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~~ WONDERFUL LOOK AT THOSE NEW SUITS THEY WERE ALL MADE BY RICHARDS & SON. THEY SURELY FIT WELL. VERY REASONABLE IN PRICES. THEY ALSO CAN IMPROVE THE LOOKS OF YOUR OLD SUIT BY CLEANING AND PRESSING THEM. RICHARDS & SON, The Cottonwood Tailors Taste is a matter of tobacco quality We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chesterfield are of finer quality (and hence of better taste) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Lower Prices 20 now 18c 10 now 9c (Two 10’s—18c) sterfie CIGARETTES of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended a | In Ireland, the hand-spinning and | in cottage and castie for centuries be- | try.’ Sc far back as the Fifteenth cen- | country and linen was exported from | magic of good luck that permanent | Ireland Is World’s Chief Linen- | is ideal for the manufacture of Mnen Producing Center The antiquity of linen is greater than that of any other textile. Its use dates back at least to the Pharaohs. band-weaving of linen were carried on fore the fntroduction of the power loom raised an occupation of the home to the position of a great staple indus- tury linen was mentioned as one of the principal branches of trade in the Belfast from the earliest days of the port. Through many phases of his tory the industry was fostered, but it was not until after the discontinuance of the linen board in 1830 that any at- tempt was made to introduce ma- chinery. By 1859 between 3,000 and 4,000 power looms were at work. Then eame the American Civil war and with Lancashire unable to get cotton an enormous demand for linen was created, In 1870 close to 15,000 power looms were weaving Hnens and the industry was firmly established. In 1912 the number of looms had in creasea to 36,942 and the number of flux spindles In Ireland was 924,817. Today Ireland 1s the chief linen | producing center of th world. This position is insured partly by the cli wate of the northeast province, whieh HPL LLIP PPO P POOP IOS EIOPOSEES OD OOOIOOPOOOO OOOO but an equally finportant factor is the hereditary skill of the Inen workers throughout Ulster. In the days of Charles I premiums were offered to induce skilled workers from France | and the Netherlands to settle in Ire jand and Irish workers wer t to the continent to acquire know of the best methods of manufacture Families brought from Brabant, from France and Jersey settled, it is said, in Carrick on Belfast Lough and thetr skill has been handed down through generation after generation, | FOUNDATION oF ALL SUCCESS Why It Is liparative That Youth Shai! Fully Realize the Neces- sity for Thrift. The young wan who is ambitious for | success in business should understand first of all the value of thrift. It is} not through the flash of genius or the and substantial success is brought | about. But rather there is a combl- | nation of elements of which thrift 1s | | the fundamental and most important THE ARRIVAL OF BITTY A Farce In 3 Acts To be presented by students of the Cottonwood High School at the Orpheum Theatre SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 22 THE CAST At Eight O’clock | learn, He must have courage, initia Delve as deeply as we may into the annals of any notable and permanent business success, and we shall pt that thrift is the framework of the structure, writes S. W. Strauss, presi dent of the American Society of Thrift. This {s a lesson that every young man in America today who is striving to get ahead in a business way should | TTT nnn tive and a restless aggressiveness. He | must have good Judgment, equilibrium | and patience. He must have the qual ity of hard work and the fortitude to | stand knocks and blows, And at the very heart and core of all his activl- | ties there must be thrift,—The Thrift Magazine. Why “Pot-Luck.” When a man offers a spur-of-the- moment invitation to “come home with | me and take pot-lucs,” he is under- stood as meaning that no special preparation has been made for the guest, but that the repast will be whatever chances to be ip the house, But there was a time when “pot- luck” was actually dished out of a pot, | | and when the guest took his chance of | | getting either a good meal or a very slim oue. In the old days—and the | practice is still in force in some parts | of Europe—nothing came amiss to the | | Pierce, vice president of the Amert- WILLIAM WINKLER AUNT JANE, HIS SISTER JANE, HIS NIECE BOBBIE BAXTER BENJAMIN MORE TING, A BELL BOY SAM, A COLORED PORTER KITTY, AN ACTRESS SUZETTE,AUNT JANE’S MAID ......... Directed By Miss Baker KARSTEN SCHROEDER _JEANETTE GREVE VERA MOUGHMER BURDETTE BELKNAP .RAYMOND TACKE FRANCIS HOMAR .GLEN RINK nee ELLEN ASKER ROSE TERHAAR Seats Reserved at Kendall’s Confectionery ADULTS 50c_ -- CHILDREN 35c | isn’t i?” | | petticoat.” family covking-pot suspended from the pot-hook in the center of the fireplace. Everything edible was thrown into it, and, tu “keer the pot boiling,” the | tire was seldom, if ever, allowed to go out. When meal-time came, persons fished for themseives, aud whatever they happened to find was their “pot- luck.” Why Slight Shock May Be Fatal. It is astonishing how slight an elec- tric shock may cause death. Dana, can Society of Safety Engineers, | states that “there are some well au- | thenticated cases of fatal shock from | a voltage of 110, the usual lamp cir- | cult voltuge. The danger is believed | | to be small to persons in fair physical | condition unless the contact made | with the circuit Is extremely good and is long continued. “A voltage of 220 1s, of course, more dangerous. At 440 volts and | over the hazard becomes very real and anything over 600 or 1,000 yolts | must be treated with respect and con- | stant caution, It is not possible to | say where real danger begins, nor Is it necessary, at least over 150 volts.” Why the Breakers Roared. “I've been down here at the beach two weeks,” she remarked, “and my hands gren’t tanned a bit. Funny, “Oh, I don’t know,” replied her summer beau, “they've been in the shade of my sheltering palms most of the time.”—-Boston Transcript. Why He Need Not Worry. . “That lady has dropped her lace handkerchief. Pick it up.” “T hesitate to do so, It may be her “You're safe in picking it up. Ladies don’t wear petticoats.” re Courier-Journal. 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