GIRLS! TRY IT,
-^ BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
-*k
f
! \ m \& trtake It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxun
t.y lant and Remove Dandruff?Real
Surprise for You.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf- i
/ fy, abundant and appears as soft, IubtrouB
and beautiful as a young girl's ,
arter a "Danderine hair cleanse." Just
try this?moisten a cloth with a little
Danderine and carefully draw It
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
tho hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and In just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and Invigorates
the scalp, forever st9pping Itching
and falling hair.
Hut what will please you most will
bo after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see new hair?fine-.and
downy nt first?yes?but really new
haii--growing all over tho scalp. If*,
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of It, surely get a 25 cent bottle of
Knowlton's Danderine from any store
and Just try it. Adv.
Nimble-Footed.
The preaclior was a young man and
nervous, but Interesting. He was mak- |
Ing an eloquent plea for the home life,
and was descanting eloquently on tho
evils of tho club, telling bis congregation
that married men in particular
should spend their evenings at home
with their wlv6s and children.
"Think, my hearers," said he, "of a
poor, neglected wifp, all alone In the
groat, dreary house, rocking the cradle
of her sleeping baby with one foot '
and wiping away tlio tears with the
other!"
STOP EATING MEAT IF
KIDNEYS OR BACK HURT
Tako a Glass of Salts to Clean Kick
neys If Bladder Bothers You?
Meat Forms Uric Acid.
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble In some form
or other, says a well-known authority,
because the uric acid In meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked;
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
sorts of distress, particularly backache
and misery in the kidney region; rheumatic
twinges, severe hcadnclies. acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and urinary Irritation.
The moment your back hurts or kidneys
nren'tWctlng right, or if bladder
bothers you^et about four ounces of
Jad Salts fromfc any good pharmacy;
tako a tablespoonful in a glass of
water before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys avIII thou act fine.
This famous salts made from the
acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined
with lithia, and has been used
for generations to flush clogged kid
noys nnd stimulate them to normal
activity; also to neutralize the acids In
the urino so It no longer Irritates, thus
ending bladder disorders,
i Jad Salts cannot Injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent llthlawnter
drink which millions of men and
women take now and then to keep the
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus
avoiding serious kidney disease.?Adv.
Within the Law.
A real negro "mammy" of the old
type caine up the walk through tho l
old-fashioned garden to the side porch, i
She had a basket of "freBh uigs" on .
her arm and was offering them for j
galo.
"Are you sure they aro perfectly :
fresh, auntie?" naked tho lady who
came out of tho house.
"Yes'um, they sho Is all right. Miss
Peas. Ain't nary disorderly alg
amongst 'em."?Now York Evening
Post.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CA8TOR1A, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
n?<ini o.. ? ' m
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Ars.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Probably.
Bix?I boo that someone 1b getting
up a Woman's Dictionary."
Dlx?Moro words In It, I suppose.
- Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills put
the Btomach in good condition In a
" short time. Try them for Sick Stomach.
Biliousness and Indigestion. Adv.
Snickers and glggloe seem to have
taken the place of tho good old fashioned
hearty laugh.
Astonishing Tohscoo Ilcmodj -OatrMtMd
to lnntinllj rrtnuvn luut for clararwttes or tobsooo
In snj form, or nxinty cheerfully refunded. bend
60 and receive wonderful remedy by roium mall.
Address Dm! b, Mmw Umm 0e., SMJte, turn.?IK
Many a woman suffers from insomnia
becauso her husband talks In
his sleep.
The Cough Is what hurts, hut the tickle la
to blame. Pfean's Mentholated Cough Drops
stop th? tickle?60 at good Druggists.
Evor notice that tho girl with s
broken heart always managed to saws
s few of the pieces?
Putnam Fadeless Dyes are ths
brightest and fastest. Adr.
Nearly every man Is willing to do
his duty?ss ho sees It
' ' *"* *"># .H . 4 -?! "*.
Jv - rv? . *-' . ^ .':' - . * v-v*?* ? '<?
i
TWO LOYAL LOVERS
I
By MILDRED CAROLINE GOODRIDGE.
