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Show We Want Yon1 to keep in mind the fact that in addition to printing this news-paper we do job work of any kind. When in need of anything in this line be sure ,ToSUs !e Read ewspaper Thft wfcyil would U profitable) for you to 1 advertise bit . If you wnl a 30 vinf 0 Ar aomthody If yea miant to stlt tomtlhlng If yea wni to ley something Ifyoa tuant to rani yo hoM Ifyou mtant to itltyour hoosa If yov to U yoor farm If yoa wnl to Uy property If thtre U anything thai you wnltha qvkkisi and Isstwty U supply that wnttiey placing an advertisement In this paper The results will surprise end picam you Los Angeles Boy Needed Help I 1 Leroy Young, 1110 """"""X Georgia EL, Los An--f geles, Is "regular I j fellow." active In V 1 In his classes at Sf school To look t JTr him now, you'd think IbX aiBk. I ha never had day's sickness bat his mother says: "When Leroy was Just little fellow, we found his stomach snd bowels were weak. Be kept suffering from con-stipation. Nothing he ate agreed with Mm, Ha Fas fretful, feverish and pony. "When w started giving him Call-forn- ia Flf Syrup Ms condition Im-proved quickly. Els constipation snd biliousness stopped snd be has bad bo mora trouble ef that kind. I have sines used California Flf Syrup with him for colds snd npset spells. He likes It because It tastes so food and I like It because It helps Mm so won-derfully !" California Fig Syrup has beennle. trusted standby of mothers for eijw 80 years. Lea din physicians recom-mend It It is purely yegetable and works with Nature to regulate, tone nd strengthen the stomach and bowels of cMldreo so they get full nourishment from their food and waste Is eliminated to a normal way. Four million bottles used a year shows how mothers depend on It Al-ways look for the word "California on the carton to be sure of getting the genuine. We Are Ready j j Toturnout that job j I of printing when ever you need it. I Onr Prices Are Rlkt g 3Z5Z5ZSZS2S2SZSZSZSZ52525252525 YOUR NAME Is it on our subscrip-tion list? We will guarantee you full value ; FOR YOUR F.I0NEY WW A BET! A aitiall aottla that jo ca lar " no on alaa can without tha Moret Prtoa u HutUw Salaa C.X? PraapKt.BaUairlu.Kr. 1 IPR1MHG1 I n Good Printing ; Is the Dress I of Business. I Thtt Is the I I Kind We Do. j U 1 I Let Va Show Yon I AS FIRST AID Use Hartford's Balsam of Myrrh All aaalart ata aatliariial to raJmid you tmn oaanaa I f IN II r aMttl 1 1 waH iriteal Advertis-jingaSale- lj 3 IfOU don't leava 1 your rig in tha mlddls of ths road and go to a fence post to read a sals bill do jrouf Than don't expect tha other fel-low to do it. Pulta ad In thla papar. than, raen-diaa- of the waather, tha fallow you want to raaahraadayouranMunaa mant while MOtad at hie OrMldo. If ha la a proaeMttra bur you'll hv Mat at youraaja. Ona KtraburaraftaiioaTa V the entire mrnpm of tha a, and It's sear ad that wont ouU that huiran A ad In thta papar raacpaa tba aooole rou ara aitar. Bltltmay ba a oaaaaatty.bot tha ad la tba thin that doo tba bualaato, IWt think of Baring a aoaalal aolo without ualnS adrartlaln tasee an tna) paper. L OaeExtraBayer tt t nls sftt n7t tlx tBtirt txteis at tk ti Get That Buyer HeyThere! How about jrouf letterheads, billheads, statements, enve-lopes, cards, etc. Don't wait until they are all gona and then ask us to rush them out In a hurry for you. Good work , requirei time f.. "aaaJ'-- andourmotto tnat' B S worth do 7VjV 9 big is worth ansa fr I'lMmlt siaaU e efcae. CSfds r little CopperRivef at all Strain points Plus Extra Heavy. Tested Denim in LEVI STRAUSS i WaistOverallsi ; I Insure long wear ANEW CDEC IFTHEY PAIR. lfCU RIP Askfor Levi's Reliable Merchandj'ses!ncel853 UPSTAIRS GliOTHBS SHOP :.. S75 SOUTH MAIN 2 SALT LAKE CITY lV f"""") Th Largest Exclusivt j 9 H Two-Pan- ls Syit v f A Housa In tha West A ?;' For Men, " Youno; Men flats, Cap aAM V 4 " an( Bojr,-.- Furnishing atamam.nralaTalaTalata S THE WAY TO SUCCESS 13 UNDOUBTEDLY 2 i THROUGH TRAINING ! S FOR BETTER RESULTS, GET YOUR TRAINING ' g 5 WHERE YOU ARE GIVEN PERSONAL ATTENTION I NEW CLASSES EACH WEEK IN DAY AND NIGHT I SCHOOL. . j S Call, Write or Phone for Information !i I Salt Lake Business College I UTAH'S QUALITY SCHOOL I 15 Vi E. 1st South Wasatch 7280 " $ al.t.t.trttaTWra StWWWWattlllWn S BEEHIVE STAGES S I Salt Lake City, Pocatello, Twin Falls, Idaho FaUs, Boise, Portland, and AU Points in Idaho and Orefon. : g 5 Park City and Tooele. 