part of California.
The City of Anaheim, with a population of 2500, is situated in the northern part of Orange county, in Southern California, 12 miles from the ocean, 4½ miles from the foothills, and 104½ feet above sea level. It is 27 miles from Los Angeles, the second largest city in the State of California.
The climatic conditions are the most favorable for out-door life to be found in Southern California. The temperature is extremely uniform, seldom rising above 90 degrees in summer, or falling below 32 degrees in winter. The abundance of sunlight and the absence of sharp frosts and cold winds make it a place especially acceptable to those desiring to escape the severe climate of the east.
The country is very attractive. It is practically level, with just sufficient slope from the hills to afford adequate drainage. The roads are level, well graded, and well kept, affording excellent opportunities for cycling and driving. The soil is a rich sandy loam which never bakes, making it a very easy ground to work; thus lending itself readily to the cultivation of berries, nuts, oranges, etc.
The variety of products, and the possibility of procuring small tracts of land at low figures, and on easy terms, make our section of the county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds.
Annaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns its water and lighting plant.
There are nine fraternal organizations including Merrill-Old Oak Church.
GRANT'S RETREAT
The General Went When a man's Club Pointed the Speaking of nightsticks reminding of seeing General Grant in his mind greatest hour, the only way ever beaten and by a person I told his son, Fred Grant, off because a police commission nineties, but I do not think it elated it. He was not cast in father's mold. The occasion he was after the general's second presidency. He was staying Fifth Avenue hotel when one day Masonic temple was burning fire line was drawn half way over block toward Fifth avenue, but lice were much hampered by ticks and were out of patience when ing by saw a man in a green with head buried deep in the cigar sticking straight out, down the street from the recognized him at sight as Grant. The policeman who his way did not. He grabbed the collar, swung him about taking him a resounding whack back with his club, yelled "What's the matter with you you see the fire lines? Chase out of here and be quick about."
The general never said a wolf did not stop to argue that man had run up against a sentinel stopped went the other way. The all. The man had a right to be had none. I was never so admirer of Grant as since that was true greatness. A small would have made a row stood dignity and demanded the purity of the policeman. As for him was probably never so badly fed a policeman when I told him he had clubbed. I will warrant not sleep for a week, fearing of things. No need of it. Grassly never gave him a thought Rils in Outlook.
Called Lorillard's Blue
Heavy bettor as he was, Pierlard once met his match when up against gray bearded Jack Kelly, who introduced bookmaker this country. It was nearly a tonion ago and at Jerome park was laying 2½ to 1 against Lorillard's horses in a big stall. The news went to Mr. Lorillard on his coach on the clubhouse.
"I'll just take a little of the out of that sawed off Irishman Lorillard to Wright Sanford," Morris John Hunter and a few others.
SURE-SHOT SQUIRREL POISON
SURE-SHOT SQUIRREL POISON
CARRIE'S DEATH AND DESTRUCTION TO Squirrels, Gophers, Rats, Mice AND OTHER Ranch and Orchard Pests.
Sure an speedy in action and reasonable in corn. Ask grocer or druggist for it.
HAAS, BARUCH & CO.
LOL ANGELLES, CALIFORNIA
SOLE AGENTS.
WOMAN'S RELIEF
A really healthy woman has little pain or discomfort at the menstrual period. No woman needs to have any. Wine of Cardui will quickly relieve those smarting menstrual pains and the dragging head, back and side aches caused by falling of the womb and irregular menses.
WINE OF CARDUI
has brought permanent relief to 1,000,000 women who suffered every month. It makes the menstrual organs strong and healthy. It is the provision made by Nature to give women relief from the terrible aches and pains which blight so many homes.
GREENWOOD, LA., Oct. 14, 1900.
I have been very sick for some time. I was taken with a severe pain in my side and could not get any relief until I tried a bottle of Wine of Cardui. Before I had taken all of it I was relieved I feel it my duty to say that you have a wonderful medicine.
MRS. M. A. YOUNT.
diliterature, address, giving sympathetic advice Department, The Medicine Co., Chadanoogn, Tenn.
NOW LOOK OUT!
"Take care of yourself," say our friends.
