Loap City Norilwtsteri i V BCKLSGM. PnbBdhar LOUFUTY I - I MMUPKi la this weather freckle* rtpea rap id!? The hospitals should be 'aformed la tiae whether we are to hare a aoiao k« Fusrtb or not The Delaware peach grower* bow admit w«l tears ta their eye* that their pea^t crap is Bat destroyed at aB The value of a fish as a suhstltote fur beefsteak Is likely to tahe some of Che wm i out of this summer's fish la* poetry. The aaaual war is to begin oa w* dittoes Pst the little pests seem to hare the best end at It. and hat is the n t f [ eng Aa Indiana novelist* father has take* to P»rstar* Indiana may add to tta achievements hy showing that heredity works loth saft The czarerltrk at the age of sir ran away from beat the other day. with am idea of going to sea Some kids doat know wt>~* they are well off. A grand opera trust is threatened and the ultimate consumer Is wcoder tog another he will hare to get an •orwrdeon and do Ms owa vocalizing. Wonder tf that fellow who stole the i:f Ml picture la California a few days ago. did it to satisfy the cravings «f a hungry sod or aa empty stomach After being shakes by 3» earth wake* la a day. there Is no doubting the reports that real estate is show tag roe lid trabi* artlnty Is Costa Xcgwf-hsfaading tbe fact that young l»dy ticket sellers km beea Installed *• hos cfke <4 one at the Chicago theaters the demand for passes will be as brisk m ever. Longfellow's blacksmith of “the spreading chestnut tree" has Just died •gale, though he has been burled a number of times He Is becoming a rival. In this way. at "he last survivor at the "Charge *4 the s»s Hundred " In buying an automobile it to bet ter to select one of a kind that can be obtained wtthoat mortgaging any thing as a preliminary being careful, at the same time, to see that you have enough money in bank to pay for a year s repairing A Re'gtaa aeroplane carrying two me® has remained !* tbe air two hoars and twenty minutes, the longest fflcht by tarty-9ve minutes The hazards at aeronautics have no effect am the nerve and enthusiasm of tbe daring sky (dots A maa ta Connecticut committed •ulride with a million dollars wroth *4 stacks and bonds ia kts valise How a cat with at this money in hand could be tired of life Is a mys tery which If too dr use for the aver age dtiarn to penetrate A snrdral operatic* was performed en the bend of a California hoy re cently for the pL-pcn* <4 curing him af era tendencies It to reported to have been a fcflare There may stttZ te a chance, though fVrhaps aa op eratton with a serviceable slipprr would have the desired effect. A r»ah r iianfiss i d of married women af TVente*. X J, after * careful ia looptku has decided that wedded bliss carte* he insured without chib drew It to to be taken tar granted ■bat the members of the dub are not ladies whs tlfdst «n living at fash ion able family hotels and keeping pet A Aataen* of as Egyptian gnddea*. cm «f tte trewsnre* of tte Metropol Itw Hoars® rf Art t* New Ynrk and shirk cart SLSM. althc-gb tte art mine **» aery nserh greater, wa« •telex by ax im pecuniae* ristior and pawned tar S* cent*. Wtee goddess *» ca a! that rate ate wfa dery that ttk a aa Irreverent ace* Tte tide of immigration la roc tins teg aad terreasteg Tte authorities at Washington rati mate tkat tte ar rival* during tte present year w!E te not less than UN.W. shirk *-.51 <«ot done s# the rmrt Tte fig ore* sere l.tCT «2i in lfi«. IJOO.T53 ta Itad and 1 ~HM9 te 1*07 Tte cask This year stews tkat tte «-ffer* rf tte “panic' of IH7 Las jeer sell * am off Xow tte war® ha* turned Tte girl ersttenai’y accused of most at fte rrfis of tte nation by ter extra* seance and have of dress has a rham ydon m a young college *» freak egg* going into storage plants at present meet yearitags con »** och known la save It* wearers' fires b] taming aside ballets and dagger* Now tte equally abused “rat" to ap j^mr^g in tte news fimetight as ate string feminine fife in fact, then (rlTubilen of faateoa appear to plaj tte same part In feminine liic-sarinj ss tte famoas lore letter package* an< matter*' pocket Bible* da with th. —txiaimgee: Helen of Troy By ROYAL N. GREEN Fred Erickson was heart-keen to the fact that he loved the girt. but. as let. he had raid nothing to her about tt_ In fact he had never spoken to her They were not acquainted with each other It was what Is railed love at first tight— that It. as far as Fred was con cerned The first time be saw her she was sitting opposite him on a belt line car going from Albany to Troy, and his susceptible heart had gone pit-a pat. Chance thrust them together often after that, but without an op portunity to become acquainted. Erickson, a young lawyer located In Albany, should have been giving his whole attention to the theories of a practice that