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Show ACHE? NOT THE TIME TO 8TOP. Manager Saw the Poeaf bllities In the Situation. ' Jim Johnstone, the famous ball umpire, said recently la New York that baseball crowds were far kinder to umpires than they used base- to be. This is true of theater crowds, too," said Mr. Johnstone. Why, with provincial touring companies in the past, maltreatment was regularly expected. In fact, the companies profited by it in more ways than one. I know of a company that was playing The Broken Vow in Paint Rock, a one night stand. The audience didnt like The Broken Vow and eggs, cabbages and potatoes rained upon the stage. "Still the play went on. The hero raved through his endless speeches, dodging an onion or a baseball every other minute, and pretty sore from those missiles that be hadnt been able to dodge. But Anally a gallery auditor in a paioxysm of rage and scorn hurled a heavy boot, and the actor, thoroughly alarmed, started to retreat. Keep on playing, you fool hissed the manager from the wings, as he hooked in the boot with an umbrella. 'Keep on till we get the other one.' PRESCRIPTIONS ALICE The Great . Painters of the Future Will Be Women By Alice Barney Religion Gave Man His First Impetus Toward Art Posslbllltlesof Religious In Delicacy and Charm o( Painting Thought Woman Excels Capable of Civing New Interpretation of Her Cod Women needs Faith In Herself end Opportunity Let Those Who Execute, Help Women Soon Will Rivet Masters of Old. IN LATIN. The Public Should Have Them lated by the Druggists. Trans- What virtue is there in the secrecy with which the doctor hedges about his profession? Professional etiquette" occupies a prominent place In the curriculum of every medical school, and when strictly analyzed professional etiquette" seems to mean doing what is best for the doctor, Individually and collectively. Among the things that Is best for the doctor is the writing of his prescriptions In Latin, and thus keeping the public In Ignorance not only of what It Is taking for Its ills, but foro-In- g a call upon the doctor each time a prescription Is needed. In plain and unmistakable English the writing of prescriptions In Latin makes business for the doctors? Let us say that you have the ague. You had It last year and the year before. Each time you have visited the doctor and he has prescribed for you in Latin. You have never known what he has given you for the disease, and so each time you are forced to go to him again and give him an opportunity to repeat his prescription In Latin, and Ills fee In dollars. If you ask the doctor why he uses Latin In writing his prescriptions, why he writes aqua when he means water, he will give you a technical on the purity of the Latin language, and the fact that all words are derived from It, etc. It will be a dissertation that you may not be able to answer, but It will hardly convince you. It would be a good thing for the public to devise a little code of ethics of Its own; ethics that will be a good thing for the public Individually and collectively." Let us apply one of the rules of this code of ethics to you, the individual. You call In the physician when you have the ague, the grippe, or any of 'the other ills to which human Aesh Is heir, and which you may have again some day. The doctor prescribes In Latin, and you take this, to you, meaningless scribble to the druggist to have It compounded. Right here Is where you come In. if you are wise. Say to the druggist that you want a translation of that prescription. It is your privilege to know what you are .taking. While the doctors code of ethics may not recognize this right It Is yours Just the same. With the translated prescription In .your possession you have two distinct advantages. You know what you are taking, and should you wish to call aorae other doctor at some time you will be able to tell him what drugs you have been putting Into your system, and also If you should have the same disease again you can save yourself a visit to the doctor, and his fee. by taking this translated prescription to the druggist once more and having it reAlled. , - Jerome on Colored Evidence. District Attorney Jerome, of New York, said one day of a piece of suspicious evidence: It Is evidence that has been tampered with, colored. It Is like Jut ladys report of her physicians prescription. A lady ore day In July visited her The man examined her physician. and said: "Madam, you aregmly a little run down. You need frequent baths and pleuty of fresh air, and I advise you to dress In the coolest, most comfortable clothes nothing stiff or formal When she got home her husband asked her what the physician bad said. The lady replied: Ho said I must go to the seashore, do plenty of automobtling, and get some new summer gowns" 8he Experimented. little girl of fivo was taken to church one Sunday, and llstcued with unexpected attention to the aermon, which graphically told the story of the stilling of the tempest on the Sea of Galileo, and how Christ walked on the waves, la the afternoon her mother missed her and began an anxloue search of the house. As she neared the bathroom she heard sounds ol eplsshlog, and hurried to the door to behold a small, excited