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Show ' ' ' '. .;, ' ' .... r ' , ' ,( ; - ; 1- r v ' V ' . . ' ' ; ' r ' ' ' ' J , i Dt Reader: This ia your corner All questions submitted will be csref ully answered, except those seeking medical advice. . Names and addresses of business firms cannot be printed here, but will t 8"t lf d, stamped envelope accompanies Hhe request.' ,Que"tlons are limited to two. Full name and address must each letter or no accompany reply can be made. ' i All communications are held strictly confidential. ' ' ' In requestmir poems and songs,, the correct title, the first line, or the of author 18 necessary In ordef'to find them. - Please send stamped, addressed envelppc also with these requests, so they may be forwarded directly to. you. ' ... , , L Adre" lett"s plainly, with pen and Ink, to Helen Brooks, Box 1545, . Salt Lako Citv. TItAh: !,., ... ' - r - .,..... Dear Miss Brooks: I enjor roar' corner very mueh ana would like you to anawer me ' some questions. (1) I am 12 years, old a,nd kayo taken few music leaaons.' Would rou tell sue th.ntma of some easy sheet muaict (2. Is 4t proper for a Klrl of 12 years to go to a picture show with a boy? I remain, . ' r. ... - FLORENCE Idafio: (1) Following- - are a few piano selee-tlo-na which I hope will be about jrlght for you,, though It ia hard to JOdgre1 whtit grade, pieces 'you ahonld have: "EvenUif; : Prayer." No. 456; Walts ro "F," No. 175; "Young-- Cadets March" Milltaire,'! (op. 30) B. Lag-- and "In May," (op. 578 No. 2.) (2) No, dear: - i. Thanka for the catalog;. I have an-other question I would HUe to ask. What ,,kind of artthmetlo Is taken mostly In the 8th grade t . Your an-aw-are helping me very much. Thanking you In advance. DOROTHY, McCamraon, Idaho. I am glad my anawera are .help to you, uoroiny. Your queation is a little Indefinite, but as I understand It, what you want ia the books lined in the 8th grade. The A pupila of the 8th grade take Book I, Part t, and the B pupils take Book 3, Part 2. Dear Miss Brooks: Have you room for me In your cor-ner? I am a girl of 17 with brown eyes and long, brawn hair. (1) Would you advise me to have it bobbed? Home of the girls of my age have their hair bobbed and look good. Everyone tells me I would look good with bobbed hair. (2) Is it proper to walk home with a boy If you know his name and have been around him lots and never been introduced? Hoping I will be welcome to come again, I remain, . BARBARA, Idaho. Indeed there Is room, Barbara. (1) I cannot have"H-4s- , jny heart to advise a gtrl who has lovely, long hair, te have It bobbed. But of course one must use their own Judgment, my deav (2) And how doea It happen you have not been Introduced to this boy, Bar-bara? Under ordinary circumstances it would not be proper. Come again. Dear Miss Brooks: I feel as though' you are a godsend to our community at large, and great will be your reward when you have finished your good work here on 'this earth. Now for my question. Please give me the exact time to boll plum, apple and grape Juice for making Jelly. Thanking you In advance, . BUSY HOUSEWIFE, Utah. v Thank you, Buay Housewife. It Is ,. ' .""SONGS REQUESTED ' These songs and poems ire on the requested end list: r I'll Remember You, Love, In Jljr ; y ' Prayers. f- " The Boys Won't Do To Trust ' ' Wandering Home. The Drunkards Lone Child. . I Am Looking for a Sweetheart. . ' Somewhere in France There's a Lily, , Wackeyed Hallor Boy. " William and Mary. ; Put My Little Shoes Away. ' ' . When You Left the Red River Valley. The Lonesome Nigger, Don't take advantage of my good nature. ., 'First Lines , Go, pretty rose, go to my love, ' . i Tell her of all I fain would tell. ''I t , SONGS RECEIVED ' The following aonga and poems have been received during the paat week, and I wish to thank each one for their , ktndnesa In contributing them: - I've Juat Come Back to Say Good-by- e. ' THERE'S A ROSE IN OLD ERIN U (That's blooming for me) I. Kln. that dear little isle o'er the sea t - There's a rose that Is blooming for me, Just a sweet fragrant flow'r In a green shady bow'r, ' I'm yearning to see her each day and ' each hour. By the lakes, of Klllarney so bhj. She Is waiting with heart everirue, The smile so endeariu' she always is wearln' .... Just calls me to Erin as nought else ' ; can do. ... , Chorus: f An IrUh rose Is blooming . I That la JuBt for me; J I dhe's the fairest of flow' re on that deai Isle of green, . . My rose of Klllarney, my wtnsom Colleen. , ( "Co"rns back to Erin," she's