Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 07, 1912, Page 13, Image 13

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    i 13
azire
) a g e
SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT
That Stuff Don't Go With Eumhauser
Copyright 1912, National News Ass'a
Drawn for The Bee by Tad
' '
VlAM- !! r. V (OH GEVHHIT-. te two Oamc ano vnekt a dahcG i boob owmjeowp ) (THE COOLcP- !
.la.ua .-t A- 7 P0hTT3Ee V6 MET1eDHUC Anohe THOVr VfiC 1 . - ' me? nnOmm - 1 f0f2. fTM ( T
rTf V. I A-A -UA- T - I THNK. ITS TOS" BEIT" V AFTSf COURT ' ) IU HAMS TO ' 1 V ' '-f i
- ; -
.. 1 : . - I - ' ' I
f .. . '. . - I f? ) O J! lYi TWEMAIDEIS BAND of? HOPE! (f V u tt ' n
h - Captives of Fate 1 FTMd s hus-band , . ; New Fields for Human Enterprise : 1
By WINIFRED BLACK.
-We saw her up there on the mesa the
other day Loma Doone. the V sweet
maiden poplar tree standing light and
graceful in the great gathering circle of
gloomy pines. Stolen,
aear tning, ironi a
quiet valley by some
wandering breeze of
mischief, and set
there In the woods
with the dark ever
greens, Roughing
around her like some
falr maid carried off
by. .rubber chieftains
apd kept cjaptive in
their. mountain fast
ness. . ''
How. light she. was,
how graceful, how
j modest and timid,
j and yet she stood
! her ground, too, and would not let anj
j of the rough, burly pines, or the melarr
chely brooding cedars come too close
Even the tall spruce with his silver tipped
finger she kept at a distance, like somi
modest -princess of royal blood keeping
up the tradition of proud aloofness even
In her -captivity. .
Flutter, flutter, all her graceful leaves
eemed sending signals to her tall broth
ers there in the valley. ' v -
"Come uo," she seemed to cry to them,
"come uj and take me' home, t want to
be by the water." r do not like this high
mesa, I am afrntd of all these dark trees
around, me.- Come brothers, march up the
hill tonight when the moon is gene and
take me home again," " ,
But the brothers down there by the
stream in the green ; valley do not even
take' the. troyble, to' wave back to the
captive prlncese.-and go there she stands
today Lprnavftoonis we have named her
-a capyv among the'dark .robber trees,
, thepe on the wind swept hill'.' ' -
by - that; -name when late' does hot hear
me. She taarfi&i when she was 1,. mar
ried,a mahi f he' scatceJy.j- knew, (Carried
away with 'his daJki'-hahdsome face and
his fine manner, which made all the men
she knew seem dull and commonplace. .
And now poor Lorna is marooned with
the man he jmarrled, marooned . on a
; queer little Island where the man lives
I with his strange family, and the uncanny
' friends he gathers about him.
1 She Ds gay, is Loma, and' pretty, and
soft voiced, and gentle hearted, and the
i man who carried her away with him is
; saturnine and sarcastic and cynical.
He doesn't believe In anybody, he
, thinks people who laugh are all fools.
He never reads anything but some book
j which proves that everything is all wrong
everywhere, and when poor Loma for
gets for a minute ber "melancholy fate and
tries to sing a simple Httle' song of love friendly company,
and laughter, the robber chieftain frowns
and the song dies in poor Lorna's throat.
Captive, poor little girl, a captive bowed
down with iron chains, though th world
thinks they are nothing but pretty brace
lets. ,
I wonder how long she will live In
risont : -
They- are not always women, the cap
ves of fate. I know, a man who's a
i)tlve, too. He'i a big-hearted, gener
ic soul with a laugh like a-burst of
rimal joy. He has a brain, too, a quick,
:een active brain. He likes to eat and
o drink, and he is never really happy
vlthout a lot of friends around him, and
e married a wife who lives to save.
She haunts-the shops looking for "bar
,a!ns;" he screws down the cook's
vases; she haggles over a qaurter on the
as Wll
' She wears a dress till she's tired of It,
nd then what? Does she give It to a
oor relation and be glad she has it to
?'ive? Not she. She sells that drees to
the maid or some friend less well off than
she. ' ' . . ,.
