Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 348, 23 October 1909 — Page 4

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AU SU2S-TliL.fc.UK A Jl, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1909.

PAGE FOUR

The Richmond Palladium and San-Telegram Published and 8wb4 by th PALLADIUM PKINTINO Ctt Issnee? V ar each wek, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North th and A street Bora Phone 1121. RICHMOND, INDIANA.

Raaolek O. Vtrdm. .Editor Charlee M. Morcii...Maa(lK Editor Carl Herahardt Associate Editor W. R. Ponadatoac Nw Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 5.00 per year (In advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance $5.00 Six months. In advance 2.S0 One month. In advance 5 RURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance $2.50 8x months. In advance 1.62 On month. In advance 25 Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be srlven for a specified term; name will not bo entered until payment Is received.

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as second class mail matter.

IV AssacUttoi of

(New York City) has

at OKtUM to Um sjralattsa

I (Ms nkttaulra. Only ti Bent el

talasi la Its

REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. Mayor DR. W. W. ZIMMERMAN

Clerk BALTZ A. BESCHER.

Councllmen-at Large OSCAR C. WILLIAMS GEORGE J. KNOLLEN'BERG HARRY C. WESSEL ED. THATCHER

Councilman, First Ward ALPHONS WEISHAUPT

Councilman, Second Ward JESSE J. EVANS

Councilman, Third Ward H. H. ENGLEBERT

er homeseekers will not look for cities free from the contamination of vice, and fields for business Investment where they will not be subject to blackmail and corrupt competition. The issue can be summed up in a few words: Shall the panders of vice, the panders of franchises, and Pat Calhoun unite to debauch the city in their own interest and defeat the people because

some of them can be deceived by the press gang of the crooks, or bought? What of a journalist who served: a

public-serve-us corporation instead of the people whose retainer he holds at 5 cents a copy, whose chief counsel he ought to be when the Issues are joined between corrupt capital and the public weal? He is what is called among lawyers a shyster, and on the Barbary coast, as they call it in San Francisco, a prostitute. Public damnation of such a man will be inherited by his children until the generations have forgotten his name. The Tribune is reliably informed that a million dollars is being spent in behalf of Fickert. How much of that was appropriated as retaining fees for the journalistic advocates of continued corruption? How much of that has gone to political bosses? How much of it has been spent on windjammers whose business it is to make

the "lesser reason the greater?"

We are thousands of miles away

from the picket line in San Francisco but the cause of Heney is our cause.

He is holding the left wing of the bat

tle line of decency which is flung across the country, and his victory or

defeat must determine for us the

character of the people who vote in

San Francisco Nov. 2. Are they our people? Can our young men wisely

and safely, live among them?

It is for the San Franciscans to de

termine. "He that is not with me is

against me," said the Savior. They

are with us or against us aliens, as

alien as the Japanese in race to the

cause of decency if they reject on elec

tlon day the most prominent and ag-

gressixe champion of popular rights

since Theodore Roosevelt has left the

country. Chicago Tribune.

though she needed a little more love, but what she really needs is a little more money. If a girl is built right she doesnt need garters to beep her stockings up. When a man's business becomes dull, as a result of his own shiftlessness, he is pretty apt to lay It on the town. Nothing makes a man feel sillier than to shake hands with a woman

who pulls her hand away as though she had struck a snake.

It would surprise a man if he knew how soon after he employs a man that man begins to criticise his methods.

With most of your friends you treasure up things they do or say that offend you.

Most persona can find something to quarrel about without going 90 degrees north.

Councilman, Fourth Ward WILLIAM H. BARTEL. JR.

Councilman, Fifth Ward E. E. KING

Councilman, Sixth Ward HENRY C. KAUFFMAN .

Councilman, Seventh Ward FRANK WA1DELE

Councilman, Eighth Ward JOHN T. BURDSALL

Hems Gathered in From Far and Near

Everything is Out of Order in Kansas.

New York World In furtherance of

his reputation as an optimist knowing no limit, William Allen Wrhite

predicts the early downfall of "Uncle

Joe'' Cannon. Can the Speaker rule

that the prophet is out of order?

The Sunday Church Services

First Church of Christ Scientist j gregational meeting will be held to

Second floor Masonic Temple, Sunday Service, 10:45 a- m., subject, "Probation After Death." Wednesday evening Experience Meeting, 7:45 p. m.

