U. S. Government Homesteads COLVILLE, WASHINGTON, INDIAN RESERVATION. 1,000,000 ACRES In the Famous Columbia River Basin and Okanogan Valley. Fruit, Dairy, Farm and Timber Land. Map showing Roads, Lakes, Rivers,' Creeks, Mountains, Indian Allotments and Mineral Land. Book of Description, shows How to Locate anv Homestead of 160 Acres on the Reservation WITHOUT THE EXPENSE OF A LOCATOR. PRICE, POSTPAID, $1 00 OREGON HOMESEEKERS INFORMATION BUREAU, 504-5 McKay Building, PORTLAND, OREGON snrm NEW PERKINS HOTEL Fifth tnd Waahington SU., Portland, Or. The homelike stopping place for those who appreciate the dollar's full worth. Room with Bath. . . Room with Detached Bath Breakfast and Luncheoa Dinner . $1.50 1.00 25c He PORTLAND Y. ML C. A. will fit any ambitious young Man or Wom an for high-cIasB position in Bookkeeping. Stenography. Salesmanship To men this IncludeB valuable athletic, aquatic and membership grivilesreB. al though tuition cost is less than elsewhere. Valuable courses can also be' had in Grammar grade and College Preparatory Subjects. WHITE FOR CATALOG. AGENT WANTED Business necessity every Mer chant buys on sight. Big profits. Exclusive territory. Free samples. Sells from $5 to $100. Write quick for territory. Sayers. 637 Railway Exchange, Portland, Ore. LADIES, THE PROBLEM IS SOLVED Make your own HAIR TONICS and TOILET WATERS with "Tonico Tablets," the Sensational Invention. Send 20 cents for sample package; makes one pint, which otherwise costs 50 cents to $1.50 (4 for 60 cents.) Money returned if not satisfied. Want Exclusive Representative each county to manu facture and sell. Big Profits. TONICO SALES CO., Multnomah Station, Portland, Oregon. DON'T EVER- FORGET When you are dissatisfied with others, there always remains the old reliable Hazelwood Co., Portland, Or, Make us your next shipment of Cream. Eggs, Poultry and Dressed Meats. Wo Can Satisfy You. 1 I A fee Indian Curr dwellings No Accounting For Jurist. Many verdicts of a strange, curloug and humorous nature find birth not in frequently in coroner's juries and jur ies in justice's courts. Uncommonly intelligent are the cor oner's juries in Mississippi. Twelve men in Warren county, in that state, returned a verdict several years ago which read: "The deceased died by the will of God or some other disease unknown to the jury." Another verdict, equally as solemn, reads: "We are of A Pinion that the Decest met with her death from Vio lent Infirmation of the Arm, producest from Unoan Cauz." An old story, oft repeated, is that an English jury in a criminal case once brought in the following. "Guilty, with some little doubt as to whether he is the man." Another is told of a Welsh jury, which reads: "We find the man who stole the mare not guilty." Docket. Blasted Out HAWTHORNE AUTO SCHOOL The only Automobile School on the Pa cific Oast maintaining a Gas Tractor Dept.. Using Holt Catterpillar, C. L. Best Tracklayer and Wheel Tractors, both in the school and operating field. 445 Hawthorne Ave., Portland, Ore. Double Tread, Puncture Proof Tires Made from your old ones. Last loniar i as Bran New Tires. WE ALSO BUY OLD TIRES. We pay as high as 10c f per lb. for such as we can use in Double Tread work, and the highest market lor junk. Ship your Tires at once or write us. OREGON VULCANIZING CO., 550 W Vngioa St. Pordud. Ore. DAA1ra UVna Treatment and Prevention HtC 0f Contajrious Abortion. Treatment and Prevention of Calf Scours, Host Sanitation. Poultry Diseases. Clip thiB ad and mark an X in front of books wanted. THEDA liUOS.. Dekum Bids., Portland, Oregon. See our stock of FORD De livery bodies. Shipped any where. Ourown make. Guar anteed. Write us. Carl Pe terson, 121 Grand Avenue N. East 1433. Portland, Ore. A ELECTRIC MOTORS Boucht, Sold, Rented and Repaired WALKER ELECTRIC WORKS Bumside, cor. 10th. Fortland, Ore. HIDES, PELTS, CASGARA BARK We want all you have. Write for prices and hipping tags. THE H. T. NORTON CO. " 53 North front St.. Portland, Ore. Safety First. Brown and Green were discussing dogs, and Brown declared that any body could take the fight out of a savage dog by sitting down and star ing straight at him. "Yes," agreed Green, I once had occasion to try it. The dog was com ing at me as fast as he could, and all that I could do was to sit down and look him right in the eye." "I am glad to hear you say that," was the rejoinder of Brown. "It is an actual confirmation of what science contends." "True," answered Green, "but 1 should have added that when I sat down I chose for a seat the top limb of a ninety-foot tree." His Golden Wedding. Up and down the village street walked old Tompkins, dressed all in his Sunday best, and with a clean col lar on. "Hello, old