TAKES OFF DANDRUFF,
HAIR STOPS FALLING
Save your Halrl Get a 25-cent bottle
of Danderlne right now Alto
tope Itching scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff that awful scurf.
There Is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of Its lustre, Its strength and Its very
life; eventually producing a feverish
ness and Itching of the scalp, which
if not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, lnnnon nnrl HI a than th
hair falls out fast A little Danderlne
tonight now any time will surely
save your hair.
Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's
Danderlne from any drug store. You
surely can have beautiful hair and
lots of it if you will just try a little
Danderlne. Save your halrl Try It!
Kept on "Layin'."
Anthony Comstock, at a luncheon In
New York, said of certain tabooed
books and plays:
"The motive of these works was
perhaps all right ' But the expression,
the form, was bad. And that spoiled
the motive completely.
"Expression form, you know. Is ev
erything. Consider how the lack of
it Bpoiled the mason's speech.'
"A mason at a memorial service said
of a bricklayer who had been acci
dentally killed:
" 'Yes, gents, I looked out once on
the beauties of nature, and all was
ca'm. Our friend, deceased here, was
layin' a brick. I looked out once
again, and still qil was ca'm, but our
friend, deceased, was no more. He
was layin' a corpse.' " Washington
Herald.
The Popular Fad.
"Well, this will be your con's last
year at college and football."
"Yes."
"Of course you're glad. He'll soon
settle down to something practical
and useful."
"I'm afraid not."
"Eh?'.'
"No. He expects to be a sociolo
gist" Cleveland Plain Dealer.
ARE YOU CONSTIPATED?
Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills have
proved tbelr worth for 75 years. Test them
yourself now. Send for sample to S72 Pearl
fit., Nw York. 'Adv.
Anomalous.
"This is a queer role you have In
this new production."
"How queer?"
"It Is a crooked role In a straight
drama."
Sugar cane In Argentina this season
la expected to yield 200,000 tons of
sugar, the largest crop the country
has had.
A famous optical works In Austria
Is UBing ultra violet rays produced by
arc lights, the carbons of which are
impregnated with the salts of Iron, for
examining the purity of materials with
which it deals.
10 CENT "CASCARETS"
FOR LIVER AND BOWEL8
Cure Sick Headache, Constipation,
Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Bad
Breath Candy Cathartic.
"No odds how bad your liver, stom
ach or bowels; how much your head
aches, bow miserable you are from
constipation, Indigestion, biliousness
and sluggish bowels you always get
relief with Cascarets. They Imme
diately cleanse and regulate the stom
ach, remove the sour, fermenting food
and foul gases; take the excess bile
from the liver and carry off the con
stipated waste matter and poison
from the Intestines and bowels. A
10-cent box from your druggist will
keep your liver and bowels clean;
stomach sweet and bead clear for
.months. They work while you sleep.
Anyway, false hair looks better on
a woman's head than when scattered
about on her dresser.
IF YOU NEED A MEDICINE,
YOU SHOULD HAVE THE BEST
Although there are hundreds of pre
parations advertised, there is only one
that really stands out pre-eminent as
a remedy for diseases of the kidneys,
liver and bladder.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands the
highest, for the reason that so many,
people say Is has proved to be Just
the remedy needed In thousands upon
thousands of even the moBt distress
ing cases.
Swamp-Root makes friends quickly
because its mild and immediate effect
Is soon realized in most cases. It Is
a gentle, healing vegetable compound.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Is a physi
cian s prescription ior special diseases
which la not recommended for every
thing. ' A Sworn Certificate of Purity Is
with every bottle.
For sale at all drug stores, In bottles
of two sizes fifty-cents and one-dol
lar.
Sample Size Bottle of 8wamp-Root
In order to prove what Swamp-Root,
the great kidney, liver and bladder
remedy will do for you, every reader
of this paper who has not already
tried It, may receive a sample site
bottle by Parcels Post. Enclose tea
cents and send to Dr. Kilmer ft Co,
uingnamton, n. y. write today.
PROPER COURSE IN READING
Systematic Selection, With a Purpose,
la About the Only Way to At
tain Results.
A' book, an apple, and a blazing fire.