Public invited. Reading room No. 10 North Tenth street, open to public daily except Sunday, 9:00 a. m. to

12 and 1:30 p. m. to 5:00 p. m. East Main St. Friends Truman C.

Ken worthy, pastor. Bible school at 9:10 a. ra. Special Rally day exercises. Meeting for worship, 10:30 a.

m. Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m. All are invited. United Brethren Church Corner of Eleventh and N. B streets. H. S. James, minister. Bible school at 9:30, S. A. McDonald, superintendent. The pastor will preach at 10:30 and 7:30. Subjects "Depression and Help," and "Christian Union." A cordial welcome to all. Universalist Church In Rhoda

consider the election of a new pastor

for this vacant field. Let every member be present so as to have a voice in the same. Fifth Street M. E. Church J. Cook Graham, pastor. Sunday school, 9:15 a. m.. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. The Sacrament of Lord's Supper at this service. Class. 2:30 p. m. Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. Evening Worship at 7:30 p. m. You are welcome.

First Christian Church Corner of Tenth and, South A streets. Samuel W. Traum, pastor. Bible school, 9:05 a. m. Junior Endeavor, 2:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor. 6:30 p. m. Communion service 10:30 p. m. At the morning service, 10:30, and at the evening 7:30, the pastor will give a detailed account of the great Pittsburg Centennial Convention. All members are urged to be present, and all friends or strangers within the city

fnl and bealCxtnl made wiCx ? Iloyal, Impossible without it, Y 1 PHEE3 lVK Absolutely Ptm Jf SSI VNw THE ONLY Baking Powder Ell -. 3? -.3 stSm BSi liarSry

Temple, Sunday, Oct. 24 Rev. Martha are invited. The prayer-meeting on

next Thursday evening win oe aevci-

.lones will nreach at 7:30 n. m. Sun

day school at 9:15 a. m. On aivi after the first Sunday of November, the Universalist church will hold its services in the Commercial Club rooms in Masonic Temple. Sunday school at 2:30 p. m. Preaching at 7:30 p. m. No morning meetings. First Presbyterian Sunday School at 9:15 a. m. Raymond B. Nicholson, Supt. Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m., by Rev. Isaac M. Hughes. Visitors and strangers cordially invited.

ed to Convention Echoes, each delegate participating in the service. Reid Memorial. Corner Eleventh and North A streets. Rev. S. R. Lyons, pastor. Preaching by Rev. T. H. Hanna, Jr., 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Rev. Hanna atid Rev. Lyons exchange pulpits for the "day. Sabbath School, 9:15 a. m. Christian Union, 6:45 p. m. Second Presbyterian Rev. J. F. Baxter, of Ladoga, Ind.. will preach both morning and evening, 10:30 and 7:30, at the Second Presbyterian church. Sunday School, 9:15. C E.

Colonel John Siveed's Conversations on Domestic Problems Copyright. 1000. by C 9. Yost.

West Richmond Friends Church

Held at Earlham College. Bible school j 6:45. at 9:00 a. m. Prof. E. P. Trueblood, st. Paul's Episcopal .Church Cor. Supt. Meeting for worship at 10:30 ! gth ani North A streets Rev. David

YE CANNOT SERVE GOD AND MAMMON

On Tuesday, Nov. 2, the electors of San Francisco will determine whether

or no the city is to mark the first mile

stone on the new road toward municl pal decency.

New York again is engaged in a struggle against corruption. There

has been a ten year fight in Philadel

phia which, if it does not result In the election of Gibboney this fall and the

winning of the fight by the forces behind him, will result in a Pyrrhic victory for the gang so costly that they

cannot recover from it. If the oppon

enfcs of Tammany are beaten in New York It will be because the fight

- against it has been, intermittent and

badly led.

But the issue in San Francisco is clear. San Franciscans have been

parties to. and witnesses of the most

rtramatlc and the most inspiring battle by honesty against the fearful odds of

corporate corruption that the country t

has ever witnessed. The election will "decide whether citizens of the rest of the country will be willing to go there with their wives and children: whether they will be willing to bring capital to establish businesses; whether . the city will be pointed cut as an example of the almost hopeless shamelessness of the commercial capital of the Pacific, or whether it will be an inspiration for the inhabitants of other cltieg who are winning their way to freedom. Francis J. Heney. who has been in charge of the prosecution of the grafters, is the people's candidate for district attorney. Arrayed against him

