The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, January 13, 1915, Image 2
p mm,
Rape's Diapepsin" cures sick, ij
Kour stomachs in five minutes f
wL ?Time Itl |
S^Really does" put bad stomachs in
SB|r^wreally does" overcome indigesj^K
dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and r J
Btflfaessin five minutes?that?just
rape a umpepsm iu? iaiHHk^elMng
stomach regulator in the
HfcHd. If what you eat ferments into I
Blob born lumps, you belch gas and *
nictate sour, undigested food and 1
head is dizzy and aches; breath 6
Bpol: tongue coated; your insides filled 8
Kpth bile and indigestible waste, re- fi
Kember the moment "Pape's Diapep- c
pn" comes in contact with the stomach
&Q such distress vanishes. It's truly *
^ntonishing?almost marvelous, and 1
the joy is its harmlesBness.
R; A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia- a
pepsin will give you a hundred dollars' 6
ftrorth ot satisfaction.
ft It's worth its weight in gold to men 1
Kid women who can't get their Btom- 6
Kcbs regulated. It belongs in your
Konifr^-should. always be kept handy c
n case xjf sick, aour. upset stomach ?
taring the day or at night. It's the ^
ttaickent, surest and most harmless E
jjtpmach doctor in the world.?Adv. 8
K Soldiers in Silk. n
K< There is a 3erlous proposal to clothe o
pfce British army In silk, and an order P
i given ror ciom ior & oai- *
he Yorkshire regiment. , . t
homely looking i material, I
i tussah yarn, wool and wor- I
h the'silk trade wants the a
oHtJesto accept. t
d to have#he great advanIghtness
and durability, the v
^P?BfECT"
i North Carolina Lady If
fhatShe Owes To Canhri, J
e Woman's Tonic. J
, N. C.?Mrs. Ada Hull, of ft
sa^s; ^'About six years ago ti
ery JJad,health? I suffered
tins in my abdomen and h
readed to aee the sunvrise
ded to' see it set, for I suf- .
agony. No one except my?er
wow -how badly I stff- p
I. doctor said I was suffering b
W&; result ol the menopause. . n
Kj^aothing gave me any relief, I ?
Bwd the doctor if I hadn't better try f(
Birdy), He said, 'It might help you,' a
Kd;(otd my husband to get me a botAt
this time I was so weak I Ei
pte pQt lift my head, and my voice c;
Ku so weak, people had to lean to- ci
Wards the bed to hear what I said. I .
poked so bad and had such a dark
Ktfor that I looked like a dead woman, c
Kd my relatives thought I would t(
Kver get up again. P
Wl took one bottle of Cardul and it d
Blieved the pain and suffering so 0
Koch that my husband got another E
' a. a
ana mat improveu me hui u
mope. I began to strengthen and e
factually got welL I have now had u
Batter health for six years, than I
Brer had ,in ajl my life. I have taken .
^medicine Blnce, and my health is ?
Cardui is the ^finest medicine a ?
fry it- At druggists.?Adr.
U Precaution. p
78 she going to marry the young ?
Hkn who saved her from drowning?" .
think ao." }J
is she sure that he is able to ^
Hippo rt her in the style to which she
ma been accustomed?" *
*Yes, she looked him up in BradRreet's
before she fell in." h
I CARE FQR YOUR HAIR 5
E: Shampoos With Cuticura
ap. Trial Free. ^ *
rtrttent^ff needed to spots u
itdhing and Irritation of n
lotWng better for the com- *
, hands or skin than these fa
ercreamy emollients. Also
ons for the toilet n
eh-iretf'by mail with Book, t!
fejaxdrCuticura, DeptXY n
S, everywhere?Adv. s
Reverse Irish. t<
nejr?Thin yez think xhot' c
??Oi do.. They are a most n
Look at my Moike. Be
Kre we were married he was always c
Bltti' De on the bean, an' since thin t(
iteen., beanto',me .on the kisser. c
Sometimes Apply It Lightly. ?
^CtltS; burns, scalds, sores and j
wounds always apply Hanford's
in lightly, .but be sure that it *
s and gets to the bottom of the v
d, A few. light applications are
Sly all that is needed to heal
>!?? '?? iWBMlltlftS. Adv.
f 73=^ I
^ York County Farmer (bursting into ?
