r VALUABLE ADVICE IN CATCHING J"Vr "' . -iMi .-..y -' A .'r ''.-Olv.. . V' J John Kling, Catcher John Kling, the Cubs' famous catch er, still receives credit for knowing 11 of the fine points behind the bat. Kllng war asked the other day to give a talk on the scientillc methods pmployed In baseball, and this is what ne said: "When I was a pitcher In semlpro !csslunal teams around Kansas City ! lost many games by trying to do too nurh, by throwing too often and by fearing myself out by wasted efforts. ; was a failure as a ball player in teveral towns before experience iaught me that one play at the right natant is worth tun at any other "When I begnn catching one of the frit things I learned wus that the fatcher can break up a team quicker ihan anyone else can. lie need not tven make an error to do It. One of Ihe easiest ways to loso a game is for !he catcher to throw too much. He Jiay throw perfectly, and yet by keep ng the Infield moving and out. of po rtion, expecting his throws and study ng him instead of watching t he bat irr he may cause the game to be lost. "My idea has been to make plays Aben they count and not to use too SLOW CALL THING OF PAST Christy Mathewson Says Style of Pitching Has Undergone Changs in Fast Company. Christy Mathewson is of the opln on that the day of the slow ball jitcher In fast company is a thing of ;h'e past. "When I broke Into the big league," tald Christy the other day, "Win Mer ex, Clarke (irllllth, Red Donohuo and jther pitchers were getting away with their games and each one was jepending upon a slow ball to a large extent. Hilly lieiilv and Dusty ftlioades followed them, but look over iho list of pitchers In the two big leagues today and you will not find a single pitcher who Is noted for his ilow ball. There may be some who have n flonter In their repertory, but they do not depend upon it to any r-xtcnt "Today tlie big league pitcher must have speed. The majority of the big league pitchers are large men. hut. large or small, they must ho able to put steam on the ball or they go back to the minors. In fact, when a big league scout reports some minor leaguer to his employer, the first ques tion that the latter asks is: 'Has he nny smoke?' "I have reasoned It out that the nlow ball pitcher scarcely ever won his games by small scores and the dubs In the days when slow ball pitchers thrived generally had a lot of batters who won their games by big scores. It did not causo much damage If five or six r ins were scored against a club that owned a slow hall pitcher if that team was able to go out and score seven or plght runs, lint nowadays the scores are smaller and the man with the (loater finds It difficult to stand the pace." HAS BIGGEST BASEBALL HAND Mike Kahoe, Scout for Washington Team, Says Eddie Aln:;mlth Will Be Greatest Catcher. Eddie Alnsmlth, the Nationals' young catcher,, who h attracting so much attention by his brilliant work, and who bids fair to bo the sensation of the American league this season, carries around with him the largest pair of hands known to baseball. So big are Alnsmlth's bread hooks that he cannot buy gloves to fit, and during the cold days In Cambridge. Mass., he Is forced to don mittens. The digits on Alnsmlth's throwing hand are badly twisted and look like branches of a guarded oak, but he Is not handlcapifud in the least, and claims that this misshapen bunch of fives does not bother him In throwing to bases. It has been said that Frank Dower man of the New York Giants had only to bold up both hands and one might see the complete deaf and dumb alphabet there. According to the veteran, Mike Kahoe, Alnsmlth's hands ore almost twice the size of Bowerman's, and the scout also de clares that in two years the former will be the greatest backstop known to organized baseball. "".'