fellow!" a friend hailed him. "Aien't you working today?" "No," replied the old man proudly. "I'm celebrating my golden wedding." "Reallv? Then you've been mar ried 50 years!" "Yes, I have." "Then Where's Mrs. Tompkins? Isn't she celebrating, too?" "The present Mrs. Tompkins," the old man coldly rebuked the idle ques tioner, "has nothing to do with it" The Department of Farm Crops, University of Idaho, has received dur ing the snrine. shipments of seed from the following foreign countries: Can ada, Sweden, Denmark, Australia, and Japan. The Bureau of Plant industry of the U. S. Department of Agriculture has also sent samples of clover and other leguminous crops for the pur pose of co-operative testing experi ments. Vain Regrets: "Never write letters, young man, that you'll regret in afterlife." "You speak as from experience?" "I do. In early correspondence with her who is now my wife I signed my self 'Your obedient servant.' 'An swers. Unobservlng Fate. Full many a flower is born to blush unseen 'And waste its Bweetness on the des ert air; Or else to nod above the gasoline Within the auto of some lady fair. Evening Sun. Home Helps. "She froze him with a glance." The man read this aloud from a novel. "Try that on the ice cream, my dear," he suggested. Louisville Courier-Journal. Make Believe. "This is a toy tea set my little girl got for Christmas. She likes to serve make-believe tea and make-believe sandwiches. A harmless fancy." "Perfectly. I've been to grown-up affairs where they did it" Louisville Courier-Journal. You Can Get Rid of That Itching Rash There Is Immediate relief for skins itching, burning and disfigured by ec zema, ringworm, or similar torment ing skin-trouble, in a warm bath with Resinol Soap and a simple application of Resinol Ointment. The soothing, healing Resinol medication sinks right into the skin, stops itching instantly, and soon clears away all trace of erup- tion, even in severe and stubborn cases where other treatments have had no effect. After that, the regular use of Resinol Soap is usually enough to keep the skin clear and healthy. You need never hesitate to use Resi- nol. It is a doctor's prescription that has been used by other physicians for years in the treatment of all sorts of skin affections. It contains absolutely nothing that could injure the tenderest skin. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. (Advt.) HUSBAND OBJECTS TO OPERATION Wife Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound So-Called Temperate." "What zone is this v. 3 live in? You may answer, James," said the teacher, "Temperate." "Now, what is meant by a 'temper ate zone? "It's a place where it's freezing cold in winter and red-hot In summer. Philadelphia Public Ledger. The Touch P-e-Emlnent A cosy picture, eh? A man lolling in an easy chair and his beautiful wife leaning over him to light his cigar." You haven t seen the companion picture to it, have you?" "Why, no. "It's the same man savagely chew ing the end of his cigar and writing a check." iiumiimmuiiiiidm Des Moines, Iowa." Four years ago I was very sick and my life wai nearly spent. me aocwrs stated that 1 wouia never get well with oat an operation and that without it I would not live one year. My husband objected to any operation and got me some ol Lydia Pinkham'a Vegeta ble Compound I took I t and commenced to get better and am now well, am tout unrl able to do my own housework. I can recommend the Vegetable Com A anv woman who ia iick and run down as a wonderful strength and health restorer. My husband says I would have been in my grave ere this if it had not been for your Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Blanche .itrrt 80N, 703 Lyon St, Dei Moines, Iowa. xt.tnr. uhmittine- to a surgical opera- if wia to tnr to build np the female system and cure IU derange ment with Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vege tahle Compound; It hat saved many men from surgical operations. wrtt to the LydU E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mast., for advice It Willi connaeniMu. What Dreamt Are Made Of. Dillydally (a chronic procrastlnator) I dreamt last night that I er ah proposed to you. I wonder what that is a sign of? Miss Lingerlong (desperately) It It sign that you have got more sense when you are asleep than when you are awake. Tit-Bits. Ask anybody Balsam. Adv. about It Hanford't MONG all the historic spots in the Southwest none is quite so thrilling and entrancing as that along the old Santa Fe trail. Among those towering granite hills, buried in the silence of the Rockies, are to be found the ruins of Spanish palaces spacious and stately in their day. Here lie the bones of daring scouts like Kit Carson. Here lingering