McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Jul 1911, p. 2

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' ".' liltJ*,^-*'! . /'AWl' : ;£& '̂*,\ -> *rr-:j> ,1 vr -•', v.. < ?»<v The McHcnry Plaiodealcr Published by F. Q. 8CHREINER. McHENRY, ILLINOIS. Now, altogether: for youT* "Is It bot enough Even the mosquito is feeling the Impulse of the back-to-the-farm move­ ment Nearly everybody who says "I dont care" Is not telling the truth. When an aviator loses his way In a fog he cannot ask a policeman. At least not yet. Almost time for some get-rleh-qulck man to establish a correspondence school of aviation. STEEL REPORT DOT 8MITH SAYS TRUST OWNS 75 PER CENT. OF ALL LAKE ORES. MUCH 'WATER' IS ELIMINATED Strength of United States Corporation Is Shown to Be Due to Its Owner­ ship of Large Portion of Crude Product. Germany has adopted a new gun de- Signed to bring down aeroplanes, juat as if aviation is not dangerous enough. The convicts who struck for the eight-hour day in the Michigan peni­ tentiary finally decided not to walk out The earth has only 10,000 years to live, according to a Swedish astron­ omer. Let us then be up and doing, etc. Western farmers want the weather bureau investigated because Its pre­ dictions don't agree with their rheum­ atism. According to fashion expert In London and Paris the harem skirt is dead. As a matter of fact it was born that way. B&rber*, alarmed by the adv&iicte of safety razors, are considering the abolition of tips. They slight also abandon criticism of the previous hair cat Henry Alirenshoersterbaeumer Is the name of a man who lives in Mis­ souri. We suppose his friends call him Hank Alirenshoersterbaeumer for short f • boy graduated from a Pennsyl­ vania high school without ever hav­ ing missed a half day, and shall such horrors of child slavery be unre- lkuked? Irrigation is fast driving the Great 'American Desert out of existence. There are canals enough already to reach across the continent if placed and on end. One man gave a fortune teller $31S (or the information that he could find a treasure by digging in his back lot Be didn't find the treasure, but he got a lot of exercise. It is surprising how a city man, for­ tunate in the possession of a garden about the size of a checker board, can spoil $38 worth of clothes planting 10 eents' worth of peas. The appearance of five aces in a pqker game in Pennsylvania and the resultant death of three men, simply goes to show that a good thing some­ times can be carried too far. A New York boy found a certified eheck for $55,000 and was paid $1 re­ ward when lie returned it to its own­ er. Notwithstanding this, however, honesty is still the best policy. Returning from Asian Jungles, a scientist anneunces that a man "with a tactful wife in a wild country can get along twice as well as a single Also in a tame country. "Wealth is no longer an open ses- aae to Independence," wails a disap­ pointed capitalist Too true. Why, nowadays one cannot wear a ftlk hut sad a short coat without being ridi­ culed! Just to make good the proud boast t&at every other city In the country Is merely one of its suburbs. New York, a few days ago, sent a Pullman carload of its women to Reno to get divorces. Washington.--President Taft made public the much discussed and long expected report on the United States Steel corporation submitted to him by the bureau of corporations. Signed by Herbert Knox Smith, commissioner of corporations, the re­ port makes no recommendations and is almost whnlly narrative in form, ^fr. Smith declares that restriction of competition was a prime object of the organizers of the steel corporation, or so-called "trust." Capitalized at $1,402,000,000, the cor­ poration, he asserts, had tangible prop­ erty worth only $682,000,000. By con­ stant reinvestment of earnings, how­ ever, the report points out, much oi the "water" In the company has been eliminated. The steel corporation now owqb 75 per cent, of the lake ores, having re­ cently concentrated Its efTorts to se­ curing these "properties. On this point the report 6ays: "Indeed, in so far as the steel cor­ poration's position in the entire Iron and steel industries is of monopolistic character, it is chiefly through its control of ore holdings and the trans­ portation of