-village inn)?What d'ye think, t
^Kas? The bones of a prehistoric t
Ban have been found on Jim White's 1
^ hmkeeper?Great gosh! I hope
or Jim'll be able to clear hisself at
coroner's inguest-rPenn State
^Bpeumonla? Apply T-Ianford's Bal- j
Rub it on and rub it in thorj^Hfely,
until the akin is Irritated. ,
Two of a Kind.
^Hj^ld heads remind me of kind ,
|| Dr. Marden's
j: Uplift Talks 1
I By ORISON SWETY MARDEN. f
Copyright by McClnre Newspaper Syndicate
SHOULD NOT BE A DRUDGE OR A
DOLL.
"There are some things it doesn't
jay us to get," said Vice-President
Marshall in a recent address. "For
nstance, it doesn't pay a man to get
io much money that he becomes
ishamed of .his old-fashioned wife
md no longer wants to trot in her soiety."
Not long ago a man who abandoned
lis wife and who tried in every way
o provoke her to -get a divorce from
iim so he could marry a young and
ittractive girl, plainly told her that
he was not good-looking or stylish
inough for him, that now that he had
aoney he wanted a wife who could
how off in society.
This poor woman had made all sorts
if sacrifices In their early days of
truggle with poverty. For years she
ikd worked and deprived herself of
lecessities to help her husband get a
tart in the world, and to care for
jid bring up his children without a
lurse or maid. She made a drudge
f herself, but when he had become
irosperous he had no use for the
rorn-out, wife, with her b\irned-out
ieauty and her wrinkles, which had
>aid the price of a large- part of his
irosperity; he wanted to cast her
aide for a young, fresh and attracIve
wife.
In the trial the wife said: "I
worked from seven in the morning unil
eleven o'clock at night. But now
bat 1 am no longer needed in the busiess,
he has heaped upon me insults
ntold. He has neglected and failed
a properly provide for me.
"He repeatedly told me that I was
ot fashionable enough for him," the
rife concluded. "He liked dressy
romen. He took me to one place and
ointed out a Miss K. and said he had
pent 5400 wining and dining ner."
Thfe world will never know the torires,
a thousand times worse than
eath itself, endured by wives of
rosperous husbands, who so often
refer suffering to scandal and enure
a living death rather than exose
their husbands, who have been
iscinated . by younger and more at-i
ractive women.
One of the most pathetic spectacles
1 American life is that of the faded,
utgrown wife standing helpless, in
le shadow of her husband's proserity
and power, having sacrificed
er youth, beauty and ambitionearly
everything that the feminine
iind holds dear?to enable an indif;rent,
selfish, brutish husband to get
Btart in the world.
It does not matter that the wife
icrlflced her own opportunity for a
areer, that she gave up her most
tierished ambition in order to make a
idder for her selfish husband to asend
by. When he has once gotten
> the top, like a wily, diplomatic
olitician, he often kicks the ladder
own. He wants to make a show in
le world; he thinks only of himself,
[is poor, faded, worn-out wife, standlg
in his shadow, is not attractive
aough for him now that he has got*n
up in the world." >,
Tfre selfish husband thinks that he
iiould have "a clear track for hiB amItion,
and that his wife should be
ontent, even grateful, to'be allowed
) tag on behind and assist him in
rery, possible way in what he confers
the grand life work of both of
lem?to make him the biggest man
ossible. It does not even occur to
im that she could have an ambition
elllng up within her. heart, a longfa
ananrAK tha nail nrhinh rnra (r*
i?, iv p.uou?i tuo nutvu iuuo *u
er own blood, and a yearning to exress
it In some vocation as well
b be.
I do not believe that the Creator
as limited one-half of the human race
ractically to one occupation, while
le other half has the choice of a
lousand.
"But," many of our men reader^
111 say, "is there any grander projssion
in the world than that of home
laking? Can anything be more stim
lating, more elevating than home
laking and the rearing of children?
low can such a vocation be narrowag,
monotonous?"
