McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Dec 1921, p. 2

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?mm ' • • , • v.*«*•>:$* : v2» *.»' . A t- VfllB'MWftW! ' VV ".', ..-X STr*: " ."" !*• -tr#* ^ ** McHENBY PLAINBEALEB, McjatENBY, P|,* VX$? 1 ' I." $$>&#&£* *r. «r-:t V£r?t' ' 'Ca.-Li AGES Wt':U* iFORTHEt A^RrormjsnLMKsyMHocEicr ^IRVWei BtACHELLER ; CHAPTER XXII. • '.'. ' ' --21-- : erein Atx Lincoln Reveals His iMethod of Conducting a Lawsuit In fhe Case of Henry .J(0in«t^..et'«hi' vs. Lionel Davis. ' y -J' p: Utey found m«ny Of Da^af-aotes- M Taiewell county. Abe Lincoln's complaint represented seven clients pad a sum exceeding twenty thousand i&Uars. ,: With the papers In his pocket Harry went on to the Honey Creek settlement There he found that the plague had spent Itself and that Bitn had gone to a detention camp outside the city of Chicago. He was .not permitted to see her, the regulations having become very strict. In the city he Went to the store of Eli Fredenberg. The merchant received him with enthusiasm. Chicago had begun to recover from the panic. Trade was ;<dy. . > Harry spent the afternoon with Mrs. Kelso and Bim's batiy boy. He wrote • very tender letter to Bim that day. He told her that he had come to Chicago to live so that he might be near her and ready to help ber If she needed help. "The same old love is in my heart that made me want you for my wife long ago, that has filled my letters and sustained me in many an hour of peril," he wrote. "If you really think that you must marry Da- Tts, I ask you at least to wait for the developments of a suit which Abe Lincoln Is bringing in behalf of many citizens of Tazewell county. It Is IBcely that we shall know more than we do now before that case ends. I aaw your beautiful little boy. He looks ao much like you that I long to steal him and keep him with me." KM In a few days he received this brief C' m*y- £." ^ "Dear Harry: Tour letter pteased and pained me. I have been so tossed ^ ~ "about that I don't know quite where I • Atand. For a long time my lfe has y been nothing but a series of emotions. What Honest Abe may be able to <2 ; frove I know not, but 1 am sure that ' f he cannot disprove the fact that Mr. /-f jm Davis has been kind and generous to #> aie. For that I cannot ever cease to J# ». be grateful. I should have married i 'fi . him before now but for one singular jjps.y;\"rcumstance. My little boy cannot be •• • fcade to like him. He will have nothf*- V Ifig to do with Mr. Davis. He will not ae bribed or coerced. I saw In this a |r --prophecy of trouble. I left home and n ,%ent down Into the very shadow of ^ • ?< ' death. It may be that we have been f.f ir, aaved for each other by the wisdom I •••<* childhood. I must not see you iow. ^£:o-:|>or shall I see him until I have found /' tny way. Even your call cannot make .¥§3^ fri'l- tne forget that I am under a solemn f. promise. " it i -ft "I'm glad you like the boy. He Is a ^ ' Wonderful child. I named him Nej& 1 hemlah for his grandfather. We call §j? " f» " Jiim NIm and sometimes 'Mr. Nimble' « ';*• because he Is so lively. I'm homesick f; :j|o see him and you. I am going to „ *<f)lion to teach and earn money for ^ , !v Inother and the baby. Don't tell any- ^ p- one where I am and above all don't # ' jt~ - Come to see me until lor good heart 1 S * #•- KJfcan ask jrou to come.. ...... tr< j "God bless you! : / p' j. In a few weeks the suit came on. . JDavis' defense, as given In the an- I f ^ 4^,wer' a,,e8ed that the notes were to h > ' , .t>e paid out of the proceeds of the !T. v §' --sfifule of lots and that in consequence . , ; tl the collapse of the boom there had A - ft ' t'-' t>een no such proceeds. As to the un- H" understanding upon which the notes - ydrawn, there was a direct issue ,t?->r:'Of veracity for which Abe Lincoln •- i ' "wa» exceedingly well prepared. His ^ i cross-examination was as merciless •:%s, as sunlight "falling round a helpless ?5 l thing." It was kindly and polite In : tone but relentless In Its searching. * .;*^When lt ended, the weight of Davis' .^character had been accurately estab- In his masterly summing up jfhMr. Lincoln presented every circum ^stance In favor of the defendant's po- ^ sition. With remarkable insight be anticipated the arguments of his attorney. He presented them fairly and generously to the court and Jury. Ac- ^ cording to Samson the opposing law- .