ore." Discussing in detail how "the Im­ pending struggle of the giants" was averted almost over night by the for­ mation of the great combination of combinations, taking in 250 subsidiary companies controlling 60 per cent, of the total crude and finished steel production of the country, the report says: "Until 1898 the bulk of the busi­ ness was distributed among a very considerable number of concerns. There was sharp competition, modi­ fied by frequent pools of greater or lens duration and effectiveness." Then came an era of great combina­ tions, the report continues, with capi­ talizations ranging from $30,000,000 to $100,000,000, mergers of many smaller companies, which, Instead of eliminat­ ing competition, threatened to bring price cutting on a larger scale thm> ever before. In 1899-1900 there -wme three great companies--the Carnegie company, Federal Steel and National Steel--dominating the production of crude and semi-finished products, and six concerns--the American Steel and Wire, American Tin Plate, American Steel Hcop, American Sheet Steel, Na­ tional Tube and American Bridge-- controlling the lighter finished pro­ ducts. This was the period when the "strug­ gle of the giants" was impending and when the formation of the United States Steel corporation was con­ ceived and brought about. All nine of the companies named were combined, and later the Union Steel company, the Clairton Steel company, and. In 1907, the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad company were taken over. The promoting syndicate putting the deal through netted $62,500,000 in cash. The commissioner finds t£at compe­ tition, so far as prices are concerned, haB been modified by the policy of "co-operation" Inaugurated at the "Gary dinners," about which so much has been said before the congressional steel investigating committee. The present valuation of the com­ bine's tangible property is placed at $1,187,000,000, as against $1,468,000,000 outstanding securities, an Increase of about $487,000,000 in property, while only about $66,000,000 has been added to capitalization. It has now been demonstrated that a motorcycle comes oil second best in a collision with an automobile. The question has interested many persons who have had to step lively in cross­ ing the asphalt A wife in Atlanta had her husband arrested because he refused to kiss her. Husbands are getting very frac­ tious these days, and advanced fem­ ininity is finding it necessary to drive them back into harness. A government v oman expert says that chickens kept in cold storage nine months or a year are more healthful than t,hose fresh killed and kept 24 hours without refrigeration. It may be, but she will have a time convincing, the ultimate consumer. New York supreme court has de­ creed that a bill collector must pur­ sue bis prey in apartment houses only by means of the dumb waiter. For­ merly the bill collector was called upon to cope only with deafness, but now he Is confronted with both the deaf and dumb. The heir to the East Indian throne of Baroda, who is a student at Har­ vard. had to work on his twenty-first birthday while his future subjects were celebrating It with holiday and festivity at home. This is but an­ other Instance of the modern way in which princes have to stand a great deal to keep their Jobs. BALKS PLAN TO FIX VOTE La Follette Objects to Proposal Take a Ballot on Reciprocity Bill July 24. to Washington.--An attempt by Chair­ man Penrose of the senate finance committee to fix July 24 for a vote on the Canadian reciprocity bill was defeated in the senate through Sena­ tor La Follette's objection. The debate Indicated that some of the Republican insurgents and some Democrats will fight to have the wool revision and the free list btlls passed first so that the president will have to act on them before the Beuate passes the reciprocity bill. A severe wind rain and hail storm swept over Washington. It blew sixty miles an hour about the capitol, caus­ ing so much disturbance that the sen­ ate adjourned. Senator Borah was speaking and his colleagues found it Impossible to hear him. KENOSHA MAN QUITS MONEY CAN'T BUY SOME THINGS NATHAN ALLEN RETIRES AS HEAD OF BIG LEATHER FIRM. Alleged He Furnished Money to Buy Jewels Which Mrs. Jenkins Is Charged With Smuggling. ' Kenosha, Wis.