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I I etk ————C—————————————————— e T S ————— i ———— e — BEAUTIFUL HAR AT SMALL cOST A Simple Remedy Beautifies the Hair, Cures Dandruff, Stops ‘What a pity it is to see so many people with thin, wispy hair, faded or streaked with gray, and realize that most of these people might have soft, glossy, abundant hair of beau- tiful color and lustre if they would but use the proper treatment. There is no necessity for gray hair under sixty-five years of age, and there is no excuse for anyone, young or old, having thin, straggling hair, either| full of dandruff or heavy and rank| smelling with excessive oil. You can bring back the natural color of your hair in a few days and forever rid yourself of any dandruff and loose hairs. and make your hair grow strong and beautiful by using ‘Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy. For generations common gar- den Sage has been used for restoring and preserving the color of the hair, and Sulphur is recognized by scalp specialists as Dbeing excellent for DEER FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA | Are to Be Brought From English ! Estate and Turned ose in i the Rockies. After completing a hunting tour which occupied the greater part of two years and which has been con- ducted in the wilds of three contin- ents, C. E. Lucas, an English hunter couver, will make arrangements be- | fore his departure with the British Columbia government and game wardens of the province for the accom- i modation of several hundred red deer which will be brought from his | father's estate at Warnham, Surrey, | Bngland, early in September next year. | These animals have been given to ! the government of the province by | C. H. Lucas, Sr.. the intention being i Ing of a game ordinance allowing #hem | to be shot in limited numbers. | Mr. Lucas said that it was originaily |Intended to send the deer out this foot and mouth disease among Eng- lish cattle had prevented the exporta- | tion of any live stock from the old coun- | kY. Congequently the animals were { retained. About fifteen years ago his | father had made a similar gift to the | g@overnment of New Zealand and since Bnd naturalist who is visiting Va.n-‘ to turn them loose in the wilds of the ! i Rockies and allow them to increase | | until their numbers warrant the pass» | MADE USE OF NATURE’S GIFTS| 'Some of the Make-Shifts Which Have to Be Employed in Various Parts of the Earth. We in this country have so wmany | kinds of cheap pails, cans, boxes and freceptables of ail sorts ready to our hand that it 1s hard to realize what ptraits the people in cruder lands are put to for such things. In a large part of the Orient wine and water are etill carried and stored in bags made of pkin, usually goatskin with the hair side inside, just as in Bible days Even now the same rule applies against ‘putting new wine into old Men, Beware. Simultaneously with the announces ment that waistcoats for women will be all the rage this coming winter every married man dashed out and bought an extra lock for his ward- robe. The announcement was made at a recent meeting of women’s tailors in Pittsburg and brought joy to those women who for years have envied men their easy apparel. Attempts to ap- | propriate trousers from the sterner sex have been made from time to time without much success, but #t is ex- | pected that women will jump at the chance to wear the snug-fitting waist- coat. They are to be cut man fashion, | with enough room at the neck to show bottles,” for the dampness soon rots | the cravat, woman naving adopted the ithe leather and makes it weak. In Asia and Africa bamboo joints are utilized for making receptacles in great variety. The bamboo in favored places grows to a diameter of six inches or more and a “joint” from a foot to two feet or more leng, makes an ideal bottle or jug, for nature pro- vides it with a partition at each joint which makes it water tight. is very light and very strong.—The | | Pathfinder. | year, but unhappily the outbreak of . Tennyson and Tobacco. Tennyson’s devotion to his pipe is well known, but the following astory of it will probably be fresh to most readers. A friend had driven him from Plymouth to visit an old lady who stood in no awe of the poet. The Bamboo | ! latter when soft-collared waists be- | came popular last summer. All Resources Needed. Those who are anxious that the | boundaries of knowledge should be en- | larged ought to be most eager that the influence of women should be fn-! | creased, in order that every source of | { the human mind may be at once and | | quickly brought into play. For you | may rely upon it that the time 18 approaching when all those resources ! will be needed and will be taxed even | to the utmost. We shall soon have on | our hands work far more arduous than lany we have yet accomplished; and | we shall be encountered by difficulties { the removal of which will require | every sort of help and every variety of | treatment of hair and scalp trou-'that time they have multiplied so | visitors were invited to remain for | power.