Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, May 10, 1891, SECOND PART, Page 10, Image 10

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things except the laws of health and life.
I went to Encland when 34, and cot some
hints from there. In those days very little
F
attention was paid to hygiene, and after re
turning I began to put into practice what
I had learned, and ever since that time I
have increased in weight and size. I
increased my chest measure 12 inches, and
my weight from 50 to 60 pounds. Ton will
be surprised to fcnow that this was done
fvwithnnt mr vev crninir jntA n tfpmnrfiinm
Health In Lone Breaths.
p "I could only use tbs means within the
(breach ol a blind man. and one of the princi-
t'pal means of increasing my size and weight
which I adopted was air, taking a larger
and larger .quantity into my lungs. I hare
I cultivatstbrcathing as the basis of life, so
that sow I suppose I can inhale and exhale
as large a quantitr of atmosphere as any
i living man. That is the secret of the devel
t opment of physique, to take into your lungs
' the whole amount of air which your lungs
' are intended to receive, and that is, in the
case of a man of fair chest proportions, 330
. cnbic inches. The well built men in this
country do not take in 200 inches.
"Tne hrst thing you do when you awake
' in the morning is to be snre yon hare a cur
rent of fresh air passing through your room.
Remove the heavy bed clothing from your
i person, leaving only a sheet over you, lie as
nearly flat as you can, draw up the knees
and relax the muscles of the abdomen.
I Then with your mouth closed and your chin
I raised, in order to relieve all constraint
, about your chest, draw in all the air you
can without violence, doing it gradually
and without painful effort. Hold the air
os long as you can and breathe it out
' through the mouth or nose, in the former
case with effort.
Never Itreath Through the Month.
"Close your lips as soon as all is out, and
practice doing nil your inhalations through
your nostrils, never under any circumstances
inhalinr through the mouth. I would
rather drink the water left in a finger bowl
at the close of a White House dinner, than
to take in one spooniul of Washington air
through my nioutii. Do this breathing
while in bed in the morning for five or ten
minutes. This has been my constant habit
lor a number of years.
"You will remember the Bible says: 'God
breathed into man's nostrils the breath of
liie, and be became a living soul.' Shake
speare and other famous men speak of the
nostrils as the only proper channel to be
used in breathing, and it is an uncontra
dicted fact that the Indians who never
breathed through their mouth were never
subject to thousands of our diseases, until
coming into contact with modern civiliza
tion he was induced to adopt the white man's
silly method, and he at once became sus
ceptible to all of those ills of the Caucasian.
Iu the pulpit the very moment I need a
supply of iresh air I close the mouth, and
the great ranee and power of my voice I at
tribute most largely to the development of
the luugs through my great breathing
capacity."
Xtaldness and the Sun Care.
"Air is my first prescription," continued
Dr. Milburn; "the sun is my next. I
oiten walkabout with my hat off in the
sun, and it was a practice of Goethe to do
this for an hour at noon. He said it stimu
lated his intellect.nnd that there was a vital
end quickening power in the sun's rays.
Thirty years ago I began to be bald. My
father aud younger brothers were as bald a's
the palm ol your hand when they were 40,
but I told them when they informed me
that I was getting bald, that I would never
be so. I have resolved to prevent it and I
did. I never wear a hat when I can help
it, and I am not as barefooted to-day on the
top of my head as I was in 1860. I wash
my hair whenever I wash my face and
bands.
"I have a muscular exercise, alight dumb
bell exercise," Dr. Milburn went on, "and
haveoften used Indian
clubs, and in addition
have some gymnastic
movements for the
arms, legs, chest, etc
As to the massage
treatment, I suppose
I am the most expert
i massage operator in
'ibis country, and am
also the best groomed
animal in this respect.
Immediately after get
ting out of bed, I take
a cold, tepid or warm
bath, and rub down
Justice Hi adieu. vigorousIy,andIspend
from one to two hours everyday in
Grooming My Venerable Carcass.
VI used to be brought constantly in con
tact with Henry "Ward Beecher, and other
prominent characters of large physique, 30
years or so ago, and they were always banter
ing me about my small vitality. 'Why
don't vou laugh and grow fat,' they would
,say. "'Well,' I would reply, 'I laugh
ynough, but don't know how to grow fat.'
Wince I have changed my plan of life I have
buried them all."
"I use horsehair mats in rubbing down,"
he continued, "and then put on vaseline or
oil and rub into all parts of my body. The
oil taken up by the skin in this way is as
good as food, and it keens the cnticie in ex
cellent condition. This use of oil was com
mon among the Greeks and Romans, and
jou will find it among many ravage
tribes."
"How about vour eating'."' I asked.
"Oi course," replied Dr. Milburn, "a
man must varv bis diet according to his
habit-;. If you cat a certain article the
year round it will certainly give you the
itch, The diet should conform to the sea
son. The Duke of Montrose once put up
Itching I'olcs In Scotland
for the benefit of the peasantry, and you
know Sandy feeds on oatmeal 12 months of
the yer. The tilings were a subject of
considerable ridicule, but the people ap
preciated them, find whenever they used
them they said as they rubbed: 'God bless
the Duke of Montrose' "When I come to
eating I take a cup ol hot water aud sip it.
It should not be drunk. That is the only
water I taste during the day except a glns's
of water at the beginning of dinner. All
the water I drink is boiled. Then comes
porridge and fruit, the former with milk and
sugar, xnen some Drown oread and Dutter,
a little fish and a little bit of chop or steak,
and then I wind np with two boiled eggs.
"I have eaten from two to four boiled
eggs every day of the year lor 30 years, and
t when I speak in the evening I hi ways eat
two boiled eggs beiore so doing. For lunch
1 eat n few biscuits, a little cheese, herring
and shavings of dried beef. For dinner at 6
o'clock a simple soup, one course of meat
with one or two vegetables, green things in
spring, and above all, onions. I am very
strong on onions. I believe it to be the most
valuable vegetable that enters the stomach.
I take boiled milk before going to bed,
which is the last thing, and it enables me to
sleep well. My digestion is as perfect as
when a boy, and 1 think that without a
doubt, any man, by adopting the same
methods that I did, can achieve the same
results."
fupreine Justice Bradley on Longevity.
