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The Tribune from Scranton, Pennsylvania • Page 12

Publication:
The Tribunei
Location:
Scranton, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12 TELL SCKANTQN REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1916 'V SC No. 35 EDUCATION FOR WAGE EARNING, EFFICIENCY (Copyright, 1111. by Bull L. Smith, Philadlphi). TOPIC OF TALK Discussed By Prof.

M. J. Cos tello at Dinner of Teachers Heidi in Carbondale. Prof. M.

J. Costello, vice principal of BAKING In Our Window on the wonderful NEW DOCK ASH RANGE, now being DEMONSTRATED, by a BAKING EXPERT, at KAPLAN'S FURNITURE BAZAAR, 211 213 LACKAWANNA AVENUE, SCR ANTON, PA. THIS is the only EXCLUSIVE FURNITURE HOUSE in the city showing this WELL KNOWN RELIABLE MAKE. Come and See What Scranton Labor and Skill Can Produce At the SCRANTON STOVE WORKS 1866 50 Years Old 1916 til Technical High sscnooi at me meei of the English teachers at Carbon J.1 ek4ilav mariA fin address on "EdU cation for Wage Earning" that attracted much attention. The address follows: ft Klven by the high schools to the boy and RlFl WnO mUSL KCl xilC ww.vx without much ado, the great big ever tramping army of young people who are being compelled, through force of circumstances, to Join the ranks of wage earners in early life.

According to etatistics of the United States commissioner of education, of every one hun KKKP YOI DYNAMO WORKING (a) SUCCESS IS THE OUTCOME OF YVEMi DIRECTED ACTION. Just rplain simple action is with many people, a difficult They look upon exertion and the expenditure of energy as hard work and so shrink from and avoid it. Too many like ease and comfort without working for it. But to vitalize action by giving it principled direction, is a task that must be He who 'how, to evolve out of himself continuous action at all times well directed, has learned the secret of success. (b) PUT POSITIVE ACTION UNDER FULL HEAD OF STEAM.

Not only should you give positiyeness and well directed purpose to your action at all times, but you must put driving power behind it. High tension applied to effor: of muscle or brain Is what develops them. You'tnust employ gymnastic tactics and train for development 'and added efficiency. Encourage the growdh of your ambitions. Fan these into living flames.

Shovel on the fuel. Get up your steam. (o) KEEP YOUR HEAD LEVEL. Poise of mind js a most excellent attainment. It lielips you to Judge accurately, decide positively, and act wisely.

The attitude of your mind Is the weathervane that shows the trend of your thoughts. Your "head contains high powered machinery which may Ibe driven at high speed. Keep that machinery in the best working order. Don't let it rust out. Properly cared for, It is difficult to wear it out.

(d) KEEP YOUR HEART PURE. While you think with your mentality, yet the purposes of flhe heart are the guiding factors Your motives are iheart qualities. "As you think in your heart so are you," is a statement of fact demands more than your passing notice. (e) THINKS TURN ON THE BATTERY OF ENTHUS IASM! What you do, depends upon you and you alone. You yourself must turn on the ipower that makes things move.

You may double your 'producing powers. You can increase the effectiveness of your work by keeping up your enthusiasm. Turn on the battery at full power. dred Doys wno enter mc imu ox twenty four will not return after the flrat year, forty eight will not return l. 1 a and ROVArtv.SlX will not return at the beginning ot the fourth.

Of the survivors from five to ten are preparing for college work, and of thU group, two go through college Absolutely Guaranteed. The Greatest Kitchen Triumph DOCIASi COAL GAS RANGE One Range In Kitchen the Year Round Cooks. Bakes and Heats Water by Gas Cooks. Bakes and Heats Water by Coal WORTH WHILE MEDITATION He Who knows how to evolve out of himself continuous action at all times well directed, has learned the secret of success. and represent me eeieui jt I think, the high schools have been mov ins the entire machinery of the English department too long.

