University of South Carolina Libraries
SYRUP OF FIGS FOR A CHILD'S BOWELS It is cruel to force nauseating, harsh physic into a sick child. N Look back at your childhood days. Remember the "dose" mother insisted on ? castor oil, calomel, cathartics. How you hated them, how you fought i against taking them. With our children it's different. Mothers who cling to the old form of physic simply don't realize what they ' do. The children's revolt is well-founded. Their tender little "insides" are Injured by them. If your child's stomach, liver and bowels need cleansing, give only delicious "California syrup of Figs." Its action Is positive, but gentle. Millions of mothers keep this harmless "fruit < laxative" handy; they know children 1 ^ love to take it; that it never faHs to 1 clean the liver and bowels and sweet-* < en the stomach, and that a teaspoonful i given today saves a sick child tomor- < row. Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has fall directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on each bottle. Adv. "SHOWING OFF" CHILDREN Washington Youngsters Proved Themselves Amusingly Adept at "GetQuick" Foreign Language. They had but recently arrived In Washington, and in order to fit themselves to shine in diplomatic circles were taking especial pains to acquire a certain fluency and understanding of foreign languages Little Willie hac* heard so much about the "get-quick foreign language" habit that when he and his little neighbor were called upon to give an exhibition of their progress in modern languages, they were quite ready to do so. Doting fathers, uncled and aunts sat about, and when the lesson had been completed, and proper praiBe had been bestowed, little wiiue looKea , - confidently at his tudlence, and with a shake of his little curls, said, "Reservoir!" There was a general disposition to laugh, which culminated in a universal guffaw when little Katrlna, equal to the emergency, piped out: "T'anks! T'anks I"?"Affairs at Washington," Joe Mitchell Chappie, in Na^ tional Magazine. Couldnt Beat Her. Ellanora had been the negro maid at Mrs. Hopson's for several years, and left to get married, Bays the Delineator. She moved to another city and noUiing had been seen of her for a couple of years, when one day she * called on her rormer mistress. "And so ybu have a little son, Ellanora?" said Mrs. Ropson. i "Yes'um," smiled the woman. "A nice little boy." "And what did you name Mm?" queried Mrs. Hopson. "Well, we calls him Eggnogg," replied the colored woman. "Eggnogg!" said the other. "That's a funny name for a boy." | "Well, yo' see, missus," explained i Gllanora, "det cullud woman what ; lived nex' doah to me named her twins ' Tom and Jerry, an' I didn't want to be j ^ outdone by her." < mk- [ CLEAR YOUR SKIN H By Daily Use of Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. Trial Free. II You may rely on these fragrant BH^L supercreamy emollients to care for BmS your skin, scalp, hair and hands. NothHn^^Bing better to clear the skin of pimples, jSCHH^wlotches, redness and roughness, the HfflnHcalp of dandruff and itching and the ?* Chapping and soreness. Sample each free by mail with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. Y, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. I Her Portrait. W' The painstaking artist, anxious to please, remarked to a prospective cus* tomer: i "I can paint you a portrait of your ft wife which will he a speaking likeF ness." "H'm?couldn't you do it in what they call still life?"?Lippincott's MagIazlne. INDIGESTION, GAS 1 ' OR SICK STOMACH Time it I Pape's Diapepsin ends MB all Stomach misery in five minutes. HBBk Do some foods you eat hit back? H^^HHaste good, but work badly; ferment stubborn lumps and cause a sick, ^^BH^Bur, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's flHHSpBiapepsin digests everything, leaving j B nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how IH badly your stomach is disordered you H-'1 will get happy relief in five minttes, Hf but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stomBL ach so you can eat your favorite foods B' You feel different as soon as 'Tape's v; Diapepsin" conies in contact with the , H^^^^ftoinach?distress just vanishes?your ^HB^f&tomach gets sweet, no gases, no belchlng, no eructations of undigested food. HBBK Go now, make the best investment you ever made by getting a large fifty^HgS^9huit case of Pape's Dlapepsin from any ] ^HRH^^B^You realize in five minutes how is to suffer from indigesHB^^H^Hn^Lgnsia or bad stomach. Adv. , H^BHB^^BB^IingNr-Fury, of Course. MHB9|t's a nemesis?" HHH|^^^^^^H^iesis a married worn- : B^^BBflHHfi^fcband has