MIKE HAD A KICK COMING! And Typically Milesian Waa Plan Ha Had Evolved to Put Thing f tralght. For sixteen years Mike Flynu bad denned out the town hull nrier shows, Jet-tun, political meet inns, Decora tlon day exercises and other doings, and never a complaint did he make. Iteeelitly, however, he fancied !) had a kick coming, ond he went Into the mayor's ofTlee to register It. "Whnt Is It, Mike?" nsked the mayor. "It's about 'he hall, yer honor. The byes stand up In the rear, they do, an' they chew an' spit durln' the Intlre perform ance, An" not a wurrud would 01 say, yer honor, If they would spit out on the flure where 01 rould git at It, but the varmints they would spit all ever the legs of the chairs in the back row, an' on the places where the chillis do be fastened to tho llure, an' hard work It Is fer a man of me age to stoop down an' scrub It off. There's favor 01 would be nskln' of yer donor this mornln' In rlspict to It." "What Is that, Mike?" "lndnde, 01 would ask yer honor fer permission and authority to do away with tho luck row of seats entirely. Nobody likes to sit In the back row anyway, yer honor, an' slnceless it Is lo hnva cne In the hall at all." Kansas Clu Star. t ALL OVER THE STATE TOLD IN SHORT ORDER in CURE THAT SORE THROAT Sore throat Is Inflammation of tho mucous membrane of the thront, and If this membrane happens to be at all fcnsltlve a predisposition to sore throat will exist. I'axtlne Toilet Antiseptic Is both a preventative and a cure for sore throat because It possesses extraor dinary cleansing, healing and germl fldal finalities. Just a little In a glass of water, used as a gargle, will quick ly relieve all soreness and strengthen the mucous membrane of the throat, and thus overcome all tendency to tore throat. Paxtine Is far superior to liquid an tiseptics or Peroxide for all toilet and hygienic uses. Paxtine mny he obtained at any drug store, 25 and Bflc a box, or sent rostpald upon receipt of price by The Pnxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. Send for a free sample, HOW IT HAPPENED. OreeiiKhurg. lladubuugh tunnel, the longest tunned on the main line of the Pennsylvania Railroad with tl.: single exception of the Oitllitzin tunnel, in doomed. The tunnel stan di to cave In on Friday and all efforts of the workmen to save the immense iirch as they proceed are fruitless. The tunnel was built twelve years ugo and was considered one of the I! lest pieces of masonry on tho road It Is a mile In length. Chester. Ilomlnlck Foiroi'cfn. it trackwalker, found tho headless body of a man nlotig the Pennsylvania Railroad In Kddystone. Deputy Coroner lirewcs found a letter In the pockets of the clothing addressed to llernhanlt d laser, Boardwalk, At lantic City. The letter was signed, ''From Your Brother, Slgmund C laser," which H supposed to be the namo of the dead man. Iieading. Coroner Wagner and several physicians, In the presence of the local authorities, made a post mortem examination on tho body of Walter J. Plnnka, who was found shot to dentil In n Held at West Head ing several days ago, and reported a strong tendency to a suicide the ory. Dubois. Philip Dusch, a resident of r.i-ndy Township, died thirty min utes after being stung by a honey bee. Mr. Dusch went out to place a cap on a hive, and was beard to call. Ills wife rushed to his side In time to see him fall. Before dying Dusch said he had been stung only once on the point of the Jaw. Ho was sixty two yeurs old. MAKING A STUDY OF EUROPEAN WARSHIPS ,V - ' i r M The Fountain Head of Life Is The Stomach tZZJ'Y h1V '""""l '""'"I' and who doe. not writ In, 1"'1d ' 1 ind ,,,"t '" hcomo V Dr. PIERCE'S COLnr.v MZDIC71L DISCOVERY SSje , t """,tA B,ron6' the tllw of c'lioil e lulee; restore,, t.,e lost appetite, make assimilation perfect. !nHr;,t... .1. ,1. "T .1 1 no.trum,. 1 every mired enHn I i u ? rt'lu"0",liP '" "cret medicine .,, nL ., . . ndrscd by the lender, in all ihc .dumb of remedy', ZZ aTZ ' . . .nr., , pv m it, LnAa. r - , , -non vi r own neitflihnrli.in.4 ierce, I'rei., llulfulo, N. Y. many turn made hv it ri...i jii ..'