— —-— L PRO RI =) FUN) DENIED PLEASURES OF TABLE | Great Jockey Had to Sacrifice Much to | Maintain His Position as King of Riders. Fred Archer, the famous Jockey, had to employ ures to keep his weight down. The story is told of how, easion, he was the guest of a very hos- pitable host. English of savory meats, and at sturdy, rosy-cheeked man-servant made his appearance, his back bending un- a lordly dish. Poor Archer's face, as he surveyed the initial preparations for the eYesiing | meal, was quite piteous to watch. Then, with a shrug of the shogiders. and a sigh, but ill-concealed by a cyni- cal remark, he left the table, shortly afterward his host saw him pass the window on a hack, galloping toward the training grounds, of champagne and a biscuit, playing one game of billiards, and retired to | bed. —— ——————— Talk is cheap, but not when you are hiring a lawyer 1 to do it for you. Clowns to Jail in Petrograd. | According to the energetic Aftonbla- i det of Stockholm, the circus still exe ists even If it does not Hourish in Pe Ji At a recent exhibition two clowns engaged in the following pat. iter: | week?” “Looking for firewood.” “Did you find any?” “Sure thing.” “Let me see it” “1 will if you promise not to touch Lit” With that he took a match from ! behind his ear. Both clowns were locked up by the | soviet police. Legion Inherits Old Cannen, The American Legion Is assuring perpetuation of an Indianapolis tra- dition, which has endured for than fifty years, due to Mellvaine. Kothe post continuing the custom of {a society of Civil war veterans. Sa. { lutes will be fired from a Civil war cannon at an Indianapolis cemetery {on Memorial day and In the court. { house yard on Washington's birthday. | The old eannon originally was on {board a confederate flatbo at, which patrolled the Ohio river and was cap. itured by a federal gunboat in 1864. riding about in a wheelbarrow, SE Satisfying, ple it to do harm. like flavor; by boiling a full twenty Instant Postum stantly of hot water. e is made molasses. packages) is made (i toe) made i oC Uncle Waltss SECOND HAND “yy have the general appearance of a man who is hunting for | trouble,” volunteered the low-browed man. “I am greatly annoyed,” replied the professor, “I bought a second-hand typewriter, think- ing I was getting a bargain, and It {8 a constant ag- | gravation,” “A man always thinks he's get- | ting a bargain when he blows himself for ods | ond-hand goods. Old Doolittle thought he was | getting rich quick | when he bought ‘a surrey for $17. The man who | sold it said It was as good as new, | and it broke his heart to part with | it, but he had to go to Florida for his | | health and needed the money. Most | of the great bargains are offered by | | people who have to go somewhere, for { thelr health, and they're wise in doing | | that, for if they stayed around the neighborhood where they sold the | | Junk, they'd have their heads punched, “Doolittle was so proud and happy | over his bargain that it would have | | made you feel ten years younger just i to look at him. He hitched up his i family steed, which is named Jan- { wary, and then invited Aunt Julla and | | Mrs. Spry to take a buggy ride. He | | and his wife sat In the front seat, and | | the invited guests took the rear ong, | | and all went as merry as a divorern | i bell for about a block. “Then one of the hind wheels came | | off, and the surrey keeled over and | | dumped my aunt and Mrs. Spry onto | a pile of gravel that had been left on ! i the street by a cement contractor. He had put a red lantern on top of the | plle as a danger signal to motorists, | I think the fall must have unsettled Aunt Julia's faculties for the time be- ing, for she grabbed np the lantern and broke It over Mrs. Spry's head, Mrs, Spry has her faults and failings | like other people, but she is dead . game, and the way she went for Aunt | wiulla was the prettiest thing I ever | | saw. I was sitting on our froat porch where I could see the doings, and 1 | don't know when I ever enjoyed my- | | self so much. “Unless you have seen a couple of refined and cultured ladies clawing | each other around on a pile of gravel, | you don't know what true sport Is. | | Mrs, Spry showed some fine ring gen- | | ernlship, but my “aunt had the best | | wind and she finally won out and came : home victorious. ‘And thus through | | camp and court she bore the trophies i of a conqueror,” as the poet says, but | | there was no pleasure in living In the | | same house with her for a week or | ! two. As soon as she cooled down she | was sorry and ashamed, and would | have given a million dollars. if the | row had never started. i “Women are so blamed queer I've | given up trying to understand them. i i When I get the best of a shindy I feel | | all swelled up for quite a while. I don’t have any remorse unless I get | | the worst of it, and that doesn’t often | { happen, for I am a pretty handy man. | When I put a cupola on Tensmith's head last February I was so chesty | for a month that everybody noticed It, and thought I must have been appoint. ed postmaster, “Well, after the women fell out of the rear seat of the surrey, old Jan- uary ran away, and it wag amusing to | see that rig go bumping along the | street on three wheels, with Doolittle | banging onto the dashboard and his wife waving her umbrella and yelling Fire!” January couldn't go very fast, being covered with ringbones and spaving and other blemishes, but