"I'll try to," we answer. We do take a little care, yet in spite of warm clothes, rubbers and mackintoshes, an army of people were bowled out by pneumonia and other lung and chest diseases last winter. They caught cold, neglected it, let it fix upon them, were torn by coughs, choked by inflammations and congestions, wasted by county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns its water and lighting plant.
There are nine fraternal organizations, including Masons and Odd Fellows; seven churches, embracing the principal denominations; a Free Public Library, and a fine Grammar and High School.
Saw Death Near.
"It often made my heart ache," writes L.C. Overstreet of Elgin, Tenn., "to hear my wife cough until it seemed her weak and sore lungs would collapse. Good doctors said she was so far gone with consumption that no medicine or earthly help could save her, but a friend recommended Dr. King's New Discovery and persistent use of this excellent medicine saved her life." It's absolutely guaranteed for coughs, colds, bronchitis, asthma and all throat and lung diseases. 50c and $1.00 at all druggists. Trial bottles free.
Garden Grove Irrigators.
Articles of incorporation have been filed with County Clerk Beckett for the Garden Grove Irrigation Company, capitalized at $6,600, in 440 shares of $15 each, of which $1000 has been subscribed. The directors are five, as follows: J.W.Hawkins, A.Moody, J.D.Chaffee, G.D.Ingram and W.B.Harper. The purpose of the company is to furnish water for irrigating purposes to Garden Grove ranchers.
FATE.
It is very convenient to attribute the disasters which overtake us to fate. But for the most part man is the arbiter of his own fortunes. Business men are struck down suddenly as by lightning. The verdict is generally "heart failure."
His heart was weak. It was fate for him to meet this end.
But if we went behind the "weak" heart we should find a "weak" stomach, probably, and back of the weak stomach is careless eating at irregular hours.
When the stomach is diseased the organs depending on the stomach for nutrition are starved. Starvation means weakness of the body and its organs.
Dr.Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. When these organs are cured, diseases of heart, liver, lungs and kidneys, caused by the diseased stomach, are cured also.
In the fall of 1917 I was taken with smothering spells, palpitation of the heart, and a distressed feeling in my stomach." writes Mr. Lorillard's Blue Heavy bettor as he was. Pierlard once met his match when up against gray bearded Jack Kelly, who introduced bookmaker this country. It was nearly a tion ago and at Jerome park was laying 2½ to 1 against Lorillard's horses in a big stall. The news went to Mr. Lorillard on his coach on the clubhouse.
"I'll just take a little of the cut out that sawed off Irishman Lorillard to Wright Sanford, Morris, John Hunter and a few congenial spirits. They starten ring together."
"I'll lay $10,000 on my horse price, Kelly," said Mr. Lorillard principally fashion, expecting to do wit and refuse to take the war.
"Certainly, Mr. Lorillard." turning to his sheet writer, Kelton "$25,000 against $10,000. Pierlard." Quickly he turned to bacco magnate with a politician obliged to you, Mr. Lorillard much obliged. Would you be friends care to bet another $the same odds? Should be able to accommodate you."
"What a nerve!" was all Mr. Lorillard could say as he turned on and walked away.
Jimmy Kelly won the bet, Lorillard's horse was beaten.-No Times.
The Landlubber Ducks of S
"The proverbial fondness of for water would lead one to pose that of all the world the nittitude of ducks would be the desert and that if a stray spain happened to drift into that river would either vamoose or turn tooes with briefest delay. Well all," said a Frenchman who merely a resident of Tunis.
"There are parts of the deserts abound, flourish and with every evidence of perfection. The fowl is slightly from any of the varieties we see this country, but it has the bill, extensive breast and showing that it was once a way though now it scarcely finds any drink and has become too productive. Like the other good Musk of the country, they take their bed in the sand, and their come in very handy as snow walk upon the deep yielding is claimed by an eminent Freethologist that the Saharan desert remains of a race of aquatic which frequented those seas with present desert was a part of the tide ocean."
Holes In Everything
You are skeptical about the truth of this statement and ask whether does not leak from a bottle if holes in everything? The simple enough—the drops or water is bigger than the Taking glass as an illustration that air is about the only that can get through those holes.
A scientist proposes the follow an experiment: Place a bell in exhausted of air and heat sealed. The bell will not ring the medium for conveying souls.
NOW LOOK OUT!
"Take care of yourself," say our friends.
