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PART II Home and it's interests Diet for the Whole Family HOW" best to provide a table for six lieisotis on $10 a week is a ques tion ably discussed In the Ladles' Homo Journal by Mrs. Rorer. In order to do ihis successfully, she points out, die' occupation's and habits of .in h family tnnst be considered and a house wife, must have forethought and a knowledge Of how tO buy and cook and how to utilize every scrap of food that Is left over. She must also know what is the best food to build up the muscles ami nerves and to enable a person to do tli«' greatest amount of work With tho least expenditure of bodily energy For the man or woman who must bo confined in the office all day such foods as eggs and milk and lean meat, which are concentrated energy, as It worn, must form tho staple diet. For th I door worker a goodly proportion of vegetables Is needed to supply muscles^ III.:,- are cheap and plentiful and may i veil in many appetising ways. To know how to buy just enough and no more is an art, one that the French houHcwirc has reduced to perfection. There Is no waste in her larder. Bones 1,11 on the meat platter arc boiled for stock and the water In which veg etal.les no boiled is added, making a nutritious soup. The housewife should plan her meals beforehand, not watt until the last nao meni before preparing for a meal, add ing (in occasional new dish and Serving the left-overs in the most appetising way Where a. family has one good, well-balanced meal a day they will usually be satisfied with a simple lunch eon or supper. In the majority of families, declares Mrs. Uorer, "potatoes are boiled and mashed 2W days In the year, when there are 100 ways of cooking potatoes. If mashed potatoes are left over they are too often pa I ted into flat cakes and badly fried in lard. Under these con ditions they take up from a quarter to a half pound of grease and arc made Indigestible, If not unpalatable. Pota -111 pudding uses up mashed potatoes ami scraps of meat, and make a cheap, palatable and sightly dinner dish. Hits of bread may be used for escalloped dishes, or ground for moat rolls, or used In bread omelet, or may be made over Into a dozen simple, wholesome puddings for the children's luncheon. "Breakfast cereals may be mixed with ii few chopped nuts, baked In a baking dish, lo take the place of meat at dinner. "Utilise the so-called inferier pieces of moat Inferior, not because they are without nourishment, but because they are low In price, and they are low in prloe because there Is little demand for them. The average housewife knows ln.w to cook only tender meats; for this reason wo pay twice as much for a sirloin steak as It Is worth, and buy bits of flunk and the round at rational prices. One pound of chopped beef at 11' cents a pound, with one egg and half a pint of bread crumbs, nicely seasoned, will make a Hamburg roast for six people. Serve with baked potatoes, stewed cabbage or cabbage salad. Or make the same mixture Into round, flat Cakes, pan or broil them, serve them on cream horse radish sauce. With these serve boiled rice and baked ba nanas. Apple dowdy or Indian pud ding would make an excellent finish to this meal. "The famous pot-a-feu of the French combines a soup, meat and vegetables, and hM additional advantage, of sav ing dish washing, as one pot holds tho entire meal. A shin of beof for 35 cents, 10 cents worth of vegetables, with whole-wheal bread and butter, make an excellent, comfortable dinner, and you will have meat enough left over for a potato pudding for tomor row. Cut the meat from the bones and have the bones sawed in small lengths, because you want to use the marrow. Put the bones In the bottom of the kettle, the meat on top, cover with three quarts of cold water, bring to the boiling point, skim. Simmer for two hours, cut the vegetables into piei os, suspend them in the soup, either In a wlr.e basket or in a ball made for the purpose. Cover the ket tle and cook for one hour longer. At serving time, strain the soup into the tureen, saving enough tor sauce for. the meat and vegetables. Season the soup with salt and pepper. You may add a few .slices of lemon If you like. Slice the meat, arramge it nicely on a platter, place the vegetables at the ends and pour over a well-made brown sauce. Jf this is