IN A LUTHER BURDANK GARDEN. iWhits are the eorolfM apple buds, The cactus plant neVr cackle now, As your liuml in mine 1 clasp, A its teeth have nil bct-n drawn, 'Anil we wander thi-miuli tlx- eu'leaj ipuJi Anil calm titer t'ulln upon your brow Ami the raspberries, anil rasp. The life-lit nf a simlcsj dawn. You plucked n blackberry, darling white, In (hi dear place T would live for aye, As we rlinnteil n timclc' rum. Di.iiiuhihi the wlivlcwi how. Aim 1 look liim-ums, RtiiiMul bite . Jf a pilk'sM, b k i i less jininu. I could pro nothing, lirnr nothing, r.s I waited In tho nppnlllu:; stillness for thorn to come for come this wny they must. Before mo stretched tha Inns, white road, ti perfectly straight llns ruled between strips of green, and limply of living trenturo or obstacle of any kind. What a road for racing; how imposslbls to come up with any thing that had got tho start! Sud denly camo a low droning like that of a bumble) bee close at hand, a tiny npeok appeared over tho ed.?a of tho world, and In the same Instant (as It seemed to ine) a Napier cur went roaring by In a whirl of dust, and I caught n lightning glimpse of Its two crouching occupants, their white overalls grotesque and distended by the tearing wind. Like nn apparition, It had come, it had gone. I could almost have doubted If it had ever hepn there hBd it not left on my mind an Impression nt once amazing and Intoxicating intoxicating, as Illustrates human possibilities applied to locomotion; nmazlrig, that a man should have tho nerve and skill to control bo enor mous a projectile. Cut Major Collingwood hr.d nerve enough for anything, oven to run ning wny with my sweetheart, for It was Tarry who sat bejide him, and whose attitude, as sho flashed past, cavd mo tho impression of fear. Yet they were guests In the same house. What was thera out of tho way in their having a trip before breakfast in the now car, of which the man wns so proud, an J that had only Just arrived? Well enough I knew how women with diseased nervcS, living only for excitement, found a fierce Joy in tliese mad rides, courting danger as a fillip to their ' ;adod senses; but Tarry was not one ' of that sort, or she had not been so dear to me and others. That Major Ooliingwood had nbduelsd her, I was morally certain, yet thero stood I like d clod and a fool by the dusty hedge, not knowing what I should do next, and knowing well enough thpt whatever I did I could not come tip with a motor car 'hat was going at the rate of eighty luties an hour. Across the fields showed the gables of the house at which I was staying, and to which, at 8 o'clock that morn ing, had come a' wire which had planted mo hero In the high road, to see what I should see and I had seen It. "No breakfast!" cried a voice from the other side of the hedge, "and all to see your beloved flash by with Dolf Collingwood! Fastest pace I ever saw but tho roads about here are heaver.-born for motors." "Kow could you possibly tell who .the woman was?" I Inquired, Jealous for her honor. "Eacause Tarry Is so pretty you'd know her in the dark," said my host, equably, as ho lit a cigar. "Sho is nlmost tho last survival of tho old de lightful type of woman that has not lost its femininity by ovcr-lndulgenco In outdoor pursuits and masculine vices. Lord, you may walk the Lon don streets for days and res tons of well grown, aggressive women, and not ona really pretty girl like Tarry nmong 'em all! But what's the trou ble? They are merely out for a morn ing scamper." "Look here," I said, and gave him the wire I had received that morning, i He muttered over its contents half r.loud. "Colllnswood taking Miss Well born out on racing car to-rnorrow be tween 8 and 0. Moans mischief. Look out for them. London road. Toby." "Up to his tricks again," said Boh, frowning. "He forgot you were stay ing here; also reckoned without Toby. But Tarry's as straight as a die, and it's broad daylight, man. He can't dras her by her bonny brown locks to bis lair without somebody fccelng him." 'Tarry is r.ch," I said briefly. ' Collingwood is poor and desper ate. Toby Is no fool. Depend upon it, he did not warn me without rea fcon. Will you lend me a horse?" "With which to catch a Napier ttoing its eighty miles aa hour?" "Accidents happen they must ' Blow down at the villages. Tarry may be able to attract attention to her plight fifty things may happen. Now will you tell them to saddle a horse, and I'll get Elsa to give mo come breakfast?" 