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THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant-Try the Moist Cloth. Try as you will, after an application of Danderine, you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most, will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first-yes-but real ly new hair-growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No differ- h ence how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small p strand at a time. The effect is im mediate and amazing-your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incom- e parable luster, softness and luxuri ance, the beauty and shimmer of true a hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's a Danderine from any store and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft n as any-that it has been neglected or n injured by careless treatment-that's all. Adv. n The road to success is shy of rapid transit facilities. Many an actor whose name is on a billboard is an acrobat when it comes to jumping boardbills. For genuine comfort and lasting pleas ure use Red Cross Ball Blue on wash day. t All good grocers. Adv. t When it Fails. "Has she every confidence in her husband ?" "Yes. except when he is driving the car with her in it."-Detroit Free Press. FIERY RED PIMPLES Soothed and Healed by Cuticura Soap I and Ointment. Trial Free. Smear the affected skin with Cuticura Ointment on end of finger. Let it re main five to ten minutes. Then wash ' off with plenty of Cuticura Soap and hot water. Dry without irritation. Nothing like Cuticura for all skin troubles from infancy to age. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, i Boston. Sold everywhere.-Adv. SIMPLE RULES FOR FIGURES Remembering These, One May Always Be Sure as to the Divisibility of Numbers. It is often convenient to know whether a given number is divisible by another without going through the I usual process of division. Almost ev eryone knows that, however large a number may be, it is divisible by 5 if the last digit is 5 or 0. The follow ing gives the rule for some other num bers: A number is divisible by 2 when the last digit is divisible by 2; by three when the sui of the digits is divisible by 3; by 4 when the number repre sented by the last two digits is divis ible by 4; by 5 when the number ends in 5 or 0; by 6 when it is divisible by 2 and also by 3: by 8 when the num ber represented by the lest three dig its is divisible by 8; by 9 when the sum of the digits is divisible by 9. For example: The number 1.728 Is divisible by 2. because its last digit. 8, Is divisible by 2; by 4, because 28 Is divisible by 4, and by 8, because 728 is divisible by ,. It !s also divisible by 3 and by 9. for the sum of its digits total 18. a number divisible by 3 and by 9. Since it is divisible by 2 and by 3, it is also divisible by 6. To find whether ,. number 2s divis Ible by 7. you must go through the usual process of division.-Youth's Companion. It doesn't take the average honey moon long to get ready for the em balmer. People talk of the "flowing bowl" when they know it isn't the bowl that flows. Unless a man looks silly when he tells a woman he loves her, he doesn't mean it. MORE THAN EVER Increased Capacity for Work Since Leaving Off Coffee. Many former coffee drinkers who have mental work to perform day af ter day, have found a better capacity and greater endurance by using Por tum instead of coffee. An Illinois woman writes: "1 hat drank coffee for about twenty years, and finally had what the doctor called 'coffee heart.' I was nervous and extremely despondent; had little men tal or physical strength left; had kid ney trouble and constipation. "The first noticeable benefit which followed the change from coffee to Postum wuas the improved action of the kidneys and bowels. In two weeks my heart action was greatly improved and my nerves steadier. "Then I became less despondent, and the desire to be active again showed proof of renewed physical and mental strength. "I formerly did mental work and had to give It up on account of coffee, but since using Postum I am dolnlg hard, mental labor with less fatigue." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Postum comes in two forms: Postum Cereal-the original form must be well bolled, 15e and 25e pack ages. Instant Poetum-- soluble powder dissolves quickly In a cup of hot wa ter, and. with cream and sugar, makes a delic.ous beverage Instantly. 30c and 50e tins. Both forms are equally delicious and easot about the same per cup. "There's a Rean" tor Postem. -eMId b Oroeesa ' Farmers' Educational and Co-Operative Union of America Matter={nEspecial Mmuestt t C tie Proreive Agrichdurist t Feed wasters-cold stables. The less birds the more bugs. Read and preserve farm papers. Theory is the pioneer of practice. The weed gone to seed is an evil Indeed. There is one Zood mortgage-the paid one. Rust ruins more farm tools and Im plements than work. A grouch and bad health nearly al ways travel together. Most unconfirmed rumors are start ed by confirmed liars. Red clover and the hog seem to be made for each other. A kicker, no matter whether he is a mule or a man, is always unpopular. It is only the unfair and jealous man who calls friendly rivalry in busi ness-fighting. The farmer who thinks straight never plows crooked furrows nor zig zag lines of fence. It's the wrong kind of boost when old opinions formed before we knew come home to roost. A stitch in time may save nine, but unless we keep on stitching, the rent will continue to grow. The greatest cause for the discon tent of farm boys can usually be traced to the old folks. Many a msguided farm boy who goes out for wool in the city comes home shorn to the skin. A man with an accusing conscience often goes to church but he does not find it a good place to sleep. A man with a grouch is like a dog who has been fighting skunks-every body gives him a wide berth. Magazines, papers, books and bul letins may be studied to advantage, as a preparation for next season's activi ties. If some folks could see themselves as others see them, they would never have any more use for the looking glass. A man may worry until he becomes heartsick and yet he cannot cause a ray of sunshine to break through the clouds nor a drop of rain to fall upon his thirsty crops. GOOD DEMAND FOR FARMERS Important Message Sent to Boys Who Are Now Considering Question of Future Occupations. The announcement by the director of public welfare that the city has a job paying $2,000 a year. with a good home and board thrown in, for which no qualified aptlicant has yet offered himself, is more significant than it is novel. The unfilled place is that of man.erer of tLe city's 2.100-acre farm at Warrens-ville. The succeusful appli cant, it is said, need not be a resident of the city or state, but must be an able farmer, having an agricultural college education, practical experience in farming and business knowledge qualifying hirm to get results from the city's large investment. The persons to whom this state of affairs should carry an important meaning are the boys who are now, or ought to be. considering the bother some question of their future occupa tions-boys in a position o obtain the benett of technical education of some sort, but .ndecit.ed as to what sort best fits their needs. Though very good indeed as such things go. an in come of $2.000 a year with living ex penses paid may not seem Irresistibly attractive to ambitious boys. partic ularly when coupled with the uncer tainties of public employment. But the lesson of the siutatlon is not Er much that an acceptable place should go unfilled as that there is evidently a shortage of men qualified to fill it The need of scientific farmers to m.nage big farms has not gone un fcreseen The agricultural colleges of the country are filled even now with shrewd young men learning a profes sion surt to come into greater and greater demand. There is room for more. Young men still debating their futures should give attention to agri culture's nossibllltts. particularly if tL lr tastes I*e in any such direction. Such callings as the law. medicine or Sengineering may be overcrowded, but there is no likelihood that agricul ture will be for many years. if ever. SPrivate. as well as public, farms of large size are always bidding for Scapable superint*ndents and it may be taken for granted that the demand I will inc-ease as the financial posel bilities of farm efficiency become r more adequately realized.-Cleveland r Leader. Get Best Results. When conditions remain unchanged for a long time. farming becomes ap Sproximately what It ought to be to get Sthe best results, provided that prac tice which is Immediately the most I profitable does not deplete the soil I fertility. That Awful Office Itch. SWe can vaccinate against blackleg, I hog cholera and typhoid fever, but no one haa so far invented a serum that I will immunize us Americans against Soffice itch. Silage for Cattle. The same acreage devoted to a all age crop will support more cattle than It would if devoted to hay or other Sroughage. Best Housesa for Hogs. - Hogs need properly ventilated, not drafty houses, with plenty of dry, * clean straw for bedding. Good Stable Manners. S A borse with good stable manners has more value than one with no manners. PLAN OF GETTING TOGETHER Farmer Must Push Aside Green-Eyed Monster of Jealousy-Be Impe. sonal in Choosing Leaders. Did you ever stop to think of what a public-spirited man has to contend with in building up a community? Gen erally he meets with sneers and gibes, his purpose is questioned, ulterior mo tives are attributed to him. Usually these men are like Joseph, "drumers of dreams," looking down the vista of the future, foreseeing the grandeur of the things to be. They must be made of stern stuff and their only re ward is such as is common to all. This country needs such men today. They are to be found among us. so let us hunt them out and develop them. The banker, the merchant and big business man find little difficulty in fighting their battles collectively. These men may be bitter personal enemies, bpt 'ou find them fighting shoulder to shoulder when their business interests are involved even in a small measure. The farmer must do the same. Push aside the green-eyed monster, Jeal ousy. and get together. -vrites Perley B. Gates in Denver Field and Farm. Let your slogan be "one for all and all for one." In selecting leaders be impersonal. Do not name Neighbor Jones as one of your leaders because he is a good fellow and you wish to pay him a compliment. Bear in mind that it is not always the fellow who kisses the babies and slaps you most heartily on the back that is best suited for the work you desire done. We want to make of this country what its God given qualities entitle it to be--a t happy, prosperous farming communi ty Then, without fear or favor, se lect leaders who are best adapted to e the bringing about of that end. A little over a year ago some of us got o together and started what is called a the Farmers' Improvement Associa tion of Montezuma County. The pur e pose wa to advance the interests of it the farmers. We are political, but nonpartisan, we take no blood-curdling g oaths, we hind ourselves to nothing r- but the upbuilding of the community. It brings us together more frequently. 1. There are mans ways in which such a an organization can be if assistance. i. Our national and state governments spend millions of dollars annually in , aiding the farmers. How much of r these vast sum- benefit us? There are many problems confronting us. Shall we not act together in solving them? We should have local commit tees in every part of the country e through which communication may be nha' with a central committee, the head of which may be easily reached. Lei I be known that we are standing behind our comtrittee and we will be amczed to see how much more wt are respected acting collectively rather o than individually. Our achievements will depend in a large measure on the men we select as leaders, but our judgment of men would have to be very poor indeed in order that our ef a forts prove wholly barren. d BEST FARMER IN COMMUNITY )f Good Results Cannot Be Secured Out n of Co-operation Scheme Unless 1-. Everybody Works Together. n Every wide-awake, enterprising, I reading farther helps every other en re terprising. wide-awake farmer in the e community, and the more there are of e them in the neighborhood the better it is for everybody. You can't get good work out of any it team if half the mules pull and half don't. So you can't get good results out of any scheme of co-operation in your neighborhood if half of the farm Sera are waked up and pulling together and the other half are not. And the best way to get them waked up is to get them to reading. = BUSINESS SUCCESS OF CROP c- It Must Be Disposed of as Efficiently, r- as Grown-Teamwork Always It Pays Best Prices. Id It is not enough to grow a good crop, ly or even to grow a good crop at low cost. To make a big crop a business to success. It must be disposed of as n- fficiently as it is grown-must be so ft graded and packed as to meet market h standards and so marketed as to bring s-the farmer the bhighest current price id The farmer who is too suspicious to r get together with his neighbors in or fr der to do co-operatively what no one 1- can do alone is sure to pay dearly if for his incapacity for teamwork. r Horses and Mules. it Growing horses and mules may be I- fed a liberal ration of corn silage, but r. they must have some hay and grain f along with it. A few pounds of silage ra day is good for work horses too, Ly but they should not be expected to id eat a lot of it because they need a ii- more concentrated ration. Ld Be a Success. Why longer experiment? Corn is a success. Alfalfa is a success The silo is a success. Live stock farming d pays. Why not quit grain gambling p- and be a success? S Watch Cotton Acreage. It In the meantime, let every cotton II farmer of the South walk around his cotton acreage and be sure that it has not expanded.-Houston Post. g. Brains Count Most. to It does not follow that the farmer, at in order to be prosperous must be a at drudge. Brains count as well as muscle. Good Profitmaker. I1- The fall pig generally strikes a un good market and if he Is pushed right ar along by good feed and care may eas ily prove a good profitmaker. Farming That Pays. •t Diversified farming payas. Try and y. have a little cash coming in every week in the year. Weeds an Asset. rs A rank growth of weeds becomes ua so asset when plowed under before they make smed. BURNING BODIES OF VILLA'S RAIDERS Ihe picture shows the burning of the bodies of 27 Mexicans who were killed in tfte raid. In the foreground is the galvanized coping of the Central hotel, all that remained of the building after it had been burned. PLANNING MOBILIZATION OF THE TROOPS fc Newton D. Baker, the new secretary of war, and General Scott, chief of staff of the United States army, conferring in the war department. USING THE FIELD TELEPHONE HERE PUNITIVE EXPEDITION WILL HUNT StON 0N tC 'Hn9v : * A UA / o Chihuahua region to be pierced by United States troops bent on capturing murderers of New Mexico citizens and soldiers; arrow indicates point where Mormon colonists are in peril from Villrtas. To Remove Ink Stains. Improvement. As soon as possible after the article Movie qperator-'What shall I do becomes stained, put it to soak in with this flm? There is a tear in it sour milk. This removes the stain that cuts right through the hero's without injuring the cloth. After the nose?" Clever Manager-"Hh! Just ink is all soaked out, wash with warm the thing! Bill it as a feature in two water and soap. parts." Lot of Differetnce. Masculine Vanity. Lawyer (to witness)-"Did yoU say A Wellesley girl has sent out a po that an incompetent man could keep etic appeal for "a tall Apollo In a full a hotel as well as anybody?" Wit- dress sualt" It she gets all the men ness-"No, I said an inn-eaxperlened who think they could fill that bill she man could." will be mobbed.-New Orlemas tter. BRIG. GEN. J. PERSHING plh sti m I of ticapture Villa and his band.l Eu at McR fa S fe so Placed in command of troops to d capture Villa and his band. t MAJIR GENERAL SCOTT u: rI El ct ci Chief of staff of the United States army who is in charge of the plans. for the pursuit o: Villa. BRIGADIER GENERAL DAVIS m I "Spr Gend Thoem's Dase b en omar lumbus, New Mea., lad thes loundation ol his military training in McKanley chool, Washington, D. C. The pl tnre shows him in the unnlorm ol a cadet captain. For two years he hase been on patrol duty on the aexicny "Has your wii e a good memoryt " o thaenty years, and she's still remine when we were courting." "Aome ot our cannon are diswppewar do ing" remroed the lieutenant. "Well, it thined will disappear when you have r he ways break in and wake him ap,-" .stM r pL HAD AWFUL WEAK SPELlS Suffered S. Much Fek Se Bad to Have Relief. Says Cardl Made Her Well Elba, Ala.-Mrs. M. T. May, of this place, writes: "I was not especially strong when I married..., but after my marriage, I seemed to get very much worse. About two months aftter I was married, I began to have awful weak spells. Would have bad spells of headache, simply felt bad all the time, could hardly do a thing... I suffered s6 much pain in my left side and had the swimming of the head sad congestion and heartburn very bad. In fact I suffered so much I thought I would die. I kept getting worse and felt I must have some relief. I had some pain and difficulty in walking... "Mr. - , who ran a store In -, recommended that I take 'Carl to dul,' and my husband bought me a bot tle, which did me so much good that he bought me another, and after the use of three or four bottles I was well; was up doing my work after the use of the first bottle. It's the finest tonic I know of. I got Into better health than I had been since my marriage. I ad vise all women... who have weak spells..., to take it." The thousands of letters, which come to us every year, like the above. certainly are proof of the merit of Cardul, the woman's tonic. For sale by all druggists. Effects of Dress. "Some say the garb often affects the character. The woman in white in clines to play the ingenue." "I suspect there is something in it Queen Elizabeth always wore a ruE." "Well?" "And had the reputation of being something of a roughneck." KIDNEYS CLOG UP FROM EATING TOO MUCH MEAT Take Tablespoonful of Salts If Bak Hurts or Bladder Bothers-Meat Forms Unic Aoid. We are a nation ff meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns as tee to be constantly on guard agalnst kid ney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, bpt become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative ti i sues clog and thus the waste is re tire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have tting ing pains in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the blad der is irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have severe headaches, nervous and dissy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weather, get freg your pharmacist about four ounces ac Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast eskh morning and in a few days your kid neys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes anad lemon Juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to dush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to nag tralize the acids in urine so it is no longer a source of irritation, thus md ing urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful efferves cent lithis-water drink, and nobody can make a mistake by taking a Ittle occasionally to keep the kidneys olean and active.-Adv. Special at Nine Cents. "Do you suppose all these womem on the streets are shopping?' "Oh, yes, but not necessarily for S spring suits, cosmetics and gewsaw.. "No?' "An enterprising confectioner ad vertises a sweeping reduction in nut sudans." AND INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepcin" settles sour, gassy stomachs in five minutes-Time itl SYou don't want a slow remedy whvn your stomach is bad-or an uncertain one-or a harmfutal one-your stomach Is too valuable; you mustn't injure i Pape's Dlapepsin Is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmless ness; its certain unfalltng action tn regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions of cures in indigestiol, dyspepsia, gastriti and other stomach Strouble has made jt famous the world son over. Co Keep this perfect stomach doctor in tion your home-keep it handy-get a large nley fty~cent case from any dealer sad pl- then if anyone should eat something of a which doesn't agree with them; it has what they eat lays like lead, ferments ec and sours and forms gas; causes head ache, dizziness and nausea; eructa tions of acid and undigested food remember as soon as Pape's Dispepstin comes in contact with the stomach all sed uch distress vanishes. Its prompt ness, certainty and ease in overcoming the worst stomach disorders is a revs iade I lation to those who try ILt-Adv. In Local 8hipping CIrcles. Parker-What is your friend Oma Dea* doing? Hell, Heiny-Operating a line of schoo' have era. lady Parker-Between what points? find Heiny-The bar and his mouth. WOMAN'S CROWNING GLORY is her hair. If yours is streaked with ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use "L Cr raits ole" Hair Dressing and chant it in r, the natural way. Price $1.00.-dt. 't al S People who always say whit the think have but fow rlads. - , -