^yera admitted in a private talk that IS Lincoln had thought of presumptions , , - jf In favor of Davis which had not oc- ; j carred to them. Therein lay the characterlstlc of Mr. Lincoln's method in a r, « lawsuit. -f ^4 i "I* was a safe thing for him to do, rf * ; J *or he never took a case in which Jus- ^ |tic e was not clearly on his side," Sam- T, .J son writes. "If he had been deceived '01- * aa to the merits of a case he would S ^ : V drop It. With the sword of justice In »!/•;' Ws hand he was Invincible." + A Judgment was rendered In favor 8 'i?:' '"M the Plaintiffs for the full amount of ^ vfl $ their claim with costs. The character ' ^ •• of Lionel Davis had been sufflolentiy « v, / revealed. Even the credulous Mrs. Kelso turned against him. Mr. Lin- , / • /' i '% wiiu's skiii as a lawyer was recognized in the north as well as In the middle counties. From that day forth no man enjoyed a like popularity In Tazewell county. When Samson and Harry Needles left the courthouse, there seemed to he no obstacle between the young mar and the consummation of his wishes Unfortunately, as they were going MfSamson for his trouhles, flung an insult at the sturdy Vermonter. Sampon, who had then arrived at years of Arm discretion, was little disturbed by the anger of a man so discredited. But Harry, on the sound of the hateful words, had leaped forward and d^lt the speculator a savage blow In tfif face which for a few seconds had deprived him of the power of speech That evening a friend of Davis called at the City hall with a challenge. The hot-blooded young soldier accepted lt against the urgent counsel of Samson Traytor, Mr. Lincoln having left the city. As to the details of the tragic scene that followed next day, the writer has little knowledge. Samson was not the type of man for such a chronicle. The diary speaks of his part In it with shame and sorrow and remorse. We know that it was at daybreak when he and Harry rode to a point on the prairie "something more than a mile from the city limits." There he tells us they met Davis and one friend of the latter and two surgeons. It Is evident, too, tha£ great secrecy had been observed In the plan and its execution and that, until some time after the last act, Lincoln knew nothing of the later developments In the drama of Davis' downfall. For the rest of the deplorable scene the historian must content himself with the naked details in the diary of a puritan pioneer. "I went because there was no escape from it and with the shadow of God's -wrath In my soul," Samson writes. "The sun rose as we halted our horses. We paced the field. The two men took their places twenty yards apart. The pistols rang out at the command to fire and both men fell. Davis had been hit at the left shoulder. My handsome boy lay on his face. The bullet had bored through bis right lung. Before I could reach him he had risen to his feet to go on with the battle. Davis lay like one paralyzed by the shock of the bullet. His seconds declared they were satisfied. I 8aw them take the bullet out of rf down the steps Ltevis, who blame* 1 •,)**. ^ The .Two Man Took Their Plaeea. Harry's back, where It had lodged under his skin. I helped them put the wounded men into the wagon an<5 rode to the home of one of the doctors near the city wherein were rooms for the accommodation of critical cases, leading Harry's horse and praying for God's help and forgiveness. I took care of the boy until Steve Nuckles came to help me. Bim arrived when Harry was out of his head and didn't know her. She was determined to stay and do the nursing, but I wouldn't let her. She did not look strong. I loaned her the money to pay the debt to Davis and persuaded her to go back to her work In Dixon. She went and was rather heartbroken about it. "The surgeon said that Harry would live if lung fever didn't set In. It set In, but he pulled through. He mended slowly. I had some fear of arrest, but the conspiracy of silence kept the facts under cover. It was partly due, I guess, to the friendship of John Wentworth for me and Honest Abe. He kept it out of the papers. There were no complaints and