Her husband is pruned, and cut, and
.rimmed down to suit her little sordid,
narrow, schemes. Poor fellow, I am al
ways wondering when he will, find the
courage asj the chance to escape down
the hill, off the - wind-swept mesa, and
go home to his own folk.; , :
I've, seen children captives In their-own
family, haven't , you? Clever children-In
a .family pf dolts,' and the dolts all feei
so superior, because "poor Mary Is ho
queer." '
Dull children in. a clever family, poor
things., my - heart aches for them,, but
they are not so. much tp.be pitied as the
clever, prisoners, of dullness.. Clever-people
have warm-hearts,- as a'fule,- and
quick sympathies, and there's no one so
cruel on earth as a dullard.
An honest boy In a family of crooks,
a good woman In a bevy of selfish, mer
cenary, worldly sisters. Stolen, every one
of them, stolen away from the home
they should have, and brought to sorrow
among aliens.
My heart goes out to them, and for
their rakes I am going to climb the wind
swept .nesa tomorrow and 'take with mi
a little sprig of quivering aspen, on a
branch of poplar; and set it Iq the ground
bes'de the lonely, pale captive poplar
who waves her slender arms in such pa
thetic appeal to her brethren down then
in the valley to come and rescue her. She
shall have company of her own sort It
I can manage It' Poor, pretty, light
ened Loma Doone, up there in the rob
ber's stronghold with the dark pines,
And maybe sometime when some kin
of mine wanders lonely and mtsundestood,
some kindred souls will see him far oft,
and recognize him, and go and bear him
7 " f V
IT WAS FRISCO PETE3 WAK&
IKE HAP PIED WITH Hl5 GOOTS OHi
THP JJORV GH WN& THE
DedlSl ON TO THP OTHER KJftMj
ON HI 3 A.BILITY TO SHOOT FIBDMR BROWN-VE5 1 ND V, A GOOD
pete's friends sat DRNKIN&
AND TEfLLING rVNNY STORieSbA5ruS-AMD THINK.
TILL THe WITCHMG MOOR
wmeN pbjc jvmped up
AMD GrRP08NG UON&y
ROUtM BVTNS ARM Mtj
OLD SHOE IN
dea p mam's lanc
AOU UD VOU C fLL IT
AN ALieVGAITOfa?"
MALT!
TA-RA-K-RA-RA;
GCNTLEI-fEN Be SCATHD
RASTOS-Mft BROWftDATWA A
DISASTROUS FRE VE.5TERDAV
DEAL OF PROPERTY WAS LOST-
DAT DeyHAOiTooTwnrwoor
ANV LOSS, WHS H A B6WCRV
TRUCK PASSSaAND DE HOSSE
FANNED DC FllCe UPA&AN.
MRSifdwrt- VVHV. HOW COULO
A TEAM OF rWS63 DO THAT
i?ASTu5-SLRe Dev could.
I DEV VYEfcE DRAF7H0SSE3
D'MPLFD POlxy BE E H A n
WILL NOW FMOJtuS WITH,
FOK SHE WAS A
PEROXIDE BEAR '
MALTjl
WHO
QOem
THERB?
ME.
you?
DOST THoo
KNOWETH
THP
WOePT
HEWASLOOKlNCxOUT
NOWB FELL OPPLlKf TH15
AND WHEN 8R00&HT TO
MB ASKfeR,
IF YOU TELL SOMff GOOy
TO STOP THPIK C MATTER
WOULD THJ?y BPP .
CANNING TONCrOS
Si A
THS"N-
YiHO
ART a
THOU?
ft
r
to the Booty
THAT POTTSTHJ
THP HAM
IN RAMBURGi
j-
Selected by EDWIN MA11KIIA31.
. Robert Kennedy Duncan In his scholarly
book, "Some Chemical Problems of To
day," opens up many vistas Into the
whats and whys and hows of the world
about us. Among scores of suggestive
pages I note .the following:
"A matter of much contemporary - in
quiry and anxiety relates to the Increas
ing scarcity of wood particularly the
hard voods. Many men are today making
and selling composition woods out .of
wood waste for the most part sawdust.
This sawdust Is mixed with a binding
material, and as such Is finding Us way
Into the market as flooring compositions.