3ob went off to the stables, and Else poured out my tea. and blamed . me for letting Tarry alone in a house where Major Collingwood also was a guest. "Didn't you and Bob beg roe to come over for a couplo of days?" I -Osesoa, liidlgnantly, "and ain't I as liure of Tarry es she Is of me?" She looked comical at that, and t7id me never to be sure of a woman, end thought it was awfully smart of Toby to wire me, and wondered bow ho gat the tip. "Cf&ug'wood let out something In sss s:S:S:o0a ..:5:S;S :S:.j.. ,o vAwek )!Ti Anil periling the miniiteleita limim by. From the until of the imtlilon mitr. Denver Republican. his cups, I expect; It's the only time ho Is over known to speak the truth." She nodded. "That is the secret of his Influence over us women," she said, "that ho never lets us see ourselves as we really are, only as wo think we are and he la genuinely In love with Tarry, quite npnrt from her money. You don't think!" She put her Im pertinent hend on one side, and there was a suggestion in her eye that mnde me long to box her ears soundly. "No, I don't!" I said, curtly, and went off to tho stable, and In another minute was out on the road, doubt fully encouraged by Bob. "They are thirty miles ahead of you by now," ho said, "though, of course, they can't go the pace all tho way they did here. Ills extraordin ary nerve and skill will enable him to negotiate awkward corners, but you miiBt hear of him as you go along. Still, bar his having a smash, I don't see how you can possibly como up with him." "I moan to try," I said, waving my hand to Elsa, who maliciously mur mured: "They'll havo fleet steeds that fol low, quoth young Lochlnvar," as I departed. There was no difficulty in finding out which wny Major Collingwood had gone. The road had a deserted appearance here and there carts wore drawn up beside It. I saw white faced, trembling people Into whom the very fear of God had been put aa he leaped upon thorn, as It were from the ends of the earth, and, used 83 they wore to motors, they had never seen anything to go the pace this one did. In the villages whero he had Blowcd down tho wom en told mo that tho lady had seemed "afeared, and several times had tried to Jump out, but the gentleman had only laughed and held her fast, and said that his wife was "nervous." All spoke of his incredible skill and luck; he had Injured no one, his car was unhurt, nnd he seemed In the best of spirits. They must have reached town long ago, I thought, as at 11 o'clock I came to a place where the London road forked, and by a do tour of about a mile one could follow a seldom used road by which one eventually returned to tho highway. As I passed the corner a scrap of something white, caught on a thorn bush, arrested my attention, and, obeying some unaccountable impulse, I turn aside, secured the bit of cam bric, and in the corner of it found tho initinl I had somehow expected. With beating pulses I followed what I felt sure was a signal flung out in despair, and I had not ridden far, on an exceedingly bad road, when I came upon a motor car lying In ruins, a man pinned beneath its wreckage, and a littlo terrified figure sitting in tho hedge with hands clasped ovor Its eyes. "Tarry!" I cried out, and at that she Jumped up, and, running toward me, fell into my arms ns I dismount ed. "Frank! Frank!" she moaned, nnd wept as if Ucr very heart would break. I kissed tho grimy little face, In which at least tho blue of her eyes was untouched, and leaving the horse went to seo if her abductor were dead or merely insensible, and when 1 had lifted the lighter wreckage from him (he lay face downward and his un changing luck had decreod that he was plqned in such a way that he had escapad visible Injury) I was about to turn hirn over, when Tarry seized my hand and dragged me in the op posite direction. For the moment I had no impulse to go baci and play tho part cither of good Samaritan or of Nemesis. What 1 had to say to him could bo said later, and curiosity gripped me. "How did it happen the accident, I mean?" I said. "Just where the roada fork we heard a fast motor coming up behind us, and a man's