Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Apr 1921, p. 9

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w» McHENBT, nX.I to Coolidge Town Shoe Repairer, "Friend, Philosopher and Guide" of " *>*ice President. " ^ ' HOPS TO SHAPE HIS CAREER Friendship B*awi lii CollaQ* Days Continues Through Early Struggle* and Subsequent ProijAi* rience in Politics. Northampton, Mass.--Janfes Lucey, mender of shoes, is pegging sway in liis shop here with one eye on the tiewspapers for word of bow the national capital treats Calvin Coolldge, his one-time associate In local politics, and now vice president. When Vice President Coolldge, Just before departing for Washington recently, grasped the cobbler's hand the photographers snapped their cameras, lie gave him a distinction that fce was asked to explain. "Put Mr. Lucey down as my guide, philosopher and friend," he said. And so the cobbler is now nationally known. What the vice president meant waa more or less well known to Northampton folk. The story goes back To the days when Calvin Coolidge was a sophomore at Amherst college. With shoes to be repaired he sought Lucey's sliof on Gothic street in this city, and then remained to listen to the cobbler's jljomely comments cm the topics of the pay. Helped to 8hape Career. The student found the shoemaker*! philosophy so engaging that during the remainder of his college course he went frequently to see him. As a lawyer later young Coolidge opened offices here, and while he waited for clients, continued bis acquaintance the cobbler. Throughout his caeer in the politics of the city and tate, Mr. Coolidge dropped in at the hoe shop from time to time to exhange ideas with his friend and have he benefit of the letter's pointed po> itical observations. fhe youthful Coolidge took away essons from the cobbler counsellor; Coolldge, the candidate, received the benefit of his influence, which was considerable in city politics, and when he rose to a position ot state and national prominence he still received the loyal support of the shoe man. Mr. Lucey, modestly explaining that Mr. Coolidge long slnfe passed out of his range of influence, admits that hejmay have been of some help when the vice president was on the first rungs of the political ladder. Cement Closer Friendship. The cobbler says that the only time he ever crossed Calvin Coolldge seemed to make firmer tlie friendship between them. Mr. Coolidge had sought the election of s friend as mayor, and asked Mr. Lucey as a delegate to the party caucus to stand in his behalf, but the cobbler, already bound to the opposing candidate, refused. This evidence of loyalty to a prior allegiance served to heighten their mutual respect. The shoemaker, a native of Ireland, came to Northampton forty years ago at the age of twelve. • family of eight children, seven of whom am, ISM* living, has made demands on his "earning ability. Five are girls, one Is a 'stenographer, two are teachers, a fourth, who was formerly a teacher, is now married and one Is a clerk. Of the two boys one is a graduate of Holy Cross college, and the other Is a student in the Northampton Commercial college. - - - i ,* - \ Income Tax Four Cents; * ! U. D.U> in InalollmMlti * - THUD READ1 lyers Measure, Backed by American Legion, Has Been Given Right of Way. He Pays in Installments ; ANT1-SCALPIN6 ACT IS II. Atagusta, Ga.--A taxpayer whose total tax is 4 cents and who insists on his right to pay in four installments and, who bought a 1-cent money order for which he paid 3 cents waa revealed here today. The taxpayer, a tall, lanky farmer, who gave his address as Lincoln county, but whose name was not divulged, personally submitted his return to the deputy collector off Internal revenue, using the 1-cent money order to pay the first Installment. Committee Approves Denvir's Proposition Providing for Heavy Fines , --Would Make Teachers' tyUn- * I mum Salaries $1,500, Year. Radio Amateurs Enjoy "Concord of Sweet Music Sounds" From 60 Miles Away. CONCERTS A RIGHTLY AFFAIR Development of Radio' Equipment Has Brought Price of Apparatus Down --Wire and Broom Handle Enough for Aerial. fete* York.--Rapid development of the radio telephone has made possible for thousands of persons in New York and other parts of the country fulfillment of Longfellow's prophecy that "the night shall be filled with music." Enterprising amateur wireless operators, as well as many commercial stations, now put out through the air each night concerts created by attaching to sending sets phonographs and player pianos. Others, more enterprising, sing or play the vtoUu and T Russian Mystery in Seattle Yards Here Is more Russian mystery. Since Kereusky's fall valqable railway achinery consigned by American manufacturers to the Russian government, ms been lying in Seattle railway yards. No one appears to know its ownership. It was originally Intended for export to Siberia. A congressional lnestigtftion now In