the rumors soon fell into silence. "The boy, 'Mr. Nimble,' is a cun uing little man. When be began to get better, Harry loved to play with him and listen to his talks about fairies The young man was able to leave his bed. by and by, but he didn't get over his weakness and pallor. He had no appetite. I sent him with Nuckles Into the Wisconsin woods to live in the open. Then I took the small boy to Dixon with me in the saddle. Bim had Just got back to her work. She told me that Eiiphaiet Biggs had been there. He had heard of the boy andi wished to see him and demanded to know where he was. For fear that Biggs would try to get possession of 'Mr. Nimble' I took him with iae to Springfield in the saddle. "1 learn that Davis has recovered his health and left the city. A man :an not do business without friends aud after the trial Chicago waa no CHAPTER XXIII. Which Presents the Pleaaant Comedy of Individualism In the New Capital, and the Courtship of Lincoln and Mary Todd. Samson, with "Mr. Nimble" on a pad stuffed with straw In front of him, jogged across the prairies and waded the creeks and sloughs on ills way to Springfield. The little lad was In his fourth year that summer. He slept and talked much on the way and kept Snmson busy with queries about the sky and the creeks and the great flowery meadows. They camped the first night in a belt of timber and Samson .writes that the boy "slept snug against me with his head on my arm. He went to sleep crying for his mother." He adds: "It reminded me of the old days of my young fatherhood. 'Mr. Nimble* wanted to pick all the flowers and splash his bare feet in every stream. In the ev^ning he would talk to the stars as if he were playing with them. He Is like some of the grown folks In Chicago. He would sit hanging on to the reins and talk to the horse and to God by the hour. He used to teil me that God was a friend of his and I think he was right. It was good luck to get back to Sarah and the children. They took the little stranger into their hearts. 'Heart room, house room' Is the motto of this part of the country." It was a new town to which Samson returned. The governor and the state officers had moved to Springfield. The new capitol was nearing completion. The hard times which had followed the downfall of '37 had unjustly diminished Mr. Lincoln's confidence in his ability as a legislator. He enjoyed the practice of the law, which had begun to turn his interest from the affairs of state. But the pot of political science boiled before the fireplace In the rear of Joshua Speed's store every evening that Lincoln and his associates were In Springfield. The wit and wisdom which bubbled into Its vapors and the heat that surrounded lt were the talk of the town. Many came to witness the process and presently It was moved, for a time, to more accommodating quarters. Before a crowd of people In the Presbyterian church, Lincoln, Logan, Baker and Browning for the Whigs, and Douglas, Calhoun, Lamborn and Thomas for the Democrats, having assiduously prepared for the trial, debated the burning issues of the time. The effort of each filled an evening and Lincoln's speech gave him new hope of himself. Wise men began to have great confidence in his future. He had taken the style of Webster for his model. He no longer used the broad humor which had characterized his efforts on the stump. A study of the best speeches of the great New Englander had made him question Its value In a public address. Dignity, clear reasoning and impressiveness were the chief aims of his new method, the latter of which is aptly Illustrated by this passage from his speech In reply to Douglas in the debate mentioned: "If I ever feel the soui within me elevate and expand to those dimensions not wholly unworthy of Its Almighty Architect, It is when I contemplate the cause of my country deserted by all the world besides, and I standing up boldly and alone nd hurling defiance at her victorious oppressors. Here without contemplating consequences before high heaven and in the face of the world I swear eternal fidelity to the just cause, as I deem it, of the land of my life, my liberty and my love." In these perfervld utterances one may find little to admire save a great spirit seeking to express Itself and