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X...? I irfTS^MMHIMLIlai IUI.II HIHIMMIUl Mr. "William A. Radfora will answer questions and give advice FREE OP COST oa all subjects pertaining to the subject of building for the. readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as Editor, Author and Manufacturer, he Is, without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all Inquiries to William A. Radford, No. 1S4 Fifth Ave., Chicago, 111., and only enclose two-cent stamp for reply. Some general observations on home building will not bo out of place for the benefit of the intending builder jbefore describing the plan shown in this oohnection. The long-felt want for an artistically expressed and con veniently arranged small nouse is Deling filled. The man with $2,600 to $5,000 which he wants to put into a house can now have a cottage which will, in design and plan, express his Individuality. And it is true that the house should reflect the taste of its owner or occupant Home builders "have come to realize that a house should possess individuality without being freakish. The hammer and saw square box of a house, or the frightful creation with eaves extending out barely six inches, never sells, let alone being a place for a habitation. Architects as a rule are putting forth their best efforts in the line of designing bouses that will be artistic and beautiful to look upon. The architect realises that, first of all, the plan must be arranged to meet'the needs of the family. The court of last resort in the planning of a house should not be the architect, should not be the man of the house. The final dictum must be given and is given in most cases, by the wife and mother. And provided what she wants is within the bounds of architectural limits, let her have it, for she is there the whole livelong day and ought to have the last say, as she will anyway. Another thing, the design will be Influenced by the site the building is to occu py. These points decided, the restrictions lie only in the materials to be used, and the amount of money to be spent It is safe to use the materials found in tho immediate vicinity. They will harmonize with the landscape better. A brick house is as much out of place in the woods as a log bungalow would be on a city boulevard. Most houses are the result of thought and study, and one of the chief factors to be considered is the site Itself. There iliouid be_a generous living room placed bo that It will have the benew I, TYlTWI J J r irjj'ltDfch I y=B==^H First Floor Plan fit of the afternoon sun, If possible. A dining room is well placed if it has a good eastern exposure. The placing of windows in groups of two or three or more, klve a pleasing appearance to the side walls, which form centers of interest that attract the eye. Casement windows are cheaper than the double hung sash, give twice the ventilating area, and are very attractive with their small square or diamond panes which suggest protection to the Inmates from the Inclement weather without Casement windows should be m%de to open out Windows should fclways be placed in two sides of a room to furniah ventilation. If possible. The kitchen and pantry windows should be higher from the floor than the other windows. In placing windows and doors In a room, see that sufficient wall space is left for the furniture. Many a room has been built in which soace could not be found for a bed. Have all tho floors and etair treads of hardwood If possible. They cost lesB than soft wood and carpets, and from every standpoint of health, beauty, service and economy In time and labor of housekeeping, are far superior. Oak and maple make the best floors,-but'hard comb grpin pine floors are quite presentable If the better ones are not obtainable. Now as to the design of tho house shown here. In size It Is 30 feet 6 inches wide and 84 feet C Inches long, mwr inn nn --n.n i M w.uJt .anmrmrsBii. exclusive of porchea. This house planned for finish in cement stuc A wide porch with massive pill extends across tho front. This its is a feature and affords a relief fr the familiar porch columns one s on every hand. Massiveness is impression the porch gives. And outside chimney gives a hint of 2 I . ? fl I \s ?mmii ? Tzo&OQ* \ ,/ | IJ. ^Oj ! feiiiil H H **%?