progress may solve the mystery. If Kerensky should get n top again, as now seems quite possible, doubtless the mystery will be uickiy solved. The goods are valuable, though they have suffered from sure. other Instruments for the benefit of all who will "listen In." Receiving Apparatus Cheap. Approximately one-half the amateurs in the New York district are licensed, permitting them to send. Development of the radio equipment has been such that a practical receiving apparatus can be purchased for a very few dollars--the prices range upward in accordance with the equipment Great stretches of aerials are DO longer necessary. A few feet of wire, looped over the end of a broom and hung out over the fire escape, and ground wire attached to a radiator or water pipe answer. Some do not even call on the family broom, but attach a wire to the spring of a-bed or a couch and excellent results follow. On a recent evening one amateur residing In New York city heard seven concerts at one time coming from distances varying from two to 160 miles. By means of "tuners" these concerts were easily separated so that tach one stood out clear and distinct from the others as desired. Music From Sixty Miles. The Press club of Jackson Heights, a suburban residential district of New York, recently featured a radiophone demonstration at a meeting of the members. By the aid of a "loud speaker" the members were enabled to dance from 9 p. m. until midnight to music which came In from varying distances. In a medley dance ihfc members of the club started with a waltz, played at Woodslde, Long Island, five miles away; swung Into a fox-trot, played at Brighton Beach, 15 miles distant; to a one-step, which came from Paterson, N. J., 35 dies away, then back to a fox-trot, emanating from a phonograph about sixty miles up state. At 10 o'clock all watches were set by the time signals which were sent out from the United States navy station at Arlington, Va. So numerous have their amaturs become and so united their Interests by being able to talk with each other at will that they formed an association. They held a convention at a New York hotel. The.v exhibited not only their latest possessions in modern sets, but also brought with them the homemade apparatus of their pioneer days. During the convention lectures were given and nightly concerts from distant stations featured. --- iaihond Mine Found )nly One on Western Hemisphere It Located In Arkansas. Items Are Found In the Crater of »n Extinct Volcano in Pike County --First Found in 1906. Murphreesboro, Ark--The only diamond mine thus far discovered on the Western hemisphere is located In Pike junty, Arkansas, In which this tiamfet is situated. The mine Is two and half miles south of here. The diamonds are found In a pipe," the crater of an extinct volcawhich ages ago boiled up through lie surface, had its terrific heat chilled the water of an Inland sea, and Fft bits of carbon scattered through- Jt the peridotlte which now fills the pater, to be pressed into diamonds by contraction of the rock. The perljtite forms the original matrix of the diamond, and thus far the only diamonds found In the western hemisphere in their matrices are those of Pike county. Diamonds have Men found In some twenty-five states, in Canada and South America, but always in river beds where, geologists surmise, they have been washed by the waters, or In places where U is presumed they have been deposited by glacial action. The first Arkansas diamond was found in 1906 by John Huddleston, then, owner of the farm on which the sixty-acre "pipe" is located, by accident. Huddleston observed outcroppings of the gray-green rock, since classed as perldotite, and came to the conclusion that his hillsides contained valuable mineral, perhaps copper. After pecking around without finding anything which looked to him like mineral, be picked up a crystal, and then one day, showed it to some friends la Murphreesboro, A Little Rock Jeweler pronounced It a diamond, and made sure by verifications by Jewel experts in New York. The mining operations in Arkansas, for several years, at least, will be far different from those of the South African fields, although the formations are the same. In Africa, deep shafts are sunk, fhe perldotite is brought to the surface and spread on drying floors for periods ranging from six to eighteen months. The rock has the peculiar quality of disintegrating when exposed to the air. In Arkansas, however, except for a few places, the peridotlte already has disintegrated to a depth of about twenty feet, and mixed with vegetable matter, formed a sticky clay, called "gumbo" locally. This overburden of "gumbo" will be worked before blasting operations are started. Ex-Admiral Sixty-Eight, Cobbler's AM. Vienna.