lacking as yet the refinement of taste equal to his undertaking. He was no heaven-born genius "sprung in full panoply from the head of Jove." He was Just one of the slow, common folk, with a passion for Justice and human rights, .slowly feeling his way upward. His spirit was growing. Strong in Its love and knowledge of common men and of the things necessary to their welfare, it was beginning to seek and know "the divine power of words." Every moment of leisure he gave to the study of Webster and Burke and Byron a Ad Shakespeare and Burns. He had begun to study the art of Irving and Walter Scott and of a new writer of the name of Dickens. There were four men who slept with him In the room above Speed's store, and one of them has told how he used to lie sprawled on the floor, with his pillow and candle, reading long after the others had gone to sleep. Samson writes that he never knew a man who understood the art of using minutes as he did. ' A detached minute was to him a thing to be filled with value. Yet there were few men so deeply in love with fun. He loved to laugh at story-telling and to match his humor with Thompson Campbell--a famous raconteur--and to play with children. Fun was as necessary to him as sleep. He searched for it in people and In books. He came oftep to Samson's house to play with "Mr. Nimble" and to talk with Joe. Some of his best thoughts came when he was talking with Joe and some of his merriest moments when he was playing with "Mr. Nimble." He confessed that It was the latter that reminded him that he bad better be looking for a wife. But Lincoln was only one of many remarkable personalities In Springfield who had discovered themselves and were seeking to be discovered. Sundry individuals were lifting their heads above the crowd, but not with the modesty and self-distrust of Honest Abe. "Steve" Douglas, whom Samson had referred to as " that little rooster of a man," put on the stilts of a brave and ponderous vigor. His five-foot stature and his hundred pounds of weight did not fit the part of Achilles. But he would have no other. He blustered much with a spear too heavy for his hands. Lincoln used to call him a kind of popgdn. I This free-for-all joust of Individualism-- one of the first fruits of freedom ' in the West--gave to the life of the little village a rich flavor of comedy. The great talents of Douglas had not been developed. His character was as yet shifty and shapeless. Some of the leading citizens openly distrusted him, Llucoltt pfjYT |Hfwi t>jt| little uiAn, in opposing whom he waa to come to the fulness of his power on the platform. It is evident that Lincoln regarded him as an able advocate of small sincerity looking chiefly tar personal advancement. There is a passage In the diary which illustrates the character of Douglas and Lincoln's knowledge of lt. The passage relates to a day in the famous debates of 1858. Lincoln had not reached Havana In time to hear the speech of his opponent. A great crowd had come by train and In wagons. Taking advantage of his absence, Douglas had called Lincoln "a liar, a coward and a sneak," and declared that he was going to fight htm. Lincoln heard of this and said In his speech: "I shall not fight wltli Judge Douglas. A fight could prove nothing at Issue In this campaign. It might prove that he is a more muscular man than I, or that I am a more muscular man than he, but this subject is not mentioned in either platform. Again, he and I are really vesy good friends and when we are together he would no more think of fighting me than 6t fighting his wife. Therefore, when the judge talked about fighting, he was not giving vent to any 111 feeling, but was trying to excite--well, Jet us say, enthusiasm against me on the part of his audience." Justice accompllihed her ends now and then with comic displays of violence In the prairie capital. One night Abe Lincoln and certain of his friends captured a shoemaker who had beaten his wife and held him at the Ullage pump while the aggrieved woman gave him a sound thrashing. So this phase of Imperialism was cured in Springfield by "hair off the same dog," as Lincoln put it. One evening, while E. D. Baker was speaking in the crowded village courtroom above Lincoln's office and was rudely interrupted