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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1915)
10 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1915. HOW WE DIG OUR OWN GRAVES-BY DR. WOODS.HUTCHINSON, A M. )' ' i LIVE WHILE YOU, CAN AND FORGET ABOUT DYING "To Live Vigorously, Usefully ( - to Promote Longevity and I Auinoniy. : -TO THE HEALTHIEST, LIFE IT DOESN'T matter in he least how fufet we dig -our own graves, bo long as we do not fall into them too previously. r Indeed, if wc enjoy the process awl sire of soiye little use to the world meanwhile, digging our own graves may he wholesome .and " profitable exercise. Our equanimity ' need not ho in the slightest degree ' " disturbed hy tlm thought ttiat. sooner or later, we shall lie down to rest in 0 them at list. Of all the utterly trivial and insig nificant considerations where and. uf- 1 ter 60. when we shall find our-last rust ing place is the least worth worrying v over. If wo spend 10 minutes, on n. We are wanting time. i-ife Is some thing, death Just nothing at all. There uro many wors places than the grave. Yea, there is for the night a resting j i place, A root lor when the long, dark nour.s begin. May not the darkness hide It f rorrt"4r face? Ye cannot miss tliat inn, v that peaceful inn which hath 'beds for all who come." Living takes three score years. dy ' lng, 10 Beconds. and this represents the true proportions each should oc cupy' in our thoughts. fiot "Mem-i-nto niori," but "Hemeiriber thou imist lie," ' tohould be our motto, and as for death, forget it." It takes neither brains. " nor courage, nor skill to die. and when " It happens, p are the only ones of - those present who don't know it, and the most utterly unconcerned. But. 1 however confident we may be that the grave in only the soft lap of Mother Karth which receives us painlessly for 1 oUr last dreamless sleep from which we wake again In the flowers .that bloom over us, we. are not anxious t j sink into it any sooner than is neccs- eary. .We may entirely agree with llub aiyat 113 of Omar the Tent Maker I sometimes think that never blows bo red, ' The rose as where some buried Caesar bled, : That every hyacinth the garden wears ' Dropt in its lap from sonic once lovely , . " head, vand yet not hanker to go into the'pure floricultural business a day too soon. We want to do our work, to live our life, first; and if there be any sins, or r mistakes, either of omission or com k mission, which fights against this sin, i vt are anxious to avoid them. What Shorten Xdfs. The question has been brought for ward prominently of late, by a paper on the avoidable causes which shorten human life, before a national gather ing of life insurance experts. From the records of the insurance compa nies, with their millions of histories of life, illness and death, huge masses tT data were collected bearing up or: this or that "hazardous" occupation, , this Or that questionable habit, over fatness or overthinness, underfeeding or overfeeding. Upon this imposing basis, amounting in one category to something like 2.000,000 individual rec ords, were based some fairly definite and 'plausible conclusions as to tho things 'which n:en are doing which shorten their lives. Kither digging - their graves deeper than necessary so that they will fall into them with an uncomfortable thump' or tripping themselves into them before their . time. . The -Inquiry covers so wide rang- of human activity and interest that it furnishes an interesting and suggest v Ive basis for the consideration of th-r - ever-appealing problem. Can a man by .doing this or avoiding that, add a decade, or even half a decade to his span of life?" Broadly considered and regarding that hypothetical creature, the average man, or the' community as a Whole there cannot be the slight- - est hesitation in answering emphat; 'cally, "Yes." For one of the most . striking and unanimously attested facts in the realm of medical science and vital statistics is the rapid and . continuous increase in the length of human life .during the last half cen tury. Just to take the rough average of length of life, as determined by tho crude age at death of those dying a given year, the almost incredible im " provement has been effected from on average longevity of about 30 years in 1875, to one of a little over 51 years In 1915, in these United States, rio that we may lay the consoling unction to our souls that whatever mistakes we may be making in detail, our orig .,. Inal line of action has been sound and wholesome and we are entitled to keep on taking it with a clear and hopeful , conscience until further orders, or , fresh llrumftialion is vouchsafed. We are wasting less of our time in grave- ' digging today than ever before in hU- tory. , i - Gloomy View of an Expert. This our insurance expert seems to . ".Tail to recognize if correctly reported ?, and, although he does not go out of Ms way to be aggressively pessimistic. She Stopped Her Son From Drinking A St. Louis Woman Stopped Her Son From Drinking With a , Simple Home Recipe That She Gave Secretly. She Tells What She Gave. A well known resident of St. Ixmis. ; whose son had used liquor to excess f or years, broke him of the habit by using a simple home recipe which she ' grave secretly. In reply to the ques . tlon as to what she used she made th following statement: "I used a - simple prescription which I mixed at bom and It is as' follows: To 3 oz. of ' y water . add 20 grains of muriate or . ammonia.