12 THE MORNTXG OREGOXIA2C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1914. We've got to deliver the goods. And do we cat learn a let fom acfclevits and working tj achieve: It techej us to be resourceful, to have initiative, to use Judgment, to discern, when w have made a mistake, where we went wrong, so we will not do It again. Then think of the worth-while quali ties our work builds into our character patience, thoroughness.' carefulness, punctuality. There Is scarcely a single quality that helps make up the full stature of manhood that honest, true work does not demand and does. not help us to acquire If we will let It. So work Is our best friend. Is It not. Most Important Millinery Sale of the Season J' :! li SOCIETY folk are keenly interested in the dinner dances on Wednesday evenings at the Commercial Club. ' This evening's reservations bid fair to make this party eclipse all others at the club. Sanford P. Lowengart is chairman of the evening- and has several surprises in store for the guests. Mr. and Mrs. Lowengart will entertain a party o"f 24 covers and there are a number of other large parties arranged for. " Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Hoyt and the Misses Louise and Katberine Hoyt have reached New Tork from Europe and are registered at the Hotel Wolcott. They will remain In New York for sev eral days before starting for Port land. t An anticipated event of next week is the card party and social to be given under the auspices of the Christian Brothers Business College alumni at Alumni Hall Friday evening October 23. The affair is for the benefit of the athletic association. Dancing will round out the evening's festivities. 9 - This eveninig the Nebraska Society will give a large card party at Hotel Multnomah at 8 o'clock for a deserving widow and her three children, who de sire to return to relatives in Omaha Telephone Mrs. Phil Kasterday for res ervations. fhe Monday Musical Club will give an elaborate at home at Hotel Mult nomah on Monday evening at 8:30 o'clock. The club's affairs are always delightful, and this one is eagerly an ticipated. The Kenton Club will start its Win 1 ter social activities with a progressive J 600 party this evening. The usual t monthly dance for members and J . friends, with cards for those who do I not dance, will be held October 28. ' During the Winter free lectures of educational value will be given. The subjects will be announced later. Mrs. K. TColan entertained recently with a bridge-tea in honor of Mrs. Burdette Thayer at her apartments in the Hotel Mallory. Two tables were arranged for the games, and additional quests called at tea time. Card honors fell to Mrs. Thayer and Mrs. Charles Ha worth. A wedding of interest to take place tomorrow is that of Miss Mary Moffat and Dr. C. K. Strafrin. The ceremony will be solemnized at the home of the brldo's mother, and Rev. John H. K. Simpson, of St. Mark's Church, will officiate. Archibald Wright, St. Mark's organist, will play the wedding march, and the young people will be attended by Mrs. Paul Weybrauch, sister of the bride-elect, as matron of honor and Gus Olln. as best man. A small recep tion will follow, only relatives being presents The Lincoln High Alumni Associa tion will hold Its first dance of the "Winter season Friday night, October 16, in Christensen's Hall. The com mittee in charVe. is composed of "Wil liam Smyth, Clarence J. Young, Clar ence J. Gilbert, Krnie Spamer, Billie Lewis. Pauline Henitz. Mamie Free, Kdlth Shapirer, Lucy Shearer and Mar garet O'Shea. Mrs. Dan Danziger and son, Walter, "who have been spending the .last two weeks in Tacoma and beattle visiting relatives and friends, are expected home within the next few days. Namyenoh Club 'announces its sev enth annual party to be held in Cotil lion Hall Friday evening. December 4. The members are "W. S. Johnson. "W. ' K. Slater. S. G. Kirkland, George C. Denholm, Fred Johnson, Harold Wil son, C. Lestoe, Carl Kosengreen and Roy Etnler. ... A committee meeting was held last week to make arrangements for a se ries of dances to be given by Kiwanda Council No. 11, D. of P. The first one is to take place Saturday. October '17. at Kagles' Hall. Lotta Hoch's orches tra will play. Among the important events on the social calendar for thils evening is the opening dancing party of the H. R. S. Club at lrvington Club. The patron esses are Mrs. G. G. Bailey. Mrs. w. K. Jenkinson. Mrs. William J. Clarke and Mrs. William J. McGinn. The reception committee includes Misses lone Wilson, Margaret Donnerberg. May Sullivan, Laurette Conlague, Nina Leader. Nan 1'onnerberg, Mary Clancy and Maude Littlejohns. , The G. N. C. B. girls have issued Invitations for their next party Thurs day evening, October 22, at Cotillion Hall. . A delightful affair of Monday was the luncheon given by Miss Margaret Mann at her home on Milwaukie ave nue in honor of Mrs. M. E. Monson (Irene Ellis), of Seattle, a former well known Portland girl. .Mrs. Monson has been visiting In Portland and has been entertained with a number of smart affairs given by the girls of the younger yet. JlycfitiJfcf?7ifffomej. THE Arts and Crafts Society will hold its annual meeting this after noon in the Library at 2:30 o'clock. Officers for the year will be elected and reports will be given. Miss Bertha Stewart will give an address on "The ory vs. Practice in the Decoration of Homes." An informal tea will follow the business session. ... The Artists' Chorus of the Monday Musical Club will hold its second meet ing this morning at 10 o'clock In the Boyer studio, Tilford building. All wo men soloists wishing to join may make application at this time. Central Women's Christian Temper ance Union will meet this afternoon at 2 o'clock in the headquarters, fourth lloor of the Dekum building. Tlolladay Parent-Teacher. Association will hold a meeting on Friday Dight in the schoolhouse. A representative of Reed College will discuss measures that will come up at the next election. The Arguments will be offered in a strictly educational and non-partisan way. The Willamette Chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet today at the home of Mrs. C L. Rick ert. Hillsdale. Take Oregon Electric train leaving North Bank station at 12:40 P. M.. to Metzger. The Tuesday Afternoon Club met yesterday at the home of Miss Grace Amos. S.3 Hawthorne avenue. Mrs. Push gave a paper on "Law of the Drama. Mrs. G. Johnson spoke on , "Study of the Drama. 'Technique of the Drama was given by Mre. Jfl. Stahl. The guests were Miss Margaret Mock, Mrs. i It. Shields and Mrs, U DESIGN FOR STREET SUIT f iTiflfn i r f ' ' ?lt -ill n fj : ' '. v? a( if ' - iiX:?:i-:ii::M":""'; . George, The next meeting will be held in the home of Mrs. William F. Amos. 853 Hawthorne avenue, Octo ber 20. . . ' The Buckman Parent-Teacher Asso ciation will meet Thursday afternoon in the assembly hall of the Buckman School. A member of the dental as sociation will give a talk on the dentis try bill. The children will give a toothbrush drill. Delegates . to the state ..convention of the Oregon Con gress of Mothers .will be appointed. All who are interested are invrted. . . The Women's Auxiliary of the Ger man Red Cross Society met yesterday afternoon ajid made,. final plans for the play. "Die Barbaren," that will be given in Deutsches Haus Friday night. Tickets for the performance are sell ing rapidly and the auxiliary members are working bard to raise a large sum of money for the humanitarian work. Those who cannot attend the perform ance are offering to send in checks for the fund. Mrs. Theresa Abendroth is president of the auxiliary and a num ber of prominent matrons are includ ed In the membership. The next meeting of the Corriente Club will be held at the home of Mrs. M. Moore, Oak Grove. October 20. The last meeting "was with Mrs. Clinton Sharno, of Cleveland avenue. Mrs. Elizabeth Bo Dine, Mrs. S. Clark, Mrs. M. Kinder and Miss Bertha Moores participated in the programme, which was a series of in teresting papers on Egypt.' The Methodist Woman's Home Mis sionary Society will meet this morning at 10 o'clock in the social rooms of the church at Twelfth and Taylor streets. A ' box will be packed for a minister and his family who are in great need. The officers urge every member to attend that the occasion may be a rally meeting. Box lunches will be in order. The business session will be held at 2 o'clock in the after noon. A meeting will be held under the auspices of the ' Lents Parent-Teacher Association Friday afternoon in Lents school assembly hall. W. Claude Adams will speak on "Mouth Sanita tion." . - Rev. John D. Rice, vicar of St. John's Episcopal Church, Mrs. T. D. Elkln. Miss W. Dennis, H. L. Morgan and others will speak this afternoon before the members of the Sellwood Parent Teacher Association. Refreshments and a social hour will follow the pro gramme. y TALKS ON DOMESrCSCENC . . Br Lilian- Tangle. PORTLAND. Sept. 29. Will you kindly inform me whether grapes can be canned, and. if so, bow is it done? Would like also a recipe for a grape catsup or spiced grapes. Thanking you for much help re ceived. MRS. H. L. CANNED GRAPES are very good, though' the seeds are, of course, inclined to make "difficult eating." The seedless grapes are delicious, and may be put up alone, or in combina tion with other fruits, or with "flavor modifying" material, such as spices, lemon or mint. Pickled seedless grapes, by the way, flavored with mint, are particularly good as a Winter sub stitute tor mint sauce accompanying roast lamb or mutton. Seedless grapes are also very nice preserved In concord grape Juice. The general method is as follows: Canned Grapos. Wash and cut th grapes from th bunch. Make a, syrup, uslnsr 1 quart water to 1 pound sugar. Place the grapea In sterilized Jars, sot the Jars on a rack In a boiler, till up &8tomxssid&&&x &&&&& f&eZxx&tgz i iiifnniiwntir v I FOR LATE FALL WEAR. ,r' :: '"" to the shoulder of the jar with cold water and bring gradually to boiling point, t ill up with syrup and let cook 10 minutes, then fill to overflowing and seal at once. This will give a rather large proportion of juice to fruit, but the Juice is always accept able. Long boiling tends to spoil the flavor, consequently a rather short boiling time is given here, and par ticular care must be taken to' insure complete sterilization of jars, caps, rubbers, etc. Other fruits besides the seedless grapes, mentioned above, may be pre served in grape juice pears for in stance. The grape juice is heated until reduced one third, and the prepared fruit is put in and boiled slowly in the juice until tender , and translucent. It is then placed in heated jars and sealed at once. Usually sugar is unnecessary with the concentrated juice. Grape pulp may also be canned and used later in various ways. In that case the grapes are stewed, rubbed through a sieve, heated (with or with out, sugar) to boiling point, boiled 10 minutes, and sealed at once in ster ilized jars. If this method Is chosen. It will usually be found convenient to drain off some of the juice, for bot tling or for jelly, before passing the pulp through the sieve or colander. Grape Catsup. To 5 pints grape pulp allow one pound sugar and 1 cup vinegar. Boil the sugar and vinegar 15 minutes with one tablespoon each whole cloves and broken stick cinna mon, and 1 teaspoon each allspice and mace. Or use the powdered spices If preferred. Heat the pulp and rub through a colander. The grape pulp left after the first "drawing" for jelly may be used for this purpose. Add the strained pulp to the spiced vinegar syrup and boll to the desired thickness, then seal while hot. More sugar may be used if a less tart catsup is pre ferred. Various spiced grape preparations can be made from strained grape pulp, varying the spices to taste, and using more or less sugar according to whether a sweet or tart relish is pre ferred. Not more than three-quarters of a cup of sugar to 1 cup pulp should be used, however, unless a regular grape jam is desired. Snapshots .Barbara Boyd, What Mar Lie In Our Work. (6Y T was my songs that taught me I all the lessons I ever learned," a famous poet sings. One doesn't think of this poet as learning from his work, but rather of his work: being the expression of what he knows. But If you look deep enough, you see what he means. And it is rather won derful. Isn't It? He is rather a. mystical poet, and no doubt the desire and the effort to ex press his thoughts set him to thinking even more deeply, to searching out the "deep things of God." His exquisite bits of verse about the wayside flowers no doubt sent him to those flowers to learn more of them. His wonderful pictures of village life and village people made him a deeper student of the wonders of human nature than he otherwise would have been. Truly his songs taught him. And in realty doesn't our work no matter what It Is teach us? For one thing, it teaches . us to be ambitious. And being ambitious, we reach out. we look about, we study what is ahead and beyond. If it weren't for what we are doing now would that germ of ambition urge us on to some thing better beyond? Then, our work teaches us to achieve. Most of ua feel ws must get results. even when we do not take It In the purely material bread-and-butter, way. Some look only on this side of it, and though they may regard It as a hard ship, ara nevertheless thankful for the living it brings. But in addition to- this mere matter of living, which Is a thing to be con sidered by most of us, work comes 'to us with out-stretched hands laden with gifts. For like the poet, we can say, it is teaching us all we ever learn. It is our means of learning. For it is the expression of ourself. And in express ing ourself we grow. And to grow, we must learn. But axe we learning all we can from our work? That is the question It will profit us to consider. We may be learning some things pa tience, carefulness, initiative, whatever our special line of work most requires of us. But are we learning all we can? Why not get all the good out work has for us and as a consequence go on to bigger endeavors and a fuller, richer life. Look into this matter of your work a bit and see if It hasn't got a lot more for you than you are getting out of it. So many things in this life are ver itable treasure houses. They are full of all sorts of beautiful and good things for us if we will Just go after them. This poet knew what he was talking about. He is getting much beauty and Joy out of life because he is letting his work teach him. Are you? BARBARA BOYD. Blunder Brings Harvey Wells Spoiled Birthday Party. Unfortunate Man, to Do Penance for Karly Arrival Home. Barna Trash in Basement and Present. HARVEY WELLS had a birthday last week. How old he was makes no difference, but the point is that he got hirabelf in awfully bad with his family and cheat ed himself out of a birthday present. In the first place Mrs. Wells had con trived to keep her husband downtown until late in the afternoon, but Harvey had his own notions on thetsubject, and by way of celebrating the day, knocked off work at his insurance office about 4 o'clock and started home, and jumped right into the midst of preparations for a surprise party. That was bad enough, but it wasn't all. So. by way of doing penance for his indiscretion, Harvey thought he'd make himself useful about tho house. Ac cordingly he sneaked away into the basement and started to clean up in preparation for the arrival the follow ing day of the Winter's supply of fuel. All the old papers, boxes and refuse that had accumulated through the Sum mer were piled into the furnace, where a roaring Are made ahort work of them. In due time- the guests arrived and all sat down to Harvey's birthday .din ner. As is. usual on such occasions, everybody unloaded a"juah" present of some kind, and when Mrs. Wells thought that kind of thing had gone far enough-ahe sent the "girl" on a mysterious errand into the basement. Presently the girl came back and whispered something to the hostess. Then Mrs. Wells got'-up and went into the basement ,herself. She came back after a while, dismayed. ' . "Harvey, did you see a green box down in the basement?" she asked. "Yes." "Well, what did you do with It?" "Why, I threw It into 'the furnace with the rest of the trash." His birthday present had gone up In smoke. The rest of the family now treats Harvey something like an unwelcome boarder around the house, and his wife passed him o the street the other day and wouldn't even speak to him. VOIDING , OF LEASE ASKED Two' Ask to Be Released From 50 Year Fact, Charging Violation. Suing to have a lease on the south half of lot 3 and the whole of lot 4, block 253. Portland, declared violated and that they be released from the terms of the agreement, G. H. Durham and M. L. Holbrook yesterday brought suit against Elsie E. Hamilton, Mar guerite, Hume Sears, H. Slnsheimer and the Durham Investment Company. A lease had been executed covering this property, it Is said, to extend 5u years from August 1, 1911. For the first year, J700 a month was to be paid, second to fifth year, $800; sixth to 10th year, J1000; 11th to 20th year, J1.250; 21st to 30th year, $1500, and 31st to 60th year, $2000. It is alleged that prior to the lease mortgages had been placed on the property, making It impossible to raise money with which to erect a build intr. as was intended when the lease was executed. It is asked in the suit that the liability of the plaintiffs because of the lease be discharged and that they be declared entitled to the return of $17,783 as damages. In the event these requests cannot be granted. It Is asked that the mortgages on the propert:' be declared Inferior to the lease upon It and that the plaintiffs be protected fully in that regard. PERSONALMEIITION. E. T. Skoor, of Carson, Is at the Cor nelius. C. H. Furcell, of Salem, Is at the Mult nomah. H. M. Gilliam, of Baker, is at the Oregon. F. S. Wendt, of Medford, is at the Carlton. D. C. Warren, of Everett, is at the Seward. J. C. Shultz, of Dallas, is at the Perkins. . W. L. Tooze, Jr., of Dallas, is at the Imperial. F. L. Norman, of Seattle, is at the Imperial. A. E. Leflar, of Salem, Is at the Cornelius. C. A. Behr, of Central la, is at the Multnomah. N. F. Gay, of Seattle, is at the Multnomah. C C. Whltten, of Eugene, is at the Washington. Frank Gibson, of Salem, is registered at the Oregon. E. L. Shipherd, of Shipherd Springs, is at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Price, of Weston, are at the Seward. Mr. and Mrs. W. Pollak, of Albany, are at the Oregon. Mrs. Ida E. Roark, of Salem, is regis tered at the Eaton. P. J. Driscoll. of La Grande, is regis tered at the Oregon. H- G. Wortman, of "Medford, is regis tered at the Imperial. C. G. Matlock, of Pendleton, is regis tered at the Imperial. . Thomas Cobb, of Roeeburgr, Is regis tered at the Washington. Miss Fern Hobba, secretary to Cot- Black Silk Velvet Dress Shapes o5 The Wonder At Morrison and Fourth ernor West, registered yesterday at the Seward. Mrs. E. C. Temple and daughter, of Tacoma, are at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Nickerson, of Sil- verton, are at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rumley, of St. Paul, are at the Washington. Professor Adolf Zelfle and Mrs. Zelfie. of Corvallis, are at the Seward. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Cochran, of Salem, are registered at the Cornelius. Dr. W. E. Mallory and Mrs. Mallory, of Newberg, are at the Perkins. G: A. Graham and Mrs.' Graham, of Kaiania, are at the Washington. Mr. and Mrs. George A. Wilson, of San Francisco, are at the Perkins. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Denman. of Cor vallis, are registered at the Carlton. E. H. O'Brien and Mrs. CTBrlen. of San Francisco, are at the Multnomah. Leonard W. Riley, of McMinnville, was registered yesterday at the Eaton. Mr. and Mrs. George Armstrong and son, of Streator, 111., are at the Per kins. Mr. and Mrs. R. Welch, on the Em press bill this week, are registered at the Eaton. Slg Sichel left last night for New York and other Eastern centers on a business trip which will detain him several weeks. CHICAGO. Oct. 13. (Special.) Ore gon visitors at Chicago hotels Monday were: Great Northern. W. C. Hay wood; La Salle, John A. Keating; Con gress, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Elliott, all registered from Portland. CHURCH CONCLAVE ENDS Reception Closes Two-Dajr Session of Latter Day Saints. The Oregon Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints concluded its two days' session with a reception Monday night' to elders and friends at the home of president M. J. Ballard at 246 East Twenty-fifth street. It was the largest conference held in Portland by this church, the building in Laud's Addition being filled at all the meetings. The cornerstone of the new church at the corner of East Twenty-fifth and East Madison streets was laid Monday. Appointments were made as follows: Eugene, Salem and Southern Oregon, Elders K. J. Hawhins and Stillman Pound; Astoria and Coast territory. El ders H. D. Lowe and J. W. Mortensen: The Dalles and Hood River, Elders F. L. Gardner and D. L. Ryan: Vancouver, Wash., district, N. A. Wheeler and G. R. Houston; Portland and surrounding territory. Elders H. P. Mathews, as conference president, J. C. Hogan, R. M. Stewart. J. C. vHarker, Claude Brown and Carl Richehs; lady missionaries, Letitia Higginbotham and Ivy Skeen. Mission secretary A. C. West was transfered to the Seattle district and Elder C. R. Beecher was appointed missionery secretary to president Bal lard. Missionary stenographer, Elsie Brown, was released to return to her home in Salt Lake City, her successor to be appointed later. Reports showed that the number of baptisms was the greatest in the history of the Oregon Conference and that the distribution of literature also broke records. HOMES FOR FIVE SOUGHT Associated Charities Desires to Find "Winter Places for Wards. The Associated Charities wants to find places for several of its young wards at once. At the office are five children, all under 14 years, who would welcome homes where they could go to school during the Winter. They are Joe, aged 14, a fine boy from a poor home. He is now at the Detention Home. George and Robert, aged 10 and 9. are brothers. Their father out of work and the family is destitute. Rosie, aged 7. is a homeless child. Billy, aged 10, wants a place on a farm, where he can go to school. His father Ja in the penitentiary and his mother will give him to a family for the coming Winter. Information regarding these "Fresh Air Kids" of last Summer may be ob tained from Mrs. Margaret .Thoroman, of the Associated Charities, 411 Com mercial block. Main 717, A-I517. EXAMINATION DATES SET TTnited States Civil Service Bureau Announces Vacancies. The United States Civil Service Com mission announces the following ex aminations: November 3, pharmaceutical chemist, male and female, for a position in the Bureau of Chemistry, Washington, D. C, salary 1800 to 2500 per annum; Investigator in agricultural insurance, male, for a position in the office of markets and rural organization. De partment of Agriculture. Washington, D. C. salary $1800 to $2400 per annum. November 4. Junior chemist in radio activity, male, for a position in the Bureau of Mines, Denver, Colo., salary $1200 to $1500 per annum; elevator conductor,- male, for a position in the De partmental Service, Washington, D. C, salary $400 to $720 per annum: ad vanced apprentice engraver, male.for a position in the Geological Survey, salary -(2.00 per diem; field agent, male, Are you looking for Nobby Black Silk Velvet Hats at a ridiculously low price? If so, see the beautiful Dress Hats on sale here tomorrow. Values range to $5.00. No hat in the en tire lot worth less than $2.95. -Small, medium and large hats displayed in our Morrison and Fourth-street windows. -Fifty styles from' which to make your selection. for a position in the Bureau of Crop Estimates. Department of Agriculture, salary $1600 per annum. November 10. assistant agriculturist, male, for a position in the Bureau of Plant Industry. Washington, D. C, sal $1800 to $2000 per annum. Nevember 18, labratory aid in tech nical agriculture, men and women, for a position in the Bureau of Plant In dustry, salary $600 to $90O per annum: pharmacist and physician's assistant, male, for a position at the II. S. Peni tentitiary, Leavenworth, Kan., safary $1000 per annum; aid in mineral tech nology, male, for a position in the divison of mineral technology in the National Museum, Washington, D. C. salary $1200 per annum: assistant in nutrition and hygiene, male, for a posi tion in the Department of Agriculture. Washington, D, C, salary $1440 per annum. November 18-19. manual training teacher, for a position at the Pine Ridge School. South Dakota, salary $900 per annum. Complete information and application blanks may be obtained from T. V. Hutchlns, local secretary, Postoffice building. Portlan, Or. LIVING COST IS DISCUSSED Addresses Heard by Episcopal Social Service League. Before an interested audience com posed of the members of the Episcopal Social Service League, Dr. S. E. Josephl, John F. Carroll and Eugene Brookings gave short addresses Monday night at a meeting of the organization in Li brary Hall. Methods of lowering the cost of living as a factor in assisting in so cial service work was the general theme. Dr. Josephl congratulated the league on its work in Scadding House and in the city and county jails. Mr. Carroll spoke of the public market as orre of the great means of lowering the cost of supplies. Eugene Brookings said the great cry of the day is to get people "back to the soil." but to do that he said farm life should be made attractive. CENTRALIA MILL REOPENS II. II. Martin Co. Resumes Work After Year of Idleness. CENTRALIA. Wash., Oct. 13. (Spe cial.) The H. H. Martin Lumber Com pany's mill in this city, which has been closed down for the past year, resumed operations yesterday morning with a full crew in the mill and a half crew in the woods. The mill pond Is choked with logs and a full woods crew will not be put on until part of these are sawed. The Martin mill employs a big force and its reopening is greatly welcomed. YOU CAN'T BRUSH OR WASH OUT DANDRUFF The Simplest and Quickest Way Is to Dissolve It. The only sure way to get rid of dan druff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arvon; apply It at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and you hair will be fluffy, lus trous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. If you want to preserve your hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for nothing destroys the hair more quick ly. It not only starves the hair and makes it fall out, but it makes it stringy, straggly, dull, dry, brittle and lifeless, and everyone notices it. "You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work. Adv. STOPS HEADACHE, PAIN, NEURALGIA Don't Suffer! Get a Dime Pack age of Dr. James' Head ache Powders. Tou can clear your head and relieve a dull, splitting or violent throbbing headache in a moment with a Dr. James' Headache Powder. This old-time headache relief acts almost magically. Bend some one to the drugstore now for a dime package and a few moments after you take a powder you will wonder what became of the headache, neuralgia and pain. Stop suffering it's needless. Be sure you set what you, aak or. Adv. Come Early for Best Selections $1.85 Millinery Always Something New" "Maderite" In. America is a slogan that means much to the American Housewife. It means the protection ' of the U. S. pure food laws, which demand that all fopds must conform to to a fixed o lauuai of purity. At All Grocers One pound 25 cents NATURAL COLOR TO GRAY HAIR BY AIR Hair dye Is not a natural color re storative. It simply STAINS the hair by Fowerful chemical action, and leaves a ustreless, dull finish that tells jour friends what you are using. The simple, clean and heiilthy method Is by using- Hay's Hair Health, which contains a wonderful element that so prepares the hair that the AIR th pure, fresh air you breathe causes it to COMK BACK to its natural color. It can't harm. It singles out every faded strand and restores it to the color nature intended healthy, lustrous, full of life. NO OTHER liESL'LT BUT THIS CAN BE PRODUCED. If you want these undreamed of benefits in your case if you want to REMOVE DANDRUFF and have a nor mal, healthy scalp, begrin at once the use of the NATURAL method Hay's Hair Health. NOT A Dl'K, but a mir aculous color restorer and scalp tonic all In one. If it fails, drug-grist will refund price. 25c, 50c and $1.00 at Drug Stores or direct upon receipt of price and dealer's name. Philo Hay Spec Co., Newark, N. J. Adv. Makes Face Young Tightens Love Ties A fretful expression, a wrinkled face and a faded complexion do more to drive the male members from home than is commonly supposed. It was one of my greatest diffi culties to appear smUltng, fresh and elegant when my dear ones were with me. But I have overcome all that. I have changed my mental attitude and I now find it second nature to look cheerful. Due partly to this, partly to a remarkable treatment recom mended by friend, my appearance has sn improved I look fifteen years younger than before. A simple face lotion made by dissolving an ounce of powdered saxolite in a half pint witch hazel, proved a wonderful wrinkle chaser. I still use this occasionally. To renovate my complexion I purchased an ounce of ordinary mercolized wax at my druggist's and before using this up. a. marvelous trans, formation had taken place. It was like re moving an unsightly mask, revealing a. new face, a youthful complexion of distinctive delicacy, clear, white and velvety. I mere-" ly applied the wax like cold cream before retiring, washing It off mornings. Ten days' treatment sufficed. "Aurilla" . In Club woman. Adv. a SXIH OF BEHUTY IS A JOT FOREVEB Dr. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL CREAM 03 MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER Removes Tin. Pim ples. Freckles. Moth Patches.Rasb and Skin Dieases and every blemish cn beauty, and de fies detection. It bas stood the test of 66 years, and is so harmless we taste it to be sure it ia properly made. Ac cept no counterfeit of similnr name. rr. 1 A. Sayre said to a lady of tiie hauttoa (a patient): "As you ladies will use them. I re commend 'Gsursud's Crtaia' as the least harmful of all the skin preparations." At druggists and Department stores. FtnL I. Hopkins & Son, Props. 37 Gnat Jones St.ll.TX. To Make Hairs Vanish From Face, Neck or Arms Keep a little powdered dclatone handy and when hairy growths appear make a paste with some of the pow der and a little water, then spread over hairy flurface. After 2 or S min utes rub off. wash the skin and It will be entirely free from hair or blemish. This simple treatment is. unfailing, but care should be exercised to be sure and get jrenuine delatone, otherwise jou may be disappointed. AUt. ;