1 I BUSSES ALSO LEAVE FOR ' 5 5 Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Chicago, Reno, Ely, Heber City, Duchesne, Vernal, Coalville, Grantsville, Alta, 2 I Union Bus Station 1 144 East Broadway I 5 SALT LAKE CITY WAS. 6231 S teMtltUtltWiS ONE PRESCRIPTION MADE FAMILY DOCTOR .. FAMOUS Seldom has any single act been of greater benefit to mankind thaa that of Dr. Caldwell in 1885, when he wrote the prescription which has carried his fame to the four corners of the earth. Over and over. Dr. Caldwell wrote tho prescription as he found men, women and children suffering from those common symptoms of constipation, such as coated tongue, had breath, headaches, gas, nausea, biliousness, no energy, lack of appetite, and similar things. Demand for this prescription grew so fast, because of the pleas-ant, quick way it relieved sudlt symptoms of constipation, that by 1888 Dr. Caldwell was forced to have it put up ready for use. Today, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, it is called, is always ready at p"" any drugstore. W. N. V., Salt Lake City, No. 41-- 19 Sait lake floral company Visit our greenhouse. ; WHOLESALE RETAIL CUT FLOWERS POTTED PLANTS FUNERAL PIECES & DECORATIONS EXPERT DESIGNERS , HONEST VALUES DEPENDABLE SERVICE Very good express service on Tooele Bus line at a very reasonable charge. PHONE HY. 118 NITE PHONE HY. 2539 We telegrapii flowers to all leading cities. 1910 SOUTH STATE STREET jptop awmF )j Imjgj&S'W Illustration by llll CT.kW,.Mtrrlll Ce. W.N.U- - school assembly room, the room that was used for church dinners, socials nnd the like. This luncheon was to take the place of a home reception. The details of the ceremony had been carefully practiced. Horace Langley, with Eddy Jackson a his best man. was to wall in the small room at the left side of the pulpit The brides-maids were to gather in the primary room, just Inside the main entrance. Helen decided that when aU the Invited guests sat silently waiting within the church, she, with her fa-ther, would walk quietly across tbt Intervening space from parsonage to churchsuch very little way-- sod while Ellen rook Um on around to the pulpit room on the right of the altar, she would Join her attendants la the primary department ror fully a week, although but tea days bad elspsed sines the forging of the first link that was to grow Into aa endless chain of sliver dimes. Gin-ger had dogged the steps of the post-man, "Letter for met There's not? That's funny." But oa the very day before tbs wedding, as though 10 Oil her cup to otter overflowing, the postman deliv-ered three letters addressed to B. Tolllver, all In strange handwriting. "Well, that's funny." summered Ginger, snd held out a trembling hand, and with the gnllty consciousness of the evildoer, sura die very postmaa must be suspicious of such a sudden burst of correspondence, she added, "Bunch of ads, I suppose." She was so excited that she fell off the ladder three times before she Anally got her-self and ths three letters Into tba attle studio under the dormer-windo- She was trembling nervously. Bar chilly lingers tore uselessly at the stiff paper, she bad It open at last, a dime rolled out upon the floor. 8be seized snd kissed It. "You're my nest egg." she whis-pered, "you're my lucky piece, you're what some dumb farmer would call pay dirt" , She opened the other tetters, three dimes resulting. A son of stillness came over her. 8he sat, huddled Into a small bunch on the old stool and read the letters pleasant letters, sympathetic "It Is a Joy 10 help In such good work," "God bless the cause," "Pleasure to sdd my mite." "The darlings." said Ginger. "The dear, sweet generous. Christian souls." Ginger had a significant hahlt of Judging one's ITbrlstlanlry, not by hta thoughts, but by hlf contributions. Three dimes to her represented three devout Christians. Very still she sat on the old stool, very quiet enveloped In a sweet and grateful gladness. Her mind leaped swiftly on, to expensive curative treatments for her father, new rich furniture to replace their threadbare shabblness, coal and steak and chickens She kissed the letters, one after the other, and crumpled tbem In her hand, to be burned. "Little white angels," she called ten-derly. Then she cast about for a proper re-ceptacle for this Incipient fortune. Three dimes, of themselves, did not require much treasuring, but the btgbly imaginative eyes of Ellen Tolll-ver looked already upon the thousands and thousands. In neat Utile sucks, that were to