tribes cling to pueblos and till the fer tile valleys In the most primitive fashion. Here live the cliff-dwellers a remnant still wandering through rough-hewn granite halls deserted by their fathers in the long ago. Pages might be filled with the stories of the pioneers and frontiers men of the miehtv Southwest. No more picturesque character ever trav ersed this wilderness than Augustlnl anl the Hermit of Old Baldy. John Mary Augustinianl was a her mit because of pious inclination. A nobleman by birth the product of Italian aristocracy he was born of the nobility in Sizzarlo, Lombardy, Italy, in 1801. Under the impulse of religious zeal, he turned his back upon all tho wealth and luxury of his Ital ian home, only to become a wanderer in strange and distant lands. Of this there Is a legend, common in some fashion to the beginning of every re former's life. One day he was strolling in the garden of the estate. Suddenly he saw an apparition the finger of the Vlrein pointing toward regions far away. He must therefore lead a soli tary life in life far from his native home. No cave-dweller in the Orient ever more certainly followed the path of destiny. After three years of earnest medita tion, and at the age of twenty, with only staff in hand, he set out on foot to Rome. Seven long years he dwelt m the caves of Italy, and for five more years he wandered on foot all over Eu rope. About this time Ms tnougnt turned toward a new continent, and he landed on the shores of Venezuela. Here, still afoot, he traversed the Bra zilian, Chilean and Argentine coun tries. He then sought out his abode near the dangerous Orizaba volcano in Old Mexico. In all these wanderings he became famous as a doctor and a priest among the wildest Indian tribes. Banished to Cuba. While doing his priestly work around the city of Orizaba, he was ar rested by the. civil authorities. A charge was trumped up against him and conviction followed. He was ban ished to the Island of Cuba. From these shores he set sail for New York. He reached St. Louis In the opening of the sixties. These were the opening days when the intrepid pioneer blazed out the Santa Fe trail. Augustinianl began to dream of priesthood among the Indians in the distant West He walked to Kansas City and on to Westport. By invitation of Gonzales, a wagon-train king of the historic trail, he found his way to Las Vegas, N. M, On reaching Las Vegas, he found a cave-home In Kearney's Gap, west of town. The people thought him super human, but their coming broke the auletude he so much longed for. With only his bag of meal, his books and hi staff, he began his long journey toward the Owl mountains. There Is a well- worn path on the very summit of. Old Baldy about which there gathers a le gend of the hermit priest From breast to breast the story nas passed, and to this day they tay this It the path of the pious patriarch at he walked to and fro in hit devout medi tations. Amidst the snowt of thlt Im mense altitude Augustinlana lived In pious solitude until the last tragic hour of his life In tho summer of 1867. About the base'of this famous peak lay the trading station of the Santa Fe trail. Old Baldy overlooked the vast outstretching leagues of the Baublen Maxwell land grant, equal to three states the size of Rhode Island. In the very shadow of these heights, plied In such wondrous beauty, stood the Max well place, where frontiersmen like Kit Carson, Dick Wootton, Don Jesus Abreau, Colonel St. Vrain and ex-Governor Boggs made their rendezvous for years. Amidst Old Baldy's fastnesses were the famous hiding places of sucn desperate outlaws as Griego, Poncha, Clay Allison, Chunk, Coal Oil Jimmy, "Lone" Taylor, and scores of other bandits equally wild and fierce. Thus was Augustinianl environed by a mot ley and reckless citizenship. Story of the Hermit. Near the summit of Old Baldy there is a perennial spring whose cold and sparkling waters leap from beneath its very crown. About these gushing mountain waters there lingers the story of the hermit. It Is said that when he first reached the summit, searching fot a cave In which to live, he was almost famished on account ol thirst. With his staff he smote a rock and from it sprang this beautiful stream that has not ceased to flow since that day. Though many thousands of feet above the valley, numbers sought his cave. Augustinianl erected fourteen huge crosses, the ruins of which still stand as silent monuments of his de votion and zeal. From among his curi ous and devout visitors he formed a society called the Brotherhood of the Holy CroBS. His only exaction was a nllgrlmage In May and September. They must ascend the peak and say Drayer around these crosseB. In the May pilgrimage