It was a festal eve everywhere. The
ground was covered with snow and the
tnick (lakes still falling. A biting wind
blew John Lane before it, but his
heart was warm and he Bmlled as ho
buffeted the tempest, bearing a goodly
stored market basket.
Still a bachelor at 28, John Lane was
pursuing a brief journey that had a
rare tinge of romance to it. He had
come to Drookville, a near suburban
town, upon the invitation of some old
friends the. Ward family. John had
known these worthy people for a long
while?Miss Muriel Ward particularly.
She was two years younger than himself,
still she classified in the group
of "spinsters.*'
"I don't know that 1 am doing a
wise thing." mused John, as he strode
along. "It's opening up the lost past?
lost, because I have never been nble
to put enough aside to offer Muriel the
home she should have. Ah, me!" ho
.sighed resignedly, "the little savings
I put by are small. Indeed. Now they
have asked me to spend a holiday
with'them. I shall see Muriel. Her
sunny face will make life the sweeter, 1
but when 1 go back to my humdrum
work agaj/i the regret will bo the
keener."
John had brought a genuine holiday
offering with him?a noble turkey, a
parcel of toothsome fruit, several
boxes of bonbons, some toys for the
children. It cheered his sterling soul
to be thus generous, even amid his '
necessities. He know (ho .
homo at Brookvllle, but they had
moved, and he was trying to locate
them from their "written directions.
"I declare,' he said, halting and puffing
from his undue exertions, "I'm
quite at sea. This can't be Magnolia
terrace. I believe I'll inquire.
John started towards a little Isolated
house where he observed a light in its
rear rooms. He rested his heavy basket
on the Btoop and knocked at the
door several times. No one responded,
and leaving the basket where he
had placed it, John started around the
houso to pursue his inquiries at the
kitchen door.
"The mischief!" exclaimed John, as
he passed near a frozen water spout.
"I Don't Know That I Am Doing a
Wise Thing."
Ills feet gave way, he was conscious |
of a heavy fall, and then lost sensibility.
He must have soon aroused, but in a
dazed condition. It was at a new spot
to which he had wandered, that he
came to himself. His arm hung helpless
at hiB side, he had forgotten all
about the basket, he was seated on a
street curb and a village watchman
wrb shaking him.
"House up. my man," urged this latter
individual. "You'll freeze to death
here. What's the trouble?"
"I have had a fall and lost my
senses, 1 guess." rospondod John
weakly. "I was bound for the Ward
home."
"I'll help you there," and in desperate
faintness and pain John was welcomed
with concerned faces by the
family ten minutes later.
Old Mr. Ward saw at one? that there |
waa something serious the matter with
John's right arm. They made him comfortable,
Muriel hovering about him
like a veritable ministering angel.
They sent for a doctor.
"You will not be able to use that
arm for a full three weeks," was the
dictum of the physician.
"Hut my work in the city!"
"Friend John," said Mr. Ward quiet- 1
ly, "you are going to be patient and
happy among us until you are all well.
We are going to give you the vacation
and rest you have needed for ten
years."
So John Lane settled down into the
fair groove In which circumstances had
placed him. Muriel, his solicitous
nurse, flitting about him with her
sweet womanly ways, and deeoor and
deeper grew his love for her.
Meanwhile the festal basket which
had been left by John on the doorstep
)f a house he could not now locate
had performed a glorious mission.
In that humble cottage lived a Mrs.
Ilernard and her three little children.
For over a year her husband had been
lost, missing?dead, she now feared.
He had gone to a remote part of Australia
to look up the estate of a dead
brother. The months passed by, and
no word was received from him.
With the family on the verge of poaa
jfc: v
:?*> ? r ' - ' sSi?" " ' *' '? - *4'*'.
rHE FOBT MILL TIMES, FOB
- ? -
ltlvo destitution and ill, discouraged,
nearly heartbroken, when John Lane
knocked at the door of the house that
stormy night the mother lay very
near to the point of dissolution and
the children huddled over a smoldering
fire in the kitchen stove. They
had not heard the summons at the
front door, but the next morning
when the eldest boy went out to seek
for some dry branches to burn he discovered
the basket.