Dr. Milburn here attributes his good
health and working powers to his habits of
life, Many ol our spry
est old men say that
' habits are little, but the
inherited constitution is
everything. Take for
instance. Justice Joseph
P. Braaiey.ortbe United
States Supreme Court,
who has, for the last 2t
years, been one of th '
most learned men on thi
Supreme Bench, and
who now does as much
work as any man in pub
lic life lie was born iu
1813, was 78 years old
last .March, and his Sm,v Kina.
working hours are from 10 to 12 daily.
There Is no brighter mind in the country
than his, and his range of knowledge is as
wide as that of any other man on the bench.
X met him at Deer Park during the past
summer and ehatted with him as to his
health. Said he:
"I have been a worker all my life, aud
flurjni ureatputof mv career J have putj
mmzm
w - kL.vminr f.Nrt
HS
HM
iu from 12 to 16 hours out of 24. It is my
habit now when the court is in session at
Washington to put in four hours on my
cases before I go to the Capitol. I rise
earlv, take mv breakfast and wort from 7
unti'l 11. The' Court meets at 12, and I sit
theie .ind pass upon cases uqtil, 4. I then
return to my house uponue adjournment
of session of court, and take a. couple of
hours of relaxation until dinner time. Some
times I take a nap.
Mathematics as Becreatlon.
"After dinner I usually spend the even
ing in my library, w.here I work until I get
sleepy. I vary my work with philosophical
or mathematical calculations, and some
times take a rest by reading a good novel.
I am very fond of good fiction, and I have
a natural tendency toward mathematics.
"I attribute mv health and working
powers." said the Judge, ''to an excellent
constitution, added to a moderate degree of
temperance in eating and drinking. My
father was a farmer, and he married a
farmer's daughter. He was 18 years old
when hejras married and my mother was
17, and I was the first child and apparently
inherited the vigor of both parents. I was
brought up on a farm and spent a part of
every year upon one until I was 20. After I
weut to college I spent my vacations in
teaching, and I also did considerable sur
veying. While I was at college I studied
16 hours a day, and I think that I worked
too hard during my early life, and especially
during a period of my practice of the law.
I Was very ambitious to succeed, and when
I had Important cases" I often sat.up until
morning studying them.
A Warning Against Overwork.
"One might remember well and it was
this experieuco tnat led mo to be moderate.
I had a very knotty problem to solve, and I
worked away far into the night. Toward
morning I was shocked to find my mind all
at once refuse to act. I could not think
at all upon the case and I feared that I had
piralysis ol the brain or at least the first
symptoms of it. I took a wet towel and laid
it over my head and went to bed and slept
aoout three hours. Wheal awoke I found
my mind all right, hut I decided not to risk
such a thing again. I have since been more
temperate in mv work, and am regular in
my working hours. " -
, "1 have never patronized the doctors to
any extent," continued Judge, Bradley,
"and I have been well the greater part of
my life. When I was about 20 years old I
was troubled with bilious attacks. These
continued a number of years and then left
me. 1 don't know that I. did anything to
drive them away, and I have no particular
rules of diet, 1 have smoked during apart
of my life and I smoke now.
An Intermittent Tobacco Smoker.
"I find no trouble, however, in stopping,
and throughout life I have smoked lor two
or three years at a time and then stopped.
Then taking it up again, ai.d again stop
ping. When I break off smoking, however,
I become a teetotaler as to tobacco for the
time. 1 also take a little whisky and water
occasionally and I have never found it to
disagree with me. Good wines in modera
tion seem to suit some men, but they are too
acidiferous for my stomach and I do not
drink them. As to what I eatlam'not par
ticular, save that I choose such things as
agree with me and discard tbos which do
not.
"You ask my advice to young men who
wish to make the best of their working
powers. I can only advise moderation and
temperance. The young man who is moder
ate in everything, "leading a temperate life,
abstaining from worry, and keeping his
working apparatus in good order,is bound to
outlast him who does not, provided the con
stitutions of the two are the same. I believe
that marriage conduces to length oi years.
The married man keeps better hours, and
his life is a natural one."
Uow Horatio King Hoops Tonus;.
Another Washington septuagenarian, al
most as old, and fully as active, both phy
sically andjnentally as Judge Bradley, is
the Hon. Horatio King, who was Postmaster
General in Buchanan's Cabinet,.and who
now, a generation later, is as fond of Wash
ington literary and sociaLlife as he was then.
I met him on the street" the other -day, and
my first question was as to his habits of ex
ercise, baid he: " "
"I am a great believer in walking, and I
think one of the .secrets of my good health is
in that I never owned a horse or carriage.
I walk until I get tired, and then if I have
not reached my-tiestination I take a street
car. As to my other rules of life, J don't
really know that I havo any except those
of ordinary temperance. I have always
been accustomed to plain living. My
father was an independent farmer in New
England, and I was brought up on a farm.
We had plenty of potatoes and meat and
good bread, and this aras-cnough Jflr-us,
without overloading our stomachs. We
were not very particular as to what we
drank, and I remember we always laid in a
barrel
Of Fine Old Medford Bum
at harvest time. Well. I have kept up mv
love for plain living all my life, and I sup
posemy health has been the better for it.
I enjoy life now, and I have always done
so. I keep no regular hours, go to dinners
and receptions aud enjoy them! and I used
to smoke tobacco and was fond of it. I
found, however, that it was not good for
me, and I gave it up."
I asked (be noted lawyer, Mr. Latrobe, of
Baltimore, who is nearly if not quite 90
years ol age, and whose health is apparent
ly perfect, his receipt for perpetual youth.
Suld he: "I attribute my long lifejto an ex
cellent constitution, and the only advice I
would give to young men would be tn avoid
the use of tobacco. I have not used it uow
for 25 years, and I stopped it because I
found it was injnringmv health. As to my
other habits of lite, I have been rather gen
erous to inTself than otherwise. I have
eateu good dinners and have given dinners.
I don't believe generally in the mortifica
tion of the flesh, and I believe in enjoying
li.e an. far as possible as you go along."
Ex-GoTernor Curttn, of Pennsylvania.
Ex-Governor Curtin, of Pennsylvania,
has been one of the leading public
men in the United
mates lor many
years. He was
eminent as a War
Governor. He served
withgreatdistinction
as our Minister to St.
Petersburg; and be
has bad a long career
as a member of Con
gress. He is in good
condition "now, and
be promises to live
to be 100. Said he.:
"I owe much to a
good constitution.
My grandfather died
from being thrown
Governor Curtin.
from a horse at 106.
and my father lived"to he 93. I have had a
stirring lite, have seen some sickness, and
am cow, at77, in perfect physical condition.
