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GRADY COUNTY PROGRESS. CAIRO. GEORGIA.
THE WORLD OVER
Happenings ci This and Other Nations
' For Seven Days Are
Given.
THE NEWS JjFJHE SOUTH
What Is Taking Place In the South
land Will Be Found In
Brief Paragraphs.
European War News
Another British man of war, the For
midable, has been added to the war
toll. The battleship was sun by a
torpedo from a German boat off the
British coast outside of Dartmouth.
Six hundred seamen of the crew of
the Formidable went down with the
sunken ship. One hundred and fifty
were saved by the trawler Providence.
The Germans are reported to have
captured a British trench near Beth-
une in Flanders.
The Berlin war office admits defeat
to French troops at St. Georges, a Bel
gian coast town and the los sot that
town. Official announcement says at
tempts were abandoned to retain pos
session of St. Georges during the -high
water season. '
Austrian attacks on Belgrade have
been renewed according to advices
from the Servian capital. A light bom
bardment last week was without re
sults.
An outbreak between Servian and
Bulgarian forces has been reported un
founded.
Sea forces of the allies have focus
ed their attention on Constantinople,
which is to be the prizo of the present
war. Bombardment of the city by
English and French battleships south
of the Bosphorus and by the Russian
Black sea fleet on the north is report,
ed to have commenced.
Persia’s entrance Into the war as an
ally of Turkey, Germany and Austria
will add many complications In the
war zone of Asia Minor.
Germany , has officially denied the
statement issued' by the French gov
ernment that she offered to effect a
separate peace settlement with France
provided the latter would not Interfere
with, her claim on Belgium and to re
store Alsace and Lorrraine In lieu
thereof. The kaiser says no such thing
was ever contemplated, that Germany
has any intention of restoring Alsace
and Lorarine to France.
President Poln6are held a big New
Year's reception at the Palace des
Elysees at which American Ambassa
dor Sharp was one, of the important
figures. In an addresii to the foreign
diplomats the French president pre
dicted tiie end of the European war
during the year of 1915,
A fleet of five German aeroplanes
made an aerial attack on Dunkirk, an
important French seacoast on the Eng
lish channel, dropping bombs and do
ing much damage to property and life
in the city.
In addition to checking the German
advance in Poland, the Russians are
reported to be harassing the Austri
ans who have been flung back across
tiie Carpathians.
The attacks of the allies along the
western frontier are reported to be
losing strength.
Defeat , of the Austrian troops at
the hands of the Servians has been
followed by raids by the Montenegrins
who are reported to be now invading
Herzgovina.
Over tliirty American merchant
ships have been held and searched by
the British government according to
official advices in Washington, which
was the cause of President Wilson’s
vigorous warning to the English gov
ernment. ’ ’ :
Sir Edward Gray convened the,
British cabinet to consider the Ameri
can note. The British press and the
government officials’ attitude regard
ing the note seems to be sensible and
all are regretful that the action of the
interruption of American rights on the
seas has been sufficient provocation
to bring President Wilson's note or
cause any feeling between the two no.
(ions.
The report that Japanese troops
have been landed at Vladivostok and
are on their way to Europe is said in
Tokyo to bo unfounded.
The Berlin war office has ordered
the Belgium borders to be closed to ali
mail service after the beginning of the
new year.
President Wilson's official note from
the United States government to
Great Britain protesting against the
treatment of American commerce on
the high seas lias aroused great ex
citement throughout the British em
pire. War news was given secondary
consideration in London and the big
English cpnters. Not since President
Cleveland's famous Venezuelan mes
sage twenty years ago hns there been
su'ch a sensation abroad.
Germans taken as prisoners of war
by the French have been set to work
on the French roads.
The Belgian minister at Washington
has lodged a formal protest with- the
United States government against the
• alleged vandalism of Germany since
tiie Teutons’ occupation of that king
dom. '''. fV,
Tiie French are preparing an aerial
fleet to attack German cities in the
spring. . •
The Russians are reported to have
again checked the Geramns in an en
counter on the Austro-Pollsh border.
The defeat by the Slavs is said to
have been almost as severe as the Aus
trians suffered at the hands of the Ser
vians at Belgrade and in Bosnia.