. - ,,' ; i 7 ' a. , V V '1 t ' for Champion Cubs. many signals. The Inflelders have a lot to watch and if the catcher keeps them watching hi tn all the time he takes their minds ofl the other duties and causes them to make blunders. ' "First and foremost In Importance In winning Is that the catcher never shall muke or attempt to make any play, especially a throw, unless ab solutely certain that the other men In the play have caught the signal, un derstand what Is to be attempted and are prepared to make the play with him. "A bad first baseman or one In whom the others have no confidence makes bad throwers of all. I believe In helping umpires and doing all I can to make their work easier. If. they are let alone and not nagged at their work is much more satisfactory. I am not put out of ball games. I take as much Interest as anybody, but I cannot see the use of kicking on de cisions." No International Track Meet. English authorities say there will be no meeting between the Oxford Cambridge and combined Harvard Yale track and field teams this year. ATTELL WILL HAVE TO REST Injury to Shoulder of Featherweight Champion May End His Long and Brilliant Career. Abe At tell, the featherweight cham pion, who suffered another Injury tc Ids left shoulder In bis bout with Frankle Hums in New York recently, has been ordered by his physicians not to fight again for at least six months nnd probably for a year. There is a possibility that the arm In bo bad ly injured that Attell will never be able to return to the prize ring. Enforcement of retirement for a year means a loss of from $:!0,00 to $."i),noO to the fighter, who had m-.pped out a busy campaign. One of his first matches was to have ben with "Knockout" l'.rown, whom Manager Danny Morgan promised to send against the little champion as soon as Ilrown's ear was again in shape. At tell rested more than two months after the tinn was first Injured in his bout with Kilbane at Cleveland, but the rest did not prove long enough. NATIONAL GAME IS BARRED Baseball Placed Under Ban and Foot ball Likely to Meet Same Fate at Stanford University. President David Starr Jordan, of Stan ford university, has Issued an order that the committee on athletics abol ish Intercollegiate baseball. To the further discomfiture of the college athletics, Dr. Frank Angell, chairman of tua Stanford committee on athletics, Bays that in all probabil ity both baseball and football, as In tercollegiate sports, will be done away with at Stanford. Dr. Jordan witnessed one of Ihe games of baseball between Stanford and the University of California re cently, and became highly Indignant at what he termed "systematic muck crlsm," as manifested by tho raucous joshing of pitchers and other players trom the grandstand, the- bleachers and the field itself. Dr. Jordan states that the players were called more dif ferent names than he thought could be contained In any lexicon, and that they were harsh and coarse. Stone Back in the Minors. Owner Charles S. Havener, of the Milwaukee American association base ball club, announced the signing of Outfielder George Stone, former lead ing batsman of the American league. (I m$&$$&A 11 Abe Attell. SPEAKER IS BEST FIELDER Boston Fan, Who Are Well Informed, Claim Texan Is Greatest of All In Center Garden. flostoti bast ball fans, the best In formed anil Die most discriminating, ,iay I'l-ls Speaker Is the bent center lleldci in the world. lie Is seen every day In center field making dillleult lly bulls look eawy, running like a grayhound Info the right Didder's or left fielder's terri tory, nnd we see him at the plate swinging his bat nonchalantly, eyeing the pitcher like a hawk and waiting for him to send up the kind of ball he is waiting for; but the public never gets very closu to a bull player ncv-, er knows what kind of a man he re ally Is. Trls Speaker Is a Texan How did he come by the name of Trls? He wns asked the quesllon. ! "Oli, I don't know," ho replied; "they just call me that." I Speaker Is twenty-eight years old. i weighs ISO pounds and stands & feet !lt Inches high. He has tho rough complexion of one who has spent most ' of his life In the open air. He has heavy, muddy, bloodshot eyes, not the kind one would Imagine could pick out a good ball nnd paste It to the far corner of the field, or could start after the ball at the crack and Judge to an inch where that ball is going to land. ' He has a voice like rumbling thun der, and his softest words sound like the growl of a mastiff. He ban large, powerful hands, freckled. Speaker lives In winter in Hubbard City, Tex., which Is not a city at all. but a small post village near Dallas, having a population of 894 In summer and 895 when Speaker Is there. He goes buck home at the close of the baseball binon and spends the JIM Tris Speaker. first few weeks hunting, and then turns to the cattle Industry. He Is a regular Texas cowboy in the saddle, and can do as much with a horse as he can with a baseball bat. Louisville has released Pitcher Pow ers to Columbus, S. C. Baseball's "bad boys' are gradually dropping ollt of tllH Ku,"- M""'1' will not waste their time on the loose livers. Con.