I had three or four attacks of the grip list
winter, and have survived them. My rule
of life is temperance apd regularity. lam
blessed with a very small appetite, and I
don't know what it is to be hungry. I have
just eaten my supper. It consisted of some
bread and milk, and I rarely eat more than
this for breakfast. My dinner is light, and
lean go all day without eating and not
notice it. I have no particular rules of
diet. I drink a little good rye whisky
everv dav. and smoke in moderation. I dow
not exercise a great deal, and nave no
particular rules of health. I believe that
marriage conduces to a long life, "because it
j ,,, -. .
is in the course of nature.
Not Always a Healthy Stan. ,
"At the close -of the war I was, a very tick
man. For four years I was constantly with
in the sound of the clicking of the tele
graph. It was so in the Governor's office
in Hairiaburg, and in the field I carried an
operator with me. Day and night my mind
and nerves were on a strain, and at the olose
of the war my nervous system was broken
down. I could not olose my hand, I was
so nervous, and J low entire .control of my
self. My doctors told me that a change of
climate was all that would save me, and
they-sent me to Cuba. I improved as soon
as I got out of New York, and X was well
In a few months.
Fsaotc G. CXBraxxxs. X
Us
wi&n via 'Ji'
vr
. THE
GOSSIP'OF THE WEEK,
Case of Isaac Smith, of Ohio, Who
Was Respited Eight Times.
DR. FELIX OSWALD ON L0K6EYITI.
Portrait tf Emma Eames, Who It Bitting
ill London by the fan.
MAEEIAQB OF THE FBIK0KSS L0UIBB
nrxiTTXir roa th Disr.i.TCB.1
Governor Campbell, of Ohio, has at last
decided to settle the case of Isaac Smith,
convicted of the murder
of his cousin, Stephen
Skidmore, by commut
ing the prisoner's death
sentence to life imprison
ment The case is re
markable from the fact
that the prisoner, since
originally convicted in
1889, has been respited
eight times, both Gov
ernors, Foraker and his
Jtaac Smith. successor, having grave
doubts of his guilt. Smith was "found
guilty on circumstantial evidence, pure and
simple, and such evidence as would hardly
be satisfactory to any other jury in the
world except an American. The prosecu
tion relied almost entirely on the evidence
of a man, Fowler, who repeatedly perjured
himself in matters of minor importance. As
a result many influential persons interested
themselves in the prisoner's behalf and
feeling swayed repeatedly to and fro, now
with Smith, then against him, until the
present Governor of the State determined on
a life-sentence as the' best way out of the
difficulty. Smith himself very consistently
argues that he is either guilty or not, aud if
there is a reasonable doubt he should bo
permitted to go free, but this was more than
the Governor was willing to allow and
Smith will, therefore, have to serve his
time, whether guilty or not.
Tho Kale for Longevity.
Dr. Felix L. Oswald gives some reoipes
for longevity in a recent letter, but very
sensibly refuses to indorse any of them.
The learned doctor is always interesting, no
matter what his subject, because be is so
thoroughly conversant with- everything
worth talking about In this last case he is
every bit as entertaining as usual, but does
not cover the ground completely as his
wont, not from a lack of knowledge so much
as a lack of space. In treating of the sub
ject of longevity it is idle to fix upon any
given rule lor its attainment No scientific
or other rule ever promulgated has demon
strated power to lengthen for a single year a
human life. Yesterday we might have met
So-and-so on the street and compared his
magnincenc pnysique with our puny shell,
inwardly envying the fortnue Nature had
bestowed on the other. ' To-day w read of
his death. The 'poor, weak;, "cold-blooded
mite of humanity goes shivering past and
we mentally fix the date of his funeral,
thereaiter granting him respites for gen
erations perhaps.
"Oh, man, man," raves the prohibitionist,
"drink will destroy you," and yet there is
not one among us who cannot point out
dozens of persons who have been drunkards
all their lives: are still robust and
hearty, and likely to bury the majority
t those who are busily trying to save them.
There is a man who has had consumption
lor the last 20 years and looks better to-day
than he did at tho beginning. There's an
other and another and still another, who
have bad incurable diseases as long as we
nave Known mem ana thev are still livine.
Baxter, the celebrated non-Conformist, was
such a frail delicate man before "20 years
that he could scarcely move about without
assistance. So fragile was he then and until
the time ol his death that scarcely a dav
passed but the life-blood oozed Irom the
pores of his fingers' ends through weakness,
and yet he lived to be 76 years of age,
preached many wonderful sermons, wrote a
series of works which fill completely 25
large volumes,, served 18 months' imprison
ment and did a prodigious amount of labor
generally. What law or rule held good in
that man's case? Was it abstinence? Per
haps. And yet German statisticians have
recently demonstrated that heavy drineers
live longer than total abstainers, and mild
drinkers longer than either. Doctor Oswald
may agree with you that a genuine' specific
for longevity has not been discovered yet
Importation of Egyptian Cotton.
The steamer Fitzroy recently arrived in
New York from Alexandria, with a con
signment of Egyptian cotton destined for
consumption in this country,' amounting to
2,150 bafes and valued at $36,000. It seems
ather strange that the importation of this
material is necessary, when according to the
most recent statistics, the production of cot
ton in the United States exceeds the demand
by 5,316,000 bales, or in plain figures the
estimated production last year was 7,434,000
bales of 400 pounds each, against a consump
tion ol 2,118,000. Will someone please ex
plain the necessity for importing the foreign
articles. Must we admit the Egyptian cot
ton to be superior to ours, after the time
honored assertion that the American pro
duction was the finest iu the world?'
A FrollHo French Writer.
Most people think that when a, person
reaches the age ol 60 or thereabouts it is high
time to prepare for dis
solution, but M. Fran
cisque Sarcey, the
eminent dramatic critio
of a Parisian journal,
does not go on this
theory, for now. just as
he has reached the ripe!
age ol Oi, what does h
do but get married. Old
as he is his tastes are
evidently young, too, if
we may judge by the
fact that he has selected Franoltque Eareey.
as his bride
xauy luuvau -lean vouncrer
than himself.