nicely cooked and neatly served, it is not only palatable but it is also attractive-looking, easily digested and nutritious. Follow this with a salad, a 'bit of cheese and a cracker, or, If you like, some light pudding; queen of all puddings, fruit tapioca, or a slice of French toast covered with jelly sauce. "A leg of mutton, the first cost of which is a dollar an da quarter, gives much the same sort of a meal, with enough meat left over for the day fol lowing. Wash the leg, put it in a kettle with three or four quarts of boiling wa ter; add four tublespoonfula of well The Dainty Art of a Veil THE veil mid the art of its wearing will mark all of the season's various excursions. I^et the wear er's dress be only indifferently stylish, let the gill even be plain, if' she has a gauzy niuflling of the required stamp, and sports it with the required air, she may enter the list of the chosen. In point of style, veils are either old or young—t\\ enti-«J,wo, aa you may say, or sixty. The ola lady veils aro those which cover only the hat brims and fit snugly over the face —such undecorated sorts as display plain or dotted meshes, and seem always skimpy. The belles in veildom aro the long draperies of beau tifully' colored chiffon, with rich hem stitched borders, and the huge square" of lace webbing, which, with untold coquetries In the way of borderings, are worn completely over the hat. The headpiece for the muffling worn completely over the hat must be flatly trimmed and have a down-dropping brim for the veils to show off to ad vantage, whereas the long scarfs, which wrap so gracefully around the throat, may accompany a slde-tllted or mushroom hat with equal art. They also look especially well with the Af rican helmets and the beehive and reach basket hats. Apropos of the "hives," French taste sprinkles a shower of scattered bees over some of the square veils in lace «'i iihlng, kiltlngs of lace or chiffon or narrow silk fringes edging them. None of the reajly coquettish veils is cheap, and those which are especially elaborate are appallingly dear. But a person of tiiste could easily match many of the materials by the yard, and cct borderings in the same way very i.early akin to those employed upon the imported veils. A mixture of white Blia violet, brown and black, gray and blue are modiHh laoo effects to look Pretty veil pins were in the form .- | O ng-stemmed lilies, fastened entire ly in green and white enamel. ' For ordinary picnic or boating pur poses, a plain chiffon veil in red brown washed barley; cover the kettle, bring to boiling point, skim, simmer gently for two hours. Add a tablespoonful of wilt, a naltspoonlul of black popper and a little grated onion if you like. Berv«. a portion of thlH liquor and the barley as soup. Serve with the mutton boiled ilrc, stewed turnips and white sauce. An.orange tHpioca pudding, water Jelly with oninge sauce, or apple dumplm;;s would BlßJte an exceedingly nice des sert. Make the left-over mutton Into shep herd's pie, cecils, bobotee, Spanish mut ton with rice or a curry. Or make It into a pilau—half a can of tomatoes with half v pound of rice or two quarts of spinach will give you a palatable ellsh. Strain the water left over and stand it away for cither tomato or en am of turnip lOUp. The water In which the rice lias been boiled makes • much bitter soups than a thickening of Hour doss, for Instance, add to a quart of this thick water half a can of to matoes, strain, season and serve with croutons. An Irish stow with dumpllngi and OniOtit 11.sis at the average restaurant 40 cents an order, with broad and but ter. 'I'his ran lie served at home for i.'i cents for an entire, family, and, again, one pot rooka il all. Apple tart, raisin pudding and Indian pudding all make good desserts. •\V ere the main dish at dinner con. taitis a little less nitrogen than is re quired, make up the amount In th ; d( ert. Lentils, peas and beans ale richer In nitrogen than the cereals are, and contain un equal amount of starch and mineral matter and a little more fat. For this reason tiny may lie sub stituted once or twice a week for meal, They are more easily digested if they are pressed through a colander after they have been well boiled. Then they may be seasoned and baked In a cas serole or ordinary baking dish, or main into croquettes, or made into a ro! 1, nicely