Newspaper Page Text
14
Ty 1 f If not, why rest contented? Ayer’s
Of H air Vigor gives softness and
y richness to the hair, promotes its
XT TT • q growth, keeps it from falling; can
> 07/F r not chan 2 e the color. Ask your
A X wf/ > doctor about using it. L^enf e
iilhiMwnns
»Ji RICH IN CURATIVE QUALITIES-NO HABIT FORMING DRUGS
LA GRIPPE JOHNSON’S
AND BAD COLDS' 25c and 50c, and Tablets 25c TONIC
BUY AT FACTORY SAVE THE WHOLESALER’S and retail,
* 1 ER'S PROFITS. This cut is exact size of
our 75c strong knife. To start you, will send one for 48c; 5 for $2, postpaid. Best 7-in.
shears, 60c. This knife and shears, sl. Stock knife, 3 blades, stag handle, sl, postpaid.
Best hollow ground razor with strop, fl, postpaid. Every M. & G. blade is hand-forged
from razor steel, file-tested, warranted.
Send for 80- page free
list, and
“How to Use a Razor”
Kg* I Maher * Grosh Co.
131 A St -
W -. J TOLEDO,
Ms OHIO
You Need One of These
< b
■ B
£Eggyy|ytA _ /
Buka WMWwwiil
I sfcjw IblMm t®«wJ
®J! ,|NEv IVork CITY NY! hi : 1 I I h NOVELTY
HANDY PORTABLE COOKERS
J- will find endless opportunities to use it profitably and it will save you the usual time and
tiouble incidental to preparing a stove fire, when only a few minutes’ heating is required. Can be
carried in the pocket, on carriage or auto trips, or on journeys. Solidified Wood Alcohol is the
uel used—and in this form is a very economical fuel, giving out intense heat and is entirely
sootless and odorless when burning. Can be instantly extinguished when desired, thereby pre
venting fuel waste. Perfectly safe and cannot spill.
T? 16 ome Camp Portable Cooker, as it is called, is practically unlimited in its utility,
t will boil, fry or broil any dish the regular stove will. Tn the sick room and the nursery it is
a most imdispensible, coming in so handy when hot water or hot milk is needed during the night.
Very Inexpensive in p ™s Uptep
It is so simple in construction, that, while being very substantially and attractively made, the
®cost is only SI.OO. This includes one extra can of Solidified Alcohol. Ad
ditional cans can be had for 25c each.
LET US SEND YOU ONE POSTPAID
We will refund your dollar promptly if you are not pleased with the
Cooker. Orders sent in at once will be filled in time for Christmas. Send
money order today. Address
MAIL-ORDER BUYERS’ LEAGUE, 41 E. Thornwell Ave., Clinton, S. C.
THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF DEC. 18, 1913
CLINTON HOWARD’S CLUSTER
OF GEMS.
(Continued from Page 13)
through which an army of nullifiers
pass andd which will keep its meaning
a matter for eternal dispute before the
courts. Let our Prohibition conversa
tion be yea, yea, and nay, nay, for
what solace is more than these cometh
of the devil. We must strike at the
rum power entrenched in our great
cities, where in the absence of prohibi
tion triumphant in national gomern
ment as well as upon the statute book,
a constitutional amendment will prove
as ineffective in those great cities con
taining almost one half of our entire
population, as it is in those large cities
of the several states that are enjoying
constitutional prohibition now.
Let us not deceive ourselves, the ap
plication of this same policy with re
spect to prohibition in the nation will
prove as abortive as it has in the town
and county and state. Therefore, the
political powers that the captured by
the liquor traffic and prostituted to its
base ends must fall.
We must take this Christian govern
ment out of partnership with the li
quor traffic as our fathers took it out
of partnership with slavery; not by
way, confiscation, proclamation or revo-
lutionary administration but by the or
derly peaceful and constitutional meth
ods of majority rule as provided by
law, imbeded in the notional consti
tution beyond the reach of designing
politicians or the temporary occupa
tion of the legislative branch of the
governmen, elected, perchance, upon
some other issue, wrecking its ven
geance upon prohibition.
This is the remedy for the crime,
Constitutional Prohibition for the na
tion, made effective by lical, state and
national administration, recognizing
that the political party in power is the
government in operation.
We must make Prohibition the fixed
and settled policy of the United States,
and put the burden for the enforce
ment of the law where it belongs upon
the shoulders of the government and
relieve the people of the infamous im
position of first making their own
laws, supporting the government for
the administration of the law andd
then banding themselves toogether as
an independent body of citizens, and
at private expense doing the work of
their public officers.
Any plan that proposes to leave the
machinery for the enforcement of a
constitutional amendment in the handds
of the enemies of the law is doomed
to failure. It vastly underestimates
the strength of our enemy. The law
and its administration must stand or
fall together. For there is none other
way under heaven given among men
whereby the liquir traffic may be de
stroyed; the law and the government
united in purpose to establish national
constitutional prohibition.
The liquor traffic is the criminal and
this is the remedy for the crome.
Some of us will live to see the day
of its execution. Somewhere God has
his leader in training, where like Moses
on the backside of the desert, like
David hid away among the cattle
among the hills; like eJohn the Baptist
in some wilderness or beside some sea;
like Lincoln brooding before a log
fire in some log cabin, or rocked in
the lap of some AV. C. T. U. mother
nursing from her holy breast the seed
of truth, that, like a handful of corn
planted in the earth in the top of the
mountain, will grow in stature, in wis
dom and favor, elected to power by
the vote of the people, will sign in
Washington the death warent of the
criminal liquor traffic and shake this
nation with fruit like Lebanon.
Stung.
“What does the busy bee teach us,
Freddie?”
“Not to go too near the hive, uncle.”
-—London Tatler.
A BUSINESS COLLEGE CONDUCT
ED ON CORRECT PRINCIPLES.
An Ideal College For Young People to
Prepare For a Business Position.
The Hall School of Macon, Ga.,
which during the past seven years of
successful effort has gained an envi
able position among the Business Col
leges of the South has succeeded be
cause every pupil has individual in
struction from competent instructors.
And this idea coupled with the desire
of the principal, Mr. B. Dixon Hall,
of not trying to enroll a big body of
students, but rather to perfect the lim
ited number, has made the College suc
cessful. The College is conducted in
a Christian atmosphere and all stu
dents are placed in Christian homes.
The Gregg System of shorthand is
used and all graduates are placed in
positions. Another feature of the
school is the literary department in
connection with the college.
Parents or students considering a
business education should by all means
write to Mr. Hall for full information.