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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1917)
a,Jik,fli COOLNESS There' nothing so cool it an oil stove for i.uinuier cooking. All the heat Is concentrated ,11 the looking and nol radiated about tlie ! lUluii. everything any wood or coal ranee will took, ami rook it better, hecauae of the steady, i vmly (ii:tllbulcd heat. . iKr it ull the year 'round more convenient lli.m a wooil or coal atove, and more econom- H .1 1 . Thr long blue chimneys prevent all iraoko and Mlirtl. In 1, 1, nil 4 liurntr iln. wits pr withuul uvn, Alio (bttut mmltli. A ill irour dtiltr ludiy, NEW PERtECTlON 01LCO&MTOVE L I'OR 8ALK BY HilUboro Mercantile Co HilUboro, Oregon G. E. Allen, Hardware HilUboro, Oregon 1917 Velie Six WcJIiave token in trade a new VELIE SIX-Been driven less than 50 miles We are in a position to offer this car at a great sacrifice SEE US Peterson Brothers Garage Phone Main 6 . Hillsboro, Ore. Advantages of Perfect Silo Costs less to construct; no hoops, consequently no ad justments are necessary; perfect doors; can be added to at any time. Perfect Silage Guaranteed The BEST SILO Ever Invented- We can make 1 0-day deliveries. .Call and see .our sample or write or telephone us. We carry everything in Building Material, "and in order to make room for the Copeland-McCready stock, which we haVe purchased, we are selling rough dimension at less than cost, also our Paints are being closed out at cost. Badger Lumber Company Phone Main 842 NOTICK OF II')AKIN( OK FINAL ACCOUNT. In the County Court of Hit' Slate of Oregon, for the County of .WiihIi liilflon. In the matter of the OHtulo of M. A. Kobinmin, tleeeiiMeil. Notiee in hereby friven thut the unilersiKiieil, Frank .Speiilel, mlinin lMtrutor of miiil out ale hnn filed his verified final nrrnunt herein, anil that Monday the '.(llril day of July, 1SI17, at the hour of 10 o'clock, A. M. of aaiil day, at the County Court Room in the. County Court I louse at Hillsboro, Washington County, Ore Iton,' haa boon appointed as the time und place for the hearing of objec tions to Haiti final account und the settlement thereof. Dated ut Hillsboro, Oregon, this 20th dny of June, 1017. FRANK RiMOIDKIf Admiuislrator. WALTER T. McfWlRK, Attorney for Administrator, rat pu Last publication July -t', 1017. 1 AT ONCE the Main Street, Hillsboro NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the matter of' the estate of Wil- helmiim 1'eik, tleoeased. Notice is hereby given that the undersitrned has boon appointed ex ecutor of the estate of Wilhelmina 1'eik, deceased, by the County Court of the Stale of Oregon, for the County of Washington, and has quali fied. All persona having claims against said estate uro hereby noti fied to present the same to line at my residence at lluher; Washington County, Oregon, with vouchers and duly verified, within six months from the tlate hereof. Dated ami first published, Juno 28, 1017. ' . PHILIP PEIK, Executor. FRED JENSEN, TZ4 Hoard of Trade, Portland, Ore. Attorney. For sale: Two horses, weight, 1100 or over. Otto Ganquin. Ti gard, Ore. 15-7 z ftiKj&tu at Clngar. To CHiili Hit- world i.h u slilycr o, KOIIKH ll MM Nllliplll II - WI'H, lit YVI'ttlt Uiillhert nil yi II Ih. Tor Y volte, whimo iiri Ih hiipii'iiii', has Just been explain ing Hit secrets. Hero Is hiT rilpe: "Von iniiHi have In your on? voice all voli cs, all colors; In your one face, all n presidium; In your unit aoul ull the mil uf nil people. Ami you inuitt work, wink, work! When you liavo worked fur leu years, twenty years,, you will llnil yourself only at tliu be fc. 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 it; . " Theru U a lltlln morn. You must linvii a Ioiik uml stern course, of Vo l'.viiiiiiimIIi h fur tlm voice, of plaetlque fur tin' harmonious uml expressive use uf Dim limly, of hlMlory, literature, painting, simlplnrc- nil foruiH of art uml bisiuty 111 tint bring tlii-lr Inlluum'n to bear mi tlin i rcullvti Imagination of the singer, "or you urn nothing, with lot;!" And that Ih Iiow It 1m done. London Globe. Rosebushes. Quilt) frequently we find rosebushes not Mclu. Inn hn lino lure roses aa they illd ilurliiK nlliiT seasons. Home thing la linking, und If fertilizers have iM'i'ii upplli'd mid these do not seem to bring nut tliu good qualllle aomulbluir else Ih needed. lVrhnpa tbo mm need Irou. fne thing la oirtuln- little Inm will not hurt them. Try burying a few cam beneath llm rosebushes. . Mash them Out and bury Ihera a few Inches be tieatb the surface of the anil, near enough to tbu root a of the tm- tbut tlin