and in danger of assault, the long legs of Honest Abe suddenly appeared through a scuttle hole in the celling above the platform He leaped upon lt and seising a stone water pitcher defied any one to Interfere with the right of free speech In a worthy cause. So it will be seen thftt there were zestful moments In these sundry vindications of the principles of Democracy in the prairie capital. (TO BE CONTINUED.) / ' Traveler Found .HI* Glass Eye a Meal Ticket. EARTH'S .SURFACE IN Scientists Have Proved That It MaVer at Any Time Wlthoift - * Some Movement. Is No portion of the earth's surface is ever at rest, though all but the great movements of earthquakes escaped attention until recent years. The minute vibrations are followed by J. J. Shaw m Nature as an unending train of waves, waxing and waning In amplitude, that are unceasingly coursing along the earth's crust and reach to unknown depths. The wave period ranges between 4 «|d 8 seconds; the amplitude Is betweSl one 50.000th and one 2,000th of an Inch, but with a wave length of 8 to 16 miles. The speed of the waves Is believed to be about two miles per second. Such local causes as air tremors and the swaying of buildings and trees were formerly suggested. but It Is now known that they are wide-spreading earth movements. Earthquakes are easily followed on the recording apparatus by the primary and secondary phases and the long waves rising to a maximum. The minor movements--mlcroselsms--are not easily separated from one another, and there has been no means of studying their propagation. But recently certain tremors have been traced on recording Instruments 60 feet apart. Continuing the investigation, the range has been extended to two miles, and lt has been made practicable to pick out Individual tremors on the two sets of records. One result Is the showing that the travel of the mlcroselsms^ Is Independent of wind and weather, though the source and cause of the movements are still a mystery. CULTIVATE HABIT 0F THRIFT Practice Meana That One Will Be Ready to Seize Opportunity .When It Cornea. Practice thrift habitually. Make'it as much a part of your routine as eating and sleeping. Get yourself systematized. Work on a definite sched u!e. Save regular amounts. Plan your work and your actions so that you will have no idle time, no lost motion, no wasted energy. These are aniohg the secrets of success, happiness and progress. The time to begin the cultivation Of thrift habits is now. The most Important message that can be conveyed to the people of this nation today is: "Get the thrift habit" Practice thrift not for a brief interval or Intermittently, but habitually, Disraeli said, "The greatest secret of success in life is to be ready when your opportunity comes." This brief sentence furnlshes^one of the best reasons for practicing thrift that ever has been given. It presents a phase of the question to which not enough attention Is paid. Ordinarily turlft is looked upon as a means of safeguarding one against possible emergencies or of building up an ao* cumulation of money for some definite purpose. But there are many unexpected turns In the pathway of life.-- Thrift Magasine. Mountain Mexloans Could Only Reason That Possession Of Crystal 0*' noted a Holy Man. I was sitting In the pretty little plaza at Oaxaca, Mexico, enjoying the refreshing breeze that blew in from the plains of Mitla and listening to the music of the military band. My nearest companion on the long bench was an old mining man by the name of Foster Scurlock. He had tramped the bare, brown hills of Mexico from gulf to ocean and in the course of his wanderings he had seen much of the rougher side of life. As we sat near a bright electric light I could see the gleam reflected in his right eye which was of glass. "Were you ever aver along the Pacific?" he asked of me. I answered thaP I had* bean down at Manzanillo, near Colima. "I mean further up the coast, above San Bias, up through Sinaloa and Sonora. It's half-civilized In most parts of the state of Colima, but take lt further up and pretty, well Inland and you can Just about ride for days without seeing a living soul. "I was through there three years ago, on the lookout for something to turn up. Nothing but long strips of sand and endless