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THE CAIRO BULLETIN, fBIDAY MORNING, APRIL 16, 1909, 'ttAt? ?.. ? Iff f 999 5 I ' ..-..r-.,' ' - w NEWSTROPifl OUR NEIGHBORS 1 i'i ft ' li H ' H i i H MOUND CITY. April 15.. Mrs. J. ". ,l(.lii:ni limited her b ti Claude Johiiwou and family at Mij:iii U Wednesday. rmvnmn Uiok. nr- piiinti.itr I ho in terior of SnmlcKon'ts l'linnum;)'. .lames Martin of Mounds, tran.sact r, business here Wednesday. ' Mrs. A .P. Clark and little dniuh ler, Luciuda were ' among the Ca'ro shoppers Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. James l.olan and 'daughter Mark-, wrre Cairo visiters "Wednesday. A. II. Sexton of nun, passd through the city Wednesday en route Jo Cairo. Mr. and Mrs. James HoKendobler were in the city from Villa K'dse .Wednesday tdtoppIr.R. Miss Maze! Curreti and Mrs. Joh i CuIp were Cairo shoppers Wednes day. Oeo. Klclihoru v:sited li's farm at Grand Chain Wednsday. . Mr. Peter, Cold water was in Cairo "Wednesday. Rev. I. A. Hnniherd of Cobdt n was Jn tho city Wednesday em route from Vienna to his licin . Utile Miss Ruth Fitzgerald of (irand Chal.i is the fUli t of her grandparents Mr. and Mrj. J h 1 Saint on l'earl sdreoi. Ir. an.l Mrs. .I.,it. Maihis wrro Among the Cairo visitors Wednes day. J.'ff Brown of New Hope S;em Wednesday here nn husinesfi. Miss Nell Mall ef ("aim, was in the city on business Wdnesday. Mrs. Clara Kstes left Tuesday t ) visit Mr. and Mrs. Harry Remllcna-i at Anna a f nv davs. Miss Fannie ('iiiuminns was a Cairo visitor Wed-.K-siiay. T. '.r. Conant rcpn nrntlng t':e Villa Hideo Creamery was in the citv Wel ti' sday on business. Mrs. Al Aliff nr 1 P. !!- s Albe t and Charles re! r rue-1 ho i'e W. dii" - day from a two weeks' visit wit'i rolrt tlves at WicklitTe. Misses Heriha a i.l Anna Schuh r Wi re Cairo shoppers Wednesday. S. .1. Guthrie, Jr., f Marlt sa wa ? , In tho city Wednesday delivering maps tro whirl-, he had previously; taken orders. Mrs. Lee Wllierd and Harlow, Ky., Ver :l:e dnught-.T u 'i-ts (if friends here Wedr da. Judge J. P. Mristnw. ef ('real Sl'i-incs was In the city Wednesday (imitating nmoug his ma iy frh u.!s. Mrs. C. A. Griffith was a Ca'ro shopper Wednesday. Mr. Joe Anvifd r.pent Wedn-s try hhoplng In tho city.. Gus Miehar'is of Ashley. III. v,;s In the city VtVi. k U y -1 -r 's 'nti i.e. tiie Leopold, Solomon ami K'se:: drath Clothing company ef Chicane. Mr. I.nnils',' an I sun IC lwnr 1. of Kast Prairie, JIu, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Graver Lindsay o.i Fx;? street. Mr. Watt Wright f Valley Refuse was the guest of nor . ilatigh o' Mis. Chas. Estes on Ilieh street Wrd is day. Mrs. Frank 1'neer f Ol :te.l, was shopping In the city Wodmslay. Sheriff .1. 1. Mai his ff Vienna was calling on friends in this city a fi w hours Wednesday. Miss Jessh' Vradstlne lier home on 'Vain r-trcol avenue. Is (iii!e i'l at and K.i i Its n I A. R. Mett z I: having hi:; stort Ihorouhly repaired. Mrs. Eliza Wor.'iinut'.n of o'ui f ted' spent Wednesday here a'.op 1'lng. Mr. Will Martvvlck of Carmi is tie guest of ids sister. Miss Clara Hart rtusseh '"" ' K v , ?? r'. : - -r f fit r 1 1 &if dm r " 7 & IT; 'ft v-&t 1 "Li f U 2. . . .1 Vr -, .... --tf WthrT ' ' Snoad with "A Roys! olave -"l ':--j Opera House Saturday after noon a'-d night. 9. 9 9 99 99 9 9.9 9 9 9 .99 99 f ' ' : i . 5 . . 4 4 wick Ui this city. .Y.is:; (Via Vi tor who has heea si rli iisly ;l .the pf.ist two weeks 14 I r:pie ii;.; I.i.t will nut he on duty as, n-iii".i inxtructir., until Monday, j f). 