promised her and hasn't the money B mO&RnBS^m ~ PUN NEW LINES FOR GIRLS' GLIII TOMATO GROWERS OF SOU CAROLINA EARNED $28,000 PROFIT DURING YEAR. LATE STATE CAPITOL Ht\ Review of The Latest New* Gathe Around the State Capitol That \ Se of Interest to Our Readers 0 South Carolina. Columbli The total profit of all the So Carolina tomato club girls this y was $28,000, according to figures lounced from the national departm >f agriculture. More than 2,000 yo jirls were enlisted in the wofk in :ountieB. Miss Edith L. Parrott, state ag 'or the tomato club work, and 1 Dora Lee Walker, of Barnwell, rec y appointed assistant state agent, :his week in Washington, attendin conference of the womap agents ;he department of agriculture in South. Fifteen states are represer it the conference and the plans lext year are being discussed. The tomato work is to be carried n 30 South Carolina counties r rear and it i$ expected that more t 5,000 girls will Join the raovemen Concerning the work in South C ina, a report from the national jartment of agriculture says: "Pimentoes have proved a part ar boon to certain counties in Sc Carolina, as have figs in Mississf Certain clubs which had been i jializing on tomatoes decided 1 ihere was a possibility in piment xrhich are not so generally grown which are canned in practically >ther parts of the country, the v canned product here being impoi 'rom Spain and Mexico. Since product of these young women >een put on the market, requests h :ome from 45 states for informal egarding the canning and culture ;hiB valuable food product which American people in general do ret understand. "The total'profit of all the Sc Carolina club girls for the past j was oyer $28,000. Every agent 1 issists the girls is a college gradi ivho has received special dome icience training. Home demonstra work is a feature, the motto b( Do one thin/; at a time.' There t for instance, of home-made firel :ooker campaign which lasted ;hree days in one section and rei ;d in a hundred homemade cool jeing put into use. A fly-trap c paign is to be next in order, ana a :hat a butter-making campaign." Report of Chief of Engineers. The report of the chief of engin* to the secretary of war and hai Improvement, which has just I printed, says that the value of business done by the Colum Georgetown boat line has incres JO per cent during the current y rhe chief of engineers reports 1 ?20,000 can be profitably expen luring the fiscal year ending Jun 1916, for improvement of the Coi ree river project. "During the calendar year 1913 commerce amounted to 3,631 s] tons, valued at $532,558," report^ chief of engineers in regard to Uongaree river. "It consisted of ] cellaneous merchandise handled I steamboat running between Col bia and Georgetown. The value the business has increased 30 cent during the year. The pro has had no effect . on the raili freight rates." State Takes Over Two Warehouse Two warehouses In Aiken v taken over by the state through J G. White, deputy cotton wareht commissioner of South Carolina. 1 are the Cushman warehouse, which Geddings Cushman will be r ager and the Gaston warehouse which D. W. Gaston, Sr., will be e ager. rne two wareuuubts win i approximately 2,000 bales of cotto Many Registrars Are Lacking. After finding that magistrates c< not serve as local registrars of a statistics, the state registrar, Jas Hayne, M. D., wrote to the clerl court of each county asking hiir name a registrar for each towns The clerks sent in these lists and ters were written to those rec mended, asking them to accept the sition of local registrar. Many cepted, but quite a number decli and the latter were afeked to nomii someone to serve. Some of these quests were complied with. "In spite of the fact," said Hayne, "that a great number towns are without local registrar! is seemingly impossible to get i one to take t!he place or to ob nominations. The city of Geo town, for instance, has no regist who would possibly be paid $200 year." "Despite the continued cry of 1 times and no money," he conlin "it is astonishing to see how m oersons regard 25 cents, which is ] for each birth or death certificate too insignificant a sum to be woi of consideration." The last report shows 22 vacan In a like number of townships an is requested that those interestec seeing the vital statistics law put effect January supply the nec names. The work, it is said, w< require not more than one day's k in 31 in an ordinary town. In connection the state registrar wis to make it clear that the local r trar does not have to go to pli cians to get registrations of bi: and deaths; that his duties are < to copy the certificates sent hire the books and