calling, she's railing. , 1 Cn hear her tonight from afar o'er , the sea, There's a rose in old Erin that's bloom-I- n' for me. , 1 Dear Miss Brooks: I have been a silent reader of your corner, "Between You and Me," and think your Ideas are splendid. My sister has written and received excel-lent answers, and If you will not mind I will sale a few questions, I am 16 years old and my face has a rather large amount of pimples. I ' have sponged It In hot and cold water and used many home remedies but have had poor results. Some folks have advised me to get face cream and such arttclea. My folka do not think It is necessary. I was operated on last year and they say the medicine I took causes It. When I went to school I used powder to quite an extreme. I thought that was the cause, but during the summer months I have tried to use as little as possible and they are the same. Now what do you think could be the cause? What could I do? Do you think a good pow-der will cause such?' Thanking you and wishing you lots ef success, SLIVERS,. Kansas. Welcome Slivers, from the sunflower state. I wo,a1d say the causa of your pimples might be from neglect of your skin wlrfla using powder excessively. Of coj1rae they may be from a blood dlsofler, In which case this condition wlM of oourse have to be corrected. In ofther case I would not advise the hot Water. but rather yd should have a good acne cream and also an astringent cream or lotion. Usebthes once or twice each day and alwiWs ctoanse the face thoroughly before retiring. No, I da not think a good (swdlr would Causa this condition, if the kl Is prop-erly eared for. When bla)ifcads and pimples have found a place lnaour sklii it takts time and to remove5 them-- . ; V i To A READERS IifaboWThanka very much Cor the sonA I am very sure It Is Ihe correct one. nd Lm't there some-Uiln- g I can do forouj DXaAlIss Brooks the first lme I have written and trust you will welcome Please teU me what the seven fiof the wSild ara,f fSVSliounr-ik-hold f (utg'Irl's arm or Is to take fliM of the boy s arm V in tnkjWu- liar nttt T,itu onderful to know you feel I am of ial value toyour community. And njw because iiS Is impossible to give tlfe esact tlms or boiling the different ,frlr Juices t produce a perfect Jelly, i 111 gle yea a fewVoinfs whloh I Vto wlllfyiela. you. AsVop know, tt H hpeStlas found In fyi different ftyVs whichuiauses the Jes to ielly. l'ecltrv Vs St Its beat whet. Hie frClt le Jusrlt)A,c,r a little beforw lf thjuice l'rrtSj:its,,or the coolukjj continued H09 the pectin tiidVkoes a ijhnnge VidJVses ls powf oV(latf ilzlng. Jii-fpf'- select pluifs orNferapel which aifliSntly undorrli4-41a8- h theL-rape-ad4iK ho water. Ad quart of wa. ... , - - l 1 w MUAiia of v'ter to 8 quarts (AniiVles. I In each caselcook slowly and Yhlroiihly and strain the Juices. ad.llnMin for pint of Juice anil sna-ar-, stlrrinR until sugar is dissolved. IMace over tire and bring to boiling point, remove and skim; put over fire again and boll and skim once more; boll and skim a third time, and then pour Into hot glapses and st on a board. Mace the board In a sunny window and cover with a sheet of Klaus If possible, until Jelly is set. This max be as soon as cold jnr It may take lev eral days. (Lacking the glass, covei with anything which will protect It from the dust.) L!"0.1 ,t " "tart a emirse In tH AH BUSINESS COLLEGE, 92 B.. Bl.l.. flalt Le Citj Carl Dsvta, Prin. WRITE TODAY. " hn I ko l.aok ti Erin once more, ( AVe will wander agitln to the shore, And Killnrney will gleam 'neath the moons sllv'ry Imams, While clos, 1 am foldlu' the rose of my j dreams; ' . 'Neath the skies of old Erin so blue ' We will tell love's old story anew, t.v. When nature reposes and moonlight ' discloses . ' . y. Lovo's KarUen of roses for only us two. f. v,. BETTT UtehT Thanks for the j song, my dear. Casi I not return the favor in some way I To R. B.. rindale. Wye. Thanks. , dear, for your cheery words. Indeed ; 'I will do as you request. And a very v ba thank you for the songs,' also. To BIRDIE, Victor, Idahoi ' Tou are welcome, Birdie, and thank v' you for the song. What may. X do for , you now? Dear Miss Brooks: - I have been reading your advice to 4 v t . tohthaetrs for soma time, and I supposed If you answered questions for oth-ers, you might give me some Informa-tion that I am seeking. (1) Could you give me the name or namea of the physical education schools in Califor-nia? Also addresses? (2) Is It good form, when making the acquaintance of anyone, to ahake handa with your