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i -fl,_._._T___._. SRR, SAGE TEA WLLL DARKEN THE HAIR Restore Faded and Gray Hair to Na- tural Color— Dandruff Quickly Removed. There is nothing new about the idea of using Sage for restoring the color of the hair. Our grandmothers kept their hair dark,glossy and abun- dant by the use of a simple “Sage Tea.” Whenever their hair fell out or tcok on a dull, faded or streaked appearance, they made a brewof Sage leaves, and applied it to their hair with wonderfully beneficial effect. Nowadays we don’t have to resort to the old-time tiresome method of gathering the herbs and making the tea. This is done by skillful chemists| better than we could do it ourselves; and all we have to do is to call for the ready made vproduct. Wyeth’s Sage and Suiphur liair Remedy, con- with the adadition of Sulphur, another old-time scalp remedy. Tihs preparation gives youthful color and beauty to the hair, and is one of the best remedies you can use for dandruff, dry, feverish, itching scalp, and falling hair. Get a fifty cent bottle from your druggist today, and you will be surprised at the quick results. All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the money will be refunded if the remedy is not ex- actly as represented. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 12 private baths, 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurious and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Room, Palm Room, Men’s Grill, Oolonial Buffet; Magnificent lobby and public rooms; Rallroom, banquet rooms and private dining rooms:; Sun parlor and observa- vory. Located in heart of business sce- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Conveniens to everything. i 1] Ono of the Great Hotels of the Horthwest R. F. MURPH FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltraml Ave. Phone 818-2. | per’'s Weekly. e R Buy Shirts ing under the neck, nothing bi is sure to be 2 postal today for of ] Dry Good ildren. BMakers of All Wool T g Sage in the prover strength.| | erable change of 7 e ) BELIEVES OLD SYSTEM BEST Teaching Children Sclence of Spelling. In the memory of some of us who are not grandmothers, spelling was taught by a graduated system begin- ning with the phonetic value of the letters. The spelling books—we rec- ognize it now—were designed to make learning easy. Long lists of words of letters were given, and possibly with one or two exceptions or variations sandwiched in. The ear i from frequent repetition, grew accus< tomed to a certain combination, and, once learned, it was never forgotten. Today I take up the spelling book | of a child just out of the kindergarten and attempt to hear him his lesson. !\Vhat do 1 see? A list of “Things to Use on the Table.” He spells “bread,” | “salt” and “plates” correctly, and | sticks at “knives.” He goes back, | studies it again and again sticks to | “knives.” Why should knives be | spelled as it is? He cannot understand | The fact that it is something to use ou the table does not help him. T turn to the preface of the book to see if T can find what Rossetti would call “the fundamental brain work” underlying the system, and learn that spelling, forsooth should be taught “by an as- sociation of ideas!” Now, spelling is Dot an association of ideas. It is an association of sounds. If you teach it by association of the idea of sound, well and good. Why should the child tion of sounds would give him? Why should each work be made an excep- tion and have to be learned by a dis- tinct mental process? theories of Pestolozzi and Froebel thus clumsily misapplied? The framers of the old-fashioned memory systems depended on the as- sociation of ideas, and justly so. for they taught lists of unrelated words. | They would have been the last to de- |M pend on it for the teaching of Eng- lish spelling. They would have been the first to claim the help of the linked chain of similar sounds. Let us thank our lucky stars that we were educated before there was an effort to make learning picturesque. Those of us who wept over “Reading without Tears,” have reaped one ad- ter without looking in the dictionary. —Lippincott’s. Persian Lamb Skins, The trade in Persian lamb or astra- khan skins centers in Turkestan, and the traders of that country have the entire monopoly of it. They pasture the ewe lambs in immense flocks, and | It has been found useless to try to ac- custom these animals to auy consid- climate. If they ! survive elsewhere, the skin under- goes degeneration and the fur conse- Juently becomes less valuabie.—Har~ 1 With Plenty of Arm-Swing They have won the enthusiastic ap- ms, no tightning at the ks at the highest and best [/ /] in comfort and worth. I of the me real men who w Negligee or Dress Shirts d as iron in wearing quality. , men’s corsets, everything for -the ward- sure they bear the Patrick trade- r protection for quality. There dealer in your town. Quality Book. |, AL Patrick & Co. £s at Wholesale and Manufacturers of Garments for Men, That Are Roomy similar sound but with different initial | ¢; be robbed of the help which associa I Why are the |§ vantage; we can at least write a let- |§ ) ou buy a Patrick-Duluth ce shirt you buy absolute t. There is no bind- u of the Northwest— ant good values oz T vlish shirts. Fabrics shirts—rich _coloring, s soft and beautiful aler for- Patrick-Duluth and women’s hosiery, Send us Address Duluth Cioths and Blankets, felt mattress; the Lahr’s Furniture Store & FOSTER | Don’t confuse it with any 6i'dimzry cotton- the only thing they Rave in common word “cotton-felt” is Introducing Senator Gore, United States Senator Gore, the Writer Deplores the Modern Method of blind statesman from Oklahoma, told a story the other day of the first politi- cal campaign he ever made. “It was down in Oklahoma,” said Mr, Gore, “and the country was rather wild. We had a hard campaign, stop- ping at all the small towns and many of the big camps. The chairmen of the meetings were not always educated, and some of the mistakes they made were really laughable. One of them gave me an introduction that turned he laugh on me with those who under- stood him, however. “Rising to his full height and making and the mind, { g terrible effort to prevent his voice from trembling, he said: “‘Gentlemen, I won't bore you with & long speech, but I introduce to you 2 man who will’ Then he retired in my favor.” On the Green. Marks—That new member seems pretty green for a man who claims to | be 2 college graduate. Parks—Probably it was an agriculs tval college. THE BEMID]I DAILY PIONEER For Mamma to Think Over. Young Hopeful—‘What did papa mean when he sald to that man, ‘You've got a good figure? " Doting Mamma—-‘He got a good price for some land he sold, my dear.” Young Hopeful (innocently)—“Mamma, has the servant girl been selling som land, too?”"—Chapparral. i CHECKERS FREE, The manufacturers ot Checkers, a Souvenir Pop‘corn Confection, are run- ning a coupon in this paper, offering yon a package of Checkers absolutely free. You dre not required to buy anything, simply sign the coupon and the dealer will hand you a package of the checkers free. The manufacturers of Checkers are anxious to get a pack- age of Checkers in everybody’s hands and take this method of decing so, knowing that our paper reaches alli the homes. | Be sure and. cut the coupon out and | i take it to the dealer. The coupon pays the dealer and you get a package i of Souvenir Checkers absolntely free. All of our note paper will be put on Sale Saturday,May 4th,at cut prices. BIG CLEARANCE SALE " Values up to $1.00 a box, now 25c We need the yoom and must move this stock. Correspon-ence Cards of design at 25 cents a box. Popular Books Popular Music. latest ABERCROMBIE’S 218 Beltrami Ave. Plione. 290. oot S N R s ococeseves s cecsersees Regular $25 00 suits for it e e Regular $22.50 suits for Ui Regular $18.00 suits for..:ix ..... Gt tre Regular $2.50 and $3.00 ’hatg Regular 50 cent neckties at - Regular 25 cent neckties at L. BLOOS'TON,‘ MANACER. . Sincerety Clothes . $15.00 Blue and Black Serges ... $16.00 | $12.50 | K 4 L DO WSl g0 "-DO'TON, Manager. ’ trade starts this way. Extra Special Selling Prices For Opening Sale Packard Shoes st e .. $3.88 $2.90 Regular $4.00 shoe: : . DRESS SHIRTS Ides Dress shirts.regular $1.50 and $1.25 values, sale pric g : " ERWEAR Union suits regular $3.50; sale......... Two peice suit regular $1.00 sale... S8ub | aalii The C. 0.D. Clothing and Shoe Store The announcement is herewith made ‘that the C.O. D. Clothing store has purchased the entire stock trom the Model Clothing Company at practically 50 cents on the dollar. This stock will'go on sale at proportion- ate prices at the opening of the sale Satur- day May 4th. ¢ At the Oid Lumberman’s Bank Building An entire new stock of Shoes and Cloth- ing has been added, which was purchased direct from the rr;aufacturers, giving this store a brand new and up-to-date stock of merchandise. This store is bound to turn the tide of Clothing buyers. underselling advantages possesed by this store will be fully appreciated when once the The powerful el 35 $1.00 B atfigve ...82.28