—Buckle. | bles. or itching secalp, or if your hair is losing its color or coming out, get al fifty cent bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur from your druggist, and no- tice the improvement in the appear- ance of your hair after a few days’ treatment.—Adv. Subscribe for The Pioneer BETTER YOUR POSITION We have an opening for an honest man in your locality to represent us and engage in a good paying business without capital. ‘Write us. UNITED C0-OPERATIVE REALTY CO. Am.Nat. Bank Bldg.. St Paul, Minn. | rapidly that they were now shot every l the night, but on Mr. If you are troubled with dandruff| geason. During a recent visit to the ' stipulating that 1f he did he should be | ‘;slands he had been able to secure | allowed to smoke in his bedroom the | | four magnificent specimens. | | | Prolific Penguins. A penguin oil industry is to be es tablished at Macquarie Island, about half way between Tasmania and the Antarctic continent. This island, 23 | miles long and five wide, i estimated to contain probably 80,000,000 pen. guins, so that the stock seems almost limitless. i Increase of Dope Fiends. | Drug taking 18 greatly on the in- crease in London. Somebody recent: 1y introduced “hasheesh” into that great city, and so popular has it be- | 'come that two hasheesh chambers are i mow in full swing not a hundred yards from Piccadilly. old lady bridled up That she could not allow. Bedroom smoking was not only objectionable but dangerous, ;and for no one would she relax her prohibition Tule. Mr Tennyson prov- ing equally obdurate the hostess's wn carriage was ordered out and he was | sent in it back to his hotel at Ply- mouth, whence, however, he returned the next morning to breakfast.—From Mrs. Walford’s Recollections. To Exterminate Vermin. Mix and let stand for several houry one-half gallon of gasoline and tem cents' worth of corrosive sublimate Pnt the mixture into a pint oil can ‘with a long spout, and spray into ewm ery place where there are bugs. Aly the room thoroughly. After a few ap plications the vermin will have entire ly disappeared. Tennyson's | Told of Eugene Field. Eugene Field and his wife once en- | tered a street car, to find all the seats | taken save one at each end. When | the conductor collected fares, Mr. Field announced audibly as he gave | him a dime, pointing to the far end { of the car, “This is the fare for the lady there—the one wearing the new, | beautiful brown dress.” All eyes | turned, and her pretty face was rose color; but back of her reproving glance was mingled indulgence, appre- ciation, and mirth at the unexpected and truthful announcement—Youth's Companion. Coming Events. Bank President—“What's the mat ter?”” Bank Vice-President—“I was Just thinking. I sat next to our cash- fer in church yesterday, and I don’t quite like the way he sings ‘Will they miss me when I'm gone.’” “Who Eats—Pays!”™ No indoor worker can continue to eat meat thrice, or even twice daily, after middle life—and middle life, mark you, begins with the thirty-fifth lyear—without paying the penalty in an attack of gout, rheumatism, right’s or an allied disease, a few ears later. This “few years” may, in special cases, stretch itself to a score gbut, inevitably, “who eats, pays!”— ietetic and Hygienic Gazette. Where Caraway Seed Abounds. Caraway seed is extensively grown in Holland. Groningen, in the north: past cormer, produces more than any other province, next being north Hol- land, in which Amsterdam is situated. In these two provinces more than half the caraway plant acreage is found. In the whole country the num- ber of acres devoted to caraway growing was, in 1911, 20,337. JUMPS ON RUSTY SIDEWALK NAIL While working on a well digging machine a Minnesota man jumped upon a rusty sidewalk spike. The nail drove part of his black woolen sock far up into his foot. He remov- ed as much of the sock as he could, put on Allen’s Ulcerine Salve, and kept right on with his work. The salve drew out parts of the sock and all other poisons and in a week his foot was healed up. This salve is one of the oldest rem- jedies in America and since 1869 it has been known as the only salve powerful enough to cure chronie ulcers and old sores of long standing. Allen’s Ulcerine Salve acts by drawing out the poisons and healing |the sore from the bottom up. It is so powerful that it heals new cuts and sores in one-third the time that jcommon salves and liniments take. 1And it heals scalds and burns with- out a scar. Sold at Barker’s Drug | Store.—Adv. winter. it’'s a made-to-order Suit mend The Lanpher Your patronage is AKERBERG & KITTLESON Exclusive Gents Furnishers Hats and Shoes Thanksgiving has gone and Christmas is only a little more than one week off. Now prepare for real Come and inspect our comprehensive and popular price stock. Your visit will be well repaid even if you do not purchase. for comparason sake only. Hope you get what you want for Christmas. If looking for, you'll find everything here to grant your wishes—even the low prices. 0’Donnell Shoes Zenith Mackinaws, and Pants and other reliable merchandise. Come and see them if or Overcoat that you're We sell and recom- Hats and Caps Coats, Shirts solicited and appreciated. BUY EARLY BEFORE THE GREAT RUSH You get better results, better service and lowest prices. small paymecnt and we will lay aside any article you select and hold it until you want it. > price, set of six... .. 49c EACH. EXTRA SPECIAL. you have always seen priced at 75c to $1.50 each, Sale price, 49 Solid gold, silver and gold filled, set with dia- monds, rubies, amethysts, garnets, pearls, etc. Prices $1.00 to $25.00. $37.50. One-fourth Karat Solid Gold Mount- ing; same as sold in the large cittes for $40.00. This diamond same price in Tiffany or Belcher mounting. Sale price Whirlwind and Several New Cuttings. OUR MOTTO: “THE SAME FOR LESS” GEO. T. BAKER & CO. 8-inch Fruit, Berry Bowl, cut; least $4.00. Sale price, $2.50 50¢c than 25 cents, Sale Price, each 15¢ 116 Third St. All Goods Marked in i i i i ini Shell or 1.10 Set 6 genuine Rogers Tea Spoons, in Satin or Bright Finish, %lain pattern, also fancy patterns, regular price $1.50. Sale $1 Io $2.50 for this beautiful Salad or very deep should sell for at Solid silver tea spoons in many of the new, up-to-date pataterns, fancy French grey and bright finish, which §0c Each. Choice of large line of fine rich Cut Glass Tumblers, well worth $1.00 to $1.25 ea ch; odd lots. While they last,, each 15¢ each, Solid Silver Thimbles; 1,000 to select from, all sizes, never sold for less —eeeeeee —Choice of $11.50 Each. $12.00, $12.50, $13.50 and $15.00 Watches in fine filled cases, warranted 20 years; El- gin, Waltham or Hampden movements, $11.50 warrantde good timekeeper. While they last, each,..... Patterns. ed, in Bright or Satin $1.2 sell for $18.50. JEWELERS Plain Figures Showing Quality and Price Warranted Triple Plate Silverware. $4.00 dozen Knives or Forks, warrant- Set Six Fancy Tea Spoons, Vintage and other patterns to select from. In Fancy Finish Handles. ! Al Other 1847 Rogers Bros. Goods at Reduced Prices Near the Lake $3.50 Each. See these Beautiful, Full Quadruple Silver Plated, KEEP THIS LIST-IT Why pay more? We guar- antee to sell you the same for less. That's our motto, Warranted 25 Years, Hand Engraved or Embossed Baking Dishes with heavy enameled iron lining; sold for $4.50 to $5.00 each. Sale Price .. $3.50 ! f $9.95, 4 Piece Tea Set—Coffee Pot, Sugar Bowl, Cream Pitcher, Gold lined, and Spoon Holder, Gold lined, 4 pieces, complete; Beautiful hand engraved, Embossed or Plain, in full Quadruple Plate, war- ranted 25 years by the factory; made to Sale price....... . $9.95 Very Heavy Plated Toilet Set These are made by a well known maker and are war- ranted to give satisfaction. 95 sell for $8.00 or $9.00. Our Special Price..... ' - ; They generally 49¢ Each EXTRA SPECIAL. Solid Silver Tea Spoons in many of the new, up-to-date paterns, fancy French gray and bright finish, which you have always seen priced at 75c to $1.00 each. Sale Price 49 cents $7.50 Set 6 Solid Silver Dessert or Soup Spoons in new up-to-date each, patterns. less than $10.007 Store Open offered them for $3.00. OUR SALE PRICE .. D ——EEEE——= Did you ever hear of them being offered for 7 50 Sale Price, set of six . cee s [} Evenings : $4.50 Set 6 Beautiful full Mother of Pearl Handle. set. Sale price, set of six Sterling Silver Ferrule Fruit %1,75 for this Beautiful real Horn Handle, three piece Carving Set— ery finest Steel Blades, looks like a $4.00 set. Some have 1 75 L] Knives, usually sold for $5.00 to $6.00 $4.50 WILL SAVE YOU MONEY |