"Btlll other men manufacture their com
position wood out of waste Wood pulp
from the paper factories. Both types of
manufacture have the regular tribulations
of an unperfected process:
"Composition wood has an unquestion
able future, but Its success depends upon
the discovery and utilisation of a suitable
binding material; and this, I am sure,
has been found ' either in bakelite .(that
remarkably strong and resistive material
discovered by Backeland) or redmanlte,
a different substance, which Is being de
veloped In our laboratories at the Univer
sity of Kansas. - j . '.
"Apart from artificial wood, a great
desideratum is artificial wood for special
purposes. Thus, owing to the serious de-
: Little Bobbie's: Pa
.J
Ry WILLIAM F. KIRK.
Husband, sed Ma. to Pa nt brekfuet
yesterday. Husband, I have Jest learned
a new way for a man to. keep his temper
& Btopfhlsself from knocking sum man
cold In a flte or from jawing tiio hard at
his faithful and pashunt .wife.. , -
Wei), sed Pa, what i:1 the presrrSluin?
Pa looked kind of suspishus at that, bee
kaus he newer knows wen. Ma Is Joak'ng
. 4 win she''lseht ' ; " i' f '..' .i; ," ,.
ThiiYs'the ' idee', ted. iia. .'.I was reed"
ing about! It In a -editorial &' it was a
wunderfihly sensible-" edftorlal" s't that.
TheredttoriaJ s.ei . thaf , wen. you rfee). s
, vlent ft pr r&ge curatnng.on you the btit
thng to- do' it to chew ow a.' straw' or a
toothpiek &; that will 'draw : the blood
away from the brain. You ought to tr
that the next time you fly Into a rage.
.Husband, sed Ma. ,
' Bui; what" If I shud happen to fly into
a rage sum place where I cuddent find a
straw or a toothpick? sed Pa, Then what
'wild. J do? , '
Thare ws plenty of ttoothplcks In the
resterant whare we was the other nite,
jaed Ma, thare was eeven sum on. th.
jtabei, but you dident'eeyen try to chew
.one beefoar you h't that man that epoak
to me wen you were at the cigar counter.
Yo happened to hear what he sed, &
you newer even looked at a toothpick,
!oU knocked him out i made a scene
rite ia' the hotpl dining room. I heard
,a lady setting near me say that you were
a brute to. fite 1n a place ware peepul
dine.'-, -
Dear, dear, sed Pa. What a knock. Lis
sen, wife, sed Pa, ; I may be - a. brute,
wether I fight in a place ware peepul
dine or -wether I dine in a place ware
peepul ' Cte, but as long as thare are
warts-in th's wurld that go around trying
to win out with the ladies & acUng like,
cheap rat mashers, Just that long am
going to be brute enough to start ont
from my knee & flatten sumbody's nose.
Don't ask me to chew a toothpick to
keep my temper wen I have a reel cause
for losing it, Up Jn the woods wen 1
was a lumberjack, Pa sed, thay dldent
chew r toothpicks wen a fite calm up.
Thay chewed ears, Pa sed. Now let me
read the paper tt tonlte you and Bobbl6
cafl cum out to dinner with me.
Go last nlte we 'went to dinner at a
cafey on th Ave. wlch a trend of Pa's
had recommended to him. It - was a
pr'tty tuff place, & Vail of , us notised it
the minnut we sat down.
.Pa, I sed, thof-e two met oaver thare
looK like frun- men. .
Mercy, sed Ma, 1 am afrade, let us git
out of here.
Thare Is nothing to fear, sed Pa, thay
know wen thay look at me that you are
safe. ,- ..
Jen then one of the men started to
glare at Pa kind of hsrd A he sed so
loud that every body cud hear it: I know
that bis; stiff oaver thare with his lad
f rend 4 the kid. One time wen I was
broke he wutfdent buy me a drink. I've
got munny now, & I think I wll go oaver
& shove it down "h's throat. - : '
Lets git out. of here. Sfd Pa! Me &
Ma was as scared as Pa. ' So we can
celed out order & went. out A wen we
gat on the sidewalk Ma sed. Well no- j
bie hero, what are you doing with that
toothpick? ,
I afn chewing It sed Pa. '-
t
Many
Sharp-Noised Men
Key to the Situation-Bee Advertising.
By MARGARET HUBBARD AYER.
Beware of the man or woman with
sharp, thin nose. ,
- If you are about to marry ueR a per
son delay, linger and wait; if you have
married him or her, ' however, there is
still hope. The shape of the nose can be
changed; not with a surgeon's knife, but
Just by the proper use pf the nostrils.