< 1 nr J<n I rH, Second Floor Plan great fireplace within, and tells own story of the cheery rooms of house. Entrance is had Into a go sized hall, from which a stairway lei to the second floor. The living ro is 21 feet long and 15 feet G inol wide. The dining room back og living room Is 14 feet wide and 15 f long. This room has a window s< The kitchen Is accessible to the c lng room through a pantry of am size. On the second floor are f( bedrooms, each provided with clothes closet and a bathroom. The Albatross. The power of flight possesed the albatross, that wanderer of sea, Is wonderful in the extreme, spends its life, with the exception o few weeks given each year to. n? ing, entirely at sea, and is on 1 wing practically all the time. Furth more, it does not progress by fl ping its wings as most birds do, 1 seems to soar at will, rarely, if ev giving a stroke of t^e wing, seem I to need no impetus. At nesting-ti which is early in the year, the al tross repairs to some Isolated isla such as thfe Crozet islands in I southern Indian ocean, Tristan Cunha, in the South Atlantic oce Here they congregate in thousan building their nests and hatching a Tearing their young. The nests i built on the ground in an open si ation. They are mound-like in appe ance, and have a slight depression the top. They are made of mud a grass, and about 18 inches in heig The albatross lays but one egg, wh: is quite large, being from four to f Inches in length. The shell 1b rou; creamy white in color, and speck with numerous brownish spots. Wt disturbed on the nest they elat their bills, making a very loud nol which, when taken up, by thousai of birds, becomes deafening. A Humble Invention. To forget the inventions of the h< is an impossibility. They' are befi one at every turn, and many cf th contain possibilities vast and mt discussed. For that reason it is v occasionally to contemplate come vention of the past which works remittlngly and inconspicuously the welfare of mankind. Consider air brake. How many, when they a journey by rail, ever take thoui of the device which stands ready Insure safety from possible acciden All are so used to the sibilant no below the cars that they never com er.lts portentousness. /Yet by this plication of the powtr of compresi air, tans of thousands vat- 41 yes -4* been preserved, and railroad fcarirel I been made more expeditious. All t is arrant truism; not a word of it what has been said scores of tir before. But we like to dwell uj the air brake as one of those tvDi inventions which are doing their wi faithfully and humbly while rcc creations get the glory and applause Collier'*. The Russian Jewels. The splendor of the Russian jew exceeds all powers of description; know that Catherine the Great's cc nation robe was so heavily laden tv gems that it took twelve chamberla to support it. The czar's thrc which belonged to the last empc of Constantinople, is of finest iv studded with pr?ciou3 Btor.os, : that of the czarina contains 1, rubies and 876 diamonds, besi pearls and ....quoises. * 1 ONE OF BROOKLYN'^ ihe ^ ^ * - . ,<*#?* I "l - *. *? * c* - ::^v Left Flol When Manager "Bill" Dalilen co: *t9 lyn team at the beginning of the seai ^e was outfielder Wheat from the Mobile 0<*" has certainly made good. He is nea: a^3 Leame sluererera and his fielding has om " (163 the r?iHE classification legislation In the eet S National association national 5at. agreement will be revised at the 'to* annual meeting of that organization In P*e Chicago next fall. The system may Dur not undergo radical change, but there a will be modifications that, will do away with abuses and Injustices that have arisen in the course of the development of the game, to Individual minor leagues in all sections of the country. The major leagues are Interested In the matter, because the draft price ?? of the player Is ^c-termined by the lj rank of the minor league of which the H club to which he belongs is a memM ber at the time of liis selection, but |g the parties of the first part in the H agreement will have no part in the a aow grouping of the minor leagues. H This power Is delegated to the rninorji m hv cpotinn 5 of Article 6 of the na e tional agreement, which reads as folB lows: The Natfonal association shall have ?6 the classification of Its leagues and M the adoption of a salary for its clubs ja according to such classification and it 9 agrees to withdraw protection from H any league which allows any of its B clubs to exceed the salary limit pre8 scribed for leagues of its classificajjj tion. v 50 The succeeding section fixes the ng price for selecting a Class A player by g a major club at $1,000; if a class B 9 player at $750; of a Ciase C player at Sj $500, and cf a player "from a club of lower closs," at $300 The quoted It words were manifestly employed in cxf a pectation of the creation of classes be;st* low D and are assuredly sufficiently Lhe elastic to include the rest of the letters er- of the alphabet. However, it is apap-' parent that, although the National asDut sociatlon has sole control of the er, |, grading of its leaguen in rank, three Ing ' classes?A, B and C?must be retained me In oi'der that the drafting rights of the ba- major leagues under Section G, Artni tide 6, may be exercised at the price Ihe fixed for each of these ranks, da ? an* "Are the Tigers out of the pennant ds' running this year? Decidedly not," ind said Manager Hughey Jennings the *re other