i» Sponsible. rm The Satisfaction of Saving. Among all material pleasures there is hone so great as that which springs from a store laid by for future wants, especially for the needs of those for whose well being you have become re- And when you have gath- ered that store by steadfastly refusing thriftless self indulgence you have a satisfaction that outweighs and out- lasts all fleeting joys. I speak from my own experience, and 1 can call to witness the thousands of others who have traveled the same road. Strictly speaking, all mere luxury is waste. But there may be and often is wanton wastefulness in luxury when a reasonable indulgence in it might be justifiable. That is certain to react most harmfully on soul, mind and body. ¥t is not the accumulation, waste and misuse of wealth, that makes men decay.—.Judson Harmon in Youth’s Companion. X Poisons In the Stomach. A most curious fact is that all food contains the elements of poison, and in our body poisons are manufactured from these. For instance, meat, fish, «cheese and milk are composed of hy- drogen, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen. Take away the last and you have prus sic acid. We do not manufacture prussic acid, it is true. But in every stomach in the world fermentation but the SEP S—————e goes on just as in a brewery. and the ' poisonous carbonic acid is made vin | large quantities. few days’ output of carbonic acid gas you would inevitably die. Sulphuret- ed hydrogen is one of the most deadly _gases known, yet in every stomaéh it is mpde at one time or another. In the stomach all food is converted into what we call “peptone,” and ‘if a very small quantity of this found its way into the blood it would kill as surely as prussic acid. -Pearson’s Weekly. To Waterproof Tents. Here is the way to waterproof cloth: Dissolve ten pounds of rosin in four gallons of hot linseed oil. Pour into a tub to which a wringer is attached. Pass the cloth through the hot oil and, as soon as well soaked, through the wringer. Spread on fence or ground If you breathed a | { the story interrupted him at this point. immediately until thoroughly dry. Dry- * ing may take a week or more. This solution will treat about fifty yards of cloth. For waterproofing a tent Nessmuk in his “Woodcraft” gives this recipe, which he says is' excellent: To ten quarts of water add ten ounces of lime and four ounces of alum. Let it stand until clear. Fold the cloth or tent snug- ly and put it into another vessel, pour the solution in and let it soak for twelve hours, then rinse in lukewarm rain water. Stretch and dry in the sun. Sleep and D, eams. The brain is more #ctive while en- gaged in dreaming than when not thus engaged. The only perfect sleep is | The moment’ that which is dreamless. the sleeper begins: to dream he begins to work, and the more vivid and pro- tracted the dream the more ‘intense, naturally, becomes the work. It is possible that at no time during the waking hours of life is the brain =o fefive us it is in the strange business of drioqming. : Lock /head. “Re an speedway.” seid Brother Dick- ~ey, “but onderstan’ well how ter slow up. Reason so many folks gita pitched over de fence -into de brier patch er “life js kaze dey dumne dat de fence is dar ontil dey hitsiit. So watch ‘out whar:you is An’ how is you!” —Alanta Monelimtion. 3: $ J Household Caltthanies: The Terre Haute woman rounds out her arms by dusthig chairs, moving rugs and brushing down the stairs and aweaping the Hoors Rhe gives herself a flper carriage and «4 steadier galt by carrying wood and coal to the domestic hearth.--Terre Hante Tribune. Inconsistent. sAnd you tvon't: chair 1 got from you. ten years ago?” “No; it would he of little use to me in its present condition.” “What do you mean? Why, it's more antique than ever now.” —— Louisville Courier-Journal. The Sign. “I'm afraid Maud’s second marriage $s a failure.” “Did she say gro?" “No. but she’s beginning to speak well of ber first husband.” VE VE YE VE UE YE UE UE UE UE OK UE OX OF OF OOF o% 4% PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. Rules For Long Life. There is no panacea that will bring Jong life to every user. , “What is one man’s meat is an- . other man’s poison.” But a few rules are applicable to every one: Be moderate in everything, Ex- cess in eating, in drinking, in anything, tends