sf THE' BEE! OMAHA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER '31, 1916. 15 Personal Gossip :' Society Notes : Woman's Work : Household Topics October 30, 1916. Ruth St. Denis was no stranger to the guests asked in to tea Sunday afternoon by Miss May Mahoney to" meet the celebrated dancer and her husband, Ted Shawn. She and Mrs. E. M. Fairfield had met in the Met ropolitan museum in New York, where the dancer haunted the lec ture halls when old Chinese, Oriental or Grecian art was the subject of dis sertion. Mrs. Edward Creighton had also met Miss St. Denis before:" When Mrs. Creighton as Hazel Council was attending Miss Hnch's exclusive school in New York Miss St. Denis was the exponent of the dance there. Mrs. Wayland Magce, who was in Berlin eight or nine years ago, when Ruth St. Denis made her de but in the German capital, just missed teeing her dance there, but she mo tored in from Summer Hill farm es pecially to" see Miss St. Denis dance this time, as well as meeting her at the tea. Distinction is given the celebrated dancer by her prematurely white hair. This, combined with hef youthful countenance and large gray eyes, makes her face one not soon to be forgotten. Her lissome, graceful figure was clothed in a simple gray silk gown. Many of Miss Mahoney's guests commented on the striking resem blance that Ted Shawn and John Rayley, a guest at the tea, bear- to each other. Both men wore the same color suits and Mr. Rayley's friends assure him, sinc he devotes himself almost as assiduously to tcrpsichore, he may masquerade as the well-known dancer's partner. How many men attended the sup posedly feminine diversion of after noon tea to meet the social "lioness" was interesting to note. Mr. Charles T. Kountze, Mr. J. de Forest Rich ards, Mr. Myron Learned, Mr. C. D. Armstrong, 'Mr. E. M. Fairfield, Mr. E. M. Slater, Mr. Edward Creighton, Mr. T. R. Rutledge, Mr Martin Har ris were a few who accompanied their wives and were presented to Miss St. Denis. Robet Burns, Jack Baldwin, C. E. Hall and a few more bachelors were also tempted by "a cup of tea." Neighborly Kensingeton. The Neighborly kensington was en tertained Friday at the home of Mrs, D. Farley. Prizes were won by Mrs. H. Philoott and Mrs. F. Morrison, The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. F. Gewinner. Those present were: Mesdsmee C. Zlebarth, ' B. D. SUn, B. B. Anderson, P. Morrison, H. L. Byxbe. C. 8. Delehoy, H. Phllpott, F. Morrison, jr., MMdames E, Harvey, F. Davis, J. H. Peritll, D. Farley, C. Thatcher, R. Mullen, Thompson, F. Gewlnner. rial Anrfirtrt Rnrlcr flllb Mrs. L. M. Beard entertained the '.Dale Auction Bridge club Friday aft ernoon. High score was made by Mrs. J. B. Ftadenberg. Society Night Parties. Parties of six or less -will be en tertained at the Orpheum this eve ning by H. 0. Mann, Henry Benford, J. E. George, Norris Brown, O. C. Redick, J. T. Stewart, C. L. Burdick, C. F. Copeland, L. M. Cohan, Carl Furth, N. R. Hamilton, L. Hill, Dr. H. A.- Waggener, W. M. Jeffers, R. A. Newell and Judge Baker. For the Tuesday matinee" Warren Switzler has reservations for twelve. The same evening Mrs. Arthur Crit tenden Smith will have a party of seven in a box. For the Wednesday matinee reservations have been made tM a Mt-tv r,( i hv G. H. Pratt, for five by C. L. Wilson and for twelve by Mrs. Tony oaraner. inursaay evening A. Palmer will have a party of eighteen, Friday evening H. Elli son will have eleven. Saturday after noon Mrs. Charles Kise will have twenty in a box party and Miss Anna T .... ,.,;11 1i,ih iffht Dr. and Mrs. John Mach wilt have with them in a box Mr. ana Mrs. r. A. Hauser. W. G. Preston will have a party of eight this evening. Allen-Nichols Wedding. ...... The marriage of Miss Iva Nichols, J t Mr mil Mr. W. R. Nichols, J Mr. Raymond "Allen of McCook, Neb., took place Saturday : . Ua V,r.m nf th hnne t evening i " -V T er. parents, the Rev. Oliver Keeve offi ciating. , The bride s gown was of white taf feta with trimmings of silver lace. sne carriea a suuwc. u, and lilies of the valley. Mrs. -Charles Hudson, sister of the bride, attended her. She wore her wedding gown of white satin and carried Killarney roses, ueorge nucn, orauiti bridegroom was best man. Miss Mildred Frost, cousin of the bride, played the wedding march and Mrs. f. E. Pulvcr sang1 "Because." Mr. and Mrs. Allen left for a south ern wedding trip. They will be at l - . 