Of course it is grand. There 1b
othing grander in the universe than
be work of a true wife, a noble
lother. But it would require the contitution
of a Hercules, an Infinitely
reater patience than that of a Job,
a endure such work with almost no
hange or outside variety, year in and
ear out, as multitudes of wives and
lothers do.
The average man does not appreiate
how almost devoid of incentives
o broad-mindedness, to many-sidedess,
to liberal growth, the home life
f many women is.
The business man and the profesional
man are really in a perpetual
chool, a great, practical university.
ie is continually coming in contact
rith new people, new things, being
noided by a vast number of forces
vhich n'<ver touch the wife in the
luiet home.
I believe In marriage, but I do
lot believe in that marriage which
jaralyzes self-development, strangles
imbition. and discourages evolution
ind self-growth, which takes away
he iife purpose. ' Nor is it necesary
:ha* the wife should work like a slave
n order to grow. There is a certain
ila*s of men who go to the other
Bad Practice Discouraged.
Getting married in Burma is not euirely
a pleasant operation. Custom
warrants the practice of throwing
jtones at the house of the newlytvAAflcxA
hut tint hlanlrmoil n-nrl
>1 WUUWU| WWW uw? k/*MVW4MU*t| UliU >l ucu
recently a band of Burman youth denandfcd
money before they would depart
the law stepped in and sentenced
:he leaders to heavy imprisonment
ind corporal punishment
1? ?:? ?
, ^Hgbt nations to the European wai
lave 17,000,000 fighting
j extreme and make slaves of theli
wives?work them half to death. Bu
physical drudgery does not develoi
power. The slave wife is as badly of
as the doll wife.
A wife should neither be a drudg*
nor a dressed-up doll; she should de
velop herself by self-effort, just as
her husband develops himself. Sht
should not put herself in a positior
where her inventiveness and resource
fulness and individuality, her talent
will be paralyzed by lack of motive
Everything in the whole environ
ment. of tens of thousands of Ameri
can wives is discouraging to growtl
and tends to strangle a broader, fullei
life.
A healthy mind must be an activt
mind. Vigor and strength cannot bf
built up in man or woman by inac
tion of a life of indolence or monot
ony. There must be a purpose, a vig
orous, strong aim in the life, or.it wil
be nerveless, insipid and stale.
For centuries women themselves ac
cepted man's estimate of them, anc
were content to walk in his shadow
But since the higher discovery ol
woman in the last century a new or
der of things is being brought about
Women are becoming less and lest
. dependent upon men and more in
clined to live their own lives. Thej
are, beginning to see their own pos
sibilities, that they can have careen
and ambitions as well as men. Tht
gin or today expects a UDerai eau
cation and looks forward to a careej
of her own. Women have at lasl
learned that men have not monopo
lized all the genius, that abilitj
knows no sex. And the wife is be
ginning to realize that there is one
thing she should guard as the verj
jewel of her soul; that is, the deter
mination to keep pace wjith her hus
band.
HOME, SWEETEST WORD IN THE
LANGUAGE.
" ' %
The story is told of a perplexec
young man who wrote to the querj
department of a newspaper to knov,
whether the editor would advise hin:
to buy an automobile or get mar
ried. He said he could not afford *c
do both, and was in a quandary.
The editor cautioned the youni
man to deliberate earnestly and not
V ,,, . ,
to maKe. up im mma wunoui au?
consideration. He was reminded
that while an automobile costs more
it doesn't talk back, and that a sec
ond-hand automobile could be traded
for a new one. It Is not recorded
what was the decision of the irreso
lute ycfung man. >:
V There have been men, good men
whose lives, measured by ordinary
standards, were successful, who nevei
married; but those who hear or read
of them feel that such careers were
incomplete. i
To a certain degree, a young man
should look upon marriage from a
utilitarian standpoint A good wife
is so much capital. She makes bin
to be, by a kind of grace, a great
deal more than he is by nature. She
contributes the qualities needed In
order to convert his vigor into a safe
as well as productive efficiency, sne
introduces, for instance, into bis in
tellectual nature tbat Ingredient crt
sentiment which Intellect requires in
order to be able to do its best wort
and makes home an Eden. "To Adam,
Paradise was home; to the good among
his descendants, home is paradise."