"I'll try to," we answer. We do take a little care, yet in spite of warm clothes, rubbers and mackintoshes, an army of people were bowled out by pneumonia and other lung and chest diseases last winter. They caught cold, neglected it, let it fix upon them, were torn by coughs, choked by inflammations and congestions, wasted by fever, tired out by pain and then gave up the fight. The hour you realize that you have a cold on the chest, place a Benson's Porous Plaster where the pain or oppression is felt. If you think two are needed make it two. No harm if you were covered with them. They act quickly and prevent the engorgement of blood in the organs. In this way—with ordinary caution as to exposure—you will break up the cold and avoid a serious sickness. No other applications, or any other form of treatment, will accomplish this as certainly and speedily. Benson's Plasters have a distinct and positive action and are curative to the highest degree. Use them with the same confidence for coughs, muscular rheumatism, the grip (back and chest) and all similar ailments. Women, who are chief sufferers from cold weather complaints, should keep these plasters always within reach. Get the genuine. All druggists, or we will prepay postage on any number ordered in the United States on receipt of 25c each.
Seabury & Johnson, Mfg. Chemists, N.Y.
You May Need
Pain-Killer
For Cuts Burns Bruises
Cramps Diarrhoea All Bowel Complaints
It is a sure, safe and quick remedy,
There’s ONLY ONE
Pain-Killer Perry Davis'.
VERDICT is generally "heart failure." "His heart was weak. It was fate for him to meet this end." But if we went behind the "weak" heart we should find a "weak" stomach, probably, and back of the weak stomach is careless eating at irregular hours.
When the stomach is diseased the organs depending on the stomach for nutrition are starved. Starvation means weakness of the body and its organs.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. When these organs are cured, diseases of heart, liver, lungs and kidneys, caused by the diseased stomach, are cured also.
In the fall of 1897 I was taken with smothering spells, palpitation of the heart, and a distressed feeling in my stomach." writes Mr. H. W. Kinney of Knight, Doddridge Co., West Va.
"I consulted a doctor and he said I had organic heart trouble. He gave me some medicine but did not go good. I then tried different kinds of patent medicines, but they only helped me a little. I then sent and got five bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Before the first bottle was gone I felt a change. When the five bottles were gone I began to work. I had not worked any for a year before."
I am well and can eat anything now with the exception of pork and greasy food.
Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure billiousness.
Mary's Fractional State
"I suppose your baby sast some?" asked one of the no "Cries!" said Mary. "Why seems to look on the dark side all the time!"- Youth's Companion
NEWS AND OPINION OF NATIONAL IMPORTANT THE SUN
ALONE CONTAINS BOY Daily, by mail, $ Daily and Sunday by mail, $
THE
Sunday is the greatest Sunday New in the world.
Price 5c a copy. By mail, $2 Address THE SUN, New York
GRANT'S RETREAT.
The General Went When a Policeman's Club Pointed the Way.
Speaking of nightsticks reminds me of seeing General Grant in his to my mind greatest hour, the only time he was ever beaten, and by a policeman, told his son, Fred Grant, of it when he became a police commissioner in theineties, but I do not think he appreciated it. He was not cast in his great father's mold. The occasion I refer to was after the general's second term in the presidency. He was staying at the Fifth Avenue hotel, when one morning the Masonic temple was burned. The fire line was drawn half way down the clock toward Fifth avenue, but the police were much hampered by the crowd and were out of patience when I standing by, saw a man in a great ulster with head buried deep in the collar, a sugar sticking straight out, coming down the street from the hotel. I recognized him at sight as General Grant. The policeman who blocked his way did not. He grabbed him by the collar, swung him about and, hitting him a resounding whack across the back with his club, yelled out:
"What's the matter with you? Don't you see the fire lines? Chase yourself out of here and be quick about it."
The general never said a word. He did not stop to argue the matter. He had run up against a sentinel and when stopped went the other way. That was all. The man had a right to be there; he had none. I was never so much an admirer of Grant as since that day. It was true greatness. A smaller man would have made a row, stood upon his dignity and demanded the punishment of the policeman. As for him, there was probably never so badly frightened a policeman when I told him whom he had clubbed. I will warrant he did not sleep for a week, fearing all kinds of things. No need of it. Grant probably never gave him a thought—Jacob Ellis in Outlook.