ridges of mountains, with here and there a little mesqulte brush thrown In for decoration. I'm not. much for luxuries, but I can stand a good tree to rest under at noon and a cool, fresh spring to water from. "The natives were as wild as deer. Whenever I would come to one of their villages, nine-tenths of ,them wduld hide in the bushes or scoot off like rabbits to the mountains. I've stayed all night in one of their rickety huts without seeing or hearing one of ^hem. In such a state of affairs it was a serious matter to get anything to edt. "One day In August I remember especially. I came in sight of a little adobe hut with a clump of scrubby trees around it, after riding all day with nothing to eat or drink. I woke up my pony with a dig In the ribs and in less than five minutes I a>yung out of the sadble and In at the front door. My sudden appearance scared the woman of the house, for she dropped the rolling pin with which she was preparing some corn for tortillas and ran back to the other door. Then she turned and stared evilly at me. I certainly didn't want to pick a fuss with her--I? was too hungry--so, hat In hand, I asked her politely if she would sell me something tp eat. At first she pretended that she didn't understand me, then after she wouldn't talk, I sat around so long that to git rid of me she finally grunted a little. Then J up and asked her again for something to eat, "She swore up and down that she didn't have a thing in the house. "I turned and walked toward the door as If to leave, she following at my heels. Suddenly I turned and, grabbing my right eye--this glass one-- crammed it into her hand, yelling like mad, 'Keep that till I get something to eat!' Well, sir, she dropped plumb down on her knees as if she had been shot, and then, carefully laying my eye on the floor she crossed herself repeatedly, saying In a penitent voice 'Santo miol Santo moll' ('My Saint! My Saint!') I knew then that ber saint would be fed. - ' "A few minutes later a couple of gamelike roosters had been killed and plcfked and were well on their way to the kettle. This supper was a grand success. The Mexican woman and her children stood with saucer eyes and watched the holy one eat. The guest of honor did not need to be urged to help himself, nor did he have any complaints to register,^ After the meal was over the remains Of the repast were carefully packed In my yawning saddle bags and a live rooster tied on behind for good measure. "If you ever travel in those parts, my friend, looking for cement deposits containing coarse gold, be sure to take plenty of food and a good, reliable glass eye." He rose and shook himself Ilka a bear, then with h hearty "Adlos, •enor" he ambled away across the plaza.--George F. Paul in the New lork Shwaing Post * ^ ( v u < i r; i n i r <xi b y >\ 4 j i IS, r k j riv;, • Pty\\tier (cy. C ontauis no Alum Use ii and Save ! Write tor New Dr. Price Cook .Book- It s frc ( Price Baking Powder Factory, loo} I n d e p e n d e n c e B l v d . Chicago l l l ftospliate Canada's Fur Farms. The growing Importance of fur farming In Canada is illustrated in the Dominion bureau of statistics report covering the industry for 1920. At the end of the year there were 582 fur farms in Canada, as against 414 in 1919, and the values bad Increased from $3,968,591 to $4,632,605 last year. Fur farms now exist in every part of the Dominion, and there are 14 ranches of domesticated animals In the Yukon territory. .. to all Wonwi ^ Readers of this Paper Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and never •uspect it. Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. , If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer pain in the bade, headache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irritable and may be despondent; it any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring; health to the kidneys, proved to, be just the remedy . needed to overcome such' conditions. Many send for a sample bottle to see what j Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine, will do for them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., you may receive sample size bottle by Parcel Post. You can purchase medium and large sise bottles at all drug stores.