What magic of Joy it proved to
them! Mrs. Bernard never doubted
that some kind person had thought of
them, and secretly provided for their
necessities. What a royal feast they
had! The nourishing food, the good
will of kind hearts Implied roused
the woman to new hope and courage
and saved her life. *"
And then two nights later there
burBt in upon them the husband and
father, returned. He had been lost,
delayed amid great danger, but had
come back to the happy home fold a
rich man.
The evening after that John and
Muriel wero seated conversing in the
cozy parlor of the Ward home.
"I am asking bo much of you, dear,"
John was saying lovingly. "After waiting
so long, we must be patient for
another year or two."
"What is that to a woman who
truly Iovcb?" murmured Muriel.
There was a ring at the door bell.
Muriel answered the summons. A
stranger confronted her.
"Is there a Mr. Lane here?" she was
asked, and the caller was led into the
parlor, where ho grasped John's hand I
warmly.
"You aro the gentleman who left a
basket at my homo a few nights
since?" he said.
"Unintentionally," replied John,
"but If it made anybody happy?"
"It saved my wife's life, and I have
come to thank you," said Mr. Bernard
earnestly. "I found your name on
one of the packages. It gave your city
address, and from there I traced you
here. I must know you better."
He got to know Bterllng, honest
John Lane so well that he started him
in business for himself.
And the fullness of joy and happiness
complete came at last to the two
loyal lovers.
(CopyriKht, 1914, by VV. O. Chapman.)
"HOMING" INSTINCT OF BEES
Their Remarkable Powers Demonstrated
by Most Thorough Series
of Experiments.
Ilenrl Fabre, the naturalist, tells in
the Fortnightly Review a characteristic
story about Charles Darwin and
JtimSelf. Darwin wanted to explain
the "homing" instinct of bees, and induced
Fabre to begin a series of experiments
with that purpose in view.
A regular plan of campaign was
drawn up.
Marked bees were placed in a dark
box und carried away from the hive in
the opposite direction from that in
which they were llnally liberated. The
box was repeatedly turned about, so I
that the inmates would lose all sense
of direction. Every possible means
was taken to render useless any
known or conceivable method of oh.
talning one's bearings. The bees
were even placed within an induction
coll in the effort to confuse -hem.
The result of a long and elaborate
series of tests was nil so far as any
explanation of the homing power was
concerned. In every case from 30 to
40 per cent, of them found their way ;
homo without apparent trouble, no
matter how confusing the trip away '
from home had been made.
The story is characteristic, because
it illustrates the thorough way in
which the author of the "Origin of ;
Species" attacked all his problems. |
Ho was not one to merely "opine pret- 1
tily and probably," and let it go at
that. He put everything to the test
of experiment, and when the answer
came out wrong, or didn't come out at
all, he "scrapped" the hypothesis as a
matter of course Instead of trying to
explain away its failure.
Women Parasites?
Francis W. Crowninshield, of the
editorial staff of the Century Magazine,
says:
"Of course I do not see the married
women in this country as 'helpless,
parasitical dependents.' That parasite
idea is nonsense. There are more
weak-kneed, dependent husbands
than there are parasitical wives.
"It isn't the fault of the American
women that she is marrying less frequently
and uninarrylng more frequently.
It's the fault of the American
man. Once a rich man supposed
lilmaol# * -
iiuioon iv >m t v tuo pi iv Ul n
Red Rover. He believed that all he
had to do was to throw his handkerchief
nt a woman, or slap her on the
cheek and she would humbly and
thankfully become his wife. Now
that sort of man merely bores a woman.
And she's not going to pretend
that he doesn't.
"The modern wife wants a husband
who has read Brleux and Arthur
Schnltzler. She wants him to know
the paintings of Matisse. She looks
for a cultivated taste in music, an interest
In chamber concerts. For the
woman of today is caught In all the
cultural currents, all the new social
movements. I believe, indeed, that
she Is more responsive to them thar
the men."