M; Sarcev is not a handsome man as the
reader will agree by reference to the" portrait
accompanying this article. Both face and
form are thick and "Dodgy," and one look
ing at him would think him a dull old fel
low, but, in truth, his is one of the brightest
intellects in all France. Foryears'he has
been contributing 14 or more columns weekly
of dramatic matter to his paper without ces
sation, and it c.in be said that his articles
are always lull of lite and spirifand the
opinion of no man of his time is held in
higher esteem. . Besides, there seenis to be
no limit to his powers. Others will at least
occasionally drift away from their chosen
field, but M. Sarcey never. Day afjer day
he has bomething new to say in theatrical
matters. To-day it is on dramatic novelties;
to-morrow new books relating to the staire:
the next questions concerning the advance-
ment or condition of his favorite, rtrofessinn
Always uruiiani.iogicai and sparlcliug with
ideas are the productions of this dis
tinguished writer, and 'as he is still active
and strong we may reasonably hope for a
long continuance of his much-admired work.
A Judge's Peculiar Baling;.
The judge of a petty court in England
raised a peculiar point in a trial which took
place there recently. ' A committee of
miners dismissed a man for drunkenness.
The oommittee happened to be made up en
tirely ot teetotalers, and when the man whe
bad been discharged appeale'd'to'th law the
judge In question sustained him, .and, fur
thermore, 'roiused to accept the testimony of
the committee, on the ground that the men
composing it were so extreme ia their views
that their evidence was bound to be influ
enced. While many persona will obtect to
. .it. , . . - ri: . .
.such a theoretical manner of aondnstimsr 4
Km? T5t J
iv ,m&& m
im WHMM
Kk. Hi ...mm
vK9SSk. I VtNOI
S
FCTTSBpTRff DI8FAT0H.
trial, there are others again who will admit
that there is considerable good, hard common
seme hi the judge's view.
The Erlncess Ioulia's Marriage.
Another" niarriage-of the spring aud win.
ter variety, soon to take place, is that of the
reigning irince,
George Victor, of
Waldeck-Pyrm o n t,
with Princess Louise
Caroline Jullane, of
Schleswlg-Holstein-Sonderburg-
Gluoks
burg. The groom
was born Janurylt,
1831, and the bride
January 0, 1858, so
there is a slight dis
crepancy in age.
Princess Louis is de
scribed as afatr.blue
eyed, kind-hearted
girl of more than or
PiWn.iii l".si.fV
dinary intelligence.
Whither she may or may not consider it a
matter for self-congratuiauou, n nwi
that she at one time was seriously consid
ered as a mate for the'present Emperor of
Germany. 'The arrangement waa set aside,
however, and-Princess Victoria chosen in
stead. Probably Louise, etc.. is better off
as it is. even if she, does marry a man well
up in years, as he has at least the reputation
of being a good-hearted old fellow.whlle the
Emperor's marital affairs do not appear to
be as' happy or as well balanced as they
could be.,
Alsace-Lorraine lsj German.
There is a lot of talk these days about the
hatred of Alsace-Lorraine for everything
German and it would appearas if the border
countries ceded to Germany after the Franco-
.Prussian war were solidly French communi
ties carried oyer bodily into the enemy's
country. The sensational writers who are
continually issuing reports ought to remem
ber that these principalities, though under
French rule since the time of Louis XIV,
are"" not French in any other particular.
During all the 200 years this splendid coun
try was alienated from the German people,
the language of tbe,Bhinelanders never
ceased to be the language of the people and
even all the newspapers have been printed
in both languages. An officiil estimate ot
the population, -made in 1S90, also annuls
the wild assertions. Ot the 1,660,000 persons
comprising the population 1,350,000 are of
German origin. Under the circumstances,
it is certainly ridiculous to,assume that
Alsace-Lorraine is clamoring to return to
French rule.
A Great American Singer.
If it were true, that kittens born in a
bake-oven should be loaves of bread, then
Emma Eames, the
Boston singer who has
become famous at Lon
don with the charms of
her voice, should be a
Chinese girl, for the
land of tea, pig talis
and objections to
Henry W. Blair, is
the land of her birth.
She is the daughter of
an attache of the diplo
matic service who was JTmmo Eames.
stationed there when she was born. Her
childhood was spent iu Boston. She learned
the value of her voice early, and deter
mined to fit herself for the operatic stage,
going to France for that purpose. Two
years of study with Madame Marches! and
Gounod and she was ready for active work,
ner first appearance at the Grand Opera
House was an instantaneous success. She
essayed the role ot Juliet in which she made
a great hit Sinoe that time she has ap
peared in several other operas, in all of
which she has shown to advantage, and
many critics think her the best singer, with
out exception, this country,has produced.
The. Colony on Trlstan-CAounha. -The
published reports concerning the con
dition of the inhabitants of that remote
island in the South Atlantic, Tristan
D'Acunha, are rather misleading. It would
appear as if the entire colony, which now
consists of abont 100 souls, was wrecked on
the island in 1836, while in fact Peter
Green, the present bead of it, is the only
one who reached the Island in such a man
ner, it having been colonized years before.
Although Tristan D'Acunha; is 1,300 miles
from at Jieiena, a compauy or British artil
lery was placed there in 1816 to watch Na
poleon. When the latAer died the force was
withdrawn, with the exception of a Corporal
named Glass and a few companions who
were left in charge of the small fort that had
been erected. Finding the soil very fertile
and the locality agreeable, the men decided
rto remain when their terms of enlistment
had expired. Thev were also able to carry
on a brisk trade with passing vessels which
added considerable to their revenue. Iu the
meantime their number slowly but steadily
increased.
The island is about 20 miles in circum
ference and is within a score of miles of two
others, one of which, Inaccessible Island, is
of special interest from the circumstance
that it harbored two Germans named Stolten
hoff, who led quite a Boblnson Crusoe exist
ence there fccgiuning in 1871. They were
finally takeu off by the. Challenger on Octo
ber 16, 1873. Wilkie.
- THE- Aira-TIGHTS CHAMPI01T.
Kellale, of Minnesota, Now Finds Zdf an
Almost Intolerable Bore.
The most utterly miserable man in tho
State of Minnesota is McHale, the antl
tichts'ah'ampibn, says Thomas J. Beamy, of
St. Paul. He thought, for a time, he was
one of the. 'greatest men in the United
States. Up to the time the Sent pa'ssed
his bill be had been left comparatively free
from criticism. He was rudely awakened
the next morning to find that "the world
had turned against him" in one night Ye
godsl how the newspapers did "throw it in"
to himl They printed columns of clippings
front the Dress of the country, and that
"busted'.'-MoHale.
Then came tho guying.- He would start for
a drive, and find that some solicitous friend
had encased the legs of the animal in old
trousers. Did he 'go into a restaurant or
hotel dining room, some wag would see to
it that the, bill of tare wonld read "frog's
limbs" instead of frog's legs. He would
order spring chicken, and the leg of'the
fowl would, be wrapped in paper. Even
the'girls'would giggle when they met him,
an 1 with expressive glances look down at
their dress to see it was not disarranged.
Then the oldvman's mail began to Increase
until it seemed that everybody iu the United
States. had determined to take a crack at
him. t The letters many of them were
abusive made the old man wild. The
writers called him by every name known,
and some., of,' them were addressed "Old-Man-Ashamed
- of- His Shape McHale,"
"Nude-in-ArtMcHalej" etc. These letters
orushed'tbe old fellow, and it is probable he
will be'seennonore in' public life.
,02DEBS IS A COFFEE H0U8E.
The Walter Uses a language Peculiar
to
His Establishment
Baltimore 'Herald. J t
Any man who has ever a meal within the
portals of a full-fledged coffee house has
beard the sportive waiter singing out his
abbreviaied;and nondescript orders. If you.
nouiu-nappen tocau lor roa oeei ana a
baked potato you, will immediately hear!
"One slaughter house and a murphy!"
If It is a mince pie sprinkled with white
sugar you crave, the waiter calls aloudi
"One dyspepsia in a snowstorm I"
Only a few days ago I asked the waiter of
one of these resorts to order ae some poaehed
eggs,. No sooner were the word ont of ray
month than I heard him yellt
'Adam and "Eve afloat in aid oeean."
But I changed 'my mind, quickly saying I
ucureu soraBiBiop. & no cnangea Ota
oner to oninwrecj-Aasa ana xntv
9T v"2fc 3
9. vsBr I
BUNDAY, MAY 10,
A GREAT COpISSION.
Dntj Laid Upon tho Church in the
Second Sermon on the Honnt.
DISCIPLES OP ALL 'TBE NATIOJS.
It Wav Hot U Bo a Lieal Crouds, bit to
Embrace "tho World.
THI B1FTIS AHB'THS MACHI56
f
iwarrraif ros xxrz nisrxToa.
Sometime between the resurrection and
the ascension into heaven, sometime prob
ably in this very month of May, Christ
preached the second sermon on the Mount
Some say that there were 11 people in the
congregation, some say that there COO. Any
how, we may be sure that the number made
no difference to Him. That is one of the
notable things about Christ, that He never
cared about the siae of the congregation.
Eleven people, or 1,100 people, JJe made no
ohauge in the sermon. Perhaps the most
important sermon He ever preached was
that in which his pulpit was a moss-grown
well-curb and where He had a congregation
of one. It matters little how many people
heafd the second serman on the Mount
It is worth while, however, to notice this"
about the congregation: That although they
had heard Christ preach before, and many
times, they came to this sermon as they had
never come to any other. You cau see a
change in the attitude of 'the disciples
toward the Master. "When they saw Him,
they worshiDed Him, but some doubted."
Some worshiped and some doubted. Some,
sure that it, was He, fell down at His feet in
adoration. But some looked a second time,
and waited until He got nearer, guessing
that it was the Lord, but not certain. Here
is something to think about.
A Month With a Dead Man.
They had come aloug tne country road,
between the green fields of- the Syrian May,
a wondering company. Not a spaos for
silence all the wayl Marvels, and marvels,
and marvels, more than they had tongues
for, to talk aboutl These men had lived
such a month as no other men ' have lived
since Enoch walked with God. They had
lived a month with a dead man. And the
dead man had touched them with his hands,
sat down to supper with them, held long and
wonderful conversations with them, and had
proved to them that he was not a dead man
at all, but alive, and alive for evermorel
The gates of death had opened, and He had
come back to live with tbem for 40 days.
And as they olimbed the hill, the old hill
beside the lake where He used to meet them
in the days "of their ministry together, be
hold a Figure coming down. And some
worshiped, but some doubted.
Christ and His disciples had lived verv
familiarly together. They had a vague and
dim idea sometimes that He was somehow
quite different from the rest of them. But
they had never thought of worshiping
Him. As for any doubt of His identity,
and difficulty ahout knowing who He was
when they saw Him, there had never been
such a thing. They knew Him as we know
our friends. They could recognize Him a
quarter of a mile away, and never make a
mistake.
A Change Not to Be Described.
But there was a difference now. Christ
was changed after His resurrection. The
men who were walking out to Emmaus
walked all the way with Christ aud talked
with Him all the way, and did not know
Him. The disciples, gathered in the upper
room, were scared at His sudden entrance,
crying out that it was a ghost Peter and
James and John, who knew Him best, stood
at His side upon the shore of the Sea of
Galllse and looked into His face and heard
His voice, and yet wanted to ask "Who art
thou?" and durst not, "knowing that it
was the Lord." They were absolutely sura
that it was the Lord and yei, what was it
about Him which held tbem back from the
old loving familiarity? Evidently some
thing. He who preached the second sermon
on the Mount had somehow unspeakably
and indescribably changed since He preached
the first sermon.
The truth is that Christ rose with a spirit
ual body. And that is something about
which, at present, we knew nothing.
"There is a natural body and there is a
spiritual body." The natural body is laid
in the grave. and.God.will give ns "another
body as it hath"pleased Him," a spiritual
body. That is what we are told about our
own resurrection. There Is little use in
talking much about the shapes aud colors of
Things That Are In the Dark.
By f nd by, when Christ gives us light, we
shall see with our own eyes, and know per
fectly. It does seem plain, however, stand-
ing among the congregation Defore the
second Sermon on the Mount begins, that
when we .say that "on the third day He
rose again frbm th'e dead," and mean bv that
that life came back to His crucified body,
and the still heart began to beat, and the
cold hands began to move, and He rose np
as Lazarus did and came out of the grave
if we mean no more than that, we are only
at the beginning of the truth.
Nobody had any difficulty about recog
nizing Lazarus, but there was a difficulty
about recognizing Christ The resurrection
of Lazarus was not like our own resurrec
tion at all; but the resurrection of Christ
was. He did rise again from the dead in
such a body that He could show Himself
alive, and oonvince the hardest-beaded un
believer that He was risen indeed. And
yet, was it the same body? Down He comes
along the hillside, 'as we stand here watch
ing. Is it indeed the same Jesus of Nsu
reth that we used to know? Yes; it is He
and yet how marvetously changedl And
some doubt, and some worship,
A Grand and Noble Commission.
So the sermon begins, and the doubts end.
A brief sermon, as they who listened have
remembered it lor us, more like a text than
a sermon, in these words: "All authority
hath been given unto me in heaven and on
earth. Go ye, therefore, and make disciples
of all the nations, baptizing tbem in the
-name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Ghost; teaching them to observe
all things whatsoever I have conrmanded
youj and lo, I am with you alwav, even
unto the end of the world." This is the
second Sermon on the Mount.
"Ail authority hath been given unto me
in heaven and on earth." That they were
to understand the beginning. Th'e head
of the new kingdom of Gud, which was to
be begun on earth, was to be Christ Himself.
Christ was to be the center of all its theol
ogy, the possessor of the authority of
heaven. Christ was to be the heart of all its
morality, the possessor of the , authority of
earth. When they thought of God, and
wondered what God was like, they were to
think of Him and get an answer to all their
questions. They knew God because they
knew Him. Wheu they thought of duty,
and were perplexed amidst temptations, or
confused among many authorities in
church or state, and questioned what to do,
they were to obey Him; He was to be their
guide, their counsellor, their conscience.
The Need of the Disciples.
"Go ye, therefore, and make disciples of
all the uutions." Does that follow? Christ
has all power. Does He need this little
company of Galilean peasants? Hewbo
possesses all authority in heaven and on
earth, has He need of Peter, the fisherman,
and of Matthew, the tax collector, and of
these obscure men and, women? I suppose
that the Lord knows, best bow His own work
is to be done in the world, fend it is the
Lordf Himself who lays "Go ye." The
Liordli good work in the world actually de
pend! upon that little congregation, and
depeaus to-day some part of it upon you.
andmV. We have an idea that He who has
all aatherity la heaven aad on earth will
therefore look after thlars Himself, and has
no need of us.
But this if not the lessen ef the eend
Berinon'on the'Mont Thelessoa is that the
T.nrA nri af . that wa ay Sla fallaw
Xworkiwik the JUtasKUAlMa-
lgf
if we leave our .'share of the work undone
we actually put things back in the plans-of
God Almighty. God could do it all, and do
it this afternoon. He could convert ail the
nations of the heathen, change all the
temples into churcnes, translate all the
Vedas and the Korans into Biblcs.and write
the Christian creedwhere every man could
read it, plain across the sky. God could end
all wrong, light up all the dark places and
plant all the waste places, make all the men
genuine Christians, solve all the hard
problems which confront us, and bring in
the millennium to-day. But no. "Go ye,"
the word is, the work is ours. -Work
of the Missionary.
Some people say that If God wants "all
the nations" converted, He will convert
them without any need of missionaries.
Don't yon believe it God does want the
heathen converted. He wants them? as it
is written in this sermon, to be baptized and
to be taught to observe all of Christ's com
mandments. The Lord Christ set His fol
lowers the task of carrying His truth to all
the nations. And that task isn't done yet
He wants His message carried to' the culture
of Japan to-day just as He wanted it carried
to the cultnre of Home 2,000 years ago. He
wants it to lighten the darkness of wild
Africa to-day just as He wanted it to
lighten the darkness ot wild England in the
daysofonr savage forefathers. There is no
change in the eternal principle. There is
no countermanding of the "marching order
of the church."
As for the plea that we ought to convert
New York and Pittsburg first before we ad
vance upon Tokio and Timbuctoo, it oan be
said, at least, that the congregation Vho
heard the second Sermon on the Mount did
not so understand the preacher. Thev did
not wait to convert everybody in Jerusalem
and Jericho before thev pushed oatoAn
tioch and Athens. Happily not Else bad
the Christian religion been a little, foolish,
narrow sect to-day, struggling still for life
among the peasants of Syria.
A Duty laid Upon AIL
"Baptizing" them and "teaching" them.
The kingdom oi God is the kingdom of
truth, as Christ said. He meant that it
should grow among men, not by the aid of
civil power, not by the sword, not by force.
nor by violence, but by the persuading of
the reason ana the heart ot man. It should
grow by winning "disciples," that is. by at
tracting men to learn more about it, till they
should be desirous of entering into it that
they might be taught the ways of God more
perfectly.
Every man or woman 'who belonged to
this kingdom should have it for principle
and purpose to persuade somebody else in.
Every Christian should "go" and win dis
ciples. That means something different
from sitting down and being content to re
ceive disciples who might come. Not a
word is spoken of the duty of those who are
outside the kingdom to come in. But it is
laid upon us who are inside the kingdom to
go out and bring them in. I hope that
there were 00 people in that congregation,
and 'not just the 11, as some would have
it; because the 11 were ministers, and it
might be said that it is the duty of the min
isters, indeed, but of nobody else, to go and
make disciples. Christ meant that for all
the 00, whether they were there or not He
meant that for every Christian, minister or
layman, rich or poor, wise or unwise. Go
ye and make disciples. That reaches all the
way to Pittsburg, into this nineteenth cen
tury, into this month of Hay, aud touches
us."
Teaehlng Comes After Baptism.
"Baptizing" them, that was to make
them members of the great Christian society.
And "teaching" them; that was to make
them members of the right sort Notice
that the teaching comes afterward. Some
people think that they must do all things
whatsoever Christ commanded first, and be
baptized and come into the Christian
church afterward. They will wait a long
time. Christ would not have them wait at
all. First a man must be a disciple. What
is that? Why, simply one who wants to
learn. Whoever desires to know the truth
of God and to follow the will of God, how
ever imperfect may be his performance,
however great his faults if ho'does but de
sire to learn, he is a disciple. He has taken
the first step. Then comes baptism, and
then a whole lifetime of learning, and prac
ticing, and growing in grace and iu the
knowlege and love of God.
Finally, the Lord promises His help.
"Lo, I am with you always, even unto the
end of the world." A great task, but suffi
cient strength. Tribulation, adversity, per
secution, discouragement, failure again and
again, but the Lord with them, the Lord
working with them always. Thus the
second Sermon-on the Mount ends in bene
diction. The Lord is on our side. All
power is His in heaven and on earth. Hs
will be the gnide and helper of His church
over all the hard ways, through all the
doubtful battles, in the midst of every dan
ger, even unto the end of the world.
, Geoboe Hodges.