--Nathan Ansa* th* millionaire leather manufacturer who is enmeshed in the CaBsie Chadwick- like financing of Mrs. Helen Dwelle Jenkins to an amount believed to ap­ proximate $1,500,000, and which the United States customs authorities at New York allege were smuggled into this country, has retired from active business. Announcement was made from the offices of N. R. Allen ft Sons company here that Mr. Allen had resigned as president and member of the board ot directors of the big leather concern. About three months ago Mr. Allen resigned from the board of directors of the First National bank of Kenosha, a post which he had held for several years. Charles Chester Allen, a nephew, succeeds to the positions va­ cated by his uncle In the bank and the leather company. When Charles Chester Allen was asked whether his uncle had been forced to resign, he made an emphatic denial. New York.--Collector William Loeb, Jr., declared that all the plans made by Richard Parr, deputy surveyor of the port, for visiting Chicago to investigate the smuggling charges against Nathan Allen, millionaire leather man of Kenosha, Wis., Mrs. Helen Dwelle Jenkins and John R. Collins, their southern friend, wers laid before Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh at Washington before Pair Binfieu on hio trip. Pending official developments in the case, ten men and women of social prominence in this city are under sur­ veillance and the names of a score art on the suspect list of Collector Loeb. What particularly stimulates him are Intimations he has received that the underground channel through his nets Is still open and that members of his staff are implicated* GIBBONS PRIEST FIFTY YEARS Cardinal Celebrates Mass of Thank* giving on the Anniversary of His Ordination, Baltimore, July 1.--In a little chapel in a home where he Is visiting, about 50 miles from Baltimore, Cardinal Gib­ bons offered up a mass of thanksgiv­ ing in honor of the most momentous event of his long career. He completes 50 years of a successful- priesthood Cardinal Gibbons. and 25 years as cardinal and nominal head of the Roman Catholic church in the United States. It was on June 30, 1861, that Father Gibbons, after fin­ ishing his education for the priest­ hood at St. Mary's seminary, was or* dained at the cathedral here by Arch* bishop Kenrick. Just 25 years later, June 30, 1886, the red hat was con­ ferred on him, also at the cathedraL HARVARD WINS THE VARSITY Beats Out Yale Crew In Annual Row­ ing Test--Minor Events Are Divided. New London, Conn.--Harvard won the annual boat race from Yale here by a liberal margin. At one point the Crimson boat was nine lengths ahead of the Blue craft. The Cambridge men caught the water easily and took the lead from the start, and at the finish were pull­ ing easily. An aeroplane circled over the course during the progress of the race. The official time of the varsity race was: Harvard, 22:44; Yale, 23:40ft. Harvard won by fourteen lengths. Yal« pulled out a victory In the freshmen eights by a superb spurt in the last half /iniie, while the Harvard substitute ^yarslty fours, leading from the start, defeated Yale by two lengths. Both races were rowed well, but a contrary wind and a slack tide made the time slow. Mother Slays Children and Herself. Lockey, Tex.--Searchers found the body of Mrs. Maude McCrary of Los Angeles, Cal., hanging from a wind­ mill in the rear of a house she had been occupying, and the bodies of her three children, with their throats cut in the weeds near the dwelling. Barbers who plan to abolish the tipping evil might also consider the advisability of cutting out the con­ versation. W- '/g A Pullman car which was filled with New York women who wanted di­ vorces arrived at Reno, Nev., a day or two ago. It may soon be necessary for the railroadB to run divorce spe­ cials. Lawyers could be provided to draw up papers on the way so that averything would be ready for the im­ mediate beginning of proceedings on |j»cblng Reno. Banner Connecticut Peach Crop. New Haven, Conn.--AAfrices re­ ceived here from important centers of the peach raising industry of the state point to a banner crop for this year. Bank Robbed of $43,000. Utica, N. Y.