Going Down.
"The last time I saw you you were
all lit up over the fact that you had
been let In on tt\e ground floor on a
big proposition."
Well?"
"And now you are looking all broken
up. What's the matter?"
"The elevator has already gone up
and I stepped into the elevator shalL"
'
!? : 'Ji - 1 V
-*ir~ r- -"v
"
T MILL, SOUTH CAROLINA
| KEEPING TAB ON 1
Fine Group of Wl
I
(Hy ANN%\ OAT.ir.TTKn.) |
xx iu?ftv piupurnuii ui 1116 lOFSPS, 0S- !
; peclally among the young poultry, j
could easily be prevented by the uso of
common sense and a little forethought.
A few years ago we lost a lot of highpriced
eggs because we placed the
thermometer too near the water pipes
in the incubator. Instead of setting it
on a level with the eggs it was fast- '
encd to a little box, where it could not !
be overturned. We thought it a very
clever idea at the time, but found out J
too late that we had made a mistake, >
Ileing so near the pipes, the heat
caused the thermometer to register
several degrees too high. That is, it
was several degrees higher than the
temperature down where the eggs
were. Only one chick hatched, and it
died. The eggs wero broken and examined.
We found that they contained ,
chicks in nearly all stages of develop-.
ment. This taught us a lesson that !
has never beon forgotten, and that
was not our last by any means. In
the poultry business it is just one lesson
after another; and still we don't ,
protend "to know it all." One never j
gets too old to learn, but we never
make the same mistake twice, but try
to learn something through every mistake
made, and that is some consolation
when things go wrong. Whatever
the trouble is, wo try to find the cause
and remove it.
A neighbor of ours lost nearly a hun
dred young chicks last year because 1
of ignorance or carelessness?probably
a little of both. The chicks were not
properly cared for and they became
very lousy. They had been hatched
with hens, but were placed in a small
brooder, inclosed in a small yard
where not a spear of grass could grow. I
In spite of the fact that there was no
lack of grass on the place, and also
plenty of shnde, not a hi* of either was ,
provided for the chicks.
They would probably all have died |
sooner or later, anyway, but as stated ,
above they got very lousey and the !
owner made a short Job of it by applying
lard. This did the work?iit killed
all the chicks inside of an hour or two,
and it is not at ull likely that nny lice
escaped.
Now it was not the lard alone that
did all this mlBchtef, although it had
been applied too freely. This happened
to be when * t&g. thermometer
registered- 90 degrees ltv. the shadgeii
The chicks had no shade eTrceflT the
brooder, which was about as good as
none; to make matters worse, the owner,
after treating the chicks to lard,
went to call at a neighbor's house, and
TAKE CARE OF THE HARNESS
Should Be Cleaned at Least Once
Every Year?Frequent Sponging
Will Help Appearance.
(By A. JOSEPH, Gcnossec, Cal )
Harness should be cleaned thornil^blv
fit looat Am?A o r V*^ ??> .!???
being the best time.
Take the harness all apart and soak
the parts in a wash tub of luke warm
water with a handful of washing soda
in It.
Lot the harness soak fifteen or
twenty minutes and then scrub with
an ordinary scrubbing brush. When
the leather Is nearly dry use edge
blacking. It can be obtained from a
harnessinaker. If you cannot get It,
take half gallon of vinegar and put
pieces of Iron in it for three or four
days or until the vinegar is a rich
golden color.
Give the leather a good coat of this
fluid, nnd rub the harness thoroughly.
Take a quart of neatsfoot oil and n
half nint of keroaene Mlv ?nH
them and give the harness two coats
of this, using it freely.
When the oil has dried, sponge the
harness with hike warm water and
castlle soap. Use the Imported castlle
soap, as the oil In It also helps to
soften the leather.
Harness treated In this way will
look like new and give about double
wear, and can be kept looking well
by sponging with the castlle soap frequently.
Control Boll Weevil.
Occasionally the theory Is announced
that the boll weevil can be
controlled by late planting better than
by early planting of the cotton crop.