come. In another part of the attic she ferreted out an old doll's trunk, very dusty, very shabby, but stout well made, with a strongly hinged top. snd best of all. with the old lock still Intact and the key dangling from a string. Within It, aide by aide, she laid the three dimes, and turned the key In tba rusty old lock. Then she moved everything else off ber desk, and directly In the middle of It she placed tba trunk, royally alone. The key she thrust un-concernedly Into the table drawer. She was not afraid of thieves. Her sigh was a great and glad one. "At last fortune smiles upon the par-sonage, and all the Toll I vers In If she whispered Joyously. "Perhaps not much of a smile so far just a little giggle, hut a nice little giggle. The poor little church mice are going to surprise folka one of these days." She wished greatly to tell ber sis-ters of this sudden turn in the tide of the family fortune, but that tittle Inner monitor, which Ginger most called a hunch, warned her against thta confidence, and she buried herself and her seething emo-tions as well as she could In plans for the following dsy. Long before the high hour of noon on Helen's wedding day, she was daintily arrayed In her blue organdie, pirouetting up and down the hall from room to room, hurrying everybody, criticizing the general appearance of ber sisters, ofierlng endless pert sug-gestions, and always Inciting them to greater haste. (TO BB CONTINUED) over and over, adding a word, omit-ting a word, substituting a word, until tba final version seemed Impoeslbla of Improvement The question to whom the letter should bo sent was subjected to deep thought Indeed, It was more than thought so deep It was. Men, she knew, were more rasceptlble than womea to -- personal appeal particu-larly when the personal appeala came from not unattractive girls. But wom-en were more superstitious and would be more reluctant to bring npoo them-selves tbe Implied curse thst wonld result from a breaking of tbe chain Women, then. Aa for location, she was not par-ticular, except that It would be best to start at some distance from Red Thrush. Methodist Interests are close-ly allied In neighboring towns, and she realized the lmMrunce of pro-tecting the family name. Now Ginger herself was deeply enamored of the chain letter Idea, to her It smacked absolutely of tbe hand of Providence. But one could never know just bow fathers snd older slstera would react to things, hence she realized It would be tbe parr of discretion to avoid questions whose answers could not be evaded. Ginger's unfailing resource In sn emergency was the dally press. 8be got the last Issue of the Burling-ton Hawkeye, and studied IU col-umns. Now, theoretically, a chain should start from single link, but aha was not willing to trust the foundation ot her fortunes to one small dime which might not be forth-coming. She decided upon three as a fair start "Three links are better than one." she said thoughtfully.'' "And If It starts three chains, so much the better.". When ever she came to the name ot a woman mentioned. prominently, she put her finger on the place, closed her eyes, and tried to get a vibration about It Finally the three letters were written, enclose In envelopes, addressed, and Ginger took them at once to the corner mull box. and put them In. "Ah," she breathed ecstatically, as she turned back toward the parsonage. Her heart was as light as tbe wings of a butterfly. It seemed to carry ber borne. Already the old house looked a new place to her, a may place, bright with flowers, fresh paint new furni-ture. Thousands upon thousands, Helen herself bad said It Thousands upon thousands "Oh, 1 wish 1 had asked .or quar-ters," she thought "Such a very good cause, nobody could begrudge It" Had It not been for tba pleasnrabls excitement attendant upon' Helen's wedding, Glngei felt she could oot possibly bare endured tbe strain of the days that followed. Her con In the outcome of her chain let-ter waa absolute. Winters might come, with-- their con-sequent coal and coat bills, daugh-ters might go, with their petty love affairs, but Ginger Ella and the chain letter would go, on for ever. Plans for the wedding took prece-dence over everything else, for Helen, yielding to the argument that for ber In this case the way of genuine sacri-fice lay In gracious acquiescence to plans already made, proceeded calmly with her arrangements. She knew In ber heart that she would bave pre-ferred a mora apparent display of ber