seasoned, baked and served with bacon, in summer serve them with tomato or brown sauce. "During the hot months substitute for meat some light vegetable, fur we clo not need so much meat —tomatiH-i stuffed with a little meat and bread crumbs, cucumbers, squash or eggplant. You may use for the stuffing rise sea soned wltH meat, breadcrumbs or rolled crackers, or in the place of meat us« Chopped nuts. Hake ther~ slowly and serve with a sauce. "A bean stew is palatable and, if well made, sightly. Soak a quart of Mexi can beans over night, then boll them in fresh water for a few moments, then throw this water away. Add two quarts of boiling water and cook slow ly for two hours, or you may put them over night In a fireless cooker. Near the serving time put a tablespoonful of butter or suet, with two chopped onions. In a SHticepan, shake over the tire until the onion Is soft, not brown, drain the beans, saving the water, and turn them Into the saucepan with the onion. Add half a pint of strained to matoes, seasoned nicely with salt and pepper, cover and stew for twenty min utes until each bean is thickly covered with the tomato. Serve these on a l.l.itter m a border of rice or potato, pass with them a tomato or lettuce sal ad, and you have an excellent meal. "French dressing made from bacon fat may be used over the cold beans for another meal. Black and white beans may be substituted for the red. They all make a cheap, luxurious and highly nutritious meal. Add to the water In whle-h these beans were stewed milk and thickening, season it nicely with salt and pepper, and serve It with a large plate of brown bread croutons for the family's luncheon. Left-over beans make croquettes, or they may bQ served cold for luncheon or supper In peeled tomatoes, with either a well made mayonnaise or a cooked dressing. "Rim is cheaper than potatoes, more easily digested, more easily cooked and kept, and the water In which it Is boiled may be utilized for soups, sauces, or for starching your finest lingerie. Left-over rice with cheese and potatoes makes an excellent dish known as rissotto, or Turkish pilau, with bits of chicken and a creamed spinach sauce. "For these dinners the main dish need not cost more than 40 to 50 cents for a family of six. The "kedgree" of the Creoles—a dish of fish, sweet pep pers, rice and tomato —is fit for a king; and one pound of halibut, costing 25 cents, Is quite sufllcent for it Or take that excellent Spanish dish, "polio con arroz," made from the carcass and remains of a cold roasted chicken, with rice and garnish of tiny tomatoes stuffed with peas or spinach—this is just iis dainty as a dish can be, and it costs 25 cents for six. "Corn breads are to be recommended for their cost and nutrition; for in stance, have cereals or cornbread for breakfast with fruit and coffee. In the summer fruits are accessible and cheap. In the winter prunes and dried fruits, with apples and bananas, are to be had In mo.st places at little cost. may bo advised, for this color and mesh are about the only things which resist tan. These are not dear as smart veils go, for $2.50 will buy one In quite an if.\i ellent quality. The violet and blue tissue veils—a blue sometimes showing shaellngs that| look like faded streaks—are the. latest kind, and there are some silvery blue follies which are all the world like pieces of summer sky. Ah, me, why shouldn't woman be lovely under these radiant, becoming and expensive masks! It is asking too much of any member of the sex to be ware of this extravagance—so go to and be costly and lovely. But treat your veil tenderly. A spe cial receptacle will keep the perishable webs in the immuculate condition they should be In to look well. A French veil case seemed for all the world like a bic- tin book of some specially pre cious sort with its delicate satin covers and ribbon tie strings. The veils were to be put between padded leaves, cov ered with thin silk and deliclously scented. A WOMANS WAY Her husband will get 'loaded," He'll go the primrose way; He'll squander all his earnings And leave her to work by day; Tet, when he Is arrested For thin, without a douM, She'll promptly leave her worth In t And go and ball his out. Her husband will deprive her Of comforts In tliu home. He'll club her and he'll snub her And he'll go away to roam; But does she say, "You scoundrel, I'll have you up for this?" Ah, no, she tells the neighbors That her life Is perfect bliss. And thus It Is she labors To keep him In her heart, T.i minimize his errors Which leuves the surest smart; And though she's often foolish In that she thwarts the laws, Should you ask her why she does It Bho'll Just anaitcr you. "Because." —St. Louis Star. LOS ANGELES HERALD: SATURDAY MORXTXO, JT'LY 10, 1000. M. N. F. BRIDGHAM THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ISAAC WATTS, D. D. Out of the Old ToMampnt. Put Into short l hymn for children. 