forward the orig certificate to the state registrar. ||| 'PS? Winthrop Grow# With the Year*!. Advance sheets from the annual report of D. B. Johnson, president of Winthrop College, Rock Hill, have JL been received in Columbia. The rejy port will be sent to the general assembly through the state department of education. Dr. Johnson ?ays that the usefulness of the college has been TH broadened by an extension of the work for the welfare of the public at large and the movement Is bearing fruit At the joint meetin gof the Conference for Education in the South and jyg the Southern Educational Association, held last April in Louisville, two of the most important demonstrations were assigned to Winthrop College, that of the model rural school an.$ VIII the model rural home. ver An evidence of the growing reputiv tion of Winthrop College and its ill* creasing usefulness is the ever in k. creasing demand for its graduates, ur last year's graduating class, over 27 ut-h procured positions before they receiveHT ed their diplomas. The Winthrop dlan" ploma is being accepted in lieu of ex* ient amination in states that are very unS strict in the certification of teachers. 24 President Johnson says that, notwithstanding the greater enrollment 'ent during the past season, the college ^rs- ran smoothly in every department and en'" there was* no sacrifice anywhere of afl*e quality for quantity g ? "It seems that in this small, sparse*th sett^ state, with only a little ^ ? over 700,000 white population, men, women and children, there should bo no fear of Winthrop college becoming too big to do efficient, acceptable I on work in the face of all the facts and lext the experience of other states," says han Dr. Johnson. ** Winthrop College this year has its aJ~?" largest enrollment, there being 892 <*e" students attending the institution. There were 1,473 applications for admission this year. There are now 10& ,u , officers and teachers of the college. PPi. spe-. iat Will Build Mail Road. oes, Contract for the construction of a and portion of the Aiken county post road,, no 'which will be built by the United lain States government and the county of rted Aiken jointly, has been awarded to the H. P. Dyches and B. P. Holley of has Aiken?that Is, the contract is award* ave ed subject to' the condition usually tion made that the proper bond be made 5 of for the faithful execution of the thfl wr\rlr not Holley and Dyches were the lowest bidders when the bids for the con,Qtl1 struction of the toad were opened rear here last week, a large numbar of ^ko contractors from throughout the coun* 1^te try submitting bids. Their bid was stic approximately $11,500. >1 As the contract involves about 18,vas cubic yards of excavation and 24,ess 00?/cubIc yards of sand-clay surfacj0I! ing; the work to continue for several months?it Is required, that the road ters completed six monts?the work am will g've employment 1:0 a large numftgr ber of laborers. The contract was awarded by the United States department of agriculture. The contract as awarded is for that part of the government post road ber tween Aiken and White Pond or to the Barnwell county line, a distance Jt" of about 19 miles. Tfie roaa wnen completed will extend from the Barn18. well to the Edgefield county .lines, ^r" through Aiken, a distance of about T*r 40 miles. Contract for the remainder ? of the road will be lat9r awarded. e 1. ag;a- ? No Deaths From Rabies. 'the All immunizations ftgainst rabies, tiort which this year numbered 297 against the 356 for the pervious year, were suctha cessful, as there were no deaths from mis- rabies during the year, according to >y a the annual report of F. Asbury Cowum ard, M. D., bacteriologist, State board > of of health. The record shows that one per patient ,a white girl 8 year* old, died ject during the first week of treatment, but ne.d tho nttftTvdin? nhvsician was unable to obtain consent to an autopsy and hence was uncertain ol the cause of ,8 death. irere Many experiments were tried durL. ing the year with the quinine treat)use ment and advertised curatives for 'hey rabies, "but they were uniformly unof successful," writes Dr. Coward. "So aan- the misty hopes of a- year ago have i of faded before the bright light of practian tical experimentation, and rabies ana aold certain death still remain synonyn. mous." Princloals for Naval Academy. juld B. R. Tillman, United States sen? ital ator, and J. F. Byrnes, congressman. . A. announce a competitive examination c of to select two principals and- alteri to nates for appointment to the United hip. States NavaJ Academy at Annapolis, let- This examination will be held in Col:omr umbia in the office of the state superpo tendent of education, John E. Swearac ingen. January 22. All applicants must ined be between the ages of 16 and 20 late years and must have been bona fide i re- residents of the state or district for at least two years. Dr. of Additional Clemency by Governor. 