. . World'. I )ipcns,,ry Medical A. i 17.,i n: wn "Ahorhood, - : .. i ITS STRONG POINT. "PHKEE rear admirals of the United States navy who were sent to Kng and to attend the British naval Ing. will put In ronsldernblo time studying European warships and Ibex equipment. The admlrali u..u tni.pH. cmei consiruciors. anu cone, chief of the bureau of steam engineering. meet- admirals aro SOLVES BIRD SECRET Prof. Miohelson Discovers Cause of Metallic Colors. Pittsburg. Workmen engaged in clearing away the wreck of a Balti more and Ohio freiirht trnln at Bryant, found the body of Tony Fleischner, of Ktna, Pa., under a mass of debris. Four bodies were taken out of the wreckage soon after the accident, and Samuel Mattingly, of Johnstown, later died in a local hospital. Brilliance of Plumage, as Well as In sects' Luster, Is Due to Light Absorption Prof. Cutler on Arid Problem, Tom Was It case of love at first tnt7 ii. ....... . .. -mi nrsi can. sue was telephone girl, and he was taken with er voice when he first heard It. Rifle for Under Water Use. When he is working In water Infest "I by sharks and other sea monsters likely to do him harm, the diver has i present to rely for his safety on the uk- of the knife or, falling that, on a nisl'-k return to the surface. Now femes the Invention of Captain Grobl, German diving Instructor, who has CHistriut,.,! a rifle which can be tired Jailer water, nnd Is designed for the ''': running of tho diver. The most remarkable thing about this Is that It not bullet8,but water, which Is K m lled with such farce that It has " v tuordinnry power of penetration. the Inventor himself has M'-ncd armor plate of medium thick "'?s lih the wnter Jet from his '''I'm. The rifle has a stout barrel " leaded with a cartridge caned In India rubber. Wanted Finding I 11 Fivn Wi. Slid tii 1 '? meals a day. a good Job f "Mp-Muh.uh. whnt kind of a Job nigging potatoes, nam,, (stretching hlmself)-Woll, ' " man that planted them, lie K' ws where they are In the Office. am afald to hear that report.' liy so?" 11 I" likely to f'-K en." mean some firing A Triumph Of Cookery Post Toasties Many deliciout dishet fve been made from Indian Corn by ihe skill ao! ingenuity of the . trt cook. Bui none of these oea-h'omexcelsPostToast-W in tempting the palate. "Toasties" e . "xurythatmakeadelight lul hot-weathe, economy. , The first package tells " own itory. "1 Memory Lingers" SoW by Crocers S""co..L,... " Mich., u, 8, A. Allentown. Mrs. Kve Hankie, one of the famous "Adam nnd Kvo" twins, died at Northampton at the age of eighty-eight years. She was the twin sister of Adam Yehl and leaves one daughter, fourteen grand children, thirty-three great-grandchildren, and thirteen great-greatgrandchildren. Allentown. Ever since he got a hard bump In a Muhlenberg football game last fall, Christopher J. Qulnn, ratcher for the Temperance baseball team suffered from a lame nrm. He went to a doctor Wednesday, who found a dislocated shoulder. The marvel it he could throw at all. The dislocation was successfully reduced. Chester. Miss Mary I,. Morrow, a school teacher, has entered a cinlin for damages of $22.1 against the city, sustained by stepping Into an exca vation on Madison street one dark night. Miss Morrow wrenched her hip nnd one foot and has been lame since the accident. Allentown. After a fight that last ed more than a year Allentown City Councils bought an auto for tho lire chief. A total of fifteen hundred dol lars will be available, a stranger con tributing f 420 to tho appropriation of $1230. Shlppeiisbnrg. While working a spirited team of colts In n hay rake, James C. .Noaker, aged fifty-live, a well known Walnut Bottom mer chant, was Instantly killed. The ani mals ran off. throwing him violently to tho ground and breaking his neck. Heading. A coach horse, valued at two hundred and fifty dollars and two valuable bull dogs owned by Mrs. Ella E. ltichards. of this citv. were mysteriously poisoned by un known parties and all three died. I.ansford. Ileal estate here com mands higher prices than In any other town In the county, some of the choicest building lots selling at $4 00 per foot front. The town has almost doubled Itself within the past ten years. , Somerset. While playing Boldlcr, Taltnadge, six-year-old son of Court Stenographer J. J. Walter, was per haps fatally Injured by a bullet from a small rille In the hands of six-year-old Daniel Saylor, Jr. Illghtstown. Simmons If. Dcy, former Councilman of