Is Charles M. Fickert, selected by the men under indictment and by the public service corporations. Who apparently desire to place the stamp of approval upon the bribing of public officials and to nullify the statute which calls bribery a crime. It staggers us in the middle west to " learn that 15,000 men ca.st their votes In the primaries for Fickert when the Issue was plain ; when the grafters had sought to murder Heney; when Spreckels has been ostracised not by the churches, but by the rich criminals Indicted; when the evidence unearthed by Burns is so clear that a boy could understand it. The issue is not local to San Francisco except in the sense that it will determine the status of the city In the eyes of the country and will determine

whether decent men would not rather

do business in the west at Portland,

Seattle, Spokane, and Tacoma; wheth

er Any Other Old Country. Charleston News and Courier. It is

reported that King George, of Greece, will abdicate, and that the Greek army

will offer the crown to the Duke

d'Abruzzi. An American woman ought

to make a good Queen of Greece.

Sermon by Prof. Russell. Midweek meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. All interested are cordially invited to every service. Grace M. E. Church W. M. Nelson, pastor. Sunday School at 9:00 a. m. Preaching at 10.30 followed by the Holy Communion. Epworth League at 6:30 and preaching again at 7:30. The public is invited. Whitewater Friends Aaron Napier, pastor. S. S. at 9:00 a, m. Lee Ellis, Supt. Meeting for worship, 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Rev. Frank Kinsey of Salem? O., will preach at 10:30 a. m. C. E., 6:20 p. m. " Second English Lutheran SundaySchool at 9:15. Preaching services at 10:30 by Mr. Edward Moore, who resides near the church. At the conclusion of the morning services a con-

C. Huntington, rector. 7:30 a. m., Holy Communion. 9:15 a. m., Sunday School and Bible classes. 10:30 a, m.. Morning Prayer and sermon, subject: "The Man of God in the Nation." 7:30 p. m.. Evening Prayer and address, "The Misuse of Hypnotism and the Suggestive Influence of Society." Public cordially invited. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at 8 and 9 o'clock and High Mass and sermons at 10:30; Vespers and benediction every Sunday at 3 p. m. Rev. J. F. Mattingly, rector. Rev. Thomas A. Hoffman, assistant. tf St. Andrew's Catholic; Fifth and South C streets. Mas3 at 7:30; High Mass at 9:45; Vespers, sermonette and benediction at 3 o'clock. Rev. Frank A. Roell, rector; Rev. H. J.

Gadlaee. assistant. tf

PROGRESS OF LABOR.

But Not For Parson Taft in Texas. Denver Republican. Mr, "Jack"

.Inhnsnn smhtisi in havp fnne-ht well

enough against Mr. Stanley Ketchel to cent,y 8alIed with Mrs- Gompers and

Its Upward Course Inevitable, Says President Gompers. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor for twenty-five successive years, who re-

messa'ges he had received lea mm to believe that the cause of labor was being better understood by all the people, including those who do not have to labor with their hands.

NO INJUNCTIONS ASKED.

win another sermnn of praise from Booker T. Washington. .

Merely a Suggestion.

Miss Gompers on the Baltic to visit many of the different cities of Europe, said he went abroad with a heart filled with gratitude toward the whole Amer

ican people, not only toward the labor-

St. Louis Post-Dispatch. To make , jng people who stood by him and the

the comedy complete, couldn't Mr. Taft let Uncle Joe Cannon issue the regular Thanksgiving proclamation this year?

Takes Everything In Sight. Detroit Free Press. If the authorities do not watch Charles W. Morse he is liable to get a first mortgage on the penitentiary and then foreclose.

They Prefer the Anvil Chorus. Chicago News. Speaker Cannon is still singing the praises of Cannonism. Not many are joining in the chorus.

7 WINKLES

In the Future. (New York Sun.) Knicker Well, my dear? Mrs. Knicker Wipe your wings before you come in the house.

A Fixture. (Puck.) Mistress Bridget, I hope you're not the sort of girl who quits her job? Cook -No, mum; I'm a regular De-pew!

Disgrace. (Detroit Free Press.) Poor mother's now In deep disgrace: Last night she trumped Her partner's ace.