3, it J- W. Barrineau, white, convicted any- of larceny in Charleston county, June, tain 1913, and sentenced to three years in rge- the penitentiary. Paroled. ;rar, V. D. Mizzell, white, convicted of I a larceny in Charleston county, June, 1913, and sentenced to three years on lard the public works of the county. nod Pnrrwlfiri. any Willie Jenkins, colored, convicted paid of larceny and burglary in Charleston , as county in 1907, and sentenced to 15 rthy years on the public works of the county. Pardoned. cies d it Only 16 Cases of Epidemic. 1 in Only 16 cases of epidemic cerebrointo spinal meningitis were reported to leed | the state board of health during the juld j past year, and in each instance a ibor : thorough investigation of the case this j was held. The germ of the disease shes and what conditions make it spread igis- are unsolved problems and so a strcit lysi- Quarantine is enforced. Cases were rths reported from the following, counties: mly Abbeville, one; Charleston, two: Cheri in okee, five; Greenwood, two; Marion, inal one; Pickens, two; Richland, one; Saludfe, one, and Spartanburg, one. g^?SS^3?gS?$tt$?S$3S33g?3ftSS&> 1 Dr. Mairden's Uplift Talks jj By ORISON SWETT WARDEN j; Oopjrigbt br McClnre Newspaper Byn01cai? WHERE THE HONEY OF LIFE; 18 FOUND. "8ome folks tries so hard ter be happy in dis' worl' dey gits miserable tryfn'. Happiness is alius whar you ain't lookin' fer it." That they have not found happiness where they expected to And it has been the experience of every human being who has made a specialty of hunting for it. Happiness is not gffcied that way. It is the product of a deed and not to be found by hunting, as sportsmen hunt for wild animals. Real happiness .is so eimplo that most people do not recognize it. It Is derived from the simplest, the quietest, the moat unpretentious things* in the world. It Is difficult for many people1 who are honestly striving to make the most of themselves to see how they can possibly get happiness out of their monotonous, humdrum , voca uuud lu nuiui luoj mo wbiu':u uj necessity or on account of those who are dependent upon them. These people would get a good lesson by studying the bees, who, every minute during tie day of the honey season, are finding sweets in every weed, in ]>oisonou8 flowers, in things in which we would never think of looking for anything good. If we are} ever happy, it will be because we create happiness out of our environment with all its vexations, cares and disheartening conditions. He who does not learn to create his happiness as he goes along, out of the day'ii work, with all its trials, its antagonisms, its obstacles, with all Its little annoyances, disappointments, has missed the great life secret It is out of this daily round of duties, out of the stress and strain and strife of life, the attrition of mind With mind, disposition with disposition? out of this huckstering;, buying and selling world?that we must get tlie honey of life, JUBt as the bee facias the sweetness from all sorts of flowers and weeds. An old farmer was cace asked at a meeting of the Agricultural congress to give his opinio:a on the best slope of land for the raising of a particular kind of fruit. "It does not make so much difference/' sad the 0I4 man, "about the slope ol the land as the slope of the man." Maty a farmer w^o has the right Eilope makes a gord living and gets a competence on irery poor soil, while the farmer whc does not slope the right way barel? exists upon the richeitt soil. Happiness does not depend bo much upon our being favorably environed as upon the slope of our mind. Nothing contributes more to the highest soccesi) than the formation of a naDit 01 set ing me origin, mue ta i things. Whatever your calling' in life may be, whatever misfortunes or hardships may come to you, make up your mind resolutely th8.t, come whal: may, you will get the most possibhi real enjoyment out of evei7 day; I that you will increase your capacity for enjoying life by trying to find the sunny side of every experience of the day; Resolutely-determine that you will see the humorous Hide of things. No matter bow hard or unyielding your environment may seem to be, there io a sunny side if you can only see it The mirth-provoking faculty, even under trying circumstances, is worth more to a young; man or woman starting out in life than a fortune without