-lskey says Jimmy Callahan Is tho "wonder of the decade," that Cal has como back with a vengeance, good as ever. "Uuck" Freeman, the home-run kid from Boston, is still In the game and will manage a team in the Northwest em league. Eugene Sampson, pitcher and cap tain of Westminster college last year, has accepted terms with the Philadel phia National leaguo team. Clark Griffith, like Hobby Wallace, it is said, wants no more of Hot Springs as a training camp and the Reds may go Into Texas next spring probably to San Antonio. John Ganzel is to make his per maaent home In Rochester. Ho has bought a lot in an aristocratic rest dence Lection and Is now building a house that will cost him $10,000. George McQulllen's brother, Karl, has signed with Aurora In the Wis consln-llllnols league. He Is also s pitcher and hopes soma day to be at fanwua as the Cincinnati (linger. Engle is the handy man In tho Hos ton Heil Sox this year. He has been switched from one place to another on the Infield all spring and has been de livering the goods all the time. Mrs. Ilrltton, the new owner of the Cardinals, says she will continue tc hold her interests in the St. Ixiuls team, and will cater to women fans. The bar has been eliminated from the park. About the last thing Harry Stclu fleldt did with the Cubs before Man ager Chance broke the news to bin: that he was in the discard was to hit a home run drive In tho exhibition game played at Evansvllle. President Comlskey or the White Sox has bestowed upon Harley Parker of the Grand Rapids club, these three players: Chief Chouneau, tho In dlan pitcher; Robert Greensdalo, a sutnl-pro twlrler, and Outfleldt-r Kand zer. 2 - rrrpivM .'.'... J ,' ' &-:.f " ;" , 9 hV PLACE INEBRIATES ON FARMS Medical Authorities Are Unanimous In Their Belief of the Colony Treatment of Drunkards. A new method of bundling the prob lem of drunkenness Is set forth in Ihe Survey. Whilo it Is undoubtedly t suggestion of the right kind for the ellef of individual cases of drunken less It would appear to the casual jbf-erver that too much of our effort nd time and money are six-nt in the ittempt to repair the damage which iv o ourselves permit by licensing the public drinking saloon. There Is one thing better than to lift a man out of the gutter that Is to remove tho gutter. We tire dealing too largely with effects nnd not with causes. Inebriety is tho source of many of .he most Important problems of gov ernment. Recent figures show that ?8.9 per cent of the male cases of In finity In New York are due to exces sive use of alcohol. ,Iu Pennsylvdnla II per cent of the Imbeciles owe their condition to lutenipcrnM'e, 30 to 40 per cent of epileptic cases hnve their origin In alcoholism. The report of tho Hoard of Prison Commissioners jf Massachusetts for 1908 states that 8(1,30"), or Co' per cent of the total ar rests were made for public Intoxica tion. Drunkenness as a cause of pov erty Is continually noticed In every day life. The use of the nhort sentrnco Is absolutely Ineffective. A man leaves the county Jail or workhouse without money and In most cases without friends. He can secure shelter In a Baloon nnd probably l.y performing menial service for the bartender get it drink. This Is the most natural tiling for him to do. The alcoholic repeater is tho natural result of the short sentence. The number of persons who apiear ngaln and again for drunkenness Is alarming. In one case, a mini now Gl years of ago has been In tho work houso C2 separate times. lie has spent 3.163 days there at a total cost for maintenance alone of $1,868.53. Another case has been In tho work