- a small box of Varlex Com pound and 10 grains of pepsin. I gave a" teaspoonful three times a day in Ms coffee. Any; druggist can mix it - for you. or supply these ingredients at "very Jtttte cost-' . This recipe can : ua given secretly in corree. tea or milk, or in the food, as it has no taste! . color or smell and is perfectly harm , Jessi, . . I believe any mother or wife can do as I have and rid their dear . ones of this awful habit," (Adv.) and Happily Is the Best Way Human Efficiency, Asserts J IS ONLY GOOD PLAY he leaves us undisturbed in th pre vailing melancholy conviction that our nerves and our livers and our kidneys j are going to pieces under the rack and strain of civilization, and that only vigorous action along the lints sus- '. Rested by him can prevent, a collapse ' of our civilization alter the olansic . and terribly overworked examples of G-reece and Jtorne. Incidentally if what i is rather vaguely known as "Western" or ;eito- t eutonic civilization, ismbi as long, makes as .splendid a mark,; leaves as superb monuments anil claims upon human gratitude and has as good a- lime in doing It as either Greece or Rome, it will, in the lan guage of the day, "have no kick com ing.'' I.'vcn if it. too, one day peters out and fails under the inevitable doom. "Jnlo the iright go one nd all," of whicli, howeer. there i.s not tho! slightest sign at prcbdit; o,uite V coutrar.v, in fact. Civilization is l longer national,' but world-wide, ,-iml depends upon no one nation, no otic race, n one conti nent, lor its continuance and health, but has a base as broad as the entire human species. Another significant omission from the general picture' oi our insurance expert's statement i: that hi: makes no attempt whatever to explain the singular and to th man in the street puzzling paradox that while the average span of life has increased at this enormous ra te and th average prevalence of disease decreased in almost the same ratio, , there has been no substantial red uc tion in 60 years' time In the rates ! charged for insui-ing said human life. ! On the contrary, if any change has occurred, it has usually been in the ' direction of an increase, as nation- ' wide organizati'JHwas computed and i "gentlemen's agreements" made more ; binding. The companies are still do- i ing business at the old stand at the same old rates that were calculated, in one table. 40 years and in another 60 years ago, when the average long evity was 33 instead of 5t, as now, and the average death rate 30, as against the present 1 3. State Insurance. One of these days the state will take over tho life insurance business and then we shall get protection for those we leave behind at little moiej than half the present ' rates. The list I of sins against long life which our expert presents Is interesting, because j it so closely corresponds to the pre- i vailing impressions of the man in the street as to the things which lie ought to do or ought not to do or be, if he wishes to reacn a good old age. For instance, over-eating, social dissipa tion of various sorts, too swift a pace, drinking too much and being either too fat or too thin. In the main, most physicians and health experts would agree with him, that the man who avoids these various forms of excess is healthier, happier and more likely i to live out his full, natural span of life than the man who doesn't. But, j for the consolation of those of us who : have attained the dominant decades that crown cur first half century the youngsters are making the sput- ; ter, but we are "the works" it is j only fair to recall that at 50 we ami the products -of all the five decades j preceding, and that many of the things I wre are now doing are as insepara- ! ble a part of us as the color of our ! hair (such as we have left) or the , tone of our. voices. j Moreover, while there are always ' room and time for improvement, in the main, that general conduct of life ' which has brought us to a reasonble degree of efficiency and success in a fair state of preservation at 6o 1-j entitled to considerable resdect. We can neither turn Into mummies nor alabaster saints at 48 hours' no tice, and a reasonable amount of fool ishness is necessary to the wis eon- i duct of life. Do the best you can to i aioia every evil as fast as you seel it, but don't be unduly anxious or ap