this place who tried to commit suicide by cutting bis troat with a butcher knife nnd was later found by his daughter, died from loss of so much blood. Pennington. Charles O. Good hart, a well known man of this com munity, died suddenly nt his home as a, result of taking an overdose of laudanum. Chicago. Peacocks and pigeons, but terflies and beetles the gayest of the bird and Insect tribes have yielded Ihe secret of their brilliant attire to Prof. Albert A. Mlchelson, head of the department of physics of the Cniver- clty or Chicago, w ho has discovered in his laboratory the. real causo of the (iietalllc colors observed In his feath ered and "buggy" specimens. Prof. Mlchelson, who won the No bel prize in 1!)U9 for his achievements In optics, announced his latest find In a paper rend at the annual conference of the Illinois State Academy of Sci ence, in tho botany building of the Uni versity of Chicago. The professor's experiments prove that the colors stud ied are fhe result of light absorption due to the shape of the surfaces and are not caused by the pigment cells or any means that the amateur naturalist might Imagine. The discovery, according t.i the sci entists at the meeting, furnishes scnol ars with a new theory for Important color phenomena. It overturns the position held by many distinguished Investigators that the Irrldescent glit ter of beetles and the tints of the humming birds are tho result of or dinary "Interference" and "diffrac tion." "The total number of specimens wmcn nave heen examined," snld the Investigator, 'is perhaps not so large ns it should be to draw general con clusions, nnd it Is clearly desirable thnt It should be extended, but so far ns the evidence for surface films as the fcffenlng source of the metallic col ors in birds and Inserts Is entirely con clusive." Prof. John M. Coulter, head of the University of Chicago botany depart ment, said: "Practical plant breeding is now on a practical basis nd botany has at last attacked tho fundamental prob lems nnd may be of some oractlcnl I service, for It Includes plant breed lug." Of the possibilities of converting nrld land Into wheat nnd corn lamia prnf. Coulter said: "Attempts arc being made to secure a combination of hardiness to drought which we desire and quality of grain which we possess. I se no reason why the vision s.hould not be realized, but you need not Invert in arid land iwr immediate use ns wheat fields. In the case of corn, as of wheat, we are not breeding it for drought resistance alone, and it will tnko many plant gen erations of the highest tye-e of scien tific plant breeding to determine whether we can combine this drought resistant structure with the high-grade quality and yield we have already ob tained In our cultures." SAYS ONE CHILD IS ENOUGH So Declares Olive Schrelner In Her New Book Hard Work Would Make Women Much Happier. Cambridge. Mass. "One child Is enough lor the Twentieth century fain tly," says Olive Schrelner in her new book, "Womnn nnd Labor." "The woman who doesn't earn her own living is therefore a parasite, ex cept for that small portion of her time when she Is engnged In propa gating the species, but for that time sbe should bo paid. "Wherever In the history or a na tion great numbers of Its women have become parasitic, that nntlon Is on the road to downfall nnd decay. America Is, therefore, on the road to degenera tion, unless Its women of leisure can be allowed or Induced to exchange their vanities for hard labor. i lie nu inn n remale parasite," the book states rurther. "whether In mod ern Paris or New York, or In ancient Greece. Homo or Assyria, Is the wom nn who, relieved of manual labor by the prosperity of her class or nation. or by the Invention of labor-saving machinery, will trade on her unused potentialities of motherhood for her support. Unless she enn or will en ter the Industrial held or some other line ot productive activity she has no right to live on thw labors of the male, except In the primitive or decimated nations, where the duties of mother hood extend over a greater period than the half dozen years now neces sary out of her three score years and ten. "The woman of leisure today," she says, "like the hot house specimen so notorious before the downfall of Home, who seeks madly by