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. ¥he never forgave him relative's or friends’ make a handsome, lasting wedding IQFTIS o H ealth Hints - Are Women Good Friends to Women By FORTUNE FREE, gets all about of women made to men 9 | Among girls brpught make |{dea 'n thelr heads that th It 18 one of the commonest accusatio Sveled against girls that they don't he best of friends to one another. And |ag an possible the most “eligible hat s not tho accusation of a ‘‘mere iyoing i, cne canno: exps t much char Jrute man.” I wonder how many young |ity with regard to one another, One does Yomen I have known who have sighed |not find it, anyhcw, But is not that hu 0 me that there was not one among their | man nature? Take two young men firl acquanintances to whom they could | of whom is In love with them sime girl ionfide a secret and expect it to e | Do they 5 cak we l cf «ne another? iept, or from whom she would recelve fie proper amount of sympathy In|inhat two of my young frie-ds—who had ":’"”" known one ano‘her for yeirs and years len ordinarily, 1 believe, make better |11 siways teen m st ami bla (o tme ¢ utmost d #like for one anothe Mr. A in excellent reason for it informed e he had not seen Mr. B, for A man once told me of a woman | U ‘riend of his who, after binding him by he most solemn promises of secrecy “I'e fact Is there are soie fellews on MId horses would never extract it from | POt rtand,” he cxplained. ‘Now, B alm~found the secret she confided to |has some gocd qualities, but the insuffer 3lm such a trivial and wearisome affair Able concef’ of the chap and his seifish ness are a bit When | met B had not seen A co much, ater ke for a long time hat he clean forgot about it after he left he house, That worried him. He could 0t recall And the woman the next ime she saw him, would inevitably say. “You remember what I told you the other it wherever Miss G. happers (o be, T re fay, don't you?' Then he maemed to re- | marked member it all In a flash. Sure enough That & Just what the silly fs0l would he woman recalled the confidence the | do, he remarked bitt rl “Bilty ext time they met hump! “You remember, don't wou?' she asked, | “Perfévtly,” he repled; “pertectly, You sshaved just as 1 should have expected I said 1 didn't ses much silliness fn it Miss 13 ery bewutitul and delight ful young lady was 4 =% | rifices to thelr friendaship, that | &ood friendn of women that theee friendships | girls employed in some common labor OND = DlT some serious work in which they have | found themselves side by side. It fs . comradeship that leads to friendship— Would yon like (o wear a beautl- B/ .oroqomnip oith fta innumerals little | ful diamond! or fine watch at your wedding, or cpportunities for those little acts of help- fulness that knit forgotten | "Wa are all frisnds soldler at the front trench fogether, and see if they &row Into chums in no time’ | Girls who meet united In fighting the | same troubles and with the same daily | worrles and anxietles hes deeper one another's souls than the girls who only meet in drawing-rooms or on tennis courts. They are rivals in the drawing. room or the tennis court. In work they are comrades mutually dependent on lit- | tle kindnesses from each other for an anormous amount of lightening of their toll. It ia there they find friends, m\.r mifid how often you have tried and falled, you can stop burning, \tehing sczema quickly by applying a little zemo furniahed by any ArugEst Tor e, Exir large bottle, $1.00. Iealing begins moment zemo I applied, In a usually every ftrace of -pimples, black heads, rash, eczema, tetter and similar | akin diseases will be removed For clearing the skin and making It vigorously healthy, zemo i excep tional remedy. 1t I hiot greasy, sticky or watery and {ta does not stain. When others fall it is the one dependable treat- ment for all skin troubles mo, Cleveland or graduation present? June, the great month of wed'dings and grad- uations, Is not very far nway, Your credit Is good with ws, Come in and select anything desined and wrrange terms of payment (o sult, Spe here,” wrote # aa Ring 14k solid lnM Loftis " P foction'* moupting Ouercomc Eczema Wiy, the pear! pendant Pine BT e e complete with 16 Imnrfm Nom cavmlod lmlnl Faces Lifted, Wrinkles Removed watches, bags, vanity cases, solid silverwars and fina plated ware, cut giass, clocks tollst articles 10 wets and wingle pdeces, leather gnods, and & full stock of noveltdes—for the cash buyer as well an charge accounts All On Our Besy Oredit Terms. Open Daily Ustil 8F. K. Saterdays Till 9:30 ol or it for ] tod Catalox No wn Phone Douglan 1444 and aur salesman wiii v.n | r‘ln’r"”mh | TREATME EMONETRATE MY " 125 "Glenarm Bt Denver | Phone Champa 1871 HIghth