1. Lsir ieit left Tuesday evening fur Chicago where lie will transact lillsi'M SH. Mrs. I U. Mills is on the sick list this Week. ! T. I. (' It. R. layed off al out 00 nii'ii Wednesday at Mounds. , !!. P. M rcf.cy of Varalles, Ky.. was in t'.ie cily Wednesday repre i;;:tiii,; l!ie Western Cartridge coin- i f !:ast Alton. 111. II G. Carier ':! I J. I. Han is, Sr., wlio originally came liv.ni Versailles had a very peasant conversation with him about; 'old fri. inks. At the piLiuiry election in this city Tui sd.iy JinlgVt; l vthr, Duncan and j I ( v. i wore nomiKaied for circu t .judge; J. AL lUshinger, R. G. Castor mi. I Silirsy .Inhiison for constable ; I). J. Crahi, C. M. Thomiison and Jack Shi ehnti for justice of the pea'e. VIENNA, ILL. Aoril 14. Mr. Sam Lang and little son of Grand Vliaiii are spending the ween wiih the family of J. Sjdeldoch. ir. ,1a;. ;is WoeUle and family cf Cairo wise i.;ii(sts(if Vienna relativi- from Sunday evening till Monday .M n: iiiit. Mr. Frank Chapman of Cincinnati wu.; a k ! ; st of his mother ard sister I on ,;ond.y. S' i -; Anna Pickles had as In r 'mii:. a Sunday In r sister from Anns. .'!:ss R'-ssie Parish spent Monday wiih 1iii":ls in Vienna returnirg lo her in) in ni'd iarrisburg that, eve.i- in..;. .Mi-;. . E. Galeiicr returned Wed iH'iilay iii-nihis 1 111 an exlindiii isit . I!'; 1m r lather Mr. Joe llrov. n and s'sler Mrs. l.'evd Whitloe in n'sis iis. v . K. li 'al visited Jielliiiap on bus i;u ; on Tuesday. .'.i. Wayne Whittenberg who ha; I i ni eviii sick with nmsiliiis is able tO 1m. (.lit. Miss r- - ii Rr.)vn left Monday rvi for ';;lpraiso, Inil., to jil- 1 ! s:.!i:r, 11 nn of 1 1 1 Normal. .!ts. Ah:; Weldou of Cairo is a '-;' s; 1 f Mis. i'A Morton. Mr. ,'iad Mrs. Frank Kujkeiidall ci : i:;'!1:! d ihe l';.',ypi ia'n Club at their Is a.;r ;'i I s"lerhan home on Frldiiy eiiii;:i,. Pri"i'S were won be Me darn's Noel Whitehead and ). W. ( ha. .u.i y consolation by Jim Carter, ,!,'. Ali f t,:e names lumdieou was :-;i reil. Miss Gene Real was a guest 1 I 1 lie ( i"ii, Tiie lac-. ihers of tin; Rlack Cat r.-'ub Wv-i e UK ,st. charmingly cntsrlain i d en 'Lac; day evening hy Mi.s Ruby Ride- hour at, her home on Norm Sixth slusl. .The evening was speit! in and social ci.nversat Ion, ,'tl.i r which dainty refreshments we!v i;eivid. iiss Fay Vanderplyim will is' tii" (li b';', next hostess. '; l ao u(,t been able to get the c ; , m . 1 -,e r, larns from the eh-ctina of .-.day but indieatlovs are tli.i' !i;i p'l-sii,! circuit judges were nomi nate. 1, nanely: Judne XX. N. liiithr. of ('aire; W. W. Duncan, of Mario'i and A. W. Lewis, of I hi'Th-burg. a'l r iiul.lii ,:i;s. Tiie democrats had no eaUdill.lle. 'tic Aid S ciety (;f the Christ i.i .) chiK'ih lu.t this ( Wednesday all"r 1101 - wil.i Mrs. Matti" Cant well. Th M. i:. AI1 wiil meet Thursday nft.'r ;e ; a ia the parleis of the diurch. Ail ;r,."..i! el's are leeuested to b" present in ; N.dsi in so, lie extra work en l and. 11 PtOPLE 1 BALL GA1 WHEN NEW YORK WAS DEFEAT ED tlY BliOOKLYN IN NA ; TIONAL LEAGUE. FOR THIRTEEN INNINGS Two Teams Battled For Supremacy Btcrnalian Ordered Off Filed at Chicago Results at Other Places. New York, April la. Thirty thous and persons, a record breaking gath ering, attended the opening chain pioiiship came today between New York and Brooklyn, watching the home team go down to defeat by a scon- of u to 0, alter R3 hillings of marvelous ball. Ames did not allow a 1 1 i 1 in tiie first nine innings, only twertyseven men facing him in this lime. In the . extra periods, tlr; Brooklyn batters; got to him strongly, making ft nr hits in the last round. Score: K II E Brooklyn 7 I Ni w Yc.rk ' ti ;i 2 Rnllerhs Wilhelm and Bergen; Ames and Schlei. Thirteen innings. At Boston Resin; l'li'iladelphi.i; post pencil: wet grounds. At Chicano. Chicago, April .". Vlie visitor, wire easy for the locals tnilayll Bivs ia'. an was ordi red oil' the held in th si vsiilh i!ining for ilispuli;; a decis ion. Score: Cliieago St.. Iei;i Mallei ii R U i: lo t ! 