was yet to come. In s'ead be dreamed the long office hours through, and all bis dreams were of the fair unknown. This fascinating girl was. In points of beauty, a maid to marvel at. Her eyes were dusky wells of midnight with long, dark lashes that half hid the depths of them, and the black of these contrasted strangely with the white of her satiny skin. All in all. she was. from her daintily arranged hair to the tips of her tiny shoes, the sweetest g:rl creation that had ever come to the ken of Fred Erickson. He longed to meet her. Here romance stepped in. If Helen Landen—this was her name —tad ever cast a calculating eye over the tall, serious faced youth who ap peared so frequently to'her. she did so without due knowledge of what fates had in store. Kingston's circus, a mighty army of tents, opened in Albany to play two dates, afternoon and evening, with all the pomp and ceremony of that digni fied institution Erickson attended the evening performance Spangled per formers crowded the three rings in marvelous act after act. An army of "O. W*ut a Great Bract. clow-s capered to queer pranks, and. a* always, tbe cirrus was a pulsating Caere**—a gaudy, glittering success After tbe concert. Erickson and a friewd bound themselves leisurely strolling through the menagerie tent A mighty elephant, almost tbe peer of tbe famous Jumbo In site. Interested them Its crafty eves weje sparkling with intelligence Its calm, calculating aurvey of the curious ones who gath ered to do It honor, was majestic regal Its swaying trunk, vitally rest *•**■ raised itself above them occa sionally as if delivering a her.icon A tiakltng cadence of girlish tough ter from behind the youth again caused the erratic bean vibrations in his breast, responsive to only one maid, and Erickson turned His face flushed as be gazed at her She was with an elde-fy person—evidently her fa'her. Her nearness caused the youth to fear for kunself. it seemed to him that he must turn and crush her in his arms *hat ■ great beast!" The girl turned to her father "I wonder if she is cross*" The elderly person looked Inquiring ly toward a keeper who stood at some litile distance "Not a: all." answered the attend ant. “Mildest mannered animal in captivity, and tbe largest. Bess here knows morn seme folks, she does." The girl stepped daintily forward, a •mile curving her red lips, and the pert little nose of her s wrinkled in amusement ”! m going to feed her." she said Tbe elephant graciously accepted an absurdly small bon bon. and seemed to wink a knowing eye at Erickson, who glared enviously. “Tbe tiger is out!" A hoarse voice raised the cry and in an instant the tent was mob mad Women screamed and fainted. Children wailed and men cursed. To add to the pandemo mum. the gasoline lights flickered des perately in the wind created by the panic-stricken crowd—and went out A Mine scream rose above the noise and an animal chorus quickly respond ed Elephants trumpeted. Lions roared Tbe camels lifted their voice? In uncanny shrieks, and excitemeni was the order of the moment Erickson, stricken dumb, sudden! v recovered himself and reached oui band arms for the girl His first thoughts were of her She must be rescued at all hazards Just as his satisfied hands came it contact with her. a velvety someth inf brushed curiously across his face, anc then sadden y dropped to his waist— thetr waists—and the two were liftee high In the sir to be placed gently o: tbe back of the elephant The girl gave a frightened hal: i scream, and her little hinds consul ' wveiy clutched the arm of her com pat km. “What wht what to lt*“ she gasped i Erickson thrilled at her touch "Don't be frightened." he said. “Thi big etoptrst has picked os up. and tor some it axon. ptoctii us on hei i back Just at present 4t is the safest place in the tent. We are out of the struggling crowd, and away from the tiger. Hello! What's happening?" The elephant was beginning to move. Slowly, cumbersomely. like the heavy body that it was. the great . mass of flesh began to get under way. and in a moment the two upon the beast's back found themselves under the starry sky. Save for a scurrying ■ circus man. here and there, the stretch of green about the tents was deserted. The girl kept tight hold of the exultant youth, although the broad back and gentle motion of the now rapidly moving Bess were not calcu i late* to precipitate a fall. "O. I 1 am so frightened." gasped the damsel Her hands convulsively j gripped the youth's arm. Erickson was not tightened. He was hilariously i happy. From behind them came hoarse shouts, and the elephant, hearing, quickened his pace. Had Erickson been a solitary rider, he would have slid to the ground, but now he was pleasantly impressed with a sense of guardianship. i\eep up your