glove on? When meeting some friend on the street should one k remove the glove? Two questions the limit, n'est-c- e pas? I . know It Isn't H conventional to thank anyone In ad- - vance for a service, but may I not take this opportunity to thank you, and thus , "smash" oneo f the conventional rules? I wish you success, ' LOU-LO- Utah. il Tou "supposed" just right, LouLou, and here you are. (1) titate Normal School of Physical Kducatlon, Chlco, ; Calif., and Leland Stanford University, Dept. of Physical Education, Palo Alto, Calif. (2) When meeting a friend by i ' ohance. or receiving a chance Introduce r TINKLE. And so i'wlll, Tinkle. The seven wonders fft the Rnclent world are the Pyramid of Egypt, the Hanging Gar-de- .of Semlramls at Babylon, the Statue of Jupiter, or Zeus, at Olvmpla the Temple of IHana at Ephesu's. the Mausoleum of Hallcarnassus, the Colos-sus of Rhodes, and the Itiaroa, or light-house, at Alexandria. The present age Is one of supremacy In science rather than In art and the Seven Modern' Won-ders are the Wireless telegraph, tele-phone, flying machine, radium, anti-septics and antitoxins, the an 4 spectrum analysis, (a) The custom of taking hold of the arm of your part- ner or escort Is not generally followed now but when this custom Is followed the girl aheuld take the boy's arm, ex-cept In casea where the boy assists the girl In entering street cars, automo-biles, at street crossings, etc. Dear Miss Brooks: I have written to you a few times and have also read your corner. I think your anawera are splendid. Would It be too much bother to answer a few more? (1) How can a person make warts go away? (r) Is a girl 14 years of age too young to wear silk stock-ings? Wishing you oceans of success, LITTLE DANDY, Kans. Always welcome, girlie. (1) Some have found the following remedy very effective In destroying warts. One tableapoonful of borax to one quart of water. Moisten the warts several times dally, and allow the solution to dry on without wiping. (2) Fourteen is not too. young to we silk stockings for dresa occasions. Dear Mlaa Brooke: May I enter your corner? I am a girl of 14. I have blue eyes and brown, wavy hair. I have my hslr bobbed. (1) Which Is the most popular way to comb It leave It straight or curl it? (2) Is It proper for a girl to go with a boy four or pve yeare older thaa heraelt? I remain, BOBBETTE, Idaho. Yea. Indeed. (1) The newest way of , ' tlon. the glove need not be removed. If attending- - a social affair when hand-shaking! Is In order the glove should bej 5 removed. Yea. dear, tempue fug-It- . Deed you may, and you're welcome; we "' don't care how many of this sort of , conventions we smash, do we? ,. To BROWN EYES, Summit Ut. And 'i; once more I thank you for another song, aa well as for your gracious let-- i. . ter. Dear Mlae Ilrooks: We hope we are welcome to your cor-ner, and that you will anawer our quea- - tlona. (1) How can anyone tell when , they are reflly In love with a boyT We , , are afraid that aome day, when it ia too late, we will And that we do not , f truly love them. Ct) Can you auggeetl anything that will keep our light hair: from turning dark? (3) If a girl la going steady with a boy and he Ixavea: town for eight months. Is It proper fori the girl to have partners while the' boy ia gone? (4) Hnw can a girl kill; --- ia --uuuwi nair ia perrectly etralght, but very few look well with It thla way. (2) At your age, no. dear, you should not be going with the boya at all. Do you not And your achool work takea about all your time and at-tention? To WHITE KOSK. Tetonla. Ida. Sorry. White Rose, but I have only one of the eonga you wish, ao will aee if I can get the others for you and then send them all together. I am very happy to note that your "worries" seem to be along the right line, and also glad that my. previous anawera were satisfactory to you. Dear Miss Brooks: I am giving a party soon, and I want you to help me make It a success. It will be an Indoor party, as It la at Ti.'tct. What kind of games do you think would be good to play? What do you think would be good to serve Instead of Ice cream? They have all served this, and I would like to have something different. (2) What will remove Ink her love for a boy? Hoping thla doesn't reach the waste baitkivt, we remain, ANDT AND T1K1TEK, Nevada, Tou are welcome and I will try to answer your iueations, but how old are you, children? I am nulte sure you will be aware of the fact when you really are In love. It la indued a trag- - edy to discover you are not in love