1 I ." Pfcister, Brown and .Mo- ren Becbe. Moore,; Rrcsiiahan and Phelps. , At Cincirnati. Cincinuai I, April l.V - The b.icals hi! Willis hard in the fill Ii, making a grand hub h, when a pass, two trip Ics, a double and a single iiettej four runs. Score: R H II ("iiH iniiati 7 9 5 Pittsburg , 2 2 2 Raterles- Kwirg and McLean; Wil lis and Gibson. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Waiihinyton. Score: R II E Wa. hii) ;ieu 1 1) New Vol !i I Ti t B.iiOvh - Glooms, Siuiih, Liirns, Street. ;iud Blankenshii: Quiui!. I-Ileiuow and Blacir. At D-troit. Score: Deie't Chieago .........' R H E :i , :; 1 ' :: 1 eis iiud Slaiage; Railirii:. Si While and Sullivan. At St. Lcuia. Score : R II E . :i 10 0 . i v, 2 Creiger: St. l,i-ni. ( h velaml Bail, ri Polly and Yiiu:::', aed N. t'laiko. At Pl'il.u'clphia. Pl.il.'d' phia i: t'.teii ; pest polled , W"t tind;.;. AMr.RICA'l ASSOCIATION. Mi!v.ai-l(e :I, St. i'aul (10 i'l aines). t "ii's i'e :i, Celuiubus 2. liniia; r.'M lis 1. Toledo 2. Kansas City 2, Minneapolis tl. (12 innlrgsl. V.'RESTL ERS READY. Collins and l met .Montour aie t,-aiuing lor llisir match at the opera lice'o next Tmsil-iy night, when one ef the best tournaments of the sen se;' will be pulled off. Montour is a leackl'oot Indian, ami bis tilclity as a wrestler has be("i .lemons rated In Cairo, w 1: .-'ti , sex oral weeks ago be gay.1 tin Caii;o favorite th ehardost go of thi- season here. )B w;is inarched to tno"t' Collins again the frcond of this tneiith, but failed to appear, so the date was postpoiieil and aga n tin- in li.m was tuiable to gc lu re I, ut tills time Montour lias deposited a sunt of money with local parties which he will forfeit if he lails to come. By this method bis presence is assured. A gi c 1 preliminary program is I f in" arranged, and will consist of scvtiiil good glove contests. Rob S v. .;rd. the colored man who met F.Mik I izett at the ias: athb tic show r.L the opia house is anxious ti meet hpi-i2ain and chances are the two v will be matched again. COLLEGE BASEBALL. ' At Ithaca, N. Y. Cornell Universi ty 1. NS'-:ra e. At N; .shvil.- I'liiversity of Miehi ,".-1 Q. nderbi!t rnivcisitv 0. ' HOLOEHPY WINS MATCH. lr the Gelderby liacl ney catch a--';;''!!! t YI-;:ti;i3 match Ix bire ti e It. A. Club las' High! Hel lerby gai-o .e fiisi fall i:i 17 minutes, but bis psiniiii sus'sinrd a sprained limb, .! cciild act (1 n back for another fa"' Win. Jackson took Hackncv's pbi" a-el link-bed the,.last fall, H'l derby niniing the match, but ghirtg Hacktif.vthe privilpgo cf dmandia aantVr n-eti g At t'.ie rirgoide IlolJitrby was' challenged hy Clia.