--The First National bank of Earlsvllle, N. Y., announced the disappearance of its cashier, <iuy H. Clark, and a letter mailed in Utica by Clark gave the officials the first Intimation that they had been robbed Of $43,000. Bank Head Found Guilty. New York.--Joseph B. Reichman, formerly president of the Carnegie Trust company, was found guilty of making false statements to the state banking department Regiments to Quit Texas. Washington--After a talk with Secretary of War Stlmson and Major General Wood, chief of staff of the army, President Taft authorised the withdrawal of four regiments from the maneuver division at San Antonio, Tex. The regiments will be with­ drawn In the next thirty days. Iditarod City, Alaska, Burned. Seattle, Wash.--Iditarod City, Alas­ ka, was nearly destroyed by fire on June 25. News of the conflagration has just been received here. Plan McNamara Defense. Indianapolis.--Samuel Gompers and other prominent union leaders began their conferences in regard to further­ ing the defense of the McNamart brothers, now in Jail in Los Angeles, Cal., on charges of dynamiting. Claxton Named by Taft Washington.--President Taft an­ nounced the appointment of Philander Claxton, professor of education at the University ot Tennessee, as commis­ sioner of education, succeeding B. Brown, resigned. f. $ '/I EARTH SHOCKS, HEAVIEST SINCE 1906, MAKE 8AN FRAN­ CISCO TREMBLE. SKY-SCRAPERS ARE ROCKED HJT HE TRUST FEDERAL GRAND JURY RETURNS NINE INDICTMENTS AGAINST ALLEGED MONOPOLY. PROMINENT MEN ARE NAMED "Companies and Individuals Affiliated With Steel Industry Are Charged With Restrgfht of Trade In Viola­ tion of the Sherman Act New York.--Nine indictments were returned by a federal grand Jury here against as many associations and a long list of individuals comprising tho so-called "wire trust." Among some of the prominent Indi­ viduals named as officers of the com­ panies composing the alleged pools are the following: Frank J. Gould^ president of the Old Dominion Iron and Nail Works of Vir­ ginia; Herbert L. Satterlee, Haber- shaw Wire company; William P. Pal­ mer, president of the American Steel and Wire company; Charles F. Brook- er, vice-president of the Ansonla Brass and Copper company and a member of the Republican national committee from Connecticut; Henry G. Stoddard, president of the Trenton Iron com­ pany; Erskine Hewitt, vice-president of the Trenton Iron company; Frank N. Phillips, president of the American Electrical works, and Ferdinand W. Roebllng of John A. Roebling, Sons & Co. The companies Indicted are: The Bare Copper Wire association, the Wire Rope Manufacturers' associa­ tion, the Lead Encased Rubber Cable association, the Fine Magnet Wire as­ sociation, the Underground Power Cable association, the Horseshoe Manufacturers' association, the Tele- phine Cable association and the Weatherproof and Magnet Wire asso­ ciation. Only two of the associations named are subsidiaries of the United States Steel corporation--namely, the Tren­ ton Iron works and the American Steel and Wire company. The offense with which they are charged is unlawful combination In re­ straint of trade in wire products In violation of the anti-trust law. Herbert Satterlee is a son-in-law of J. Pierpont Morgan and Frank Gould Is the well-known financial and street railway magnate. FLIES OVER NIAGARA FALLS Airman Beachy Circles Cataract In Aeroplane, 8klms 8urface of Rap­ ids and tands Safely. Niagara Falls. N. Y„ June 28.--With the whirr of his biplane motor drowned in the roar of the cataract and man and machine momentarily obscured In spray and mist, Lincoln Beachy, the California aviator, after circling abovs the falls, swooped beneath the arches of the upper Steel bridge and down the gorge almost to the whirlpool. It was the first time a bird-man had cut through the air currents and mist clouds and leaping foam caused by Niagara's falls and rapids that have lured so many adventurers to their death. Roof Falls, Seven Killed. Buffalo, N. Y.--Seven workmen were crushed to death and seven others seriously injured in the collapse of the roof and other portions of the Buffalo water department's new pumping statien. One In 500 Can Sell Fireworks. New York.--A permit has been re­ fused to 499 of the 500 applicants for permits to sell fireworks In New York on July 4, because their shops are not located in fireproof build­ ings. Dix Vetoes Grady Bill. Albany.