Year in Denver Profeasional and Bank References. BROS&CO. 153l "‘“""'“n What Dividend Should profits from the service sold There are many problems peculise sitating extra expenditures which we cannot control, exponses caused Dy sleet stonms, thousands of dollars requirements, ote,, which add to our expenses upon the problem of dividends money actually tnvested tn the husiness sock " Al we wordh of securitios issued ank i Ahe money invested in return money I it wore lnvested (0 athey b are takhen which entitle wa b e tra peofis table ommission o vomrt would awand us Boing on ss |diotic _£a'nd ha could not frr the life of him | “f haye known so many girls who have Pk ta whom ste otter nccret belonked | been the most devoted frisnds of other Jt 18 culte casy 10 kieap o wscr t one fer | girlg and ready to make the biggest sac 1 don't belleve a #crap In women not being the But I have noted have been between Put chaps in & don't and half the confidences are of that kind ip with the o0re y are to marry ench I was surprised some time since to fin1 ntirmed me he | “I bel'eve be spends o considerable tims "M you. When he offerad to kiss you “V/ho wald she wasn't?”' he snapped The woman inteir pnd him WiAh & | “That fs just what makes it so silly. phriek. Fier arcret had ‘o do, it turned | Think a girl like that is going to care A Wit, With a hat she had bought In Parls. | xngp of the finger for so consummate | e hod mised 1p one ret Wl h another. | ap ass as he 187 That's what makes his hearts and are never | ort time | The sable black feta frock THE - Fashions - indispen- taf- s made by Premet with old - fash- foned white riuching in the very modern col- lar. | dll Ur in the May making extensions and improvements required by the public, tons from governing bodies regarding methods of construction, We have absolutely no to the telephone business neces a Telephone Company Pay? We believe that we should pay such return on the money invested in our property as will enable us to obtain additional money necessary for \ If we do not carn enough to got this new money the public will suffer from the curtallment of extensions and improvements that should be made. Weo make additions to the plant out of new money lnvested and not out of Moods and tornadoes which amount (o Then there may be increased taves or possible evacs This company Is and will be satisfiod with a falr average return on the A dollar has boen invested in physical property for every dollars s enterpriaes tnvolving ke riska I spevial canses 10 the evtension of business where evtraordinary risha ;n or have o rlght to evpect in sich & property as conld be obtalned on the i T M B jr il Bazar, EE: riskha, we ahall only ask for that return om the nvestment which any equls OMAF 1A, WEDNESDAY, ' HJ ; ’W" U?f The \nl'n tor striped linens for sports | of the dot. Pussy willow tatfetas in bold | gives the requisite touch of Individuality wear is steadily Increasing, says a writer | | designe issue of Harper's are also usea for such lmd when made th a slde-plajted model MAY - Woman’s Work - Worth While Frocks for Modest Purses Published by Special Arrangement with Harper's Bazar skirts | 10, 1916. W Ty ‘\ ‘,’,‘ it guuf \ ‘ 4 | rf W e “ u“ u‘ J} i ,. i Il i for bathing A most striking and unusual hat is a farge dark ecri straw with the top of lar gives a il m (l /m!f'mnuunf:.’fi:.’!u” 4 suits ns triraming, and a detachabls plque ol most - Household Topics The Force that Keeps ¢ Zeppelin Up By GARRETT P, SERVISS, Please explain mhr‘lfrr the lifting ca- pacity of a Zeppelin type n\r'hlkdb creases as it ascends from the earth, If it does, is it due to the inareased rarity of the nir or to the decreased pull of the 7 When we say that The Eton jacket is the coat of the oment Paqui force of gravitation b DRasin a Zeppelin can carry, or lift, thirty tons, tops a skirt of does that mean that the weight of the alrship ia thirty tons lighter than the volume of air that it displaces? P Yes, the “lifting capactty’’ s measured | by the difference between the welght of the balloon and the welght of a volume of alr equal to the volume of the balloon The air presses upward upon all bodies fimersed fn it. even when they are heav- blue gabardine with an Eton of blue chiffon, Soutache braid and gold thread for trimming 0 ler than the, air In the lafter case like a balloon, but they lose a certain proportion of thelr weight, If the at mosphere were suddenly removed every- thing on the earth would weigh more than it did before, The force of gravity would unchanged, but the buoyant action of the air would be gone This experiment Take two bodie Hke wood and iron the scales of a they do not rise, be proved by of unequal density, them In In order fs easlly and