voice very like yours; I am sure ho thought it was you He lost his head and took the wrong road, whilo I drew out my handker chief as a signal, in case it was you for I knew yoa would follow us. This road is quite unfit for motors, and, though wo were not going fast, sud denly a tire burst, the car ran up a bank, turned n complete somersault back Into the road, hurling me into thi3 hedge, while he was under the car. I think it happened ages ago, for I tainted." "Tarry," I said quietly, "what have you been up to that the fellow should dare to take the liberty of running away with you?" "You would go away, Frank, to your dear friend Bob, and I told you Major Collingwood was worrying me,, and refused to believe that we liked each other." "Tarry, you're a flirt," I said, with conviction. "A decent girl shows her love for the man she li engaged to so plainly that- " Tarry looked wisely at as--ssms- how I tuoughtof Elsa; In some things women are very much alike. ' "His new racing car only came last night," she said, "and he begged me to have breakfast early and go out for a trial spin In It. I tried to get out of it, but my hostess backed him tip, so at last I gave In. Hut we hnd barely started when he told mo coolly that, as 1 didn't seem to know my own mind he hnd mado It up for me, and he was taking me straight to town ho had tho special marriage license in his pocket! Hut ho couldn't make me, you know. And I was pray Ing that you might see us from the gables, when we passed you In the road, nnd I did everything I could to de-lay him so that you might come up with us, but it was no good. In the villages I tried again and again to get out, and begged the people to help mo, but he only laughed, and said his wife was nervous! His wlfel So nobody dared to help mo!" "Cowards!" I said. "Think of It, Frank, that the worst brutality used by a man to a woman Is not interfered with because she is his wlfo!" "Much motoring hath made him mad," I said. "Even if he got yoti snfoly to town, what could he do? And he must havo known there would be a hue and cry ralBed after you.". "He reckoned on the scnndal on my not facing It, I mean," said Tarry. you are a very proud person, Frank supposing you had refused to take me back.'.' The tears had made two clean run nels down hor cheeks. It was almost impossible to recognize In her one of the daintiest little girls that ever lived, and, Inwardly, I vowed that If I ever bought an automobile, her looks should not be sacrificed to either reckless conceit or the manu facturer's advantage. "Frnuk." she said, "I've heard women say it's heaven going at that terrific speed but It's Just hell, and the wind tears the breath out of your throat. It's mad, It's brutal, It's wicked for mon to build, and men to drive, such things Just to cut one another out " "In other things than speed," I said. "Well, It was boldly planned, and but for Toby might have suc ceeded." "Toby?" eriod the girl, startled. I took tho wire out of my pocket and gave It to her. She gasped as she read it. "Oh! the scoundrel!" she cried, and clenched her fists. "Tarry," I said, "prepare for a shock. Major Collingwood abducted you, not because he loved you so much as because he loved your money more. I am rich myself, so your for tune is no serious drawback to you In my eyes. But Collingwood spends all his money on automobiles and wants more " Tarry turned an Indlgnnnt shoul der on me, and I put my arm around it, and said In her ear: "So it was not wise of you to put such a temptation in his way " "Temptation?" " or good form to be racing about the country with one man while engaged to another." "But all the women do it " "Yes but then you see you are the woman." "I was angry with you for going away," she whispored, "and though I'm not a motor-maniac I'm sfraid to be for once that mad fover got Into my veins. I'd never scttlo down or make any home for you worth having. In moderation, I liko It tho Incredible ease of movement, the swallow-like sensation, tho exhilara tion; so you shall buy me a car, sir, but not a racing one, when when" and sho impudently pinched ray chin instead of completing her sen tence. "Tarry," I said, "don't .you think you look far nicer with all your fril lies on, sewing under a tree in your garden, than as you do now?" "It