to bring on old age. Be faithful in your exercise and be sure to choose an exer- cise that is helpful to you. Stand: and. sit erect and use your lungs. Keep your teeth and gums and throat clean. The mouth is the principal port of entry for unde- sirable immigrant micro-organ- isos. Be careful to maintain the bowel functiarfS. The 3 tract is a favorite abi for hordes of ria "Have yo examined # World's V wR Ww wR > RR 0 + “ o mara Le Ajtineinesais = a o =n T AT AS NS ur body Hawthorne buy: that antique } ’ g | mologically precisely the same thing, OR ROR ROR ROR RR OR | even then it was of inferior quality. : | father is anxious to get you off his | 2 2 ve pe pe | ers give it a distinctive name, such as Uncle Sam’s Belt. The total area of the canal zone, | which includes all the land and water ' within five miles on either side of the center line of the canal, but does not include the area within the three mile | limit on the Atlantic and Pacific ends of the canal, is 441% square miles, of which the land area is 332.35 square miles. The area of Gatun lake within the five mile limit is 106.4 miles, the area of Miraflores lake 1.9 miles and the area of the canal channel itself .85 mile. The area was given in 1911 as 448 square miles, which was correct at that time, but by a treaty proclaimed Feb, 18, 1915, an area of six and one- half square miles adjoining Panama city was ceded to Panama in exchange for two small tracts, one of them in the city of Colon, on which one of the defense batteries of the canal is situ- ated. - The same treaty gave the Pan- ama canal administration control of all the waters of Gatun lake outside of the five mile limit and all land sajein, ing the lake up to the: Humired® foo contour line; adding’ ‘sixty-one’ ny miles to: the -44#%4 miles’ within the zone, making the area of the canal zone and controlled territory 502% square miles. —Christian Herald. Hinge " By Post. Maurice Mauaeterlinck, they say, one day “found fhe little daughter of a friend very busily and conscientiously blackening a nice sheet of white paper. He asked to whom she was writing. *“T'o Prince Charming,” said the child. Naturally the reply delighted the au- thor of “The Blue Bird.” little girl had finished her letter she put the sheet of paper in an envelope, wrote on it ‘The Prince Charming” and said to Maeterlinek : “Please stick a stamp on it and put it in the post.” A man to whom the poet was telling “And what,” said he, about it?” “Well,” said Maeterlinck dreamily, “1 stuck a stamp on the envelope, and ‘1 dput the letter to the Prince Charming in the letter box on the corner. You never can tell.”—New York Post. “did you do Why Japan Cannot Be Starved. Two of the most interesting sights in Tokyo are the fish market at Nihom- bashi and the Mitsukoshi department store, very near the Billingsgate of Tokyo. Nihombashi is not only the geographical center’ ‘of Tokyo, but of Japan, according to the Japanese, who ought to know. Here is situated what is probably the largest fish market in the world. There is every kind of fish a man could mention and a few thou- sand other varieties. Some big fellows cut up into great steaks, weighing ten pounds or so, and there are little ones which would make good minnow bait, if one could find a hook small enough not to mangle them. I think that in certain sections they must use a cham- ois skin for a fish net and save every- thing that does not pass: through the pores. Until the sea dries up around Japan the islands will hever starve.— Christian Herald, Others Have Had the Same Desire. Two high school girls came into the criminal courtroom a few days ago just after a case had been tried and the jury had been locked up in the jury room for deliberation. ne “May we listen to this case?” one of the girls asked an officer of the court. “They just finished the case,” replied the official, “and the jury is now de- bating what its verdict should be.” “May we go and listen to the Jury debate?’ they asked. ) And then the official enlightened them on one phase of the Jury system. —lndianapolis News. : The Word Umbrella. . The English word umbrella is very like the latin, coming through the Italian “ombbrella,” or “little shade.” The French. German, Spanish and oth- “parapluie,” “regenschirm” and‘ “para: guas.” “Umbrella” and “parasol” are ety- but custom bas given them the dis- tuctions that we understand today. Polson Upon “Their Cheeks. Professor M.