house 34 different times, in tho alco holic wards of a city hospital 31 times, in tho municipal lodging house twice. In tho almshouse once andiln '.wo other hospitals two times each. He has spent a total of 1,943 days In ihese various places at a total cost Df $1,323.12. Still another cr.Ro, a man about fr years of ago, hns been In the workhouse, almshouse, or hospitals ft times or a total of 5,884 davs nt a otal cost of $2,492.37. In I'tl'ca. N. Y., one person has appeared beforo he police court nt least 1C0 times for public intoxication. There Is substantial unanimity as ;o the general lines along which changes should be made. A graded series of remedies Is needed. First sffenders should bo released without their nppearanco In court. For the aext grade of cases probation Ehould be tried and a fine Imposed to bo col lected in Installments. More serloin :'ascs should bo committed to a farm solony. To carry out this plan in trolvcs extending greatly tho principle of probationary oversight of potty of fenders. This principle Is compara :lvely recent In application but the -OBults are so satisfactory that it has passed the experimental staga. Seven Btates provide for tho com mitment of habitual drunkards on tha petition of relatives accompanied by proper medical certification. When l man has completely lost hU Eflf control and is a constant burden to !ifn family, It should not be neceB3ary for him to become bo obnoxious to the community as to incur arreBt for dis orderly conduct before ha can bo com mltted to an institution. Medical authorities are unanlmo'is in their belief In the farm colony treatment. The prime necessities ire: Isolation from alcohol for n con 'Inuous period of time, abundance of light and fresh air, therapeutic baths ind as much outdoor work as the pa tient is capable of physically. Not ill cases of Inebriety, however, can do treated alike. Physical differ ences due to tho stage of the disease require classification and diversified treatment. Incipient and advanced rases cannot be treated together. The advantage of such colonies an that a large number of rounder would be taken from the streets courts, prlsous, workhouses, and hos pltals. Many cbbcb that are a con stant menace to society would be re moved. Families that are burdened by caring for fathers and brother! who aro habitually drunk would be re llevcd. Hut most Important the Indl vldual would bo Isolated from alcohol and placed In a healthful environment and helped to lend a wholesome and partially self-supporting life. Temperance Is Christianity. "From the first, even when most ol the churches were as yet hostile, th temperance movement has been a re ligious movement, deriving its power from a strong faith In God and the belief that the movement was fulfill Ing His purpose In the moral up building of His children, and in tin removal from their path of avoldabli temptation. Temperance work ti practical Christianity. No other phas of Christian work Is so Immediately effective on life and character, sc helpful in removing temptation, It developing self-control, nnd thus pre paring tho soul for deeper rellgloui experiences. 11. G. Chancellor, M. P It Looks Like Fraud. Whero Is the man who would liki to marry a woman who chews tobneco Jrlnks whisky or uses profane or yul jar language? And yet many a mai tvho Indulges In all of these nnstl nesses and vices will Impose hlmsel' upon a pure and lovable woman at proper material for a decent husband Does he not thereby commit a felon like that of obtaining goods undo false pretenses, and ought he not t so arrested and punished as a fraud' Hotter Times. IS PUT ON PROBATION MERICAN WIFE FAILS TO PASS THROUGH HEAVEN'S GATE. 5t. Peter Is Too Well Posted on the Way She Has Conducted Her Household and Spent Her Time. "Next!" called St. Peter. A tall, comely woman arose from .he bench and came forward gracious y. She was dressed rather for style :han for comfort Her clothes rustled vulgarly and her hair was manifestly different from what God intended It jo be. "Name, please." "I am tho American Wife." "Aro you mire?" "Here la my marriage certificate." "I mean are you Bure you have been I wife?" "As to that, I" "What