is all you men care for frills," she said. "Do you' do you think he Is dead? 1 I'm afraid to look!" I started, the sheer inhumanity of the thins, leaving him untended yon der while we laughed and talked to gether, struck me with sudden force, and I turned hurriedly back, Tarry following at a distance. At the bend of the road I drew a deep breath of relief. Collingwood was sitting in the hedge, his attitude one of deepest dejection as he gazed at the mass of wreckage before him. All's fair in love and war," he said, airly, as I came up; "you've won, and be hanged to you. There," and he pointed to the smashed par, "goes 1200 and there," he pointed to Tarry, "goes the only woman I ever wanted to marry." "And there Is. the horse that brought me," I said. "If I give you d leg up can you ride to the nearest doctor?" for I saw by the way his left arm hung at his side that it was broken. He, nodded and got up. Shaken and grimed as he wa3 beaten, too, in his mad enterprise the old reck less light still showed In his eyes as, having mounted, he turned in ths saddle and looked at the motor. "I'll send you these pieces," he said, then looked at Tarry. "Of all the little devils to run away with" ho said, then was gone, while I shouted after him to return the horn to Bob Fanshawe, to which he yelled back that he would. , For a momeat we listened to those calloping, retreating hoofs, then J said: "Tarry, there must be no more ot these jccldeots. When will yoa mar ry tael" "When you Wee!" "To-merrowf" "01 y oaly taks m where I tai tiafrsenwt! -T Spread of the Tip Graft. Millions Paid Yearly to Porters and Walters. One Custom We've Borrowed From Europe to Out Own Disadvantage- Pullman Employes Alone Get 92,000,000 a Year Easy Money Made In Hotels The manner in which the people of the United Stntcs are borrowing tho tipping hublt from Europe Is a matter for gruve concern. Take the case of your smiling friend the Pullman por ter. Do you know that the dimes and quarters and half dollars given him by our traveling public every year amount to more than $2,000,000 and that we present him with $0000 every morning before breakfust? Lot's figure It out. There are about 8000 porters In the employ of the Pullman company. It the total amount received by each ot them was a dollar a day, that would be $H000. But In order to make allow ance for time off and for stingy or frugnl travelers who give little or nothing suppose we knock off a cou ple of thousand dollars every morn ing. That would make $0000 a day, or $2,190,000 for the year. This generosity on the part of the traveling public would be all right It the porters got the boncllt of It. But they do not. Under present con ditions the tips are merely another source of profit for the Pullman com pany. One would suppose that all the time ot a grown up man, in most instances with a family to support, would at least be worth $10 a week, or $40 a month, to a concern earning millions of dividends. But the por ter gets ouly $25 a month, and is left to get the remainder from the pub lic. Therefore the Pullman company, on account ot tips given to its em ployes, makes a saving ot $15 per month on each of them, amounting to $120,000, or $1,440,000 a year. After the thousands of passengers arriving at their destination In this country every morning turn over $0000 to the Pullman porters, they give away another thousand to sta tion boys who carry their bags out from the trains. Defore they get comfortably settled down to the breakfast table another donation of $2000 or so Is made to hack drivers. Then the waiters proceed to "get theirs." After the porters no other class of servants depends so much upon tips as the waiters. In many ot the large establish ments in the cities the attendants have a perfectly organized system for securing and sharing the proceeds they get from the public. One way of working it Is this: When you enter the dining room for a first meal at a hotel the head waiter places you at a table and then watches carefully when you leave to see If you fee the waiter. If you leave some change the head waiter claims part ot it. If the one who attended you Bhould re fuse to divide, the next time you en ter the dining room you will be put at some other table, presided over by a "square man." Sometimes the only