face peering over the rim of the big white tub, and to hear a small, excited voice exclaim: Say, mamma, this walking oa the water Is quite a trick." A BARNET. V J by Joseph B. Bowtos.) (Mrs. Alfred Clifford Barney la one of the cleverest of the women artiste of this Home of her plrturea have been country. hung In the Baris salon and aeveral of her of Amerlran statesmen, ordered portraits department at Washington, are now on the walls of the large reception room of that department. As Mr. la Harney poeaeeaed of wealth, all the money received by her from the sale of her paintings la devoted to the aaalataneo of Amerlean young women who are studying art In Parle. Kor years she has been prominently Interested In the art movement In Washington. She haa had more alttlnga from ambassadors and other dismemliers of the diplomatic tinguished eorpa than any other artist In this coun(Copyright, try.) It will be admitted that up to the last few years gentlewomen were open to but one honorable! and almost always possible, Aeld marriage. Now Instead of marrying for her support and living, as she often did, a miserable and distasteful existence with a man she neither loved nor admired, we And her living and living well by her pen, her brush, her nthsic her profession. She may have to struggle aud almost starve to gain her end. but her will and determination, her talent, her power of endurance and her powers of mind are being dally tested and are bearing the test welL During the last ten years wjtmen, both painters and sculptors, are no longer a matter of wonder. They are accepted facts and their work Is Judged not as the work of women but as tho work of artists. The strong mailed hand that has bound her daring spirit to the limits of a home is powerless. Her wings, well feathered and strong, carry her beyond Its profound but narrow limits Into the great Aeld of workers, where her talents demand and command recognition. Naturatly men have objected to women entering aay of tve moneymaking Aelds. They know. In the nature of thing In each department there Is only so much money, or success. to be gained; and that money, success and fame will fall to those possessing the greater talent and application. Women entering the Aeld of art and forging ahead, aa they are doing, means that men of less talent and men of like talent and less application will do without the success and money that the competing women carry off. TJtey know that in all things when you can keep down the number of competitors greater are the chances of success and the standards except where genius exists less high. Remember, It is in the boys early years that the seed of example Is planted, and from that seed, perhaps of ambition, the man becomes a warrior, a statesman, a scientist or an artist. Boys from the beginning are taught of the great deeds of Caesar, Washington. Newton and Columbus. Who were Michael Angelo and Vales-ques- ? Were they not men? Were not all the great men but men? And will he not, as he dally studies their deeds, the deeds of great, powerful minds, will he not think, I shall be a man a great man? Year after year he grows with tho Idea Armly planted In his mind that he Is a man to whom all things are posblblo. And unless he Is great In mind and deed It often takes time and many hard knocks before much, if not all, of his conceit is knocked out of him. But would It not be well If the coming woman were taught that women can, aqd shall, attain that glorious fame, that victories are In some Aelds equally possible for women as for men? And to that end let the women who cannot but who desire to progress help these women who have already started on the way. aiding them, at least, by encouragement and cheer so far as their talent ami strength will carry them, thereby making the road less hard for the future woman. If every ldlo woman who says she has no talent, no power of expression, would Interest herself In some woman struggling to attain, would encourage and strengthen her efforts at those moments when the artist feels despair, she would And that the mere effort to help another would awaken In herself Arst an Interest and then a desire to create, and little by little her artistic temperament would be aroused until the desire to try hreif to accomplish DOES YOUR BACK something would thrill ner heart and exhe would feel arise the power of of One Who pression that Is within each one of us Profit by the Experience Relief. Hai Found It may be she would become Interested In a woman struggling to become James R. Keeler, retired farmer, a painter, and thereby would awaken N. Y., says: the powers of a painter within heraell of Fenner St., Cazenovla, I suffered ago years fifteen About the a sleeplna or, encouraging painter, back and with my musician or poet or the active prac doctored I kidneys. tlcal worker in the world of progress remeused many and would be aroused. dies without getting relief. Beginning with It was religion that awakened .the Doans Kidney Pills, Arst crude effort of man to express b I found relief from means of pigments and marble hU first box, and two the Ideals. The great statues of the gods boxes restored me to and goddesses crowning the hills ol condi.. good, sound Greece were but mans expression ol friends of my his belief In the deities that ruled hb tion. My wife and many fate. In Italy the palette and brush have used Doan's Kidney Pills with were laid at thp feet of the church Oi good results and I can earnestly recRome, serving to add to her glory, tr ommend them." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. portray her beliefs, to seek the spe clal blessing that her service be Co., Buffalo, N. Y. man crown stowed, and In the end to APPEAL THAT WAS HEEDED. Rind with the flower of an Immorta his of In color art the expression Follower Ideals. Judge Must Also Have Been of the Gentle Art. With searching for the Ideal, mar. awoke to the realization of the won John Quincy Adams, of Massachuders of nature. Perfect In detail marvelous In construction, sumptuous setts, third of that name, who died in color, nature surrounded him, beau- about ten years ago, was very fond tiful even In Its bareness In Its bar- of fishing, and not especially fond of ren spots. What could rival the play his legal profession. One day, the story runs, a case In of the sunlight upon Held and forest, the mists of morning and of twilight which he was counsel was down for time? What could mere thought and trial In a Massachusetts court. Mr. canvas and colors do to surpass the Adams did not make his appearance, charm that atmosphere breathes upon but sent a letter to the judge. That and about the homeliest things of life, worthy gentleman read It, and then giving them character and beauty, postponed the case with the announcemystery and pathos? What could rival ment: the charm of life with all Its variaMr. Adams Is detained on Imtions? So art turned from the church. portant business. Its history and service, to life, to Its It was afterward learned by a colmirth and sorrow. Not to the forsak- league of Adams that the letter read ing of Its God, but to a broader and as follows: more comprehensive service, the highDear Judge: For the sake of old er expression of which to my belief-w- ill Isaak Walton, please continue my be by the hand of the future case till Friday. The smelts are woman. biting, and I can't leave. For women are fast making themselves teachers In the Held of religion, Great Discovery Announced. Sir William Crookes, as a result of leading and leading well to those things that heretofore they were per- his own researches and the experimitted only to accept with unques- ments of Professors Krowalskl and tioning faith and never permitted to Mosclckl, of Freiburg university, has Judge; and may not the women who discovered a process of extracting are painters, those who are touched nitric acid from the atmosphere. The by the same religious Are, may they process Is available for commercial, not give their talent like the masters Industrial aud agricultural purposes, of old to the glory of their God, arous- and la expected to revolutionize the ing not only the eye to see but the nitrate industry and the world's food mind to awake to the possibilities of problem. Foster-Mllbur- the bouI? And why. should not art, touched and conquered by the hand of woman, Youthful Philosopher Thought Out James Wilson, the secretary of agriIn Washington culture, was discussing gives his department which the aid the American farmer. He pointed out the benefit that bad been derived from the Introduction of darura wheat, machine, and of of the wheat-testinthe method of extracting potash from It was Jamies bath night several each v all. On this particular started, he soaked and tub for a full half mother haled him forth of the room In his paiam g granite. In fact, said Mr. Wilson, smiling, "I believe that eventually our finest to be products will be cheap enough Then the within the reach of all. hot house story of the boy and the and dead as antiquated be will grapes as the theater hat stories of the past. This boy ho was a bootblack-ente-red a grocer's store one day, and, said: pointing to some superb grapes, them o' there, the price "Wots mister?' , One dollar a pound, my lad, the clerk replied. A look of anguish passed over tha boys face, and he said, hastily: "Then give us a cent's worth o' carrots. Im dcd nuts on fruit. n TORTURED. CHILDREN Girl Had Running Sores from Eczema Boy Tortured by Poison Oak Both Cured by Cuticura. "Last year, after having my little girl treated by a very prominent physician for an obstinate case of eczema, I resorted to the Cuticura Remedies, and was so well pleased with the almost Instantaneous relief afforded that we discarded the physicians prescription and relied entirely on the Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Pills. When we commenced with the Cuticura Remedies her feet and limbs were covered with running sores. In about six weeks we bad her completely well, and there has been no recurrence of the trouble. "In July of this year a little boy In our family poisoned his hands and arms with poison oak, and in twenty-fou- r hours his hands and arms were a mass of torturing sores. We used only the Cuticura Remedies, and In about three weeks his hands and arms healed up. Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas, Fairmont, Walden's Ridge Tenn., Oct 13, 1905." Not Entire. Been Raid Away in Stockings. The Framingham (Man.) national bank has Just received for redemption give form to her higher Intention and a note on the old Framingham bank, her higher Ideals? For the delicacy which was the predecessor of the pres-en- t and charm of her thought In her un national bank. The note Is dated selfishness and love of the Ideal she June 12, 1854, and Is as crisp and excels men. and will she not carry art. clean as the day that it left the enof which she is fast making hersell hands. The note will be gravers Into her purer atmosphere mkster, kept as a souvenir. giving expression to her idealism; del Icate dreams and great unselfishness, Negros Valuable Head. love t it Is and uncon A Kentucky negro earns double sclous beauty to lay all at the feet ol wages as a hodcarrler, because he is her hearts religion a new interpreta- able to do the work of two men. He tion of her God? carries from 40 to 50 bricks at a time. Ha places the1 bricks upon a board In Genesis It Is the earth, the plants, which he balances upon his head as the animals, man, and then woman, he climbs to the tops of high that follow one after the other In the order of creation, more perfect, more Would Make Rich Crop. powerful, more Intelligent and more is It estimated that 21,500,000 acres woman been until, spiritual, having made, we reach the highest and most are available for rice growing In spiritual of all created belng3. We Louisiana and Texas, and the value know thut women are more spiritual of such crop would be $400,000,000. than men, and It Is the spirit that This would make the rice crop fifth makes the great artist. It Is the spirit in point of value among the cereals of that Is developed by continuous effort this country. then that which Is gained by arduous Reasonable Explanation. toll stamps Itself upon the soul and I wonder why a dog chases his personality, never to leave, giving a tail? certain facility or trend to the artists A sense of economy. expression. Painting Is not merely Economy?" mechanical and technique alone Is Yes; can't you see he Is trying to nothing, but the greater master of make both ends meet?" one becomes the technique greater will bo the possibility of Interpreting Riches Cause Trouble. any subject as the mind desires. 'And Great riches are ever accompanied Is not mastered without technique also by great anxieties, and an increase work hard work constant work of our possessions is but an Inlet lo not merely tho work of the classroom, new disquietudes. Goldsmith. but original work, trying to weld toto weed and so out. that what What a man ean do Is his greatest gether one desires to express will be unques- ornament and he always eonsults his tionable. The master knows just what dignity by doing It. Carlyle. to put In and what to leave out, beFEET OUT. sides what method, will give the desired effect, and that Is what the pupil She Had Curious Habits. only acquires by tedious, arduous work and s'ep by step. When a person has to keep the feet If women painters advance In the out from under cover during the coldpresent century as; they have tu the est nights In winter bcause of the past they will outstrip men. Give heat and prickly sensation, It is time women faith In themselves and an op that coffee, which causes the trouble, portunlty to work and we shall see be left off. There Is no end to the nervous conthem rise to the plnnaclo of the great masters of old whom none has ex ditions that coffee will produce. It celled and to whom all artists aspire. shows In one way In one person and In We shall see woman, when her faith another way In another. In this case In hetself Is strong, a great religious the lady lived In S. Dak. She says: 1 buve had to lie awake half the painter, Interpreting that thrill of reIn which is the night with my feet and limbs out of ligious Inspiration midst of us and which seeks expres- the bed on the coldest nights, and felt afraid to sleep for fear of catching sion for its broad, pulsing life. So It Is as the future religious paint- cold. I hud been troubled for years er that I look to women to raise art with twitching and Jerking of the above the art of men. And to this end lower limbs, and for most of tho time I would amuse In the women of I have been unable to go to church or to that great faith in themaelvea, in thelt lectures because of thut awful feeling possibilities, In their powers, snd In that I must keep on the move. "When It was brought to my atten-tlothe highness of their aim. Iat them that coffee caused so many try to achieve and ever keep trying; s and let the written who cannot achieve diseases, I concluded to drop through lack of talent of opportunity, coffee and take Post um Food Coffee to encourage their more fortunate sisters tee If my trouble was caused by coffee unUI women shall be the power and drinking. most true. Then those who cannot "I only drank one cup of coffee for see with the eye of the imagination can breakfast but that was enough to do see to Interpret that which Is most the business for me. When I quit It beautiful masterstrokes whore the my troubles disappeared In an almost color Is put upon canvas by women miraculous way. Now 1 have no more to endure masterpieces have en of the Jerking and twitching and can