of 1867, he made a farewell speech that crushed the hearts of his followers. It was then he revealed to them the hand ol destiny in his call to the land of Old Mexico. Before his departure he vis ited Father Baca of Las Cruces, who presented him with gold for his long iourney. He sought meditation ioi the night in the Oregon mountains Taking his farewell of Father Baca, he said: "Tonight I will be In my cave and will build my last fire on the peak tc tell you good-by. I will pray the rosarj and I want you to do likewise with your people on the roofs of youi houses. If you do not see the fire you may know that I am dead and may come tomorrow and get my dooks ano property." No fire was kindled on tne peau tnai night. The next day a company as cended the heights. Amid the very clouds they found the body of the good old hermit, stricken through with many an arrow flung from the bows ol the bloody Navajos. Got Even. A young man who had been snub bed at the theater door decided to get even with his girl friends. The girls occupied the first lour seats in the sixth row and the young man had the fifth. They paid no at tention to him. On the program was monologist who began to talk of love to get a few laughs, as those ar tists often do. He said: "All the girls who are in love, please stand up." Turning to the girl next to him, the young man who had been snubbed said: "Please let me out." Naturally, the entire four had to rise. When they were on their feet ttje young man sat down, while the re mainder of the audience roared In glee at the four. Philadelphia Public Ledger. HiL f Recognizing the Profession. "Was your father a pirate?" asked young Fltztop Of the girl of his choice at a clandestine meeting, after the old sea captain had urged his exit from the family mansion on the hill by the use of his pedal extremity. "No, my darling," was the reply. "Whv do you ask?" "He seemed to me to be a good aeai of a freebooter," said the young man. Philadelphia Public Ledger. For the Human System. For cuts, burns, bruises, stiff neck, sore throat, sprains, lame back and bunions, use Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. It is guaranteed. It Is for external use only. Always have a bot tle on hand, ready for accidents. Adv. You know the difficulty of getting the roots of stumps out with pullers, by burning, or by using explosives that merely shatter. You need explosives that not only shatter but also lift and heave that tear the roots and make clearing easy. You can save work, time and money by using Farm Powders STUMPING AGRICULTURAL made by a Pacific Coast company, with SO years' experience, to meet Pacific Coast agricultural conditions. More than 2,000,000 pounds used every year by farmers who have proved they reduce stump blasting costs. There are two Giant Powders Eureka Stumping Powder, for use in dry . work, and Giant Stumping Powder, for wet work". Ask your dealer for them. Test them alongside of any other explosive. Write us and we will have our nearest distributor supply you at lowest market prices with a trial case that will , prove to you the economy of using Giant Farm Powders. Five Valuable Books Free We issue five handsome, illustrated books to help you to blast cheaper and better books on Stump Blasting, Boulder Blasting, Tree Planting, Subsoil Blasting and Ditch Blasting. Any or all of these written by western men for western farmers will be sent on request. Choose the books that you prefer and write for them today. THE GIANT POWDER CO., Con., JBS5. San Francisco "Everything for Blotting" BRANCH OFFICES. Seattle, Spokane, Portland, Salt Uka Citr, Denver A Reminder. "Look here," said the indignant house owner to the agent from whom he had bought his home on the Install ment nlan. "The paneling in my din ing room Is opening so you can put your finger through the cracks." "That's all right," replied the agent. "The house is settling. And that re minds me. It's about time you settled up for last montn 8 installment. Philadelphia Public Ledger. "An" phwat is your Patsy doln' these days, Mrs. O'llagan?" "Ah. he's doin' foine! He's a con ductor in the opery house, an' wears a swallytall coat." "A conductor, 1b It? An' phwat doeB a conductor do?" "He conducts people to their seats." BE PRETTYI I URN GRAY I DARK Try Grandmother's old Favorite Kecipe or sage lea ana Sulphur. Hanford's BalBam Is good for blood poisoning. Adv. Both Prodigals. A young wife remonstrated with her husband, a dissipated spendthrift, on his conduct. "Love," said he, "I am like the prodigal son; 1 shall reform by and by." "I will -be like the prodigal son, too," she replied, "for I shall arise and go to my father." In Modern Times, "In the old days, the main element of a soldier was to know how to act under fire." " 'And nowadays. In addition, he Is supposed to know how to act under water, In the earth and without air." Puck. At the Boarding House. "Is this beef too rare for you, Mr. Slmpkins? 