1. Thou slialt haw bo mnrr gncls but me. 2. Before no Idol bow thy knee. 3. Take; not the name of God In vain. 4 Mor dare the Suhbath day profUW. 5. Give ooth thy parents honor due. 6. Take hei'd that thou no murder do. 7. Abstain from word* ami rlcoila unclean. 8. Nor steal* though thou art pour and mean. !>. Nnr makf' h willful lie, nr.r love It. id. What Is thy neighbor's dare not covet. TONGUE TWISTING A London paper recently offered a [series of prizes for the best "tongue ; twisting" sentences. The prize-winning contributions are: The bleak breeze bllg\.ted the bright broom blossoms. Two toads totally tried to trot to Tedbury. Strict, strong Stephen Stringer snared slickly six sickly silky .snakes. Susan sliineth shoes and socks; socks and shoes shines Susan. Sin- ceaseth shining shoes and socks, for shoes and socks shuck Susan. A haddock, a haddock, a black potted haddock; a black spot on the black back of s black spotted haddock. Oliver Oglethorp ogled an owl and an | oyster. Did Oliver Oglethorp ogle an on! and an oyster'. 1 it Oliver Oglethorp ogled an owl and an oyster, where are the owl and the i oyster Oliver Oglethorp ogled?—Chl- Tribune. KEEPING CLOTHES FRESH Every woman should pay weekly at tention to hoi- clothes that are hanging and not in use. Two different kinds of brushes are needed to keep the clothes looking fresh. One' is the usual whisk fe>r removing dust fremi the shoulders «nd either parts of the gar ments. Tho other brush is handy tit all time's. It will remove: mud and will also remove thick, heavy lint tfcat some I lines settles on pleats. if the suit be a dark nnc and has begun to assume a rusty appearance, wipe over lightly with a flannel cloth, wet with Vinegar. There' Is no excuse for spots on any garment. Soap and wate^r are sometimes effective for removing stains. If this treatment should not bring about the eiesired result, the use of gasoline is always satisfactory. A SUMMER DESSERT A delicious dessetf for hot weather 's a dear wine jelly. Soak a half box of feletlne in a half cup of water. Add one-half pound of sugar and two and one-half cups of boiling water. Stir until the feletlne is dissolved Then add the Juice and grated ritid of one lemon and one -orange, a cup of sherry, one-half cup of brandy and one-half sup e.f Marashlno. Add last the beat en whites and crushed shells of two e-irs When all has boiled a few mm Utes strain through very fine cheese cloth Into a mold and set on the lee. Serve with a large bowl of whipped cream or vanilla Ice cream and whole Maraschino cherries. THE GREATEST WEALTH Is there any compensation in money for a starved, stunted, dwarfed mind Can lands and houses, stocks and bonds, pay a man for living a narrow, sordid life? . How much money would match tne wealth of a trained mind, of unfolded possibilities? . , Is the capacity for the appreciation of the meaning of life, of the lessons of civilization, worth no more than one's bread and butter and roof? Can anyone conceive of greater pos sessions than an Intellect well trained and disciplined, than a broad, deep, full-orbed mind responsive to all beauty, all good?