prehensive about it. You may brace j up at one point, only to break over at another. Itise with an easy rein, don't grip the saddle. Keen your eves ooen and keep going. When you pull up you begin to wabble. One Way to Live. It is far better to live 65 years vig orously, daringly, red-bloodedly, and then go smash all at once the more suddenly the better than to reach 70 or 75 with one foot perpetually in our graves and one finger ever on our ! pulse. The ever-widening knowledge I and power of science are proving be- ! yond dispute that "man is man and j master of his fate." and with reason able good tense and pluck, that fate win always be a tolerable one, even though we have to do some things oc casionally which, from a purely hy gienic point of view we would like to avoid, if we could. What can we men of middle life, or later, actually do to lengthen our lives or render them healthier, happier and more efficient while they last? First of all, by liv ing just as hard, just as usefully and happily as we can. Much more Is lost by not doing things than by doing outtui ana rack and per petual distractions of civilization which ' our philosophers lament so lugubrl- ously, instead of breaking us down, j me vciy imngs mat Keep us alive. City dwellers, above the level of the slums, live longer than country dwell ers. The one path which leads toward the grave with greater rapidity and certainty than any other is a rut, even if tjjat rut consists in what we are pleased to term "good habits." For all habits are bad. under 70, at least wiien you are Hungry. Drink' when you're thirsty; work when you j feel like it: stop when you are tired; in biological terms, "respond to your environment-- These are the ideal rules for a full, useful happy life. I wD jiuiiuiuons to the principle ... v.,.Ucw mature, ana you will quickly enough find these out from experi ence. But the minute you begin to pro tect yourself behind a secreted cal careous shell of so-called habits, you begin to build your coffin. For instance, our insurance expert lays stress upon over-eaUng as a shortener of life. There are at least ten times as many deaths and dis eases due to under eating as to over eating. But the poor cannot afford oiu-une insurance, thence don't ap- pea? on the death lists. Tuberculosis.! for instance, with its one-seventh of w. w.iuieaeam rate, is chiefly dua to under feeding, and cur hv rvot nn lk and cream. Pneumonia and ty phoid, the two next most deadly scour ges, tall most heavily upon the under fed, and are cured by fresh air and abundant food. Afl the acute . infec tions, almost without exception, wreak cr jssp - - V-' II. v i III I Dr. Woods Hutchinson, former Portland physician, whose discussions terms are widely read. their heaviest vengeance upon those who are under nourished. Against these, the death roll from over feed ing can bring forth only gout, rheuma tism, cyrrhosis of the liver and dia betes. At least three out of these four are now knowlf to be due to infections and very little affected either one way or the other by food, except that certain articles of diet aggravate them after the disease has already devel- j oped. This lllustratees a flaw which un derlies all the findings of insurance experts, viz., drawing rather sweeping conclusions from data based upon a rather limited class, and period of life, viz., the kind of men who apply for life insurance in the big old-line com panies, ,who are distinctly tire more prosperous and substantial members of the community; and the conditions of these men after the age of 45. j To such a class, it may be advisable to preach abstinence in the matter of feeding,' partly because, being at least able to afford whatever they want, they can indulge hankerings which they may have been obliged to sup press all their lives heretofore. But more because the keen, vigorous ap petite which was the secret of their success during their years of strug gle and ambitious adventure, hangs on and over into the period of dignified ease when they are able to sit majes tically at a desk and make other peo ple do the hustling and drudgery. The real cure for the over gorged and ple thoric conditions which may result un der these circumstances, is not less food, but more exercise. If you have a good appetite, pr.ze and cherish it above all things, it is your best possible asset if not toi a long life, for a full and happy one, which is much more important- But play up to it, for every pound you eat, play an hour In tha open air. no matter what at, so long as you enjoy It and go through some sort of mo tions. Whether with your legs in walk- ' ing, or tennis or golf, or your arms In rowing and boxing, or of your body in swimming and horseback riding, and gardening, or your arms and your How to Fight Tuberculosis Xn a paper read last year before the Bazar County Medical society and pub lished la part In the Ziouisvllle 'Med ical