Most married men are saner, mucli
more normal and level-headed, eco
nomical and careful, on account ol
their wives. A model home is a great
corrective for a man. It keeps him up
to . standard and saves him from get
ting blue and discouraged. It devel
ops the affectionate side of his na
ture and renders his character strong
er and more symmetrical. Men can
produce very much more because ol
harmony an^ affection In the home.
There is nothing else which will call
out the dlvinest qualities of a man 01
woman like unselfish service. The
very consciousness that one has others
depending upon him tends to call
out th? best in him.
A happy marriage brings sunshine
into the life and broadens, softens and
sweetens the character. It is a great
educator, a perpetual influence for
good.
Who could estimate what civilization
owes to man's dream of a happj
home of his own!- What an incentive
to man in all ages has been this
vision of a home of his own! It is
this picture which holds the youth tc
his task, buoys him up in times of
hardship and discouragement. 'Thle
picture of a home, this vision of :i
little cottage and some fair maiden
waiting at the door?this home'Vision
has ever been the great incentive of
the straggler, the greatest incentive
of mankind! It is the dream of "a
home of my own" that has lifted
multitudes of youths out of obscur
ity. There is no spur on earth which
has had anything like the influence
over man that this home vision has
The thought of his home and wife
and children, dearer to him than life
keeps vast multitudes of men grind
ing away at their dreary tasks, when
they see no other light in the distance
To multitudes of people home is the
only oasis in their desert life.
Home js the sweetest word in the
language. It has ever been the favor
ite theme of the poet, the author, anc
the artist. History is packed wit*
the achievements of men for the sake
of the home. They cross oceans, thej
explore continents. They endure th<
heat of the tropics and the cold 01
the arctics, they explore mines in tht
wilderness, cut themselves off tron
civilization for years for #the sake o:
wife and home.
Women are always sincere wher
angry.
Military Dances.
The Highland fling symbolizes vie
tory. The rschottjsche militaire, tha
was popular some years ago, was an
other Scotch dance with a military sug
gestion. Many old prints show tha
the bagpipe of Scotland accompanie'
the military dance, as it do3s today
1 and to its strains fighting is bein;
done that emulates that of past cen
turies.
% Many trains of thought carry n<
freight
[ FRUIT UHIHE
: MUD
! -^California Syrup of Figs" can't
? harm tender stomach,
iiver and bowels.
Every mother realizes, after giving
- fler children "California Syrup of
- Figs" that this Is their ideal laxative,
i because they love its pleasant taste
r and it thoroughly cleanses the tender
little stomach, liver and bowels with5
out griping.
3 When cross, irritable, feverish, or
breath is bad, stomach sour, look at
the tongue, mother! If coated, give a
- teaspoonful of this harmless "fruit
I laxative," and in a few hours all the
foul, constipated wc3te, sour bile and
undigested food passes out of the bowels,
and you have a well, playful child
again. When Its little system Is full
of cold, throat sore, has Btomach-ache,
diarrhoea, indigestion, colic?remember,
a good "inside cleaning" should
always be the first treatment given.
Millions of mothers keep "California
r fivruD of Figs" handy; they know a
- tenspoonful today caves a sick child
j tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 60>
cent bottle of "California Syrup of
- Figs," which has directions for babies,
* children of all agos and grown-ups
t pointed on the battle. Adv.
r ~ Just the Boy He Wanted.
The aim of golfers is, of course,
> to go round the course with as few
r strokes as possible, and the man with
. the least strokes wins the ;;ame. A
. player realized this once, an J decided
to engage a caddy who would help
him. ' .
r "Caddie," he saidi to the boy who
came up to him, "caa you count?"
"V"" olw " c*al?9 +Vio h/MT
JL CO) Oily OUiU IUU MUJ
I "Can you add up?" ;
r "Yes, sir."
"Well, what's five and seven and
i four?"
"Twelve, sir." . ,
> "Come along," said the golfer,
"you'll do." And be engaged the boy
r on the spot.
S IF HAIR IS TURNING
' GRAY, USE SAGE TEA
r*
j Don't Look Oldl Try Grandmother's
, Recipe to Darken and Beautify
Gray, Faded, Lifeless Hair, i."