nerve, came from i young attorney. "The elephant Is running away with us. but he is not dangerous. We are safe enough. The keepers and circus men are trying to j catch us." Suddenly the beast plunged off the moon lit road and into a lane, slowing up and stopping as it came to a tall free. The sensitive trunk cautiously rose to investigate the lower branches, and then, with a despairing squeal, a long-tailed spider-monkey was brought from a sheltering clump of leaves, and passed carefully back and into thq very hands of Erickson. The lawyer laughed. “O. how sweet." ventured the girl, j ijet fear suddenly gone. "And how do I you suppose the elephant knew he I was in this tree?" "Pm sure I don't know. It seems to , have been her sole errand for she is \ now going back." i Sure enough, the great beast was j now retracing her footsteps. In a few minutes she had come to ■ the pack that had been following her. ; With the sang froid of a calculating { human, the animal reached a careful j frunk around and placed her passen ; cers. one at a time, on the ground. ' Then the same impressable organ re | iieved Erickson of his chattering charge, and without waiting for her j escort the elephant ambled on. turn j ing a quizzical eye to her late riders as she did so. It de\ eloped that the tiger was still a captive. The panic had been started by some mischief maker, but the rush ing. scrambling crowd had alarmed the animals, and the monkey cage had | been overturned by the crazy exit of j the masses. The little simian rescued by the big pachyderm had been an es pecial pet of the trainer having Bess j in charge How she knew the monkey a as hidden in the tree, no one knew. “Weil." said the girl, flushing as she : turned to Erickson “1 am sure that I shall never care to see another cir ' cus." "I shall always have a friendly feel irg for them." answered the youth meaningly, and the flush on the girl's cheeks deepened to an alarming red "Inasmuch as It will be useless to attempt to And your escort. I must In j sist upon seeing you safely to your [ home " "You don't hsve to—to Insist," an swered Helen linden, softly. The Stony British Glare. Lord Crewe made a very Interesting little speech the other day at the an nual meeting of the Atlantic union, a society which works for the Improve ment of Anglo American cordiality and of the relations between English men and men of other nations general j ly. He said that one grave cause of ! international misunderstanding was our "notorious stiffness of demeanor." 1 and he referred to that delightful drawing by Du Maurier in Punch in | which the table d’hote of a foreign j hotel in the slack season was depleted as populated only by two Englishmen, ; sitting at opposite ends of the table, glaring speechlessly at each other. All that be said was true enough. We are undemonstrative. We are not men and brothers the whole world round as we should be. and as we shall be j when Robert Burns’ millennium comes at last. If we may be allowed to say so, we can hardly picture Lord Crewe { himself responding with a leap into j the air and a joyful howl to the “How do. sonny?" of an Ontario mine mana ger. He would probably smile charm ingly. bow most courteously and ex tend a friendly hand; but the colonist would take all that for coolness and the Atlantic union would have to ex plain.—London Evening Standard. Practise Hard to Eradicate. It has been stated frequently during the last year or two that the prictise of artificially deforming women’s feet Is dying out in China. This strange ; method of beautification, differing only in degree from the practise, not un known among white women, of wear ing leather shoes several sizes toe small for the feet, has been for many years practically universal among the : real Chinese w omen. The ruling race of the country has. it U said, never practised it. Despite the work of the anti-foot binding society, says a Eu ropean traveler now in China, fully 95 J per cent, of the Chinese women still present mutilated feet. Imperial edicts have been launched against the practise, and may eventually drive it out of use, but as yet little improve ment is apparent. Sympathy Appreciated by the Sick. Sympathy and tact will often prove a greater benefit to the sick than the most skilful treatment given in a cold, indifferent war. The Wise Man and the Fool. A tool’s heart Is in his tongue, but a wise man's tongue is In his heart.— Quarles. BRITAIN MAY BUY BIG FRENCH DIRIGIBLE BALLOON i~ne- cz.i77£v>T zl LONDON.