Prog-Teas," Br. J. W. Carhart of Sam Antonio, Texaa, a physician who has devoted much time to tha study of tuberculosis, said: "Sine lime salts constitute three-fourths of all the min eral substances of the human body, they must be supplied In tha foods r supplemented In mineral preparations, or natural starvation ensues with tu berculosis unchecked. - The widespread and unchecked spread of tuberculosis and other preventable diseases is duo largely to tne aecalcined (lime lacking-) conditions of multitudes through out ins crvxueza woia." Thus from another authoritative medical source comes justification for the Use of lime in the treatment of tuberculosis. Since this is one of the ingredients of Eckman's Alterative, much of the success attending the widespread use of this remedy doubtless is due to the combination of this salt n such a way as to render it, easily assimil able. It causes no stomach disturb ance, and. since it contains neither opiates, narcotics nor' habit forming drugs, it is safe to try. Eckman's Alterative has effected re markable results in numerous cases of pulmonary tuberculosis (consumption) and allied chronic affections of the throat and bronchial passages. In manv instances &uch conditions, apparently, have yielded-completely to it. In ram your druggist is out of it, ask him to order, or send direct to ut. Zckmsm Laboratory, Philadelphia. Adv. ns "V:- "$Jk. ' k - - V lungs and your soul on the bleachers. All the sound, wholesome food you can eat with an appetite, won't hurt you a particle, so long as you burn it up clean by exercise In the open air, an hour to a pound. The exer cise may be of the mildest sort, so long as it keeps you in the open and amuses you. Motoring, trolley tour ing, yachting, eitting out on the porch, are capital coffin-nail extractors. Lazy Habits ratal. Of course, if a man of 50 has be gun to be unable to burn up certain classes of his food, such as sugars, fats, meats, in the order of difficulty, then he will have to take expert advi' e and be guided thereby In the choice of his tnenu. But at least three fourths of such alleged Inabilities are now found to be due to the lazy, stuffy, flabby habits .which begin to grip him about this time of life, or to the after results of some half-cured slum bering infection. Keep away from coughs, colds and snuffles, from flushed faces and heavy eves, from sneezers and hawkers and epitters, if! you would have your days be long in tia . T f ot-K,.. .nAnnn Ml - .cut.. - j ni n .t iu JrKjm room, don't say, "Gesunheit!" but "Chase yourself!" Shoo them into se clusion unt the curse is off them, and do the same with yourself when you're "full of cold'' and watery-eyed. "Man born of woman Is few of days, if full of sineezes." The deadliest enemies of the middle aged and the elderly man, as of th-i child and of the youth, are one and the same thing the acute infections coughs, colds, sore throats, diarrhoeas and dysenteries and the after effects of consumption, typhoid, pneumonia and rheumatism. And the best guards against them at every age are rich and abundant food, especially meat, play in the open air and breezy bed rooms at night. As our expert well says, simple knowledge of preventable diseases would do much to lengthen life. The same thing may be said of the claim that fatness or overweight is , the deadly foe of long life. This again is far more a symptom than a cause of anything, .either good or bad; and coming on, as it is most apt to do about this time of life, means any one of three things, hereditary ten. dency, beginning trouble with the liver, kidneys or heart, resulting in the un due retention of water in the system; or 'fat making or fat-headed habits of life. (Not a little of our so-called "fat" is simply water bloat). Fat People Head Hot "Vorry- . The first cause, hereditary tendency, would account for at least two thirds of all cases. We may as well- frankly recognize that the tendency to put on weight between the ages of 40 and 50 is a normal, comparatively harmless process, analogous to the other piles of golden stuff which we ought to be accumulating at this time. That it runs its own course and provides its own cure, in the equally inevitably shrinking from the "good round belly with fat capon lined," of 50, to the "shrunk shank and lean and slippered pantaloon" of 65 or 70. It can usually be kept within reasonable limitb by ac tive enjoyable outdoor habits of life. Never give in or behave as if you are old and fat and you never will be either to any damaging extent until after 70. If it comes on too suddenly and goes to such unwieldly extremes as to embarras your movements or shorten your wind, go to your doctor and have a thorough examination, to see whether it is water-log instead of fat. If he relieves your mind upon this bead he will probably-also be able to suggest measures for keeping it within endurable bounds, and you may possess ycur soul in patience