Far be It from me to disparage in a Ingle regard the noble heritage of the sea that comes to us through the so called cultural aides of education. It urely lo of great consequence in the make up of our achool system, but 1 feel that we have been giving to it the lion's share of attention. We persist in feeding to the ninety and nine Johnny Smiths and Kosie Whites, who are destined to leave the ranks of the school marchers early, most high and lofty appreciations of things that are among the clouds. Instead of aim in to meet their needs by giving them an ability In the use of clear, terse English necessary In modern dally life and an appreciation of such literature as touches their surroundings we are too often stretching out for them Into the MUtonlc atmosphere of the past What a grievous offense it Is to send out into the shops and storerooms young people who have a bemuddled and befuddled idea of all that we should mean by English such as is concerned in build in; the foundations of later life! And yet the mass of khowledge this class gebs through he ramification of lofty requirements In English and the things that are presumed to be for the souls of the chosen ones does much to cloud their sky. Tou may say it is not the business of the school to get itself down to the needs of the "so called mob that this motley throng should take whatever cars of itself and keep apace with the work mapped out for the Patricians.

i Should Meet This Heed. But all the public is paying for the Mgb ehool; all the public is entitled to the best possible service to all the people. The school should provide me thods to meet the needs of life for all pupils. The boy and girl who spend one week within the walls should be .00 fall Places This Wonderful Combination Range in Your Home Balance on Easy Payments ing English to them? Don't you believe that they would be more interested in reading Babcock and Wilcox on steam or the educational, literature of the Carnegie Steel company and General Electric company to living in the society of Sir Roger de Coverley's day? Are they more likely to be concerned about Popular Mechanics and Scientific American than about the development of the subplot in "Macbeth?" Why, then. Is It not nnssible to give them attention In drills for legible marginal lines, correct spelling, punctuation and paragraphing, with real live shop reports than using as models worn out letters which Lord Ma caulay, when a school boy, wrote to hie enough practical values in English work is demonstrated best by our asking those who meet our pupils and employ them1, whether the condition of their English work Is satisfactory or not.

Their harsh statements are always unanimous. We may say that those who are Judging are not fit Judges. Is this explanation enough? Scarcely Will Be Wage Earners. The purpose of an overwhelming number of boys and girls who are with us in the schools is undoubtedly wage earning. We must fit them for this and in the way that they can do it best.

If they were to live their lives and earn their bread within the narrow end aristocratic confines of the classroom, then we might remain firm In our fixity of purpose, in our hewing close to the line of the past. But unfortunately for our viewpoint they must be fitted to serve the needs of those who pay them real money. If uhis body of people is not satisfied with the supposed experts whom we send them, trained thoroughly and efficiently In the knowledge of the highly cultural English of the classroom, trained to a nicely in an ability tc dissect literary effusions, and to apread themselves on soaring topics In theme writing, then we must look to It we must change. If the world that we fit for Offer Good Only During Demonstration Time 30 Days FREE Trial We make it Easy for you to Buy. We make it Easy for you to pay on any Scranton Dockash Range.

213 LACKAWANNA AVE. persists, as It seems to be persisting, in feeling that those whem It gets from us are not capable of doing very much of anything it wants, or fitting in to much of any place, we should rub our eyes. When we come to do this I feel that we will realize the worn out values if English work that what met the i eeds of life. in the ages past has alii into a slough of despond. But do not infer that I believe that tt ie world is going to be ever rid of the esthetic, or that there are not in it SOOTH SCRANTON MY TIRED FEET ACHED FOR 'TIZ' people to whom the aesthetic should be given in school Do not gather that I would have eliminated from the courses of study in schools the pursuit of the beautiful or the acquirement of the cultural.

May the time never be at hand when all the stored un pleasures of the father? The boy or girl who is going to do work as a secretary much prefers to know and Is really forced to know how to write well a common sense type of business letter, how to display initiative in the development of business 'transactions that call for the use of terse, unvarnished English, rather than a knowledge of how to analyze anapestic hexameter. Of what use it is to have a girl who is destined to brighten a home flre slde with radiant smiles wear out her patience and flitter away her nerves writing a five hundred word theme on the development of chivalry in ancient Babylonia? Or point out the salient points in the exordium of the Bunker Hill address? Of course, I realize as one looks at that scheme outlined by the skilful school system for the edification of the onlooker, it is admirable, it is charming. But is it not a fact that the wrong way to develop a taste for polite letters and polite learning is to perpetuate the system that tortures harmless youngsters who have no option but to sit under it. Here again let me say that this does not insinuate that there should not be some time and much time, too, given in the schools for getting to pupils a love for the beautiful In literature the accumulated treasures of our glorious literary past, books of delightful essays, adventures, treasures and histories. And one might, with all this, get to an appreciation of the poets Longfellow, Whlttier, Poe, Grey, Wordsworth, Tennyson, Kipling, and the noble hosts of others.