The bureau of entomology has conducted
many experiments to determine
whether late planted cotton will
produce a satisfactory crop. The results
have all been negative.
Shelter In Pasture.
Shade and shelter should be In
every sheep pasture. If there ar^
plenty of trees, well and good, otherwise
a cheap building should be put
UPV
*> y v.vtC.
HE CHICKEN FLOCK
Kite Rock Chickens.
never knew what was taking place in
her poultry yard until It was too late
to render aid. This reminds the writer
of a similar experience that proved
only a little less disastrous to the
chicks. We had a fine lot of brown
Leghorn chicks, nicely feathered out
and growing to "beat the Dutch."
They were kept in a house never before
occupied by any kind of poultry
and quite a distance from any other
poultry house. Suddenly we became
aware of the fact that they were
lousey. Several had died after drooping
nround with wings dragging. Wo
had been dusting the chicks with
"louse-killer" and were therefore very
much surprised to find their bodies
paten into "raw" spots by the lice.
The powder had possibly lost its
strength. Something had to be done,
and done quickly. We could think of
nothing, then, but lard, which we applied
in generous quantities. None
was applied to their heads, as no lice ,
..o.d iuuiiu uiL'ie. i u?ir wings were
fairly saturated. They had free rango, 1
however, and plenty of shade. Only a |
few of the chicks died, but a good
many were injured. The lard Beeraed i
to take the life out of their wingB; !
they hung down limply and dried that
way; the skin between the feathers appeared
as dry and lifeless as parchment.
We have never used lard or any
kind of animal grease on young fowls
since. Kerosene is worse. If something
of this sort must be used, let ?t
he olive oil, vaseline or even castor
oil. We have used these with good results.
When hunting lice, always
raise the short feathers on the outside 1
of the wing, there may be some lice
on the body of the chick, but as a
rule th%y are most numerous among
the feathers on the outside; that is, I
under the short feathers amoug tho
large wing quills.
Don't be deceived. When a chick or
turkey poult begins to drop without
any apparent cause it is a sign of lice;
when you see tho little feathers In the
wings either ruffle up or outgrow the j
body, look for lice. When their shanks
or heads look pale or shrunken, search j
for lice.
If there are any lice or mites on the
premises go after them with a ven- [
geance, they will take possession it
given half a chance. Where lice thrive
poultry will not. Don't give the rata
ss-nhance, either. Last year a rat i
crept in at one of our chick house J
doors, which was left open a few j
inches, and killed nine chicks in less
than half an hour. This was caused
by lack of forethought.
NOTES OF THE DAIRY FARM
Dairying Is One of Few Absolutely
Permanent Systems of Agriculture
?Name Your Cows.
A cow's ancestjy is valuable only
so far as it teaches us how to produce
her counterpart.
Give each cow a name and call her I
by it, and you will b^J^prprised to see
how soon she will i\n>\e r to it.
Surrounding condlPm*9? have much
to do with the milk prodffdlng value of
any ration.
Dairy cows cannot make as good
use of whole grain as they can of
grain that has been ground.
In the generality of cases, heifers
with their first calf do not show as
high a test of butteMat as they do
at a more mature age.
A period of rest before freshening
will usually produce a larger flow of
Tnilk than where the animal is milked
close up to calving.
A man can better afford to sell butter
at the cost of production than to
sell grain, that is, when the selling
price of the butter li?ludes the feeds
and labor at their market-value.
Much farm butter soils at a low
price, not because it is in itself bad,
but because it is mads to suit the {
mnnt'i unu uui inc ouyer.
A stud"* of the kind of butter liked
best in one's market is quite essential ;
to high prices?as much so ns a
knowledge of the principles underlying
good butter-making.
Wo can warm water more cheaply I
in some other way than through th?
cow.
The dairy cow's stable should combine
warmth, ventilation and dr&te
age.
Dairy farming is one of the few absolutely
permanent systems of agriculture.
Do not try to cheat your
cows by giving them an ounce less of
anything than they will profitably consume,
nor crowd them at anytime boyon*}
their nofmal capacity.