-, Wtlda whose. defy liejjiecoj.ted, ar.l this nialch will bo pulled off next Thursday night. ' i'rcliinirary to lint Holderby Hack rcy mutch two liattlcs loyal and two snarling matches werir given. The latter two events ended in draws, and the work -of the contestants -was fat,! and furious, all showing up to good advautage, with , the honors truly even. The battlo royal events were all that could he expected, the men piimmolit-g each other around In a fashion botii exciting and laughable FOOPS THAT GO TOGETHER. ' Many -Meat and Vegetables Never Should Be Separated. rvrtnin meats are as closely allied to certain vegetables as is the long meter doxology to Old Hundred. To separate them seems aluiost desecra tion. 1 Thus Etewed chicken without mashed potatoes, and pork without apple sauce lose half their zest. Fried onions fulrly cry aloud for a juicy beefsteak, and roast beef with out potatoes browned under tho meat never tastes quite tho same. Potatoes are an accommodating sort of vegetable. They are good with all meats, though their digestibility when served more than once a day Is ques tionable. With roast inetits, sweet potatoes aro appropriate as are squash, tomatoes, uspuragus and stewed onions. Baked macaroni 1 a titling accom paniment to a roast, so are Brussels sprouts and scalloped cr creamed eait lillower. - - Turnips, carrots, parsnips, and cab bage are generally eaten with boibv! meats, while peas, beets, beans, corn and tomatoes are good with ( either boiled or roasted meats. Rico should he served with stewed chicken. Roast duck demands both apple sauce and stewed onions. Tur key without cranberries wiiuid be as lost as venison without currant jelly. Celery should never be omitted when serving poultry, and is an invari hie accompaniment, of soup. It is spe cially good for the nerves and is fit tingly served with all meats. Squabs and all game have lettuco with French dressing served with theni, and lettuce must be eaten with Virginia hum. It is no longer correct to serve more, than two vegetables with the meat course, though with poultry cranber ries are counted as an extra. TWO DAINTY LUNCHEON DISHES. Hot Biscuit Chicken and Peach Pud- ding Furnish a Meal. Hot Rfsouit Chicken Chop the breast of a chicken quite fine, with tiix olives, a stalk of celery and a strip of green pepper. Add mayonnaise to make a smooth paste ami season well. Make tiny raised biscuits, break them apart, till with the prepared chicken. Serve hot on a lettuce leaf. Peach PinWinT Skim and halve as many peaches as you wish, place half in each derseit dish and pour over a lemon custard covering the peach en tirely. Whip the whites of eggs (as many as is desired) until very stiff, sweeten, flavor and cover over all. This will bo found delicious if eaten very cold and served with plain cake. An easy inched ( f skinning peaches is to pour over tlieni boiling water, let stand for two minutes, when they peel easily and evenly, leaving tho peaches nice and smooth, without soft ening thein. . REMAINS ALWAYS SEALED BOOK, Mystery of Mentality Seems Designed -to Be Hidden from Mankind. We F.ny of one who has destroyed hio life: "He must have been mentally unbalanced." Was he? What Is the proof that conies from nn action mere Iy contrary to the ordinary rule of life? And what is balance? In every walk of life we meet with the unbal anced, or Hie mea'ally dying. The fa natic is the man with large mental force, but vith only one outlet. lie looks on the wor'd through a single window. His salvation is to ojn many windows to his soul. The busi ness man struggles with singleness ml purpose. The. student lives among the fancies of bi.s brain. But extreme ap jdicatimi brings he Fame results as extreme Inattention. The rush of ur ban life and the desolation of the farm ) reduce Identical results. Iu a thousand peisers the gradations from the extreme of brute physical domino tion to the extreme of nervous force are found, and all are susceptihle to the unknown law which, without warning, extinguishes the inner light and leaves the a!"