THE ST73TOAT OTfEGONTAN, POR1XA2TD. OCTOBER 24, ID 13. CAMPFIRE GIRLS PLAN BENEFIT PERFORMANCE Ceremonial Robes to Be Worn at Entertainment in National Theater October 30 Beads Insignia of Honor, Bestowed for Deeds Well Done. I -IfeU -;7i r . f MOT i ARRATED in their ceremonial robes and with bright honor beads strung- about their necks, the campfire girls of Minnehaha and Chinook camps will appear in an en tertainment that is planned for the night of October 30. when the National Theater will be turned over to the campfire girls and their friends. On the occasion of the benefit per formance there will be motion pictures depicting the various activities of the campfire organization and showing the lessons that are taught In the work and ceremonials. Each bead worn by a campfire girl means an honor won. Home tasks well done are regarded as victories. Duty becomes a pleasure when one is a true campfire girl. Dishwashing ie dignified as an accomplishment; housework is glorified. Any task well done is not only a duty, but a pleasure a triumph. Honors are gained by doing the homely, every-day things with a spirit so splen did that the workers feel a pride in their task and a joy In its accomplish ment. There are three ranks in the organi zation the wood gatherers, the fire makers and the torch bearers. Athletics properly supervised are encouraged, as they tend to make the girls healthy. better, r& sifts Cs&oc' Srrr CZerrr? The aim of the order is for finer womanhood. - Little tots under 12 years of age are not allowed to be campfire girls, but they may be bluebirds, little harbingers of happiness. At the entertainment on Saturday Mrs. Ralph Wilbur and Mrs. Louis Ger linger, Jr., guardians of the camps, will chaperone the "Indian maidens." Some of the proceeds of the entertain ment will be put away toward the Sum mer camp fund. Last Summer the girls enjoyed a wonderful outing at River dale, where they lived an ideal camp life for a fortnight. They did their own cooking, baking, washing and any other necessary work and devoted the after noons to out-of-door exercise and. sports. The money expended on the last camping trip was all earned by the girls themselves. Italy Ancestral Glories, Henry Dwight SedgwJcjc in the Tale Review. Three times has Italy ruled over Eu rope. She has sat on the political throne under the Ceasers: on the eccleasiasti cal throne under the popes, from Greg ory the Great to Leo X, and on the in tellectual throne of the Renaissance. These things every Italian family re members. Augustus Coasar and Tra- !M'1 . 0 Here are OWING to happy recovery of health by the timely use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound thou-' sands of women throughout the world once more enjoy the reflection they see in their mirrors. Nothing is so pleasing to the eye as a happy," robust, healthy woman, but owing to some curable disorder peculiar to their sex many women suffer week after week and month after month. Without complaining, they do their duty like soldiers until all beauty and freshness of features are gone; premature old age appears and their mirrors tell a sad and disheartening tale. Many women owe their: health to Lydia E. Piral Vegetable Com ham s pound three out of tens of thousands of Genuine Testimonials: An Operation Avoided. "I suffered from female tmuMes so badly that I bad a ereatdealof pain, am I if I slipped on a stone in walking, or got the leivst jar. it would hurt me terribly I continued to set worse until I had spasms; and was advised that I would have to go to the hospital for an operation I objected to that, and one day a friend called and advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, for she said she had the same trouble dreadfully and could get no help until she took it. which cured her. Therefore I began taking it. and after the first bottle I was better, and foui bottles have entirely cured me of the trouble." Mrs. Ella F. Rice, 182 Friendship Street, Providence, K. L In a Short Time I Recovered. u I suffered from female trouble so that the best physicians advised me to go to the hospital for an operation, because they thought there was some thing growing in my left side which would have to be taken out- I refused and instead sent to the drug stcre for a bottle of Lydij E. Pinkham's ' Vegetable Compound and took it according to directions. In a short time I recovered enough to do my workand later was able to make the trip to Decatur, I1L I know the Compound worked a miracle in my case, and I have recommended it to many persons arid told them what it has done for me." Mrs. Lath a A. Gbiswold, 2300 Blk, K, Williams Street, Decatur, I1L Makes Change of Life Easier. ' " Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound lias done me a world of good, and I want to recom mend it to others who suffer as I did When I began to take it I was passing through change of life. I was very nervous, could not sleep nights, and had a great deal of pain and soreness. I was advised to have ar. operation but they old not think I could live through it. I took Lydia E. Pinkhanr's Vegetable Compound and have come-out all right I think every woman in this condition should rely on Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at this time of life, as it is such a good remedy " Mrs. A. Bannioan, 57 Knickerbocker Avenue, Paterson, N. J. A medicine that has restored so many women to health and can toe proved to have done it, must be regarded with respect. This is the record of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which cannot be equalled by any other medi cine for women. LYDIA E. PDfKBAM MEDICINE CO LYNN, MASS. Jan. Hildebrand and Innocent III, Dante and Petrarch, Michelangelo and Raphael. Galileo and Bruno, are in his mouth like household words. The I modern democracy, but deep in his Italian docs not consider himself and I heart he is an aristocrat, haughtily us as equals; he accepts, he believes in, ' proud of his long desoent and his ancestral glories. When thinking or Italians, one must always bear in mind that they, out of all the peoples of Eu rope, have the most glorious past, and that they are conscious of it to the quick. NEAT DESIGN FOR TRIMMING A BABY BONNET AND GIRL'S DRESS o - I NO . : I The accompanying designs are sufficiently simple J V ) 'warrant any woman who is fond of the needle V V adapting them to her uses. The cap would make a charming and inexpensive little Christinas gift and the dress design could be beautifully incorpo- Q y rated on a holiday frock. i I -The detail drawings show the method of working. In using the printed designs from the paper the ) directions are as follows : If the material used is sheer II I the easiest way is to lay it over the design which will show through plainly, and draw over each line '. Q I with a hard, sharp pencil. If your linen is heavy, J I secure a piece of impression papers the kind that I does not nib off lay it on your material, place the q I . design over it, and trace with a hard pencil, TN. v. SATAt EYELET O O BUTTON-HOLE ANb J c - VUTL1NE STITCHES fl I I v "o i ) o. -OOO yo V o o