What more can the heart of man de
sire r
Pretty near solid comfort Isn't UT
Especially if the fire burns without
smoking, the apple is ripe and Juicy,
and the book Is of the right kind. For
the book Is the most Important part
of the combination.
i In planning your reading for the
long winter months, it is a good thing
to have some definite idea in mind
some particular line along which you
would like to add to your store of In
formation. It may be history, biogra
phy, science or farming. It may be
that you would like to know more
about animals, or bug or birds. If
you take pains to plan your course of
reading carefully, you may In a few
months' spare time accomplish a great
deal.
Suppose for example, that you are
principally Interested in birds. There
are enough books, magazines and oth
er literature devoted to these pretty,
feathered friends so that it will be
easy to find material for the whole
winter's work on this one subject
Of course you should make notes as
you go along. In this way you can
save for future reference any scraps
of Information that you may glean
from the sources at your command,
and you will find, in a short time, that
you have accumulated a vast fund
of definite knowledge on the subject
For convenience you may divide
your notebook into several sections,
under such headings as follows:
1. Classes of birds., 2. Their nests
and nesting-places. 3. Their habits
and food. 4. Description and classifi
cation of common birds. 5. Birds
that are rare or extinct 6. Miscel
laneous notes and anecdotes.
Any subject may be divided in a
similar style. By following some
such methods one is enabled to put
knowledge Into definite shape, which
helps one to remember and make use
of vastly more than when it is left
a mere Jumble of odds and ends.
One need not In fact should not
confine reading to only the one cen
tral subject Good literature of any
kind should be mixed In for the sake
of variety. Every boy and girl should
acquaint themselves with the great
writers of prose and poetry, both of
our own and Of former times. The
boy and girl In the country have no
better time for this purpose than the
stormy days and long evenings of win
ter. Boy's Honesty Rewarded.
Little Willie Hinson, a sixteen-year-old
colored boy employed by John
D. Stlcht, 1147 Bedford avenue, Brook
lyn, Is a very honest youngster, for he
found a gold watch and fob, lost by
Miss Alice Barnes Shaffer, and with
out consulting anybody raced as fast
as his legs would carry him to the
Classon avenue station house and
there deposited his find with the lieu
tenant on the desk, saying: "Will you
see that this gets to the lady what
lost it?" .
Were It not for the fact that Mrs.
Jessie F. Barnes Schaffer, mother, of
the young woman who dropped her
watch and fob, had advertised her loss
the Jewelry might still be in the prop
erty department at police headquar
ters unclaimed. But Willie saw the
"lost a'd" and ' went to 243 Carlton
avenue, the home of Mrs. Schaffer,
with the news: "Lady, I found your
watch at Lafayette and Classon ave
nues, and I gave It in at the station
house." , A phone call to police head
quarters confirmed what Willie had
said. . .
Mrs. Schaffer gave the boy a sub-.
stantial reward. She said:
"It is not the trouble for which I
want to reward you, Willie, it is your
honesty."
When the World's Askew.
Take work. Do you complain of It?
Try doing more, of a productive sort
An engine builder received complaint
that his engine burned too much coal.
How many cars on the train?" was
the telegraphed query, with the reply,
"Four." "Try 12," went the prescrip
tion, and the train drew 12 with econ
omy of fuel. "Your brain tired?"
William James echoed a student
"Never mind, work straight on and
your brain will get Its second wind,
I myself do not know of any anodyne
surer and quicker than that found In
the garden. When all the world Is
askew, dibbling In seedlings In
straight rows is a wonderful solace.
Why do so many women treat do
mesticity as drudgery? Its Infinite
variety, so unlike the monotonous
tasks of men, ofter wearies the mind.
but like Chesterton, I do not see how
it can narrow It And socialism,
with Its cry of armchairs for working
men! Armchairs, as Crelghton nobly
says, will bring no lasting happiness,
but to quicken human being, even
one's self, Into a sense of the meaning
of bis life and destiny, that is a real
happiness. Atluntlc Monthly.
; MA 4 If ?
STRANGEST of all the Indian
dances are those that take place
in secret lodges under ground.
No outsider Is ever permitted to
witness these and their charac
ter can only be surmised from the
dances that take place in the plazas.