Mrs. Marie Leavitt Clerk of the court
of domestic relations in Chicago, was the
first to aalt general attention to the mean
n ess of the man with the sharp, thin nose,
and to warn girls against bim.
Prof. Charles Munter is the one who
holds out hope for the person whose nasal
organ doesn't come up to the mark, nt
the same time explaining why you should
beware of (he1 man whose nose is too
long, too sharp and too thin.
Prof. Munter's mission in life Is to
make people breathe properly, and event
ually, almost .every one drifts into his
spacious and ornamental .office, for he
hss various side lines which Interest
many different kinds of people.
It wa this same Prof. -Munter who
woke the blind man from his hypnotic
sleep to Rhow him that he really could
see, and who recently has astonished the
musical world, and the medical faculty
especially, by hypnotising a beautiful
young girl ordinarily entirely without 'a
sipgtng voice, and transforming her into
a modern "Trilby" who can . sing both
high and low at command.
"Women should use the nose as a
kind of barometer of character when
selecting their husbands," Professor
Munter told me. "And for this reason:
The nos9 indicates accurately the physi
cal and mental functions ef the body;
In fact It . controls these functions. It
Is the medium through which the In
visible power of oxygen fs transmitted
to the internal organs, and It . is this
oxygen which goes to make up and
rebuild the Invisible life that Is beyond
the power of the individuals themselves.
"The general opinion, both of the pub
lic and the medical practitioner, is that
the bony protrusion extending beyond the
face regulates the shape of the nose, and
consequently, that we are not really re
sponsible for the shape pf our noses. But
this Is not true.
Kacn person maues his own nose-
creating It forming if and rechanging
It from time to time, according to the
amount of air draw through the nos
trils, through the deep breathing of the
lungs. ,
The nose you . want to avoid Is the
nose wnicn is pmcnea at the nostrils
and bulges a little at the point show
ing that some of the air is forced into
the tip of the nose instead of back and
up into it . . ... ,
'The nose can be compared to the
rudder of a vast ocean steamer, with
its great wealth, wonderful machinery,
Iced crew.
"All this wonderful ship is subject to
the invisible working of the simple rud
der which gives the ship the direction
in which it must go.
'The hose Is the rudder of the human
ship.
"The amount of air that rushes In
through the nostrils shapes and forms
the character as well as the body of the
man and It also shapes the nose.
"Every Individual Is what he breathes,
and his capacity lor doing good or wrong
depends upon the regularity of bis breatb-ltK.
iff v.
k Nt ! ' , '
I 1 ' ' -W &
V . ' ' " T'' S'f
i - - -' : ' 1 i : ' , , , ;: 4 1
Ip ' , , , . ' it-i-,,,,,,,,,,.!.,,,.. J
' n-lJ; y'i , '4" "
V i ? ' ' $ )' '-.T,".,wJf
V - t' iatr ( r d I
v ' 'tC V II P' f -
Jr r ' ' j ' I J I
MISS MARION GRAHAM.
Miss Graham had a sharp-pointed nose until Prof. Munter : took her In hnnd
and taught her how to breathe properly, Today her nostrils are well arched and
her general vitality is much improved., . y
"If one nostril Is lax, only half the
section of the brain is supplied with
air, and this makes the Individual - er
ratic, spasmodic and miserable within
himself.
"The small amount of oxygen which
he inhales produces Improper circulation
of the blopd, . and such a person sees
things in a distorted way, both his men
tal and physical vision showing imme
diate signs of the stoppage of the nasal
passage, or the badly developed nose,
"The narrow, thin nose, like the rudder
held straight, must Always go in one
direction. A person with a nose like this
follows, a narrow lane of human en
deavor, and his pessimistic view of things
narrows life down to a very fine point.
"He is straid. w deviate from the
beaten path himself, and he prevents
others from growing end enlarging,, be
cause he can only see the narrow, small
view of all existing things.
"The person with the narrow, thin
nostrils is governed by fear. Through
this laek of physical deep breathing and
consequent lack of mental exertion his
would one be necessarily doomed to pov
erty and failure?" I asked Prof- Munter. .
"No, indeed,"- asserted tbe master of
deep breathing eult "Look at this girl."