— Success Magazine. STARCHING Even the good laundress sometimes has trouble In making her collars and cuffs exactly right. It is, indeed, a fine art to starch well, and it needs much experience. Potato starch Is said to be the finest of all starches, and to make the very best finish on shirt fronts and collars, while for those who like glazed linen a little turpen'.ne added to the starch will make a gloss to vie wKh the mirror. Starching is an art brought from Holland by the wife of good Queen Bess' coachman, and it has lost rather than gained during the century or so that it has been In use among Eng lish-speaking races. — * > ■— PORTIERES Here is a pretty scheme for making portieres. Buy burlap or monk's cloth the natural color in dull tan, cut the portieres the desired length and turn a ten-Inch hem at top and bottom. Run the rod through the upper one. Stencil a conventional pattern on the lower hem. Draw threads for two inches, make another stencil border, draw the lime number of threads and so con tinue to the top. Stencil the hem at the top. This is a very effective pat tern. Aniline dyes can be used for the stencil work. The red poppy with green leaves makes n good stencil design on natural colored burlap. SOME SEWING A trnnip went to the back door of a Topek.i house and knocked. The lady rams to the door. "Please, mum," said the tramp, "could you do a little sewing for me?" "With pleasure," answered the kind hearted lady. "What sewing would you like to have me do for you?" "I have a button here," replied the trump. "If you'll sew a pair of pants unto it I'll be very much obliged."' Wedding Anniversaries First year, cotton; second year, paper; third rear, leather: fifth year, wooden; seventh year, woolen; tenth year, tin: twelfth year, silk or Ine lln?n; fifteenth year, crystal; twentieth rear, china; twenty-fifth year, silver: thirtieth rear, pearl; fortieth year, ruby; fiftieth year, rclden; seventy-fifth year, diamond. ■» « » HELPFUL THOUGHTS So faith Is strong Only when we are strong, shrinks when we shrink, . : It comes when music ! stirs us, and the chords. , Moving on to some grand climax, shake our souls, With Influx new that makes new energies, [t comes In swellings of the heart and tears That rise at noble and at gentle deeds. — George Eliot. Oh, lift your natures up: Embrace your alms; work out your freedom. Knowledge Is no more a fountain aeal'd! Drink deep, until the habit of• the slave, The sin of emptiness, gossip, and spite And slander, die. Better not be at all, Than not be noble. —Tennyson. Cheer your heart, Be not troubled with the time, which drives O'er your content these strong necessities; But let determined things to destiny Hold unhewalled their sway. . .'. , " —Shakespeare. Heaven Is not reached at a single bound; Bill we build the ladder by wnlch we rise, From the lowly earth to the vaulted skies, And we ■ mount to its summit round by r; round. ; —F. G. Holland. ' Parents' Part in Homemaking DR. MADISON C. PETERS WHEN Franklin marie his discovery of the identity of lightning and electricity people asked: "Of what use la it?" The philosopher's re tort was: "What's the use of a child? It may become a man!" Ooethe said: "What the women leave unfinished in our education the children complete in us." Oliver Wendell Holmes tells us that "many of the noblest and most beauti ful traits of a man's character are left undeveloped and unperfected until he knows what It is to have a child look up Into his face and say 'father.'" If this be true of a man, how much more so is It of a woman, that she is unde veloped and unperfected until she knows what it is to have- a little Child look up into her face and say "mother." Children are the poetry of the world, the music of whose rhythm rivals an gellc hymns and lills all listeners with ,i heavenly delight: they are apostles of hop" and love and sanctify the soil of earth to bring forth benedictions to bless and cheer the care-worn. VV'hi't is a house wtihout a baby? It may be quiet, but it is very dull. What a bond of union is the liaby! What an Incentive to tenderness! Nothing has such a sobering Influence as tho baby, ii gives incentive to life. The employer will tell you that the man with a baby at home, as a rule, gives greater satisfaction than the one who is not tied down with such a re sponsibility. • A baby famine would be the greatest calamity, the worst financial disaster that cOuld befall this country. The " hies, are the best national asset we have and are worth more than all the other crops put together, for wtihout them the' produce would be valueless. Tho baby is king in America. The childless woman is apt to be sour, and landle>rds will tell you th:it ! they would rather have the woman With a baby than the childless one. The; former is more content, and therefore makes h better tenant. If you haven't s baby you should adopt one. Two children of a gentleman at whose house Emerson was spending an even ing were playing, when tho father re