it. Re80lvti that you-will be an optimist; that there shall be nothing of the pessimist about you; that you wil] carry i your own sunshine wherever you go. Thus you may make poetry out of the prosiest 'life, bring sunshine to the darkest home and develop beauty and grace amid the ugliest surroundings. LET IT GO WITH THE OLD YEAR. i ... " How many of us make our backs ache carrying useless, i'oolish burdens! We carry luggage and rubbf.sh that i^re of no earthly use, but whichj nap our strength and keep us jaded and tired to no purpose. If we could only leara to hold on to the things worth while and drop the rubbish?let .Bo the useless, the foolish, the silly, the thingfi that hinder?we should not only make progress, but we should keep happy and harmonious as well. One of the secrets of right living is letting that go which absorbs our energies and retards our progress. We should let our unfortunate past experiences drop into the world of obj livion. We should never recall a dis agreeaDie memory or misiaae u.niesa i it be to arm ourselves against falling; into further errors. If thu pasi; torments and haunts you cut it off sharply as if with a knife. Do not allow its shadow to darken your present or rob your future of its possibilities. Profit by the lessons it has taught, but do not morbidly brood over them. Do not hang on to the things th?it keep you back, that make you unhappy. Let go of the worry, let go of the anxiety, let go of the scolding, fretting and fuming, let go of criticism, let go of fear, let go of anxious, i a _ _ over-strenuous me, let go 01 etuua.u Fog Signals. All the up-to-date light statniot.3 possess fog signals for warning the mariner of the presence of rocks and other dangers in foggy weather. The larger ones are so powerful that their blasts can be heard 25 to 20 mileu out at sea. Most of them are worked b3' vimpressed air, a gas engine of perhaps &0 or 25 horsepower b'sins; brought into requisition for this purpose. The siren is blown periodically every 70, 80 or y0 seconds or so, the actual blast lasting perhaps about living, let go of the rubbish, tbt? use less, the foolish, the Billy; let ID ol the shams, the shoddy, the false; lei go of the straining to keep up appear ances, let go of the superficial, lei go of the vice that cripples, the false thinking that demoralizes, and' yoi will be surprised to see how muct lighter and freer and truer you are U run the' race, and how much surer o: the goal. The American people do not knov how to let go. We keep qur musclei tense and our nervee up to such i pitch that it is the hardest thing ii the world for us to drop things. Why not resolve this coming yeai that whatever you do or do not do you will not be haunted by skeletons that you will not cherish shadows Determine that you will have nothlnj to do with discordB, that every one o them must get out of your mind. N< matter how formidable or persistent wipe them out. Forget them. Havi nothing to do with them. Do not le the little enemies?worry and feai anxiety and regret?sap your energy for this is your capital for futur achievement. Whatever Is disagreeable, whateve Irritates, nags, destroys your balano of mind, forget it?thrust It out. I has nothing to do with you now. Yoi have better use. for your time thai to waste It In regrets, In worry, ii useless trifles. Make war upon d< spondency, If you are subject to ii Drive the "blues" out of your mind a you would a thief out of your houst Shut the door in the face of all you enemies and keep It shut Do no wait for cheerfulness to come to yoi Go after it; entertain It; never Ie it go. If you have had an unfortunate & perience forget It. If you have mad a failure in your speech, your song you book, your article; If you hav been placed in an embarrassing pos! tlon; if you have fallen and hurt youi self by a false step; if you have bee) slandered and abused, do not dwel upon It. There is not a single redeem ing feature in these memories, an the presence of tfceir ghosts will ro yon of many a happy hour. If yoi have been indiscreet, imprudent; 1 your reputation has been Injured a that you fear you can never redeem ii do not drag the-hideous shadows, th rattling skeletons about with yoi Rub them. off the slate of memory Forget them. Start with a clean slat and spend all your energies in keepin ft clean for the future, and yon will b surprised at the transformation ii your life and its effect upon thos around you. . ; y Lowest Note Fitted to, Organ. ' An organ stop which emits a not one full octave below any that ha ever been heard before has been ii stalled In an organ at Lowell, Mast This stop is 128 feet long and It note is