place balance beam may rest horizomtal it is that the volume, or size, of having the lesser density shall larger, Now, remoye with the balance, Into a vacuum, and the beam will inctine down ward on the slde of the larger body, be cause the afr, which been removed pressed upward more ody t on the smaller one . But it you should fill the vacaium cham ber with a gas heavier than air the in linatién of the heam would be reversed because the relative upward pressure c opposite that necessnr the he them hody proportionate Logether ha on that nn the larger would than he great than on the smaller one, and to make them balance as they did in afr you would have to decreage the size of th arger body It the alr were of equal dem ity fro % hatékom (o top, A halloon woulld neier ato ntfl It got o the surface of the atmo - ephere, butethe density of the alr de crea s rapidly wiih increase of helght k0 thit ag he ballcon rises the diffcren batweon ita we'ght ard that of an eq a volume of a'r continually desreases un th at s certain holght, whieh can b caleulated by the formvlse esnployed i1 hypsoma vy, there will be no di¥erence and then tke ballsen can rize no higher The decrease of (ha force of gnavity at | mich heights as can be attaingd by ba loo relatively (light, ard fias no not able effsct on thelr buoyancy At a h 4ght of forr v fles a ballorn would lose only one-bith of fta weight | A cuble foot of ajr at the eaxth's su and n quar varl 8 with th A cubic n ounce welght face ve ghts atou ter, although the temperature and the humtdity frot of hydrogcn, in the same circum stances, weighs about nine-ome-hur dredths «f an oince. The difference, 1.18 ouace, in the measure of the buoyancy, or 11 t ng power, of & cuble foot of hydro gen Immers:d ‘'n air, snd cont ned it garnot escaps. Then ten cubic feet of hydrogen should be able to Nft 116 o'nes; 19 cubc fat, 116 ounces, an 1,00 cuble feet 1,1% ounces, or seventy- two a4 one-half pounds But a'l must he made for tie weight «f the ballcon, the ropes, the ad everything that it carries. If the o that J!W..w:d Plain taffeta is used wanee becoming tonch, Fach There are no end of materials shown, |are exceedingly good looking the crown, underbrim facing and band |sult should have {hree or four of these |tozether amounted to seventy-two and and the sfripes grow wider and wider. | Effectiveness, in fact, ia tha keynote around the crown of black satin On the |collars, which may he attached with |one-hal? pounds, then the buoyancy of = | BOMe even to the exaggerated width u'fnv the smart fasidons in summer sport front of the band is & hand painted | #nap hooks; In this way a freshly laun- [the 1,000 fcet of hydrogen would only su nine nches | Clothes. Whether one Indulges in sports flower basket, and on the crown are |dered collar can be put o withaut troubls, | fice to eoun’erbalance thelr welght with If atripes continue fo broaden at such | herself or in only an onlooker, it In es- | painted the flowers which the basket Though taffeta 1a ratisfactory for bath- |out liftirg them frim the ground, A rapid rate, they muat inevitably axpand [sential that her wardrobe should contain | holds. The painted basket Is In shades of | Ing suits, salt water satin s, perhaps But Ly mreking the capacity of the ga to their limit and so ceass altogether. [a goodly upply of thesq garments, for [brown and the flowers of na garden |the most fceabla of all materials, | bag 1000 - ub'c feet the Increass In weigh ‘r‘)::-llr'fly:;-[t::lpnr‘l‘::"m no one can gainsay lu.t ;:\"rhklnnnvalflfl rasorts such a costume | vartety, in vivid coloringx and s eqia 00d 1ooking In either navy |would he In-onsiderable in esmparison ) orn the greater part of the day. Have you meen the ne detachable | biue or hluck with the _inerease of buoyaney, whi A dangerous rival to the striped goods Of sports’ hats the I8 leglon. Bome | brims for bathing.caps? They are in A number of the newest suits are made | would now amount to ‘25 psinds, But | for #ports’ wear, however, han appeared {are of Angora braid, others of the straw |tended to shade the eyes on’'the beach | from checked or plain pongee, but while | get the actval Iftirg power a consider ¥ |in polka-dotted materials, with polka-|and material In combinations innumer- and are most becoming. The brim fits |these garments look very tempting In [able marg'n must always be allowed for dots sometimes as large as a silver dol- | able and on many of them hand-painting |over the bathing cap and is taken off |the hand, it doubiful whether they |change cf temperature, hizmidity, etc., as |lar. There are even sports’ skirts of (I8 Introduced. Tt may be only a plain | before plunging into the sea will prove prActicable, for such material | well as