marked: "Just the interesting age." "And at what age, 1' iisked Mr. Kmer son, "are children not interesting?" He I regarded them with the eye of a phi- ' losonhor, and saw tho possibilities that surround their very being with Infinite Interest. When the children come what what shall you do with them? What duties do you owe them? What is the parent's part In making the home? The respon sibility rests upon both parents. The man who is too dignified to play with his baby or help the little ones In their games not only lacks one of the finest elements of true greatness, but fails In one of the duties to his chil dren. The mother is with the children all day and carries the burden of their entertainment for long hours. Surely, it is only just to her that the little I time the father Is in the home> he should relieve her. Resides, no father can afford to let his children grow up without weaving himself Into the mem ories of their golden youth. ■ si a One of the inalienable rights of your children is happiness at your hands. The richest heritage you can give them is a happy childhood—tender memories that will brighten the coming clays when the children have gone out from the sheltering horne —memories which will be a safeguard in times of tempta tion and a conscious help amid life's stern realities. Blessed is the son who can speak of his father as Charles Kingsiey's eldest son does: " 'Perfect love casteth out fear!' was tho motto on which my father based his theory of bringing up children. From this and the interest he took in their pursuits, their pleas- ABOUT FINE IRONING When you iron waists, one-piece iiresses and articles liable to crush on the clothes rack, make a number of tubes with newspapers, tie with stout strings and slip the blouse or dress on these holders and hang them on a nail or a convenient hook. Once dry, they will not crush so easily, and can be hung in the closet on these holders. Mailing tubes are the best for the pur pose, but an old magazine or two pa pers rolled tightly together answer the purpose. Do not hang ironed towels over each nther, for they will not be smooth if packed when still damp. Hang men's shirts by the lower portion, exposing the bosom, neckband and cuffs to dry. Petticoat! should be folded but once md hung up to dry around the waist band, which retains some dampness. Handkerchiefs and starched collars should be laid upon paper or napkins near the fire to dry or In the sunshine. ■> » » STUFFED PEPPERS WITH CORN Groen peppers stuffed with fresh green coin and baked make a tasty tuncheon dish. Far six medium-sized papperi take enough fresh corn to fill them. Boil the peppers until they are 30ft Mix the corn with salt and pep per to tfiste and a genarous lump of butter. Lay on top of each bread crumbs and a thin slice of bacon. Put the peppers in a baking .dish half full yt water and bake in a hot oven. Servo ivith a thick cream sauce. SATISFACTION rhey're nocking on the duty where the duty shouldn't be; told things that ought to hear a tax they're putting down as free; They're raising hob with everything there is beneath the sun. But, oh, it's good to realize It's hot In Wash- ' ington! [t'« hotter there than blazes when they get a real hot spell, ' It's hotter than the torrid zone. It's hotter, far. —well! When those soft pavements catch the heat reflected from the sun. STou want to bet good money that it's hot !n Washington! rhey're roasting and they're toasting and they're sweltering all day rhose senators of evil bent are simmering away; IVnd, oh, the hotter that it gets, the while they tinker on. Let's hope it will be hotter yet down there In Washington! rhey're throttling" our resources, they are crushing enterprise, rhey're tying up our business and destroy ing our supplies, They're taking taxes oft the rich the poor folk to put on. But there's one deep satisfaction—lt's hot In Washington! D*«un, shine hot! O hrezes cease! O asphalt melt and boll! • ■ -> shado trees, give them "naught of shade to lighten up their toll! kye, while the senate tink'rlng sits and loads Injustice on, • Let all the land unite In prayer for heat In Washington! 