pursuit of pleasure to All the voll left by the lack of honorable activity, would be far happier If she had plenty of hnrd work to do. and the race would be correspondingly healthier and more efficient." FUN BY BARONET AND WIFE Disguise Then-selves as "Poor Mul eians" and Go on Tour Friend Drive Them Away. London. An escapade in which T.g ure a well-known baronet, his wife, a cavalry officer, the heir or another bar onet and a street organ Is reported trom Warwickshire. The Incident, which took plnce a lew miles Irom Nuneaton, has caused much amusement among those con nected with the Atherstone hunt. Having hired n piano-organ from some traveling foreigners, the baronet and his wife disguised themselves ns Italian musicians. The former wore a slouch hat and old clothes which had done duty In amateur theatrical per formances; the latter wore old gar ments and hound her head with a col ored silk handkerchief. Accompanied by a kinsman of the baronet, they set out to the neighbor ing mansion occupied by the son of a baronet well known in London. No sooner had they begun to reel off popular music hall airs than the gen tleman appeared upon the scene and, in a peremptory manner, ordered their instant withdrawal under threat or calling in the police. When, nrtcr a time, they mado themselves known, ho joined them In n peregrination of the village, nnd eventually the "adventurers" reached the seat of a country magnate, a lead ing Justice of the peace. Here the butler was sent to tell them to leave the grounds Immediate ly, and It wns not until the Irate sipiire himself appeared on the scene that tho quartet retired. The cllmnx was reached when the party arrived at another country real dunce. The family were flway from homo, but tho servants In a body de scended uuon the "poor musicians." Hut tho party reached home with their disguise impenetrated, and a few days later details of the "joke" leaked out, and were discussed and grently enjoyed by the field that met the Atherstone hoards nenr the vlllaae where tno escapade vr.s plnnned. Thinnest Man Weds. The tlilntiest ,li;m n. ,., wng married recently by .Municipal Judge John K. Newcnnier at the city hall. "I had to liiok time times to see hltn," mid ihe Jmge The man Is Arthur Atherton, twenty four years old. Though five feet high, he wtifili only thirty-dght pounds, lie married lilanche Huckley. nineteen years old, who weighs lliG pounds. Chicago lialiy News. lie Auber Yes, I've Just finished that painting. Do you like the per spective? Orville P.litnt Yes. It's great. Tho further away you stand from It the better It looks! eventy-One Years In a Shoe Shop. Charles II. Wilson of Trov. Y occupies the iiniiiie position of having been In business in one building for 71 years; nt least he will have completed 71 years In the shoe business at 211 River street August 12 next. This record. It Is believed, can be equaled by few If nny shoe retailers In tills country. Mr. Wilson has also been In business for himself for more than r.n years. Mr. Wilson Is today just as much In active business as he was al most three quarters of a century ago. when ns a thirteen-year-old lad he en tered the employ of John Leonard Williams of Troy. To be exact, that was August 12, 1M0. Mr. Williams kept a shoe store at 212 211 Itivcr street in a building which hud been erected In IMi.l, and so the building now occupied by Mr. Wilson for his retail shoe business Is one of the old est buildings In Troy. S7 STY . T ' Important to Mothers I.xamiue canlully eer bottle of v .-in i ukia, a sure and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Hears the Signature of fn I se Kor Over 30 Years UiiMreii Cry for Fletcher's Castorig Wise. "l obby, didn't you hear mamma ttilin' us to come in out o' the rairt?" "Vep, but I'm not goln' to do It till I'm so wet that she can't lay me across her lap "thout spollln' her dress." im: a i i v.' foot-rasp., ThrnmiM-ii,r .,l,-r 1,1 I... l,.,k, n Int.. 1 1. ahf lr jrnii w nil n-l aim i or.ifi .n fur li ml. hi n. ivul h n.mi-.umn Ii...iii Ailin'i mil-Kami. i irvr t-.irnMin.l Im ri i.n.iif all inunaiul ,r,tiTil. blltirrt, nt.. nn.l ,u! niik ,,i A, wail um It In llrrak la Ni-Sh.VK. N..l,.,.,jh.-rr.a.,i. ll. lc rpr.iri i(irntnr. i ..r Hii:K irml luiku.