Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Feb. 21, 1904, edition 1 / Page 13
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TVhy was George Washington called first In the hearts of his country- T.en "Because he was not first in the hearts of his countrywomen. He was his wile s second nusoand." v TO SLEEP COR RECTLY AN ART -4- "There is a good deal more ,ln the art of sleeping correctly than on might suppose. A comfortable night's rest depends upon a soft bed for one thing. The bed should be soft enough, to yield to every muscle of the body7 If there is an aching spot, the bed should not be hard enough to hut it. . A feather bed was not without Its advantages. Indeed, in these days, feather beds would do a great deal to ward banishing Insomnia. Ttj going to bed at 12 o'clock for a while." "said the physician. . A week later the woman came to his office with beaming face and bright eyes. . . , " - .' .Y 1 have, tried your remedy' said ahe "and it ; worked. I go to sleep at 12 and sleep like a top until 7. I find that I did not need-' more than seven hours' sleep. , "That," said the physician, "has cured half the insomnia patients In this country. There are people who need nine hours' sleep a night, and others that do not need over seven. It is all a matter of personal ldiosyn- 1 chasy." Prepare yourself slowly and comfort ably for bed. Do not "go to bed until you are sleepy. And then make your are so delicate thai the body cannot . Perfectly easy. Those rules for rest comtortabiy at night , in the oral- D bi nary bed. Each nerve seems strained, I , Tne woman who counts shiep jump and the slightest movement wakens Insr over a wall in the hop4 of getting the sleeper. Once awake it is not easy sletp wlu flnd relief this way. , The man wno says uie aipnabet. the ner vous woman who cannot keep her mind off the house, and the head of the family -, whose affairs disturb him to the point of disthaction all of these will find that sleep is not so far away if only they know how to woo it hither. FASCINATION OF " HIDDEN TREASURE Hidden treasure has an irresistible attraction for . the human race. On the slightest hint from seer or fortune teller some one is sure to. dig where the buried treasure is supposed to be, and disappointment does not discour age another attempt when another "tip" is received. Very few have ever come upon hidden treasure and the adapted to daily use. To help us deter- i mine whether it is beautiful or not j to -go to sleep, again. Feather beds for invalids are good things; also for brain workers, and for all who get very tired every day. The trouble -with the feather bed, the great objection to it, is that it is diffi cult to renovate it. The second objec tion is its heating qualities. 'In a house that is kept too hot in winter the body would be heated beyond endurance by a feather bed. ' AMUSING BROWN BRUIN (Los Angeles Times.) The brown or black bear of Call- let us ask ourselves some definite ques- a of feathers or of down and tions. Is the building appropriate tojwln - it weU shaken un and will its location? Does it fill the proper mm)0.0tai rAni rwm thM fnrnia i tv, mMt mn i amount of space in the campus compo- lne flrst step toward the banishing of . that roams the hills. He is a worse sition? Does it harmonize with nearby insomnia will be taken. thief tha n the northern wolverine, and buildings in style, color, material, cor- J Tlxe second step comes In the finding at the same time better natured than nice line, etc.? Will it contribute to of the correct pillows. half the farm dogs the hunter chances the effect of the university buildings There is no one general rule to be upon, a pair at play will furnish more as a whole, or will it. attract attention ' laid down on the pillow question. Brain amusement than a three ring circus- to conspicuous features of its own?! workers and all full-blooded people and , run like' scared deer If you but Does it by its exterior make plain the should sleep with the head high. j'show yourself through the brush; in purpose for which it was erected, and the use to which it Is put? Do its It is positively injurious to Bleep short, the brown bear is the most with the blood rushing into the brain, ''amobsin cuss" of all, if approached few have found it unexpectedly J outer walls correspond with