with the thought that you. will probably, get rid of it again on" the other side of 65, and in of medical matters in popular the meantime it won't do you any par ticular harm so long as you keep a good appetite, walk five miles or more every day, and sleep with your win dows open. Just look over the fat men and the thin over 50 of your acquaint ance, and make up your mind which group gets the most enjoyment out of life. It won't take you long to decide. Many Corpulency Theories Absurd. Much of our expert's denunciation of fatness as a shortener -ot life is robbed of its terrors by his singular definition thereof: "Forty pounds or more over normal weight for heignt and age." As the normal weight at 50 for a man of average height is 170 pounds, this would make the heavy weight class of our expert average 210 pounds, perfect human sausages, a con dition which even the man in the street knows to be either a sign of serious trouble, or an invitation to disaster, without the aid of deductions from statistics based upon 2,000,000 cases. It's twice as easy to hit such a man with an automobile or a street car, or even to mash him in a railroad wreck, or trap him In an elevator door, to say nothing of risks from breaking down carriage springs and smashing through chairs, or Inability to crayl out of a window in case of fire. Broadly con sidered, fatness under 190 pounds will do its owner little or no harm, unless he tries to cure it either by patent medicines or amateur dieting, both of which are about equally dangerous and impair his health and vigor twice as much as they reduce his weight Social dissipation often comes in for severe -arraignment as a shortener of life. So far as that form of social dissipation is concerned which involves the risk of two serious blood diseases, the second number in Goethe's famous triad, "Wein, Weib und Gesang," this is Just. Both of them not only mark edly shorten life by impairing the brain and nervous system producing nearly one third of all our forms of extensive paralysis, and even more frequently the heart and blood vessels, producing aneurism, apoplexy and arterial decay. But there is a way to lay even thhj ghost. If the man of middle age is happy enough to have a clean slate and a clear conscience in this regard, he may congratulate himself upon being safe from nearly half his risks of paralysis and two thirds of his risks of those prostatic and cystic troubles which often render old age a torture. But if he has not, and there be any reasonable doubt, or unreasonable, that any traces of them still linger in his system, he can go to a physician and have one of three different blood testa made, two of which are a mere pin- (Q)3M?i (5M for , x Sore Throat and Cold inchest First rub the chest or throat with Omega Oil ; then soak a piece of flan nel with the OH and put it around the neck or throat, and cover with a piece of dry flannel. This simple treatment usually gives relief. Trial bottle ioc, prick and the other as trifling as a vaccination that doesn't "take." These will usually either relieve his mind entirely, or, if trouble still exists, put him in the way of curing it up completely and leaving no fear of any spectre of his past rising up to haunt him. But if by "social dis sipation" is meant what are. common ly known as social amusements dancing, card parties, club nights, the concert, theatre, opera, garden parties, club nights, the balance of proof inclines the other way. With all their excesses and extravagances, with their late hours and overheated air and full undress, it cannot fairly be claimed upon any evidence yet brought forward that such habits, foolish and wasteful as they may become, actually shorten life. On the contrary, the class which most reck lessly indulges in these pleasures is precisely the one which has the lowest death rate and the highest average longevity. Hankers, noblemen, public officials, clergymen and successful men of affairs and their families are the classes which stand at the head of the longevity tables. Of course they are usually superbly fed, beautifully housed, groomed to the highest pitch and spend half of their daylight hours nt some sort of grown-up play or sport in the open air. It is the patient and Industrious day laborer, the pious and hard work ing' peasant who is oftenest sick, who breaks down earliest and who dies years before his time. Fanners have a gpod longevity, farm laborers a poor onei Broadly considered, most of us would be better off, physically and mentally, if we had much mere dis sipation In this sense and enjoyment in our lives; particularly the great wage and salary earning class. As il is, such little snatches of pleasure as we now get are the tilings that ktep us alive. The multiplication of country clubs for the comfortably off and of people's clubhouses for the workers is one of the greatest steps toward health and happiness of the last two