--With former officers of the army and navy as pupils, a shoemak- Ing school has been opened here. Among the students Is a former vice admiral, sixty-eight years old. who Is enroUed as a cobbler's apprentice $24,000 Radium Needles Found in 2 Day Search Philadelphia. --Two radium needles valued at $24,000 were found today in rubbish at the Medical Arts building here. They had been missing since Wednesday, when they were Inadvertently swept from a table in an operating room. The office force joined the building's porters In an all-day search of the basement before they were found. The needles are three-quarter* of an inch long and one sixteenth of an inch in diameter. They possess a slender aperture at one end into which the precious element is poured. , new coupling for connecting wa heaters to galvanized Iron tanks spring-controlled lugs which exafter insertion Ir.to holes in the • . ? . Reports oil Self Operation Philadelphia 8urgeon Who Removed Own ^ftjpendix Back «jt Work ? Twe Weeki| Philadelphia.--Evan cffeTIl Kane, sixty-year-old Jefferson Medical college graduate, who on February 15 removed his own appendix with a local anesthetic at the hospital at Kane, Pa., two weeks later performed a major operation on another patient Dr. Kane will not discuss his exploit other than to say "the experiment will be worth while," but his surgical assistant. Dr. D. E. Vogan, said of It. "Dr. Kane's operation establishes these things: "First*-Base with which local operations can be performed. • "Second--Can be done without severe pain. "Third--Pain more due to traction and rough handling ot parts than to Incision. _ _ Toerth--Any surgeon with a fMr degree of skill can perform sach aa operation on himself." Indian Woman. Marysvllle, Wash.--Released from physical slavery among the Indian tribes of the Puget Sound country by the treaty of Mukilteo sixty-seven years ago, when she was between thirty and forty years of age, and for several years preceding her death under the care of friends at Tula Hp, Mrs. Sarah Kettle, a native of the West Vancouver shore, died at the home of William Shelton at Tulallp. Her age probably was about 115 yyny , Boom In Divorce £aee% St. Gall, Switzerland.--So matty divorce petitions have recently been filed In the local district court that the presiding Judge requested the Cantonal government to appoint one or two special judges to handle the dl- Sprlngfleld.--Thus far only 'a rew bills in the interest of former service men have been reported on by the committees. The Myers bonus bill, providing for a referendum on a $55,000,000 bond Issue to pay bonuses of $15 a month, with a maximum of $300,, ts on third reading In the house. The Hanson bill, identical with a bill in the house, has been passed by the senate. It rededicates tlie Illinois Soldiers* Orphans' home at Normal to sen-ice men of the World war, provides for a rehabilitation of the home and the care of only soldiers' orphans. Several bonus bills have been Introduced, but the Myers bill, backed by the American Legion, has been given right of way. Other bills in the hands of committees are: Representative G. J. Johnson, Paxton-- Authorizes counties to levy a 2- mill tax for a burial fund for ex-service men, their widows, wives and mothers. Representative Fahy--Appropriates $500,000 for hospital for care of exservice men. Representative McCarthy -- Appropriates $25,000 for memorial statue to mothers of service men. Senator Mills--Senate Joint resolution memorializing congress to pass bills for relief of service men. Passed by both houses. Other bonus bill have been offered by Senators Denvir and Kessinger and Representatives Maher, Joyce and O'Brien. Senator Denvir's bill to prohibit ticket scalping and. Inflicting heavy fines on scalpers came out of the judl clary committee bearing tlie commit tee's stamp of approval. It was ae companied by Senator Denvir's bill to require railroads to furnish individual drinking cups on all passenger cars. Passage of the Holaday road bill by a vote of 103 to 1 in the house was a blow to the building combination which has kept up cost of highway construction and kept bids at an average of $38,000 a mile. Governor SmalJ, who has fixed $30,- 000 as the maximum he Is willing to pay for road building In the state, wa.« well pleased with the house action and will urge the senate to pass the measure at once. The bill gives the department of public works and buildings full power In relation to the construction of roads. The department may purchase and supply for Its own or for the use of any county, tools, materials, labor and machinery, and also may advance funds to counties to enable them to procure any, needed equipment. All roads shall be constructed under plans and approval of the state. One big feature of the measure is that which gives the department authority to purchase or acquire by eminent domain gravel pits, quarries, cement plants, brick plants and any other plants necessary to road construction whenever it is decided that prices demanded for their products are unreasonable. Representative Healy's proposed amendments to the cold-storage act to fix new limits on the time in which meats, eggs and butter could be held In storage was killed by the house committee on agriculture. Senator John Dailey of Peoria led his buildjng probe committee back to Chicago for the week-end to continue its investigation of alleged combines between material men and labor union business agents accused of Btlfling building operations. Minimum salaries for schoolteachers are fixed at $1,500 for a 200-day year by the teachers' bill brought to Springfield by Margaret Haley of Chicago and Introduced in the legislature by Senator Herlihy of Chicago. L'nder the bill the maximum of the salary scale cannot be fixed, at less than $2,500. Representative Charles Baldwin's bill to Inflict a lift sentence upon convicted gunmen passed the house by a vote of 103 to 0. Following the receipt of word that former • Congressman Frank L. Smith of Dwight had decided to accept chairmanship of the state public utilities commission, It was announced that he likely would assume duties of the office at the commission's meeting this week in Chicago. In assuming the chairmanship of the commission Mr. Smith will relieve the holdover member, Thomas C. Deinpcy. Bill to Insure Cops and Firemen. Group insurance for the Chicago firemen and policemen killed In "line of duty" is provided for in a hill Indorsed by the city council and ordered forwarded to the state legislature. The proposal was Introduced by Aid. Joseph O. Kostner five months ago. In its final form it v.ould give the city poWer to buy Insurance for firemen and policemen, or to set aside a fund from corporate revenues, the income of which would be nsed to pay widows or other dependents of men killed on duty. . . ' .1 . To Disease "Lincoln Trait" Plans for a big road meeting tt Salem, April 8, t6 which all citizens Interested In paving the "Lincoln trail" from the banks or the Wabash ' river, opposite Vincennes, Ind., to East St. Louis, will be invited to attend, have been made by Senator E. D. Telford of Salem and C. R. Miller, director of the department of public works and buildings. The highway, a direct route across the state and a section the Midland ooean-to-ocean trail. It part ol the state road system. Road Patrols for Illinois. | Illinois took the initial step In the i formal adoption of the Wisconsin s_vstern bf road patrol. A district of 12 counties of central Illinois has the distinction of being the first to adopt this Innovation. F. C. Foutz, district engineer, will have general supervision over the territory to be patroled, and will make his headquarters In Edgar county. The county superintendent of highways will appoint the patrolmen in each county and will allot the territory, reporting to the district engineer. There will be ten patrolmen in Vermilion county, and each will be assigned to 15 miles. Each will be expected to look after all repairs, look after the drainage, dragging, grading, leveling, oiling and shoulder work of the dirt roads, and be ready to give immediate attention to any report of bad places filed by motorists. Each section must be given dally Inspection. It has been computed that the patrol system will cost all the way from $150 to $250 per irile per annum. This includes construction work and repairs of various kinds. In the case of the dirt roads, the drainage will be given first consideration. Grading will follow and oil will be the final stage, unless the road has been selected few hard surface. Rock Island county is one of the leaders in road progressiveness. Without a dissenting vote the board of supervisors adopted a resolution authorizing a special election in June to pass upon a proposed bond lssfle for constructing hard 'roads. It Is planned to make a tax levy of 3 1-8 mills upon each assessed valuation of $1,000, which will produce the sum of $132,000 annually. This money. It Is planned, will be utilised solely for the construction of permanent roads, Independent of the state bond issue. J# *'k*' C* I tern*! Think what that means to von la ,1-w- . rfood bard dollars with the treat de> ' ntand for wheat at bicfa price*. Many farmers in Western Canada have paid for their Iain from a single crop. The same wcc«-- may atil be youxa, for you can bay on easy terms. Farm Land at $15 to $30 an Acre located near thriving twrnL good markets, railways--land of a ind which growa to to 40 bushels of wheat to the eere. Good grazing lands at low prices convenient to your grain farm citable you to reap the prefita from stock ralelug aad dairying Learn Km Fact* Ibset Western Cassia low taxation (none on improvements), healthful climate, good schor ls, churches, pleasant social relationships a praperoue and industrious people. For UluKrated litarmtor*, map*, domristtoo of (n •peartsaltlas la Manitoba 8a*atrh««CB and Aftmrta, ndoead isllilSll fataa. •«(., writ* "•txutment of naaugrsOoo, Ottawa, Canada, or C. J. B rough ton. Room 412,112 W. Adaaas Street. CUaw, nL| M. V- Machine*. 