-P. Philbrick ‘of the Uriversity “of Washington told the Washington State Philological society thit ‘women of the seventeenth cen” tury powdered’ thelr ¢héeks’ with ‘cor: rosive sublimate-(biehloride of mer cury) -and. with’ white lead; -And they perfumed their:gloves ‘with ambergris. Good Likeness. “Did Miss Sourgirl have ‘her photo- graphs taken yesterday?” “Yes.” “Good likeness?” . “Yes; must bave been, for she re fused to have them and demanded an- other sitting.”—Exchange. A Shrub and a Tree. Southern California boasts one na- tive species af acacia, the cat's claw (a. greggii), “which is but-a shrub in that state, but becomes 8 tree in Ari- zona. It bears small pale yellow flow- ers and an abundance of very sharp thorns.—Argonaut. Early Paper. When -paper was first made in Eng- land, in 1588, it was only of a brown color, and it was not until about 1690 that white paper was produced, and Settied Him. He—But you say yourself that your She—Yes; that’s why I don’t he’ll listen to you.—Boston Tran- task is always light if his t.—Wallace. When the! THE MEYERSDALE MERCIA NE RSDalr PA. Army Rifles of Europe. The German Mauser can fire faster than any other rifle used by the armies of Europe. The magazine holds five cartridges, packed in chargers. The British rifle is the outcome of the South African war. It holds ten | cartridges and is sighted from 200 to 2,800 yards. The Italian Mannlicher-Carcano is rather slow, discharging but fifteen rounds of ehot a minute. The French Lebel is the longest rifle, The tube magazine under the barrel holds eight cartridges. The bullet used in it weighs 198 grains, The Russian rifle is seven inches longer than the British. It is capable of firing twenty-four bullets to the min- ute. The bayonet is always fixed. The Austrian rifle is the lightest of all, yet its bullet, 244 grain, is the heaviest used by any of the powers. It is very rapid in action. = Xamon The Belgién'’ Miser ‘of 1889 holds five partridges-éarried in It can- not be used as a’ ‘single 'T HR pounds,’ 3 ig From the Cellar of er Lie Do not be afraid, do not ery out, for life is good. 1 came, from low down. from the cellar of life, where darkness and terror reign, where is half beast and life is only a tight bread. It flows slowly there, in dark streams, but even there gleam pearls of courage, Weighn'over: e eight - pounds. The Flag on the Schoolhousa. Every public schoolhouse in this country wears as a crowning jewel the United States flag. This is so accord- ing to tke law. But long before legis- lative bodies passed this law the flag had a permanent place over the Fifth Street Grammar school in New Bed- ford, the first public school in this country to raise the United States flag and make the use of it a permanent | feature of the public school adminis- tration. ; That flag was unfurled May 11, 1861, and that flag and nine others served the school until May 11, 1901, the for- : tieth anniversary of the raising of | flags, when a small one for use within ! the building and a larger one for use _ period of the war. on the building were unfurled. This school was organized Sept. 11, 1860, and just eight months from that day it tiung to the breeze the first flag. That flag was in use during the entire "At the end of the war the flag was completely whipped out and _ unfit for farther use. It was then discarded, but not fill its succes- sor had been purchased: What became of it nobody knows.—Boston Globe. Presidential Dignity. Dignity is the most terrible punish- ment inflicted by the people upon their { president. The president must always | be ou his dignity; he can never relax. of intelligence and of heroism, even there beauty and love exist, Everywhere | g | uproariously; he cannot fail to applaud. that man is found, good is: in tiny particles and invisible roots—but still it is there. All these roots will not perish; some will grow and flourish and bear fruit. to believe this; therefore it is mine my I bought dearly the right | . is undemocratic. whole life long. And thus I have won | yet another right, the right to demand that you, too, believe as I'do; for I am the voice of that life, the despairing cry of those who remain below and who have sent me to herald their pain. They also long to rise to self respect; ! to light and freedom.