Grandmother kept her hair beauts
' fully darkened, glossy and abundant
with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
' Whenever her half fell out or took on
that dull, faded or streaked appear1
ance, this simple mixture v, aa applied
with wonderilul effect By asking at
1 any drug store fox* "Wyeth'H Sage and
1 Sulphur Haix- Remedy," you will get a
1 large bottle of this old-time recipe,
! ready to use, for about. 50 cents. This
' simple mixture can be> depended upon |
1 to restore natural color and beauty
1 to the hair imd is splendid for dan|
druff, dry, itchy scalp and fulling hair.
| A well-known druggist says every|
body UBeii Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur,
' because it darkens so naturally and
! evenly that nobody can tell i:t has been
. applied?it|a so easy to use, too. You
' simply dampen a comb or soft brush
' and draw it through your hair, taking
one strand at a time. By morning
' the gray hair disappears; after an!
other*..application or two, it is re;
stored to its natural color and looks
' glossy, soft and abundant. Adv.
The Finishing Touch..
The young man hesitated to believe
' the statement of her little brother that
' the young .lady was not at home. He
| repeated the question, at the same
time displaying a quarter. The boy
eyed it longingly and again replied in
1 the negative.
"But didn't she leave a message for
1 me?" asked the disappointed swain.
"Yes," said the lad?and nothing
[ more.
As one who sees a great light, the
' young man tossed him the coin.
1 "Now," he said, "out with, the mes;
sage." .
"She said she's not gonna see you
any more and you're not to give me
" any money."?Philadelphia Ledger.
RESINOL WILL SURELY
V STOP THAT ITCHING
What blessed relief! The moment
resinol ointment touches itching skin,
the Itching stops and healing begins.
That is why doctors have prescribed it
successfully for nineteen years in even
the severest, stubbornnest cases of eczema,
ringworm, rashes and many
other tormenting, unsightly skin dis
[ eases, witn me neip 01 wtvrm uuuin
. with resinol soap, rcisinol ointment rei
stores the skin or scalp to perfect
) health and comfort, quickly, easily and
. at little cost At all druggists.?-Adv.
i
Evidently Trusted Wlm. .
"I don't know of but one woman who
i has perfect confidence in her hus.
band." *
s "Are you sure there is one?"
"Yes; she poses for him n vaudei
ville in a knife-throwing act."?Louis
yflle Courier-Journal.
I
RUB-MY-TISM
5 Will cure your Rheumatism and all
1 kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia,
5 Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruifies, Cuts,
Old Sor^s, Burns, etc. Antiseptic
| Anodyne. Price 25c.?Adv.
c Sure.
"Do you believe that there is a
higher power?"
I "Mir ^ftow o4r* T morrlo/i ViOT T,1fa
i"/ ucai Oil f A UiUi < tvu uv*. Ir-nr.
, The only time we notice an impediment
in the speech of some people is
when an occasion arises to praise'
t others.
But sometimes an amateur vocalist
t loses his voice, and the neighbors live
I peacefully ever after.
j The chap who borrows trouble
' doesn't have to pay it bacl:, but he
pays heavy interest on the loan.
} SamanthE. Ann goes to church every
time'she gets a new dreBB.>
< ' (
.. Cape of Satin 1
' // 1: ffiBEHMBgiiH
.SJBl % '
ALONG and ample cape of black
satin, lined1 with satin in a contrasting
color, and interlined for additional
warmth, develops a new idea in
treatment of the neck. Here a wide
ruff, liko the body of the cape, makes
an attractive finish and-'a protection
for the f-hroat at the same time. The
plaiting for the ruff is graduated in
width, growing narrower from the
sides toward the front. But it fc sufficiently
wide to enfold the back of the
head, .the $ara and the throat when
the cape is fastened in the front.
A1 long silk-covered cord extends
about the base of the ruff, terminating
in two cabdchons (made of the cord),,
one at each side: Long ends terminating
in heavy silk tassels fall from
the center of each of .these silk ornaments.
v
A narrow ruching made of satin like
tbat in the lining outlines the hem
on the inside of the cape all around.
It Is a dainty finish, handmade and
elegant.
This is one of the longest of capes
and one of the few intended solely
for evening or other dressy wear.