--The Grady bill, prohibiting the photographing and measuring of suspected criminals, was vetoed by Governor Dlx on the ground that it would "hamper the police in securing the most usual and simple means of identification of suspected crim­ inals." HINES DENIES STORY Ddares Funk Suggested Fund Be Raised. Lumberman on Stand Before Lorimer Investigating Committee--Per­ jury Is Hinted At Washington.--Edward Hlnes, the Chicago lumberman, denied on the witness stand the story of Clarence S. Funk that be (Hlnes) had asked $10,000 for the election of Senator Lorimer. He also contradicted the testimony of W. H. Cook as to the al­ leged telephone conversation with Governor Deneen. Hlnes gave his version of the much discussed talk with Funk at the Union League club at Chicago, sftld he was sitting in the club with Fred Carney of Marinette, Wis.; Charles Hall, Sault Ste. Marie, and Isaac Baker of Chicago. Mr. Funk aproached and shook hands. -The witness continued: "He (Funk) said: 'I am very glad to hear of Mr. Lorimer's election to the senate.' I said I was glad to hear him say so. He said, 'I would like very much to have you arrange to Introduce me to Senator Lorimer. I have never met hltn.' "Then we walked over toward the entrance of the club and he said: 1 understand the senator must have been put to more or less expense for this senatorship, and he ought not to stand it The business interests ought to take it off his hands. We would like to contribute 1' "I said. 1 do not know anything about that. I will see about It and let you know."* Hines said he did not tell Lorimer Funk wanted to tontrlbute. After listening to Hlnes' denial of testimony by Fun\t and Cook, Sena­ tor Kenyon exclaimed: "Well, there will be some prosecu­ tions for perjury right here." Referring to tMe much-discussed telephoae conversation, Mr. Hlnes nied positively that he said, "Hello, Governor Deneen,** or spoke about the use of money In the election. He de­ nied knowing anything about the use of money to elect Senator Lorimer. Mr. Hines swore that Mr. Lorimer himself, not Governor Deneen, was at the Springfield end of the wire. He assured Mr. Lorimer, then a congress­ man, that he had been requested by Senator Aldrich to say that President Taft, Senator Penrose and the rest of the national administration were for Lorimer for senator, "and you must be elected." In testifying, Mr. Hlnes admitted saying he might "come down on a train," but made no mention of money. 11. . " Many Towns In Utsh "Wet"' Salt Lake City, Utah.--Out of the 110 cities and towns in Utah that voted on the prohibition ot the of liquor, S3 voted "wet" FIRE ON BATTLESHIP OHIO Capt. Buchanan Orders After Maga­ zine, Containing Large Quantity of High Explosives, Flooded. New York.--Fire, starting In the after turret of the battleship Ohio in the Brooklyn navy yard, became so threatening that the after magazine, containing hundreds of pounds of high explosives, was flooded on orders from Captain Buncbanan. Henwoed Found Guilty. Denver, Colo--The Jury in the case of Frank H. Hen wood of New York, tried on the charge of killing George E. Copeland, returned a verdict of second-degree murder. Copeland was standing near Henwood in the bar­ room of the Brown Palace hotel when Henwood shot and killed Sylvester yon PhuL Head of College Resign*. Galesburg, 111.--President W. F. McVey of Hemming coliege, Ablngton, 111., has tendered bis resignation Senator Warren Is Wedded. * New York.--United StateB Senator Francis Warren of Wyoming was mar­ ried to Miss Clara Le Baron Morgan in the ball room of the Hotel Gotham. Senator Warren la sixty-eeven years old and his bride thirty-five. Jap Ball Players Sail. San Francisco, Cal.--The Keio uni­ versity baseball team of Japan brought its tour of America to a close with the defeat of the United States naval training station team by a score of t to «. Central California and Western Ne­ vada Are Jarred--Property Dam­ age Slight--People Flee Into Streets in Panic. San Francisco.