—Gorky in “The Peasants.” Horse Sense. If you work for a man, in heaven’s name work for him. If he pays wages that supply you your bread and butter, work for him, speak well of him, think well of him, stand by him and stand by the institution he represents. I think if 1 worked for a man | would work for him. I would not work for him a part of his time, but all of his time. 1 would give an undivided service or none. If put to a pinch an ounce of loyalty is worth a pound of cleverness. If you vilify, condemn and eternally disparage, why, resign your position and when you are outside roar to your heart's content. But; I pray you, so long as you are a part of an imstitu- tion, do not condemn it. N it you will injure ‘the instit At-—- but when you disparage the of which you are a part you disparage yourself.—Elbert Hubbard. - Colony of Cousins. In Catlin bay, close to the great rock of Gibraltar, theré is & ¢olony so unique that it ds out almost as a tribe dis- tinet in itself. Many generations ago, during a storm, a fleet of Genoese fish- ermen put into the sheltered spet and so édcaped the fury of the sea. fa the bodts] de’ history has it. were ‘many wo- men, and they became so enamored of tha spot that huts were built and they remained. Hundreds of years have passed, and the little tribe still lingers on.’ It is a colony of cousins, dwelling apart in the shadow of a great, rock and going down to the sea In ships to earn a hard won livelihood. | 3! All Pleased. A candidate for parliamentary honors called upon a Scottish miner and met with a hearty reception and assurance of his vote. After his departure’ the candidate of the opposite { parfy dp peared on the scéne and Teceived the miner's ‘reply, “Oh, "aye, sir; TH vot for yo.” After he bad gone the miner’ wife ;remonstrated “with? Ker “bélo against ‘such beliavior. ' “Never ‘you mind, Jassie. | Yo see it's like this—twa already gore Awd’ pleased, and when I gang taé'gl'é nia vote I'll'please ‘Thasel’, and there ‘willbe’ three 0" ug ‘that's pleased.” —London Mail. ' Pathetic. reap (to. Sve you ove me something to eat, madam? Woman— Noi there ain’t-a thing in the house. ’, besides; I've got 4 couple of letters Ta no time to bother. » (pleading)—Madam, let mi stamps. ‘I can't starve. Fra Tele graph. rath ‘Two Definitions of Thrift. Thrift is the handmaiden of inde- pendence. It is not related to greed or parsimony and will gladly be your servant. ’ Thfift “is sequiring Sémething, when you have nothing, conserving whit Fou already” have and adding tot. kd Just Reversed. City Girl—That hen is iting very gueerly, just as though she were hatch- ing a plot. Country Maiden—On the contrary, she is plotting a hatch.~— Baltimore American. May Be Something to It. “How do you account for hig great popularity?’ “Well, I imagine it is because he doesn’t want fo do all the talking.”— Detroit Free Press. A Sable Philosopher. Ef you can’t light a fire on de hills, mebbe you kin stir a blaze in de low grounds, an’ no matter how little it is de world’ll see de flicker. — Atlanta Constitution. unselfish be one ved He cannot sit in the orchestra or in the gallery, away from everybodys staring glances. He cannot laugh too He is constantly on exhibition. When he travels he must appear at all the railroad stations that he passes through lest the impression get abroad that he The secret service men are by act of congress ordered to guard the life of the president. They shop with him, they accompany him on the links, they sit in bis limousine. they go to the oculist with him. to church, to the bank, The president, in short, is not a private person at any time; he is treated by the government, the people and the press as public prop- erty. David Lawrence in Ceatary. Isle of the Blest. The king of England is not the only king in the British isles. There is also the king of the Isle of Bardsey, an is- land of Wales in the Irish sea, in the County of Carnarvon. This Kingdom, with its seventy-six inhabitants—that figure including the king and queen— is, we are reminded, a free and inde pendent realm. The monarch ‘is not only sovereign ruler, but physician, schoolmaster, magistrate. He neither owes nor gives obedience to the laws of England. His subjects pay no taxes and live luxuriously upon barley bread, milk and butter. No newspapers trou- ble the peace of the teeming populace, and nobody on the island troubles him. self about what goes on ou i tive rock bound coast.’ Riga pL py people, though perhaps their igno- rance of the fact that they are so may mar ‘the perfection of their content ment.—Paris Journal, Richter’'s Conducting. It is difficult to define just what dif- ferentiates a good conductor from a mere time beater. but'a story that is told of Riehter may help indirectly. In the prelude to Tristan und [solde™ oc- curs a beautiful ‘passage for the oboe. | which rises. swells and dies’ away to a pianissimo most effectively. To in-. dicate the quality of ‘the playing which he wanfed from this instrument. Rich- | ter, beating the time with his right . band, placed his left hand over his heart. and the ohoe player at once re- sponded to a direction all inclusive in its simplicity and intelligibility, Sun Rooma. One of the first sun rooms of which there is any record’ was in Madrid: at the home of -Canovas del Castillo, prime minister during the regency. Dinner used to be served at one end of the conservatory, in the shadow of tall palms, while fountains’ played, :birds with gay plumage sang, and the air Contin 000) hd aa war po “Hor comfort d réd rugs’ were put down on ‘the white divle —— floors.” of a ‘Snake. The people of Uruguay. have some queer ideas and superstitions. One of them is that if one throws a live snake inte-a fire 3 will stick - out 118 logs, which ft keeps. conce: : scales. This idea probably arese from the scales scales. sticking outward a8 the snake felt ihe heat... $07 2:7 i 4 ola Geiliemah (at his daughters wedding) —My dear, T'don’t see how 1 am to get along without you. Bride Oh, that's all right, pa. Since the cere- mony’ WS performed ‘my Busband Bas oaed that he 'iasn't e saved to start Opackoeving. 80. I98, won't lose'me § an J » More Satisfactory. A poetic contributor recently submit. ted to a magazine an effusion, entitled “The Lay of the Lark.”’’ It was re- turned with this editorial note: “Rejected with thanks. Send a few specimens of the lay of the hen just now. We will gladly accept them.” Busy Listening. “] bought my wife a parrot last week.” “Can he talk?” “] don’t know. He hasn't had a chance yet.”—New York World. Gastronomy. “How’s your appetite?” asked the physician. “It’s all right till I go then I get nervous and lose it.” - ington Star. to buy food; -Vv¥ ash- is the only investment that -Thoreau, Fen:ing a Continent. The state of South Australia has since 1891 erected 29,148 miles of “ver- min fences,” enough to encircle the globe and with the remnant build a double line fence along the southern border of the United States. When contracts now. running are completed .the mileage will be much increased. New South Wales has expended over $27,000,000 for rabbit extermination and has within its borders 98,000 miles of fence. One of Western Australia’s fences extends entirely across the con- tinent. Of late years the rabbit has been repaying in part for his keep— paying his board, as it were. He goes to swell the total of food exports from the commonwealth. Along tlie coun- try roads rabbits may be seen hung on fences awaiting the passage of the rab- bit earts, «which convey them .to"th . packing houses to.be prepared: for ‘ship ment as frozen meat and kides.' Prac- tically "all are exported. ' THe :Austra- lian does not eat. "vermin." —National . Geographic Magazing, Soap an Antiseptic. Some medical authorities, explaining the abatement of epidemic diseases in ! recent years, are sufficiently free from professional ties to attribute this bet- ‘terment of conditions not to medical science, but to the increased use: of soap and water. Many medical author. ities hold the opinion that with a clean house and a clean person no one need have much fear of infection. A writer in the New York Medical Record says: “Soap is now recognized to be anti- septic and to be eflicacious must pro- duce a lather. Bacteria rubbed into soap or dropped on its surface are in- ‘capable of multiplication. The typhoid bacillus is very sensitive to scap, being killed by a 5 per cent solution in a short time. More than half the total number will die in a minute. The thorough use of a pure potash soap is not only a mechanical method of cleans- ing, but is an active favor in cutting down