But I would argue that this love for literature and appreciation of all its glorious things should not be given to the mass of high school pupils by the teacher with a dissecting knife in hand, ready to cut to pieces for the gaping wonderment of the helpless pupils the most beautiful things of the pest. Let us teach our love for literature as it should get to the boys and girls something that is vital, ferceful, and all that Is meant by beautiful. Changes Are Blow. Slowest of all the changes has been this process of educational change. One hundred years ago the English education of the American boy or girl amounted to the acquisition of enough learning for a profession.

But recently the National Cash Register company issued a leaflet showing one hundred things not known thirty five years ago; one hundred things that have contributed to the demand for a revolution in the acquisition of English. Among them are such every day things as sanitary drinking past are to be attacked in ruthless! lust as sacred charges as tne iavorues of fortune whom the principal boastfully reports as passing their English as a major subject at college. School should give the boy who must get to the world's work next month or the month after, a preparation that will make him worth something to himself and his employers. It should ring Just as true for him and his needs, even though it must make more earnest effort to search out his needal as it does for him who has been picked by fortune to enter the lists of the colleges. I feel that the English departments In our high schools should do proportionately much more for him.

If there be any discrimination against either one of the two classes it can be borne better by those who are picked to enter the Promised Land and eat of its manna As things are now, there is surely a lead to a blind alley in our English work for the less fortunate class. Tou go to any number of boys or girls who have been forced to leave the high schools during their freshman, sophomore or Junior year and get from them some tangible evidence of the English they have acquired in the school. What a sad and sorry mess you are likely to find. How much of all the delightful cultural food that has proved palatable? Scarcely enough to leave the slightest impression. Their knowledge of spoken English is far from what it should be: their inability to display much Initiative in constructing written English is most evident.

Then, what has the school done for them along the line of English training that is tangible? The Areopagus of Athens and the Forum at Rome have crumbled in the long ago; Catallne, Boswell, Beuclerc, Reynalds and the Club are only memories, and for the boy who is forced to throw himself shortly among the rough and tumble things of life, I question how much attractiveness they have. However pleasant the reading of Burke's "Speech on Conciliation" may be, or the perusal of Addison is. In providing an evening: of delight, they open few immediate vistas to the chap who is asked to be the rapid fire c.erk or mechanic and to sit down to the writing of an order for ten barrels of apples or a report of the breaking of an axle in a shop machine. Fifty years of trial have proved that our theory has fallen down somewhat, at least The demand from nine tenths of the boys and girls who so out from our hands, whether partly finished, half finished, or paragons of finished products is not, as the world goes, a highly literary one Then, why have we been feeding the food that is suitable for the one to the ninety nine who are crying out in starving fashion for something else Let us pay Just a little more attention to the children who have as their allotment but one or two years of high school life Would Interest Them. For Instance, let us take a group of boys for are forced to leave their school work before it is finished, to go into the shops.

Why not offer them something that has to do with hand and machine work? They really prefer while at school to stay in the shops all day and not touch academic work. Maybe they sre wrong. but this is their attitude. Whv not seize this as a means of teach Let Your Sore, Swollen, Aching Feet Spread Out in a Bath of "Tiz." rasnion iiei not tnose wno wuum argue against a change beg the question so far as to say that there is any advocacy of such a calamity on the part of the one who would suggest a change Far be it from me to even remotely offer a possibility of such a (rearrangement. What I would emphasize is that all this is a luxury; the other is a necessity.

When the second is acquired and Is quite well in hand, then let us get to the development of the first. Let us start not at the twelfth story of the sky the room in which Ihe. corpse rested and were banked high above the casket. L.ong before the time set for tVs funeral throngs tilled the home to pay their last tribute of respect to her memory. Interment was in the family plot in the Pittston avenue cemetery.

The pall bearers were: Ailolph Heusner, Julius Heier, August Huer, Charles Scherich, Charles Phillips and Peter Hartman. The flower carriers were: Charles. William and Marvin Heusner. Fred Hartman, Floyd Carl and Robert Phillips. Birthday Gathering.