for Impurity of the hydrogen. Any dotted satin to be worn with lingerle [ribbon band about the crown on which | Plald or striped silk in a dark color {18 apt to cling to the figure after it has | misture of oth'r gas wi'h it diminishe blouses and a silk sweater in the color |are painted prim little flowers, but It | combination {8 a most attractive material | become wet ftz buoyancy. The above estimates ar e P e e — S " . prebibly twl e too groat | 3 Space must be left in the gas hag fo . ks « rapidly, or else be forced out at the May says an old proverb, “bends | do hest when set out in the sarly days of | May and’ e fortnight thersafter until | bottom, and thus a portion would be lo. the gardensr's back ' And trus the say- | May the midde June, will not {nterfere| The increase fn the volume of the ba Ing 18, too, for May is the busiest month Annuals ars of two classes, hardy and | with thé hlooming of these annuals but, | loon through the expansion of the hydy in the gardener's calendai. But ft 1s | 1®04er. The former, needless to say, may | when they faded and withered, will | gen, tends, up to o certain padnt likewise the happlest-the back bends |D® SOWN earliest. The first to go into | ralse their flowers to replace thosa that|counterbalance the lose of buoyancy willingly, joyfully, Evervone in May | {1® §round should be the seed of popples. | have bloomed and passed. Montbretias | through the decrease of density in ti - Then, in the order named, as the ground | #an be used for the same purpose and, |surrounding air. But an elevation {s would begin a garden. The year is in fts . | becomes warmer and danger of frost | Aince they illy prove hardy with | ways reached whera the buoyant for youth and-the call of the fresh tragrance (n.o 0 " orinte sow larkspir, ondula ght winter protection, may be per-|ceases to carry the balloon higher of the.sofl da. Irresistible., But. bafore. tha | soiiisngiai cantaures, sweet.alyssum, nas. | mitted to rem mdisturbad where they | canse the volume of air displaced exaoct pade. Ia driven. into. the earth, the gars|, . oium ~ convolvolus, - stlene And ager- | AT® set out. In semi-shaded spots, the equals in welght the total welght of ti ener should take counsel of the fact that [ o 0o Tl T eher (n the | tube s N it an al o1y With ite apBUrtenance o garden well bagun-fs'a garden hall | pegvens and the days lensthen. sow | F¥rabie plant, meh alike in| The same prineiple of buoyancy appii grown. Work crowds on the heela of | coionia. eandytuft, cosmos, galllardia ! ble and follage Another excellent | in the case of the immersion of a | vork In May and everything seems to be | paiia marigold phlox and - scablosa, | Summer ering bul A8 hardy as the In water. If the density, or itie gra alling for immediate attention There in, These, for the henefit of those who Are Monthretia th summer hyacinth. Iy, of the body Is greater that rccordingly. a temptation te slight some | ynaoquainted with thelr habita and re- | Hyacinth andicans. Tt will prove water, it will sink to the it of the tasks. There lies danger, Do what | quirements, may be further classified as he an mpanion plant for | (s less 1t will rise ta the rf R in done thoroughly: bo ordarly and ays- | follow adioll there Is A great difference hetween tematie For Dey Sunny Situat Perennia nted for many feasons | and water with regard to compressibiitt Foth annuals and peronnials a1e 16 e | xasturtioms Marigolds " ! It 1s necessary. there- | Afr near the earth's surface is very y planted this month—tha latter first. Tha Coreopsis Popples fore, to g Is and bhrders | denser than at & helght of & mile or tw perennials are hardy plants, making mos: | Alyssumn Petunia wh [ W wit Are pade [and the decres t d ty eontiy t thelr root growth bafore summer sun For Cut Flawers wo teet and add th Nith inerease of helght. But th At " t tere nt, | Annusl Pinks Loar . tilimer o | Increa ) s Hae There are occasional P ke iizey s Rrate: - \ 1 manure iy w po Iharefore " Pt § Annuais Sotabhle far Fraur . v x . 5 . - wotting peria e | Mignonelts . . \ ' These costs always bear ment s B #0 Wrong, especia Laeful as Fdging Mlanis - t might : n o | 8t first, and nothing se . ' andytuft wart Agerat " \ Lan attempt to plant toa ma p " . ol 2 o 4 i o Annuals with Hed Flawers #iances the I “watered sl st ritoen, | e Koppies . ' American Learning { . Annuals with White Flawers }( b comaideration of such 2 ) y . ! . . A It ke bew - Annaale with Vellaw Flawers py n getting s bate and borders Bueet Mulians : . . moagvet, Sturdiest ot reliable Annuals with Wiwe Flawers N henin _ eal A L Aw Y A Poom ove ' teod Astery Mook hand ‘ ) R . A Nall of Shel \ TS onaud - LI . ’ . \ st 4 . . \ 2 - . » A i . L - . o planin T T ’ N geeriias