Omissions of History. Chicago Tribune. "Why are you 20 miles away?" they asked him. "To oblige T. Buchanan Read," answered Gen. Sheridan. "Think what would happen to his immortal poem If I were any nearer!" Sinking the spurs deep into the quivering flanks of his trusty war horse, he began his deathless ride.

cause, but also toward others who had

expressed their good wishes. President Gompers is to be gone until October. He goes by direction of the Denver convention of the American Federation. He will attend the international trades union congress at Paris on Aug. 30 and the British trades union congress at Ipswich. England, in the early part of September. I "The outlook for labor is good." said the departing president. "In a natural course of events labor should find an ( era of prosperity for some time to j come." ! He was asked if labor was faring ! better under the present national administration, and he replied: "Administrations have little to do with the ' great progress of labor. It is not administrations that make the progress. ', It is the broad conditions of national life itself that do so. "So far as administrations are concerned, the progress of labor is like the shining of the sun. Administrations might as well try to regulate the

rays from that orb as to attempt to regulate the course which labor may take. Labor as an organization in America owes its progress and its

firm hold to the judgment and the sentiments of the laboring people. "Many persons outside of the ranks of labor have sent their best wishes to myself and Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Morrison in the contempt cases," said President Gompers. "and we all keenly feel the interest taken in as not for ourselves, but for what we represent I go to Europe to look into the working problem there. Laboring men in Europe are behind us in many

ways and ahead of us In other ways.

Y

III. How to Keep Young.

OUNG Mrs. Rollins was dressed

for the opera when Colonel

Sneed. her father, entered. The

old sentleman threw up nls

hands in mock astonishment and

chuckled with delight.

"My, my. my, child." he exclaimed.

"you look as fine as the queen of Shebal And I'll bet," he added, "you're

a doggone sight prettier. Turn around, honey, and let me get a sort of panoramic view of you." With an Indulgent smile Mrs. Rollins revolved. "The more I look the better I like it" said the colonel. "Bat the wrappin isn't any too good for what's inside of it. And that reminds me that I haven't kissed you yet You dazzled me so I plum forgot Kind of turn your cheek up to one side so I won't muss anything. There, now. But but" The colonel was running the end of his tongue over his lips, and there was a puzzled expression on his face. "What's the matter, papa?" asked Mrs. Rollins, with twinkling eyes. "The brand don't seem quite familiar," be answer

ed. "What is it honey T'

"Ob. it's Just a j

little touch of rouge, daddy; that's all." "Huh!" grunted the colonel. "1 thought so.

count in the game as mucn" as people J party after new deacons I'd be riTLT Imagine. It's the looks and feellu's. j ,ue jas,t niao they'd pick, but 1 come but principally the feelin's. that make ; to tDe conclusion a long time ago that you old or keep yon young. j the church is a mighty good tblug to "And you need just two things, lit-1 hitch ou to. whether you're flgurtu' on tie girl, to keep you feelln young, happiness iu this world or th next I've been keepin' them a secret, savin . i don't mean to say that the church Ml them for you. One of them Is what ' carry a man into heaven. Not by is called a stiff upper lip; the other's a , long jump. Anybody can join the straight back. One is a mental attl- church, but gettlu through the pearly tude toward life; the other's a phys- 1 gates is a different proposition. Sou ical condition. A man or a woman cf the meanest no 'countest people I with a stiff upper Up don't get dis- ever had any dealin's with belong to couraged. don't get the blues, don't the church, and If I thought they had worry about trifles. When a black through tickets to the green fields of cloud comes along she grabs it and Eden I'd want to go the other way. turns it around so the silver linin' nut I know they haven't. 1 know will show; she finds out what her duty they'll all be brushed off when they try s and does it without kickin' up any I to come under the wire at the finish.

fuss about It; she don't make mountains out of molehills nor cross bridges until she gets to them, and It there's any fun goin' on in her neighborhood she's goin to hare her share of it without makln' a fool of herself. "Now, did you ever see anybody

and so the things tbey do and the things they say dont bother me a little bit On the other hand. 1 believe a man or a woman. If they're got the right

! kind of a disposition and the necessary ! stiffness of backbone, can worry along

with a straight back who was really i through life and get satisfactorily act-

old I mean old in heart and mind? tied In the hereafter without any help No. slree, you never did. Keep your ! from the church. But and 1 wn't backbone straight . honey, whatever j make that "but" too strong It's only you do. The minute it begins to sag one In a thousand who can do that or bend that very minute old age 1 The other 099 need some help to keep starts down the road to meet you. i 'em from wanderln' off the straight-

It's easy enough to keep it straight now, while your years are few. but after awhile you'll begin to feel like lettin' your shoulders droop, and if you let them do it. why. pretty soon your chest will go in, and your stomach will push out and the wrin-

Two Recent Strikes Fought Out With

out Appeal to Courts.