!ict (i groping in the darkness. Was poverty, ill health or dishonor confronting the haplesn one? Did he have the thing? that men desire, and was he about to lose tinm? Did any one of a thousand things impend which try men's courage and test th"ir powers of resistance and philosophy? And if we cannot find one of these taiitfilde, material things, w shake our heads wig'ly and leave the ques tion unanswered. Why should it be unanswered? There are things we know and things we may not learn And anmng the latter is the mystery of mentality. "35 Ru3. To make a ru?. just as nice and twice as durable as any hrjugl-.t at a store take wool rrraps. cut fine as for rug caipot or p"r:iercs, then tak" a piece of w ire tnice as long as . you want your rug vide, bend it in the middle like a hai. j in, wini rcur rr.r? on it, sew through the middle of the pin nith sewing t:!,vhine to a strong canvas fouudfition, pull out pin. and rpat till filled, then clip all even; bind, or. better still, line witn any dark cut material. VISITS WITH ' Sit Level. lTp In Northern Minnesota ia a place where the big fish grow. Beside the lapping lake where the curlews curl and the sudsy waves whlmple along the shelv ing shore, stands a summer hotel, to the support of which I have at divers times con tributed. At this hotel, chief commission aire of bait and fishing holes, is Louie, Louie U a Pole or a "Scaii d I U u o v I a n" of eonio sort, coun try unintelligible antecedents un knoon. lie just dropped in while passing and lodged there like a bit of Heating debris against a fallen water-elm. In summer he works tho chores, and the boarders, and iu winter he gets his bo.ard for swilling the? pigs and cutting ice. But unlettered though Louie is, he preached 1110 a great sermon not v"" 1 " -' long ago a. ser; inon that I am going to touch briefly upon for the great, congregation 1 as same shall read this. Beside the hotel there winds two streaks-of light Iron rail along which valiant tr.-iins take their heroic way twice a day. On the siding there stands a railroad velocipede built for one, with a tonneau on behind. It may be that I should call this rear seat the caboose of the velocipede, but In -the day of automobiles 1 fear lessly refer to it as a tonneau. When tho evening shades were fall ing, Louie invited my friend and 1 to take a ride with him to the village, distant two miles. ' . "But. we can't all go on that thins," remonstrated my friend. "So!" said Louie, placing a board across the tonneau. "Don't you see?" said I. "We play teeter-totter while Loulo rides the goat ahead." My friend looked doubtful. "Now, boys," said Louie iu a patois I shall not try to imitate, "SIT LIV1L!" The admonition, was forcibly brought to our minds two mlnut' a later when in rounding a curve we landed In the ditch. . "Ach!" cried Louie which might In tlmnto that ho was a Oorman, wWcii he was not. "You didn't SIT L1V1L1" We admitted tho corn and start d all over again. As we swayed pei il ously from side to side, Louie's warn lng voice Moated back over his shoul der to SIT LIV1L! On arid on wo flew with the hired man's cooing censures In our ears. Clinging for dear life and balanced rigidly on the outer end of the board, we tried with all the poise of the tight-rope walker, to obey. Easter grew tho pare. Not to SIT LIVIL meant to be dashed