—Even the death of the king cannot long stop the business of the government, and within a tew days the parliamentary aerial defense committee will resume consideration of the plan to purchase the great dirigible balloon. Clement Bayard II., that has been built in France. This monster airship is to attempt a trip across the channel, landing at Wormwood Scrubbs. and will be submitted to tests by the parliamentary committee, which has an option on it. WAGER ON BEETLES -:- * Chinese Gather in New York on Sunday to Enjoy Sport. Two Small Insects Are Dropped in Porcelain Bowl and Bets Are Made on All Sorts of Chances —Fight to Death. New York.—How Guns at your Chi nese laundry may seem the meekest person in the world, but on Sunday Morning at about four o'clock he is * changed How Guns. How Gung is dressed In his best tnd he is smoking his fortieth cigar ?tte In a low, dirty room blue with :he smoke of many hundred other cigarettes that have been smoked. All How Gung's fellows are there with aim. and they're all gathered around t little table. Two two-inch beetles are fighting Tor their individual lives In a porce lain bowl placed In the center of the table. One of the beetles has a white lot on his wing case. The other has a spot of blue. The Chinese have wagered their money on white or on blue, as fancy or appearance of the contestants may have decided. The proprietor previous to the com mencement of the fight exhibits his two bits of live stock to the frequent ers. One of them tries out the man dibles of the favorite, letting him pinch his finger with them, to Judge his probable fighting strength. The dialogue is high pitched, nasal and noisy, and It looks as though a fight were going to start at any moment. But they're only making their bets t* things are being made ready for the big fight In the porcelain bowl. The proprietor drops the two beetles Into the bowl. Lights are brought close around on the table and the gang crowd and Jostle each other to get a good view of what Is going on The two beetles make a preliminary blundering circle around each other, clumsily clashing their mandibles Suddenly white dashes In at blue. The Chinese stand like statues. White has rushed at blue with wide open mandibles. Blue's mandibles are open too. They Interlock and soon are pulling against each other. The six legs of each contestant slip a little on the smooth, white porce lain. The effort Is to turn an op ponent over on his back, for he would then be helpless, and the con testants are striving In s sort of wrestling match. The clamor starts again. Side bets are placed on alt sort of possibilities. Will the fight last an hour? A bet Is posted and covered. Will white let go within five minutes? There Is another bet. Suddenly the whole bunched crowd Quivers with excitement- Blue has suddenly broken away from white, and there Is a little chip off the Inner edge ot his mandible where white's mandible has sawed It. Blue Is act ive now. He Isn't clumsy any more. He backs up the sloping side of the bowl, all his tittle legs going like lightning. Soon white has lost his strongest leg on the left side, and blue has lost a right foot. The beetles grind their mandibles and scrape and tinkle on Whisky in Heart of Tree Wood Choppers In Iowa Park Make Unique Discovery—How Did Liquor Get There? Council Bluffs. Ia.—President Gra ham of the park board found that there were too many trees In Bayliss park, a breathing spot In the cen ter of the city, so he concluded to cut out a number of the maples that were planted more than fifty years ago. when Council Bluffs was first given a place upon the map of Iowa. One particular tree. In the course of a new path that was proposed, was marked for the sacrifice. The chop pers felled this tree, finding It solid from circumference to center. Saw ing the trunk into four foot lengths, eight feet from the butt, the saw just missed a long-necked black bot tle. The choppers carefully hewed away the wood and brought forth lightly corked, a bottle of one-pint capacity, filled with liquor. It was sampled by experts, who pronounced ft whisky of a superior quality. How the bottle of whisky got intc the center of the huge maple tree Is a mystery. Counting the rings of wood from the place where the bottle was lodged, each one of which repre sents a year's growth. It must have been there 50 years. The bottle and contents have been placed in the pub lic library as a curio. WILL MEASURE ALL HATPINS How Police of Indianapolis Will En deavor to Enforce City Ordinance —Carry Rules. Indianapolis. Ind.—The difficulty of enforcing the hatpin ordinance, which fixes a fine for wearing a pin that protrudes a half-inch beyond the brim of the hat. has been solved by Mayor Shank and Police Superintend ent Hyland, in so tar as detenuinins liability under the law Is concerned. The police are to be provided with little stiver plated or steel scales about two inches long and marked tn Inches, halves, quarters and eighths, so that the exact length of the pro trading end may be determined J when an arrest Is made. The mayor feels that there nay be difficulty In enforcing the ordinance, as prominent society people may vio late It. and he does not want the offi cers to make any mistakes Where an officer believes that the ordinance is being violated he will be required to take the exact measurement of the protruding end so that the fact may be established in court without doubt. Grows Blue Rose. Morrtstowo. N. J.