He pulled out a picture of Miss Marion
Graham, taken some time ago, before she
had begun the study of deeep breathings-
Her face was thin and emaciated; her
nose rather long and very narrow. To
day I have seen her, and she is a beauti
ful girl, with a' round, plump face and
welt arched nostrils, and living expon
ent of what deep breathing can do to
change the face as well at the nose aid
give health snd vitality to the body.
"This .young lady," said Prof. Munter,
"Is the. best proof of the-wenderful power
whtah lies in deep breathing, for she Is
the Jiving Trilby, Bhe was a frail, deli
cate little girl,-with a Sharp-pointed nose
Now she has not only overcome this ten
dency to a delicate constitution, but her
noftrllfl have widened, and there Is , a
plentiful supply of air being pumped into
the lungs every minute.
'Mies Graham's breathing orgsns are
so thoroughly developed through my con
tinual .teaching, and her mentality has
reached such a standard of efficiency,
him a valuable asset In the matrimonial
that by looking across the' room and per-,
mlttlng the power of a ray of light to
strlkt both hw, eyes I was sble tr get
Into such mental communication with the
student as to make her sing the most dif
ficult operatic selection, though1 she knows
nothing of music whatever." " .
Most girls would be willing to practice
deep breathing If they could successfully
accomplish the feats that Miss Graham
has performed. But the same practise,
according to prof. Munter,' will cure the
thin-nosed man of his dlefect and make
market. ..,
pletlon of the cork trees, an artificial" .
cork is desired, "
"The art of paper mailing, into which. !
60 per cent of our pine and hemioqW-,
passes, is, according to certain inquiries!
by no means in a satisfactory condition'.'; f
Owing to tariff conditions, actual and po' !
tentlal, and for other reasons, it is lecesu
nmy mvr w (nana paper wii.ii quail virBk
different from those that obtained in tKij;
past Thus a paper is now desired hail
ing a higher finish on a lighter weight:
and for a less cost. This is as yet an
unsolved problem.
"Did the paper makers but know it the.
solution of the problem of paper manu, '
facture and the provisions for- eheapej;
paper lie in the transformation of the'
nitrogenous waste material and resldu .
from the pulp mills into valuable an?; !
utlllsable chemical substances. It is in ,
credible that In this age of progress
per cent of the wood should pase'heedV '
lessly down the drains.
"The wood refuse from the sawmills,:
cornstalks, waste paper indeed, all kinds
of cellulose refuse are Industrially con- 1
vertlble into denatured alcohol, and con-','
sequentty many Inquiries arrive as to the.
industrial Value of such materials. . ,'t
"The only hampermant to the eonvejT
slon of wood refuse Into denatured aloo-
hnt tm thm fnf that th nrn.a. mT'
present in the hands of one corporation
and its ramifying .connections.. If then
holders of wood refuse will but 'bide a
wee until such time when, "through the
exhaustion "of an adequate gasoline supply
industrial alcohol becomes Inevitable as"
the source of power for automobiles and '
other power consuming mechanisms theyi
will find their material both useful and!
valuable. ; . ' '.'
"finally, in relation to this business o'
wood supply there are fiber-making plants.'
Whose' possibilities are hardly more" tha'ft'r
suspected. Down In New Mexico there; is f
an immensely plentiful and widespread'
form of vegetation known as the yucca
plant, or vulgarly, as the 'soap weed' or j
'pear grass.' This grass yields a fiber of
remarkable tensile strength and quality?:.;
The only reason that the fiber makng;
possibilities of the grass have not been? '
exploited is because it has not been prop-y '
erly Investigated by men of scientific e&tfe . '
cation and training." , '.
Fox Terrier as a Boozer
a stage
lungs are never expanded to their fullest
capacity, to he only assimilates about a
quarter of the food that he puts Into his
system, allowing the. rest to accumulate
and ferment, causing the Increase of
noxious gases.
"His narrow nostrils do not allow these
gases to scape, so they eventually
nscend to the brajn, befoa-jflns; It and
distorting the viwion, both mental and
physical. . v
"A thin, narrow-nosed Individual Is al
ways dyspeptic; the only time he reilly
breathes properly Is when he smells his!
food. He believes his nose rather than
his brain should designate the kind - of
food he Is to eat and consequently every'
thing tastes wropg that goes Into his
sytem, because he doesn't allow, a suf
ficient amount of oxygen to follow the
food and act ss draughts to consume the
muterlal put In the body.