its inner 'Rush of blood to the head will cause' properly. - Take, for instance, that romantic- un- anatomy? Are its prouortions good, ! headache, and many persons are made But don't be misled Into picking earthing of 2CO.0CO coins in the bed of thsxt s the relative dimensions of its the River Dove in Staffordshire, sevens. ty-two years ago. oome workmen were t r.ZrrzrT .Vthe head flat should try the plan of same animal under variations of ne- in removine a mud-bank ; m 3X1 is a quauiy to ;wmca many oti j"..h a i-,o- rn ao-t, .t.,r rhA ill by no greater thing than sleeping fight with either of our small bears. with the head too low, : unless you are well armed, for Uie Those who . have been sleeping with - black or the brown bear (one and the engaged vhich had formed in the centre of the s are apt to give slight consideration, river, when one of them "was amazed That unnecessary expenditure of effort to find on Taising his spade 'that it or material is not only wasteful but glittered with silver coins. j inartistic is true of every art. In lit- Attracted by the digger's exclam a- mature superfluous adjectives and ver- tion of astonishment and delight, his bal Pyrotechnics which do no advance fellow-workman hurried up. and in a "16 current of the thought are positive moment half-a-dozen men were detriments, and a straightforward, scrambling and fighting for'the treas- simpleslmple speech like that of Pres- nr fvfvrishiv filling thelf TJor.kets- Went Lincoln at Gettysburg is a mas- their hats, and beer cans with silver Piece.- So, in painting, the suppression: coins, which were worth their weight pr-nmai aetan ana uie renaermg oi In gold, for they were of the time of ly the essential appearances helps to the first two Edwards, and had lain in create a great work of art like Rem Lhe river for 500 years. That the bulk hrandfs "Lesson in Anatomy. The of the treasure trove was ultimately sranduer of Beethoven s "Funeral claimed by the Duchy of Lancaster March" would be lost if. it were over matters little, for its finders had al- en with elaborate variations and a xeady appropriated scores of thousands i -.complicated score. And this truth ap f the precious disks. . plies especially to architecture and the Only two years later a few village industrial arts because economy, of mo boys were playing at marbles on Sun- terial counts as well as economy of day afternoon in a field near Beaworth, efi'ort. :. . - . tn Hampshire, when one of them' The questions as to this building, caught sight of a piece of lead pro- which I have put, relate to aesthetics, jecting from, as cart rut. in ,a . rough therefore. wiU be answered dlf road that crossed; the pasture. Tug-. ferently(S by different individuals, but ging at the strip of metal, he disclosed this (building) committee believes that a hole, and through the exposed" open- the discerning will be justified in an Ing he saw a pile of glittering coins, s sweringthemfayorably. v - bright as if fresh from the mint. To ' This hall, however was built pri Bll his pockets and those of his play- anly not . to look at, but to use so mates was the work of a few moments. Jhat aneven more Important question and so little did the youngsters appre- is whether its arrangements are con- ciate the value of their discovery that Lenient P . A .fT.. 'f.. lifting it gradually. At flrst the neck lage) will fight ferociously when cor- will be uncomfortable, but soon it will nered.- You will .come upon them, too, be a habit to sleep with the head iin the most unexpected places; not raised. - . -even the wilful jac'ksnipe can beat-a If you are a light sleeper, and most ; brown bear in variability of moods or people at some time or other have choice of feeding ground. Travelling trouble getting to sleep, you may try ! in the mountains one is apt to come the pillow cure. This calls for- soft, , upon Sir Bruin drinking from, a llt pillows, of two sizes. One Is to rest j tie wayside stream, and the very next under the head and the other is to . day, having descended into the foot make your neck comfortable when you hills, find possibly a pair playing .about go to sleep. "Make your head as easy .some poorly guarded sheep camp. Good natured as is either of these smaller bears, which weigh from 400 to as you can. xnen maKe your nus. comfortable," was