--Two earthquake shocks, the heaviest since the big shake of 1906, and separated by only a few seconds, jarred the central part of California and western Nevada. The first sharp shock, experienced at 2:01 o'clock, was followed within a few seconds by one of similar in­ tensity, each lasting ahout fiv® see* onds. Only slight damage was report­ ed from any section, but In San Fran­ cisco, Oakland and other cities in the affected area, panic seized upon crowds in stores and restaurants, and there was a pell mell exodus from the large buildings. One peculiar feature of the earth­ quake was that it did not appear to follow the old "fault" In the earth's crust, which has been the playground of tremblors in the past, but extend­ ed from the seacoast eastward to the Sierras, including hitherto exempt mountain areas. It was felt to the northward of Sac­ ramento in the Sacramento valley, southward as far as Fresno, and to the east to Carson and Reno, Nev., the former place experiencing the heaviest shock in its history. Some slight damage was done to buildings in San Francisco. Heavy stcuss in the ccrriice of tile Me­ chanics' bank building were moved slightly out of alignment; superficial ^cracks were made in several sky­ scrapers; cornices of the new post office building were disarranged, minor damage was done to the in­ terior wails of a number of other structures. Within a few seconds after the first shock many downtown buildings were depopulated by a rush to the streets. Telephone and telegraph service was suspended by the operators deserting their posts. Herbert Hadley, a lodging house In­ mate, died of fright, and some cases of hysteria and of cuts or bruises re­ ceived in the panic were treated at the hospitals* Santa Rosa, which suffered a great­ er disaster in proportion to Its size than did Sa-n Francisco in the catas­ trophe of 1906, scarcely felt the shock. San Jose, another heavy sufferer In 1906, reported the shock was the se­ verest experienced since that time, but it did no serious damage. Stockton and Fresno residents were frightened by the Jarring, but there, as in Sacramento, where the state of­ fices were deserted in a hurry as a re­ sult of the shock, the damage to buildings was trifling. In Carson City, Nev., the shock was severe. The federal court was in ses­ sion and judge, jury and attorneys rushed to the street. EXPRESS PROBE IS ORDERED Commerce Board Will Make Sweeping Inquiry Into Companies' Rate Charges and Business Methods. Washington.--A sweeping in vestige tion of all the express companies do­ ing business in the United States was formally ordered by the interstate commerce commission. This action follows close /an a re markable move made in filing with the commission new schedules of tariffs in all parts of the country. Although it will take several months to com­ pare these new with the old rates, it is understood the companies have re­ duced most of their charges. The question of a deep probe of ex­ press companies' affairs has been un­ der consideration by the commission ever since its reorganization last Jan­ uary. It was decided a fortnight ago to embark upon the Inquiry, but the announcement was withheld. In mak­ ing public the order the commission stated that the filing of new rates by the companies will affect the investi­ gation in no way. The inquiry will be without limit In scope or time. In the words of the official announcement, the investiga­ tion 1b ordered "to determine whether such rates, classifications, regulations or practices, or any of them, are un­ just or unreasonable, or unjustly dis­ criminatory, or unduly preferential or prejudicial, or otherwise in violation of any of the provisions" of the inter­ state commerce act, "and to deter­ mine the manner and method in which the business of said express compa­ nies and each of them is conducted." About a year ago, however, 100 com­ mercial organizations filed a request for a general investigation of the^ex- press trust, with a view to the equitar ble reduction of the rates charged. McCreary Wins In Kentucky. Louisville, Ky.--^Returns from the state Democratic primary indicate that James B. McCreary was nom­ inated over William Addams for gov­ ernor and that Ollle M. James made a runaway race with Thomas H. Paynter for the United States senate. Aged Packer Kills Himself. Indianapolis.--Albert W. Coffin of the Coffin-Fletcher Packing company committed suieide by shooting him­ self at his home. He was sixty-one years ol<L Auto Crash Kills Three. Albany, N. Y.