riHita fiin eecure aoine of the lnu and tarry It to the foliage and the Mower. Iruin three to half doen ram to l.ivli It enough. The tin aoon ruta off, and tht thin sheet of Iron will be rapidly gathered up by the action of rite i-li'iiii'iitH, und It Ih aurj'rtalnij how H'hiii a fii n will wholly disappear 1'hllndi'lpbla North American. Moving an Army. Horns Idea of the adequacy of the equipment of the rallriHida of the Cull ed Hlaiea for the movi'iueiit of troopa may Iw oliluliicd from a Hlutement pre pared by an olllcliil of the quartermas ler corps, fnltitl Ktate army. To move one Held army of 80,000 men, consisting of three Infantry dt lhluiiH. one cavalry division and a brlitade, ti hub-ally known aa a bri gade of Held iirniy troopa triK)ia aux iliary lo the Infantry and cavslry divisions-require a total of tl.''-li cara. made up lnio "'i train with uh many ,ocoinotlve. TIii-hc .SK cara would Ik. iii:iiIi on of -.11.1 liaiHenKer, 3-S." l.nu'iiiii'. 1 . ."i Ik.k. 1.H!i Mlut'k and T75 Hut ii. TliU iiiiiiiilty of efpilpment repre-m-iiU I'," of 1 per " I'lit of the loromo :len owned by AmerU-un railroads, 1.2 per rent of tlndr pBien;or t ara and 0.2 of 1 per cent of their freight equipment-A mi'ilmn liidiiHlrlea. Toeth of tha Whala. AIIIioiiu'Ii t!ie whale U a warm blood ed, 11 Ir bieiilUinu Hiiiiiiul, It cna "lay itinler waier half mi h"Ur. Funnily It iSiiiicx to the Hiirfaee every ellit or ten mlinili'H lo blow, spouting a Htream of water from Its uortrlla and remain Inn up iiUmui two minutes The I'liiiiiial or tlulmck w hale Ih some time more tlmu li f't lomr. The teeth of the sperm or oil whale often welch thirty pounds apiece. They are used for Ivory, but ure not aa flno aa elepliinil tusk. Whalebone, which oineH from the rb-'ht or whalebone whale. Is imt really Ume at all, but re- nembli'H the horna of cattle. It irrowa lu pbitcs fnnii the roof of U114 whale'a niuuia ami serves the purpose of tth, which ure lin king In this variety. Washed Dianas at tha Tablt. In former centuries a cistern for the washing of dishes at tbo table waa purt of the funillure of a well appoint ed dining room lu F.iiglaud. The platea were rinsed lu It w hen mvessary dur ing the meal, l'epya In hla diary tells of puivhaNliig a pewter cistern aa part of tilt preparations for a dinner of state. A magnificent silver cistern Is still preserviil In the dining room at lturghley House, the seat of the Mar quia of Kxcter. As 6h Saw It Kie-Itealgn from the club, sell my automobile and move Into a cheaper house Just because I've been losing a little money la stocks? I can't do that. It would make talk. Mrs. Exe It would, William. People would say you hud done a sensible thing for once In your life. lloston Transcript. Psrnioious Llteratura. "Mil you see that stout womau push that little iniin off the sidewalk V" "Yes." ' "What did she do It for?" "Why, she's been reading somewhere that women nre dlspluclng men lu all tbo walks of life." Want tha Limit. "I used to try my hand at writing when I was lu college." "Ever write for money?" "As often as I thought the old man would send me liny." Iluffalo Express. True. "Why do they any that honesty Is tho best jMilley?" "Hecuuse Jt never lapses, aud you don't have to pay premiums on It" Detroit Free Press, Reading. If you like to read' and have many books, be careful lest you read too much and think too little. Tho feeble tremble before opinion, the foolish defy It, tho wise Judge It, the skillful direct It.-Mme. Kuluud. Identificstion. "I shall try to leave footprints on the sands of time," Buld the umti who is earnest, but not original. "Very good," replied the absent inbided criminologist, "but thumb prints' nre now .considered more relia ble." Exchange. 1 An Obstructed Order. Owens How do you do, Mr. Shears! What cun you show me in the way of new suit today? His Tailor Your bill, sir. That 1 decidedly iu the way of new suit. MoU'jm'i Caitit. In tho Venle tullev, I I'lil.v-xlX miles soulhi'SHt of lnl.il.iie. An... t a ie uiiirkiible rilu knoiwi 111 Moiileziimu ' eaHlle. It U one of I lie line 4 und best preserved moiiiinn'iil 1 l f t by a i'.ple known us the ancient li.V dwellers. Tho castle Is oil the ll-tlit bunk of the beautiful tree fringed Heaver creek, thrivtt miles from Him Inliind town of Camp Verde, and occupies a natural depression In the vertical limestone cliff 3 feet from the stn-am and eighty fift ulMiva It. The rustle prop er Is five stories, each story risvding by several fis't, and Is Hiibsluiitluby built. The masonry bAudiiiliiible lieu It Is considered the ruile iitone Impli! tueiits with which the builders hud ty work. The Kloins ure H'lUiired and faced and laid In cement thut bus hIk -1 tho wear of centuries. The lintels over the disirs ure of hewn tediir. Seen rrom a distance. It Is cry strililng. lu the perisiiidli ulur front of the while und gruy und yellow limestone cliff, about halfway up, Is a huge circular liutural tuvlty, mid therein stupds the iioblu pile of Montezuma' castle.