the advice given oy a London physician to an insomnia f 500 Tvounds aoiece. it Is best to know patient. '3 , jhow to hunt them before attempting Tf you go to sleep with the neck jit. As with most big game, the best unsurported you will not sleep longHtvay to hunt them for sport is alone, said a physician to a ftew York banker. J armed with a reliable rifle and a good "After your head is comfortable, begin knife; though there is seldom occasion and prop up your neck. "Place a small pillow under It, twist for using the latter If the hunter keeps cool, If one is hunting for hides, or to and turn the corners of your pillow, i rii a section of undesirable bear neign- and keep on until your head is per-jbors, a well trained little dog Is prob- fectly supported. men tau asieep and you will sleep until morning." r A . great many women and men, too, ably the best ally. Fox terriers us ually are best, as they are quick, re sourceful and brave to a degree. A sleep better sitting up in a chair than -little dog brought up In a good bear in a bed. VThe reason," said a physi- country, where he has roamed the hills clan, "is that the neck is . supported all his life, has had the best training better when tney are steeping in mat way. But before she goes to sleep the wo man who wants to be pretty - will com- possible, and is a prize to be taken care of. -As has been said, a black or brown bear seldom keeps one address long, Dn their way home they amused them selves by flinging the coins into the village pond. . Ultimately nearly 7,00 coins were re covered from this buried treasure chest, and they proved to be of the reigns of William" I. ' and William IL. and in a Ronderf ul state of preservation. . A similar discovery was made near Wetherby in Yorkshirfir when, a heavy rart passing over a country road stuck fast in a rut, and on being released dis closed a number qf silver coins which had escaped from the burst lid of a che?t hidden under the roadway. It was assumed that the chest of coins This can be determined definitely only by actual experiment, but careful thought has been given to the most minute details so far as they could be foreseen. Theodore Francis Green at the dedication of Rockefeller Hall, Brown University. . . I pose her features. She will try to think ! but likely most of them Just now are of pleasant things. The woman who (jown among the oaks, where the fal goes to sleep worrying, will wake upien acorns afford them an easy living, during the night. Pleasant thoughts gThere are possibly a good many alon? THE GREAT BEAR AND. THE RISING SUN IN BATTLE ARRAY for (Continued from 9th page.) our goods. The United States had been buried there in the perilous ; needs new and large markets for the days of the" civil war," and that the ; vast surplus productions. We have the gradual sinking of the road and the ' cotton, oil. iron and grain to supply the weight of the passing cart had at last brought it again to the lightof day. In the year of 1846 a most valuable deposit of treasure was revealed in the Preston, in Lancashire. Some labor- f secretary of st ate-dnce Se-ward n rs we dtortMt near the banks of the UlPl braham Uncol" and a petitor in at least two of these pro- ducts grain and oil. Herein comes into play the astute ness of our adroit Mr. Hay the great- River Kibble, when the pickaxe of one of them struck something harder ihar earth and more yielding than rock On removing his pick he found trahsfiex ed at the end" of it a large ingot of sil ver. Plying his -tool with renewed statesman of the calibre of RichelieuH without, the methods of IUchelieu. His proposition to localize'' the scene of conflict in a vast territory in the inter est of commerce and common human ity, and the hint that neither side be nermitted to absorb Chinese vigor, he soon discovered wealth con- ( territory ultimately Is a masterful one fisting of scores of sUver ingots, weigh- and ig the master key to the future ac Ing.in all over 1,000 ounces. ., j tion 0f the United States, England and Similar fortune bef el a-couple of la- t japan. These three nations in combi borers who were digging in a ditch nat4on can easily withstand the on near 'Glastonbury, in Somersetshire, slaught of the rest of the world. They v. hen they uneadthed an ancient chest have the money, the ships, the men and