It hns been announced at the White
House that President Wllson'ls ready
to veto the literacy test bill should
it pass the senate, A similar blll'.'was
vetoed by President Taft in 1913and
by President Cleveland in 1§93,. Both
form.er presidents said it was uncon
stitutional and' un-Amoricun in princi
ple. Woodrow Wilson’s reasons, it is
said, are the same, ',iu;! v , ■ . ■'
President Wilson ha: named three
Democrats for tiie federal trade com
mission. Ills choice will be Joseph E.
Davies of Wisconsin, commissioner of
corporations^ Edward N. Hurley of
Chicago, president or the Illinois .Man
ufacturers' Association) and George
Foster Pdaliody, a NOw York banker.
A revolution has broken out in Para
guay and it Is reported that Dr. Ed
uardo Sherrer, president 0 f that South
American republic, has been' taken
prisoner, ■' ;
General Villa has- issued a public
statement In' Mexico City that lie Is
subordinate to Provisional President
Gutierrez and will abide by any of his
decisions.
Noted American scientists In con
vention n’t Philadelphia have offered
to bequeath their brains to science
when they are dead. So far only
brains of criminals have ever been
preserved. Those' who will make such
a bequest are Dr.. Edward Pickering
of Harvard, Dr. Henry Skinner of tlio
Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sci
ence and Dr. L. O. Howard of Wash
ington.
President Wilson has. received felic
itous'New Year’s greetings from King
George of England, King ’Albert of Bel- ■
gium, President Poincare, and Count
Von Bernstorff, the German ambassa
dor to the United States.’
Alfred Henry Lewis, prominent'New
York journalist and novelist, ' whose'
political writings were perhaps the
best known in-the country, is dead at
his Gotham'home, ’ • " -
Groat Britain,, it is.announced, will,
agree, to. the American note sent by
President Wilson,', and will cease fur
ther Interruptions of American com
merce.
The decision of the Rota tribunal in
Romo in' the suit of Count Boni do
Castejlane against his former wife,
now the. Duchess of Talleyrand, who
waB formerly Miss Anna Gould of
New York, has again' been postponed.
The count protests against the an
nulment of his marringe to his for
mer wife, \yho procured, a divorce from
him several years ago In the French
courts. : ' 11 u '
New York’s social Jife ■ hns been
startled over the sudden marriage of
Mrs. Robert Gooldt and Henry Clews,
Jr., soil of the well known Gotham
banker.
Secretary of Commerce Redfleld’lias
strongly recommended to the house
shipping committee the passage of-
the American merchant, shipping bill
which will lay the foundation for the
establishment of a merchant marine
for the United States. It is probable
the measure will go through at this
session of congress.
Governor Blease of South Carolina,
the retiring executive of that state,
pardoned lifty-five prisoners at the
state pentitentiary the day before lie
left office. In the four years he has
been governor he has pardoned over
fifteen hundred prisoners.
The. first American shipment of cot
ton, consigned' to a German port, has
reached its destination after being
held and inspected by British author
ities for several days.
In the establishment of the new fed
eral reserve banking system. President
James of-the University of Illinois
sees the end of state’s rights in the
United States.
Agriculture’s increasing importance
aniV'its basis in science wero recog
nized by members of the’ American
Association for the advancement of
Science now in session in Philadelphia
in the creation of a section for agri
culture in the association. Dr. Charles
W. Eliot' of Boston, former president
of Harvard university, declared agri
culture was perhaps the saving grace
of America.
Bandits attacked the Sunset Express
near San Antonio and successfully
made away with over; eleven thousand
dollars.
President Wilson 'will back the
passage of dll tiie'measures on his
legislative, program at the short ses
sion of congress despite prophesies
that many of his recommendations
would not become law.
While [President. Wilson has an
nounced he is taking no personal pnrt
in the fight in tiie senate over the
immigration, bill, he stated his oppo
sition to tiie literacy test bill was
well known.
Debate on tile literacy test immigra
tion bill has begun in the senate.