--Ex change. - Our Wisdom Tseth. The wlsdoin leetli me the four laat molar teeth to trow. 'They come one on each Hide of euch Jaw and arrive somewhere between tlie ages of twen ty and tweiity llve years. The nume Is given them Isn auso It Is supiosed that when a person bus developed physically und meiilully to the point where be bus ws ured these last four leetli be has also arrived ut the age of discretion. It diS'S not ueceHurily men 11 tbat one who has cut Ills wisdom tiH'lh Is wise, but that, having lived long enough to grow these, which com plete the full set of teeth, the x-rsuu baa passed Millli lent actual years that, If ha ha done whut lie should to lit himself for life, be should have come by that tlntV at the a'e of discretion or wisdom. As a matter ilf fact, these teeth grow at about the same a'e in MMiple whether they lire wise or liOt - Exchange. 8nsU Bitss In India. India's annual los ut over 30.') lives from wiake bite has fsn'ed the pnsluctlon of uii lintel ite serum. The I'arel laboratory, Itombuv, list's a sup ply of cobras from w hich veietiu Is ex traetetl every ten d;js. Tlie snakes are forcibly fed with egg flip through a tube. Tha venom Is tilled over lime and then dissolved In a salt solution. Increasing doses are Injected In a horse until at the end of two years the ani mal can stand a dose List times the original one and is quite Immune from the cobra poison. The serum from the blood of this particular horse Is uu antidote and is absolutely effective If Injected hi time. Many lives have been suve by Its um. liuwmer, each bite requires 1111 antidote m.:.le from the venom of tlie same sort of snake tbat lnlltcted the bite. Walking Exercise. In a brisk wall; twenty minutes' duration a person brings Into play all the muscles of the 1 I . t!i;' abdominal organs ure shaken Into activity, the lungs are tilled with f.fsli air tiiel aie thus assisted hi their natural function of purifying the b'.ood, the iKtiou of the heart Is quickened and utreiigt'.i eued, so that the bloisl. well nenited iu the lMugs, Hows ulumluntly t the bralii and washes out nil the" poi.son with which work and worry clog It. Every business man with a sedentary occupation ought to walk to mid from his otUce If It Is po isible, as he would derive great lamclll from the pra.'tlce, Curious Beehives. In the village of IloolVI, Silesia, there are a numlier of beehives iu the s!iaH' of life size figures rlesvrly curved la wood and (minted in eo'ois. The fig ures were carved more than a tvutury ago by monks of the Naiitulung moil astery, who were at that time in ss session of a large farm iu the district. The beehives represent diffetetit char acters, ranging from Moses to a mili tary officer, a country girl and a night watchman with a spear. Chance Visitors- "Is there such n thing as a new thought?" "Maybe there Is and maybe there Isn't," replied the cynical num. "Some people entertain a thought so seldom thut whenever one strikes them they get the Idea thut It's new." lliruilny tuini Age-Heruld. Cause For Worry. "You must take exercise," said the physician, "and by all means worry less. Play golf." "Doctor," replied the patient, "you mean well, but a man who plays my kind of golf game can't help worry big." - Too Bad. Jluks Couldn't you borrow a thou sand at the bank 011 your character? Bluks Impossible! I keep hens, aud the banker lives next door to me! St. Louis Republic. , Optimistic. Cheerful t'lulettaker- Ueaiillful day for the funeral, sir; Just enough breeze to stir the plumes. Now Jump in. sir, please. London Tatler. She Did. "Jack proposed to me while turning the music for me at the piauo." "Ah, 1 see! You played right into his hands." Loudon Answ ers. Literal Explanation. "How did the dog come to bite you?" "Because he could run faster tbuu I could." Baltimore American. Fidelity purchased with money, money cun destroy. feneca. No Great Damire. "She says I made a toy of her heart." "Dou't let that girl bluff yon. She has been engaged seventeen times, ner heart is one of these Indestructible toys." Louisville Courier-Journal. After tho Ceremony. "This was givenvio me for a wed ding present by my mint, anil I dou't like it. I wonder if I could get her money back."