against the ties and seriously Injured! "SIT LIVIL!" cried Louie. And we had to or die! My friend was hanging to the hoard as thou ;h he were a part of it! I.i -spite the situation, I laughed at him and lie swore but he kept on sluing livil." "We'll walk back," said my friend, when once more we felt the earth be neath our feet. "It's all right," responded Louie, "it ye sit llvll." It was starlight when we set cut for the hotel. Louie insisted on carryh? us on his sit llvll machine, but we pre ferred to walk. Off into the darkness ahead of us he sped. We naiblel riong. slowly, but safely, with the moonlit fdretehes above us and the crickets chirping their piping lays fnuu the grassy banks. All was still, stive the voices of Nature and NLbt,- and upon the grass shimmered the 1"W of October. "Look out!" cried my friend. "T re's n train coming!" Down the incline at breakneck : -d A dark ( bjeut loomed, devoid of Iu .id light. "It must he Louie," I pttesed. We cried out, and the flying object slowed down but did not stop. "Where are you going?" we asked, as, he drew nearer. "T' find me whisky?" rame the an swer. "Your v.! at?" "I lost me whiskey bottle out of ne pocket coiuin' up h' grade." t: nllirT ly. as the voice grew sn:a!U r in ihe onward rut. "Ah." sail my frien 1. tcit-ialy, "many a si! livil fellow lik lyuiie falls to sit livil when lie has whiskey u board!" Sidelights. Hours are years M the unhappy. Pain makes an et. rrlty ot one nitht. Even a spider's w b throws a shadow. The purer a man Is, the smaller n his need for a conscience. Prospeilty Is tick!". D''Htid np'P yourself, riot upon your pros; ritv. The man who d.v not make his own ted well must li on the Inns -HYi'.ON WILLIAM? Has Biggest Crater Known. Tho volcano Aso-pan, in pouthptn Japan, has the bluest crstfr known. It is 14 miles acrosn one way, and be tween 10 aoA 11 the other. Mm Tl ' Tic must pass is so kill ol dreaa that the thought nils her with apprehension: There is no necessity for the reproduction of life to be either very painful or dangerous. The use of Mother's Friend prepares the system for tne coming event, ana it is remedy is applied externally, nti Vino rnrriprf thmtenrirfo rF women through the crisis Wi with but lit tie suffering. Book containing Information of value to all cspccuiit mottiuri maik'tt frut. ORADFIELO REGULATOR CO. Atlanlm. Cm. For the Summer's Cooking No kitchen appliancepjves such actual satisfaction and real home comfort as the new Perfection Wick BlueTlamc Oil Cook Stove. Kitchen woik, this coming summer, will be better and quick er done, vith greater personal comfort for the worker, if, instead of the stifling heat of a coal fire, you cook by, the' toncentruted flame of the fcJVick B!ue Flame' Oil Cook-Stove Delivers heat where you want it never wnere you aon 1 warn it thus it does not overheat the kitchen. Note the CABINET TOP, with shelf for warming plates and keeping fooil hot after cooked, also convenient drop shelves that can lie foliiej baik when not in use, and ,' two nickeled bars for howling towels. - , ' ', Three sizt. With or without Cabinet Top. At your dealer's, 1 or writo our nearest agency. 