The cape, which occupied the center
of the stage as the. newest tmd
most chic of wraps at the beginning
or me season, aia not capture tae
popultar fancy, but was admired by a
is an attractive novelty.
t j' ' j
There are many jeweled hair bands
discriminating following among those
i ''
Fancy Combs am
ALL sorts of fancy shell combs, ornamental
hairpins, hair bands and
small -barettes, bespeak the return to
favor of more elaborate styles In hairdreselrfe.
The combs are shaped In
so many different ways and made in
so man; different sizes that one concludes
they are fashioned to be worn
in any position on the head which
suits the fancy. .
A great variety in shell combs, pins
and ornaments are set with rhinestonns
?>nd sparkling colored stones.
The cdmbs and other ornaments are
shown In tortoise colorings, amber,
black, white, and gray. Besides white
rhinestones there are settings in emerald,
a.methyst, garnet and topaz
colors.
A popular comb, of which an exam?'
-* ? ? ? ?? /% ntAfnuA Irt m Q/1a
Pie IB BMUWU lil UIO yiuuio, ID Luaut>
to wear when the hair is done in
a French coil. II is long and the teeth
are joined to a band which is sometimes
narrower at one end than at the
other, and sometimes pointed at the
ends. This comb may be had with
the teeth hinged on so that it can be
adjusted to the head in different positions.
A single row of stones, or a
row extending all around the edge of
the band, gives a pretty sparkle to
this comb. Often, the band is entirely
encrusted with stones. This more
than doubles the price of the comb
without adding much to its attraction.
A very popular large shell pin Is
shown in the picture. One or two of
these pins is thrust in the hair at
the sides when it is coiled low. Or
o r>o<r 1 c Rnmfitimes seen in a Ions
I* ~ ^
French coil.
The larg ' Farrar comb is worn in
Milady's Morning Dress.
One-piece frocks, so easy to slip on
ird off, are the favorites for morning
ivear, and many of these practical
models of serge, cheviot, mohair and
mohair and worsted mixtures, are
shown in the ready-to-wear departments
fcr runabout morning wear under
the sms.rt topcoats, pocketed and
belted in semiboyish style. The ideal
one-pieco frock fastens with a minimum
amount of trouble?usually a
snap fastener at the belt line and another
at tho neck opening suffice, the
-p ?m
or Dressy Wear
/[ Q;
BB^P*1^
?P^^ .
who.follow radical new departures In
fashions.
The cape has been featured In combinations
with other Wraps, where it
is usually short and suggests the cape
oif the cavalier type. Its best and
most attractive development as a garment
for protection is portrayed in
the ptetare given here, where it Is
shown as a rich and graceful evening
wrap. ;
Velvet Dresses With Tunics. .
Although many dress skirts are in
circular cut, this is rarely the' cake
with velvet dresses, as the long tunic
is especially good in velvet, says the
Drygoods Economist. These long
overskirts, as they may be called, require
weight in the cloth to make
them hang gracefully,1 and are, therefore,
an attractive style for velvet
Circular skirts are very apt to harig
unevenly in velvet, as the weight of
the cloth drags down the skirt at the
sides.
? ? fi
New Silk for Winter.
For more dressy toilettes the new
fabric known as satln-regence, a soft
silk that seems .to have an almost invisible
stripe In it, and the graceful :
amalgamation of tulle and fur and' fur;
and velours wili amply be exploited:,
this winter. In the new claret or
deep .wine shade, satln-regence prom-'
Ises a flattering vogue.,
? : j
1 Hair Ornaments
several different positions on the liead
and Is a showy and splendid affair
of many jewels. The teeth support
a fan-shaped or scroll top which afford
much surface for rhinestones.
A small ornamental pin to thrust in
the hair colled high on the head is
shown in the picture, which is something
between a comb and. a pin, taking
the place of either. It is of tortoise
shell Bet with rhinestones, and
made of filigree silver, ribbon and
tinsel braid. And outside of ornaments
of shell or^metal are others of
millinery and ribbon flowers.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
Rolled Pique Collars.