decades. Hang on to your pleasures. Dont r m 1 UTT ' May reacn vags Scientific Farming Cleveland Plans Putting Prisoners prom the Pcllqs Court at Work on a 2000 Acre Parm. Cleveland, Or., Feb. CO. A pln to give the recreant "vag" a hand at scientific farming by putting the '-'000 acres of Warrensville farm, Cleveland, great corrective institution, under sci entific cultivation, is being worked out here. Not tinly the tramp who comes out of th police courts with an enforced vacation tagged on him, but every prisoner would be given an opportunity to tend his little patch of onions, car rotsf peas, corn, or whatever tho case might be. The major portion of the farm will be cut up into lots of 40 acres or so. in order that experimentation can pro gress on a larger scale than is now customary on state experimentation farms. A complete and scientific rec ord of the crop from "seed to shuck" would bo kept by experts. The proposed project is being put into form on the assumption that Western Reserve university and Case School of Applied Science here may some day be merged into a municipal university, requiring a course in sci entific agriculture. BRITISH BUILD ZEPPELINS New York, Feb. 20. Five Zeppelin destroyers airships constructed along new llnes are now under construction near London for protection against threatened air raids along the .British coast, according to Thomas Rutherford MacMechen, president of the Aeronau tical Society of America, who said the destroyers would be faster than Zep pelins, smaller, easier to navigate, and would fire aerial torpedoes. NOTABLE COLLECTION OF WASHINGTON RELICS IS OWNED BY MASONS (Continued from Pae Six.) merely said: "I am not surprised at what George has done, for he was al ways a good boy." Washington came with his suite of French and American officers to Fred ericksburg after the decisive battle. An orderly preceded him. "Madam," announced the orderly, "his excellency will be here within an hour." "His Excellency!" repeated Mrs. Washington. "Tell George I shall be glad to see him," and then, to her maid-servant, "Patsy, I shall need an other apron." The conqueror of .Cornwallls arrived and was affectionately greeted. But during the conversation that followed she made no reference whatever to his military exploits. There was a ball that night in the town in Washington's honor, and she appeared leaning on his arm and danced a minuet with him. In these later years their relations were not pleasant, to tell the truth. Ask This Man to Read Your Life AMAZES ALL WHO WRITE TO KIK. Thou sand: of people in all walks of life have bene fited by this man's advice. He tells you what you are capable of, and how you cau be s u c c essful. He mentions your friends and ene mies, and de scribes the good and bad periods in your life. His Description as to past, present and future events will astonish and help you. All he wants Is your name (written by yourself), your birth date and sex to guide him in his work. Money not necessary. Mention the name of this paper and get a Trial Reading free. If you want to take advantage of this special offer and obtain a review of your life, simply send your full came, address, the date, month, year and place of your birth (all clearly written) and also state whether Mr Mrs, or Miss. If you wish you may enclose 10 cents (stamps of your own country to pay postage and clerical work. Send your letter to ROXROV, Dept. 46-V. No. 21 Groote Markt. The Hague. Holland. Do not enclose coins in your letter. Post age on letters to Xlolland five cents. (We aru informed that Prof, ilox- letters are safely delivered and col-1 lectea in auuiau.; HANG ON TO YOUR FUN AND YOU CANT GROW OLD Work Hard and Contentedly With a Care for the Food. You Eat and "the Air You Breathe' and Your Life l-s the Longer, AVERAGE LONGEVITY JN give one of them up until you are obliged to, particularly those that are enjoyed in the open atr, und you will not only hang onto life, but will never know that you are old until one day you are suddenly dead." Life has al ready beco.me play for the healthiest, longest-lived class in the community, the successful business man; be cause his whole being is absorbed in the greatest game on earth hard, useful, successful work. The life of the day laborer, the wage earner, not only can, but it is beginning to lie made the same. Work that we do well, that lies within our powers, that gives ns a good living and a happy life, is no longer work in the sense of drudgery, but pleasure. And if the signs of Ihe' gospel of work and science fail not. nine-tenths of the work of the world will be done under these circumstances within 25 years. If we all worked hard and happily at the job we were best fitted for, in good air and light, on good food, ' i-n sunny. well ventilated homes, we should not only cut our disease rate in. half and lengthen our lives, but In crease the efficiency and working power of the world