'Ti,mhf. 1 ar frCnnk jiuuic ..v.... - - -- ; The bride's traveling dress was of opossum tur ana witn nat to maicn. O. T. Club. The O. T. club of Central High school had a long rushing frolic Sat ..AV Aftr liinrhrnn at the home of Miss Gertrude Koenig the club at tended the hign scnool loot oan game, Then in a hayrack they drove to Ben anA umifiH n the evening bv playing Hallowe'en games at the home ot Miss L.ymn Durnciu members and their guests were: Misses Misses Lrdla Burnett, Hda lnden. Catherine Ooss. Donna McDonald, Josephine Latenser, Florice Sha Jean Kennedy, Oertmde Peycke, Dorothy Norton, Helen Rfls-ers. Wynn Fairfield, Josephine Platner, Cornelia Baum. Rutn Miller, Gertrude Koenlg, Jostrn Stone, Paulino Coad. Betty Fairfield, t Ami. Whist Club. Mrs. H. B. Crouch entertained the members of Les Amies Whist club Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Charles Weber and Miss Grace Mickel won t.:i. Tk ,lk wilt mrt in two weeks with Mrs. John J. Din- TTinats Pliih Partv. The Hinata club gave a Hallowe'en nsrtv Saturday evening at the home of Miss Ruth Shackleford. Fortune telling, Hallowe'en games and music occuDied the evening. Miss Thelma Eberhart read. Hallowe'en decora tions and refreshments were used. Those present were: Misses- '.MldSCII Anna Qieb. PhuIs Kaufman, RIIW Res, Pauline Robinson, Iva Htoushton, Kthel Powers, Marjorls Shaclfleford, Ruth Finite. I.llllan N'AKlachek. Uladys Nlrhol. III.. lye Ketrham, .Marfan Kings, Thelms Kberhart. Nielsen-Pedersen Wedding. The marriage of Miss Anna Peder sen to Mr. Chris 0. Nielsen will take place this evening at the home of the bride's father, Mr. J. C. l'cderseil. Birthday Party. Mrs. J. Mattern gave a Hallowe'en birthday party Saturday afternoon for the seventh anniversary of her daugh ter, listellc. A birthday cake lighted with seven colored candles occupied the center of the 'table. Gaines were played during the afternoon by the following little guests: Elinor Lynch, Veronica Lynch. l.urlnne Morearty, Mary J. Hoffman, Marjory Morearty, Veronica Hoffman, lOllcfln Mlchaelsen, Mary Flynn. Lillian Beard. Bcrnlce Anderson, Dorothy Dyhberg, Dorothy Collins, Kllen Lynch, Bernlce Wlnqulst, Patricia Lynch, Ellen Mattern. - Parties for Powys Lecture. Mrs. Charles T. Kountze had as her guests for the Powys lecture this aft ernoon: Mesdames Mesdsmea J. E. Summers. Win. Sears PoDDleton. Joseph Barker, W. R. McKeen, w. A. Redick, Osgood T. Eastman. With Mrs. P. F. Peterson in her box were: Mesdames Mesdames E. O. McOilton, C. Sellack, O. E. Burke. C. K McDonald, C. R. Sherman, F. Barret. A. W. Carpenter, Miss Gertrude Tinley of Council Bluffs had as her guests: tltsses Misses Beatrice Tinley, Irene Klnts, Lucy Springer, Katherlsa. Beno. Mrs. Frank Plnney. In Mrs. Barton Millard's box were: Mesdames Mesdames Oeorite Redick, Dentee Rarkalow. Charles E. Metl, John Redick. Lou Clarke, Mrs. A. L. Reed also entertained at a box party at the lecture. Birthday Surprise Party. A party of young people surprised Mr. Joseph Krejci on his sixteenth birthday .yesterday afternoon at . the home of vMr. and Mrs. J. J. Tritz in Benson. Prizes were won by Louise Baehr and Frank Sudgle.' Those present were: Misses Mamie Trlts, Luclle Hofmann, Edna Henningsen, Matilda Kucera, Josephine TrRs, Messrs. Joseph Krejcl, Arthur Chalupsky, Edgar Morris, Misses Louise Baehr, Wllhelmlna Welsh, Kathryn Tamensind, Wilms Baehr. Mesars. Frank Sudgls, John "Mccreary, Carl Tamenzlnd. Daniel O'Keete, Messrs. and Mesdames J. Krejcl, J. Patents. J. J. TrltS, . Hasl-French Wedding. On Saturdav at St. Mary Magde lene's church. Miss Mary French, daughter of Mr. Charles E. French, was united in marriaee with Frank J. Hasl, Rev. Father Sinne performing the ceremony. Miss tthel Jorgenson sang "O, Promise Me," and Miss Marie Bennewitz played the wedding march. The bride wore a traveling, suit of seal brown, trimmed with mole fur, gold lace hat, and a corsage bou quet of bride's roses andtilies of the valley. Miss Mary Hasl, bridesmaid, wore a suit of green chiffon broad cloth, hat to match, and a corsage bouquet of Mrs. Ward's roses. Mr. J. F. Hasl was best njan, and the ushers Were Mr. Clarence Claire and Mr. Fred Hasl. After a wedding breakfast at the home of the groom and a brief receDtion. the bridal cou- pie left for Fort Dodge, where they will remain indefinitely. Jolly Ten Dotto Club. Because of sickness in the family of Mrs. H. Heyman, will meet with Mrs. Joe Meyer Tuesday afternoon. I Monday Bridge Club. Mrs. A. I, Root entertained the members of the Monday Bridge club at her home this afternoon. Decora tions were appropriate to Hallowe'en. Two tables were placed for the game. Notes of Interest. Mrs. Joseph Opelt of Lincoln has been the guest ot Mrs. curt Cole cur ing the last week. Mrs., Opelt is en- route to California to spend thowm ter with her