—A blue rose, something for which the horticul turists have long striven in vain, has been achieved at last by a Morristown amateur. The plant is a seedling of an ordinary crimson rambler. The flowers on opening have a purplisb pink shade wbch later develops .nto a . brilliant steel hue. the porcelain arena. White tries to get at an angle with blue to make up the loss. The Chinese look on in tense excitement, commenting loudly from moment to moment, and posting up all kinds of side bets, for there is an interchange of money going on now. White Isn't downed by any means, even if he is wounded. He can live for days in a perfect vacuum if need ! be, and the loss of air doesn't appear , to hurt him. He rushes at blue, fresh and chipper, for all that can be seen. The fight Is on once more. We're not really interested In the fight so much as we are interested in ' How Chung How Chung is living his | life now. You can see it in his tense j attitude and his eyes—not in his face, ; which is immobile. The hour drags i to an end. white and blue battling. : Suddenly there is a change. Poor i white is exhausted. He strives to j climb the bowl with his three legs, for 1 he has lost two on one side by now and one on the other. He slips and I slides on the smooth chinaware. lllue ! clambers painfully after him. still full i of fight, for white has been no mean ' opponent all this time and has dam aged blue. They fall down to the cen ter of the bowl again and again. At last blue gets a perfect grip on w hite's throat. Snip. snip, snop, go his • mandibles at the thorax of white, and ' white's head is half separated from i his body. A wave of Cantonese surges up. ' Everybody talks at once and bets are paid up. j | HORSE GETS DRUNK ON WINE Imbibes Better Part of Cask of Wine and Queer Actions Block Street Traffic in Chicago. Chicago.—A horse belonging to Wil liam Britten, an expressman, was standing in front of the North Side Ttirner hall, on Clark street, the other afternoon. A cask of wine, which was being unloaded from a truck, fell and broke open. The fragrant liquid ran into the gutter and the horse, sniffing It. bent down and drank. The more the horse drank the better It liked it apparently. Anyway It drank a couple of bucketsful of the wine. In something like three minutes the horse began to act strangely. It reared Its head and pranced like a charger. There was a fine light of exaltation in its eye. Then It stepped unsteadily out Into the middle of the street and began to neigh. A big crowd gathered, but no one dared approach the horse and traffic ' on the street came to a standstill. Some one turned In a riot call and the police came. The horse gased at the police and winked maudlin'y. The police gated at the horse and the broken wine cask and winked at the crowd. Then one of the officers secured a lump of sugar. He gave It to the horse and started down the street. The horse, still very unsteady on Its pins, trotted after the policeman In the hope of getting more sugar. That broke the blockade. Britten later said that when he went into the horse’s stall to see how It was getting along, it was groaning deeply and the groans sounded to hint like "Never again." 1 Hunting Elusive Cow Frog — Boys of Gtnmi Val'ey. Now York. | - Sot Out Thoir Jocklights, for the Season Is On. Genesee. N. Y.—At last the music of the frogs has begun and the hoys are now getting out their Jaekllghts and J preparing for business. Thousands of t frogs live In the big Genesee valley swamp, sis or seven miles up the val ley. hut the favorite hunting ground Is not that locality, but the swamp above Coo ecus'lake, about an equal distance : from here. The reason for this preference Is that they are easier to capture there; that the Cones us lake swamp Is not so difficult of access; also, that It la the favorite haunt of the big cow frog, so called because of his voice, which some liken to the hellowing of a cow, while others Insist that It resembles I more closely the sound of a distant ! sawmill In action. The Groveland swamp, on the other hand, contains mostly the common variety, known to naturalists as the grass frog. tn hunting frogs at Conesns one must take a boat up the Inlet and swing along the reeds, and by holding up a lacklight so daixle the big hatrachlans that they can be picked up with the hand. This does not mean that