when too late. Do not think you must , t try to fall In love with every hoy yeu meet. Love will come unbidden, and when you least expect It. perhaps. , Therefore, look upon all boya as friends only. (2) Rinsing the hair In water In which the Juice of a lemon has been squeezed or adding a teaspoon ef so. la to the rinse watur has a tendency to keep it Hunt but will not permanently prevent it from turning dark. (.1) ly you may go with ns many boys as you wish, my dear, so long n you have given your heart Into no purtlcu-la- r one s keeping. (4) And whv do vou wish It -- killed"? This would b diffi-cult for me to say without knowing more details. Do you think It is "really truly"? And now you se your letter did not reach the waatopaper basket. mains irom a ping Jap crepe dress? I Just got some on mine while writing this letter. EDITH, Utah. (1) It requires so much space to give a good Idea of how to play games, that I am going to suggest you go to your book store and aee If you cannot find a little book of games. Yeu ahould be able to get one which would be a great help to you at thla time as well as the future, for from 25 cents up. As for the refreshments, why not serve a dainty sandwich and fruit salad. With this serve hot chocolate. (If) Ink is one of the most difficult stains to remove from colored goods as almost every-thing which removes the Ink also re-moves the color. A prolonged Immer-sion In sweet milk will sometimes re-move It, depending upon the coloring master In this particular ink. The com-mercial ink removers are about us sat-isfactory as anything you can use. To VIOLA, rtah. As I' have only one of the songs you request at preNent, I will hold your envelope for a few days, hoping to get the otlier.one. NEIGHBOR Women Tell Each Oiler HowTley Hare Been Helped ly Lydia L U ; fiakham's Vegetable Compound . f! ' "; ' ': 't'- " PerrysbuTg', Ohio. "I took Lydta E" Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I. ... icauae I suffered with Yi"f"aJ remember Juat bow ; It"" r long I suffered, but i it was for some time. I it&hlr, vi 0ne d87 1 WM .UUt mr( 3 I ing with lady I met . iliiM on tear, and I told '4J 1 her how I was feel-- w U H ing and she said sh " IIf"t i. X haclbeea justlik.1 i ifi' was with pains and V ;ff 1 lnrvniitroubleg-an- d she took the Vegetable Compound, and it cured her. So then I went and got some, and I certainly recommend it for ' it is good. Whenever I see any woman who ia sick I try to get her to tak Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Com-- v? pound." Mrs. Ada Fkick, Route 9, Perrysburg, Ohio. In nearly every neighborhood to every '. town and city in this country there are . women who nave been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound In , k the treatment of ailments peculiar to their sex, and they take pleasure ia passing the good word along to other women. Therefore, if you are troubled in this way, why not give Lydia E. Pink-ham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. I THE SAME OLD BACKACHE! I Does every day bring the same old backache? Do you drag along with your back a dull, unceasing achef Evening find you "all played out"t Don't be discouraged! Realize it is merely a sign you haven't taken good care of your kidneys. Take things easier for a while and help your kid-neys with Doan'i Kidney Pillt. Thea the backache, dizziness, headachns, tired feelings, and bladder troubles will go. Doan't have helped thousands and should ' help you. Alk your neighbor! An Idaho Case W. A. Husted,i pe electrician, 816 f A ". Iielmont Btreet.sS JVfjL O Caldwell. Idaho., i ,Ja'lvS'"7sMF says: "I bad I fll Mi; "ijf'S sharp pains In 3 A R'15fvZ' my back and If .ri "1 g-- H ROT? I stooped I had" S Arfflr to place myrYrfiE; hands on my) rfMS'y'?i! 1 back In order toL rwT 1 straighten. I wa so stiff and sore-- ' 's' mornings I could hardly get out of After Doan'e Kidney Jv Pills the trouble disappeared and 1 I have had no return of It." 1 CetDoaaW Any State. 60c a Bos i DOAN'SSIV FOSTER MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. V. dtfP kiU.V5 1m' " ion, I f," wltli Sml, irairtlnf UK. I. pc.rtul Iran ( U "dmpiwr m bf him. .tCy A nxhlnt. ffacuia, uli rBtd, u ati, JUS- -' tAfltifafr Salt Lake City Firms A UAHUKR IN EIGHT WEEKS Wrln Mulrr Barber Cl.. nReiren St. 8. U To luuri prompt (rvie end jinck returns U theas adrsrtutmtnts mention ths name this psper. A MOlra ELECTRONIC TRt ATA1EN TS Abram'a Dinmo.1, A Trtatmtnt. Dr. R. E. Msupin. M. U 8.14 JuW Bid.. Suit Lake. JWOKSAMMHW STORIES BOflK An bnok V'hi wnt- - hv mall. C. O. O f.r,.t B,t Cn u Vjt,t s,, Tfmpl PANTJiUmriNES Frnbsirn'a Herbs for Hay-feve- Stnmach wou. blee. kidney diwueo. Stifi,etion suaranterd of money refunded. 