'Well, since you ask me, Mrs. Bkln- ner, I would like It a little oftener." Baltimore American. Followed Instructions. "Now." said the lawyer to a rag nicker who had been arrested for steal ing some fruit or a venner, tney nave a sure case on you, and we must play safe. Have you any money? "Ten dollars, boss. "That's good. I will get you out ol this. To every question, mind, every one. they ask you, simply answer 'Spoons.' " The pilferer complied perfectly, and as a result the Judge angrily ordered the supposed fool released. Of course the lawyer eagerly followed him from the courtroom. "My man, you played It fine. But for my smartness you'd be In the works. Where's that ten dollars?" "Spoons," said the thief, and hur ried away. R. H. Martin, Ohio. Keeps You Waiting. "The time, the place and the girl are seldom found together." "True. The girl is usually hair an hour late." Louisville Courier-Jour nal. Easy. "The word 'reviver' spells the same backward or forward." It was the frivolous man who Bpoke. "Can you think of another?" The serious man scowled up from his newspaper. "Tut- tut!" ho cried contemptuously. To ledo Blade. go to We Get You, Madam. Mrs. Kawler Did you ever one of those astrologers? Mrs. Blunderby No; but my daugh ter Kate Is Just crazy to have ber periscope read. Boston Transcript P. N. U. No. 18. 1018 fry-HEN vrtttaf to eaVerlieera, ahaa Sa " tin lata Fords Fords Fords 1915 TZtTA- $395 1915 rZZ.L, $335 1914 T$295 1914 T"Ttt"- $275 1913 $245 1914 MJZM $295 FRANCIS MOTOR CAR EX., . Eaat I3tk Hawthorn Art., JORTLAND, ORE, APPLAUSE OF VARIOUS KINDS Always Easy to Distinguish the Gen uine From the Perfunctory or the Manufactured. With nearly every successful ad dress applause plays a leading part. There are several Tarietles or ap plause. The common variety is me perfunctory handclap a poor, wu contribution which makes a butterfly look longllved In comparison. A sec ond variety is the charity offering of an audience to the oratorlal beggan The speaker ends profound decla ration with a pause whlca Is next door to an ODen declaration of war if tha mlipnce doesn't come across. Or he works himself up In a series of men tal naroxysms which Impels tha audi tors to rush to his rescue before it is too late. All spellbinders pocket this Y.rintT of annlause as real coin. Of course it la nothing of the kind. Tha eenulne Issue in laudation Is spontaneous and volcanic eruption of .nnroval and delight It blows out violently from the subterranean fires of (oik. and when It baa reached IU One Thing Needful, A Galveston widow says that she knows one or two places where she could get a husband, but what she has always wanted Is a white satin opera clouk. Galveston News. cumax mere comes, suddenly an gorgeously from the midst of It second and' more terrific explosion, and this Is reaching Its highest point third and seismic spasm rockets through bedlam and overwhelms every thing and everybody This is the real thing. It cannot be made to order aV It cannot be counterfeited. The prearranged outbursts at national po litical conventions following the noml natlcns are pitiable attempts to manu facture It. Claques and coteries of d votoes try occasionally to produce merhanlrally. They never do success fully. Victor Murdock In Collier's Weekly. Rubbing It In. "The audacity of this laundress!" "How now?" "After reducing my garments ' to shreds she tries to charge me by the piece." Louisville Courier-Journal. Almost evervone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, Btreaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make It at home, which Is mussy and trouble some. Nowadays, Dy asmng ai any lime store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul- Dhur Compound." you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, Im proved by the addition of other ingre rtlents. for about 60 cents. nnn't stav crav! Try It! No one can possibly toll that, you darkened your hair, as it does It so naturally and evenly. You dampen a spongo or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small Btrand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap plication or two, your hair becomeB beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Wveth's Sane anil suipnur com pound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who acBire oara nair aim vnu thfiil annearance. It is not Intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. Correct. Miss Wheat, the new teacher, was earine the history lesson, wnicn