3 , i, T■, • Paul West in N.; Y. •■ World. urcs, trials and oven the petty details | of their every day life, there sprang- up i a friendship between father and chil dren that Increased in Intensity and depth with years. To speak for my self, he was the best friend—the only true friend —I ever had. At once he was our intimate friend and our self constituted adviser; unfatherly In that our feeling for him lacked that fear and restraint that makes boys call their father 'the governor.' " No success in professional or business, political or social life can possibly atone for having neglected the care of your own home and the training of your own ! children. ; However well the devoted mother may ido her duty, her faithfulness cannot atone for the father's unfaithfulness, A home la not merely a spot In which to eat and sleep, to rest When tired, to | be nursed when sick, to receive one's friends, to keep one's treasures and a place to go to when you can go no where else. Most married people aim to have a showy house. But home ie not merely four square walls. it la a place for growth, for growing together, "like to a double cherry, seeming parted." It Is a place for children to grow Into phys ical vigor and moral health. • m • Don't surfeit your children with se vere religion unless you want to turn ■ them against it. Let the surroundings of the home be cheerful and attractive. I However small the home, let it be neat; the decorations, however simple, should be pleasing to the eye; no room should lie too line for the children to romp In, while the playroom should be the brightest and the sleeping room the airiest. Few people can Indulge in fine paint ings—tne aristocracy of art— but the masters are now reproduced In litho graphs—the democracy of art—and it is possible for a few cents each to have line reproductions of the world's great est masters. The value of pictures and pretty things in the house in Influencing the life of a child few people appreciate. As people advance in civilization they not only build better houses, but put beautiful things in them. The degraded live in hovels. The first step to Improve the masses is to provide better houses. They need not be elegant and expensive. A few days since I spent a night in the gaudy show place of a millionaire. It was op pressive, and this, I was told, cost so much. The next day 1 spent with an artistic friend who lived with his love ly bride In a log cabin. It was cheerful and attractive, chaste and pleasing to the eye. There was love in the cabin, misery in the palace, for a few days later the newspapers told the story of the millionaire's separation from his young wife, who married him for his money. If, like my artistic friend, you can af ford but two rooms for your home, put into them just as much educating pow er as possible. • • • The law of unselfishness must be the essential element of the homo spirit. Perfect love casts out selfishness. One selfish soul in the home not only like an ugly thorn bush in the midst of a gar den of flowers mars the joy, but it destroys the sweetness of the home. Fill your home with sunshine. Don't keep all your brightness for strangers abroad and sternness and dullness for home consumption. No child can grow up in rich development in an unhappy and gloomy homo. Don't drive your children to seek their amusements away from home. Better a billiard table in your own home than the boys down town in public poolrooms. Many children of the most pious peo ple In every community turn out badly because their parents' narrow notions drive them forth into the wilderness of life An unhappy childhood is the fate of too many children of otherwise good parents, but their antipathy to amusements, which may be Innocent enough in themselves under favorable enviroments. Many an unhappy child hood in severely religious homes has so filled life's fountains with bitterness as to sadden all the after years. Fill the young lives with sweetness and make your home a garden of flowers, where joy shall bloom through childhood hours. Run-Down? Tone the nerves, strengthen the stomach, purify the blood and get a fresh grip on health by taking Beecham's Pills Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c. and 25c HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, RESORTS During Elks' Week at the Famous Levy's Cafe There will be NO TABLES RESERVED Cafe Bristol The coolest and most comfortable cafe In the city. Excellent menu. Fault less service. Popular prices. Good music. Entire Baiement H. W. Hellman Bldg.,4th and Spring The Louvre Cafe Good thins' to eat and drink. Nuff Said I 310 S. Spring St. Blust & Schwartz ■j. Proprietors. CHJCKESTER S PILL 9 V_ir«v TBS PIJLMOND KRANO, ' jT^ J*dfn!v\ l*«'t*l At 7omr Upu/f U» 1/jA. C4VGML ••'"• ■•"««••»n>oid m.aii£vuw TL Iff uiiifiitlo^itiSuNU irUXM^fl <\V> ■ ytankMW«MSMt,B*J«M.Alwftyi Jl«llaiM **W r 3omßVog[KioisisEvnnyttßl M$MMi HAIR balsam ESB'a'ltßy'ia ■ Cl«m«» and besatifiei tlifl hair. DPwmm¥*>*'#».