durod, for centuries. sleep with any amount of bedding over me and sleep all night, In sound, peace-fu- l Doctor's Idea of Gratitude. rest Grateful Patient Doctor, how can "Poitum Food Coffee Is absolutely I ever repay you for your ktndneee to worth Its weight In gold to me me?" Doctor "Doesn't matter, old "There a Reason." Read the little man. Check, tuouey order, or cash." health classic, "The lloud to Well-vlllla pkgs. e W . Boy Took Grapes Beyond His Purse, Humble Substitute. The aeronaut, after painfully tricating himself from the wrecked balloon, limped to the nearest farmex- house. "Madam, he said to the woman who answered his knock, "can you accommodate with a night's lodging a balloonist who has come to grief?" Id be glad to," she hesitated, "but you are an entire stranger to "Not an entire one," he Interrupted, with some acerbity. For I have left my left ear, three teeth, and certain portions of my nose back there with the ruined car. Colleges Undesirable Fire Risks. Colleges are now regarded as rather undesirable Insurance risks, and it Is probable that the rate will be generally Increased. In 18 years 784 fires have occurred In college buildings, entailing a loss of $10,500,000 In money and a heavy loss of life. This makes tho average money loss over $13,000. "h., SS I (w 8itu,' - C4tt'- V7 4s a bath." So I did! answered jam, A bully one!" fully. But your face Is blac- k- mother. Oh!" Jamie V w4 smiled Ingly. My face Is all rig!? to wash that in the ! h no bath. You dont morning spose to waste .time bathing always begin Just below iw my Hill S work down on my arms and u? I always leave my face those ends I tend to In the mol Hi Evil of Tipping 8yttm Although there Is a great effort to keep secret the thefts in hoteiT igitREI Ik restaurants In New York it evident they are on a rapid i The manager of a large says the system of having depend almost entirely upon their pay lowers their moral! dard and causes them to look they are supposed to serve a legitimate prey. JJ CO SILLS. 177 HU iSIlMMf- - i A Base Insinuation, hear the Neweds have had dreadful quarrel and that the Is talking of going home to her er. Whats the matter? 1 J I believe one evening she got! her cooking recipes, and when the boye ijl neighborhood lost their ball in J under .the fence, Mr. Newed them one of her biscuits to finish game. J supper from LA A Knock, said the father, "Jimmy, rip In your bathing suit It up. But papa, then Go and growled the boy.-j- u Mannei er will sew It for me." "Never mind. I want you to to sew yourself. For, said the fait "some day you will get then you wont have any will only have a wife. HAP OR married, i mother- -j Pea great ms mar the a to from ::kmi ed. Al Pointed Conversation. "Jack, I am going away." Madge?" Going "Yes, going away. But before I have something to say to yon Something to say to me, 11 wife? "Yes, something to say to you. d me any poker stories li Bet the weekly remittance. Thatll about all. 1 Girls Destined for Harems The Circassians, who live lx northwestern part of the Caucui and who think It is more honorable live by plunder than by Industry, ml it a custom to bring their daughti up to be sold as slaves to tbe Ti and Persians. Circassian beauci therefore, shine not In their natr land but In the harems of the orlext fgllgee, vbel a, mi fatal arried is abot LI; loibaad Beca j. a man woul be lady v id broth nation vai are J happy roblem have ilr the rerquli ml al ;jch c would A Theory. men swear! Why woman, Its due to the vanity of the answered Mlsq Cayenne, They to be noticed even when they think of anything of real lmpo to say.' asked Habits of Sperm Whale. The sperm whale can remain below the surface for about 20 minutes at a time. Then It comes to the surface and breathes 50 or CO times, taking about ten minutes to do so. ' M - Weel All I 'he et u. Re glvei ' se denci MOTHERHOOD The first requisite of a mother Is good health, and thegood experience of maternity should not bo approached without careful physical preparation, as a woman who is la good Physical condition transmits to her children the blessings of a good constitution. Preparation for healthy mater-X- k eco",plHhed by Lydia E. 1 s Vegetable wlneh is made from nativeCompound, roots and herbs, more Successfully than by any other medicine because it tone and strength to the entiregives feminine organism, curing displacements, ulceration and Inflammation, and the irin ad mure chlld than t h!rtyy Mixe births t Mx The th 4 mrs cars james Chester healthy at birth, Mia 0. PinkhamsVegetable Notc wW the xrrlvet For mot e and twins d In oi I him then bl Compo American mothers in preparing for chil J'nesCheter.of437 W. 33th St.. New Yorksaya w,andl)-- bat &! tr 4ed 'xd t ting t to th i4itn omer a u' vompouna is Chesses and ailments certainly of women. It lmscnP!!r,.rU.liar female Complaints, Dtnggln) thins. Weak mCry ,or,ra tlon and Childbirth 2, nf? Displacements, Inflammation. stanHng Invitation to V 10 t Is a Whti Tfornln offai n ner-vou- 'flag p leci L DOUGLAS v3.00 8t S3.50 W. SHOES Tt,T Reward lay been night y &25fOOO to which t ttJXZZXZZSlSt ,,t" 4 AT LL J bHiots. pr?rm OH. IN tovel of L ochoa iu fn oral t "v4 ti dlai bay cre fetid in -Na f b by mail Catalog frae. WAJWa I |