Dr. Herbert J. Spinden, of the Ameri
can Museum of Natural History, has
recently returned from a four months'
sojourn among the Pueblo Indians of
the Upper Rio Grande. He was espe
cially interested in the Tewa Indians,
as his studies on this trip were almost
wholly ethnological, and the rich myth
ology of the Tewas offered him a mine
of material.
Not All War Dances.
"Most persons think of those dances
of the Indians which were really war
dances as being the only ones which
were practised," said Dr. Spinden. "As
a matter of fact there are numerous
dances, extremely interesting and very
old, in which women as well as men
participate and which have nothing to
do with warfare. Few of these are
wholly social, although some of them
have that element Practically all of
them have a religious origin and to
day retain a religious significance.
"The Tewas are a simple,, agricul
tural people and their homes are doubt
less the oldest of any In the United
States.
"When the Spanish came they con
verted the Indians to the Roman Cath
olic religion, and nominally these- In
dians are still Catholics." i
But while many of the Tewas . re
tain many of the beliefs and ceremo
nies of the Catholic religion, they com
bine with them many of the myths
and observances of the religion that
antedated their acceptance of the
Christian. It was because of the early
opposition of thu Cothcllc priests to
this adherence to the old rites and cus
toms that the people sought secret
places under ground In which to prac
tice them. And, although the neces
sity for the secrecy has passed,, they
still hold these secret meetings, have
danceB that no white man has ever
seen and keep up other traditions with
a constancy and seclusion incompre
hensible to men of a different race.
Some white men say they have pen
etrated to these underground lodges
and have seen what was done there,
but Dr. Spinden does not believe that
they have ever been present at the
jarefully guarded ceremonies. The
most that they have done is to see the
vacant room or perhaps some dance of
no great significance. So cautious are
they that when thoro is to be one of
these Important conclaves at one of
the villages an Indian Is sent with a
roll of cloth to cover the windows and
doors of the house In which the teach
er, who Is much loved and respected,
lives In order that she may not see
anything that goes cn. Of course she
Is not permitted to go out of the house.
Formerly eome one was left on guard,
but they trust her pow sufficiently to
content themselves with fastening up
her house. Any stranger who was In
the neighborhood would bo Jealously
watched lent he should get any Inkling
of what went on In the underground
room. i
These lodges always contain an al
tar, and although most of them seem
to have no connection with the out
side world except the obscure en
trance, they have a splendid system of
ventilation. The participant In these
underground dances are always
masked.
. , While the American (whom they call
the red neck, not the white man, by
the way) may not penetrate to the un
derground chambers and witness the
most sacred dances, he may see in the
plaza dances of great variety and in
terest, deeply significant, each one a
little drama In itself. The Tewas, be
ing an agricultural people and depend
ing largely upon the amount of rain
that falls in a given time for the suc
cess or failure of their crops, put their
heart and their skill into the dances
which they perform In the hope of
drawing the beneflclent moisture of
the heavens down, to earth. One of
the dances takes Its name, tabllta,
from the curiously shaped "little tab
lets" which the women dancers wear
on their heads. -
These tower high above the straight
hanging black locks of hair, tbe ends
being tipped with soft feathers simu
lating clouds. The men wear very lit
tle clothing, the women appearing In
the customary black dress, sometimes
ornamented with some bright bead
work or embroidery. The dancers
scarcely lift their feet from the ground,
but keep them moving rhythmically
In time to the music. 'The most of the
motion Is confined to the knees, hands
and arms. In their hands they hold
fruits, leaves or flowers, a' favorite
branch being that of the sacred pine,
which Is reputed to have grown In
the underground world.
There are many dances represent
ing animals, that of the eagle being es
pecially - dramatic. The man who Is
to take the part of the eagle is won
derfully made up.
. Over the head Is drawn a sort of
sack of black cloth that covers the
hair and Is pulled forward to form a
beak.. A red line running around the
mouth and curling up on each cheek
gives the mouth of the eagle. On the
body there is little clothing except a
short apron and patches of eagle down
attached by a gum to the flesh. The
arms are made Into wings by means of
a cord strung with long hanging feath
ers stretched from hand to hand across
the back and a bunch of feathers at
the back make a tall. His hands are
painted yellow to look like claws. He
Is lured forth by the dropping of corn,
and as he follows this trail he uses
his arms as the eagle does his wings,
and with his entire body he sweeps
and moves like the bird he Is pictur
ing, but always In time to the wubIc.