dealt with the career of George Wash ington. Turning to one of the schol ars, she asked: James, what was wasmngions farewell address?" The new boy arose wltn a prompti tude that promised well for his an "Heaven, ma am, he Baiu. 1 rt-iSVERALLS rmfi mm oa . u.s.Pat .otr. Keep Kids Kleen Tta nuut rmdical. healthful. Dityflm BtrmenU ever invenled for children to 8 yean of ige. Made in one piece with op back, tauty tupped on of on. Easily wathed. No liuhl daiticbandi to atop circulation. Made in blue oVnitn. and blue and white hickory tlripet for all the year round. Alto lioViM WMohl fad-rnlna- material in dark blue, cadet blue, tan or dork red for umrner wear, all appropriately bunmra with lait - color oatatea, M adt in Dutch nec k with elbow tleevea and high Deck tod long Icevea. 75c the suit I J.) . t..M II ynur J. uin -omiu tuyyij j. Vre will Krtd thrm, chawe prepaid 00 receipt of price, 1 x each. a New FRFF u J1 Suit Rip Beware of Imitationi. Look for the Two Huriei on the Label. Levi Strauss & Co., San Francisco Aw.rdici GRAND PRIZE at thi P.P.I.L Madtby f you are interested as up in purity first KG BAKING POWDER Wrong Gueia. A teacher was giving to her class an exerclso In spelling and donning words! "Thomas," she said to a curly-haired little boy, "spell 'Ibex.'" "1 b-x." "Correct. Define It." "An Ibex," answnrcd Thomas, after a pro longed mental struggle "Is where you look In tho back part of the book when vou want to find anything that's printed In the front of tho book." Christian Register. is what, you should always use. There are many other reasons Why but try a can and see for yourself. Ask Your Grocer Portland Y.M. C. A. Auto School Pay and nisrht claiwei. Expert tralnlnl In repairing, driving and machine work, Inciuding-Jonre. lathe, ahaper, drill pr. trnctorti, etc. Time unlimited. COMPh TKNT CHAUFFEURS AND MECHAN ICS SUI'I'LIKD. WHITE, U3. Enterprising. Visitor Can I see that motorist who .,i hrnnphf nnrp an nuur kku Nurse He basn t come to niB nntiRPB vnt. Vlsltor-Oh, that's all nsiit. i oniy wnnted to sell him another car. Judge. A Grouchy Chap. "Do vou think any of the girls will rooiiv nmnnHn this year?'' "I don t know, hui ii iney oo i uupe ilia men won't elcKle and whisper it around, as some of the girls do. Courier Journal. Rnralned ankle? Rub on and rub in Hanfnrd's UalBam thoroughly. Adv. Start and Finish. A publisher of this city is credited with a unique criticism of a story teller who had begun promisingly, but soon degenerated into the loweBttype of "best seller." "This gentleman's biography," said the publisher, "can be comprised with in two questions anu answers mus; "'How did he begin writing : '"With a wealth of thought.' " 'How did he continue?' " 'With a thought of wealth.' " Life's Little Worries. "Can vou wait on me Immediately?" demanded the richly dressed woman. I'm In a great hurry." "Yes. Let me have your prescrip tion," said the drugglsL I have no nrescrlutlon. I want you to look up p. number for me In the tele phone book." Silence. "t man vnu're wearina rubber heels. Don't you find them a great comfort?" Ynu net I do My WHO never knows what time I come home from the club now." The Essentials. "Is he a typical American?" "Yes; he likes baseball, has a motot car, owes a mortgage, pays unmuu, and thinks the motion pictures hav grand opera beaten a mile." Life. That Settled It. ynu broke off the engage- And ment?" said one young man Yes, but not brutally, you But I managed It." How?" Told her what my salary was. know A Too Willing Worker. "Yes, the boss said he was losing money on the things I was malting." "And what were you making?" "Mistakes." Philadelphia Record. Adootina Suggestion. "Talking about the total depravity of Inanimate things Woll?" Jimt as we got opposite a road hotel with a big gun, 'Hta Food a Spe cialty,' our auto deliberately lurnou turtle. Baltimore American. The Usual Experience. "Have you laid by anything alnce you took up the prolcsslou of author- ah In?" "Yes. about 300 manuscripts." Boston Transcript. The. Heroic Mood. Stella Did he think you bad some thing of the heroic In your mood? llflla Well, he proposed on 110 a week. Evening Sun. An Adept 8tudent French Visitor I am learning xe lansuaee varoy fast. Zat leetle boy tare spinning his top he's a spinster, eh T Boston Transcript. Slow. "That waiter of ours has been In Dili restaurant for 20 years." "I don't doubt 1L It scema nearly (hat long since 1 gave my order." Be Ready For Mealtime With appetite keen, digestion normal, and no fear of any after eating distress HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS helps very materially In bringing about such a condition. It is an excellent tonic and appetizer. Try it 3