day. "We've get to work hardtu* er than ever before, that's all. Who ^ do I think will win if we fail to get in ?? at the finish. Well, frankly, I like the ind I innv= nf the Red Sox. The Red Sox . f' team has even chances with the Ath.C letics of landing first In the race, despite the big handicap the Connie led' ^Iacks D0W bave on TayIor's men* As len long as thIs Red Sox smash"banS hitter ting continues nothing In the world [j. will stop the team. Great pitching by jjjg a remarkable pitching staff such as the Athletics have will win a pennant, sometimes, but when you have to choose between a team that is playing 3ur &rea^ ba^ 'n field and hitting fairore ly wel1 behl:3<i wonderfuI pitchers, and ' em a team that is bubbling over with con- I Jch fidence which has resulted from a I ^ejj long stretch of victories is able to i In. start a batting rally which means j un> everywhere from three to four singles I jor to six or eight hits with doubles and j tke triples scattered among them, and has j a couple of great left-handers, who sel- j dom pitch three, four or five hit ' I e^mes. but who never get hammered I I out of the box either, wby, give me j ,13^ the chaps who are hitting and who j jjj havo the confidence. It would be a i " great thing for Bostcn to win the pen- ! Be^ nant, and if we cannot climb in there, | why, my teBt wishes to Pat Donovan's | bis ~~ but President Lynch has been closely | Qes observing the work of his umpires. He ! poa is fairly well satisfied with the way I cai they are performing, but is anxious to ark improve the staff as much as he can. ent Next year he expects to have two or i.? three new men of intelligence and good judgment. "In order to get highI ?! .? mon fnv thfi nositlon.' said the league chief, "it is necessary to make els the *'<?rk attractive. Intelligent men wc will not stand for constant dally abuse 5ro. on the field, and I am doing my best ,jth to eliminate the use of bad laguage by ,ins players. If we can hush up the rough ,ne fellows It will be easy to get a fine ,r0I! class of men to do the umpiring, for ory it is interesting work. I think we are inci making progress along that line. 223 Every case of profane or obscene landce guage used to an umpire calls for a fine or suspension, and this rule is being rigorously enforced." Mr. Lynch is very earnest In hie desire to make 5 BRIGHTEST STARS f der Wheat. mmenced to "reconstruct" the Brookson, about the first player he secured team of the Southern league. Wheat r the top of the list of the National been equally as good. the game clean and attractive to the best people, and he Is succeeding in his intention. More than $5,000,000 will be paid out tU4~ kn#./vVA11 tins jvai iu ouiauca iw uaatruiiii yia-y erg. This does not inclue the enormous expense of keeping parks In order, buying supplies and paying traveling expenses. The total expenditure for the baseball of the two big leagues during the season this? year will run close to $10,000,000. Baseball is a paying institution. August Herrmann, chairman of the National Baseball commission, predicts that this season will pay eight per cent, on the money invested in baseball. "Baseball is the greatest business in the land," he says. "It is a progressive business and is continually growing." Paul Smith, left fielder of the Canton team of the Illinois-Missouri league, was purchased the other day by President Murphy of the Cubs for $500. James Murphy, a brother of the president, located the nineteen-yearold player on a scouting trip. Smith is six feet one Inch tall, weighs 190 pounds, and has been batting close to the .320 mark. It is his first year in professional baseball and he will remain with Canton until the IllinoisMissouri league season closes. XBASES Jack Sheridan has been created the tutor of the young "arbitrators" of the American league. Ban Johnson could not let the veteran get away from him and made a new job for the man that has been calling balls and strikes in the league ever since the start ten years ago. The baseball fans of St. Paul are J watching and waiting for the blow-up j of that Minneapolis club, and If the bottom of the Miller sac.k does not fall ( out within the rext two weeks there will be several suicide tricks turned j in the city of tho Saints. Pitcher Walter Manning, who has ' been with the N'ew York American j league club since 1908, has been re- j leased to Rochester of the Eastern ^ league. Lawrence McClure, tie form- ( er Amherst college twirler, has been , turned over to jersey city. Lord, who was recently traded by the Naps to the Athletics for Inflelder Rath, is killing the ball for Mack. He made four hits in the first game of a doilble-header the other day against his former teammates just to show McGuire's poor judgment. All of the White Stockings went "swimming" the other day shortly after they had reached Detroit. They didn't return until supper time. Even then there wasn't life enough in the squfcd to start an argument. Hilly Sunday is to be a close neighbor of Billy Sullivan near Roseburg, Ore. Sunday's fruit orchard will be near enough to permit the two veterans to get together for a fanning bee every once in a while. Dlok CYinlnv has his rnofprR nrettv ' well trained out in Topeka. After the 1 Topeka team lost twice the other day 1 thu fans took after the umpire and s chased the poor fellow a mile and a 1 haif, but Tip O'Neill would not have ( him on his staff If he was not a good ' runner. Frank Navin, president of the Detroit Tie^rs wants vountr men to heln < the champions. The recent slump of 1 the team has caused Navin to send * Jimmy Casey and Malachi Kittridge f scouting along with Hob Lowe and the < orders arc to bring in young players i to take the place of the veterans that 1 are showing signs of decay. Fred Tenney may become the baseball coach at Harvard next year. Ilia salary will be $3,000 and in his spare g moments he would be furnished with i other remunerative employment. Pretty i soft for the veteran Giant first base- r man. t WING FOR SINGLE RUNS ME PENNANTS 102 TINKER OF CHICAGO CUBS SAYS HIS TEAM WON THREE CHAMPIONSHIP FLAGS BY GOING AFTER SOLITARY SCORES. HT JOE TINKER. Copyrlplit, 1010, by Joseph D. DoTV-1es.) Playing for one run at a time, and naking sure of that one, is the way to pin at baseball. The day of big bat ing averages is over,- nud the team hat can advance runners steadily and vork together at the bat. and on the jases, is the winner. In the first place he pitching has become so good that >ne run counts for twice as much as t did even ten years ago?and the irst run in a game counts for more han that. I think a team wins that has a good nan, especially a good waiter, who ilso can hit, leading off. If the first nan up in a game gets to first, is sacificed down, and either of the next wo batters can get him home, that jame is almost won right there. The ither team is handicapped, is unable o play as resourceful and mixed up a ;ame as it could do if ahead, or on ;qual terms, while the team that is eading can take chances and vary the >tyle of attack, standing a much bet;er chance of making more runs simbecause it can afford to take :hances, while the other team must )lay 9 desperate defensive game, play :loso und take desperate chances to :ut off runs. Tho Pnhs hfivo won three nennants oy playing for one run at a time, be;ause their pitches have always held :he other teams down r.o low scores, md I think we have the best team at ,iiaklng the one run that ever was or;anlzed. The way to get that one run Is to have a resourceful attack, md to keep outguessing the other team all the time and never allow the style of play to become machlne-llke. By thai I mean to hit the first ball when the pitcher Is expecting you to fvalt, to wait when he expects v-ou to hit and to wait blm out to the limit If he shows any signs of unsteadiness. We frejuently wait out pitchers for three or !our Innings, perhaps without getting x hit or a base, and then switch the system and hit the first ball that :omes over. We fight all the time to get that first man on bases. Then, if the opening is made, we change the same and try to surprise the other team. If they are creeping In, expecting bunts, we may switch and play hit md run. It Is merely trying to do the inoYnerted and our whole scheme of ittack is based on getting one run across. I think we have been so sue;essful at this because we have a perfect signaling system. Each batter aas three signals with the three men Joo Tinker. ahead of him, and three with the :hree who follow him. Ordinarily Chance permits us to use our own ludgment as to what to do at bat and Dn bases, but if he gives a signal 'rom the bench it is carried out If he signals hit, the batter hits, if bunt, he aunts, and it is that working together and hitting together that has won for as. No matter how good a player may oe, he is worthless to a club until he learns to forget himself and his bating average and hit for runs. It Is :eam work and team hitMng that wins james. O'Rourke to Play One More Game. Expressing a desire to round out 40 ^ears of professional baseball playing, lames H. "Orator" O'Rourke of Bridgeport (Conn.) League, lawyer, former owner of the Bridgeport team, md one of the oldest, If not the oldest professional player in the country, will probably catch one game for New Ha/en during the present season. When :he Bridgeport man spoke of his desire, Cameron said he would be ileased to have him play in any game ;he veteran might find convenient. This will make O'Rourke's thirtyjighth year in baseball. He says he wishes to play one game a year as long as he is able to do so. Sox Can Now "See Kelly." The National commission has de cided that the Chicago American