musically Indicated a CCCCCC. "To -understand what this -leans, says the Scientific American, it ma; be said that a 32-foot pipe vibrates 1 times a second at its lowest not (CCCC), and this Is very near , th point below which vibrations cease t form a continuous sound, while a 122 foot pipe vibrates but four times second when producing Its lowes sound. It was found, however, that group of pipes giving overtones coul be arranged to produce, when sounc ed together, a synthetic tone, and b this means stops producing theeffec of a 64-foot pipe Hive befen built witl out. requiring the use of a pipe c that length; and now In the same wa this monster 12&-foot stop has ai peared, which Is described as ' mighty atmospheric throb of moe I awesome majesty.' Indeed, it woul seem that its tones must be rathe felt than heard." Detecting Irripurltles In Honey. Biological tests of money are d< scribed by J. Thoni in the Schweizei {ache RlATiftn-Zeltnnsr. Such tests ar 1 necessary for detecting artificial o adulterated honey, when the naturs product Is almost perfectly Imitate as to its physical and chemical pro] erties. Two tests are described in detailthe diastase reaction, based on th fact that honey contains a diastati ferment secreted by the bee, whicl in contact with soluble starch, is cai able of transforming the latter int sugar; arid the precipitin reactloi based on the fact that honey contain a special protein secreted by the be which, when inoculated, into rabbit causes the formation of antibodies li the blood serum. These antibodie when mixed with the honey unde examination, yield a precipitate, am the quantity of this precipitate indl onton fhA lrlnd and amount of th adulteration. Race Track on Salt. What is undoubtedly Jhe most nove motor race course in the world i found at Salduro, Utah, where natura salt beds furnish the roadway. Th beds are on the line of the Westen Pacific railroad and are 65 miles ii length and eight miles in width, fui nishing a smooth, unbroken surface level as a table, and are from two ti twenty feet in depth. The salt ii crystalized, 98 per cent pure, an< white as snow. The surface is har< and dry.?Kansas City Times. Gray Horse's Handicap. The dark horses are the ones that g< to the war. The only objection to th< gray horse is that ,to keep his coa spick and span he needs twice ai much grooming as a dark horse. Cur rying is not enough. He must hav< soap and water "no end," as an Eng Ho*i jrrnnm wnnJri sav?Vnilth's Onm panion. two or three seconds. It means tha' while the siren is running, in the cast of the larger apparatus, something like 500 horsepower is being expend ed in the production of sound.?Scien tific American. Not Forgotten. Bix?You may depend upon it thai your friends won't forget you as long as you have money. Dix?That's right; especially if you have borrowed it from them.-?Boston Transcript. ; ^ \ CALOMEL WHEN BILK j ACTS LIKE I r I Guarantee "Dodsons' Liver Ton and Bowel Cleansing You Ever T _ 3 Stop tusing calomel! It makes 70a t 1 sick. Don't lose a day's work. If you 3 1 feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti- t pated, listen to me! t r Calomel is mercury or quicksilver ? ' which causes necrosis of the bones, t 7* Calomel, when it comes into contact x ' with sour bile crashes into it, breaking < { it up. This is when you feel that awy ful nausea and cramping. If you feel J "all knocked out," if your liver is tor- J g pid and bowels constipated or -you 1 t have headache, t dizziness, coated ] , tongue, if breath'is bad or stomach 1 sour just try a spoonful of harmless ] ^ Dodson's Liver Tone. ] Here's my guarantee?Go to any ! r drug store or dealer' and get a 60-cent ; 0 bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take a 1 The New Torpedo. 1 The torpedOi equipped with a net 11 cutter and with an effective radiut df 'j 1 10,700 yards, has been perfected at the i h navy torpedo station at. Newport. The best long rapge torpedo owned : 8 by any nation is one which is effective' n u at about three and one-halt miles, * while the new United' States torpedo has an effective range of six miles. ' Such 8 torpedo wiH be of incaloci1 lable advantage to a sea-going submarine, or to a fleet at a long distance i ? from shore, experts pointed out. I FAILING HMf MEANS i DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE t. - p: I . :i d. 8ave Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottle ' b of Danderlne Right Now?AI?o a 8tops Itching Scalp, f , o ? . ' ^ Thin, brittle, colorless' and scraggjf 0 hair Is mute evidence of a neglected u' scalp; of dandruff?