Senator Dillingham is one of the
strong advocates of the measure. One
of the leaders of the opposition is Sen
ator O'Gormari of New York, who de-,
Clares the bill does hot provide-a fair
way to test the qualifications of Amer
ican citizenship!
Both Congressmen Mann of Illinois
(Rep.) and Moss of Indiana (Dem.)
have introduced' bills' in the lower
house to-plaie the tariff- question in
tiie hands of a special tariff commis
sion. Their bills are virtually identi
cal.
Secretary of the;Treasury McAdoo
has invited tile American bankers,
comprising financiers of tho United;
States, 1 the Central and South Ameri
can republics, particularly those of
the Southern states of this, country,
to meet him in a big conference In
Washington and discuss finances in
relation'to the war problems.
Henry Miller, president and general
manager of the Wabash railroad, has
tendered his resignation to the board
of directors. Mr. Miller succeeded
Frederic A. Delano, recently appoint
ed by President Wilson as a member
of the federal reserve board.
LITTLE NEWS ITEMS ‘
THROUGHOUT STATE
Athdns.—The creation of the now
county of Barrow, with .Winder as the
capital, has literally yanked tho office
from under Judge G. A.. Johns of tho’. 1
city court of Jefferson, Jacku.qn, coun
ty, and Sheriff Potts of Jackson icoun-,
ty. Sheriff Potts Is’ in' the race' for!
sheriff of the new county, but there
was no provision made for a-clty 1 court,
for the new county. Judge Johns, liv
ing at Winder, held his lost"cpq'rt
at Jefferson this week;'adjourning and'
announcing his resignation. . ,
Cordoie.—Cordele's governmental af
fairs have gone Into the hands of a,
now admlnistratloni Mayor J: Gordon
Jones and Alexander .1, N. King, C. L.
McMillan and C. F. Lifsey were sworn
In office. The election of officers for
tho various departments of tho city
government was taken up, -resulting'
in tho election of W. D. Wilson as,
mayor pro tern., the re-election of L. M.
Summer, chief, and W. L. Sheppard,
assistant chief of tho police depart
ment; George S. Harris, clork and.
treasurer; W.. G. Webb, city, enginoer
and superintendent of waterworks, and
S. R. Bolton, street overseer. 'All of
the s|x police patrolmen with the ex
ception of one were retained in office.
Other officers elected wet;e as fol
lows: Orie Bray, chief fire depart-,
ment; Hugh Lasseter, city attorney;
Ford Ware, city physician; W. E. Bus
sey, sanitary inspector.
Marietta.—The regular annual elec
tion of' officers of Kenesaw Lodge.
No. 33, F. and A. M., of this city, took
placo' Friday, night, resulting in tho
election of the following officers - to
serve for the ensuing year; J. P. Pow
er, worshipful master; M. S. Welsh,
senior warden; J. R. Brumby, junior
warden; John P. Cheney, secretary;
E. C. Gilbert, treasurer; George Gi
Nichols, senior deacon; Thomas L.
Wallace, junior deacon; C. E. Poiver,
senior steward; Llndlcy W. Camp,
junior steward; Rev. George S. Turn-
lin, chaplain; P,. H. Mell, assistant
chaplain; A. H. Shepherd, tyler. A
notable feature of .the installation of
officers was that tiie master was in
stalled by his father, Hon. W. R. Pow
er, who is a past .master of tiie lodge.
Savannah.—The executive .board of
tho International Association of Ma
chinists, in session here, announced
the acceptance by an eastern railroad
of an agreement recognizing the sys
tem federation. It was: the refusal-
of the Harriman lines to accept ’Such
an agreement that caused’ • those
strikes. Heretofore, there have been
separate agreements in tho east, and
for months they have endeavored to
perfect the federation agreement. The
strike at Stockton, Cal., where twenty-
five machinists had been locked out hv
the Merchants and 'Manufacturer^'" al-'
sociatibn in the shops, has been ter
minated, . with the manufacturers no-,
cepting a union agreement, the board
announced. The manufacturers have
agreed to tlw terms of the union. The
board was alsdi.informed of the agree
ment between the machinists and the
officials of tiie Panama-Pacific exposi
tion on a nejv wage scale. The instal
lation of machinery in buildings there
will be resumed, after a delay on ac
count of the strike. The board visited
Jacksonville Monday, Atlanta,- Wednes
day, Macon, Thursday and Birming
ham Friday, to study the conditions-,
there. This will be the first time the
board has paid an official visit to
these places.
West.Point.—The annual meeting of
the West Point division of Troup
County Sunday School Association
came to a close. The meeting was
interdenominational, its purpose being
to improve Sunday school conditions
and Sunday school work. In the ab
sence of the division president, Mr,
F. C. Barrett, the county president,
Colonel Henry Reeves of LaGrange,-
appointed ’Prof. W. P. Thomas to pre
side. The principal speakers at tile
meeting were Mr. D. W. Sime, general
secretary of the Georgia Sunday
School Association, and Mr. Leon ,C.
Palmer, general secretary , of .the Ala
bama Sunday School Association. The
program committee, through whose
energetic efforts the meeting was
made a success, consisted of Mr. Mark
McCulloh, Mr. A. D. Ferguson and Mr.
S. T. Hammond.
Atlanta.—The Governor's Horae
Guards nro planning a trip to the Pan
ama-Pacific exposition in San Fran-
cIbco next year. The organization-is
anxious to make the best . possible
showing upon this trip, and with, this
end in view of arousing Interest in
this organization and its trip the Horse
Guards paraded tlio streets of Atlanta.
The troops, With its own horses, which
It recently acquired, made a ’ fine
showing. Tim troop had its buglers
out who,made a merry martial din up
and down Peachtree. Quite the most
attractive feature of the parade, how
ever, was an army wagon load, of pret
ty girls, which took part in the pro
cession. The Horse Guards, propose
to charter a special train for,the.ex :
position'next year, taking all the mehi-
bers of the tfobps and as. many, of
their friends and members of their
families as . may wish to go .along.'
Atlanta.—Results of the Girls’ Can
ning club movement in the Southern
states,'promoted jointly.by the depart-
mont of agriculture at Waslilugtoii,' D,
C.’, and the general education board,
are detailed in an installment of the
latter organization’s annual report
made public. ‘‘The method is sim
ple,” says the report. “Each girl takes
one-tenth of an acre and is taught
how to select the seed, to plant, cul
tivate. and perfect the growth of the
tomato plant. Meanwhile portable
canning outfits have been provided, to
be set up out of doors, in the orchard
or the garden
Farmers’ Educational
and Co-Qpdrative
Union of America
Matters Especial Moment to
the Progressive Agriculturist'
A. forced smile gives itsolf’away.
Limited wants' make contentment.
Trouble shies-at a good digestion.
Better be a grfeenhorn than a niuloy.
The cackling politician Beldom gets
fat. ; -,f«
Other folk's failures will never save
you.
Plodding Is a greater winner than
plunging.
Borne women are not as bad as they
are painted.
The speculator's vision of wealth is
usually a mirage)
Tho dissatisfied wife is proof of her
husband’s failure.
Most of us fool ourselves more than
we do anyone else.
Ventilation and drafts are not one
and the same thing.
Selling on a rising' market is good'
business, too little followed.
The man who buys wisely seldom
buys cheapest, yet he buys, cheaply.
The political crop has been half
frosted. Still, nobody seems to care.
It’s time we begin to think in neigh
borhoods, ns well as in families and in
porsona
The man' who cheapens himself is
pretty sure to be marked down by his
neighbors. '.!.,'.
The pew broom sweeps' clean only
when there is a willing hand, at the
other end-of It.
When you see a hen eating tacks
you ar.e.rash to assume that she is go
ing to lay a carpet.
It is a good thing to know when we
are right, and it is important, also, to
know when, are left;
Fortune has little to hope and much
to fear from the young man who joinB
the-Tappa Keg. fraternity.; •
The elevator man,is a genuine hu
manitarian'. ' He'spends his days in
elevating men and women. r'
What ..repairs will be; needed, .next
spring? A list of these made now will
save'delay when'’tiie'field-work begins.
The ilkprbvlded’ schoolhous'e 1s the
public- measure of the most penurious
man on the board.
ONE-CRQP. .SYSTEM . RESULTS
Southern Farmer-Reaping Inevitable
• Consequences'In an Impoverished
Sell and SmiDl Yields. ”
Tho prosont agricultural troubles'of
tlio South -a ni not duo to our crops,
soils or climate, but to a faulty sys
tem. Such a system 1ms nlwnyH
failed, not so much, however, because
of overproduction, or that all the eggs
have been in one bnBkct.-ns that a due-
crop system always means poor soil
and low. crop yields.
If wo had a reasonable assurance
that every acre planted in oats would
produce fifty to sixty bushels,' every
acre In com forty to fitly bushels, and
every acre in cotton a bale of 600
pounds; we codld snap our fingers at
six-ceut cotton, feeling confident of
prosperity In times of war ns well ns
in times of peuco.
If our present troubles, -whatever
hardships they limy have lii etoro for
us, lend to a system of agriculture
which will build up soil fertility, tiie
sacrifices may not bo too great. For
ono year, or for even a short term of
years, cotton must sell for h very low
price, Indeed, to mnko It less attract
ive from a purely ready-cash stand
point than any other crop available;
but no system which does not produce
a rich and productive soil can ever
protect us against timeb like these.
Any cotton farmer con show beyond
any argument (hat cotton is the best
money crop for Rio South. In fact,
ho can show with unanswerable fig
ures wherpln it will pay to plant cot
ton and buy feed and food supplies, so
long as cotton brings eight or ten
cents a pound;: but a serious fact
stands squarely against his theory. We
have planted- cdtton and .bought sup
plies and the records show that dur
ing the 50 years-we have followed that
system our yields have averaged- 1?5
pounds of cotton, less than- twenty
bushels of corn and not over twenty
bushels of oats per acre.
And -now, when cotton prices make
such a yield) .even of so good a crop
as cotton,' unprofitable, we are left
stranded, because in following the one-
crop system we are reaping its inev
itable consequences in an impover
ished ' soil, jgnorancO rff .how to make
other crops, and the absence of estab
lished markets, and marketing sys
tems for these crops. If we had a rich
soli we could overcome all other diffi
culties. No country with a rich soil,
if owned by the men ,who till it, is
ever in danger of serious financial or
business disaster.—Progressive Farm-
T0 CURTAIL COTTON ACREAGE
Southern Farmers Accept Warning of
Secretary McAdoo. in Regard to
*’ Diversification of Crops.
Secretary McAdoo’s warning to the
southern farmers regarding the diver
Blfication of their crops will dohb'tleBS
be deeded, according to Walter A.
Hildebrand, owner apd editor of the
Greensboro Daily News and other
North Carolina papers, while In Wash
ington the-other day
“Even without the suggestion from,
the secretary of the treasury as head
of. the federal reserve.board, J think
the cotton planters of the South were
inclined to curtail their cotton acreage,
and plant other crops next year,"
said Mr. Hlldebrahd. “It seems almost
impossible to conceive that the Euro
pean war could have any good result;
yet ultimately, I believe, it will confer
a lasting; benefit on the South, because
it will bring about that desideratum so
earnestly urged by Mr. McAdoo and,
others—the diversification of crops.
In my jiart of North Carolina there' is
not a great deal of cotton raised., but
there are many cotton mills and other
llaes of industry directly affected , by
the-cotton Situation. '■
“fn the furniture business, for in
stance, there has bqen a marked de
pression, traceable to the condition of
the cotton market.‘ There is'no better
barometer-than the, furniture-business.
People will get along without new
furniture if they are cramped for
money before they-'Will do without al
most anything else,; and the furniture
manufacturers have been complaining
thdt there has been a decided de
crease, .in their business.' .O'. 4 *-
“The-business situation -generally-,
however, is looking up. AH around are
evidences of a revival, and with the
distribution of 1 the immense cotton
loan fund, just completed, there ought
to be, and doubtless will be, a big im
petus given to all lines of industry."'
One Farmer In Three Loses.
Thomas,.'^ooiier, -director ., of the
South ..Dakota experiment -.station,
says: "Estimates indicate that the av
erage Jawner* in this' country receives
45 to 55 cents .from each dollar ex
pended by the consumer! while farm
ers ' In most European countries re
ceive 60 to-' 66: cents.- In ‘aif investiga
tion of groups of farms located in
townships .In Indiana, Illinois and
Iowa It was found that one farmer out
of every 22 received a labor income’of
mpre than ?2,000 a year; one of every
threo paid for the privilege of working;
that is, after deducting 5 per cent in
terest on their investment they lost
money."
; Large Turkeys. Raised. -
( The [Bourbon Red turkeys are pre
ferred to the bronze because they 'are
better "homers,’’ especially the hens,
which seem to prefer laying near tho
farm buildings. Then, too, they are
better layers and mothers. These
JiointB more than offset the greater
weights Lf the bronze, which the
standard.: of perfection places at 36
pounds fp 1 adult toms and 20 pounds
for henn \
COTTON SITUATION IN TEXAS
Should Be Settled Policy of Southern
Farmers to Emancipate Them
selves From One-Crop Bondage.
Texas has produced about four mil
lion bales of cotton this'" year. The
acreage is' about five'per cent smaller
than last year, but the yield is greater.
Prospects are not bright for the mar
keting of the crop and the people of
Texas are doing what they can to re
lieve the situation for the planters by
"buying a bale," by the "wear-cotton-'
goods” movement and by other expedi
ents.
These methods of boosting, cotton
may have some little effect on the
situation, but when thby shall have’
run their course Texas still will have
a big cotton crop on hand along with
remnants of the last year’s produc
tion, says Louisville • Courier-Journal.
This also will' be the case In other-
Southern states where the tendency
has been to "spread" on cotton and to
’’skimp” on other products. When
cotton is low or is not selling readily
the, South necessarily feels the pinch
of financial stringency. Tiie remedy
was set forth in the recent advice of
Sqcretary of Agriculture Houston
when he said that It should be -the set
tled policy of the southern farmers
henceforth “to emancipate themselves
from one-crop bondage."
Farm-Help Question! K-".
Any farmer ought to be able to so
plan his work that he can keep the
same help tho year through. The
men who d6 the milking are free most
of the day for plowing or taking care
of the crops.. But' it needs the per
sonal Interest of the boss. Farming
has become a question of wise man
agement—of head work—and we will
see lots of people come to the front
as successful because they 'do not
allow their think tanks to become
rusty.
Mating Buff Orpingtons,
In mating Buff Orpingtons, remem
ber that if . you use big-boned, broad-
backed males, oversize rfialiy for the
breed, you are surer to get strong, live
ly chicks that persist in living in spite
of cold and bad usage. Never breed
from, a thin, long type, drooped-tail
Orpington. Somehow massive build
and’big bone tell for more in this
breedthan In some others.
Keep Salt Handy.
If you don’t keep salt ’so your horses
and cattle qan get, it all the time, bo
a little more careful than usual in
this- respect just now, for these' ani
mals-are eating a large amount of -.very
dry‘feed'in the stalk fields and at the
straw piles,. Too many farmers neg
lect salting their stock. The best way
is to keep it so they can get it any
time they want it.
‘‘MY HEALTH
IS PERFECT”
So Says A North Carolina: .Lady ,In,
Telling What She OwesTo Cardui,
The Woman’s Tonic.
Mt. Airy, N. C.—Mrs. Ada Hull, of
tills place, says: “About six years ago
1 got in very bnd health. 1 suffered
terrible pains in my abdomen and
back. I dreaded to see the sun riso
and I dreaded to sco it set, for I suf
fered Buch agony., No ono except my
self will over .know how badly I suf
fered. The doctor said 1 was Buffering
us a result of tlio monopnuBo.
As nothing gave mo any relief, I
asked the dootor if 1 hadn't hotter try
Cardui. HO-said, ‘it might help you,'
and told my husband to got mo a bot
tle. ' At this tltno I was ao weak I
could not lift my head) and' my volco
was so weak, people hud to lean to
wards tho bod to hear wlmt 1 said. I
looked so bnd ami had such n dnrk
color that I looked Uko a dond woman,
and my relatives thought I would
never get up ugniu. •’« ■
I took one bottle- of Cardui and it
relieved the pain and suffering so
much that my husband got another
bottle, and , that improved me still
more. I began to strengthen and
gradually got well. I have now hud'
better health tor six years,''than; I
ever had in all my life.' ‘I have taken
no medicine since, and my health is
perfect.'
Car(lui is tho finest medicine:. a
woman could use.” " w
Itey it- At druggists.—Adv. ,jj>
Theglze.,,,
Mother asked Davio o’nV-morning to
fetch a small cabbage from the grocer.
•'What would you cull a small* cab
bage?” Davie asked. ,
"Oh, about the size '• of ' Jackie’s
head 1 ,” answered the'mother, referring
to the yqjinger brother. 1 A few seconds
later a voice ea|jio from tlie.doorway:
“Mamma, mb tajting Jackie with ifi'e
to measure by:” ‘ ■
IF HAIR IS TURNING
GRAY, USE^SAGE TEA
Don’t Look Old I Try Grandmother’s
Recipe to Darken and 'Beautify
Gray, Faded, Lifeless Hair, r-
Grandmother kept her hair beauti
fully darkened, glossy and nbupdant '.
with a brew of Sage Tea and'- Suljnfur.-
Whenever her hair fell out or took on
that dull, faded or streaked appear
ance, this simple’mixture' was applied
with-wonderful effect, .By asking at'
any drug store for "Wyeth’s Sage and
Sulphur Hair Remedy,” you will, get a
large bottle of this old-time, recipe,
ready to use, for about '50 cents: This
simple mixture can be depended upon
to restore natural color and beauty
to the hair and is splendid for dan- '
druff, dry, Itchy scalp and falling hair.
A well-known druggist says every
body uses Wyeth's Sage hnd Sulphur,
-because it darkens so naturally and .
evenly that nobody can tell It-has been '
apphed-rit’s so easy to-' use, too- You
simply dampen a comb' or bo ft brush
and draw It through your hair, taking ' 1 '
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 lodku
glossy, soft and abundant. Adv.
FJis' Regular Cq’e. „ ' .;
Many a man who permits himself tp
be led forth to musical entgrtainments
he does not care for' will! appreciate
the following:
“What made yon’ start clapping your
hands when that woman stepped on
your foot in tile tramcar?” r
“I was dozing; 1 ”answered Mr. Cum-,
rox. “I, thought mother and the girls
were having a muslcale at home and ■
one of them was signaling that It was
time to applaud.”
Keep Hog Pens Clean.
The dust accumulates in the hog
sheds before you know-it this season
of the year. • Watch this and keep the
dust down. It is a louse and disease
breeder. A hog wIiobo lungs are full
of dust cannot have much vitality.
“Pape’s Diapepsin” cures sick,
sour stomachs in five minutes
*—Tiiyie It! ,
"Really does” put bad stomachs:in
order—"really does” overcome Indiges
tion, dyspepsia, gas-, heartburn--and
sourness in five minutes—that—just
that—makes Pape's Diapepsin the lar
gest selling-stomach regulator in the
world. If what you eat ferments into
stubborn lumps, you beicL gas , and
eructate sour, undlgestcL food and
acid; head is dizzy anu aches; breath
foul; tongue'coati 1;'you.' insidesLlled
with bile and iii. gistiblo was:., re-
.member the moment v *’PapoV Diapep
sin” comes in contdct wi . tu > stomach
all such distress vanishes. It’s truly
nstonishlng—almost marvelous, and
the joy is its tfarinlessness.'
A largo fifty-eent. casO'.'o’f Pape-’s-Dia--
popsin’ will give you'a hundred dollars’
worth of satisfaction.
|g It’s worth' its weight in gold to men .
and women who can't get their stom-
achs regulated. It beldngs in your
home—should always ;be kept handy
in case of sick, sour!' 'upset stomach
during the ’day or at night." It's'the
.quickest, surest and most harmless
stomach doctor in the world.—Adv.
, Hadn’t Noticed It.
Tomdix—\ „ur wife is certainly out-
spoken, isn’t she?
Hojax—Not that I know of. I never
met any one who could outspeak her.