son, Clyde. The late Mr. Opelt was a descendant of Poca hontas. , Miss Henrietta Degen of New York, who has bepn visitiniz her aunt. Wilf'"Ve Mother Testifies ' Alpine Proposed To Her Daughter , Mrs. Rose Samland, aged mother of Mary Bettner, who is suing George Alpine for $2,999 damages, claiming that he promised to marry her, took the witness stand in Judge Wakeley's court to tell of the courtship of her daughter. She testified that Alpine was a steady visitor at her daughter's home and that he proposed to her in the presence of the members of the family. According to the girl's mother Al pine told them his wife was dead, but that he had several children living. It is charged in the petition that the de fendant has a wife in Austro-Hun-gary. Mary's father and brother and neighbors were brought into court to relate how attentive Alpine was to her. Following the filing of the girl's suit Alpine filed a counter claim, making allegations that she proposed to him and then humiliated him in the eyes of the neighbors. Was Along When Huerta Did Not Salute the U, S. Flag Edward P. Malherbe, chief carpen ter's mate of the receiving snip at Boston, joined the local navy recruit ing contingent Saturday. Malherbe has seen service in Haytai and San Domingo and was with the naval ex pedition during the Huerta Mexican incident. The Latest in Seasonable Hats Oh, no, the wind didn't blow it up that way. The designer made the crown puff up on purpose, and made it of purple velvet on a shir red cuff one calls a brim by cour tesy. Finding Out For Yourselves By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "Experience is costly, as al of us can tell; We purchase it at retail and then at wholesale sell." The tragedy of youth is that it never profits by any experience save its own I The older generation tells Youth how its fingers were burned when it tried to pull chestnuts from the fire or how near it came to drowning when it skated on the thin ice and Youth smiles intolerantly and says: "Oh, yes, of course you had difficul ty, but I should have managed bet ter in the same circumstances." Each of us has, as the Scotch say, to "dress his ain weird." This means, as we all know, that everybody has to go through with his own experiences. A devoted mother says to her sick child, I wish 1 could take the pain for you." But sjie can't life does not permit that. And .the greater trag edv is that, when sorrow and bereave ment and trial and temptation come to that child grown up, the mother can neither bear the pain for it nor even assure the child out of her own experience how best to meet the sit uation. , We have all to find out for our selves. That is life. Those of us who are particularly clever can draw parallels from the experiences of oth ers. Those of use who are wise and sane try to profit by experience. But most of us buy our own ex perience in the school of life and learn too slowly even from this ex pensive -shoppingl I once knew a girl who was wooed and won by a man who fell in love with her at first sight and jilted the girl to whom he was engaged in or der to become engaged to her. A fine soul might have considered the other girl's pain. A sane soul would surely have profited by the other girl's expe rience! The man who was false to one love when a new fancy attracted him was equally false to the second love when again his errant fancy roamed. That experience was a dear one. The girl who had stolen another girl's lover suffered terribly when it came her turn to lose. But did she profit by that experience bought at a high price? Not at all. She went through precisely similar experiences twice more in her life an actual wholesale of the expensive knowledge she should have gained once and for all in the first place. The sum total of human experi- ence teaches us that an habitual liaf wi(l lie whenever he feels the slight est need or excuse iof. it. Constant repetition" of the same cir cumstance shows that a wantonly selfish person is bound to consider himself first under almost any con ditions. The coward generally acts like the craven he is. The extrava gant wastrel seldom saves. The brute is almost invariably cruel. In the weakling thera may be a flare of good. Your coward may, in a magnificent moment, sacrifice him self bravely, and the most selfish in dividual may be kind to some one. But in dealing with people it isn't safe to work on a basis of comfort- 1,0 lay up EE hie exceptions. To expect things disappointments for yourself, Idealizing people and situations against precedent and constant habit is going to lead to disappointment in ninety-nine cases out of any given 100. And that is what costly experience ought to teach us before we permit ourselves to suffer over and over again tragedies which arc similar or parallel, and which we ought to have been able to forecast from experi ences in the past. If you won't learn by experience, don't whine and whimper and rail at cruel fate. Instead, proceed to amend your stupidity and make an honest effort to sell your experience as dear as you purchase it. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. 1I May Think You Want Help. Tfnr MIm Fairfax: J am a. poor working 1r) and am earning ft a week and have to HQpport my mother, and I baT very fw clothfjB. I am kesp.nr atnady company with a ycnna- man 21. I am 10. Every time I go out with him I alwayn hav the ma thtntm on and 1 ffl whimod, berauae I aeo flrln alwaya having aomethlna; different on. I told him that, and he aald I should not be ao foollah, that clothea ta not every thlnr. He tella me th&t he lova ma. 8o, my dear MUa Fairfax, write and pleaae give me advice If he mean good with me.. He often wanta to buy aome clot hen for me, but I would not let htm. 1 think that it la aa Inault. ALICE a. I admire this young man for realising" that a girl who dreaeea simply Is to be admired!) But yon must not harp on the subject ofj Kour lack of pretty things. He may think you are hinting to him for gifts of wearing apparel; and so, when ha offers to buy bhinga for yon. yon have no right to take offence, since he may be doing only what be feel la expected of him. The "toffether we stand, divided :"we fall" type of patriotism in spires this imported hat and veil. The crown is gray felt, the brim blue velvet, the veil gray embroid ery. Love Dies By DOROTHY DlX. The most inexolicable of all human vagaries is the fact that we take so little trouble and precaution to safe guard love. 11 a man had all his fortune in gov ernment bonds, and should leave them lying carelessly about for any thieving hand to steal, or should be so indifferent to their whereabouts that he mislaid them through his own heedlessness, we should waste scant pity on him if he lost them, if a woman had a diamond tiara that she did not think enough of to even keep clean, and that she let get mutiliated and disfigured, we ahould think her a sinful waster. Yet we have this curious contra diction, that the man who could not sleep at night unless he knew that he had safely hidden his pocketbook with only $10 in it, so that burglars could not find it, and the woman who keeps her jewels locked up in a safety de posit box lest she should lose them, are so careless of the love that has been fntrusted to them that they let it be lost or stolen before they know it. It is a very pathetic truth that if men and women would take only a tithe of the pains and trouble to protect their hearts that they do to protect their worldly goods and chat tels, there would be fewer divorces and fewer suits for alienation of -the affections. It is the custom to express sympa thy with the jilted iwailr-or deserted husband or wife. In reality, they are more to be blamed than pitied. Never to be loved is an undeserved misfor tune, but to have been loved, and to have lost love, shows criminal care lessness and incompetency. Yet this thing happens so con tinually that it takes innumerable de tectives to hunt down the freebooters of love, and special courts to punish them for their depredations, and the air is full of the lamentations of hus bands and wives who are beating upon their breasts and wailing out that somehow, somewhere, they have lost or mislaid the affection of their spouses. How does it happen? A man marries a woman who gives him her whole loving heart, her ro mantic ffirlish dreams, her tender, clinging, sensitive soul. It's a great gift, enough to make a man a billion aire of affection, and you would think that he would exhaust every rjevice. every particle of ingenuity in keeping it safe. But he doesn t He is too busy to protect It, too careless to lock it up. He doesn't even take the trobule to look at it now and then to see that it is still in his possession. He is so interested In his business that he is away from home from early morn until dinner time, and then he is too- tired and absorbed in .his affairs to bother about what his wife thinks or wants or desires. Still less does he worry himself to find out whether he still owns her love, and then some day he wakes up to find that she is just as indifferent to him as he is to her. He has lost her love. It may have wasted away, little by little, as gold dust sifts through a tiny hole in a miner's pouch, or it may A morning delight