The Georgia railroad employees and their employers have been able to carry on a determined strike to satisfactory

solution without resorting to the courts for injunctions. Even when the fed

eral labor commissioner was called in

and the delicate question of interfering

with carrying of mails was raised the parties to the labor trouble and those representing the government found it possible to avoid creating unpleasant situations. The reason appears to be that the parties concerned devoted themselves to securing adjustment of differences between them instead of trying to "take a fall" out of their opponents. In Philadelphia, too. the great trolley strike was inaugurated, carried ti a very acute stage and finally settled without any of the disorder and frantic appeals to courts for injunctions usually attending such affairs. It cannot be said that any one suspected the trolley management to be disposed to do anything else than to withhold th last cent from its car operators as long as by any means it could secure others pressed by want to work at lowest possible pay. But it must be said that the company as well as the men displayed remarkable coolness under exasperating circumstances.

away track that leads to happiness and pence and everything else that' worth having. Colonel John Snecd.

"MOuifTAras otrr of moudbiils.'

B e g 1 n n i n' to kles '11 begin to multiply. You'll look paint the lily al- old, and. what's more, honey, you'll ready, are you? feel old. The backbone was made to

Well. I don't take support your head, and when the sup-

PILES CURED IN TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed tn cure any case of Itching. Blind. Bleed

ing or Protruding Piles In 6 to 14 dava or money refunded. 50c.

port begins to get wabbly you can't brace up the superstructure with toilet creams. "Not that I'm against toilet creams; bless your life, no. 1 believe In a woman lookln as handsome as she

Where's William? can as long as she can, and when I

Dressin. eh? Just see one of sixty, as I do every day cot home? I'm or so over home, massagln ber neck

"don't seem quttb afraid that boy Is and rabbin goose grease, or whatever

FAMILIAR.

much stock in artificial colors, but 1 reckon the principle's all right You see-

but, by the way.

Sir David Gill, who says the Westminster Gazette, Is to make a report to the International Geodetic Conference on the progress made with thi African survey from the cape to Cairo along the th meridian east commenced that great task many years ago while astronomer royal at the cap. He pointed out to the colonial government that a proper survey was essential to any system of land tenure, and showed that big tracts of land had beeu lost to the government by the wilful shifting of beacon marks, made possible by hurried and inadequate surveying. Mr. Cecil Rhodea early saw the

value of this advice, and not only acted on it in Rhodesia, but provided In his will for a grant of some $.iO.mn from the funds of the British South Africa Company toward the expensed of carrying the meridional are northward toward Lake Tanganyika. Tha survey has now been carried seventytwo miles north of the equator.

M. P. Remlinger. director of the Pasteur Institute at Constantinople, wrltM

to "The Lancet" to point out the danger

workin too hard. It is. Into ber cheeks, why, I glory In of spreading disease by allowing do

mestic animals to enter the sickroom. He smeared bouillon cultures of various micro-organisms on the coats of dogs and cats, and at regular Inter a' cut off an umber of hairs and took cul-

Think I'll sit down and chat with you her spunk. But and 1 want you to ; anyhow until be comes down. get this straight In your mind, honey "As I was goin' to remark, little If she didn't have a straight back girl." resumed the colonel after be bad and a stiff upper lip she wouldn't be arranged himself comfortably In the doin' that sort of thing. When your

big armchair, "I've got some rather spinal column begins to droop you be- tures from them. As a result he found peculiar notions about keepin' young, gin to quit carin' much about your ! that the typhoid bacillus was present I'm a long ways from being an old looks. If you haven't got enough am- j on the seventeenth day and the orgman yet but I've been around here a bltlon to hold your shoulders back 'anism of diphtheria on the twentyconsiderable time, and maybe 1 can you're not goin to have enough to fourth day in undiminished virulence, give you some pointers on what every rub the crow's feet from the corners ; Among the diseases mentioned by M. woman wants to know. of your eyes, and the only thing you Remlinger as offering special dang. "1 reckon you've beard that old song can do is to get some red and white jn this way are scarlet fever, measles, about a woman beln' as old as she paint and cover up the cracks. But . diphtheria, whooping cough, typhoid looks, while a man's just as old as be paint my dear, won't keep you young, i fever and tuberculosis.

feels. Well, there s some truth in tne it s all right In an emergency, l tiedistinction, for looks have a whole lleve every woman ought to bare a lot more to do with a woman than a little paint on her toilet table for use man; but, all the same, it's the feelln' when there are dark circles around that counts in the long run, and it her eyes and no color In ber cheeks counts just as much for one sex as and she's compelled to go out in com-

SUNFLOWER PHILOSOPHY. (Atchison (Kan.) Globe.) Nearly anything a man gets in wirter is called grip.