full of coins of the days of the.Stuarts. the bravery. V . They took samples of the coins to a Germany and France are not likely neighboring antiquary of wealth, who. to fight alongside for Russia as long not only paid the men a large sum as Alsace and Lorraine be remembered, for their treasure, but purchased a and that Is the only hope of . a Rus Bcore or more acres of land adjacent to - sian combination. Austria is half slav, the ditch. And here the irony of for- half German and would probably do the tune is well illustrated, for, although sympathy act to ;off set Italian sym lhe antiquary epeht thousands of pathy. Turkey would flghtRxissia. founds in buying and excavating his it Is not my purpose to discuss the 'and, not a single coin was discovered actual events of the warwthese are re 'eyond those which a stroke of the ported fully in the newspapers, are ipade had revealed. '' ' constantly changing and every intelll- This is the kind of trick fortune loves gent reader-will form his own conclu l Play on designing man. Not many slons thereupon. .r years ago when the thatched roof of ; I venture the opinion that "should the an ancient cottage near Ripon was re- Japanese capture Port Arthur the end oved a rich nest .of five-guinea gold of the war w6uld be in sight. Pi&ces was discovered hidden away un- Russia would have that long line of der it. When the news of this treasure communication, the Trans-Siberian trove came to the ears of, a neighbor- Railway, to , protect (6,600 miles), not sr landowner he was so' fired by the only against Japanese, but against lust of gold that he forthwith purchai- Chinese and also the newjy fired zeal td a dozen similar cottages In the dis- for liberty.of the hordes of robbers ahe frict, and had them all pulled down, had ;sohauered on her march east, out not a solitary coin was found in i " Whateyer happens, Japan will not be fxcange for the 3,000 pounds the ex- allowed to be hurt. and her Rising Sun lerimeat cost him. Boston Transcript, will, be remembered - almost ; until the . " M ' ' - wreck of ages by every soul that be- Plannlng a Colleee BuHdlnq " i "eves all' religions are, good.' and the Such a buUding as this to be eatisfac- ' Great Bear will have -been-taught the rfry should he beautiful, that is, pleas- lesson that . a human being , is really S t the eye; and practical, . that is, ; better than a dog. will make a sound sleeper. Here is another rule for -the woman who wants to sleep soundly and wake, up pretty: Don't go to bed until you are sleepy. The rule of going to bed at 10 o'clock, whether you are sleepy or not, makes many an insomnia pa tient out of an otherwise healthy per son. ; the - willow fringes of the larger water courses, but once let the bear get the first' sight of you there, and he will make off into a tangle of elder scrub, willow underbrush and blackberry Vines", In which you and your dogs will last about three minutes. If a bear could be persuaded to play football, he would make swellest line bucker , ever on a gridiron, Judging A xrnman afflicted with insomnia went to a physician for a cure. "I , by the way he goes through a tangle go to bed every night at 10 o'clock,' i of undergrowth, and the way a bear said she, "and I waken at 3. From that I of any species will attend to a dog time until 6 I lie awake. Then I slep that .'dares to follow him alone into an hour very heavily." 'such a retreat is certainly scandalous. OUR SENATORIAL LIGHTNING t SKETCH. By Ryan "Walker. . ; i . ' -.,.-.. - - - .-: : -: . . j ? ' I..:; . i ' " ' 4 V- - ' " " ' . -" . ' I ' ' ' " - Jt-X a- - t ' "'i ' ' s a" ""'"" ,. - " - J . " " " " . .- '" -: - ' r 5 ; . ' - . ' Z - , ' , r .... ' " ' . Senators Allison. Alger and Addlsoiv jCv irt yu cwtm?) 1 1 &Tunt; pVwbs iu- &rr r r 1 A 4 KIND WQ AN J O I ' K ON33.. PiD Y0USB CrlOp -Ar POVJN DAT TREr; J j $055.. UKS. DG 1 WoTAlX TpiV a . 1 wri NOT I z THR Ell 1 lrSS$ APPRECIATED JrVVTH WORE IM 6OR6E5 vJ)At r FOUR. 5 --.- v. ' sr ;t -fau. z ism wM'2b&5& - czk. , . fi - n I i Ha 1 p 1 'ny-CeorgerVw'-dI yoo ever get cot -op cus w - fl cannot tell a lie sir, I cut down a cherry, tree with my : little hatchet and the darned old thins fell pa me."-.
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 21, 1904, edition 1
13
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