a noon-time luxury an evening necessity Dr. LytQiini's For The Teeth Powder Cream 8nd 2c stamp today for LW. Lyra Sot fate, Couldn't Straighten Up. Mr J. M. Sprinkle, of Ben Hur, V iay that Cardul cored her per tnanenHy of her troubles: "About two years ago. . . I got Into awfully bad health. . . I was going down hill In health, could only drag around. . . My friends recommended that I try Cardul. . . so I began using Cardrd, and In a short time I was greatly Improved. . . Before starting it I couldn't straight en op to save me... . suffered great pains In the abdomen, sides and hack worse than anywhere. . . After the use of one bottle I had no more pain at all. . . The cure has been permanent . . neither had to have a doctor or take any medicine since." If yon suffer from any of the ailments common to women, try Cardul, The Woman's Tonic. Your druggist sells It 8-33 One part daring, two parts de mure, is the round black velvet hat at the left, with two little fat sable tails to bob off the side and match general effect. If Neglected have been lost all in a lump when she realize that she had cast her pearls before swine, but it is gone hope lessly and irretrievably lost. Or, his own may have been the hand tiiat set the door of his wife's heart wide open for thievei to come in and steal his wife's treasure. - She craved sympathy; he gave her none. She loved amusement; he was too busy to accompany her even to the theater, or too stingy to give her as much as a treat of a restaurant supper. She had enthusiasm for art and lit erature: he mocked at them. She loved society; he let her go into it alone and unguarded. Be sure that no man ever alienates the affection of another man's wife unless the husband is too indifferent to kep.n what he has won. How does a woman lose her hus band's affection? By the same road. By laziness, by weakness, by incompetency, by triflmgness, by carelessness. She first charmed him bv her oretti ness and daintiness. She lets herself crow slouch v and unattractive. He fell in love with her because ihe was amiable and sweet. She grows querulous and complaining and fret' tin?. He dreamed of a home that would be full of comfort and oeace. She makes one where all. the demons of discomfort and dirt and discontent have their abode. SheN complains that other women have stolen her husband's heart away from her, but they could not i i ;i r . l i . nave aone 11 11 snc nau not g'vc" them the opportunity. The coquettes of the world are merely sneak thieves that pilfer-vthe things that are lying around loose on which they can put their hainds eas ily. They cannot break through the impregnable wall of understanding and sympathy and devotion that hus band and wtte can duiiq aoout eacn other s heart if they will. We spend our lives devising way to keep our cash and our gew-gaws safe, but we do nothing to protect our love and keep it from getting lost or stolen. Yet if we lose our money we can make more; if our jewels are stolen we may possibly recover them, but if we once Lose love, it is gone for evernothing can restore it to us again. Oh, the pity of it I Skinned THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES 3t Htdpe Boot Frtt SK1NMERMFG.C0LOMAHA.U.SA IMGCST MACM0NI KCT0IY III HORLICKS THE ORIGINAL i MALTED MILK J Cheap substitutes cost you same price 0 a ganeroua trial package to 577 W. 27th St., N. Y. City Cats Lack By GARRETT P. SERVISS. Having recently expressed disap probation of cats, I have received a temperate letter from a man who keeps two pet cats. He touches the subject on opposite sides the eco nomic and the philosophic. People who can afford that amount of expenditure for such a purpose will be glad to learn that the two cats in question, which it appears from his statement, seldom or never take rats or mice, cost their owner 10 cents per day for food. This seems to be a moderate allowance where the ani mals are maintained as house pets. I know a lady who alwaya has four or five cats about her house (burying them ceremoniously as fast as they die off, and remembering them with tears), who feeds them on broiled steak, carefully removing the gristle and bone and cutting the meat Into convenient mouthfuls so that the cats shall not have to make undue exertion in taking their meals. ' Teirrcnts a day would probably not go very far toward covering this la dy's bill of expenses for feline main tenance, since sue also gives ncr cats plenty of fresh milk to drink. But, then, 10 cents a day woulir also fall far short of paying many a man's ex penses for cigars. No doubt, too, cars-can be kept, and well kept, on a daily expenditure