-,., mJUri AlUm t. OllliM. il, I.,. Iti.jr n. v. CAUSE OF DELUSIONS Work for Extinction of Tuberculosis. Kxhlbltions showing in graphic form the prevention of consumption have been shown In every state In the United States, except Nevada. Arizona. New Mexico nnd Wyoming, and also In most of the Canadian provinces and In Mexico, Porto Rico nnd Cuba, ac cording to a statement made by the National Association ror the Study nnd Prevention or Tuberculosis. There are now 25 states and lfi cities hav ing permanent nnd traveling exhibits besides the two operated by the Na tional association llseir, and tho total number of similar displays Is over 200, Including about L10 smnll school exhibits. The first tuberculosis ex hibit In America was shown by the Maryland Tuberculosis commission In January, I'un. in lime there four such exhibits. Would Need It. "0 radons, what is all that crape for?" "I bad a chance to get It nt a bar gain, anil, you know, my husband goes In lor flying:" TO 1I1ME IM T M !. ltt AMI III ll.li I I' Tllfc'STSTrX r-i tho O I KaiulaM l.lliiVHS l AM MI.KsJ I llll.l. I'l'Mi'. ..ii kmiw wtmt tt,u am uikiiig. I In li.riniri i pi.i.iiiT iiiinu-.l en rfi-ry hull.tt Mi. mum ii is :in, t .n I nlin- anil Imn In a laM. I- I. Tin- UMili.iif lllli. i. lit Itm iii.ii.rift I i tin mm Imii.u ni On- m.init. bold by ml I'ruv Ul i-rula. 4ui'ii t,t .ni Ii-jim wnnt The Retort Courteous. Manager You prima donnas so much for your services. Prima Iioiina And you managers want our services for a song. I'orroi.ll and CHIP ITtrkV ( ii-MiiNP I-- tin. I.rt rriuritr r HrvcM ih H,-iiii lt,i,l frvrrihlitM-NH riirt-a tho t'int nml r,'H,.r,-H mirinul cumlltlnuM. Ira lliiil(l-elT.iM Imiiieillntrl)-. iw., It.:, unit 50C. At tli-UK attire. were It Is a severe test of a man's Chris-' tlanlty to have the minister call on liliu during business hours. Sfra. Wirntnw'a 8nthlne Fyrup for CTiltdrMi tinlnni;. i-nfii-iw thr tfiiniK, rrilui-pa Inllamnia Uuu, ulluya imiu.i'urra wind eolie. Sic a buttle Pluck looks are wasted on people who are color blind. New Disease Mixes Sounds, Col ors, Odors and Tastes. Physicians Now Recognize Condition Which Probably Accounts for Hal lucinations of Insane It Is Called Synesthesia. FIGHT WITH BIG COPPERHEAD Pennsylvania Sign Painter Frightened at First, Returns and Dis patches Reptiles. Reading. The Pennsylvania Pa per Uox Manufacturers' Association held a two days' business session here. About one hundred delegates were present. Reports submitted show an increased demand for paper boxes, indicating better bualness In commodities which tiso the products of the association. Marietta. Henry HuKnger, elghty-ILve -years old, one of Aluy town's pioneer residents, is dead. He remembered when Lafayette rode through there and he shook hands with him. In an opinion given to Auditor General Slsson, Deputy Attorney General IlargeBt holds that the act of 1911 relative to assignment of Judges to courts other than their own for the purpose of conducting trials supersedes the previous acts. The question arose over the payment of Judges for sitting In other courts. The telegraph and telephone wires of the United States would mala tain 60 circuits between the earth and the neon, Allentown. Pa. Eugene Carl, an Al lentown sign painter, is laid up with twitching nerves ns a result of a battle with a monster copperhead. He was walking across the meadow at Dorney park to paint a sign, when ho henrd a nissing noitte and saw the retplle colled to strike. He rought tho snake off as best he could by strlUng It with his paint urusn ana Kettle, but the reptile was as skillful as a boxer, nnd finally reachod him: but, fortunately, its fangs were only Imbedded In his trous ers nnd did not strike the skin. Carl's cries brought to his help Calvin Nyce, who .killed the snake with a stick. It wns 6V4 feet long. After thinking over the mntter over night Nyce went to the spot again and found the snake's compan ion, a lemaie, with 34 young ones, which were dispatched. vvv. SMILES PUT STOP TO A SUIT Poughkeeptle Judge Sees Wife and Husband Grin at Each Other and HaJU Separation Case. New York. Physicians now recog nize a condition which probably ac counts for the hallucinations nuO delu sions of tho Insane. It In called syn esthesia, and those afflicted with It are Snown as