"When you choose your partner In life
study his nose." continued Dr. Muntwr.
for the proper nose leads to success, ths
starved nostrils away from It to poverty."
"Suppose one bad long, thin nostrils,
The Gentle Cynio
: The high filer Is seldftm the one with
mm laeais. , .
Just because all the world's
don't try to be the whole show.
iwo or the greatest forcss are elec-
inmy ttna riattery.
The man who Is afraid to think foi
himself ought to get married. .
A man never realizes how many friend,
he hasn't till he needs a few.
wne man s point of view is as good
w miiuiuei o, uuut you iry 10 sit on It.
Also dont lore sight of the fact that
ma eariy worm catches the fish.
11.14 a 1 j1
mo . nailery is - expended on
women, the other half on. tombstones.
You can't plate any market value on
aav.ee until It has been used
An ounce of silence is sometimes more
eloquent than a pound of sermons.
A financier is one who takes advantage
D4 inn pining or a iooi ana nis money.
-iove, iixe a Kitten, , is born blind, but
It only takes a kitten nine days to get
us eyes upenes. inbw lorn Times.
rotated Paragraphs,'
He's a Poor' artist who Is ashamed nf
his colors. '
Getting married costs much legs than
being married.
One never gets too old to learn-not
even a chorus slrt.
Sometimes silence Is golden and some
times It indicates guilt.
Think as others think ' if you would
have them respect your opinions.
One way to get rich is by picking up
the money others throw away. -
Most of vs are fully convinced tht our
wrongs trample on our rights.
Nearly every rich man who dies has a
lot of heirs in the guise of lawyers.
Throw mud at a man snd most, of It
falls off; throw flattery at him snd. It
sticks.
If there Is anything in the world more
changeable than a woman It Is some
other woman.
If you think you are riftht, go ahaal
but don't be disappointed If the crowd
dnawn'l follow vnu Clilaajro Km
Bosco, a little fox terrier inhabiting the:; ,
corner of Western avenue and Madison.: ,
street, Chicago, lays no claim to a must, j ,
eal ear, a speaking tongue or an eya for.
art, but his claim to near humanity Is
based on the fact that nightly he ae
quires a Joyous Jag. '
Bosco belongs to no . One. His Jove of '
the amber thirst extinguisher has so
lowered his "doghood" that even his fam
ily epoak of him In shamed whispers and ,
the neighbors in dogdom tell of his latest
misdeeds in the sewing circles and at tV
parties of dog biscuits and watef.
every nignt bosco leaves his home,
wherever it may be, and trots soberly to.
the comer of Madison street and Western,,
avenue: He enters the first saloon, puts
his paws against the bar and barks. Ths i
bartender, ' through long association, han,
learned to translate that bark Into "orwT.
long cold one." . The beer Is placed pn thV4;
the "collar,' absorbs the "suds." 1 -A
No drink is complete without a little
lunch, and so the next stop in Bosco's '
"Jag procuring" process is a trip to th
free lunch counter.. h
Bosco will stay in this saloon Just nnn
long as any one will buy. He forgets his,
If his welcome i worn out before his
thirst Bosco will leave on saloon and tro
across the street to another, , where the
Fame process is repeated. By closing time,,,
will stagger, bark In a loud voice an ,
oner to tight any other member of tn
canine family that enters.
If by 1 o'clock he is unable to walk
without assistance he Is given a bed lijvf
the cellar pf the last saloon. ' '.. ' '
Bosco has resisted the tender pleadlngaM
of his family for many weks and haj'
turned a deaf ear to the prayers of theYj
Sanation army, which holds meetings'
nightly at the corner, to turn from his-"-'
evil ways and become a real dog. ChtQ
csgo Record-Herald,
Two-Line Ticklers.'
Second thoughts may be best, but they
are always on time. - . , y
The fireman's sure of a warm reception
When he goes to work. ; . ;..,
tfou rarely find a girl with teeth Uke -i
pearls dumb as an oyster. .
Even if money Is called hard cash it's- a-,1
nice thing to fall back on. - , ;
Get busy and attend to business but X.p'1
sure It Is your own business. .
It would be a poor. business policy .
a fruit dealer to keep. ail his dates.. ..-
A man and his w fe may be one, but t
is necessary to provide for two. . 5 .
The eaeleft way for ari ambitious youngf (
doctor to make his mark Is to vaccinal i !
. n . u . nri. f . '