*l Promote! ft lnxuriant (fr«wth. HhmsB6*3. wBS Never Fall* to Bettor* Gray KM?KfcJHS Hair to ita Youthful Color. HlfsV? _. BCu/ti ir*lp diif«n«» Jt hair Ullior. jff V<-.anJtl|'"at f'nirfl'H I '~—*mmmma—*im-WKW\l*aBA — « —__■ M—^M^^ I BROADWAY CORNER 3SS. White Canvas Oxfords For Men and Women If It's Different, You'll Find It Here We are on the gui vive all the time for new, original and exclusive models, and we always get them. Durability is another point we take into consid eration. No shoes get into stock before we have picked them over. They must be up to the standard or else | back to the factory they go. 1 These White Canvas Oxfords have an air about 1 thema nifty, attractive stamp of style that strikes the | fancy of men and women who are particular about the s appearance of their shoes. They come in several dif- | ferent models in all sizes, at prices that range from $3.50 to $5.00. Experienced shoe men to fit you properly. Mail orders filled. Send for self-measurement blank. We can fit you perfectly. A complete assortment of silk shoe laces, silk shoe ' strings, polishes, shoe trees, etc., always kept on hand. Let Your Next Pair of Shoes Come « from "STAUB'S" | STORE CLOSES 12:30 NOON TODAY |0 j As has been our custom for the past N y^—fK^V I seven years, we will close our store y^'lgr^ia I at 12:30 noon on Saturdays during July ySJgP /£< 1 and August. Where It is convenient, AffiX-WJ!®^' /Jem* P we will be glad to have you do your J_^B_^B^^___W' i shopping early, thus giving encourage- /^^^t^f^^W^ ment to the half-holiday movement. yS $ EAST AND RETURN CHEAP SUMMER 1909 Omaha, Council Bluffs, Pacific Junction, St. Joseph, Atchison, Kansas City, Leavenworth, Houston, Mineola . $ 60-00 St. Louis, Memphis. New Orleans 67.50 Chicago • • J2.50 St. Paul, Minneapolis i 73.50, Duluth ' 79-, Washington, Baltimore 107.50 Philadelphia, New York city, Montreal 188.80 Boston "'- ■'l} MORE RATES TO OTHER POINT DATES OF SALE— I9O9 August 9, 10, 11, 12. 13; September 7, 8, 9, 10. 13, 14, 15. RETURN TRIP: To be completed within ninety days from day of sale, but not later than October 31, 1909. SPECIAL OCCASIONS DENVER, COLO. Transmississippi Congress, August 9 to 14 &55.00 LA CARVE, OHIO American Rifle Tournament, August 9 to 13...... $83.05 OMAHA, NEB. Fraternal Order of Eagles, September 7 to 11 $60.00 SEATTLE, WASH. Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition Daily to September 30 $45.50 Standard sleepers, observation club cars, diner and Tourist sleepers at tached to all through trains. Passengers have the option of passing through New Orleans, El Paso or Ogden and at a slightly higher rate through Portland, opportunity being thus afforded to visit the Alaska- Yukon-Paciflc Exposition at Seattle and enjoy the wonderfully pictur- . esque scenery on the "SHASTA ROUTE" by daylight and along the Sacramento Valley. < SOUTHERN PACIFIC 600 South Spring Street, Corner Sixth Arcade Station, Fifth and Central Aye. Steamship Tickets to and from All Parts of the World. , ;—, ——— : INTERESTING ROUTES TO TRAVEL,,, > BANNING LINE—S. S. Gabrillo. Daily service to Santa Catalina Island sland Villa and Canvas City Now Open for Business PORTER'S CATALINA ISLAND BAND Free Camp Grounds with Water BANNING CO., 101 Pacific Electric Hirudins, Loa Angelee. Phones—Mate 4498: E6576. —_, ■ H^EL3-j*Ej^R^ PLAN TO SPEND XOUB VACATION AT Hotel Virginia beach Absolutely Flro Proof. Open all the year. Moderate rated. CARL STANXET. Manager. — ; | Summer Restaurant ItftpGllCll V^d/G From Spring to Broadway between Second and Third streets. Best ma terials and cooking daily from 7 o'clock morning to 1 o'clock night. Muslo from noon to close. Hear the tolling of our novel patented Electric Chimes. HOTEL DECATUR OCEAN PARK, CAL. NSW MANAGEMENT Fronting the flpMt beach on the coast. Elevator, hot and cold water. Modern throughoat. EUROPEAN PLAN B. Siloway, Manager Sunset 2611 Horns 40J1 3