synesthesia. It Is that peculiar condition In which sounds cre ate the Idea of colors, and vice versa. or In which colors, tastes, sounds and odors nre confused. synesthesia Is not a matter of much practical Importance," says American Medicine, "but It Is highly interesting to say tho least It Is that curious phenomenon of the overflow of sensations so thnt air waves, for in stance, give n sensation of caiur as well as sound. It seems that through some defect of development (lie corti ca! centers (of the brain) aro not In sulated from each other completely, so that n stimulus received from the re linn say, is not confined to the visual centers, but nffects adjoining ganglia. "The commonest form Is colored healing, and most of the cases of synesthesia Investigated up to a few years ago were of this type. No two were alike, that Is, the same sound would cause different colors or shnd. Ings In the different cases; a locomo tive whlBtlo would be yellow to one, or white to another, and so on. "Moreover, In some cases only a few sounds are colored, such as the tones of a piano from black In the bnss to white In the upper keys with a spec trum in between. In other cases every sound has a light sensation adilorl tn I It Then there are cases In which col- ors or odors give sound sensations glaring colors being loud, literally as well ns figuratively, and, of course, ihero must bo an Infinite, variety or mixtures of the other sensations. The most distressing cases are these in which thero Is no actual confusion of sensations, m tliaat odors nnd tastes and sounds are not differentiated. Nu doubt these abnormalities aro nt the baala of many delusions nnd hnlluclna tlo::n of the Insane. "The nervous Instability ofsynesthe s'c Is the practical side of tlili ,,!,. Jert. Without an exception, the enses present evidences Indicating consider able nervous Involvement In the mav or abnormal development. Some If noi most or them are highly lutein, gent, though incapable or that hard work necessary for success, and all are very sensitive to Irritations which the average man Ignores. "Perhaps the condition Is far from common than we Imagine, ned It would be well to keep It in mind In the treat ment of neurasthenics. We might find thnt they nre great sufferers from Jar ring sensations, nut In tho way usually thought of. but In these overflows to other centers. A normal woman may be made actually III by garish colors or coarsely arranged music, nnd we all know the bad effects of cprtnln tastes nnd colors; how much more suf- I iciing tneso must be In synestheslcs I wnere the Irritant affects moro than one center. tf cuiirnu me cases are so few la number that the general practitioner rnreiy u ever sees them, but ho Is II able to have milder borderland types . which a uuie attention to aesthetics mny make all the difference between success and failure In treatment" Small Boat to Sail Far. -"p jawl yacht Hecluta, Hfi tons, haj set out on a voyage of 6.000 miles, from C.osport to lliienos Aires, the headquarters of her new owner. The little vessel carries a crew or four, and Is commanded by Cnpt. Harry Williams, who recently took the 20 ton cutler Moynnn to Odessa. All tho members of the Hecluta's crew aro Hampshire men. She will go to Ma deira. Cape Verde, Pernambuco and Montevideo. The longest sea run will ee n distance of about 2.000 miles, be tween Cape Verde and Pernambuco. London Siaiiiliird. r Hearts are hard to win when one's complexion is marred by pimples, blackheads ami blotches. Strengthen your charms, by keeping your complexion clear, with Glenn's Sulphur Soap SnM t)T drug(iita. Hil'i Hair a4 Waul-, Dra. aUca ar arawa. . FALSE HUNGER A Symptom of Stomach Trouble Cor rected by Good Food. PCRrECT HEALTH." Tutt'a IMIla krrp the avatrtn In prrfrct ordar. llicy reuulute the him , la and produce AMCOROL'S CODY. a'im't't hr"J"' ,,,,i conatlputlnn and milarla, SB ?HF1 asat HI BaV vk II 11 Seek to Prevent Insanity. ' New York. Now York's first fret clinic for mental diseases opened the other day at the Long Islnnd stale hospital for the Insane. The purpose Is to discover cases ot Incipient lnsan Ity In time to prevent development into incurame mental disease. Poughktepsle, N. Y. The trial of the separation suit brought by Mrs. Floronce Wnltbeck