--H. G. Nevell of Trenton, N. J., his wife and a son, aged sixteen, were killed when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by a Boston & Albany train at Post Roads crossing. Eugene F. Ware Succumbs. Colorado Springs, Colo.--Eugene F. Ware, poet Jurist and United States pension commissioner under Roose­ velt, died at Cascade, Colo., twelve miles west of here, of angina pectoris, aged seventy years. ToGet Its Beneficial Effect* Always Bwy the famine hribff Sold tyy all leading OneSix'*W » BoHW WHERE THEY DRAW THE LINE Naturally Men Disapprove of Extrava­ gance When Their Own Purse Is Concerned. Mrs. William B. Leeds, who took Mrs. George Keppel's house In Lon­ don for the coronation season, came from New York with 40 huge trunks, all the same size, all mounted with shining brass, all claret-colored, and all as lustrous as the body of a motor car. Mrs. Leeds, as her 40 trunks imply, dresses very beautifully. She spends a large amount on her wardrobe, and dlRcuaalnr the fact that woman's dress is so much more expensive and so much less durable than men's, she once said: "We women dress foolishly, and we will continue to do so till men disap­ prove; but"--she smiled on the men at the table--"no man in the world ever disapproved of dresc extrava­ gance in a woman unless she hap­ pened to be his wife."--Detroit Free Press. IN BUGGVILLE. iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili/iiiiiiMiniinniiii n Willie Fly a cyclone! Heavens! I'm caught ta A New 8ensatlon. Little Jean had visited one of the large summer amusement parks for the first time, and with the courage possessed only by those girls whose playmates are boys and girls older than themselves, she had not hesi­ tated when invited to take a ride on one of the "thrillers" that abound in such places. To her mother, on her return from the park, she confided the emotions she had experienced as she swept round the curves of the "figure eight" with her elder brothers. "Mamma," she said, "when I went round those awful turns so fast I felt Just as if I had freckles on my stomach!"--Youth's Companion. Djawjnn RjlnH_ This is a funny little stunt enjoyed- alike by old and young. If one has never tried 1( is very amusing to find anything with your eyes shut or to judge distances. First place a piece of paper on the floor before you, shut your eyes, walk backward two Bteps; then try to walk on the paper and pick It us. Then stick a pin in the wall about four feet up and try to plok it off blindfolded. Stand about five or six feet away from a table; shut your eyes; then try to walk up to it without knocking against It.--Woman's World. HEART RIGHT. •/hen He Quit Coffee. i life Insurance Companies will not Insure a man suffering from heart trouble. The reason is obvious. This Is a serious matter to the hus­ band or father who Is solicitous for the future of his dear ones. Often the heart trouble is caused by an un­ expected thing and can be corrected If taken In time and properly treated. A man In Colorado writes: "I was a great coffee drinker for many years, and was not aware of the injurious effects of the habit till I became a practical Invalid, suffering from heart trouble, Indigestion and nervousness to an .extent that made me wretchedly miserable myself and a nuisance to those who witnessed my sufferings. "I continued to drink coffee, how­ ever, not suspecting that it was the cause of my ill-health, till on applying for life insurance I was rejected on ao- count of the trouble with my heart Then I became alarmed. I found that leaving off coffee helped me quickly, so I quit it altogether and having been attracted by the advertisements of Postum I began Its use. "The change in my condition was re­ markable. All my ailments vanished. My digestion was completely restored, my nervousness disappeared, and, most important of all, my heart stead­ ied down and became normal, and on a second examination I was accepted by the Life Insuranoe Co. Quitting coffee and using Postum worked the change." Name given by Postum Co., • Battle Creek., Mich. "Thereto a reason." and it is ex­ plained in the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Kver read the tksv* Mtwf A MW a»»eat« txmm Urns te ft-- Ttoy «n xaataMt tim, sag nil * kOMS tattTMt

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