1 t f 1 ST. LOUIS and RETURN Sunday, April 25. ? A popular rale excursion, will Ije run by i tiie Illinois Central to St. Louis oji Sunday, April 25, at rate of $2.00 for the round trip. Train leaves at 7;39 a. m. and returning special train will leave St. Louis 11:30 p.m. - - - . Sunday attractions in St. Louis- are: National 'League base ball game between St. Louis "Cardinals" and Chicago' "Cuts "Habes in loytand" at (iarrick Theatre, "Faust" al Grand, "Barbara Fntchic" at Imperial, Vaudeville at Col umbia, American and lores! I'ark Highlands. lor Tickets and further particulars see I. C. Agents. '. VV. II. DRILL, Div. Pass. Agt. J. II. JONES, Tkt. Agt. St. Louis. - , . Cairo, , Tew Use World's Cables. I.i " Ilu'ti 'tne jnr ci-nt. of thi iuh liii' !i::-, oi-i'tuiluil to tn.'ilif iiso nf tho v.i I .''!' cilih'H. CHICAGOJLL. Manufacturer a iprci.I complrarion pow. Ait that is without a objectionable feature. It is prepared wit h the greaterf caie. afti-t hit original formulae and only the finest mgredienti are uwd. Remember tnat ordinary complexion pow. drr ate injuriout lo the (Lin clo(jpr)g the p"r- and drvlnn up the natural oil that nuke the km clrar and elartic Ask for E. Burnham's Medicated Complexion Powder ft poJTr a pre uliat quality of adhrting to t!r lm that niaki-t mnA tailing. In fouf l)iali-t: Brunette, t lch. White or Blrsded. ITie f- Pumham prrpaiatium are on tale I f llie drali-r nanK-d below. Call time and a k i a I iEE tample oi Corrplrrioa Pow drr, Makr Oram of Aln'nd Mral and a copy of the Gift Bor tlrt, enisled "How t be IVoutilul'" liH-b telU how to obtain, and to preserve beauty. If you cannot call arnd ten centa (to cover uni'img cxree) dirert to E. Fumhanj, 70 and 72 Stare Street, CLicafah IX II. N. lILiiNCKGLL M. Statt St No womari cari bd Happy without children; it is her nature to love them as much, so as it is the beautiful and pure. The ordeal through, which the exoectant mother passea wunout any aanger.'i . Ihts rag PERFECTION 1 The J?jytS LANV nntT djrrn'"'--f. w. economical and S won- ' " derful light River. Solidly made, ; beautifully nickeleJ. Y'our living-room will be pleasanter with a Kayo I .am p. If not with your dealer, write our nearest agency. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) r ri 200 I MUST RISK MAKING MISTAKES. I j Man Afraid of Taking Chances Wli Never Accomplish Anything. Tin- man whose rnreer ni'tn. riVr-fl.-. ri'Milt --the iii.-in )ki diK'g thitign Is not iifr.-ihl to risk tuistiikf'n. He of wIhuii It ran he i-nhl: "Ho has nryer f.Ti'i' a yrlfiu.i i"mr iif juiliurtit - hl nrnnl Is thnvl ?;." will l" fniinil to l-' i U" Alio lius done !l'tli- or nothing woi'li white. H 1 ?n riiuttoiiH in ron teinpintitu; a mov that he hanll? i!:u in ti r.l-o It In for- Its posHllile f fr-rt h.if tf n 'niTiinii.'il or lost. Citsril in ht'usi if iienlnst tiie reprorr?t of jiiiS Ur t.iiluifs. h ii'ti!8 hltn'ivlt the y.-'ti.-f.n-tlnn ' f work well rl-q .. It Is li's hah;: -f Iy a n'-tuat hoi ituttl the ti.ih- lor arth :i h;s p;eil 11 shri'iki f. ' "l P si-.naihility, as he fsrs rriti clsiii. !! !s swnycil by the Miwrr.ni tion th;, !(-: with a futile mediocrity.. Th- nth'"- typ-)f nian i.ivi stljiatt'n. flociibr an I lini s. fritlrium and th 1 i.1141' of ridicule are ignored hy him. H'twein notion nnd hsita'um he hoosi s action cv ry time. A'hn H comes to taking a rh.uire or wafting to soe what will happen h takes the ch.iriee. He would ra'her risk a mis t.'ke than do ntnin. H Is w'l'itig 'Isf'-n to ifvh 5ti)oS and th"n st-ts on his ow n j i !;nii-!it. w eh-Tmin the respoiitilillity If h me's witt fall tire h di c fh hft tlifn -ns!!il to ntuerd i'. If he Is siirrecfi he t;ah ors new hi'i-i' in dM'lns wi'h the ttext proliirnt. Thai's the Amerlesn spirit. ft Praawteta. Osiwa. IWweta ud cafrUwi Utr, aaal Mraraitimu Cw W.Jl'l' ti ll ""Ul I.HSTTTlITr, Dent. le r? sflsa ' mm