Called Lorillard's Bluff.
Heavy bettor as he was, Pierre Lorillard once met his match when he ran up against gray bearded James E. Kelly, who introduced bookmaking into this country. It was nearly a generation ago and at Jerome park. Kelly was laying 2½ to 1 against one of Lorillard's horses in a big stake event. The news went to Mr. Lorillard, seated on his coach on the clubhouse lawn.
"I'll just take a little of the conceit of that sawed off Irishman," said Lorillard to Wright Sanford, Newbold forris. John Hunter and a few other
FOES IN AMBUSH.
THE HIDDEN PERILS OF THE PAST AND PRESENT.
When the Puritan passed through the forests of New England, he realized that his greatest danger was from hidden foes. Therefore, he was armed and vigilant. The enemies a man can see he can fight, but the enemy that skulks in darkness unseen, be he ever so weak, is to be dreaded by reason of his invisibility.
The foes that threaten the life to-day are all ambushed. There is no fear of the "arrow that flieth by day," for the day of the arrow is past and gone. But the "pestilence that walketh in darkness," is still a thing of terror, because it strikes suddenly from ambush.
Let the word pestilence be only whishered and fear grips the heart. Homes are forsaken. People flock to the railroads frantic to escape from the infected city. But shout a warning against dyspepsia and who is alarmed? Nobody, yet dyspepsia in the diseases to which it tends, is responsible for more deaths annually in the United States than pestilence could probably claim in a decade.
THE WHAK SPOT
of the modern man is his stomach. No man can be stronger than his stomach because the stomach is in effect the vital centre of the body. Where does the heart get its nourishment? From the stomach. Where is the nourishment prepared for lungs, liver, kidneys and other organs? All are nourished from the stomach. Stop putting food into the stomach and in time the heart stops beat.
Toronto, Ontario. "I tried a great number of remedies without success. I finally lost faith in them all. I was so far gone that I could not bear any solid food on my stomach for a long time; felt melancholy and depressed. Could not sleep nor follow my occupation (tinsmith). Some four months ago a friend recommended your 'Golden Medical Discovery.' After a week's treatment I had derived so much benefit that I continued the medicine. I have taken three bottles and am convinced it has in my case accomplished a permanent cure. I can conscientiously recommend it to the thousands of dyspeptics throughout the land."
"I have taken one bottle of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for indigestion and liver complaint," writes Mr. C. M. Wilson, of Yadkin College, Davidson Co., N.C. "Have had no bad spells since I commenced taking your medicine—in fact have not felt like the same man. Before I took the 'Golden Medical Discovery' I could not eat anything without awful distress, but now I can eat anything I wish without having unpleasant feelings. Last summer our baby was teething and was so poor he was almost a skeleton. We gave him your 'Golden Medical Discovery,' and now he is as healthy and well as any child. I will speak a good word for your medicine whenever I have an opportunity."
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It cures through the stomach those diseases of heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, etc., which have their origin in disease of the stomach and its allied organs of digestion and nutrition.
STRENGTH FROM FOOD.
All physical strength must come from food after it has been received into the stomach and properly digested and assimilated. Medicine cannot make strength. There is only one source of strength and that is food converted into nutrition. There are two chief causes of physical weakness: one insufficient food, the other inability of the stomach and its allied organs to digest and assimilate the food eaten. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is not offered as a substitute for food, but as a medicine which enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food, and so gives the body the strength which comes from food alone.
When the weak stomach is made strong again by the use of "Golden Medical Discovery" the food it receives is
Called Lorillard's Bluff.
Heavy bettor as he was, Pierre Lorillard once met his match when he ran up against gray bearded James E. Kelly, who introduced bookmaking into this country. It was nearly a generation ago and at Jerome park. Kelly was laying 2½ to 1 against one of Lorillard's horses in a big stake event. The news went to Mr. Lorillard, seated on his coach on the clubhouse lawn.
"I'll just take a little of the conceit out of that sawed off Irishman," said Lorillard to Wright Sanford, Newbold Morris, John Hunter and a few other conjunctual spirits. They started for the long together.
"I'll lay $10,000 on my horse at that price, Kelly," said Mr. Lorillard in his princely fashion, expecting to see Kellyilt and refuse to take the wager.