In another dance a man represents
a dog. He Is made up to look as
much like one as possible, a'nd Is led
forth by an Indian maiden who has tied
her aash about the body and leads him
forth as a woman does her poodle on
a leash, except that they are both
keeping time to the steps of the dance.
Gentle.
"You'll find my waist an ' insur
mountable obstacle," said she. .
"How so?"
"Thore's no Kettinsr around U."
Feel Comfortable
after eating a hearty
meal? or is there a sense
of fullness of bloating
or Nausea. This indicates
a weakened condition of
the Stomach which can
be materially benefited
by a short course of
HOTTETTER'S
STOMACH
BITTERS
Hours. 10 a. m. to 6 p. bl
Hdj 5714
ot by
appointment
DR. JOSEPH ROANE
Chiropractor
SPINAL ADJUSTMENTS
Scientific Treatment of all Acuta and Chronic
Diseases. Licensed Practitioner. Suite 124-6-7
Arcade Building. Seattle. .
IF YOUR CHILD IS CROSS,
FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED
Look Mother! If tongue Is coated,
cleanse little bowels with "Cali
fornia Syrup of Figs."
Mothers can rest easy after giving
"California Syrup of Figs," because in
a few hours all the clogged-up waste,
sour bile and fermenting food gently
moves out of the bowels, and you have
a well, playful child again.
Sick children needn't be coaxed to
take this harmless "fruit laxative."
Millions of mothers keep it handy be
cause they know Its action on the
stomach, liver and bowels Is prompt
and sure.
' Ask your druggist for a 60-cent bot
tle of "California Syrup of Figs,"
which contains directions for babies,
children of all ages and for grown-ups.
The American Automobile.
New York Commercial: According
to American and European statistics
there are In use in the United States
1.400.000 motor earn. In nlnn nf the.
leading countries of Europe there are
o limit C A A nni mu xi
United States, In other words, operate
more than twice as many automobiles
as do England, France, Germany, Rus
sia, Italy, Austria-Hungary, Spain,
Norway and Sweden combined.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not
stain the kettle. .
His Disposition.
During a concert tour of the lata
Theodore Thomas and his celebrated
orchestra one of the musicians died,
and the following telegram was Imme
diately dispatched to the parents of
the deceased: -
"John Blank died suddenly today.
Advise by wire as to disposition."
In a few hours the answer was re
ceived, reading as follows:
. "We are heartbroken; his disposi
tion was a roving one." Washington
Herald.
To Brcal: In New Shoes.
Alway shake In AllcuV Foot-jas. anowder
It cures Lot, sweating, arhin,?. swollen
Cure, corn., Ingrowing nail, Su b'.nior?. Al
U drogR ,1s and .hoc mere,, a,-. Dont a,cent
nv , uUstit ule. Sample maj lid AddreSi
&lleu 6. Olmsted, Le Koy.N. Y. - AQare
A numbfer of rjrom!runt nritioh la
bor leaders are planning a new policy
which, eliminating the benevolent fea
ture of the unions, will leave all the
funds to supply the war chest; in
other words, will convert the trade
unions into a fighting machine.
The farmers and wage-earners of
Tennessee have progressed rapidly
with their cooperative union, both in
the country and in the city, and they
now have their first store in Memphl
vui ur lUWN
PEOPLE
en recelre prom pi treat.
trtTiii Ul '""
C GEE WO
the ChlnM Au-
thT.n? ftfit 'oT.d",hI!r,, ,,,OT!',
ttunent rollef. i2?ti?u1 L'" " ol'lped p.
otlon l.qolck. .aW ISd Wr. ? S ird7,w0,
fre oomponnded froni RontV. W.JiST' "tlon!
Hrk, that have bn i f "' """l ana
ter of the SKV ThllSrew
re not known to the outS.?.iShE",l porcine.
Eendod down from l.S.riBrildltut )
(amUlea la China! to eon In U philoUn
CON8DATION PKEB.
THE G. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO.
first St, Cor. Morrisc
ruruana. Oregon.
1 ' fan,