at least 50 poi cen t. 4 Then we should no longer care for alcohol, because there would be no She spread reports that he was not treating her well in money matters, and he suffered a great deal of pain on this account. She died of cancer on August 26, 1789, at the age of 83 years. Twice attempts were made to pass a bill erecting a monument over her grave, but both bills failed in congress. In 1830 the women of Fredericksburg i.ndertook to raise a monument, and this comlnt to the knowledge of a Law Should Stop Sale Of Elastic and Spring Trusses on n nl'"lutely iier principle. It Is far Such Misery-Causinjr Makeshifts Are nor than jut a truss. the Ruptured Man's Worst Kneniies instantly and anioniM!. iij- protaott you against eTry strain, so your, rupture cau't poasltily cume on. Depending oa elastic or sprhiff trusses lika shown aboTe la little Ins tban slow suicide. Ktich contraptions tare almost sura to shorten, your life. It's bard to make them hold,- even when drawn so tight that they scarcely give a iuIij ute'a peace. They are simply a curs to wear. And because they nearly alwaya let their victims get worse all the time, they are yearly forcing thousands of peoplo Into risk ing their llvaa by undergoing operation. These unscientific makenhlfta cuiae so much minery and auch a abameful waste of money that the law should put atop to their aale. Don't But Anything for Rupture Without Giving It a Thorough Test There'a only one reason lo the world why you or any on else ever gets aaddled up with good-for-nothing makeshifts It's simply because you trust to a mere try-on or hasty examination instead of first making a thorough teat. A truss or so-called "appliance" may aeem alright when you first try it on and afterward proe utterly worthies. Toe oaly way you can ever make sure of exactly what you are getting la by sixty days trial a thorough day-after-day teat. And there's only one thing of any kind whatever for rupture that you can gat on such a long trial Ooly one tblng good enough to stand auch a long and tboroueh test That's our guaranteed rupture uolder. Only Thing Good Enough To Stand a 60-Day Test We'll make you a guaranteed ruptura holder make ft to your measure and let yon give It a thorough oo-day --test without asking you to risk a cent If It doesn't keep your rupture from eom log out or bothering jrou In any way,' no, matter bow bard you worn., or strain If It doesn't prove every claim we make then you can send It back and it won't coat you a single penny- , ; See What It Does This guaranteed ruptura boldw tha faatous C'luibe Automatic Massaging Truai Is made f a IV... UNITED STATES INCREASES need to drug ourselves against dis comforts, or drown tho memory of past miseries by drink, and t lie terri ble indictment set forth by our ex perts against alcoholism would n' longer need to be brought. The amazing and most gratifying reaction against drinking, which Is netting in so powerfully all oxer lite civilised ., world, is based largely upon . the fact -that for the first time in blutory the masses have leally got plenty to eat and warm houses to live in. -The" bet- ter the table tho less the wine bills and beer money. The more sugars and fruits, the less alcohol craved. -. A healthy, happy nation tiaa no need of the illusions of narcotics, the day dreams of the rosy Bubbling Magic, In order to imagine itself prosperous and great. Just as long uh men are., sick and unhappy und short lived and rankling under the sense of injustice." they will drink. So don't blame the alcohol for everything that happens to drinkers. Leaving out tho clearly defective and feebls-witted and th Insane, it la those classes who work the hardest V that die the earliest, not those who work the least. Tho fact that then unfortunate, overworked and underfed ones drink heavily is a coincidence, not a cause. wealthy New Yorker, named Silas K. Burrows, he took It 6ff their hands. , The cornerstone was laid,- I'rcaiderit, Jackson delivering an address. But the monument was never erected. Bur rows, the stone' mason and the con- -tractor died, and the work languished.' Twenty years aco, however, the women of America took the matter up and raised a monument, which was dedi cated i on October 20, 1893. by Presi dent Cleveland. rxmmv pxxeb bxstbxct so. i, jjk txx jotj- KALTi SSOOO TSASX AX CTKCTLATZOS' GOV- TXST A Haines Bros. Piano V A PIANO OF MERIT MOSSL TWI1TX Height, 4 feet 6 Inches; Depth. 2 feet 2 Hi Inches; Width, 5 feet. Mads In Mahogany, Circasian Walnut and Quar tered oak. Polished or Art Finish. 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The minute it tal.es to write for this book may - make a big dffferear la the rest of your life. Don't fall to get It Just use the coo pon or simply aay la a letter or posts). -'Send ma your book.'' THIS BRIXGS IT- Box HO CLUTHE COMPAST -128 East Sd St. - HEW TOSK CITY Send me your free Book and Trial Offer. Nam Addresa ...