Progress -in dairying is greatest
where there is the most interest. Cowtest
associations stimulate Interest
and progress
r* - . rvfe-1 : CT Sfv, ?
"CA5CARETS" FOB I
' LIVER; BOWELS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh 00
with CascaretB, or merely forcing a.
passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Cas carets,thoroughly cleanse and regulate
the stomach, remove the sour
and fermenting food and foul gases,
take the excesB bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all thq
constipated waste matter and poisons
in the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep?nevor gripe, sicken
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
only io cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Heudache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
More Ab<vuv Yhat Coldest Winter.
"Ptu!?Just Indorsed Undo
Lazzenbcrry, dd Oracle Onken
had conciudad itis motrnrnloclml
reminisencea. "That's a?ptu!?fact!
I rrnininhar myself how cold 'twas In
olghteen hundred and suthin'. Recollect
pertickerly that live coals froze
solid right In the fireplace and the
flames of the candles would freeze and
us children would break 'em ofT and
eat 'em for strawberries. Eh-yah! ?
'twas middlln'?ptu!?cold, that win
ter."
SHE GAVE UP
ALL HER WORK
On Account of Her Weakness, But
Cardui, the Woman's Tonic,
Brought Back Strength.
Summit, Va.?Mrs. Leonora Walker,
of this place, has the following to say
regarding her experience with Cardui,
the woman's tonic: /'Before I began
to take Cardui, I suffered with womanly
troubles, and, also, with what I
thought was stomach trouble. I was
so weak, I had to give up all my
housework; and could not do any of
the cooking.
I commenced taking Cardui, the
woman's tonic, and after the third day
I began to feel better. Have now
used five bottles, and am well, and
can do all of my housework and cooking
by myself. In fact, I feel like a ^
new woman. <
I shall be only too glad to do anything
I can, to help praise the Cardui
Home Treatment, for it is so good for
suffering women. I shall never be
without it."
For over half a century, Cardui has
been helnlnir tn v.?u?? ? - -*- ?
j?*0 wunu wcan, liervuuB,
tlred-out women, back to strength and
health. It goes to the seat of the trouble
and builds up womanly strength
where It is most needed.
Cardul may be the very medicine
your system has long been needing.
Get a bottle from your druggist today.
It cannot harm you, and should surely
do for you what It has done for so
many thousands of others.
N. B.? Write to; Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga
Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn.. for
Special Instructions, and 64-page book,"Home Treatment
for Women." sent in plain wrapper, oo
request. Adv.
Queer Human Nature.
"People are funny."
"How now?"
"In this Van Million divorce suit
they divided $25,000,000 amicably and
fhey scrapped about the custody of a
pug dog."
SAGE TEA DARKENS GRAY
HAIR TO ANY SHADE. TRY IT1
Keep Your Locks Youthful, Dark,
Glossy and Thick With Common
Garden Sage and Sulphur.
When you darken your hair with
Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can
tell, because it's done so naturally, so
evenly. Preparing this mixture,
though, at home is mussy and troublesome.
For 50 cents you can buy at
any drug store the rcady-to-uso tonio
called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur
Hair Remedy." You Just dampen a
sponge or soft brush with It and
uiuw una iiiruuKu your nair, taking
one small strand at a time. By morning
all gray hair disappears, and, after
another application or two, your hair
becomes beautifully darkened, glossy
and luxuriant. You will also discover
dandruff is gone and hair has
topped falling.
Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace,
is a sign of old age, and as we
all desire a youthful and attractive appearance,
get busy at once with \Vyeth's
Sage and Sulphur and look years
younger.?Adv.
Living Up to Theory.
"He never spanks his son, does he?* **No,
he's an efficiency crank."
"What's that got to do with It?"
"He says the upward stroke ia lost
motion."?Houston Post.
Dr. Peery's Vermifuge "Dead Shot" kills
and expel* Worms Id a very few hours.
Adv.
It's awfully hard for a girl with a
pretty anklo to keep her shoe laces
tied.
I