-that awful scurf. ''/f'NMirf ta/ n/ilVtln rv BA f#l J Im AUDIO MO UUUUU5 BW UW v* Uyw * \? vw j e the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair , 5 of its luster, its strength and Its very 0 life; ei|ehtutfly producing a feverish* , 1 ness and itching of the scalp, which 6 if hot remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die?then the hair falls out fast A little Danderine , tonight?now?any time?will surely ; 0 save your hair. >\ ? > Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowltott's ,. Danderine from any Btore, and after a the first application your hair will take on that life, luster and luxuriance ' which is so heautifuL It will become' " wavy and fluffy and hate the appear* 7 auce of abundance; an incomparable : 6 gloss and softness, but what will 0 please you most will be after Just a ? few weeks' use, when you wlfl actuala ly see a lot of fine, downy hair?hew a hair?growing all over the scalp. Ad* . To Mend Pipes. ; j When the pipes are rusted in spots . I_ and. unsafe to use, by applying strips " of wet asbestos paper on hot plpeaj1 x the' paper will, adhere closely aho u so seal the pipes. This has been j found a great economy, as the fur: nace pipes last a year longer without ^ repairing them than they otherwise would. t . If the kitohen range contains an j ugly crack, you may fill it with a cement made by beating ' one egg,, to ! which add sifted ashes and stove po|? ish until thick' enough to spread: Work the paste smooth over the top. This will harden almost like iron ana will take a polish that will render the ^ break unnotlceable. e ' ??. * HERE IS A GOOD WAY ' d , TO GET RID OF PIMPLES > S : Bathe ydur face for several minutes - with rdslnol soap and hot water, then e apply a little reslnol ointment very c gently. Let this stay' on ten minutes, h and wash off with reslnol soap and >- more hot water, finishing with a dash 0 of cold water to close the pores. Do a this once or twice a day, and you will -j a be astonished to find how quickly the s healing, antiseptic r&inol medication s soothes and' cleanses the pores, re- j a moves pimples and blackheads, and | s leaves the complexion clear and vel- i r vety. All druggists sell reslnol soap ! 1 and resinol ointment?Adv. 1 i- ] e Had a Familiar 3ound. ! It was just after spring cleaning. j She was reading in a low, thrilling ' voice: "When the packing begins in earnest g it seems as though there could be no i ] spot on the earth's surface unshake en" a He roused himself from a somnoa lent attitude in an easy chair. "Who wrote that, Maria? He's been , through it, whoever he is. I wonder j who he married?" a "Why, you great stupid," said she, j "It's Amundsen writing about the ice." * ?Stray Stories. , | Important to Mothers ' Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for I * ' J 14 I 1 ' 111 L?lli 13 duu liUHUlCU, auu DCO UiaL All ' I Signature of ' In Use For Over 30 Tears. < 3 Children Cry for Fletcher's Custom Change of Program. "Why do you insist on moving ev- . ery year?" "By the time a year is up I know all I the tunes in the neighboring phono> graphs by heart." COLDS & LaGRIPPE 5 or 6 doses 666 will break any casa of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe; | it acts on the liver better than Calo- mel and does not gripe or sicken. \ : Price 26c?Adv. It's the little tilings that count, but j i don't lose wight of th9 fact that it's the j t bi&gest fish that always get away. j \ p i. i t(^^H . N'. -~*^_-1^WLl' Mt V? Ian. oomfo K^MCPlWlMnW*i by FfPfe. Maytn* SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSS, SUAtt/lfiCL $ Genuine must bear Signature ?*\ DROPSY TI,!ATE?' osuo^f BiYM- Qoick^^ wi """" w 1 reliof. toon remctm nitoJ^ P ^ J and sho^tbreath^often gtm^tet^rriiefi^^ j^DR^TH^Ks I. ||j Bulid Up With s^aH eifabie Wi ntersm ith'sfSSSS SI remedy for malaria, chills and TR4jrtftfei^r lever, colds and ario. 50c. ^ KODAKS & SUPPLfs J We nlso do highest class of fihlsMA&v^jj Prices and Catalogue upon reqttM^PJH S. Gtieikl Optical Co., Richmond, V*. SALESMAN WONDERFUL SELLER-REPEAT BUSINESS We can show yon how to oara dollars where yon are now earning cents. A Hustler can earn over #50.00 Weekly. 8^4.00 fully stocks and equips yon in voijrown county In an all rear ronna.no competition business, fiuar* 5 antced Article, exclusive territory. First i+fi applications given preference: Address*-:, TII1J MARAC COMPA-NY, Inc., 41 Eust !43<l Street New York Cttjr I ? III M BITPfl Men to learn barber trade. !l? Iff UN | e? 1C Few weeks required. steady position for com- . >etent graduate^. Wonderful demand for bar* fl >ers. Wnpcswhite learning; freecatalog:; writ? aM UCHMONO BARBER COLLEGE. Rtehrccnd. Va. Jj V. N. U.. CHARLOTTE. fiO.J-iSl&jffi