Rolle'd pique collars that aro attached
to vest fronts of the same can
be added to any coat front, or will go
with the one-piece dress that is always
opened with a deep V at the
neck. The pique in all these models
is neither stiff nor limp; it has to be
wired if it is to etand up about .the
neck! All the pique models are not
plain; some of them are in very fancy
weaves or have a little running spray
of white mercerized embroidery along
the edges.
Some pretty sets for dresses or
coats are made of silk in gay bayadere
stripes. The deep gauntlet cuffs
U.1J V?
are ueiu lugtauei uy uuunH.t; uuuons.
The collars are of the same sailor
shapes as the pique or tha lawn.
Spring Colors.
Among the colors for spring are
putty, greenish tans and grays, old
tapestry blues and dark shades generally.
lap of the surplice bodice holding the
lines of the frock trimly in place. The
old style costume with a multitude of
hooks and eyes which demand laborious
adjustment has gone out of favor
and the easy to get into frock Is
hailed joyfully by womankind.
To Wash Greasy Kitchen Utensils.
When washing anything that is
greasy, use hot sodawater. You will
find It very good, as the alkali turns
the grease into soap, which will do Its
Finest tobaccos,
skillfully blended? : .H
that's the source of
that rare flavor which
MONEY MWT^WISELY SPENjT '
loais in the United states. Of this
sum 66.8 per cent Was derived from
public funds^eithsr ^deral, state.
thropy. These are some of the in-. ; <
teresting figures contained, in thejattnual
statistical statement of the Rational
Association for the Study and,
Irevention of Tuberculosis, made pub*r
lie recently. The statement is based ; v
largely on actual reports received
from antituberculosis agencies to- V.;
cated tnrougmrat tne country, uui.
where reports are not available, the ' 'V;
figures have been estimated!. ,
Institutional care .and treatment of :^
consumptives to; hospitals and toitoria
makes up the largest Bhare of
the total expenditure; More than $17^
300,000 was 'spent, for purpose, \ 'j
with an additional $925,000 for spe?'
cial treatment of tuberculosis Insane
and prisoners. .These,.figure include
not only the cost of maintenance, but
in some instances the cost of construction
of Institutions. Antituberculosis
associations spent the next largest
sum, amounting to a little over-$900,000.
Care of patients 14 (Uspetotries
and by visiting nurses cost almost ae
much, approximately $880,000. The , ,
growth of the open-air school movement
Is shown in the fadt that toft \
year more than $300,000 was. epent rcjr i
thia purpose, as against $10,000 expended
five years ago. State and
city boards of health spent $200,000
directly on tuberculo^lB "work
:
. Safety Appliance Lacking..
"Didn't you say," demanded the
young man of the captain, "that this
ship was equipped with all appliances
for human safety?"
"I did." ,
"Then how does it happen that I now
find myself engaged to a lady I did not ' J
know when the vessel left her pier?"
?Judge:
: ? ;*
Making Allowance.
"Ia the toy trustworthy?"
"I consider him so. I'd trust him
as far as I could see him. Gf choree
I'm mighty nearsighted."?Cleveland
Plain Oealef.
STICK TO IT
Until Coffee Hit* You Hard.
It Is about as well to advise people
to stick to coffee until they get hit v
hard enough so that they will never
forget their experience.
A woman writes and her letter is
condensed to give the facts in a short
space:
"I was a coffee slave and stuck to:lt A
like a toper to his 'cups/ notwithstand- fl
Ing I frequently had severe attack* or h
sick headache; then I used more cofc
fee to relieve the headache, and thja *
was well enough until the coffee efr ''
feet wore off. .
"Penally attacks of rheumatism began
to appear, and ultimately the
whole nervous system began to break . *
down and I was fast becoming a
wreck.
. "After a time I was induced to quit
coffee and take up Postum. This wa?
half a year ago. The result has been
most satisfactory. . 1
"The rheumatism is gone entirely
nerves practically well and steady, dl
gestion almost perfect, never have any
more sick headaches and amgainin^^^^^
steadily in weight and strength."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville,"
in pkgs.
Postum comes in two forms: 9
Regular Postum ? must be wc^H^SH
boiled. 15c and 25c packages.
Instant Postum ? is a
der. A teaspoonful
in a water
sugar, makes a
age in?tantly. 30c and
per cup of
bout the
"There's a Reason"
. -J