amountlin to a small fraction of 10 cents, without requiring them ever to taice a mouse. Desiaes. in rne sum mer time, birds will considerably re duce the expense, because the most aristocratic cat will take the common est bird with gusto. The philosophic part of Jhe letter that I have referred to concerns the cruel disposition of the cat. It is true, says the writer, that cats love to torment and torture small animals, but, he argues, we ought to consider the nature of the feline brain. Cats are not remarkably intelligent ani mals, their brains are feeble and they have no comprehension of what they art doing beyond the enjoyment of the fun. Any moving object inter ests and amuses them, but they have no idea of the suffering that their play inflicts. This excuses the cat, but not the cat's owner. It likewise gives a glimpse at the origin of the etti menta of pity and sympathy wmch morally elevate the human animal above the other animals. A little child is cruel In the tame way, though, perhaps, not to the lame Tho Dost Doctor On Eorth-"0-EAT-ir Ask Your Grocer "O-EAT-IT" Is a in somblnstlon tally bsked, rssdr-to-sst, pun, dslleloui, nourish ing brio brssd food. Its orlip tsstjr tossUd Hess kssp Indcflnttslr mads from rioh foldsn whsat-bnui and othtr etrtsji. "O-IAT-rr" tskss ths pises ot til old-strls bread and breakfast foods, morning, noon 1 500 Ladies Wanted To let us show them that we are prepared to' give clothes pressing:, cleaning and repairing service second to none. We Sterilize Your Garments While Pressing Them and Make no Extra Charge. CAREY CLEANING CO. Tell Webster 392. Imagination degree as a cat. It does, Withe it compunction, because without co i prehension, whatever amuses it, hi ' ing no regard to the suffering that It. inflicts. When it twists the kitten's tail the yowl that follows simply ft , creases the tormentor's enjoyment if the fun. But there comes i tit when the child begins to underitai A the relation of cause and effect, ai 4 then its imagination is awakened. At first, perhaps, It stop twlstit f the kitten's tail because the kitt a stHkes back and turns the fun in ; .. 11 . .1 : 1 - L . pathy, a pure product of the imagin tinn, comes into play, and then tl 1 child refrains from tormenting its pe because their cries remind it of i own sufferngs. The animal stories hardest to br licve arcthose which are based on supposed feeding of sympathy expr rienccd by the animal that is the sul ject of the story. That a gHmmerit f of such a sentiment may exist in ton 1 animals that have been accustomed t human companionship and trainip t I would by no means deny, but it mil: C be rare, and it offers in itself a proc i of a certain amount of brain, or mini', power, since sympathy implies imag -jiation,vor the ability to form a mei r Idl 11,1 r, HI1U 1MB,, III l, II II, ,.M.I, the existence of considerable eon plexity of organization in the brah'. It is significant that the animal ! ...htflli ,.mn4,l,tii. foitljnv Is m S frequently ascribed is the dog an 1 dogs are almost the only animals bi low man wnicn are Known ij pusncet the power of dreaming. That dogi have vivid dreams Is, I think, a fact beyond question. But a dream is a play of the imagination, and imaglnt tion is the product of, comparatively, a highly organized brain, 1 Cats are notorious sleepers,, but I recall no recorded instance of a cat's dreaming. It might appear whimsi" cal to assert that dogs are free from the cruel instincts of the cat and amenable to sympathy, because they dream while) cats do-not yet it. is true that the power to sympathize and. the power to dream are closely re lated in orighy , . Perhaps the cat's greatest value as a companion to man conaista m th example of absolute tranquility tnrt easy freedom from all care, which It offers, A sleeping cat is a me'dicine)i to the perturbed human spirit Ic the cat had more imagination hi would be less cruel, but also leas con-sj tent , . I Only 10 Cento and night 1 tool for brain, blood, asms aaej, growirii- children, and Insure freedom tron eonstlpstlon and Indigestion without ties aid of medicine or any added expense e living. Physicians besrtllr recommend hV For isle at all grocers, 10s, or sent pre paid on receipt of price. Address O-Est-It Co., 184 Btudebaker Bldg., Chicago, IU. , Take Comfort With You lt'i just Uk harlnf th wMthtf made to order if you hart t PERFECTION . SMOKELESS OIL HEATER It can be carried aa easily aa a -woman's work basket. And wherever you put it, the Hester ' ia always ready to drive away coin and dampneea. Bold evary when by reliable dealers. 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