unselfishness. She would bave enjoyed a real martyrdom. She would have been proud to stand gloriously forth, to ber father, ber sisters, snd Red Thrush, giving up her marriage for a year, for fen years, for ever, U need be. But she was honest enough to realize that the course of true denial followed another channel Mental rest the doctors had pre-scribed, and that could never be bad In the sacrifice of his daughter's plana Tbe wedding was to be held in tbe church, with the girls of Helen's Sun-day school class, tbe Rutbeans, serv-ing a buffet luncheon In tbe Sunday 4TORY MOM THE iTART la the aauallf ealet homo oi Rev. Mr. Tolllver of Had Threah. Iowa, hi motharlaaa dauahtara. Halen. Miriam and Bllaa "Ola-Ca- r Ella" ara huay "aroomlne' thalr alatar Marjory for partial, patloa to tbe 'baauty paaot" that avanlne. With Eddy Jack, eon, proaparoos ronna tarmar, har aaoort, Marjory Uavaa for tha eotlclpatad triumph. Ovtr work baa effortad Mr. Tolllvar- - eyao to tha point of thraataoad bllndaaaa, Olngar.haa triad la many waya to add to iba family alaoder Ineoma, but aba I act dlaoouraaad. Marjory wloa tha baauty prlao, 160 . Bba lvaa tha monay to har father aa part of tha expeoa eaeaaaary ror tha treatment of hta ya by Chteaa paclallat. Mr. Tolllvar laavae' for Chlcaae with Miriam. Olna? maata alaaaodar Murdoch. Mr. Tolllvar return, the doctor arv-lo- a him litti hop. CHAPTER IV Continued "And everybody who buys one, will sell four more" "And It all started from one. One, single, solitary, little one." Tha girls talked on and on. But Ginger drew herself swsy from them, sat enwrapped In Unpenetrable thought. She remembered the old chain let-ters. They had coma with some fre-quency s few years ago, prayers for almost everything, for tbe sick, for foreign missions, for prohibition, for fundamentalism, for the second com-ing of tba Lord, for the release of anarchistic prisoners condemned to death "And everybody aends It on to so many more, and every ona of tbem sends it to so many more, and they aend It Ginger got up suddenly and went out of tba room.' 8ba walked dltzlly. She went upstairs, got the short lad-der from tha linen closet snd bal-anced It against the wail nnder the trapdoor. She noticed that her bands trembled. But she climbed carefully the ladder was old pushed up tbe trapdoor, and pulled herself through tha opening. From force of habit for she wss not then thinking ot trap-doors, sba locked It behind her, and made ber way carefully over tha beams to ber sanctuary under the dormer window. There she sat down heavily, to think. ' Sba thought snd thought and thought until aer bright eyes were so wide, so bright so blue, that of a sudden they seemed to hurt ber, and she shot them bard. Ber two small bands were gripped so tightly, with fingers Interlaced so closely, that suddenly aba knew they1 were throb-bing with pain, half paralysed, so that aha had to work them apart, slowly, a finger at a time. But aba did not atop thinking, "Chain letter on and on all over tha world thousands and thousands and nobody dares to stop because no-body would dare to break the chain for the blind a home for tha blind--on and on and on." 8udenly Ginger burst Into, low nervous laughter, and laughed and cried and twisted her little bands, and rocked back and forth on the stool In an ecstasy. "Oh, oh, bow heavenly, bow perfect-ly heavenly I 1 never could bare thought of such a brilliant thing. Oh, as father says, 1 sea the hand of the Lord in this!" 8ha polled the stool to tha low table which aha nsed aa a desk, and seated herself with a professional briskness Indicative of tbe oneness of purpose which prompted her. Selecting three pencils from a large number In the drawer, ate sharpened them briskly. Then aha drew her pad of paper toward ber, and opened It Then ahe studied Intently, chewing ber pencil. She wrote s nasty line, snd quickly scratched It out Again she wrote, again she frownlngly dis-carded It Several times she re-peated this painful process, but at last as so often happens, persistent effort brought Inspiration, aod aha wrote fluently, without a pause tor thought "Our parsonage home for the blind la sadly In need of foods to carry on Ita noble work. Will you oot con-tribute Ten Cents to this very worthy causet And complete the chain of good vibrations by sending copies ot thla letter to three ot yor friends In whom yon have confidence) In thla way, this valuable Institution will en-large Ita circle of friends and will be enabled