- Life. The road to success is as easy aa the road to ruin. Keujautlu Franklin. WHY, THAT WAS PRESIDENT ANDREW JACKSON'S FAVORITE OLD HICKORY WAS MIGHTY .ABOUT CHEW AWar Blight By HI TH GP.AHAM This story illustrates the fact that, no matter how bltrb one may be In the liochil scale, there Is no escai from the trails and disapisjiiitments that be- tet humanity. The estates of the Earl of Buliington and Sir Andrew Martindale, representa tives of the old aristocracy of Kmjland, adjoined. The earl's only sou, Oliver Tiwlale.' from the time he was two yeurs old, was 'ruiltted to play with (Jladys Martindale, a girl of seven. Then Oliver went to Eton and returned a handsome manly youth of seventeen, tiladys whs at this time fifteen. There Is something delightful in the love of two iiersotis of oposite sei at this tender age. They drift together uucouseious of the slowly weaving thongs that are binding them to each other. It is a spiritual rather than a passionate love. At hst It waa so between these two. To Oliver, Gladys was soinethine to be reverenced, pro tected, a thing of beauty both bodily and spiritually, not to tie profaned. To Gladys. Oliver was the embodiment of manly strength and U-auty. He was heir to an earldom, aud this cast upon him a glamour, for she was merely a younger daughter of a. baronet. No word of love was siioken between them at this tieriod.- for neither was conscious of love. Oliver went to Cam bridge university, where he was gradu ated with credit, and choosing the army for his profession entered one of the regiment most frequented by noble men. When he came home as a soldier he was a mau and Gladys was a wo man. What had been a sweet eouipanion ablp now burst forth into a passion. The two were inseparable, aud In time their engagement was announced. It was to have lieeu expected that Oliver, Mug heir to an earldom, would have mated with one of equal rank with himself and who would bring him an estate to inatoh his own Instead of uniting with a portionless daughter of a country baronet. But so charming was his tlaucee that his fam ily made no objection to receiving her as the future mistress of Ilufflugton castle. Indeed, she was warmly wel comed. The nuptials and Oliver's coming of age were celebrated at the same time. If ever a couple seemed destined to a happy life this one certainly did. They bad rank, wealth, health, everything that was calculated to make life en joyable. The young lord was respected and his lady was beloved. Nevertheless, to ihi) eastward a dark cloud was rising that was destined to overshadow the world. Suddenly grim war Bounded her tniiujiet on the conti nent. It was heard across the channel, aud there was hurrying to and fro among British soldiers. Then Oliver left his bride to whom he had been married but a few weeks to join his command. The parting to her came as a great shock, in such cases the man Is buoyed up by the excitement of the hour; it is the Ionian who suffers, ills mind is taken up w ith that upon which he is forced to think; her mind Is free to dwell upon the break and upon gloomy forebodings. And poor Glud.vs' forebodings in this case became realities. While that hand ful of British soldiers who formed the left wing of the united forces of Eng land, France and Belgium w ere driven southward upon Taris news continu ally came ucnxs the strait of Hover of many an Englishman who w ould never return to his home. Many an heir to a title and tvtate went down like tha plainest soldier lu the ranks. Among those reported killed was the man on whom Gladys' happiness was depend ent. For Some time the news was kept 'from her, since there was a dread that she would not be able to bear It. But dually, fearing that she would hear of her loss through some unauthorized channel, her friends advised that she should be Informed. Thcu arose the question who should Inform her aud how the announcement should be made. Both her parents shrank from the or deal. It was finally committed to the family physician. The shock brought a singular effect When the bride heard that she was a widow she was stunned, aud at the passiug away of the first effect she was left with the hallucination that her husband was with her. Whether she saw him in the flesh or in'the spirit was not understood by those about her. When she w alked out she appeared to lie eommuiiln!,' with some one walking beside her. While sitting by herself at home either reading or doing fancy work she would occasionally make a remark to one sitting beside her. No one intruded upon her to learn