against Harold C. Whltbeck, a wealthy bottler of Miner ton, came to an abrupt end In the su preme court here when Justice Mor schauser observed Mrs. Whltbeck and her husband exchanging smiles. The Justice, expressing the hope thnt the young couple would forgive and for- get, adjourned the case for three months. Mrs. Whltbeck, who Is very pretty, was on the stand under cross-examination by George Wood, attorney for Whltbeck, when Justice Morschauser stopped the proceedings. "From what I have observed In the courtroom you are not very far annrt " snld he, to Mr. and Mrs. Whltbeck Smiles have been passing bnck ami forth between you. and that Indicates to me It wouldn't take much to bring Mrs. Whltbeck asserted she hnd not given h- husband one smile 'during the afternoon, but the Justice said be couldn't be fooled; that he was not the only one who had noticed It The Whltbecks. neither of whom Is more than twenty-five, wore married four years ago. Mrs. Whltbecs charges her husband with cnmi .nrt Inhuman treatment and with threaten Ing to kill her. His Income, she says. Is $20,000 a year. v There Is, with some forms of stom ach trouble, an abnormal craving for food which Is frequently mistaken for a "good appetite." A lady teacher writes from Carthage, Mo to ex plain how with good food she dealt with this sort of hurtful hunger. "I have taught school for fifteen years, and up to nine yeara ngo had good, averago health. Nine years ngo. However, my Health began to fall, and continued to grow worse Rtendllv In splto of doctor's prescriptions, nnd everything I could do. During all this tlmo my appetite continued good, onlv the more 1 ate the moro : wanted to cat I was always hungry. "Tho first symptoms of my break down were a distressing nervousness and a loss of flesh. Tho nervousness grew so bad that finally It amounted to actual prostration. Then came stom ach troubles, which were very painful, constipation which brought on piles, dyspepsia and severe nervous head aches. "The doctors seemed powerless to help me, said I was overworked, and at last urged me to give up teach ing, If I wished to Bnve my life. "Hut this I could not do. I kent on at it as well as I could, each day grow ing more wretched, mr win.nnwar aione keeping me up, till nt last a good angel suggested that I trv a dtot of Grape-Nuts food, and from that day to this I havo found it delicious always appetizing and satisfying. "I owe my restoration to health to Grape-Nuts. My wolght has returned and for more than two years I have been free from the nervousness, con stipation, piles, headaches, and all the aliments thnt used to punish me so, nQ nave Dccn able to work freoly and easily." Name given by rostuni Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "Tho Road to Wellvflle," In pkgs. "There's a Reason." F.vrr rend the above letter A new our appears front time to time. Thr are ar-nulne, true, and full of human latrrrat. Piigv JQXMl IB rzmi fat'i ) rS-Vv. 'A "0'i0. ""- s"u Ii, .a.C-Jf jKVT' VJ 'rnitirnt-l, rnntra. rf. rx.SvuiVy,y-bii. i.v. m ii,.ii r Iniue nyting. v. ni.ll dalr. en, prriui.l ,-r .vc, H4liOI.ll HDNIKS ILH ! Ktlh A. JfrMtvlik,!. I. Bale r.". Press It -will hrinji you moro money. Semi ior CnlnlojJ. P. K. DliDi: HICK'S SONS 100 Tivoli Albany, N. Y. SWAMP- Is nof recommended fn ROOT ,,av kidney, liver or uiuuuer trouiilo It will be round Just tho remedy you need. At unit Cists tn llfty rent and dollar iljte,. You rimy hnvo n sample bottlo of this wonder ful new discovery by nmll free, alia pamphlet telling all about it. Addreaa. Dr. Kilmer A Co., I!lnirhimton, N. T, Iron and Wire Fences "'Nl I Mil mm aUf aaty Plain and heaTT.nlao light and Ornamental. Wire or run leneea, Klliest cra.la at limrat jirlern. Write for earning. FK Kit. Wo want a live airriit In your town. j "ii ran mane money. No capital retired. I.llral eontraet "ft. , STUDENTS WANTED JaJ,in ,hr. """nary pmfe.alon. Illnatrated LEGE South .r," VETERINARY COL- WE BUY OLD GOLD k!!,V.!T'r"!,lu"m'0!',J'w,lr'r' ' Teeth of all fae innir IVmpanr. (iuaninteod aecurltr Imerrial mailed monthly and money b.-a w hen w, ii'lisl K u lrueulata. VHaM.iuit a.r.al .hSrliiSL. w. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 30-1911,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers