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Victor supremacy Full tone -Soft tone -Subdued tone M .1 Victor Needle Victor Half-Tone Needle Victor Fibre Needle 5 cents per 100 5 cents per 100 50 'ecn's per too 50 cents ier O 50 cents per loco (can be repointed and used eigcht timecs) The Victor Needle produces the The Victor Half-Tone Needle re- The Victor Fibre Needle produces a pull tone as originally sung or duces the volume of tone and give, rich, subdued tone that takes you still played-Particularly suited for large you the effect of sitting in the further back-a tone that will de rooms and halls, and for dancing. middle of an opera house or theatre. light the discriminating music-lover. Victor system of changeable needles If a fixed or permanent point were the best method for playing records, you may be sure the Victor Company would equip the Victrola with a fixed point. There is nothing new about a fixed point. It is the old original method that was used on the cylinder phonographs for the past forty years, which has bcoin superseded by the Victor and Victor Records and the chan-geable needles-the only mcthod, that insures a perfec.t reproduction in exact accord with the artist's interpretation. All disc machine/ are more or lest imitations of the Victrola-the Victroh is theyoriginal instrurient of its kind, and years of contintiouss'eperiment with the lavish expendi ture of millions o etlars for scientific research have placed it upon a pinnacle of supremacy that is unassailable. Genuine Victrolas $15 to $300. Terms to suit your convenience, if desired. POWE DRUG COMPANY. Laurens, South Carolina I A big new discover cigarette blending e ~The big thing about Chesterfields is their unique } blend. The Chesterfield blend is an entirely new com-. I bination of tobaccos. This blend is the most important new development in cigarette making in 20 years. As a result, Chesterfields pr'oduce a totally new kind of cigarette enjoyment--they satisfy I Just like "bite" before bedtime satisfies when you're hungry. But with all that, Chesterfelds are MILD, too! I This new enjoyment (satisfy, yet mild) cornes ONLY in Chesterfield. becaus', no cigarette maker can copy the Chesterfield blend. "Give me a package of those cigprettes that SA TIS ChestuirA. CIGARETES * 10 for Sc 3 AJso packed20/or10 * - '6 iiA DISINFECT BY SEA WATER Brine Treated With Electricity Will Produce a Strong Antiseptio, Is Clain The possibilities of manufacturing a sung disinfectant from sea water was a discovery made in the bacterio logical department of the Liverpool university. During a series of experiments in the electric treatment of milk, Freder ick C. Lewis, assistant lecturer in the university, developed the idea of pro ducing a strong antiseptic from sea water. This, according to the Liver pool Courier, was two years ago. Since then all the disinfection and cleansing of cultures and slides in the bacteriological and pathological labo ratories at the university have been done by an electric chemical apparatus which insures a powerful disinfectant from salt water. The apparatus employed on the Aqui tania Is of course on a far larger scale than the one at the university. The principle, however, is precisely the same. There is an electrolytic cell, a reversipg switch, and some ordinary insulating electric cable. The cell stands upon a rubber mat, to insulate it, and is raised upon a low table, to enable the contents to be poured out easily. It is filled with sea water and an electric current is then turned on and a solution containing sodium hypochlorite, or available chlo rine, will be obtained. Tie solution Is useful as a sterilizer of drinking water, and on the Aquita nia it is added to the water in the swimming bath. HIS PRISON TERM TOO SHORT Californian Reveals That. He Forged Check to Get Benefit of the Prison School. Joseph Dietz, Oakland, Cal.. chauf feur, according to his own story, passed a bogus check in order to break into Sal) Quentin prison, so that he might "get an education." Recently when ho drew a sentence of 18 months from Judge Edgar T. Zook lie was sorely disappointed. "I wanted at least four years," lie told Sheriff J. J. Keating. "A man can't learn much in eighteen months. A jolt like that is just so much wasted time." Dietz explained that he had been "going crooked" for a long time, and attributed his misloings to lack of learning. "I heard all about those free schools down at San Quentin." he said, "and mado up my mind that I would like to fit myself for something better than driving a grocery wagon or an auto mobile, so I slipped over a check, ex pecting at the time to be caught." Dietz is twenty-eight years old, and has a wife, and two boys, aged four and five. SIl'lS'Vi ItIBi TO "Trill A)VER'i'l -'It'' 00 - S .. 0 I a' /aA o " eS FRIENDSHIP THAT IS REAl Distance Has but Small Part in Sever ing Ties Bound Together by True Affection. We often hear of cases-more ofter between men, but sometimes between women-whore school friends separate and marry, living their lives apart foi ton or fifteen years, only to find th( old relation just as firm as over oni meeting again. Or in certain instances friends separate, never to meet again but keep up their correspondence foi years, and the one in a far city would do just as much for the distant chum were the occasion to arise, as if their friendship had recently been close an( intimate. Friendship knows no space and n< bounds. It is an indissoluble link be tweon two human beings. And if you expect to enjoy the affection of a rea pal you must be prepared to do you share. Do not be forever demanding and expecting from your friends. Yoi can only keep alive the pure flame o; friendship by giving unselfish love and disinterested affection. Do not loo for them, but give from your heart and you will receive. That is one of the beauties of friendship. The more love you give, the more you receive But the more you demand and expect the less you get. Good pals are more precious thar diamonds or gold, for they are the rarert of all valuables. Friendship iE the salt of the earth and those whc know the joy of real friendship should do all in their power to guard and keep it, not to destroy it. How often we risk losing the affec tion of real friends for some worthless acquaintance! So often we offer in sults and snubs (sometimes uncon sciously) to those who weigh moro in friendship's scales than a thousand of the aimless flatterers who would try to make us believe they are friends. Let us learn to know our real friends and to give a heartfelt appreciation for the value of such friendship. SHALL IT BE SIMPLIFIED? Possibilities of Revision of Our Lan, guage Made Apparent by Writer "Out of the West." The Inglish langwage as spokun by Yankes is dificult enut as it is without makin enny attemt to simplifl it. We hay had a lot of isms in later yeers but nun more uceless than that by which it is hoped to make our vokal and ritten communikashin ezyr. Blizi bodis wil always be found reddy tc take up enny nu theory. And that pur liaps explanes the sumwhat groing in terest in simplified speling. The quiker this unkawled-for and super fluous aktivity in matturs deeling with arthografil haz a dampur put on i the bettur will it be for Inglish, gram ur, retoric and literachur in genral. Simplifid spoling goso hand in hand with the muvo to iliminate gramui Nom the skules and the plan to bar reoders in which Moother Guse rimes are kontained. Those who keel) up the muvement are simply mussin u: the wurks. We se no gud tu kum fron it. As a substitute we wud suggest that the enthusiasts take up thc kwestchun as tu whu rote Shake speer's piase. There's an argument in that; there's nun in wurk that re suits in ennythinug like this. Sayla! St. Louis Times. How tn Make Spirit Photographs. Pr'int from ordinary negatives in the usual manner on printing-out paper then lix the prints in a solution of' onc ounce hyposuiphite of soda and eight ounces of water', and wash them thor. oughly. While still wet, immerse them in a satur'ated solution of bichloridc of mercury until the image (disalp pears; then wash thoroughly. Bc very careful, as bichloride is very poi sonous. Soak some clean blotting pa per in the hyposulphite of soda solu tion and allowv it to dry. To cause the spirit photograph tc ap~pear, cut a p~icco of blotting papez the same size as the lprep~ared print andI moisten it; then hold( thle appar ently blank pico of paper' ini contact with it. The photograph wvill conmc out gradually, clear and plain, and it washed thoroughly wvill bo permanent, -Popular Science Monuthly. Orange Peel Oil Explosive. Everybody knows the flavor of or ange peel, but not everybody knows what causes that flavor. It is (1ue to the oil contained in little cells in the rind. If the peel is bent so as to strain these oil-laden cells, the oil b)ursts out, often as a visible spray and usually perceptible to our sense of smell, and often as a greasy film