do you understand the quail Ication of a wife to be?" "To take charge of tho household nd " "And do as little a possible In It, ;h?" "Hut you could not expect me to do .he heavy work, could you?" "You expected other women to do :he heavy work." "Servants. They are a different :lass." "And you were peevish when they lldn't do It Just so?" "Hut" "And you wore always complaining :hat things weren't going right?" "Let me " "And w hen your husband came home it night he had to hear all your little illmcnts, physical, mental, domestic ind social." "Hut, don't you " "Your Idea all the time being to di vorce yourself " "Not divorce " "From real usefulness of all kinds n order that you might engage In the nost trilling occupation." "Don't you think a woman should lave some pleasure In life?" "Sitting uround the bridge' table or it the matinee and eating rich food int.ll you got fat nnd then haunting joauty doctors until you got thin. Wasn't that your highest ideal of pleasure?" "I went to clubs and to church." "To show your clothes." "I had children." "Rut you found It a terrible nul (anco to take care of them." "I could afford to hire nurses and overnosses." "Hut you couldn't afford to give hem any of your own very vnluablo Ime." "Hut my husband didn't want me to work myself to death." "No, of course not. It Is no bet ter to work yourself to death than to onf yourself to death. But, after all, rour husband has nothing to do with t. We'll deal with him separately. You had your own life to live. His jelng foolish doesn't txcuse you." The American Wife burst Into tears s she saw her chance of heaven 'ailing away. "Here, none of that,", commanded taint Peter. "Tears have no effect n us." Then he turned to his clerk. "Clerk, get this woman a gingham ipron and set her to work peeling potatoes nnd other odd jobs. Iet me see her again In about six months." When Lovely Woman 'Phones. "Business will be held up In this irug store for the next ten minutes." growled tho Impatient man. "Even the prescription clerk is holding his breath. Two good-looking women nre getting ready to use the telephone That Is why. When a handsome woman talks over an open telephone jverybody within earshot takes a va cation and listens. A plain woman might talk half a day nnd nobody would pay any attention, but a good looking wom.Mi at a public telephone Irawa a bigger crowd than the prenl lent of the United States. Everybody takes it for granted that she Is golnR to say something worth hearing and ;hey become vitally Interested." "If you nre In such a big hurry," said the Impatient man's companion, "why don't you go down street and ittend to that other errand while they ire putting up your prescription bore?" "Oh, no," said he, "I want to hoar, too." Passing of Prong-Horned Antelope. The prong-horned antelope, an ani mal peculiar to North America, is In danger of extinction. This antelope, which has so many peculiarities that naturalists class it In a family by It self,, once existed by thousands on the open western plains. The naturalists of tho country fear Its nbsoluto ex tinction in the near future unless pro tection la given to tho few remaining. In 190S the biological survey estl mated that tho total number of ante lopes in the United States had been reduced to 17,000. Of these about 10, 000 were in Montana, Wyoming and the YellowBtono National park, and the remaining 7,000 were distributed In 12 other states. Reform That Failed. "Has the reform clement ever had nny success In this town?" "Not to speak of. We' elected a reform constable once, but when he tried to carry out the provisions ol his platform the bum element ducked him In a goose pond back of town, so he resigned and we've sort of been runnln' along on the old lines ever since." Why He Tames. "Why Is your friend staying so lorn In New York?" "I don't know haven't heard whlcl of the two reasons Is keeping him." "Which of the two?" "Yes; whether ho Is having t Rood a time to come away, or nai spout all his money and can't ge away." New York Needs Much Food. New York city keeps 2,000.000 pe: nons busy supplying its inhabitant .'