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Dress Good Taste Shines in Suitable Proble Office Attire By VIRGtNIA KEITH HE business girl has had SO Many sermons preached at her no wonder she's a bit tired of them! Yet I know three young beginners who lost their positions this last week-in each case on account of a matter of clothes. Girl number one dressed so richly and expensively that it made talk in the office. The other girls didn't like it, and her employers finally decided to part with her as a matter of 3 policy. 11er rings, her lace waists and silken rustle were the direct cause of the little note she found in her pay envelope. The second girl was so untidy that she became a blot on the landscape. The same old ink stain staid day after day on the front of her shirt waist. Her hair looked always in imminent peril of coming down the next minute. Her fingers had the appearance of being total strangers to the manicure. The rim of black around their edge so fasci nated her employer, he declared afterwards, he couldn't keep his mind on the letters when dictating. So she was paid for an extra week-and departed. The third girl'was scrupulousiv tidy and her clothes were not expen sive. She chose their delicate fabrics rushing from one counter to another at lunch hour, and made them up herself -in the evenings. But the perishable pinks and blues and lavenders that would have been so charm ing at an evening party caused consternation in the office. She had made the fatal blunder of mistaking the office for the home. From all of which it appears that the business girl cannot be too careful in her choice of clothes. The best dressed girl in the office is the one whose apparel best com bines the cardinal principles, freshness, becomingness and serviceability. The fabrics may be as good as her purse can buy, the colors as blithely pretty as she desires, but not so delicate that the slightest touch leaves a smudge. And take thought, too, of rainy days and dusty car seats ar6 uncertain laundresses, Dark colors are generally the best. Good taste never shines out so brightly as from suit able office attire. The girl who can keep her office rig simple and smart and with pretty touches of individ ality, even without the aid of a fat pocketbook, is the girl who is going to be noted for looking well any where. But not frills and furbelows, please. If I had a boy who had no particular sent of genius for any specific calling, I M~1uch would as soon see him enlist in the regular army of the United States as to take up any other line of work. Found -in If a boy has any good stuff in him the army will bring it out. There is no bet '.. e hlevelop all the finer traits of: 7t ae r human character. People sneer at the com mon soldier very often when that soldier is far above them in all worthy qualities By CAPT. J. POMDER W.ER and attainments. -.-------____------_ Besides, any youngster with ambition can rise in the army fronm the humble sta tus of a private, just as he can rise in civil life, Hie does not have to remain on the lowest rung of the: ladder. He may become proficient in a dozen auxiliary branches, any one of which will bring promotion in rank with better pay, and there will always be superior officers to teach the aspiring one and hold out a help ing hand. I have no assignment of getting recruits for our army, but I am positiv- that there are thousands of sple'ndid young Americans who would be better off in the ranks rather than in trying to fit themselves for some of the learned professions and who would be glad to don the uniform if: they were only: cognizant of the advantages that the army in reality has to offer. Pneumonia dah eotdfrtewe nigD Causes M iany Ti sa h aeo roeta n n - I -llTmed ets D eaths Hdtesm ubro etsbe By ERNST WED)EL ae uha mlpx ese rdpte Chicago th, city spsmally hysaterica ut other * wieth gshpo trte wuld hendn ben We wold haehadthe i isatcthemae ofn oriae aroiain, to figt theiseaseandew w oul taboprcutionar esresnto preta In te wek revous136deaths.oto 34wr u oti rae Ishencraseofhisdi ad he pstamecod ue o datsheic condtion, th greter re orte of anyeart iculbaar eindeecars and bildigs o to he g eae genera waks andox deilty of diphthe incient o urrnodcal hliriafbtethr wIe slish naturelwould thatve been Wewuldhavehadthecoittongi mae bgimesiate apprglries.o tohte ie andwewo lyak erecutonaly Imeliuee tha iteven In te wekrevius36beathse oto much lierdty tis oedreaded Is thincreasedece of thisdeaevrpstecs canue see iat me conditons, hegreterdpevale cts wfheare trbe bae saroonstreetpool Cr bidin s tWtegeae ee uvaneployed dbilys are aowedt