germ life.” —Exchange. The Rubber Situation. We as a people aré¢ almost absolutely dependent on Great Britain for our supply of crude rubber, as the great plantations are largely controlled by British capital. There are several pos- sibilities for making us independent of any other country for our crude rubber supply. One is a plant called guayule, which is even now being successfully raised in this countfy and which has been successfully raised in Mexico. There are several other rubber bearing plants also which might be raised in this country. ‘But the largest field seems to be the Philippine - Islands. where plantation rubber can be pro- duced cheaply and well. Capital has held off, owing to the uncertain future | of these islands, but local conditions . there are ideal for plazse | rubber in- dustry.—Andrew H. Metallur- gical and Chemical a Totashinee We Use. | A recent calculation as to the aver- | age number of people to every tele- | phone places Chicago and.Albany in the lead, with 6.1 people to a telephone. Los Angeles is next with 6.8, followed. | by Washington with 7.2 and" Detroit with 7.8. ©Buston® has 8.4, New’ York showed the least’ development, ‘with one telephone to every 23.8 people. Other cities are as follows: St. Louis, i 12.7; Pittsburgh, 11.5; Oleveland, 11.9: Newark, 15.6; Buffalo, 12.3; Providence, 10.1 and Rochester, 16.1, while the average of all these cities was 11.2, | Might Get Arather One. Abuse of the pension system is illus. trated by the Bostonian who discover- ed in a New England town a former townsman and policeman’ in a ‘new uniform walking a beat.” “How is this?” asked. the: visitor. “1.!thougit exclaimed ‘thie transplanted policeman, “Now,” said ghe, “can any one in the class téll me what a *buttress’ 187° Liftle Walter arose, his face beaming a nanuzgoat’ ‘—New: York Himes. . ti ‘His Arguinente Are: Unanewerable. y We put it to him this way: “Why don’t you get married?” And he answered nus honestly: a wife, aid I'm Dot lazy enough to. let a wife'support'me” 1! a ' “And that's the best reason’ we ever tedrd, ~~Cleyetand Plain. ‘Dealer: : Logic.. “You said that your wonderful death dealing inventions would make war impossible.” ruefully, “if everybody on edrth is ‘eventually killed off there can’t be any more war, can there?" Washington Star. ncient Glass. That which is believed to be the old- est specimen of pure glass with any- thing like a date is a little molded lion’s head bearing the name of an Egyptian monarch of the eleventh dy- nasty, in the Slade collection at the British museum. Easily Explained. Mother—I wonder how this book got in such a horrible condition? dry for him, so I poured water on it. There is no sinecure in the economy. Every power has its do, every capacity its gift to fill { Phillips Brooks. soul's 1 know,” ‘be shotted—* a Dtizens | 8 i 8:5 ‘and Philadelphia 11.5. Jersey City | you ‘were:on ‘the Boston force.” “Oh,” “you see I'm’ pensionéd by Boston, 501 moved: Now 1 I'm" Waving heer ay Sonus Undoubtedly. . ; Miss Wilcox. had been givin the class | . an elementary talk dpon a tecture. “I'm not-earning enough to support | “Well,” answered the great inventor | ’ Desperate ‘Warriors. It has long been a moot point whether single or married men make the best: soldiers. Some maintain that the lack of wife and family tends to make a man more reckless of his life, therefore a good soldier. Others say that the married man lmost a veteran when he enters the ranks, being inured to combat, therefore a good soldier. A French colonel was once questioned uporf this point. “Both are right,” said he. “Look yonder! Do you see that battalion of happy, devil-may-care fel- lows? They are all single men, and they would take their lives in their hands, But look again! Do you see those taciturn, somber, gloomy looking men there? They are all married, and. in a hand to hand fight they are ter- rors.” talion?” asked the inquirer. “They are called,” said ‘the colonel gravely, “the Children of Pespairi’—London Chron- icle. Girl tals amofe a Walk For Health. 