--Advertisement. The Envious Parent. "Has his schooling been of benefit to your boy Josh?" "Some," replied Farmer Corntossel. **I often wish I had had his advantages so's I could say 'agriculture' instead of farmin' without stoppln' to think." One doesn't have to be conceited in order to feelv exhilarated by comptt*. ments. A Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION v 6 Bell-ans Hot wafer ^ Sure Relief ELL-ANS 25i and 754 Packages, Everywhere j:; V scouring pots SAPOUO Tra4« Mark MOTHER SWEET PO> WDE FOR CHILDREN A Certain Belief lor CeartiMtiei. Headache. Steaaci TimMn, Twtfciat W»or«r», «•* g«itroy Wor«». ntjr lMkjs friihInS4hours. At»Ur B*apl« m»Ued PRBB• - MOTHER SHAY CO.. U Iter. N. V, ittrojr _jld§ln! Sample BMOted FREE Then He'll Learn. "Did your son learn anything in eol* lege?" "Apparently not. Now hi wants to get married." Quite often the man w&a fg swfft and a good guesser distances the slow but sure chap. WP Cuticura Soap The Healthy Shaving Soap Cod--rtSQemlMwIitwH--s- •--flwuM* Too many drawing room smiles terlorate into kitchen frowns,' Most people would rather be miss^ able rich than happy poor. Monarch of the Monkey Tcdfe ; The Chinese king of beasts Is a monkey, which Is said to be 20 feet high, with arms 10 feet long. He belongs to the tribe which Is tsliiess and which Is well known for its great Intelligence. This tribe IS regarded as entirely different from the brown monkey. The former Is distinguished among other things by its whit* Jaee and breast. Personal Liberty, j A Hyde Park orator returning home flushed with his efforts, and also from certain spirituous causes, found a mild curate seated opposite in the tramcar. "It may interest you to know," he said truculently, "that I don't helieve in the existence of a •eaven." The curate merely nodded, snd went on reading his newspaper. "You don't quite realize what I'm trying to make clear. I want you to understand that I don't believe for a single, solitary moment that such a place as 'eaven exists." "All right, all right," answered the curate pleasant* ly, "go to hell, only don't make quite so much fuss about it."--Tattler, • ' To Be Exact. ' "8o yo« called on the famous novailatr "Yes," said Mra. Gawker. "Did you find him In a bNffo study?" "Why, no. I think tlie room was finished in blue."--Birmingham Age-Har aid. V; ' Waehing Silver. Silver tfhould be washed in iwry hot and very soapy water. It should then he rinsed in very hot water and dried at once. Never let sliver drain. If Water is left on the silver there will be a tendency for the silver to blacken. If you have a llltle dish containing salt, or perhaps an old salt shaker kept specially for this pupose, beside joMi sink, lt Is a simple matter to clean spoons and forks that have become discolored by eggs. But do thla as soon as the piece Is discolored; don't wait until the discoloration has eaten deep into the fork or spoon. - "v ' Prompt D'aeouraoemant. **Any crime wave in Crimson GulchT*' "Not that you could notice," replied Cactus Joe. "That's the advantage of beliv' a tough settlement. Anybody who comes around tryln' to be a lawbreaker is liable to be made to feel like an amateur ttefortt be gets halt> way started." , Never sly "Aspirin" without saying "Bayer." ; ' WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" on tablets* A|jl "you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by ' ^ physicians over 21 years and proved safe by millions for •«%v¥.'Colds Headache^/ Rheumatism Toothache , /' Neuralgia^,Neuritis ,^1-ipsurache .V" Lumbago^- Pain, Pate" only "BaytsMfidkige whictfxstfttains proper d!re6fl&; tin boxes of IS tablet*--Bottles of 24 and 100--All druggists. - jjaplria la a* trade atA ef Baywr Manufactory of IfOBoacetieaddea t*r of SalitrUaull , v .. Writ* jrour name and address below. ii«ii to Vortag Park Sanatorium and reoelvs Ola Uat aad Mm us fRBB. Kama City. DIABETES FREE--Complete Diet List and M«,u ScK^k, wuh TJJ. £*£5 "•lues and full iiwruAon^icceMlf compiled and based on mm yean of cxpcricncc and succew in die treatment of Diabecei at Lertna Paik Sanatorium. WrUi far abort mnd iaalW tfLarint Pork SShMm M ml Frtt. umunc park sanatorium _ IMS Hirnn n»a» :6J44 x - ' ' - ' ' v-'t ifiUf 1W* " -r! WV:..

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