"Certainly, Mr. Lorillard." Then turning to his sheet writer, Kelly said: "$25,000 against $10,000, Pierre Lorillard." Quickly he turned to the tobacco magnate with a polite "Much obliged to you, Mr. Lorillard; very much obliged. Would you or your friends care to bet another $10,000 at the same odds? Should be delighted to accommodate you."
"What a nerve!" was all Mr. Lorillard could say as he turned on his heel and walked away.
Jimmy Kelly won the bet, for Lorillard's horse was beaten.—New York times.
The Landlubber Ducks of Sahara.
"The proverbial fondness of ducks or water would lead one to presuppose that of all the world the most destitute of ducks would be the Sahara desert and that if a stray 'springtail' happened to drift into that region he would either vamoose or turn up hisoes with briefest delay. Well, not at all," said a Frenchman who was formerly a resident of Tunis.
"There are parts of the desert where ducks abound, flourish and multiply with every evidence of perfect satisfaction. The fowl is slightly different from any of the varieties we know in this country, but it has the same flat, extensive breast and web feet, showing that it was once a water bird, though now it scarcely finds enough to drink and has become too provident to waste any of the precious fluid in abhuons. Like the other good Mussulmans of the country, they take their prescribed bath in the sand, and their web feet come in very handy as snowshoes to walk upon the deep yielding dust. It is claimed by an eminent French ornithologist that the Saharan ducks are the remains of a race of aquatic birds which frequented those seas when the present desert was a part of the Atlantic ocean."
Holes In Everything.
You are skeptical about the accuracy of this statement and ask why water does not leak from a bottle if there are holes in everything? The answer is simple enough—the drops or globules of water are bigger than the holes. Making glass as an illustration, we find that air is about the only substance that can get through those holes.
A scientist proposes the following as an experiment: Place a bell in a bottle exhausted of air and hermetically sealed. The bell will not ring because the medium for conveying sound is not
All physical strength must come from food after it has been received into the stomach and properly digested and assimilated. Medicine cannot make strength. There is only one source of strength and that is food converted into nutrition. There are two chief causes of physical weakness; one insufficient food, the other inability of the stomach and its allied organs to digest and assimilate the food eaten. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is not offered as a substitute for food, but as a medicine which enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food, and so gives the body the strength which comes from food alone.
When the weak stomach is made strong again by the use of "Golden Medical Discovery" the food it receives is perfectly digested and assimilated, and the body in all its parts and organs is restored to strength with the stomach. The lost flesh is regained and the body is built up with sound, solid flesh instead of flabby fat.
But as the body is but a name for the sum of its organs and members, so strength for the body means strength for each organ of the body, and when the stomach is made strong, strength is given to the "weak" heart, "weak" lungs and other weak organs.
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery," there is no other medicine "just as good" for the cure of diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition.
PLAIN TALK
on medical matters must be in plain English if it is to be understood. It was the aim of Dr. Pierce in the preparation of his Common Sense Medical Adviser, to provide for household use a book that should deal with health and disease practically, on common sense lines and in common sense language. This great book, containing 1008 large pages, is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-bound volume, or only 21 stamps for the book in paper-covera. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N.Y.
ARE YOU DEAF?
ANY HEAD NOISES?
ALL CASES OF DEAFNESS OR HARD HEARING ARE NOW CURABLE
by our new invention. Only those born deaf are incurable.
HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY.
F. A. WERMAN, OF BALTIMORE, SAYS:
BALTIMORE, Md., March 30, 1907,
a full history of my case, to be used at your discretion.
Afterward I had used it only right ear began to sing, and this kept on getting worse, until I lost my hearing in this ear entirely.
I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for three months, without any success, consulted a number of physicians, among others, the most eminent ear specialist of this city, who told me that only an operation could help me, and even that only temporarily, that the head noises would then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost forever.
Then saw your advertisement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treatment after bad used it only few days according your directions, the noises ceased, and to-day, after five weeks, my hearing in the diseased ear has been entirely restored. Thank you heartily and beg to remain.
F. A. WERMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md.
Our treatment does not interfere with your usual occupation.
Examination and YOU CAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME
at a nominal advice free.
INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE., CHICAGO, IL.
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