42 W. 7 S., Salt Lk City. Wp SHEET MUSIC S0NfIS new and old. All kind Sheet mutlr by aisil. COD. Beelfy Music to. W S Maui " - BRACTY CRKAMS h SVVrUKi Try our own Cosmetics. Made and mad In our Bntuty Parlors, We hamllea Hnt claw hoe of lti-- t styk-- s in hnirrxl. Walker's Beauty Parlor jBLArin Being Wholcmle Distributor, we can supply Bliu-kle- i Artresun at lie a drew Park Davis UU, no Cutters Blsi-kle- Tel lets-Ih- ne te Postage paid. Any quantity. Literature on reqomit COOMBS DRUG COMPANY Veterinary lept. Suit Uke City FRVIT BOXESjTbUSHEL BASKETS PEACH i APPLE BOXES tdXZ noli-- . .Salt Uke Bnt ft I.umher Co. KODAK FINISHING I We employ pmieuinnal photographers to fln-- lh your kiUk film, SIht ipSloe. rMmCommercial Photographers i ii Suit "jikn ily IIUKINKSS COt.LKfiES L. I. 8. Bt;SINtStf ( OLM.CkT fihnol of LITicienrr. All eommerirlsl hmnehei Celaloa free SO N. Main Pi.. S.lt l.,y. ri ClifC Rrmodtflrd. Tai-ne- It Uyrd Send in your I CENTRAL TRUST CO. I Travel Department Main at 1st South, Salt Uke City Dealers in Foreign Kxt-hang- Agents for All Leading STEAMSHIP COMPANIES j! We spcrinlie on through f trni Vortation for European Immigrants to the United States. Make your bwlvinj NOW Nw uarmfratiog QasUs Open July 1st. j slMitiliMC) No :Way to Restrain. Enterprising Thugs Who - ' , Sell OtheraVThoughts? ; . 7 iv1 , By ROBERT H. DAVIS, jn New York Herald. 7? WHEN Gabriel blows bis final trump a million musicians will W ff i bend1 an ear to (th8 "blast;' hoping to capture ft ne theme. 'W V tty moment a.new.porei Appears, an army of imitators seize f upon its style, its texturei'and its '.motive.' Mortal poets are helping themselves to the forks o immortal poets. Short-stor-y writers are fpyojfing.tJie.0. Henry model, so clpsely that it amounts to impudence. Jokes are deliberately stolen by the thousands, remodeled and thrown on the market 'in bales. "Epigrams are th( common' property of those who see j There isn't a magazine that hasn't received dozens of manuscripts stolen bodily, with a few characters, (lates, and locations mildly altered, the titlp changed and a paragraph here and there modified. . We have all been caught Tepeatedly. Plagiarism is on the increase. The plagiarist is not only a foe to the editor and the reading public, but also to the new authors. An edito whose, fingers have been burned by stolen manuscripts finds himself unavoidably prejudiced against writers whom he does not know. Ten years ago contributions from strangers were accepted on their merit and printed under the assumption that the writers were honest men. It is now regarded as a necessary precaution to write to a new author, whose manuscript has attracted attention, and ask for references. Even these precautions do not always succeed. One must wait for the publication of the plagiarism before a comparison with the original can be made. In the interval the fraud is accomplished. A comparison' of the two stories, supplies; the evidence of guilt 'It is the opinion of the writer that unwarranted leniency has been shown these, offenders. The usual penalty is a severance of connections, followed occasionally by the return of the money dishonestly collected. A period of agreeable silence follows, after which the malefactor sits down withi, ream of white paper, selects another alias, and continues in the business of 'selling old tales for new.' It is inconceivable that in the exalted profession of letters the occu-pation of plundering can be made so profitable. Is there no way to restrain by court procedure the enterprising thugs who sell others' thoughts? Professional Instinct. The Minister Do you promise to . love, honor The Lawyer-Bes- t Man (absent- - ' j mlndedly) I object to the question as j Irrelevant Life. J As the First Move, People Must Be Helped Back - to the Power of Faith By A. H. DESLOGES, Quebec Director of Asylums. As the first move, people must be helped back to that power of faith, that capacity fo believing in their own power for good and their neigh-bors' will for good, as well as in the ability of providence, God, the laws of nature, or whatever name they choose to employ, to run the universe satisfactorily without any human intervention or guidance. When we get the ton commandments back in their place as the guid-ing star of respectable men and women, and the criminal code back where