way a waiter ran get prompt service In the kitchen for a favored guest Is to "see" the server. Thus, when you leave a quar ter under the edge of your plate It does not always go into the pocket of the man who attended you, as you might suppose, but is distributed among a number ot employes with whom you do not come in contact. If you fall to leave any change under your plate and remain at that hotel fop any length ot time you will be likely to receive scant consideration, for the servants will be busy looking after those people who are not ab sentmlnded when they finish their meal. One hotel proprietor tells this ex perience he had with a new waiter who came to his place. The new man came on at the breakfast hour, and In the course of time was set to wait upon -the manager without knowing who he was. Instead ot serving a small cup ot cream for the coffee he brought milk with It. The manager said to him: "Here, take this milk back and bring me some cream." "We have no cream," said the new comer. The surprised manager looked up at him quickly and said: "Like thunder you haven't. I am the manager of this place, and I Just Greenhorns ns Inventors, In 1S27 a carpenter ot Sandwich, Mass., wanting a piece ot glass of a peculiar size and shape, conceived the idea that the molten metal could be pressod Into any form, much the same as lead might- be. Up to that time all glassware had been blown, either offhand or in a mold, and con siderable skill was required and the process was slow. The glass manu facturers laughed at the carpenter, but ho went ahead and built a press, and now the United States Is the greatest pressed glassware country in the world. In 1S90 a novice in the plate glass industry, Henry Fleckner, of Pitts burg, whose ouly knowledge of glass had been acquired in a window glass factory, invented an annealing "lehr," the most important single improvement ever introduced in plate glass manufacture. In three hours by the lehr the same work is done which under the old 'kiln system re quired three days. In four years the importations of foreign crown and plate glass Into the United States fell in value from $2,000,000 to $200,000. About the same year Philip Argo bast, of Pittsburg, also a novice in glassmaking. Invented a process by which bottles and Jars may be made entirely by machinery, the costly blow-over process being avoided and the axpeasa of botUeniaking redased checked In a hundred gallons ol cream not more than twenty minute ago." With genuine embarrassment the now recruit replied: "Ob, I didn't know you were the manager; I'll bring It at once, sir." The motive wus to please certain regular custom ers of the dining room, who mado'S practice of tipping, by keeping a lib eral quantity ot cream In reserve for them, giving ordinary patrons milk with their coffee. The barbers in the large establish ments of the cities are also woll or ganized for securing tips. Must of them work on percentage and have all kinds bt extra things they try to Bell each customer. The man whe does not glva ten cents above the regular tariff Is an unwelcome cus tomer In most of the big shops. The up to date barber "educates" hl customers to the Idea ot tipping. He boding a trlondly line ot talk and tolls you confidentially that things are going pretty bad with him. He will likely say: "Do you have any Idea what wages they pay In thle place? They pay so little that If It were tiot for the tips we get we could not pay rent and provide for our fam ilies. Of course, nearly everybody that comes In here gives us some thing, so we mntiago to worry along." By such means the barber makes bii customer understand that something extra Is expected. If a good "edu cator" openB up on you and you fail to take the hint, you had better look for another shop. A dodge which Is worked with uni versal success by many crafty ton sorlal artists Is the soiled towel trick. In order to induce his customers tc buy shampoos he keeps a towel at hand the corner of which Is very grimy. When you get In his chair he passeB this over your head, then shows you the dirt, which did not come from your hair at all, but oil the heel ot his boot. As he flashei the soiled towel he will say: " Loti of dirt In your hair. Better let nif wash it out," and In nine cases out ol ten the unsuspecting