53 A state board of health advises: “Take time to walk—or make time to walk. The pernicious habit of hopping on a trolley car to go a block or two robs many of the necessary health pre- serving: exercise they ‘should have. Walk for health!” . _ The recommendation is sound, but why should those who ride in automo- biles be left out? The inveterate users of motorcars need to be told to walk more quite as much as the rest of us. Nowhere is the riding habit easier to acquire than where an automobile is at beck and call. Even the workers who deem the trolley car a necessity would often be advantaged by keeping their nickels in their own pockets and there- by inviting more physical and mental vigor. We are all sinners when it comes to the failure to keep in touch with the open.—Springfield Republican. : Pot and Kettle. There is a proverb much heard now- adays that we never could see the sense of, “The pot can’t call the kettle black.” Why not, we should like to know? The kettle is black. It ought to be called black. Who has a better right to speak with confidence about the faults of the kettle than the pot, which has for years hung on the same crane and inhaled the same smoke? If thére is ‘anything that would make the pot seem less sooty in our eyes it is giving us a clear reflection of the image of the kettle. Shall no one point out blackness any- where unless he knows himself to’ ‘be estimation if it followed the custom of its critics and said, “The kettle is ent. ¥ New York City’s Bridges. Lenox avenue ‘Sections a he subway, New York city has forty-two bridges spanning the East and Harlem rivers, Newtown: creek and. other - ‘waterways. real estate requisite for- thelr ap- | proaches; an ‘investment by the manici-- | ality of wore than $185000,000. « ‘An Imaginary Tnterview. “Did you ‘say that the’ ‘times are out of Joint?” : “Yes.” replied Hamlet. “You see, I ology. It I could ‘have used modern terms I should have said that our en- gine is missing or that we're running on aflat tire.”— Washington Star. gi; oil ret a o enrbes Where We Get Marble. We import every year one-sixth of all the marble - taken: from the famous ham meat looks like a toy. Everything but the tail of cord is eaten. This is but one of many food freaks that one 1.800 | ina visit to sunny Italy. ” Te eel” { © 2 "The ‘Whole Bunch. my - Sunday’ School’ Teacher <~ And you © have no brothers or sisters? Little «Ediia—No, ‘ma'am. - dren we've got. v ¢ SEY fr oh] bee Ew wo PRACT ICAL HEALTH HINT. 2 Grip Germs germ of grip grows In the i i on a i the al at sages of those who have bad the disease. They #re often“‘found in” the ‘bronchial tubes” of "ton #° sumptives and of persons who suffer from bronchitis. The germ is easily killed by drying and in nature does not grow outside Little | William—I heard papa say it was too | % w % ue oe I: uw | % w | me | ue ve ue w 2 ' 9 oe iE se sie ule ue oie Ue U2 YE IE 12 Sle Ble le gle iE the human body. There is usually great careless- ness. about disinfecting the spu- tum of grip victims. The germs are therefore spread everywhere. Every care should be taken to avoid the germs. The bands, dishes and handkerchiefs of a grip patient should be carefully disinfected. Aged and weak persons should be guarded with special care from the germs. “What is the name of the bat- speckless? Would the pot rise in our . white, 4s white as I'am?"—Independ- - Irrespective of the Sviies railroad opi , Third, have t. be content with old time phrase- ‘An Italian Digs foot stuffed with my wl’ the ehii- Hn RNA ER * a EE ERE I ame od ss ARE oR ihn ARE SHS HOSS WILS ap Gourse Fe PENALT During H | maturali Are Lin i+ Preside: iclaring a [United Sts ent of G “Where: ed States, jstitutional ‘have reso the senat {tives bear state of States an ‘ernment 1 the Unite: ' ‘declared; “Where: 4067 of the “ ‘When (between 1 foreign ne invasion ¢ ‘petrated, against tl States, by ernment, ¢ lic procla: tives, citiz the hosti being ava years and in the Un naturalize prehended moved as @ ‘The p such even of, or any duct to be 'United St ‘become 8¢ degre 'shall and on dence sha vide. for tI ‘being per United St part, ther rej f ; the autho istitution ¢ ‘said secti I do here rect that on the p: wapd. all | subjects « the age wards, wi ed States ized, who, lamation the revise enemies, “All ali preserve od States against t violating and of the of, and to or giving ¢t® the er and ‘to ec lations wi be from t the presi shall con ance wit: turbed in lives amd od the cc and lawea 88 restric their own of the TU such alie selves in gens of th ite presex them wit] be comp.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers