• ' " -.'•¥*• .AV ? ;•:,' - .. ••• - , ,%.-v , , '• .. . ... , . .. . , [0. flCHENBf PlaI«T>MLBH, M'HENEY, "tMto ^Sv&msm saw saSssas &y A. t. MurrAy ^j. ?•* >^6 ?5W8*I . ":i. 4 Tvi&'SS DUTt TO BE ONE'S HAPPY HAT happiness Is to be fomsd some where outside himself seems to be an almost universal feeling among mankind. ""Dort wo drc nicht bftst, dort is das Glucfc." As the years pass by, the fallacy iu it begins to make itself felt, 'out each individual has to Hod it out for himself in the school of experience; nor must ba hope by any argument to convince those <uho have not yet learnt the lesson. '.; '--c? Thousands are now accustomed to take an en* s' nual holiday in the Alps, but most of these, hav- ing only a few short weeks at their disposal, stay \v!j *at a hotel. There are, however, many--and their number is ever increasing--who go out with ^3.1'̂ their families and spend the whole season in the • mountains, yet who grow weary of continual hotel . life, and seek after something that shall be not only more independent but less expensive, for to rV many the Question of expense looms larger every year. Such can hardly do better than take a fur- chalet in the hills. There are many such to be found, and although rents tend to increase, * v.sv.v they cannot yet be said to be excessive. The ^ Swiss have realized the fact that there is a grow- ^: :.i jng demand for well-appointed chalets in good sit- uations, so that many have recently been built and hi others are being adapted. ^ > Those thinking of taking such a chalet for the i • winter months would be well advised to see that ; it stands at an altitude of not less than 3,500 feet i ̂ above sea level. Should it be lower there will be ' f some risl^ of fogs from the plains and lakes rls- '•^<•4 ing above it, and of wet mud taking the place of :%^%flrm, dry snow. It may be remarked in passing i "V that for housekeeping purposes it is useful to choose a place within easy reach of some town ^Jejsuch as Montreux or Interlaken, though much shopping is best done by post. If the house is ; . large it will sometimes happen that the owner will • '̂ retain a few rooms for his own personal use. In this case he will almost always be glad to give ; :L' help whenever it is asked for. The average Swiss ^•'% village, let it be said, does not usually provide the • « luxuries of a Capua, but the visitor will quickly ' V discover where to obtain everything that he needs. He will soon find that his chalet can be managed with remarkably little servant power. "Central- heating" may be called a necessity, and, in a * ll private house where the ventilation can be proper- V.::V#ly attended to, it does not produce the stuffiness ,'v • that is such an undesirable feature in so many hotels. • »v. •.•••• •.. -i ' gv# "At Rome as at Rome" is a useful motto for those who lire away from their country. The Swiss peasant has his own opinions and his own y'^'.^way of looking at life. Therefore, a visitor should ' not be angry with him when he finds that he hAB a fixed notion that all foreigners are semi-mil lionaires. Is it surprising that the villagers, be ing intelligent if somewhat narrow and unedu cated, should look upon the gens de sejour who come from afar and live in nice houses, and, so far as they can see, do no work whatever, as almost inexhaustible gold mines? They would hardly be human if they did not use their oppor tunities of making hay while the sun shines; only it rests with each visitor to see that he does not personally contribute an unreasonably large share * of the hay. The dweller in hotels sees but one side of Swiss character--the outside; for though the Swiss may be business-like, he is emphatically not obsequ ious by nature. On the contrary, he is vigorously Independent The father of a large family will be grateful to receive any crumbs from the rich 1 man's table, in the shape of discarded clothes for ' the use of his boys, provided that they are offered as from an equal to ah equal, for he is very sen sitive. But in a short time one of the boys Will probably bring a basket of eggs "to thank mon sieur and madam*." ' The writer was once asked to photograph some girls, and a few days later a 1 message came from the children's mother: "Might she do some of the household washing free of charge in return?" That is not such a bad kind of independence! At least, it compares favorably with a variety that is to be met with, which thinks to show its Independence in rough man- - ners, but is not above taking everything it can get without making any adequate return. Take him all round, the Swiss peasant is an interesting and ,;a good man to deal with. Suspicious at first, and ; y ^sensitive always, he responds warmly when he la v ^|treated with tact and sympathy. ;.^V One of the very first questions that occur to a ^possible chalet dweller is: "Will there be plenty iD'T^of congenial society, or shall we be dull?" To is which the reply must be made that the amountof isociety depends largely on the place selected, and its nature on one's self. It 1b always possible to ascertain beforehand the number and size of the -hotels in the village, and these may be looked upon as a fairly reliable index of the visiting pop ulation. Moreover, it has been the writer's ex perience that hotel keepers, far from looking askance at chalet dwellers, welcome them and willingly allow them the use of their skating ^ ;V: rinks and toboggan runs on very moderate terms. L !'\vl Many chalets are now built with an open fire- Jplace in the drawing room, where cheerful wood '"i "*res may be lighted. And? let it be remembered. A Typical dwi&a Chalet* daily sunshine. This period gavo way in turn to a timo, when snow and frost tran|» i formed the whole countryside Into a perfect fairyland The snow is crisp but not' wet, the air keen yet nqt raw, and.everyone comes 1$, : with the glow of health oil ' his countenance. Though It is possible to feel pleasant^ tired in such air after a long tramp or a big ski ing expfn ;- dition, there is never a sear;.-: sation of weariness. Her*si and there in a sheltered col" ner the sun will chase away the snow, and almost instantly a few stray prim roses and gehtians--the forerunners of spring-- will burst into flower, fefren in December, if the season be a mild one, they may be found. A lit tle later, fieldB of delicate snowflakes are common locally. With the lengthening days of February and March, when the sun, rising higher in the heavens, disperses the snow, every meadow and pasture teems with the loveliest of flowers. There seems to be no end to Nature's prodgality. Acres and acres of cowslips, of a site and richness not known to England, bloom uninterruptedly for more than six weeks. Anemones, white and yel low, large and small, thrive in the wildest pro fusion; while in the woods, fragrant daphne Is followed by the wild lily of the valley. In many placet* the pheasant eye narcissus grows as thick as grass, and scents the while neighborhood. In deed, frota a distance of ten miles, the mountain A frozen C&saacto, in the Chalet Grounds "Alps" appear as if sprinkled with snow, but on a closer approach they are seen to be covered with narcissi. So profuse are they that the hosts of visitors who carry away armfuls every day make no noticeable impression. Most people have at least heard of the fields of wild narcissi that ex tend from Les Avants all the way into the Oruyeres country, and many have seen them; but not so many are aware that they may be seen in numerous other districts of the Alps. In every valley golden globe flowers grow in masses that eatch and reflect the sunlight while orchids and lilies of many kinds and colors vie with each other in brilliancy. A little higher up at the melting of the Bnows may be found the deli cate soldanella, most modest of flowers; but perhaps more gorgeous than any other, at least when seen in masses, is the gentlana v e r n a, whose intense a s u r e blue, spread on the vivid green of the young grass-shoots, forms a natural carpet of unsnr- p a B sV b 1 e loveliness. Amid such a Paradise of flowers the idea of an artificial garden is un thinkable! WORKMEN OBSERVE THE RULE ijemilations of Foremen, However, Do w Clot Prevent Them Getting Thelf . Accustomed Beverage. Ill the lower section of Manhattan a new office building is in the course of erection. Hundreds of men, ironwork ers, carpenters, plasterers, etc., are employed. The majority of these workmen drink beer. Recently the foremen of the different gangs com bined and agreed to issue the follow ing order: "Beer will be allowed only once a day, and that is at noon time, and one man is to go for it." Now, persons who happen to be In the vicinity of the building around 11:45 o'clock see a very curious sight. It is this: A man emerges from the nearly finished building with about four beer cans on one arm and a large butter tub embraced on the other. He starts in the direction of Church street. In about fifteen minutes he can be seen on his return trip with the four cans overflowing on one arm and the butter tub still firmly em braced and filled to the top. SHAME TO ARREST RASTUS k if* Yi/bfe-^r frozen fountain It will sometimes hap pen that a late snowfall will occur even in 'April or May. *n»e calat dweller may come down to breakfast and find a couple of feet of Bnow outside his windows. While he is breakfasting, the sun rushes out from be hind a neighboring ridge, and in an hour or two there is no more snow. That Bame afternoon roads and meadows will be dry and flowers ones more firm and upright. Soon It becomes too hot to sit In the sun. That is the end of the winter For those who have become weary of the noiss and hurry and dirt of town life, what greater change could be Imagined? It may be that there will come a moment to the chalet dweller when he will feel, mingled with reluctance at leaving the calm life of the mountains, a certain antici patory joy at the thought of returning once more to the crowded days of city life. But what of that? It only means that the spell has worked --that the cure is complete. ENGLISH HOME OF 1272 • • i hat in most places, wood is so plentiful that •^within a few minutes' walk of the chalet sackfuls of fir cones^and armfuls of sticks and logs may be collected; nor is it possible to exhaust the supply. Yet in the daytime artificial heating can often be dispensed with. Day after day the sun shines in cloudless beauty, and it is possible to sit out on the balcony reading hour after hour. So dry Is jlllO tti* WI°L OMWn wayvtatvo ititu thd uoai aHOFd rapidly than it melts, so that unless the thaw be 1, f Jvery pronounced there is a total absence of < ti^ slush." Last winter, a week of snow at the be- r/thinning of December was followed by six weeks of In a fold the Kentish hills, surrounded feqr apple orchards and hop gardens, there stands a humble building whose walls are eloquent of the past, a writer in the London Globe says. It is almost the only one of its kind left standing--so far as the exterior is concerned--in its entirety. The adjoining land was granted to one of his knights by Edward I. in 1272, and the most reli able antiquarian opinion is in favor of the house having been built shortly after. Our knight, in the matter of building, did not despise the record of the past, for he adopted the Norman method, then dying out, of placing his living rooms on the second floor. ThiB made for safety and the ground floor apartments were simply windowless don* geons and storerooms. In those days they built for strength, ahd the walls of Kentish rag are of great thickness, cal culated to withstand the assaults of any quarrel some neighbors, while the turret, which gives ad mittance by a stone spiral staircase to the living rooms above, Is guarded top and bottom by mas sive oaken doors, and is lighted by oylets through which a rain of arrows could be poured upon in truders below. The main style of the building Is that of the transition from early English to dec orated. Oblong in form, it has gables north and south, and at either end of the long east wall Is a square projection. Ascending the stairs we find ourselves la a room of truly noble proportions, occupying the length and breadth of the building, 29 feet by 18and lighted by windows east, west, north and south. It is open to the root, which contains nearly, if not quite, its original form, and has a fireplace and an "ambrey" or cupboard in which cooking and table requisites and alms for the poor were kept. In this "aire" or aitre" the -fam ily lived and worked, and here visitors and better class retainers slept. Here, perhaps, from the beams supporting the roof hung the store of dried provisions for winter use, and the herbs collected by the squire's dame. It was here In the "aire" that, at even, the family gathered round the firelight (candles were expensive luxuries in those days) to listen to story of battle or chase. The windows were an-> glazed, but glass might be fixed in the shutters, th6 iron hock for ®h!cb "til! ramnin* On Iron . ties did duty as seats by day and as resting places at night and meals were served on a board placed on trestles--hence, perhaps, the phrase "the fes t i v e b o a r d . " , - : t From the hall a doorway gives admittance to one of those square chambers already noticed as built on the ends of the east wall. It is the "lord's chamber," the sleeping room of the wom en and children. The walls are thick and lancet slits, high above reach, let in a dim light by day, while the shutter hooks, still tightly wedged in the wall, show hocw jealously the retreat was guarded by night. It was the inner sanctuia, the most protected part of the house, where those dearest to the HniSbt found refuge in troublous days and children obtained privacy from the more public life of the hall. The other projecting room throws further light on the dispositions of our knight A soltfier, a domestic man, a man of taste, he was also a man of religion. For this room, a little large! than the lord's chamber, is the chapel. It has a long, narrow, early English window, and two staallei ones, and retains on window arch and.tflscina tracery of much architectural beauty. After Aunt Rosa's Explanation Liberty '[ Ikould "Have Been Matter of But a Short Time. Aunt Rosa, who had presided in the kitchen for many years and was a per son of high privilege in the family, came into the library in a highly flus tered state, wiping her fat hands upon her apron. She was plainly both dis tressed and indignant She addressed herself without preamble to the mas ter of the house. "Mister Willie," said she, "please, suh, len' me $15, suh. Dey done 'rest my boy 'Rastus ag*ln. Dey got him shet up in de jail, an' dey 'fuse to let him out 'lessen I pays bail." "What has the laky rascal been do ing, Aunt Rosa?" "He ain't dont nothing 'tall, Mister Willie--nothing 'tall, suh. De boy was jest a settin' on the do' step wiv a knife in his han\ and a onery higger come by, and fell on it, and rip kisself ope^*--dat all, suh." Other People Inspired by Spirit of Cheerfulness Which Can Almost Be Commended. The better we understand litis, the more we come to the realization of the fact that happiness is a duty. It signifies that we are working in har mony with the laws of our being. It is one of the concomitants of right eousness. Righteousness in its last analysis will be found to be living in right relations with the laws of our being and with the laws of the uni verse about us. This attitude, this habit of happi ness, is also a benefit to others. As cheerfulness induces Cheerfulness in Others, so happiness inspires and in duces happiness. We communicate this condition to those about us. Its ef fects come back in turn from them to us again. As anger inspires anger, as love and sympathy inspire love and sympathy in others, each of its kind, so cheerfulness and happines inspire the same in others.--Ralph Waldo Trine. The Prevailing Meas She--William, what on earth Is the matter with your muffler cold d a y ? / « ; , He (absently)--I cut it out ,, f ; Uric Add Is Slow Excess uric add left in the bleed bf weak k'&wjrs, csaMs more diieni than any other poisqB. Among Hi effects are Mckache, head ache, dizriaess; irritabllhy. a#tmmii^ Jrowsinea», "blues," rheOflsstic attacks and urinary disorders. Later effects are drop6y, gravel or heart disease. If you would avoid uric acid troubles^ keep your kidneys be&Itby. To stimu late and strengthen weak kidneys, use Doan's Kidney Pills--the best recon- mended special kidney remedy* A Wtmc&BS*! C*«» Mrs. Jsim gmttfc. "JBvtry Pictur- T»U» u Story. U4-t Clay St., nasha. Wis. "I could . h: get out of bed. back ached. mT body my ankle* swollen. I lost t pound* in vetdtL Doctors difwk know what all*# me and couldn'# help me. Finally, I took Donfs Kidney Pllla ul they cured me. All the swellings dis appeared, Dofui'S Kidney Pills SJiTed zny life." (Sat DIM'S «t Amy Star*. 50e a Box D O A N ' S V Z H V POSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. K.̂ "6# - h \ " * -J L';- • . - . 9 i f v - ; 5 $ -%i W A I T E B - L K E A G E R I S 1 At)AI Tinr 1* nave . Weak No<Se#donM;or<rloader*e)lsa<m!lTIpaTPbl£TB<rE*« •Ms report ordure: exclusive territory. Wxlia tar particulars. Kar«inoij> ir*cuvn ce., " , r m Queen's Close frlenrf.' r * Lady Mount Stephen, whose hus band is likely to succeed Lord Strath- cona as high commissioner for Canada In London, is probably Queen Mary's oldest and most intimate friend. Bo- fore her marriage in 1897 to the Cana dian millionaire peer, she was Miss Gian Tufnell, and was lady-in-waiting and the favorite companion of the late duchess of Teck. She haB been the friend and confidante of the queen from her girlhood, as well as a great favorite with all the members of the Teck family. THE POWER OF MELODY. "Do yon think that music exercises an eievat Ing Influence?" "Not always," replied Senator Sorghum, "1 have known some mighty good men to be de feated because they couldn't afford to hlrs enough brass bands."--Washington Star* ECZEMA SPREAD OVER BOOT Roxbury, Ohio.--"When my little boy was two weeks old he began breaking out on his cheeks. The eczema began Just with pimples and they seemed to Itch BO badly he would scratch his face and cause a matter to run. Wherever that matter would touch It would cause another pimple until It spread all over his body. It caused disfigurement while it lasted. He had fifteen places on one arm and his head had several. The deepest places on his cheekB were as large aa a sil ver dollar on each side. Ke was so restless at night we had to put mitp tens on him to keep him from scratch ing them with his finger nails. If ho got a little too warm at night It seemed to hurt badly. "We tried a treatment and he didn't get any better. He had the ecxema about three weeks when we began using Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. I bathed him at night with the Cuticum Soap and spread the Cuticura Oint ment on and the eczema left' (Signed) Mm. John White, Mar. 19* 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cuticura. Dept L, Boston."--Adv. What She Wanted. ' - "I suppose," said the new saleswom an, "that^you want a suit that will make you look attractive to your hus band?" "Attractive to my husband!" echoed the shopper. "I should say not. He wouldn't know If I wore a suit ten years old. What I want is something that will make my ^next- door neighbor turn a pale pink green with envy." Son* women are weak because of Ills that am a In Girlhood--Womanhood and Motherhood Tfce prascrtptlon which Dr. R. V. Pierce uses most i mm dlnmn Of woaasn--wiikh has stood the last ol nearly half a century--Is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Take tills fat liquid or tablet form as a tonic and regulator! Mis. Kate D. Richardson, of Beasley, Eatex Co, Va* tayv'1 esteem It a pteastaajb testify to the wonderful curative qualities of Dr. Pierce's Fkvorite Prescription, nr some yean I suffered tfreatly with weaknea peculiar to my tea. I was treated by seven] physicians but gradually tfrew worse. One ot my friends told me of the good melts at your Favorite Pmcrtptton." I went to the drug store and •otabottfe and after taking it, with the feasant Prftets,"! commenced to get better, laewr knew what happiness was, for I was always side and complaining and marts Otbea as ••*11 as myself unhappy. So you Dr.Pierce's Pleasant PelUt* regulate stomach, Uoer, I p. .• : : > r V;, ,vi m A sick cow la s bad Investment, and a cow that is |not producing aa much good milk as she should is not welL All cows need careful attention to keep them ' and little disorders can be kept from big by the use of Kow Kure. This fkmoas remedy is a sue cmw sad preventive of meet cmr Ills--such as Lost Appetite, Milk Fever. Bunches, Red Water, Scouring; Abortion, Barrenness, and Retained Afterbirth. Get a package of Kow Kure from your dealer and keep it on band constantly.' tteentaikdlLMaisae. Ask for copy of "The Cow Book." MOT ASSOCIATION CO., IRS. IfiM* lb A HOPELE8S MINORITY. "The trouble with Tibbie Is that he takes him self too seriously." "You mustn't blame Tibbie for that His at titude is in the nature of a protest." '1 don't understand." - _ "Everybt^r ejse takes him for,a fooL" 7" THEIR WAY. "The high cost living outfit ndt to affect prima donnas." "Why not?" "Can't they get everything tor a song?" SEEMS LIKE IT. "Dont schools sometimes commit practical hulls?" v "How so?" "Why, they finish their scholars wlth j^ com mencement.** * ; - ̂ CENTLEMEN ONE TO ANOTHER jv • '".Borne Little Criticism, But the Fact Hemalned as It Had at First' • Been stated. There was a seedy-looking man sit- on the end o» the benches in Madi- n square the other afternoon as a ell-dresaol strolled came along smok- a cigar and took the other end. He d been Rpftfp.fi about two minutes fehen the seedy man rose up and said: f . "Sir, you appoar to be a gentleman." . ;• • V- <: ' ;if •: • •-*- '•? 2*j*. % vl *4 * • ., "Yes, I am," was the reply. "And I am a gentleman also." Nothing more was said. The smoker smoked on and the other sat down and glanced at him from the corner of his eye. When Ave minutes had passed he got dp and said: "Sir, am I mistaken In supposing yon to be a gentleman?" ~ "No, sir." "I am glad to hear Sajr so. I wish to again state the fact that I aa a gentleman myself." tut AWt lookftd up among the branches over his head, while the smoker drew long puffs at the last half of hie cigar. Three min utes had passed away, when the seedy man rose to his feet and somewhat in dignantly said: "Sir, I again demand to know if you are a gentleman?" "I'm sure of it," calmly replied the other. "Then give me some evidence of the fact" - v 'Here It Is!" M he held oat the stah^f the "Ah! Exactly. _I thought one gen tleman could not be mistaken In an other gentleman. Very geod, sir; very good; but next time be more of a gen tleman and don't Bmoke the stub so i^togai"--New York Press. . 1 , ; . • Stopping Supply of Hot AlfV Mrs. Waggles--Were you rude tc that life insurance man? Mr. Waggles--Why, nO! I just told him I wished he^ would go down cellar and talk into oar furnace.--£ta»or •411̂ fvSS'K.u. <* CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cxy for Fletcher^ Jjastoria A Wise Youth. "1 have temperament," simpered the "Then you are destined for a mau who is earning 25 plunks a week," responded the young man, reaching tor his hat Lumbago-Sciatica Sprains m m m "The directions seys, Its good to* lumbago too,-- Sloan's cured my rheumatism i IVe used it aai I know." Do yes «• Skaa'st IWi Fiasl. . "I had n* back hurt 1b tha Ra*r and two yean ago I was bit by « lY-fW • \ t h: > dr l.i i ' "'I I tried all" klnds of dopo wMmK success. I saw your Liniment in a drat store and got a bottle to try. The tm AimliiHitiAn (gswiiwl inaKnfc aiyllfeov , Instant RsBsf fcsaa Selatisa •f was kept In bed with aciatica sIms tbe first of February, but I had aluoatla-- "As a user of yonr Li nlment for the last 15 yean, I oenaay Itis one of bast aa the market Fifteen yean a«o I nrained my ankle and bad toaaa eratcheaswi the doctors said I would alwayaJbe lame. Amad advised me to fcryyew IJnjiwt and after using it night and morninf for three months 1 could walk wfthout a cmae and run aagrood aa any of the ether flramjsn ln mr department., 1 hava neyer iHaa w i t h o u t a b o t U e O n c e t h a t t l a ^ * ^ a L M m C i m i M . T . SLOANS LINIMENT At al Dialmb. fitaa Ifc.. SOa. amd |1M 8ka»*S Hull--IIiii Book on bosses, cattle, poaltry and hog+smttSm* Aidnaa, DR. EARL & 8LOAH» lae* BOSTON. MA8S» Cartel ITTLE OnlyOM"BROMOQUININB^ To set the genuine, call for full name. LAXA- ilVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signatora ot . W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. 2Sc. Their Dull Lives. "Rich wamen have no real joys." \ "No; the~stores never have a clear ing sale of diamond necklaces/' . • Putnam Fadeless Dyes color mfb goods than others. Adv. Some people's only aim In life seems to be to throw mud. Army of Constipation la Growing Smaller Every Dm CARTER'S LITTLE ~ LIVER PILLS are responsible-- they not only give relief -- they penna nentlycureCea^ stipatioa. Mil̂ lions use them for BiltOMMH. Indifsitisa, Skk Headache, Sallow Skia. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL JtlCE. Genuine mast bear Signature FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS U yon ImI 'OUT of bohts' -nrry poww -got Ui* M.ris- scrras from Kipirav. bladdik, nbrtuos m.-KA.-.t.-i. CHROBO WKAKBBSS, asm IHITTIOM, I lLk;? writ* for FRKK' CLOTH BOUND BEDH AI. BOOK ON and woNDK&rul cvats by No. I No.2No.3 and decldc for y.'unwlf If it Is l»olutely FREE. Ko follow'Hp' circular*. No obligations. I»u. LlCUJti Hax>. Co.. H*TRR«rOC« Rl>. H AMPUTKA I', IXIKDOK, Ksa. VI WAST TO TUIKAFIO.N WILL CVBM TOO. j j'*"® -:f- i. WESTERN CANADA The opportunity of ssearinff Cm' homesteads of 1M acres each. the low priced lands of Saskatchewan and Alberta, soon have passed. Canada offers a hearty welcome to the Settler, to the man with a family looking for a home; to the fanner's son, to the renter, to all who wish to live under better conditioM. Canada's grain yield Is 1913 ia the talk of the workL Luxuriadk Grasses give cheap fodder for lwgl herds; cost of raising and fattMfidff for market is a trifle. The sum realized for Beef. Butter, Milk and Cheese will pay fifty cect 02 the investment Write for literature and p ulars as to reduced railway rates to Superintendent of immigration j Canada, or to "••Siv'; J Sai• |SWpik Toting women with one ffx in I B, n high schooler equlTalenttoeuwr I S BbSF rwlstered trainfug school la 130 frt»o and tl week. Large demanii for onrgraduat* D per week. Catalogue mailed on ivob Inctoii Park Hospital, ul a. «>!• Wsah- W. N. U„ CHICAGO. NO. 8-1914. CHEW NAIL POO TOBACCO TRY IT AND V;J J •W