tinuedoenaverobberdsrandcrimes ThMqetinnfth byBoldnl hol Ites he ougevelmet hatisno FOR COUNTRvo-WIDE EFFORi Foes of Tuberculosis , Have Plan t4 Use Most Powerful Weapon on Earth. April 30 has been set aside this year as "Tuberculosis Day," and will be ob served In a manner similar to that of "Tuberculosis Sunday" in 1910, when 40,000 sermons were preached on the prevention of tuberculosis. It the first official announcement of the Occasion, made by the national asso ciation for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, the leaders of the movement state that they hope to en list all of the 33,000,000 church mem bers in country. In one respect Tuberculosis day wil differ from Tuberculosis Sunday ol 1910. Instead of requesting the churches to give to the tuberculosis cause a special Sunday service, the national association is going to ask this year that meetings, at which the subject of tuberculosis and its pre vention can be discussed, be held o Sunday, April 30, or on any other day near that date, either in the weel preceding or the week following, "What we went," says Mr. Living ston Farrand, executive secretary of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, in a report on this movement, "is to have this whole subject of tuberculosis dis cussed in all of the 200,000 churches of the United States at as nearly the same time as possible." ECZEMA GONE, BOILS CURE[ "My son was about three weeks old when I noticed a breaking-out on his cheeks, from which a watery sub stance oozed. A short time after, his arms, shoulders and breast broke out also, and in a few days became a solid scab. I became alarmed, and called our family physician, who at once pro nounced the disease eczema. The lit tle fellow was under his treatmeni for about three months. By,the end of that time, he seemed no better. I became discouraged, and as I had read the advertisements of Cuticura Remedies and testimonials of a greal many people who had used them witi wonderful success, I dropped the doc tor's treatment, and commenced the use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and in a few days noticed a marked change. The eruption on his cheeks was almost healed, and his shoulders, arms and breast were decidedly bet ter. When he was about sever months old all trace of the eczema was gone. "During his teething period, his head and face were broken out it boils which I cured with Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Surely he musi have been a great sufferer. raring the time of teething and from the time I dropped the doctor's treatment, I used the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint ment, nothing else, and when twC years old he was the picture of health His complexion was soft and beauti ful, and his head a mass of silky curls I had been afraid that he would -never be well, 'and I feel that I owe a greal deal to the Cuticura Remedies.' (Signed) Mrs. Mary W. Ramsey, 224 E. Jackson. St., Coloi'ado Spring., Colo., Sept. 24, 1910. -~TF':Arrange Flowers. - Here are five golden rules whiet should be observed by those who of ter arrange flowers. Use plenty of foliage Put your flowers in very lightly. UsE artistic glasses. Do not put more thai two or, at the most, three differen1 kinds of flowers in one decoration Arrange your coldrs to form a boli contrast or, better still, a soft har mony. The aim of the decorator should be to show off the flowers-not thi vases that contain them; therefore thE simpler ones are far preferable t< even the most elaborate. Glasses fo: a dinner table should be either white a delicate'shade of green, or rose col or, according to the flowers arrangec in them. The Latest Golf Story. Two Scotchmen met and exchanget the small talk appropriate to the hour As they were parting to go supper ward, Sandy said to Jock: "Jock, mon. I'll 'go ye a roond oz the links in the morrn." "The morrn?" Jock repeated doubt fully. "Aye, mon, the morrn," said Sandy "I'll go ye a roond on the links thE morrn'." "Aye weel," .said Sandy. "I'll g< ye. But I had intended - to get mar ried in the morrn'." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle a CAST ORIA, a safe and sure remedy fo: Infants and children, and see- thati Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Where Every Ear Is Stretched. Knicker-They say listening Is lost art. Bocker-Ever live in a flat with dumb waiter? Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gun and Mullen is Nature's great remedy Cures Coughs. Colds. Croup and Whiooping Qugh and all throat nd' lbmg troubles. A dggists, 25c, 50e and $1.00 per bottle. Praise is encouraging; it brings ou1 the best that is in a man and inspires him to do his duty cheerfully and faithfully.-Henry Lee. For HEADACHFE-Hicks' CAPUDIUN whether from Colds, Heat. Stomach 01 Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you Its liquid-pleasant to take-acts immedi ately. Try it. 10e, ::5c., and 50 cents at drug stores. Be a live wire, but don't burn youl asociates. WHO AGED INVENTC was leaning against a barbed-wire fence and he was almost ready to give up, b whereby he could reinforce the concr barbed wires in the concrete." It was proved to be worth millions. Ties were cast with barbed-wire sl 'jwed that 36 strands twisted in a cer A tie thus made will spring 1% inches machine. will turn out the ties at the ra Gates, who was born in Ottumwa, I Jose, Cal. He is a small, spare and una of a typical Yankee workingman, and I is sunburned and does not look over si: RISE OF PENNI English an- tremendous determination Four years later Rabinowitz had be tion as deputy to G.en. James R. O'Beil extraordinary for thli Boers in the Unit was banker' and financier both, his asso ing some of the best known .men in the In 1906 Robin was president of the a base of operations, thermerger which York was carried out. coMMADERfT he e ublcl rermne- ytesc Ths (cin ontepr/ ftepe he e pulil theprimanedt se c:a Thirsenation onr the Adro of epr Akern Fedeatice of Lcmader's Mr. R'S SUCCESS The people who declare that a man has outlived his usefulness when he attains the age of sixty years and should be put out of his misery with a dose of chloroform, will have to ex tend the limit if they wish to make a hit with the residents of San Jose, Cal., since It has become known that George Gates, a struggling seventy year-old inventor of that city, will be come a multi-millionaire through the sale to a syndicate of eleven of the greatest railway systems of the United States, of his patent rights in a con crete railroad tie which he has in vented. The price to be paid for the new tie is $17,500,000. Gates has been working on the con crete tie for about ten years. He cast thousands and thousands of concrete ties in those years and was not dis heartened when they failed to stand tests and crumbled and cracked under the vibration of heavy traffic. One day about two years ago Gates His meager funds were about gone ut the barb wires suggested a means te. "I will just cast some of these a happy idea, and one that afterward strands running lengthwise. Tests tain manner obtained the best results. and come back to line. And a single te of 3,500 per day. owa, lives in a modest cottage in San ssuming. He presents the appearance ,ecause he is out much in the air he cty years of age. LESS RUSSIAN The failure of the Northern bank of New York for $8,000,000 and the story of Joseph G. Robin's career in New York is the story of the gold-filled streets of America that lures the am bitious of Europe here. Sixteen years ago he was a penniless Immigrant, with perhaps a half-dozen words of English at his command. For the past year he has had a controlling voice in three'banks, two bonding companies, two real estate development compa nies and two traction roads. A Russian by birth, Robin came to the United States as Joseph Rabino witz. He was about twenty-two years old then, and is now about -thirty eight. He came to this country alone, and he is still single and without rela tives here. A year after Rabinowitz reached America he fixed upon journalism as the profession he meant to follow. For rather less than a month he was a re porter on the Herald, with only broken as his stock in trade: :come Robin and was attracting atten rue, Oom Paul Kruger's commissioner ed States. Within five years more he ciates in ambitious enterprises includ United States. - - Bank of Discount, through which, as resulted in the Northern Bank of New Commander W. S. Sims of the Unit ed States navy has gotten himself into a lot of trouble after a long and very creditable career. He attended a ban quet in London and made a speech, during the course of which he had the misfortune to "slop over." He was very anxious to impress on the minds of his British hosts the feeling of friendship which exists in the United States, but he went too far and as sured them that: "If ever the time comes that the British empire is menaced by an ex ternal foe she can count on every man. every dollar, every ship and every drop of blood of her kindred across the sea." Now, Uncle Sam thinks a whole lot of John Bull, but he doesn't propose to have every Tom, Dick and Harry making wholesale promises for him. So Commander Sims has been-jacked up. President Taft characterizes the offense as conspicuous and orders that etary of the navy. sident was necessary, because had he xuberant speech other nations would ernational relationships it is necessary oid giving offense. The election of a United States sen ator from Ohio, to succeed Senator Dick, precipitated a lively contest, which ended only with the selection of Atlee Pomerene of-Canton, McKin ley's old town. It is said to have been one of the hottest senatorial canm paigns in the history- of the state. Mr. Pomerene is a lawyer and is forty-seven years old. He is a native of the state, a graduate of Princeton and has been a practicing attorney since 1886. He has held the office of city solicitor and prosecuting attorney and was the most formidable rival of Harmon for the nomination for gover nor. He was forced to accept second place, however, and was elected lieu tenant governor. Mr. Pomerene is married and his wife is one of Ohio's popular and cul tured women, who will no doubt be warmly welcomed to senatorial circles at Washington. 2andidates before the legislature was toria, who had the endorsement of the aderson began life as a bootblack and hill struggle against early limitations. Crutches or Biers. Richard Croker, at a dinner In New York, expressed a distrust for aero planes. "There's nothing underneath them, he said. "If the least thing goes wrong, down they drop." "I said to a Londoner the other day: "'How is your son getting on since he bought a flying machine?' "'On crutches, like the rest of them,' the Londoner replied." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy. It is better to lose in loving. thm to gain by self-seeking. ONLY ONE "BROXO QUInE." That Is LAXATIVE BROMOMULINNE. Look the ucature of E. W. GROVIL Used the WarA over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. Many mistake soft words for tender, loving ways. Knees Became Stiff Five Years of Severe Rheumatism The cure of Henry J. Goldstein, 14 Barton Street, Boston, Mass., is anoth er victory by Hood's Sarsaparilla. This great medicine has succeeded l. many cases where others have utt4.- f failed. Mr. Goldstein says: "I .;f fered from rheumatism five years, It kept me from business and caused ex cruciating pain. My knees would be come as stiff as steel. I tried many medicines without relief. then took Hood's Sarsaparilla. soon felt niuch better. and now consider myself en tirely cured. I recomniend Hood's." Get it today in usual liquid form at chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs, Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt ReTif--Perma-ni Cure CARTER'S Irrnz LIVER PHILSnewa fail Puwly veget ab.'le-ac tsurel but gendy on U te lia. ITTLE stepa., IVER &nnerEl-- - cureindi 'tn- improve the copiMon- hte eyes. S=R Pill, Small Dose, SmIa Pic Genauie mlte Signature For SPRAINS, CUTS and BRUJISES. ForG60 years the Standard ResAey for Man and Beact. Contains no alcohol cannot sting or torture the flesh; soothes and heals Burns, Cuts and Wounds in a hurry. Mr.J.D.Andrws,Grenboo,C.,wites "As long as I can remeberI~have'used the Medican Mustang Liniment. la was -e it in my house and if any'of my .amil juredinany~ay such as ~ .ms etc., I always use it-it isthan - dostprs' bills. Ony hormeg ac itokneve think of using anytigelse. 'I commend i to all farmers; it wlkeep their families and alsotheirhoeandstokingood condition. 25.0.1abottle at Drag&Cen'Stores. js AROUND THE WORLD.7 T WO GRAND CRUISES .of about three and one-half months' duration each.' 3912, by the large tansatlantic steamer "^a a " Rates From U"Cveland $so e, Iiaciuding All Expeases Aboard ad Ashore Writg fer I!!unrated B&el'rs HINMBURG-AMERICAN L.INE. 41.d3 Broadway, Neii York. P. 0..Box 1767 Is GUARANTEED to stop and perma nently cure that ter rible itching. -It is lcompounded for that ffg ffMpurpose and your money' will be promptly refunded WITHOUT QUESTION I if Hunt's Cure fails to cure Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring Worm or any other Skin Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mal direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by A. B. RICHARDS MEBICINE CO., Sherman, Tema A COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS in New York City. Best features of con? try and city life Out-of-door sports on school park of 35 acres near the Hudson R iver. Academic Course Primary Class.t'i Gtaduation. Upper class for Advanced Special Students. Music and Art. Write for catalogue and terms. Mss Bass and Miss Whim., Rliadae Avsee,jwSerdS..War.. from Lombard Iron Works, Augus ta,Ga. Make money sawing neigh bor'stmber when gin engine is ide afte- t1he crop are laid by.