In trying to be "independent," many persons are impolite.

It is less to your credit to be ready to fight than to be ready to work.

Every married ' woman looks as

British Labor Treaty. A provisional agreement has been entered into between the British Shipbuilding Employers' federation and twenty -six trades unions for the prevention of srtrikes through the settlement of all disputes in conferences In which all employers and all trades unions shall be represented. No strike or lockout shall be declared until every means of conciliation shall have been exhausted in joint conferences. Neither side is to ask for a change tn tha aral nt vacoc at shnrter 1u

Over there the forking people are rlod3 th&n six momhs Q MoT a working out their destiny as tbey are A-mmnA m fn. a rh-n -onf,

it does for the other. You're goin to be young, honey, just as long as you feel young, and if you feel young the looks will take care of themselves, j Now. there's a good deal more in that j statement than I can work out for you J while William's gettin' into his dress 6birt. but it all simmers down to this that the way to keep young Is to quit growin' old. That's what they call a

here. I hope to bring back much information of value, to learn many lessons and perhaps to carry across the seas a message that will do them good. Mr. Gompers said that the demonstratlsn on the pier and the many

KLES CC3E0 AT C02E DY tlEV ADS0RPTI33 OET110D.

ence must be he'd on the subject between the employers and the unions. The agreement is to continue in force three years, and thereafter termination will be subject to six months' notice oh either side.

The officers and members of Triumph Lodge are nereby notified to meet at K. of P. Temple Sunday evening, October 24 at 7 o'c'ock to attend funeral services of Brother Louis Mar-

Ifjou suffer from bleeding, itching, blind shall at his late home. Sister lodges or protuding Piles, send me your address. are invited to attend, and I will tell you how to cure yourself at I Fraternally in F C B home by the new absorron treatment; and Raymond Street C. C will also send some of this home treatment ... . ' ' free for trial, with references from your j , m- Balser- K- R. C own locality if requested. Immediate re- j -0 -1 bef and permanent cure assured. Send no " money, but tell others of this offer. Write joaxha: today to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P, Notre j Gold Medal Flour la reai economy.

KEarmo yovso. paradox, ain't It? nun! Well, I don't care what you label it It's the right formula. "Of course you understand I'm not talkin' about years; I'm talkln about looks and feelin's. I've got to admit that rime has some Infinence. but It's only relatfrel I know a fellow downtown who's thirty-five years old and he acts like be was about ten. There's such a thing as keepin too doggone young, you know. I've seen women that way too. Then there's another fellow I know who ain't over forty and he's dyin' of old age right cow. So xou see. honey, the. calendar don't

pany when she's sick, in fact and don't want to show it; then I think It's all right to put up a good straight bluff. But honey, don't you get the notion in your bead that you're got to swab around with a paint brush every time you go out No man ever put a color in a Jar that was anywhere near as

globt ix bzb fine as the tints

rcK-" that nature puts In a woman's face, and If she don't keep 'em buried under artificial pigments they'll stay with her as long as she holds herself erect with face to the front and gets all the joy she can out of life. A straight back and a stiff upper Hp. little girl, beat all the cosmetics on earth."

I "I

CHICHESTERSPILLS

Mils la B4 U4 Vm4 MtlltcN

Tall mm atfcar. Umr mt r

Pi '! MMrilH ICVTUI UIAMWSD BKAMS) rilX. S

SWD BY DStGGISTS FYFRTrftlBS

Going te Church. There's a million excuses for sleepin' late on Sunday mornin'. and none of them's any account It's Just laziness pure unadulterated laziness. That's what it Is. We're all of us

lazy, more or less, mostly more, and It's a powerful temptation to loaf In .

bed until the church bells quit ringln : but all the same, children, it's a bad habit to get Into. I ain't a pillar of the church, and I reckon it thej was to send out a search

Lower

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