OOKtULT YOU* wmIf You WtDt to bt Lucky Ask Htr AdviceYo'i may be able m fool other men. but you can't fool four wife She know. row. thoroughly She may humor yon. she may obey you nut the know* yooNo mm cun take hi* marriage light-ly. HI* wlfo may b- Ida beat friend or hi* wor*t enemy—*ho cannot bo a nobody Any hu»band who treat* hi* wife like a piece of furniture will ■oon And out hi* mlatako.So say* Herbert N. Caaaon In hla recent book. “13 Tip* on Lack. Ho any a he bellovea In luck—In the kind that men enn make for th-maelves. He knowa hundred* of lucky men. and ha* atudled the reaaona for their good luck. In every case the reason* have been that the men went out and fought for their aucceaa. There la no record of n big man carrying about a horse-•hoe or a black cat.##••••*Tho moat effective charm of all la the right wife—and the knowledge how to Jet her help.Two bond* are better than one. ■ays Mr. Caaaon. Cyrus H. K. Curtla. the moat successful publisher In the world, owea hla atari mainly to hla wife. He waa running a small paper In America, and one day hla wife called his attention to the so-called Woman'* Page.“Who wrote that? ahe asked.I did. replied Curtis.It la utterly ridiculous, ahe said.Well. said the wl*e Curtis, “perhaps It I* Will you write a page for me?She did. Her page at once became the beat part of the paper. Soon it became the whole paper, end waa called The Ladles’ Home Journal To-diy It haa a circulation of more than two million copies a month.