a ;laim to A. M. Kelly Is valid anil that :hc Holyoke club must strike his name :'rom its suspended list. The evidence showed that terms submitted by Kelly vere not accepted by Holyoke. Kelly's Maim for salary will be considered ater. Courtney in Bad Shape. Charles E. Courtney, famous as the :oach of the Cornell crews, is seriousy ill with acute indigestion at his summer home on Cayuga lake. So ilarming were the reports of his con- I lition that J. W. Dugan, graduate nanagcr of athletics, and Judge ?rank Irvine of the Cornell Athletic isfoclation hastened to his bedside. Speaker Hitting Ball Hard. Speaker'? hitting is winning many ;anic*s for those llost on ufii rsox. rie i s always then? in a pinch, ana prom- j 303 to give I.ajoie anrl Cobb a hard j un for the premier batting honors of j he American Leagu:!. ' ' Religious Reading FOR THE QUIET HO I'll. / IXTEKCESSIGX We come to pray for those we love?but Thou Hast known and named them, ere Creation's morn; The gifts our love would pour upon them now Thy love had sealed, before the world was born. What can we ask for them, 0 gracious Father, That is not given before Ave bend the knee? Shajl we not praise Thee in thanksgiving rather Because their God ha3 loved them more than we? For those to whom Thy pitv has appointed Sharp pain and sorrow?dare we change the cup? Shall they not drink it with Thy Son, anointed Unto the sacrifice He offered up? For those who do Thy work in daily danger What shall we ask of ease and mirth and rest ? Art Thcu who chose their lot a careless stranger, That Thou shouldst give them ether thar: the best? For those who sink and struggle in tempt?tion Can we ask aught Thy love ha3 not sapplied? Thy bpirit's strength, Thy great High Priest's oblation. Thy unseen angel-guards on either side? Nay, but dear Lord! Thy tender grace, bestowing The best that heaven can send them, stoops to share .Love s tellowstnp witn us wno love mem, knowing How far we rise to Thee in selfles3 prayer. And Thou who loveat all, and all hast given, And we who love, outreaching from our clay, Clasp hands upon the altar-stairs of heaven, Maker and Lord and Father! while we pray. -Mabel Earle. Tho Xeed For Fathers. The crying want of the age is good fathers. Notfathers who will toil nigftt and day in order to amass a competence for their children, but fathers who will give themselves to their growing sons. The only boy that is safe is the boy whose saved father makeB of him a confidant, a playmate and a friend. Let some one else teach the boy his multiplication tables; the Christian father must teach him how to spin his top, and fly his kite, and ' trundle hi3 hoop. Let somebody else, if need be, teach the lad his algebra, but let no one except the father teach him how to bait a nooK, ana ouna a me ana uress ms first "shiner." Let some outsider teach him the Greek alphabet, but no one except his own father should teach him how to pitch a ball, or vault a pole, or load a gun. The most precious opportunities of life are those offered to the parent to enter sympathetically into the life cf a child b/ means of the pleasures, which are native to youth. The busiest man in the world can far better afford to neglect his business than to neglect his boy. His most sacred duty is to keep in touch with the lad. Somebody, if not>his father, will ba his intimate, and so his pattern.' Years ago a young men said to us, when we expostulated with him regarding his excesses: "I never knew my father. He was too busy writing sermons to give any time to me." Was it to be wondered at that the boy broke that father's heart??The Interior, Enthralled by Christ. One of the most remarkable con-vert3 and preachers that India ha? produced was Nilakantha Goreh? Nehemiah Goreh as he was called after his baptism?a high-caste Brahman and Hindu pundit, deeoly versed in all the Hindu philosophical systems. He despised Christianity, thinking it was a religion fit only for TVjTIftnKrtViop flTlfi l^UUi UUV, \ VUV VMW?VW/ I set hira3elf to undertake its refutation. With the object of proving that it was false he began to study the Bible, and he yielded to the simple fascination of Christ. Why and how he became a Christian he could never explain. "I was caught as in a net, and I could not get away from Christ," h'e said. "Christ is so pure," was one of hfs expressions. It was a very similar emerience to that of Pastor Hsi. of China, who though a scholar and a man of influence, was yet an opium slave, but became enamored of the New Testament and conscious of the over-powering presence of Christ, and suddenly, in a moment of glorious faith, exclaimed, "He has enthralled me, and I am His forever." It was thi3 Nehemiah Goreh, who had the high privilege of helping Pandita Ramabai, the child-widow's friend, on her way to Christ.?The Bible in the World. Foes of Eeanty. If I were asked what was the greatest foe to beauty in both man ard woman, I would say, not errors in diet, nor lack of exercise, not overwork, nor corsets, nor any- one of these, but bad mental habits. What do I mean by bad mental states? I mean anger, fear, worry, anxiety, irritability, regret, envy, jealous}-, lack cf trust in one's self and in the great God?all these are bad mental state:?," and all these destroy beauty, not only by interfering with the action of the ?ii-t ? ? ? ~ Knf V.T Vlltll UlgAlia, UUl u; uugvu; utMMQt.. ing the expression o2 the face.?Outing. The Heart the Test. You attitude toward others will be determined by the way you feel in your heart toward them. The best set of rules on polite living may be comprehended in the one rule that we should cultivate a kindly disposition.?Western Methodist. Understanding. The things that belong to men must be understood in order to be loved; the things that belong to God must be loved in order to be understood.? Pascal. SHOT FATHER: PRAYEI) FOR HIM. Memphis, Teiin., Special.?Pleading with her father to forgive lier and praving for his recovery, 17-vear-ohl lllllc Jiorris wihi in iiti ~ bedside until the end rams. Spccchless from August (>. when he was shot by liis daughter while, ir is allowed, he was heating his invalid wife with a eat o'-nine-tails, Isaac Morris died at the City Hospital Satu rda.v. Morris, it is said, was whipping his wit'e because dinner had not been prepared. I -want any person who suffers with bilio'sncss, constipation, indigestion or any livtr or blood ailment, to try my Paw-Paw Liver Pilla. I fruarantoe they will purify the blood and put the liver and stomach into a healthful condition and will positively cur? biliousness and constipation, or I will refund your money. ? Munyon's Homeopathic Horn? Remedy Co,, 63rd and Jef.erson Sts., Phlla.. Pa. WANTED TELEGRAPH OPERATORS New Southbound Railway offices open soon. Short hours and good pay. Any one can learn In two to tour months. Positions Guaranteed all who make neoossai7 preparation. Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Typewriting. Civil Service and Salesmanship also taught Lessons by mail if desired. Positions scoured for all graduates I W rite at once for full Information. Southern Commercial Schools, North Carolina's greatest Schools of business. Salisbury, Wilmington. Kocky Mount, WLnston-Balem. The Natural | Laxative 1 acts on the bowels just as some I foods act. Cascarets thus aid I the bowels just as Nature would. I Harsh cathartics act like pepper I in uic nostrils. ouuu uuc uuwcw grow so calloused that one must multiply the dose. 873 Vest-pocket box, 10 cent*?at dnnr-atores. Each tablet of the area nine It marked C C C. Might D? It. "Do you know anything that will kill potato bugs?" asked the young man with the yellow fingers. "Yea," said the old lady wlt^ the gingham apron, crustily, "get 'end to smote cigarettes!"?Yonkers Statesman. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. *_ The man who considers himself one in a thousand naturally regards the other 999 as mere ciphers. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, Rmall, susrareoated, easy to take as candy, rtgulate ' fcnd invicrorate stomach, liver and bow* ela. Do not gripe. DOWN TO HARD FACTS. The Dreamer?Ah! Faith will move mountains. The Schemer?Yes, but the owner of a furniture van demands spot cash. Minion* Ara Entorr.bed. The catacombs at Rome were tho S burial places of the early Christians. I They are about 580 miles in extent and I are said to have contained 6,000,000 I bodies. During the persecution^ of the1 I Christians under Nero and other Ro- I man emperors the catacombs were g used for hiding places. Under Diode- I tian the catacombs were crowded with fl those for whom there was no safety I in the face of the day. The art of the I catacombs is unique and most inter- I esting. Simple designs are etched in fl the slabs which seal the tombs. Now S and then are small chapels where paintings are to be found. All are I Bible illustrations, so that the cata- I combs may be said to be a pictorial I Bible in effect.?The Christian Herald. I Hard to Convince. > ? Little Tommy (eldest of the family, E at dinner)?Mamma, why don't you I help me before Ethel? I Mamma?Ladies must always come H first 9 Tommy (triumphantly)?Then why H was I born before Ethel??Tit-Bits. 1 The entire nature of man is the I garden which is given him to cultl- I vate.?W. E. Gladstone. 6 Cut Out I Breakfast I Cooking I Easy to start thex day I cool and comfortable if I Post I Toasties I are in the pantry ready 8 to serve right from the I package. No cooking I required; just add some I cream and a little sugar. B Especially pleasing these summer mornings ! with berries or fresh fruit. One can feel cool in hot weather on proper | food. \ "The Memory Lingers" POSTUM C2REAL CO., L'Ji Battle Creek. Mich.