victim will saj "go ahead," when he probably doesn't need a shampoo at all. Once when the writer was discuss ing tips with a foreigner he made th following explanation ot why it if done in Europe: "It Is merely a lit tle cash concession made to men whe have to labor at tasks not quite worthy of human dignity. It Is not. If you think of it, quite worthy ol human dignity that a man should spend his life in setting down baked meats on a board for other men tc iat. This is why we have invented tips, to reconcile men to perforir menial offices with an appearance ol contentment." Any self-respecting man whe works for his living ought to resent such an attitude as this. Honest labor of any kind, even ot a persona! character,1 can be 'dignified If it I done In a dignified way. The functions of the waiter and the barber are necessary parts of out living. We are all more or less de pendent on one another, and the most menial service W respectable if done In a respectable manner. Hero Is s chance for organized labor to assert Itself. Receiving chance gratultiet In the place of salaries is neither dig nified nor profitable, but it is demor alizing. The particular classes ol labor that receive tips should stand together and refuse to take them. They should demand wages in keep ing with the service they render. That taking chance tips Instead of receiving an adequate salary is not profitable Is shown by the condition of affairs abroad. In those countrlei where the tipping system has been In vogue the longest labor Is the most debased. In Berlin one Is even ex pected to tip the street car conductor. In Vienna one must fee the Janltot who lets him in or out of his own house at night. Practice has made this so universal that It is almost ai binding as if it were law. New York Sun. one-half. The result has been thai more bottles and Jars are used In s month now than In twelve montbi ten years ago. Cosmopolitan. Tillman Likes Roses. At his home In South Carolina Sen ator Tillman Is famous as a gardener. He produces, among other things, the best asparagus and the finest rosei to be found anywhere in the State Like other South Carolina farmers, Tillman raises corn and cotton. These are staple products of that region Lately Tillman has made a specialty of cultivating asparagus for the early Northern markets, and his income from this source is considerable. The cultivation of roses amounts to a pas sion with the pitchfork advocate. Ir his home garden he has no less than 250 varieties of them. The Pilgrim. Plenty of Grub. John Eickhorst, a wealthy peasant of Oerdinghausen, In West Prussia. Invited to the wedding, of his daugh ter only guests with go!, healthy ap petites. For each guest be provided one and one-fourth pounds of beef one pound of pork, thre-fourthi pound of veal, one-half ponnd of mut ton and half a fowl, with an unlim ited supply of rertablet, bread, wlae and beer. IadUaapoUa News. The Badge of Honesty Is on every wrapper of Doctor Plore's Golden Medlcul Discovery because a nil list of tho ingredients composing It Is printed there In plain English. Foty years of exHrlcnco has proven Its supemr worth as a blood purillor and tnvlgont Ing tonic for the euro of stomach dlsordrs ami all liver Ills. It builds up tho rn down system as no other tonic can In which alcohol Is used. Tho active tnedc Inul principles of natlvo roots such is (lolden Keai and Queen's root, Stono nd Miuidrako root, llloodroot and Illak Cherrybark aro extracted nnd prosnrvd by tho liso of chemically pure, trlp refined glycrrlno. fiend to Dr. R. V. Plero at lliiirulo, N. Y., for free booklet whlo quotes nxtrnrts from woll-rocognlzed md Ical authorities such as Drs. Ilarthnlov King, SciiduW Coo, Elllngwood and host of otheri. showlns that these root can be duMfiidcd upon for their curallvt action (ball weak states of tho stomach acconi y Indigestion or dyspensk us well II bilious or liver complaint! and I is 1S! wasting diseases " where thero and gradual runnlna down of tltronRth arid system. he "(lolden Medical Discovery "make; rich, wire j'lood ald so Invigorates ri Kiniura tn ; .stoinimn. liver noil nowi is n lid, through them. i.lm whole svstem. Thus all skin afflictions, blotches, pimples and eruptions as well as scrofulous swel lings and old open running sores or