.!) food. , riiOMiQoraisi by WILBUR D. MEPBIT He Needs theBtercise H hires a man to shovel coal And keep his furnace liurnlnic riKht, Thn wlill ho bus a worried soul HecaiiHe he him no Hpprtlto. "I'm KrowltiK stale," ho HlKtifl each day. ' "Tho wrinkles come beneath my eyej." His Indian clubs li then will sway Because he neejs some, exercise. He hires a nuin to shovel snow When on the wnlks 'tis drifted di-ep "Ah, my vitality Is low," Ho Hiiys, us though about to weep. "I used to be u crackerjnek And know ns nn athletic Btar." And then ho nearly breaks Ills buck Upon a horizontal bur. He hires a ninn to mow his Brass Because such work Is far too hot "I'm RcttliiK pautiilillleil, ulns!" tie crumbles, "Would that I were not!" And then he pays a sturdy fee For a physician's solemn tulk; Then o'er the country ronds we see Our worthy frknd out for a wulk. H hires n man to wield the hoe Within his garden, and to spade "I'm nil run-down." he says, "and, oh, I'm far too nervous, I'm afraid." Ills doctor tells him what to do To strulxhten out his nervous kinks, And every day he heaves In view Upon the long and tiresome links. The furnace man Is In good trim. The man who shovels snow Is line. The gardener lias life and vim, Tho grass-man shows no nervous sign And yet our friend would suy "Pooh pooh !" And let his nngry passions rise If In our wisdom I or you Should recommend their exercise. Up to the Times. The commencemnt exercises of the Grassvllle academy were In progress MIbs Tessle Jones had Just finished, reading her composition on "Komi Was Not Hullt In a Day," and thi quartette was stepping forward to ren der "Come Where the Lilies Bloom," when the principal of tho academy arose nnd announced: "I beg to call your attention to a correction that should have been made In the program. Miss Artemisia Hoi brook's essay was originally entitled 'Beyond the Alps Lies Italy,' but she has changed it to 'Through tho Sim plon Tunnel Lies Italy." The quar tette will now sing." When Arrested. "What is your name?" askB tho clerk at the summer hotel, poising tho pen over tho register. "O. U. Sporteigh," answers tho ar rival. "But your full name? We make It a custom to register our guests by their full names. It looks more dis tinguished." "Full name? In a enso like that they always put me down as plain John Doo." Out for the Dust. "I would suggest," says tho family adviser to the heirs, "that you all share the expense of a memorial tab let to your late undo." "Good Idea," agreed the spokes man. "Say a neat bronze baa relief bear ing the words: 'Here Reposes tho Dust f Ebenezer Fllnthart, Until the Last 3reat Day.'" "Not much," objects the spokesman. "In the first place, that would look funny over a bank vault, and In the next place, we aren't going to let the tust stay there long." Had an Incentive. "I think it Is perfectly noble of the hero to rush luto the midst of the fight and rescuo the captive maiden. And he does it all unexpectedly and without being called upon, too. It Is just splendid." "Oh, I don't know. Almost any man would be willing to do that for $500 a week and a private car between stands." Another Perspective. "Who Is that homely girl?" asked Colnchaser. "That's Miss Kyress, who has Just fallen heir to two millions," answered Miss Newsglvo. "Hum! As I was about to say, she has a good figure." Could Renew His Stock. "You must be glad to see Bummer coming again," wo say to tho airship inventor. "No doubt the winter sea son has hampered your efforts." "Yes, Indeed." he replies. "I find that I am almost out of hot air." i f CURE THAT CATARRH Our climate with Us sudden chanje, Is conducive to catarrh which ( a chronic inflammation of the mucom membrane surface of head nose or throat. One month's local treatment win Pax'tliie Toilet - Antiseptic will con. vlnce the most skeptical that Paxtim Is not a paliatlvo but a specific for ail catarrhal conditions. Paxtlne is a perfectly harmless aa. tlseptlc and germicide In powder foria which contains nil of the onti.soptio qualities of liquid antiseptics, bat with other valuable cleansing, gi'n&i. cldnl, nnd healing Ingredients nilikd. Just a little in a glass of water aj needed used as a spray and g:upn will not only remove the acciimiihiiiij secretions, but heals the inflaiiiiii;iii ,n destroys the germs of disease, and j j! pels the disagreeable odor can.