176 Jofforaoa AT--po. Dstrait. Mfch. Canal'slan Government Agents. * , - jsi All the Same to Her. That daddy in the eyes of childhood is always just as big a man as any in the world was evidenced one day in the West Indianapolis branch library. 4 A tiny, smiling girl stood at the desk. "What does your father dof asked the* librarian In an effort to Identify her father q^mong the many men of the same name In the city directory. "He's either a 'mlllioneer' or an engineer, and I can't remember which,' returned .the tiny one, with a pusxled frown. Vocation Transferred. 'You're writing poetry, doctor?"* "Yes; to kill time." "Haven't jro® . any ptftients any more?" -iir" ' • --U Stop the PaUk- The hut. of a burn or a cut stops wheif •« Cole's Carbolisalve Is applied. It healSt J quickly without scars. 30c and 60e bj^ s all druggists or send 30c to The J. W, Colm- , Ra^tford^l.-Adv. " "V '5 Co.. - Encouraging. ' - Clerk--Since I married, sir, I flnd ^ il that~my salary is not large enough. •% Cynical Employer--The usual dis^ j *- covery, my young friend. And it wmt- .. e r w i l l b e a g a i n . ' ' I Shale of Value In Illinois. . The discovery of shale In Illinois by the University of Illinois, which may prove a cheap American source of potassium for agricultural purposes, and rich enough in potassium to increase the yield of Certain crops grown on peaty soil as much as 180 per cent, ts announced by the university. Tests have been In progress since 1015 to find a source of potassium. "This work of the university may be worth untold wealth to the state," said President Klnley in making the announcement. The experiments carried on unller greenhouse control Indicate marked benefit to crops, resulting from applications of the shale. The shale produced an increase in the yield of sweet clover of 168 per cent; rape, 96 per cent; of corn fodder, 148 per cent, and of buckwheat, 180 per cent. The above results were obtained on peaty soli In pot-culture work. There Is also some indication, according to the university, that the shale may serve as b source of potassium for gray silt loam, another type of Illinois soil. In the production of buckwheat there was an Increase of 32 per cent In the grain and 19 per cent in the straw, from use of shale. Corn fodder also showed an increase. While further experimentation will be necessary to determine whether the potassium compounds can be made available under field conditions, enough has been done to show, not only the presence of great amounts of this valuable material in Illinois shales, but also to demonstrate that the compounds are capable of reduction by agricultural plants gDMWD uuder laboratory conditions. x ' Lawyers to Revise Fees. The Illinois Bar association has set out to include divorce, separate maintenance, bankruptcy, and all other court action as factors In the high cost of living. A revised list of attorney fees was Included In a questionnaire sent to all its members by the association. Alexander D. King, chairman of the fees committee, asks that the lawyers throughout the state submit tM? ideas m the proposed changes, Favors Uniform Road Budding. Uniformity in construction of hard roads throughout the state is sought in a Joint resolution Introduced in the upper branch of the legislature by Senator Buck of Monmouth. It creates a committee of three representatives and three senators to work In conjunction with the department of public works and buildings. Road Inquiry Is Approved. Senator Buck secured the passage In the senate of his resolution for an Immediate legislative investigation of the road building situation. The mem-, bership of the committee , was increased to five aenutors and five representatives. Passes Bill to Keep Baseball Clean. The Flagg baseball bribery bill providing two-year penitentiary sentences for persons bribing baseball players to "throw" games was passed by the house by a vote of 133 to 0. Health Promotion Week Proclaimed. Governor Small has Issued a proclamation designating the week beginning on Sunday, April 17, as "health promotion week" in Illinois.. Plans Illinois Beautiful. A statewide plau commission is proposed by a bill presented in the senate by Senator Harold C. Kessinger of Aurora. It alms at giving Illinois a duplicate of the Chicago plan commission which, under the guidance of Charles H. YVacker, has done so much to make Chicago^ a more pleasaat and heautifyl place to live in. If the legislature adopts the Kessinger idea Illinois will be the first state in the country to inaugurate a statewide plan for improving and preserving Its natural gifts of beauty. (Lose Interest in Ag. Service. > Since the rapid development of the agricultural extension service, the public has lost interest in experiment stations, according to Prof. Eugene Davenport, University of Illinois. Practically no new money has been appropriated In the United States as n whole for agricultural