ulcers aro cured and healed. In treating old running sores, or ulcers, It Is well to In sure their healing to apply to them Dr. 1'ierco's AlMJoaling Salvo. If yourdrug- glHl II Ol stock, I stamps t and Surg a lurun will rimch you by return post. You can t afford to accept a secret nos tril m as a su Imtl tu te for this non-alcohol Ic, medicine or known composition, not even though tho urgent dealer may thereby makn a littlo bigger tiroflt. Dr. IMercH's 1'lnniumt Pellets regulate and Invigorate stomiicli. liver and bowels. Biigiir-coutud, tiny granules, easy to take as candy. "UNWRITTEN LAW" EFFECTIVE. Slayer of Man Who Had Relations With Killer's Wife Acquitted by Texas Jury. Lee Randol, charged with the mur der of J. P. Stacey, has been acquitted by a Jury nt Fort Worth, Tex., after a trial of a few days. Tbn case was similar to that of Harry K. Thaw, but the defense rolled entirely on the "unwritten law." , Knndol killed Btacoy September 23, 1900, nnd, according to all witnesses It was a cold blooded affair. The dead man was unarmed. The defense did not attempt to prove solf-defonso or Insanity. Instead, It Introducod a letter written by the dead man to Baudot's wife Just be fore the killing. When tho prisoner was asked. "Did you kill Stacey because of his rela tions with your wife?" Randol ans wered, "I did." The verdict of the Jury was unani mous. Women In the Postal Service. According to a report made by the . United States postofflce department, Uncle Snm has 188 women assistant postmnsters and 2,100 women employ ed as stamp, delivery window or mon ey order clerks. The women clerks receive on an average $1,130 a year. i t nnppen to nave tills Halve In I wind fifty-four eonts In postago I n Dr. R. V. l'loren. Invalids' Ilnta! 1 leal 1 nstltuto, IlufTalo. N. Y., and box of tho " All-HoHllriir Kalvn or auoui. 9u ies uiuu uie meu ciurnis Two women employed In the post ofllco department proper at Washing- I ton earn $1,800, sixteen receive $1,600,' I forty $1,400, seveuty-one $1,200, and I seventy-four $1,000 per annum. A ma- 1 Jorlty of these women are either J wives or widows. The testimony otf tho postofHco authorities Is that wol men make highly efficient public Ber- vants and that they are equal In hon 1 esty a men. If not superior to them. i Weekly Bulletin. Deepest of Gold Mines. Australia now possesses the deep est gold mine in the world. The shafts at the New Chum Railway at Bendlgo, Victoria, have been sunk to a. rtenlh of over 4.300 feet, and the quarts there tapped has been sampled and crushed, wltn tne result mat a yield of gold equal to an ounce a ton has been obtained. The operations In the mine have been tested by govern ment officials In view of the fact that hefnr In the world's history has gold been obtained from so low a depth as three-quarters of a mile. Chicago Journal. DREADED TO EAT A Quaker Couple's Experience. How many persons dread to eat their meals, although actually hun gry nearly all the time! Nature never Intended this should be so, for we are given a thing called appetite that should guide ns as to what the system needs at any time and can digest. But we get in a hurry, swallow our food very much as we shovel coal Into the furnace, and our sense ot appetite becomes unnatural and per verted. Then we eat the wrong kind of food or eat too much, and there you are Indigestion and its accom panying miseries. . A Phlla. lady said the other day: , "My husband and I have been steS fnm IK n. 911 Tenrf frntn - drinking coffee feverish. indlgekJ linn tntallv unfit. A BOod Dart Of thl time, for work or pleasure. Wo act! nally dreaded to eat our meals. I "We tried doctors and patent tneif Iclnes that counted up into hundred Of dollars, with little If any benefit, J "Accidentally, a small paekago of Postum camo Into my hands. I madj some according to directions, wiV surprising results. We both HkV and have not used any coffee since. J "The dull feeling after meals ha left sand we feel better every way! We are so well satisfied with Postuirl that we recommend it to our frtendst who have been made sick and nervousJ and miserable by rtffee." Name gtv-,fcw n by Pootirm Co.,Battlo Croeit, Mrco. s Read the Mtle book. "The Roaa w WellvUt," ta'fkgs. There'i Rea-oav" "l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers