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Early Puty Not A!wiys’ghc Cause of Badn.ss = In Paris there lived a great physi- elan of world wide Foknown. who proved to the world that falling hair is canud by microbes. Sagerbund proved:that baldness is dlmuy due to thm permcious and nt microbes. He proved to ysician on earth that these in- yet vociferous little devils dug and burrowed into the hair root finally devoured the hair bulb. Th\l of course destroyed tlie vitality of the hair which fell out and caused thin-/ ning of the hair and finally baldness. | Inasmuch as it is an accepted fact %hat baldness, falling, hair. and dan- druff are caused by a germ, doesn’t it stand .to reason that the only way to prevent such calamities is to kill the germs? And doesn’t it stand to reason that the only w-.y to kill these germs is to use Parislan Sage, which The Lee & Osgood Co. has so much faith in that thew guaranteé it to cure dandruff, falling hair and itching scalp in two‘ weeks, or money back? Parisian Sage is a delightful hair tonic and is pleasa.n: to use. It’is not sticky or and contains only those in enu ’that will sure bene- | fit. It is now sold by druggists all over America, and by The Lee & Osgood Co. for 50 cents a large bottle. It is used extensively by women who desire juxuriant hair with a radiant luster. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every package. (Cufiinn«! page seven.) thm and a half million bales of cot- ton Dborne to ‘England in the south. Why not? ”We want to card, spin, | weave, knit, the two or three million bales e to parts other thx.in‘ England. It is hl;h time to tal up the task of industrial educa- tion. Until we do so, we will be hand- icapped even here at home, and: cer- tainly abroad. s Skilled Labor. Where did, where do we get our .high class or skilled labor? Who were the fine carders, spinners, weavers, bleachers, dyers and designers in oti er days, or even now, in New England? Who are the skilled and hikh-priced laborers in all our large cities? For- eigners for the most part. Why? Be- cause our boys have had no education- al means to meet their industrial ef- forts. If I have seemed to say harsh or ugly things, God knows it was unin- tentional. I want our workers to be the best in the world; but I know t}&at to be,the best they must be aid- ed. that have contributed so much to the syccess of others must, cannot, fail to contribute to our success if only we are wise enough to adopt them. Industrial or Industrial Art Educatiton It will pay to sharply define indus- trial art education, so as to keep it from being confused or confounded with normal training or even with industrial training. It is this latter plus art. Every industry has its art side. = Domestic science has its art side. Besides knowledge, taste is to be attained. Besides boiling, baking, or roasting, there is an art of so pre- | paring foods as to have them appear GEO. A. DAVIS dainty and appetizing. Take the man- ufacturer of jewelry. A boy begins, in Germany. in* the industrial school. He is taught to draw, to use solder, to use the blowpipe, ete. If his teach- | er, noting his efforts from day to day, !'discovers a tendency on the part of the Good Books are always desirable. WE HAVE A SPLENDID ASSORT- | MENT OF . COPYRIGHT FICTION, | ALL POPULAR TITLES, WERE $1.50, now 50c each. BOOKS IN FINE LEATHER BIND- INGS, 50c. Good for Easter gifts. WEBSTER'S COLLEGIATE DIC- TIONARY, INDIA PAPER WIRH IN- DEX, $3.50. A very handsome book. THE BOSTON COOKING SCHOOL | COOK BOOK— | 365 Breakfast Dishes 365 Desserts 365 Dinner Dishes. This is a fine Series of Cook Books and are only 50c each. Y. & E. CARD INDEX COOKING RECIPES. OXFORD BIBLES. AMERICAN STANDARD REVISED BIBLES AND TESTAMENTS. PRAYER BOOKS AND HYMNALS. GEO. A. DAVIS, 25-29 Broadway feb22daw | | i i | We Wiil Serve Another FIVE 0°CLOCK DINNER SUNDAY, FEB. 27th. TMusic by, the Orchestra. | Tables will be reserved if desired. Telephone No. 704. WAUREGAN HOUSE, THE PARKER-DAVENPIRT & ) Proprietors. TURBAN BRAIDS TURBAN FRAMES ' THE NEW | Turban Pins and Barrettes. : Hair Work of all kinds. Chiropody, Shampooing and Scalp Massage, Facial Treatments, Manicuring. The Gibson Toilet Company, Saite 26, Centrai Eldg., Phens 335 Representativeof the GCOD- i WIN CORSET. Approved by designers of fasl.ion. Every woman afforded the Opportunity of a test fitting. feb12a Special Bargains on Bedding and Stoves e THIS WEEK. Don’t fail to come and get . our prices. Schwariz Bros., COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS, §-i1 Water Street { understand the {as his guide, boy to do his work better than others do theirs, to draw well to design, the boy is taken from the industrial school and is sent to the art end of it, or to the industrial art school. If his talents show proof that they are'extra- ordinary, he 1Is sent to Paris, the German government or school author- ities paying all.or part of his expenses, In this way every manifestation of what is called genius or talent is taken care of. It is prized, -raised and re- warded. Nothing is so much needed in this nation just now as are schools of the kind. I am advocating I care not ,what you name vocational or in- dustrial. Until we organize and equip them we will never move forward to our proper place, As soon as we do organize and equip them the world will be ours in more senses than it ever was ours or anyone else'’s. Results. best results such Among the of | schools are the men and women they build up. The copper or coal miner who has been taught the geologic story of coal or copper who is able to read each recurring page as pick or powder explosion reveals it, who has heard the important part played by coal in { England and in the world's industrial and commercial history, pictured or has been told of the work of copper wires in carryin~ the messages of love, of pain, of sorrow, of joy. of war, of trade, under the waters over the hills, and through the valleys, will be able to be all the better miner as well as man for the knowledge. He will rise above the clod, he will look up to God. We will not have work- ing men and working women, but men and women working, Here is where this kind of education pays best. i No War On. The old war waged between the classics and sciences has ended. We value and place of each., There is no war. There is our incompatibility between commerce and culture. The greatest age of Athens, the so-called age of Pericles, had the Piraeus full of ships behind and sup- porting Athens. There the ships brought the gold and even the marble to the masters like Phidias and Prox- iteles, Behind the Renaissance of Rome agnd Florence, behind Angelo, Raphael and Leonardo were Venice, Genoa, Amalfi, and the marvelous cit- jes of Tuscany, Piedmont.and Lom- bardy, the deep richly laden barges that went up and down the Po, Adige and Amo, that filled the shins of the seaport cities. The world is wont to think of the poet as a dreamer, one lacking in practical lines of life. But the builder of boats, of bl buildings, _of great bridges. a dream- er. No man lac nation need ever aspire to be a great engineer. The word “poet” comes from the Greek coiep. to create. The builder of the Brooklyn bridge, Roebling. was in my opinion, one of the greatest poets that ever lived. So, t0o, were the designers and bailders of the world’s big steam- ers. Stand, as I have stood, on the deck of a great steamer; feel her thrill and throb under the mighty engines, then think of the masters that drew the Jines. that laid the keels, that forgdd the steel, who put in place h rib and rope, look then at the Brook lyn bridge, and mark its symmetry, the harmony of all its parts. The builder of this was the Homer of Steel. He went blind long before the last bit of it was built. You remember, Homer, the greatest of Greek poets, was blind. Roebling rode every day to the Brook- | lyn bridge or was led to a little box- like lodge in which he sat listening to the hammers as the workmen toiled. By the shores of Scio’s rocky isle his hand in the hand of a boy who acted Homer, the blind poet, vandered side by side. In all my pietures of the or Homer, 'the Greek. the world's great master of song, of wor f splendid harmonies; Roeblin~ the Ameri engineer, the master of iron and the fashioner of beautiful form poct of steel and iron, in his own wa great. The legacies ie priceless. The one in n.= way is as priceless. as full of yalue, as the other. Culture is not a thiug of lines or let- | ters, It is, as Matthew Arnold tells ! us, “spreading sweetness and light, and making God's will to prevail” Eack in his own wav Roehline ard Homer did this; hence my desire to do justice to each. to have othe ho:d them as I hold them, side by side in | memory, both benefactors. poets, up- lifters, lofty builders for the “Better day.” s A Those in Charge. In charge of the successful affair, for which President . Tracy @ received a shower of congratulations, were the Educaflonal efforts of the kind ! I place the other. | cards picture of President Tracy- Hartford Teamster Killed by Fal l’vu- Wagon. Hartford, Conn., Feb. SL——Thom Cummings, a_teamster, fell' from- his ” wagon here late today, striking his head on the pavement n.nd uring his skull. He died while being taken to a hospital. He was 45 years old. The payrolls of the enlisted men in the navy during 1911 will ggregate nearly $18,000,000. i MM«. xus., on ‘brought néws of the death. of Prof. Amos E. known as the inventor elegraph and telephone He was born in Norwich, | and was a former may- | o3 Professor Dolbear has been credited by many as the inventor of wireless telegraphy, but -eminent authorities dispute this claim. Included in the list of his inventions of electrical appli- ances are the writing telegraph, mag- | neto and static telephone, spring bal- | ance ammeter, the converting of sounds into electricity and photogru ing a solid body with tI P | of electric waves. ° ceived the degrees of A. M., “Ph. ————— - Professor Dolbear after his gradua- ‘tion from Ohio Wesleyan university in 1866 was appointed assistant chemist of the university. A few years later a professorship at the Undv,enuy of Michigan. There he re. M. E., and . From 1874 to 1902 Professor Dolbear was professor of physics at Tufts college, but in the latter year ill health necessitated -his resignation. Since 1902 his health had gradually declined, but to the end he maintained keen interest in sclentific affairs. Professor Dolbear 1s related to the members of the Dolbeare family resid- ing in this. city, although he spelled his name without the final e. He is known to most of the Dolbeare younger womn was a nh‘l 3101&" l‘fl-tlu. 1 a day. A 80,000 ton ship miles an hour will use up 1,100 tons. Thousands of Women * Bless Her Name Grateful Letters From All Over the World Tell of Wonderfu: Results With Mrs. Miller’s Mild Home Treatment. Many thousand women have already accepted Mrs. Miller’s generous offer to give free to every sufferer a regu- lar treatment of her mild home rem- edy. From every civilized country come thousands of kind, grateful let- ters from ladies whose hearts overflow with gratitude because this pleasant vegetable remedy has restored them to oldtime health and. strength. Mrs. Francis M. Harris of Dover, | La., writes: “I feel like a new woman and can do my work without having that old, tired feeling. I am happy tn know that I am well again.” “It has relieved me of my constant safferine and I have not words to ex- press my gladness. It was surely a Godsend to me, and I thank Him that there is such a wonderful medicine, on earth for suffering - women."—Mrs. Carrie Bailey, Pickneyville, Ala Mrs. Miller asks no one to take her word, but only wants to prove it to any sufferer. Mail the coupon if you are a sufferer from any female com- plaint to Mrs. Cora B. Miller, Kokomo, Ind. Prove for yourself at Mrs. Mil- ler's expense what this marvelous rem- edy may do for you. Do not delay; send the coupon now. There Is Some One Near You Cured by Mrs. Miller There is hardly a country, city, town or village in which there does not re— side some grateful lady who has been relieved after years of suffering by Mrs. Miller's mild home treatment, even after doctors and physicians fajled. No matter where you live, she can refer you to ladies in your own locality who can and will tell any suf- ferer that this marvelous remeay real- |1y ‘has relieved or cured women. | Only bear this in mind. Her offer | will not last long, for thousands and thousands of women who are suffering will take advantage of this generous means of getting the free treatment. So if you are ailing, do not wait an- other day; but send the free coupon to Mrs. Miller today. Room Only for the Well In this day and age of the world there is no room for the woman who can't ‘take her part in society, the home, school, church or business. If you are dragging out a miserable, feeble, ailing, good-for-nothing exist- ence, you feel that yvou might as well be dead and done for. And so you well might in days gone by. Then troubles such as yours { meant a living death or the knife, that | was often worse than.death; but now, thanks to the generosity of Mrs. Mil- ler, of Kokomo, the simple home treat- ment which has -relieved so many thousands of ladies in the privacy of | their own home is yours for the ask- ing. It's yours to accept or reject. Don’t say your case is hopeless, go on and suffer, or try to cure yourself. Many of the cases reported have been given up to die or the knife. Mrs. Miller’s treatment benefited them. Can you doubt what it may do for you? ,} Send No loney, Just Your Fortune In Giving Name and Address, If You Are a Sutferer From Any Women’s Disease or Piles. In the past few years Mrs. Miller has spent thousands of dollars in send- ing medicine to affiicted women. Several years ago Mrs. Miller learned of a mild and simple preparation that cured herself and several friends of female weakness and piles. She was besieged by so many women needing treatment that she decided to furnish it to those who might call for it. She started with only a few dollars capital, and the remedy, possessing true and wonderful merit, produced wonderful results where doctors and other reme- dies failed. The demand grew SO rap- idly she was several times compelled to seek larger quarters. She now oc- cupies one of the city’s largest office buildings, and almost one hundred lady clerks and sten$graphers are required to assist in this great business. Some time ago it was announced that she would give to women who suffered from female diseases another $10,000.00 worth of her medicine, She has fulfilled tbis promise, but as she is still receiving requests from thousands upon thousands of women from all parts of the world, who have not yet How To Treai Any Case of Piles I want to tell you flatly and plainly that any woman, or man either, for that matter, who suffers from any form of piles, may place their faith in my treatment and I believe they will not be disappointed. It's intended for piles as well as the diseases peculiar to women. It assists im healing diseased membrane surfaces, no matter where located, and I verily believe that this remedy has cured more bad cases of piles of al kinds than all the so- called “pile cures” and doctors in the country. My remedy acts speedily. It's safe and it's lasting. The purpose used her remedy, she has decided to continue to give away the medicine to those who are suffering.and unable to find relief. Mrs, Miller’s wonderful remedy 1s es- pecially prepared for the treatment of Don’t Close Your Eyes, Ears and Mouth. Mrs. Miller Wants to Relieve You of Your Suffering. Fill Out The Coupon and Send Today. leucorrhea or whitish discharges, ul- ceration, displacements or falling of the womb, profuse, scanty or pai periods, uterine or ovarjan tumors or growths; also pains in the head, back and bowels, bearing down feelings, nervousness, creeping feeling up the spine, melancholy, desire to cry, hot flashes, weariness and piles from any cause or no matter of how long stand- ing. * Every woman sufferer, unable to find relief, who will write Mrs. Miller now, without delay, will receive by mali, free of charge, a G0-cent box -of her simple home remedy, also_ her book with explanatory illustrations showing why women suffer and how they can treat themselves at home without the ald of a physician. Let me try to relleve you of those tormenting and severe pains. The cou- pon below, dear, may bring you relief. Send it today. is to relieve the intense torture, the burning, ‘smarting and itching is re- lieved and you should feel better right from the start. Send for my free treat- ment at once and see for yourself. Miller’s Mild Home Treatment. dotted lines below age at once. Name CIY secectcvorassorescsassnatons State eresotaFlour akes the bread — P (o B | ;u ds health ree To Women " Mrs. Cora B. Miller is Spending Medical Treatment Absolutely Free to Suffering Women. A 50c PackageWill BeSentFree To EveryWomanWhols Ailing. Free Treatment Coupon This coupon is good for a full sized regular 50-cent package of w.. and mail at once to Mrs, ler Bldg., Kokomo, Ind., and you will receive the remedy in pladin pack- Why Men Desert Wives A Large Per Cent, of the Wife Deser- tions and Divorces Due To Female Weakness. I should have taken better care of myself, 1 suppose. 1 wa¥ sick and saf- fering. No one but & wWoman cap ever know how I suffered. 1 was irritable. I couldn’'t be to my husband the wir that I ought to hmve be He, being a man, couldn’t understand. We driftod apart. He sought his pleasures- else- where. Finally there was nothing but the divorce court that could settis our differences. That's the sad story that eiht ouy who have pn-ed } the ordeal of the divorce eourt, 1 d5 the countless thousands of as wfi divorced, deserted wives who are mot know deep down in thelr the real cause of thelr a neglec the publlclx’ l-nd 41' room to en gh haf as ln\x:h lA.lk th in the world if only every mother would realize her duty to pre- | serve her health and strength. | No woman 'has the right'to expect | her husband to devote his leisurs hours hearts was 108, A elck “wife, | to his home and her when she is lead- ing a dregs ont. osw, ine the-mouth existe; would dis- | courage the Ereate t optimist on earth. Mrs. Cora B. ume(- n-N-lon. o remedy has done much preven divorce as ull the mo-:o- to congress and comnventlons in the world. The woman who is bright and cheerful and well has a home that reflects her own good feeling and discontent finds no place therein. Mrs. Miller ald and advice i» as fres to you as Go sunshine or the air you breathe. wants to ehow to you that her common-sense home treatment may relleve you just as surely as it cured her years ago in her humble cottage. If you are a sufferer from trouble, no matter what it coupon below to Mrs. Cora B, Miller ay once. Put Your Faith In Mrs. Miller My word that my horhe treatment should relieve you of female diseases or piles doesn’t necessarily mean any- thing. But when my word and med!- cine are_backed up by thousands o ladies, that's evidence you ecanno doubt. There is hardly & county or small village in the land that does mot contailn some poor ‘sufferer that was relieved. I didn’t force them to use my medicine. They took it of thelr own free will and it benefited them. You should have fzith in_ that sort of a remedy every time. Just cut out the coupon, send it today and prove what this marvelous treatment will do foe you. This Noted Divine Says: “I am personally @acquaimted witd Mrs. Cora B. Miller. T moat cheerfully and voluntarily testify that myselt and family have been greatly bene- fited by the use of Mra. Miller's home remedies and heartily recommend them to the general public”—Rev. R Q. Ros- camp, 30 Newcastle, Pa, Terrace Ave. a th, Do not delay. Sen e, coupon today, Just fill in your name and address o Cora B. Miller, 7846 H’II- e SRSV