the exact nature of her hallucination. It was something too sacred to be pro faned. One feature tended to render those near and thar to her content With t. It seemed to replace the V0 eJLJ LGRAVELY'S PARTICULAR HIS TOBACCO CELEBRATED . Chewing OFOUP PATENT I'M GPAVELY PLUS TOBACCO MAOE 6TPICTLV FOP ITS CHEWING QUALITY A WOULD NOT KteP FPESH IN THIS SECTION ill NOW THE PATENT POUCH KEEPS IT ,1 , . r , r a u AMDAnnn r Mton nnif w. ' A LITTLE CHEW OF GPAVELY IS ENOUGH ANO LASTS LONGER THAN A BIO CHEW OF ORDINARY PLUG. vfl j.,jj.Hroovl)fJoeiccoAiMimui.n. orif vtgwaj' rlu 1 1 bEFORE BILLY PQSTEf? GETS THROUGH, A LOT OF OTHER PEOPLE WILL BE GETTING PARTICULAR TOO mourning under w hb h she would have suffered but for It i existence. For this reiwai physicians advised that no attempt Is? made to convince her of her hallucination, for In case she realized that her husband was dead a worse condition was feared. As It was, she did ii' t teem to be unhappy. Much Is war. . It Is no respecter of H-rsons. From time Immemorial It has been the profession of the high bom, who have been leaders of the humble. Together they have len sacrificed to the grim momter. Will the day ever roine when man will rise so far above Ms Isjute nature thut he will settle hlf differences icy peaceful methods? 000000000000000000 PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. Bright's Disease. I'let, according to a prominent physician. Is the most lmiortant factor In the "cure or control of Bright's disease. "Of ail dis eases." the doctor says, "Bright' disease Is most influenced by habits of eating and sf life gen erally. This holds true to ev ery form of the disease. If a man has a necessarily fatal form of the disease, If he will live ac cording to the rules he can add a few months or a few years to his life. If he has a chronic but slowly progressive down ward form he can almost live out the expectancy of a man of his years by playing the game fair. If. he has a mUd form of the disease he can live the law' and he will find that his symp toms will entirely dlsuppear. The diet of u person with chronic nephritis should be simple In quality and limited In quantity. He should esjiecially refrain from eating heavy meals. While "nei tier a feast nor a famine' is ad visable, the, former is the more harmful." When Charlie Came Heme .y ri.ff.CR :a I'ur i:.r t''t p.-t't;' '-torate of Oliver Cromwell 1 belt- hi 1 ,s,:-.l in ne of the stalls tor s!io..s, :is we would call themi in the P. '. nl Exchange, London, a masked wo:i:a:i who sold small arti cles, stu b as c!oi . ;, la. es, neckwear aud other goocU. called by the Britons haberdashery. , One. day the Marquis of Lor eu ton, who since the defeat of the Cavaliers had kept himself away from London, passed that way. The estates of bis father, the Duke of Ethelstone, had been forfeited on account of the fam ily's adherence to King Charles L, and the marquis was in sad straits for a living. He stopped at the stall of the "masked woman," as she was univer sally known, aud entered into conver sation with her. pricing such articles as he saw on her counter. Then, with a sigh, he turned away, saying: "I would fain buy of your goods, mistress, but I am without means." "Select what you wish, sir, and pay when Charlie comes home." Now, the term "when Charlie: comes home" meant lu those days "when Charles, eldest son of the beheaded king aud legitimate heir to the throne, is recalled to assume his rights as sov ereign of England." "I see," said the marquis, "that you are a royalist. Mayhap you are, like myself, an Impoverished noble.'' "I am a royalist, but 1 am simply the masked womuu making an honest liviug. These gloves would, I think, fit you. Will you let me try them on your band?" The marquis permitted her to try the gloves i n him, but not with the ex pectation of buying them. He liked to feel her fingers on his own. "There." she said when she had fin ished; "'tis a perfect fit. Take them and pay, as I said, 'when Charlie comes home.' " But the marquis stubbornly refused to accept credit, especially from a com moner, for the woman had said, "I am simply the masked woman," and he went away. But there was something in the fig ure, the voice, the carriage of the masked woman tfcut appealed to him in a way lie could not accouut for. Wherever he went the masked woman In fancy went with him. Waking or sleeping he saw her moving about lu her little booth and hoard I lie sweet sounds of her voice. So it was not long before he again found himself at her counter pretend ing that he came to look over her goods, though In