X ORABimiO LITTLE G0WGOL,
Picture ef the Tonus Woman Wow .Attract
ing Attention In Gotham.
tw Tork Becorder.
A good many pictures have appeared in
print at one time and another of the young
woman who is Private Secretary to Com
missioner Beattie, and who, indeed, has a
a face that is fine enough to be worthy of very
frequent reproduction. But the picture that
is herewith given has not seen the light in any
of the multiplied sketohes of her oareer.
A LtttU ComatrL
Miss Cynthia Westover, for that is the
young woman's name, has not always been
the idol of the Italian laborers of the
street cleaning department and the Com
missioner's right hand in respect to fig
ures. When she was n child sho lived
pony-back among the Bnckics with Prof.
Westover, the geologist, who is her father.
In those days she spent months without see
ing a woman, and ready to scream at such a
curiosity, lor as vou observe, she had no re
minder in her own person that there was a
sex feminine, since she was dressed for con
venience, and perhaps also for pictureque
11 ess and beauty as if little cowboy. She
could swing the lariat when she wore these
garments, and charm squirrels. Sbe could
do, indeed, most things the Indian children
do, which makes it all the stranger that she
should be now in such a responsible metro
politan position.
How to Prevent Pneumonia.
Any tendency of a cold or the eriD to re-
r suit In pneumonia may be arrested by
taking Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and
using proper care to avoid exposure. So
far as it can be learned, no ease of the
grip has resulted in pneumonia where
this remedy has' been used, and mere than a
thousand bottles have been sold eaeh day
for seven months past For sale by all
druggists.' . TfBtt
TiresVThU Hants.'
JsTaadsemely colored plotnre for frasae,
wish eaeh dossn cabinet.
Lisa' Gallxxt.
, JIudUSixUatTStti,
TOPRIKG IN TEXAS.
Bill Kyo Enjoying Life on a Very Ac
commodating Haiiroad.
TALE OP THE GENTLE CHEROKEE.
The
Fat Contributor's Lecture In a Jtj
Town of Pennsylvania.
EBMARIS OH THE L05E BT1R BTATE
iWMTrxir roa ties Diir.iTcs.1
We' are still in Texas and to-day we rode
past whole townships of cacti. All kinds of
rare vegetables grow in this strange and
mighty State. The fuzzy csotus flourishes
here especially flourishes like a profes
sional penman. There is nothing small
about Texas. A ranch that does not em
brace a whole town is hardly worth assess
ing. A county with a barbed wire fence
around it is more lik'e the customary thing.
A friend of mine here has" the best of a
county. It is fenced in with barbed wire,
whioh the outlaw used to cut now and then
so that the cattle wonld get out and wander
away into Peru and other neighboring
places. He had to keep a force of cowboys
to "rlde'tbe lines" and examine- the fence
every day, until it occurred to him that he
could make the top wire a telegraph wire,
and with an instrument at headquarters he
could detect a, break and locate it at any
time. So now a line repairer and a
cheap operator, who has nothing to do but to
communicate with himself all day, consti
tute the fence force in place of the old and
expensive corps of riders and repairers.
A Very Accommodating Haiiroad.
We rode up from Galveston the other day
with Conductor Taylor. He is a hearty man
with a genUl smile filled with mirth and
gilt-edged teeth. He is thekfnd of conductor
who looks ont for his passengers' comfort
He telegraphed ahead and got a lunch for
us, which saved our lives' no doubt, for we
had to travel all day oh the Houston and
Shreveport Bailroad, which is said to be the
J J
Tte Dovmtroddtn Cherokit.
worst in the United States. Tet it is a genial
and accommodating road. All the trains
are accommodation trains. The one I rode
on stooped 15 minutes while a tall man went
back to recover his hat, and it was not a
very good hat either.
When the train pauses at a station on the
Houston and Shreveport road the little
bronze razorback hog comes and eats the
axle grease off thd cars, and the inebriated
Cherokee Indian assists his jag on board tho
train and reproaches the white man for
robbing him of his lands. We had one as a
fellow passenger. He were a pink shirt
with large, wide flounces at the wrists and
around his neck. He had been drinking, so
I was told by people who knew him, though
I thought at first that it was his way. He
spoke of the past with some sorrow, and as
he held my hand a great big warm tear
welled up in his dark eye and fell on my.
vest lie said tnat ms loics owned all the
South at one time, but the white man came
among them, and two or three treaties with
30 days and costs deprived them ol their once
lands.
Nobody Has Seen Well Treated.
The Cherokee has not been well treated,
of course. Neither his the negro, nor any
body else, for that matter. The heathens
have been imposed upon, and so' has the
missionary who went across the sea to
knock a little gospel into bim. A mission
ary who graduated with me at the same re
male seminary, in fct went over, to sock a
little Calvinism into the heart of Timbuc
too, but his relatives to-day do not even
know the names of the folks who ate him.
On the other hand, the heathen is said to
murmur a good deal about the flavor of
several well meaning pastors who used to
bacco to excess, and which Impaired their
usefulness from a food standpoint The use
of tobacco for many years makes the most
toothsome people as nnpafatable as a
Mexican.
In the day coach there was a lady with a
snuff stick in one corner of her mouth,
asleep. The "dipper" is quite common
here among the plain people. If one could
have seen this peri slumbering there, with
her snuff swab in the corner pi her sagging
jaw and the cornoob stopper of a bluing
bottle which did not contain blnlng any
more, however as it peeped from the pocket
of her deep and proiound mourning dress
he would have said to himself, "How cool
and restful must have seemed the grave in
which her husband secreted himselfl" Any
way that is what I said. Others, of course,
might have looked at the matter differently,
however. Everything is out of repair on
the Shreveport road except the receiver. He
is looking first rate.
A Boy Spoiled HI lecture.
I lectured once in Mississippi. After I
had done so, and the roar of applause had
died away, a small boy with a pale, Mil
waukee brick complexion, broken here and
there by large melodious freckles, came for
ward to the footlights, and in a childish
treble inquired, "Is that all, captain?" I
said yes, and he went away rather reluctant
ly, I thought. That is the reason why I
went home feeling rather depressed, for al
though I regarded the lecture as a financial
and moral success according to Horace Gree
ley's standard viz., that more people stayed
in than went away during the show yet
when this boy called me captain, here in a
land where yon can get enough majors for a
mess in 20 minutes. I concluded that possibly
I had missed it in Mississippi. All railway
conductors in the south are captains. Cap
tain Taylor, of the Santa Fe, saiJ that they
used to do a very poor business between Gal
veston and Houston. Once, he said, be
played to 15 cents a round trip. I think
doused this term 'in order to make himself
clear.
Speaking of the show business reminds me
of a pleasant afternoon and evening with
Mr. Gnswold, the old "Fat Contributor,"
a few days before his sudden death. He
was a most gentle and genial man to meet,
and when I use the overworked word "gen
ial" I do so because it did really fit bim.
He told me about his experience as a lecturer
in a little place, I think, in Pennsylvania.
How Western School Was Sabdaod.
This town bad made a laudable reputa
tion for itself 25 or 30 years ago beoanse it
could and djd break up. everything in the
line of a show that had come there for years.
What a glorious ambitionl Just as some
of the tough schools of the woolyv wildtr
ness used to olean out the teachers whe tried
to educate them. I remember one ease
where a consumptive boy teaeher was virtu
ally murdered by big boys in such a sohoel.
His suecessoronly remained one day, but
he conquered'the school. Ha entered, at 9
o'clock with a Bible, a valise and
an armful af beech c-adi. He
- --s I
"1 '
.jaaasM wiik 9T7V XasX fe raai a.Xarngglitv
chapter and opened his valise. He took out
a hammer and a big nail. He.&rove the
large nail into the door frame oyer the
latch. Then he took a big revolver out of
his valise, and with that in one hand and a
big beech whip in the other he went at that
school, and with wonderful generosity and
liberality, and a commendable equity, he
whipped every boy in that school so that
people passing by thought there .was a car
pet renovating establishment inside". He
did it so well that two of those boys are now
said to be in the ministry, aud two of th.em
doing time in Congress for a term of years.
Then he took his valise and left the place.
He never asked for any salary, but those
'who saw hfm last saw him "with his little
valise in his hand, crying over-the grave of
his brother, the poor consumptive teacher
That Ml, Captain
who preceded him, and who gave his Ufa tit
this tough and heartless school.
The Eecord the Town Had.
Well, "the Fat Contributor" was advtr
tlsed to "nrcy" at the hall on a certain
evening in the town I speak of, and as ha
did not know anything about the place or
this record, which, I am told, is now forgot
ten almost, he had no fears about it, and ie
went there to honestly please and entertain
people as well aa he could, knowing that if
they did not like his methods they had the
divine right to remain away.
Well, after the owner of the hall bad re
ceived his fee, and bad filed it carefully
away in the dried pancreas of a "beef crit
ter" which was the popular purse in that
town he told "Oris" that they had the
reputation there of breaking up every show
that came, no matter what it was. Not be
cause the show was poor, mind you, but be
cause the town had a reputation to sustain.
"Oh, yes." he said, "the last thing waa
what's called the blind vocalists. Come
bact here and I'll show you where they had
to jump out Structcdown there, about 30
feet, on that lumber pile. I bet you it was
rich. One of 'em was deaf, and she lost her
bearings and thumped her head a$in that
blacksmith shop over there. Oh, they lit
out like a scared coVey of quails, you bet
One of 'em broke his wrist when he fell,
'cans he tried to save his old fiddle frsm get
ting busted. Said it was all he had to get
living with. Xou better not fool with these
fellers, I tell you. They're mighty spirited
boys, these is."
Silenced by a Woman.
Well, Griswold said that he had agreed
to lecture there, and he believed that be
would try it He began and showed good
nerve. Ton can imagine, however, thefsel
ings of a man who is trying to wring laugh
ter from an audience who came to mob hint,
and who had not been above mobbing
helpless little band of blind singers. He
got about half way through when the noise
was too great for him, and then his wife
came forward. Her eyes blazed. The
noise ceased for a moment
"Yon , miserable loafers I" she said.
"Cowards, every one of yout I dare yea t
make a move toward this stage. Here is a
man who has come to please and entertain,
you, and you who. dare not singly touch si
hair of his head unite together to mob hint.
You contemptible coyotesl You haven't
the courage to even rob a corpse until it U
cold."
Then the lecture went on. Griswold had
to knock down two or three toughs at the
door, but he said he did not mind thajLJ
People at the door were liable to knot
down something anyhow. Bill Htx
THE HEGEO KOSKEY.
A Creature In London That Comes sTnar tv
the Jllislns Link.
Bliek and White.
Our portrait represents the negro" senksy
(Logothrix Humboldtli) recently pnrohased
by the Zoological Society. His face, which
is devoid of hair, his hands aud the hair of
his head are jet back, so that he has the ap
pearance of a diminutive negro, two feet
high, dresssd in a suit ot grayish fur. Thia
view, of course, disregards the long prehea
sile tail which he possesses in common with
his cousins, the monkeys of the New World j
This tail is devoid of bair on the under tidv
near the end, the bare part having the sasae
texture as the palms of the hands, and the
tip seeming to curl automatically round any
convenient object with which it may coma
into contact This particular Logothrix
Humboldtii likes to be fondled by his
keeper, readily coming out of his cage and
as readily returning; behaving generally la
a very self-contained manner. He sits aad
"talks" in his way in a little whistling
voice, slightly showing a row of even white
teeth.
In Charch. '
Hew Tt ork Herald. J
There's an angel up by tho pulpit stair,
Of marble white and cold, "'
A saint of goodly deeds so rare
That in history tney are told.
But whenever 1 look bis lips are dumb
1
t .
' It
VI IU lUltL
And I find that my heart and mind are numb,, -.
And I cannot think to pray. j .
A girl sits down in the pew beneath,
" With serlons, saintly eyes. - . ' -
That gaze Troin under her hat's flower wreath '
In most demure surprise. , ,...
She looks my way and her eyes meet mine . ftf
With a smile so sweet and faint ,,
That 1 And in my heart a prajor divine
To this pretty, modern saint. , y '.
Andlvowoldvowslnmycblldhoedmade,
As 1 sit in the pew alone, - '.. -
Jfor 1 like a saint that U taller made
Setter than one of stone.
A Speelflo for the Coajh TaQowuasi X
Orlpp. "
Hanvpersoas who have rssovsrtd trm'
the influenza are now troubled with a Mf
sistent cough. Mrs. A. J. Allen, wife ts
the editor of the Scott county. Iowa, Bl ad.
says Chamberlain's Cough Bemedy. i-"tV
speelflo for the cough which usmally follow aS
an attaeir ot ia grippe, j or saie y ana
tn