Investigation since 1914, Dean Davenp&rt says, and the result is that 80 per cent of the station workers have changed positions and about one-fifth of the most experienced have left the stations far toore attract! /e employinwt Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It ' Affiants for Insurance Qffia^ Rejected. Judging from reports from druggists who are constantly in direct touch with the public, there is one preparation that has been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life .Insurance Companies, in an interview on the Bubject, made the as- Dont Forget Cuticura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisites)^ f , An exquisitely scented face, skin, baby-.f*? and dusting powder and perfume, reni» *' derlpg other perfumes superfluous . You may rely on It because one of th#""* Cuticura Trio (Soap, Ointment an<|i> Talcum). 25c each everywhere.--Adfk « Tee Bad. Sculptor (to his friend)--WeB, $ ^ w hat do you think of my bust! FiM •>* piece of marble. Isn't ltl V; Friend--Magnificent. What a pity ? ^ to have made a bust of it It woolll.t have made a lovely washstand.--Peal* | son's Weekly. Catarrh Can Be Cured Catarrh is a local disease greatly tnlht* t • i • it _,l,_ : enced by constitutional conditions. It tomshing statement that one reason why t^erejore requires constitutional treat* so many applicants for insurance are re- j ment. HALL'S CATARRH MKDICIN« jected is because kidney trouble is so common to the American people, and the large majority of those whose applications are declined do not even Buspect that they have the disease. It is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sixes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binfthamton, N. Y., for s sample bifetle. When writing be sues and mention this paper.--Adv. , is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces ot t h e S y s t e m . H A L L ' S C A T A R R H MEDICINE destroys the foundation OC the disease, gives the patient Victim of Necessity. "Senator," said that statesman's prlnate secretary, "a delegation of lady lobbyists Insists on being seen." "Bless their hearts!" cried the senator, in his most cheerful manner, "tell 'em to line up on the capltol steps and I'll guarantee they'll be seen by no less than half a dozen press photographers. As for me. I'm busy and positively cannot see them." That's what the senator wanted to say. As a matter of fact, he groaned aloud, put aside a batch of Important papers, and weakly said, "Show In."--Birmingham Age-Herald. Wanted the Dearest CUd In fine raiment tlie Englishman who had Inherited a fortune entered the chemist's shop. "1 want one o' them plasters to stick on yer back," he explained. "Yes, sir," replied the chemist, politely hiding a smile. "You mean a porous plaster.'* The customer drew himself erect till the glittering new watch chain-- hall fnarktd on every link--which crossed his middle, threatened to snap. "What do you mean?" he snorted. "Poor 'ouse plaster. Indeed I I want the vefy best you've got"--Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. Worry is the Interest paid on trouble In advance. .There Is no gospel In a kick. improving the general health and nature in doing Its work. AU Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. v K GET VALUE OF EACH MINUTl* No Man Has a Right to Waste M'||§ Own Time or Steal That * 'T of Another's. 39 years, t of ggoolida ilas the Yukon, $200,000,000 of the precious metal has been recovered, and It Is predicted that within the next quarter of a century another $200,000,000 will he given to the world In the form of sliver from the Mayo area where there are iudicaUwM rlcb finds. Organize; even people who wflat join will give you their moral port. WORK DAYS AND REST NIGHTS Can you do it now? If you there's something wrong. * Many find coffee a distuifeini element, so wisdy and use ' i Postum is a pure cereal drink con* taining nothing that can possibly disturb nerves or digest ion^ Youll findPbstunr has a delightful flavor that fully satisfies* "There's aHeasonjbrPostum Mode by Postum Cereal Battle Creek,Mich, I \ r •"! Lift la composed only of two thb)^ time and, effort. One is useless withoots the other. Both should be as nearly 100 per cent productive as we are able to make them. Try as best we may, the end of Hffc ' will find us with many things done. i No man ever wholly completed task allotted to him. There la a retprf' Bbnable excuse if Into our nse of tint no waste creeps. For the man who wastes his time or steals another's there la tber excuse or valid reason. Put a value on every minute. Be aa anxious and as certain to get that value ns 5'ou are to gain the worth of your dimes and your dollars. Remember that once a minute h«» passed by It Is gone forever.--F. Walker Is Chicago Dally Neil|i * • «"•> VI Yukon Riches. < • It Is estimated that in the Ia4t •itI ' v.?-.:-

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