to continue Its rare of tbe un-fortunate and needy blind. "We depend on you. "Do not break the chain. "E. Tolllver, treasurer, "Red Thrush, Iowa." Ginger was greatly pleased with tbe formal tone of this letter. She knew very well that If she received such an appeal, she would contribute gladly U she had tbe money. She reed It - School Tucker' Salaries j Elementary school teachers in cities over 100,000 received $837 more last year than did the teachers In cities la the 2,500-5,00- 0 population group. Ac-cording to the research division of the National Education association, the median salary for elementary teach-ers In large cities was $2,049 Inst year, while In the small cities it was only j 11.212. a f WHY WE BEHAVE LIKE HUMAN BEINGS Br GEORGE DORSEY, Pa. D U D. I What Makes Giants and Dwarfs. ON THIS day we are born we bava up only 2 per cent of our allotted growth power. We can grow 08 per cent more If we are spared. We double our weight the first six months; a calf does It In fifty daysj a dog, in eight We Increase onr weight 200 per cent In the first year, less than 30 In the second, only B In the fifth. Increase In weight then picks np again sad continues until the tenth yesr. to drop back from tba eleventh to the thirteenth, from the fourteenth to the seventeenth, puberty years. It In-creases again, to 12 per cent That la our last spurt It drops to per cent during the eighteenth year; to 1 per cent during the twenty-secon- 8Uture elso Increases by sports. By the time the Infant can walk. It has grown from twenty to thirty-fou- r inches; thereafter, until puberty, It growa between two and three Inches a year. The thirteenth la the rapid grow-ing year for girls, the sixteenth for boys. Between fourteen snd sixteen the boy Increases his stature eight Inches. Girls usually attain their full stature by twenty, sometimes by eigh-teen; boy a by twenty-five- . But both may continue growth three or four years longer. The new-born- 's brain Is already one-Sft- h the destined weight about ten ounces; by the second year two-fifth-or as large as an adult anthropoid ape's. Full brain weight comes before twenty-five- ; after that It loses weight rapidly In old age, The two elements In growth are weight and height Weight often con-tinues beyond maturity, long after the body has taken on Its last cubit The giant can grow no taller; the fat lady knows no limit Stature Is determined almost en-tirely by the skeleton. Only skin and a thin layer of fat cover skull and the bones of the feet; thin cartilage cov-ers the ends of the leg bones ; between the vertebrae are thin pads of car-tilage. Stature growth, then, is largely a matter of growth of skull, bodies of vertebrae, and especially of the leg bones. Bones grow from centers of ossifica-tion. Centers for the principal bones of the body appear by the end of the second month of fetal life; centers for the ends, or epiphyses, appear later many not until puberty, when the skeleton begins to assume Its perma-nent form. The number of ossification centers varies In different bones. The long bones of the arms and legs have at least three: one In the shaft Itself and one at each epiphysis. The hum-erus at fifteen years Is still In three parts; shaft, two heads; but the heads are more closely connected with abaft than at birth. By maturity, the beads are so united with the shaft that It la not possible to see where they grew on. In general, facial and skull-dom- e bones are formed from membrane "skin" bones; the other bones begin in cartilage. Bone-formin- g cells multi-ply by division, absorb lime salU from the blood, ossify, and so continue until the cartilage Is replaced by bone. In-crease In length ends when the cartil-age disappears. In the mature skele-ton there can be no further growth In suture or In length of arms. If final conversion of cartilage to bone is delayed, gigantic stature resuIU; if the process Is reversed, dwarfs. Only the articulating or Joint surfaces of mature bones are covered by cartilage. Bones Increase In girth by additions of bone cells from the surrounding membrane. Long bones are hollow. To preserve their relative proportion of bone wall to cavity, bone cells on the Inside are destroyed as fast as cells are added to the outside. Thus the cavity grows with the bone, the form, and strength of the bones are pre-served. This process keeps up until late In life. With old age the bones become thin and delicate. Complicated changes take place In acquiring the