on the fingers. TPhe peel may be so bent as to rupture a large number'i of these ceils at one time, and to fIll the air with an oily mist, If, at the moment of bending, a lighted matcoh 1)0 ap SliedI by an assistant a dlecidled explo. s10on will follow. This experiment is most successfully performed in a dark ened room or in a room wholly dark except for the light from the match Popular Science Monthly, Most Lasting Wood, Practically all of the lock gates oi theo lridgewater canal are .made of ureenheart. For the lasnt 50 years all the dock gates in the Mersey harbor at Liverpool have been made of this idod, and when it has been found nec essary to roniove any of those gates 'o widen or (deepen the channel the lout has been found to be as good as eon it was first used. In the Canada '(:1 rc'jd put down in 1850 was in used in the corustruction of niew Safter 88 ynenr' une. KISS IN ROADWAY CAUSES WET PLUNGE Auto Party Swerves to Avoid Striking Sentimental Couple and Accident Follows. Clifton, N. J.-The irresistible 1m4 pulse of a young man and young wom an to klas each other In the middle of the road near here nearly cost tha lives of five persons who were riding along that highway in an automobile: As it was, they were hurled into a lake and received severe shocks after the automobile had gone down an em bankment because the driver - had turned out of the road to avoid the kissing couple. The owner and operator of the au4 tomobile Was Joseph Potenny of Nov 100 Highland avenue, Clifton, and' those with him were Stephen Wurst of No. 103 Highland avenue, John Hubert w_ _ I11 Threw It Upside Down Into the Lake. of No. 121 Parker avenue, I. M. Welde. man of No. 107 highland avenue, and S. W. Howe of No. 109 Van Winkle avenue, all of Clifton. When the young folk stopped suds denly to embrace and kiss Mr. Potcapy? was driving his automobile up thi road at 80 miles an hour. lie turned sharply to the left to avoid striking% them, and in so doing the automobile; struck a soft spot in the road, throw-i ing it upside down over a ten-foot en-' bakanent and into the bordering lake. The young man and young woman, screamed for assistance and the men! were finally pulled out. The kisseral went their way without giving their namnes. MAN CALLED DEAD TWICE Youngstown (0.) Salesman's Death Was Twice Published, and Yet He Lives. Youngstown, O.-Peter Bauer, a pt an. salesman here, has survived the second announcernen t of his death.. TIhe latest was recently maode in Potts y'llie, Pa., anzd the earlkier one about. five yeaars ago ini Clevelandl. In bo0th Inzstanices the erroneous announce ments were the result of mistaken1 idlentity. Raiuer hats just reelvedl at (lipping' from the Pottsville Banner, sent him hy his brother, telling how lhe wvas, supposed( to have been dIrowned last' week at I luron, 0. Bauer's insistence that he is very iuch alive means that the authorIties muist start oil over try lng to idenit ify the body recently watsheud aishore at the *Lake Er]le port. I-lve years ago a ain who dIropp~ed, dlead( on a Cleveland street was at first idlent ified as lhtuer. At that time he was livinzg at Garflel , 0.. anad iti wais somte tuntae before lie conv'inced the~ public that lhe was alive. 300 MILES ASLEEP ON ROOF Moneyless St. Louis Man Takes Long Ride on Pullman Without Knowing It. St. Louis--Lee Caldwell, twenty years 0old, of South Scond sireet, rode from Chicago to St. Louis on a sleep ('r, hittt not in it. He slept throughout thet journey on the roof of a Pullman car~ and was still aisleep when the train, the ChIcago & Alton nlo-stol) 11m ited, arrived( at Unioni station at 8 a.mi. A tower wvatchmaan in the yards5 saw the prone form on the ear~ andi report edl ?.P.t a dead( an was there. Tn the traina shed policemen raised a ladder andi climbed to the roof. When they, shook Cold well lie sat up and( said t "Where am I?" ICaldwell said he wvent to Chicngo t0 look for wvork. Hie had no money to pay for lodgings, so he went to the railroad yards and climbed to the top of a train and( went to sleep. The train brought him home. Women Break Jail. Ilarrisburg, 11.-Minnie Powell, Ag. ates Ralns and Mary Sweeney e'scalped jail here the other night. They diressed in overalls and( blue shirts and descend ed fromi tht: aecond story by means of a rope. Armed with the sherifT's revol+ ver, they comupelled a liveryman to drive them out of the city at two o'clock in the mornIng. They wvere captured1 in the afternoon and ro turned t-o jnil.