- I i,y chronic catarrh. For sale at nil druggists, 2. ,r0c a box, or postpaid upon ren i;,! 0 price. The Paxton Toilet Coiii'iiit Boston, Mass. Send forafrces;.iiiii(, Churches and Tuberculosis. Statistics showing how serin a problem tuberculosis is to tin: unll. nary church congregation have )( 0 Issued by tho National Association fur tho Study and Prevention of TuVr miosis. From reports received nmi over 725 churches, with n menu, . -rship of over 312,000 comniunlciinn of twenty denominations, nnd from cities nnd towns In 12 states In viri ons parts of the country, out ol' bnrly 7,000 deaths in 19H), over 700 or It per cent., were caused by tuberculosis, Tills means 2.24 deaths for every ihoj. sand members or comniiinn aniq, While the percentage of death-; !' com tuberculosis compared with other !: eases Is not higher in the chun ii, j according to these figures, than in lit country at large, the tubcrculuiU death rate, as shown by the clcmo returns, is higher per thousand 'orn munlcants than that for the guiml population In the registration nic of the United States, which the eens'u bureau gave as 1.07 In l!)n:. Subject to Restrictions. "I was cleanln' fo' a new lady las' week an' do dirt in her kitchen as a sight, po' thing," said Rose, Mrs Kra mer's dark-skinned charwoman. "But why did she let it kc( that?" asked the lady. "I dunnn', ma'am. Guess she m-v-r seen It. Some cooks, you kn v. Is mighty partl'lar 'bout 'lowin' ie madam In de kitchen. Dey Jos' take dure orders from her upstairs an' she don't have no call to go Into de Kit- b en at all." Happy Family. Mrs. Scrapplngton (In the nii ll of her reading) Here Is an account of a woman turning on the gas while inr husband was asleep and asphyxiating him!" Mr. Scrapplngton Very con.-,iil ran of her, I'm sure! Some wives u ike their husbands up, and then talk them to death. Puck. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOIUA, a Bafe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Ttont-a tlia Signature of LLZ74UtSu.V. In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Flctelicr's Castoria Confirmed. Hand.ill Has a reputation f"r brav ery, has he? Itogers Yes, with every one lm has been his wife. Life. I'orCOLDS end Gil II Hicks' Caim'Dinic In the best reni--ly " Here-) the aeliluir ami feveiinline-J- ."nv-i Culil nnl reninrt-ti normal ennilliion-i j" llqulil-elteetH imuiediutely. loe., liV . ;i:i l '.'. At drug Hloren. Consistent. He I was born on the secnie! of April. She Late as usiial.-Llfe. Fnr your own nl;e, don't w.tlt tm'il happen. It may be a ieid-ieli. ! (lehe. earache, or scute painful . lat. Hamlin Wizard Oil will cure Tt. (let bottle now. You nre not responsible, for position you were horn with, hut r" nre resixjiisiblo for the one yni J' wilh. Habcock. Facts About Motherhood The experience of Motherhood If trying- one to most women and mark distinctly an epoch iu their lives. r ono woman m PJdred is irrilared understands i" treatment a it tl time of clM-l but many appr" ivBi kt-nkham1 tho expend"". , . an organism unfitted for the trial" strength, and when the strain is " her system has received a shocK n which it is hard to recover. !" " ins right upon this conies the netj strain, of caring for the child, a distinct change in the mother restm There is nothing more churniy1' , a happy and healthy mother o f' dren. and indeed cldld-birth conditions need bo no hazard to ' or beauty. The unexplainable tmnj, that, wifh all the evidence of slm ' nerves and broken health re'"1" from an unprepared condition, . . will persist in going blindly to th " It isn't as though the el ; camo upon them unawares. iL' i,t vi. ".y v.,-..,. ,,,. '," "----- ,.,,..,e, UU nmpio nmo in wuicn i y -,h,ma they, for tho most part, trust low and pay the penalty. thfte In many homes onee cMWle" w ,t nre no.v children because) of 1 that Lydia E. l'iukham's Wi, Compound makes women IU1 healthy, and strong. .,w Any woman wlio V'1',, tl spoeial iid vice in re& ; , to matter js cordially i"v'",vnn. write- to Mrs. I'inklmm . - . jj Mass. Hor letter will ho itrict coulidcucOt mm