upright gait A chick can run from IU shell ; a baby cannot even straighten Its legs. Tbey bend In at the knees and are drawn up at the hips, and are only 60 per cent of head-trun- k length. By maturity they will be over 100 per cent As the walk-ing days approach, the legs grow fast Knee and hip Joints change; the legs can now be straightened out The soles of the feet no longer turn In. The baby at birth can clap Its feet almost as easily as Its hands. The spine also changes. It Is not solid, but consists of twenty-fou-r ver-tebrae with pads of cartilage between. At birth a large percentage of the col-umn Is cartilage. Powerful muscles develop to bold the spine erect; oth-ers, acting on the ribs as levers, to balance the trunk and spine. Standing Is a complex act Involv-ing nearly all our big muscles. When we stand "at attention," powerful liga-ments in the hip joint hold the body. This relieves the muscles from strain, but locks the knee Joint We stand easier If the knees are slightly bent and the knee-cap-s loose. The feet muscles must bind the many small bones together to give support and from the Instep or arch. A man can stand up asleep, but not if muscles of feet or of legs are "asleep." (ft by Gaoraa A. Doraay.) Stone Hamaaa lacraaaing During tbe present year, according to one limestone producer, more stone has been used In the construction of homes, than during any like period In history. Doing what they dont like has not often been done by great men. Res-ignation la not for genius. Rivers Diverted From Beds by Fields of Ice Agassis, with an outlet to the Minne-sota river valley. Part of the water-shed of the Red river became a per-manent source of water for a river Bowing to the south and the original head of the Missouri river. This river la now knowo as the Jan-t- a river. With the melting of the great Ice dam, the Red river resumed ita normal flow to the north, but the others con-tinued to tbe south. Exchange. It Is a long way from present-da- y floods along the Mississippi river back to the great Ice age, but happenings of tbe latter period have considerable bearing on the trials and tribulations of the valley dwellers. Before the great fields of Ice worked their way down from tbe north, at least two rivers, the .upper Missouri and tbe Yellowstone, Sowed northeast and emptied Into Hudson bay. With the advent of the sheets of lea, how-ever, these two rivers were forced to run to tbe south, and their combined waters cut the gorge now followed by the Missouri through the Dakmas. At the same time the Red river be-came a bugs pond called glacial Lake la the Rear to Stay Be on time in life in both small and large things. Keep up to data Don't limp Into line after everybody else nas arrived. American Magazine. Hia Occupation Nosey Old Gent What are you do-ing, my little man? Fishing? Disgusted Boy Naw 1 Drowodln' flsliwonns." a conservative estimate places the savings In this way alone at 0 a year. It In also a labor-savin- g factor In the steel Industry. Only about 6,000 tons of tunpsten are used a year. The supply Is ob-tained from China, which haa a monopoly on the metal. , Tungsten's Great Value A metal which until a few years ago was little known outside the chemical laboratory bas become. In Just a few years, Mr. Economy's favorite son. Tbe annual savings brought about through the use of tungsten are almost beyond estimate. Employed In the manufacture of light bulbs, the metal requires less current In supplying more candle-powe-r than the old carbon lamp, and Long Champion Emblam The use of a belt as an emblem of championship Is of very ancient ori-gin, dating back at least to the time of the siege of Troy. Homer In de-scribing the game at the funeral of ratroclus mentions a belt In this con-nection. Slow VYbes Unintara.tad The American girl I Very apt In some things. Very slow and dumb In other things. She can learn In SO minutes how to operate a motor car, but It takes her 20 years to learn the first principles of a washing machine. Atchison Globe. Farmera nnd Foraatry Farmers of the United States, be-sides being the largest owners ot forest lands, are also the largest con-sumers of forest products. Arch Raacal The Idea tlint two can live more cheaply than one must huve originated with somebody In the wedding ring or house furnishing business. American Magazine. Love's Mighty Power If there Is anything which keeps the mind open to angel visits, and repels the ministry of 111, it Is human love. N. P. Willis. |