one can take his time about It, however. When he proceeds to gather Mr. Cow Frog In he must have hls oarsman push the boat up close, so that he Is within reaching distance of the prey, and while he holds the light with one hand, make a fell swoop with the other. If he does not get his slip pery friend at the first grab, he may I as well row along in search of the next frog, as the sudden movement seems to bring the frog out of hts trance. After a person once becomes expert, though, he seldom misses a Stab. The row frog, be It known, has noth tng in common with the ordinary green or grass frog, so far as st»e Is concerned. He often eats several of the ordinary frogs at a meal, wtthout giving the matter a second thought. In color, also, he does not resemble the ordinary frog, for hts Is dark green, al most Mack, on top and bright yelhsw or cream color on hts belly. As to eating qualities, the big fellow Is de licious. Novices cut off his bird legs and eat them, but others cut off Ms head, remove the entrails, skin him from his neck to his toes and fry him in butter. Prepared In that way he will still weigh half a pound, and were It-not for the fact that so much of him "cooks away," It would not take more than half a dosen to make a mess for a good-sited family. Cat as Mother of Chicks Harrisburg. Pa.—A queer case of foster motherhood has been developed at the home of Lewis Flnfrock. Jr.,; where a cat which lost a litter ot kittens has adopted a brood of nice ; chickens which lost their own mother i about the same time. The cat Is unable to call the peeps so that they knew tt, but she makes a fair attempt at scratching up food for 1 them, and cuddles them "under her I “wing." AFTER SUFFERS ONEYEAR Cored by Lydia E. Pink ham’sVegetable Compound Milwaukee, Wis. — “Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound has made me a weu woman, and I would like to tell thewholeworhl of it. 1 suffered fromfemale trouble and fearful rains in mj back. 1 had the best doctors and " decided a tumor a to nu* female trouble, ana advised an opera i__l non. i-yuia r PinkhamW Vegetable Compound made me a well woman and I have no more backache. I hope I can help others by tolling them what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me.'*—Mrs. EuxaIxse. S3S first St, Milwaukee, Wis. The above is only one of the thou sands of grateful letters which are constantly being received by the Pinkham Medicine Company of I.ynn. Mass., which prove beyond a doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Com pound. made from roots ami herbs; actuauv does cure these obstinate dis eases o'f women after all other means have failed, and that every such suf ering woman owes it to herself to at least give l^rdia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound a trial before submit ting to an operation, or giving up hope of recovery. Mrs. Pinkham. of Lynn. Mass, invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health anu her advice is free. GOOD AND WARM. r-1 ,$.^***^ First Office Bay—l hesr your usde it hot for you yestenisy Second Office I'oy—Vos i he firx'ii nu\ BABY'S SCALP CRUSTED "Our little daughter, when three months etd. began to break out on the bead and we had the best dvx-tors to treat her. but the? did not do her any good. They said she had ectema. Her scalp was a solid scale all over. The burning and itching w as so severe that she could not rest, day or night. We had about given up all hopes when we read of the Outicura Remedies. We at once got n cake of Outicura Soap, a box of Outicura Otntmeni and one bot tle of Outicura Resolvent, and fol lowed directions carefully. After the first dose of the Outicura Resolvent, we used the Outicura Soap freely and applied the Outicura Ointment Then she began to improve rapidly and in two weeks the scale came oft her head and new hair began to grow la a very short time she was well. She is now sixteen years of age and a pS> ture of health We used the Outl et) ra Remedies about five weeks, reg ularly. and then we could not tell she had Ne# affected hy the disease We used no other treatments after we found out what the Outicura Remedies would do for her. J Fish and Rlla V Rah. ill. Vernon. Ky„ Oct. IS. 1W* Not Exactly want Site Meant. She—We've bin very busy at the mothers' meetin gettin" ready for the sale of w ork He—Oh! | 'opes it will he a success. She—Yes. I think so. yer see the vicar is goin' to take most of our clothes off of us.—Tatier. St tTVSS > OK SKXKNTX X V VK< T*-’. ts «*»-,-{ I-."x.--.. o*. tv»M» rwwUy K-* J»rrW*» -*y*-»**pi U4 »• v«*> f\^ey*» n)v «;<■! tlw SJv. ,Cv mu .Vv. Many a man fails to make pel be cause he spends most of his time try ing to prove that luck Is against him Vrv WtMlov'i Swt S Itvt Syvwp. -..... . ....... ■ t. . I. We.