it belongs as the danger signal for the evil-mind- minority, we shall be well on the way to that mental repose which will allow us to recover our nervous health and stem the tide which is leading mankind to universal insanity. , t I am not preaching any religion in saying that. The ten command-ments are the basis of the Jewish, Buddhist and Mohammedan religions ss well as the, various sects of the Christian faith. "We want genuine religion, not fakirisms and faddisms. We need sincerity in religion, and we need belief in the goodness of things, of nature, of destiny, of our neighbors and ourselves, and unless we can get these things there is no ' hope for the stopping of the headlong downward rush. ! Still One Field Open to Women Where They Have Outrageous Advantages ! By LAURA BRECKENRIDGE McCLINTOCK, in Motor. , Thank heaven, there is still one field left open to women where they . have some outrageous advantages over mere man and that field is : motoring. r Why take the men along? Why, even if their resistance can b overcome, and a lukewarm enthusiasm results? There are few difficulties 1 to be met with in touring that cannot be just as well, if not more easily, ' dealt with by women traveling alone than if in company with a man. And, oh, the advantages ! And the larks that result from such experiences I For there are advantages from the time the car is left to b ' overhauled at the corner garage in preparation for the trip until the last spare tire is cut into ribbons on the homeward flight. I know. I have ;had experience with and without the dear things along. ' The police with one accord are more lenient with women making 'mistakes than they are with men no matter if the latter are strangers ;also. Inn-keepe- fellow-traveler- s, proprietors of roadside filling-station- s, strangers in stranger towns, etc ; while mechanics seem to blossom forth into fits of unheard-o- f speed under a. fire of ignorant questions and IfeminiiJB flattery. Likewise, the fewer the questions and the greater the ; flattery, the gentler mechanics are with women when the time comes for 't terms. There are advantages, yea, even unto the police courts! PICKED UP ON THE HIGHWAY 1 Possibly Soma of Our Readers (but ' 1 Ws Doubt It) May Have Heard These Remarks. The miscellany department of a newspaper , might label the fotlowln "Home (Un) Truths:" "I don't mind the size at all. What I want Is a comfortable pair of shoes," was what we overheard a lady saytn , I In a bootahop yesterday. "Yes, said a tall, gtfm-lookin- g who lady paid ns a visit with her meek little husband today, "Henry's word U law In our house." "No," said .the fair musical comedy! ' actress, when Interviewed this week, I "I will not give you my photograph. 1 I hate seeing It In the papers, and I I want to keep myself as much out of I the limelight as possible." I "I always like to have my wife's. 1 mother here on visits." declared our 1 friend Whltehouse the other day, "b- - I cause we do so enjoy hearing how ev- - 1 erything about the house should be 1 done.", 1 You Must Taks Your Chancs. f The only thing you can be sure of when you meet a woman driver Is that she la going to depend on her Inrul-tlo- n, Italy has not a single coal mine la I all hpr territory. j . iUuc3l i "It Is by Hope That Nations Live and It Is of ; Despair That They Die" By DR. ZIMMERMAN, in New York Times. Austria can be and is being maJe by the intensifica-tion of her agriculture and the development of her water power to take the place of coal. Great projects for water-pow- er development are already under way. The first stretch of railroad run by electricity will be opened this fall. The government monopolies of tobacco and salt both show a profit. The railroads are run at a loss, but are being reorganized ; they will still belong to the state, but with the advantages and economy of private direction. Austria's stabilized exchange, the only stabilized currency in Euioi cast of Holland, and the fact that she is being run on a business basis, is bringing in investors. The savings banks deposits show that for the first time in years the people are beginning to save. XoboJy could save or invest while the crown that was worth a cent one day might be worth the seventieth of a cent the next. For six months now the crown has been worth about 70,000 to the dollar. It will not fall and it must rise very gradually. What you see in this country today is not so much recovery at the hope of recovery. And it is by hope that nations live, and of depp.!f th&t they die. |