he managed to knock several people down and do a lot of damage to property, and the old mmn had to pay out nearly $200 to avoid some damage suits, “The one thing that keeps him from despair is a rumor that the man who sold him the surrey is coming back here to live, Doolittle will be at the depot to meet him, and it will be worth $5 to have a ringside seat when the meeting occurs.” Opinions, bv “What is your opinion of the tariff 12 “It's a great question,” replied Sen- ator Sorghum, “on which I do not per mit myself personal views. My pub- lle opinions are regulated largely by the lines of business in which my most influential constituents happen to be engaged.” Many Unclaimed Accounts In Banks New York--There are 205000 un- claimed accounts In savings’ banks, trust companies and private banks in New York state, accounts which have lain dormant for from five to thirty years, They range from $0 to “tens, of thousands of dollars, Blow. : “He seems a little slow.” “Who?” “The fellow who will be to have gone to school with Harding. 50 far he hasn't announced himself.” A. —— 7» Cuticura Soap for the Complexion, Nothing better than Cuticura Soap daily and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talecum and you have the Juticura Toilet Trio. —Adv. Further Remarks Suppressed. Girl (making a surprise enll to her sweetheart over the telephone) —Hello, dearest ! He—1ilello! Who Is this, please ?— New York Sun. WOMEN! USE “DIAMOND DYES” Old Skirts, Dresses, Waists, Coats, Stockings, Draperies— Everything, Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains easy directions for dyeing any article of wool, silk, cotton, linen, or | mixed goods. Beware! Poor dye ; streaks, spotd, fades, and ruins mate rial by giving it a “dyed-look.” Buy “Diamond Dyes” only, Druggist has Color Calrd.—Adyv, Dye One Point of Difference. He—Hello, kid! She—How dare you speak to me? 1 don't know you from Adam. | He—You ought to, U'm dressed dif- ferently. i —— ——————— “Cold in the Head" Is an afute attack of Nasal Catarrh. | Those Bubjec. to frequent “colds in the will find that the use of HALLS | CATARRH MEDICINE will bulld up the | Bystem, cleanse the Blood and render | them less liable to colds. Repeated al- | tacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to! Chronic Catarrh, HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE 1s taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mueous Burfaces of the Sys- thus reducing the Inflammation and restoring normal conditions All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Ridiculous. “Mammag, is papa going to die and | go to heaven?’ i “Of course not, Bobby. Whateve; | put such an absurd idea Into your} head ?"— American Legion Weekly. Now ls the Time te Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othine =double strength-is guaranteed to remove ot an ounces of Othine--doubls rom your drugsdst., and spply Httle of 1 night and morning and you thould soon see that even the worst freckies bave begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldo.n that more than one ounce fis needed to com. Simply Fie sure to sak for the double strength Othine, as this ls sold under gusrantes ot | money back if It falls to remove freckies, The Procesa Knicker—What a deflation? locker— Tempering the lamb to the | shorn wind { Whenever On in a tendency to con- stipation, sick-headache or biliousness, take Don’t submit to the Inevitable until you have positive proof that it is the inevitable. Many =n i man's early training —— Somes REE Contents 15 F uid Dram = GASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria ~~ For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, hs: pT IE Gmont 1182 NTS USE Spohn’s Distemper Compound to break It wp and Eel then back in condition Twenty six years’ ure bar made "Spohn's” ind iEpensable In treating Coughs and Colds, Influenza and Distemper, with thelr resuiting compl. cations, and all diseases of the throst, nose and lungs Acte marveliouvsly ss = preventive, acts equally well as 8 cure “ cents and $1.15 per bottle at drug stores. Goshen, Ind, SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY, rrr rr rr PR rr rr Pure, Rich Blood Will Keep Your Body Vigorous and Healthy PA Peer When impurities creep into yuar | precaution to keep the system in a blood the first symptoms are usu. | vigorous condition so as to more ally a § of appetite, followed by | easily resist disease to which every a gradual lessening of energy, the one is subject. 8. 8. 8. is without system becomes weaker day by an equal as a general tonic and sys day, until you feel yourself on the tem builder. It improves the appe- verge of a breakdown. | tite and gives new strength and vi- Nearly everybody needs a few | tality to both old and young. botties of 8. 8. 8., the great vege-| Full information and valuable lit. table blood remedy, to cleanse out erature can be had by writi ing to all impurities about twice a year. Swift Specific Co., 156 Swift Lab It is an excellent idea to take this| oratory, Atlanta, Ga. «Quiet. The Thing to De. Sergeant—"Anyhing As the boss entered the factory the today?” | employees were hurling tomatoes he yelled. “Can that HORSES COUGHING? i the | it doing In Corporal—*No, stuff.” ARE ECONOMICAL There is no economy in cutting expend- itures which bring you in a profit. That is extravagance. Royster's Fertilizer economizes for you by making your land and your labor produce larger, finer, surer yields. '