reality he came to get another glimpse of her. "What can I sell you this morning?" she said. "Indeed. Mistress Masked Woman I know not your name I am lounging tpdayt and I like tp come here to aej 11 CariLiMsi J Plu& AIP - PPOOF POUCH you sell your wares. I would that I could give you my custom; but, alas, I have none to give. The Roundheads have taken, my all." "Maybap they have spent It for psalm books." "What they have spent It for I know not, but this I know It Is hard for me. who have always had a sufficiency, to get on with nothing." "May I sell you the gloves today?" "Alas, I have no" more the where withal to pay for them than when I waa here before." The masked woman took up the gloves' the marquis had tried on the day before and, making them Into a packet, handed them to him. "Would you give a poor woman pleasure?" she asked softly. "I would not rob a poor woman," he replied, drawing back. "I ask you to permit me to do you this favor." There was that in her tone which apjs-ated to him. He took the packet ami kissed the hand that gave It The marquis was seen no more at the masked woman's stall after that for some tint:-. Then one day he drove up In bis iiirriau-e aud purchased the whole sriH; of the masked woman. When s!io co;r;r:tt.i!:ited him on com ing to ills own be told her thut a cousin had died ao i U-ft him a legacy. When the nmr.;uis drove away he did not take the sto-U with him, though he left the money fur It. That was his last visit to the masked woman's stall, for soon after "Charlie came home." There was great rejoicing anion"? the Cavaliers that after the rule of the Puritans the rightful king had return ed from France. Then the masked wo man disappeared from the exchange. But the marquis thought of ber by day and dreamed cf her by night. Hla estates were restored to him. but he was not satisfied, because he longed for her and knew not where to find her. One evening be drove to a fete given bs; the king. The young dowager Duchess of Abergild, whose husband had fallen- in the late war, was pres ent and approached the marquis. "Have you still the gloves?" she ask ed archly. Tlie marquis recognized her voice as aoon as she spoke. "I have," he re plied, "but have- never worn them. I hold them too precious to bs used." The duchess, having been cut off from her income during the protecto rate, had the choice of emigrating to France and there being supported by the French king or earning her own living. She had chosen the latter al ternative. Before the marquis came into the iukedom be married the masked wo man. Economical Elopements. Elopements, with the consent of the parents on both sides, are frequent in Bulgaria, the, expense of the wedding ceremony and festivities being thus avoided by the thrifty peasants. ' 3 m. 000000000000000000 0 - O O PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. O 0 o O Rest Before Eating. O o The Importance of resting after O O eating as a necessary condition O , O for perfect digestion ha been o o emphasized, but it is equally ini- O 0 portaut to rest, physically and o 0 mentally, before eating. Dogs o O that had ruu an hour before eat- O o big und others that had begu 0 o resting were fed the same ra- o 0 t ion, mid it was found that those o o dogs that had been rested be- o o fore eating digested the meal o o much better thau those fed while O 0 tired. Usually a dog will refuse o 0 to eat If very tired, and a man o o wbo has a naturni appetite will o o feel little Inclination to eat until o 0 after he has rested, following 0 'r o physical exercise. The practice o o of hurrying from the otUce or 0 o shop to the dining room aud eat- o 0 lug without resting and then bur- 0 o rying back to w ork Is one of the o O means by which the digestive o 0 anil nervous systems are gradu- o 0 ally though Imperceptibly bi'O- o 0 ken down. o 0 o 000000000000000000 Died For His Metes. There is a tablet In the sailors' home at Melbourne to Jnmes Marr. He was a sailor before the mast on the Rip. OnIuly 13, 1873, the Kip was caught in a squall. Marr sat astride of the , guff when a great wave broke over the' boat aud brought down the mainmast. There w as only one chance to save tho Rip. That was to cut away the litter. But Marr clung to the broken apar. anil to cut away meant to send blm overboard to bis death. So, looking at hira doubtfully, the men hesitated.. : their axes In their bands. Marr. help loss, pondered. He saw that hit death would be the boat's salvation, und be shouted: "Out away, mates! Goodby!" Then be let himself fall Into the fold, wild sea. Try the Argus for one year.