A pleasant social wa.s held at the hJme of Mr. and Mrs. John Fickus, 415 Birch street, in honor of Mrs. John Fickus and her daughter Hmma's hirtn day. Unusual party diversions were indulged in and a dainty luiieceoii was served by the Misses Elizabeth and Charlotte Fickus.

Solos were reiideivJ by Charlotte, Charles and Jonn Duet by the Misses Charlotte Huriman and Charlotte Fickus, accompanied by Freda Smith. Prizes won by I. Vila Kossman and Charlotte Hartman Those present were: r. and Mrs. Fred Gun ter, Mr.

and Mrs. John Fickus, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Beckerle, Mrs. A.

Hartman, Mrs. Dora Lengler. Misses Freda Smith, Lydia Kossman, Mollie Wunder waldt, Charlotte Hartman, Katheryu Lye, Elizabeth Lye, Grace Howard, Carolyn Weber, Ruth Uunter, Helen Gunter, Charlotte, Elizabeth and Emma Fickus, George Beckerle, Charles Hart n. John Fickus. Arthur Weber, Carl Fickus.

scraper to build our edifice; rather let the pupils will be on Hit various rooms. school bor rd. teachers and the unit: in ing a cordial to 'pah mix iui friends of the schools to he this occasion. The pa. itois liiivc spomled In large numbers lu vltatious in the and evtni been very successful, and we cxpvt n.c present one will be no les.

00. request the hearty intei ami ro ticn of the patron "(iumlyear" Maultled liankn Muse. V7 C. Cat ter. Hard v.

4. i i. date. Adv. Mrs.

William J. Sneiiicor is iiiK treatment at the I pital schuol. Class No. 10 of the M. K.

Sim'f. school held a father son lmnooi, Monday evening in the Sunui.y school room The following nun save talks Rev. Dr. u. 1..

Scvcrsoii, pastor of ill. church: W. B. Rawling, of the Sunday school, and II Sw gle. teacher of the class.

Those resent were: Rev. O. L. Severson. (ooik' Cool.

W. r.awlinjrs. I). Harris, W. i Kc iirles.

I'. A. Peck, David H. Evans. Frank Barnes.

11. V. Swingle, (ieorg. Harris. Harold I'lu miner.

Herbert Bradley, Ronald Uhutler, Albert liams, Mahlon Peck. Clarence Searie. Franklin Hawlings, David B. Evans, James Barnes, Harold Scarle. The choir of the Baptist cnuri and clfcsy No.

4 will repeat, with variations, the old folk concert on Wednesday evening. May 17. Regular business meeting at the Baptist church Thursday evening. us secure a solid foundation mat win enable the erection of a structure with Immense possibilities. If the cry that is continually going up has anything of truth in it) it is for us to stop and pause.

It is well and good for the teacher toargue that every body else is wrong and that tne scnooi Is right, that those who set themselves up as critics know not what they talk about. But it is pot possible that an examination of conscience would get us to the point that maybe we are as the English soldier who felt that everybody else except himself in the line was off step. What if the rest of the world is keening proper time to the music of the I bands of progress and we are the soldiers 1 lfnA Tr, 1 1. ha ST. ALOYSIUS PLAYERS PRIMED FOR FINE SHOW The people of South Scranton and nearby places will be given a trea; on Monday and Tuesday evening of next week when the St.

Aloysius society will stage its eighth annual performance in the form of a farce comedy entitled "Facing the Music." The play was written by James Henry Darnely. an English writer, the scene being Liver pool, London. The cast is comprised of nine characters. Rev. John Smith, Mr.

John Smith, Colonel Smith, Dick Desmond, Sargeant Duffel, Nora, Mabel, Mrs. Fotheringay and Mis. Panting. The performers, while amateurs, have conducted themselves in a creditable manner in several past playlets. Torrance Maloney, the John Smith of the play, is an old performer.

He has directed numerous dramas and minstrels during the past fifteen years. James Brown, in the role of Dick Desmond, is another prominent amateur actor, having played in several minstrels staged by the society as well as with the Lancers. Misses Theresa Walsh, Anna Casey, Genevieve Sullivan, and Catherine Devers have also distinguished themselves in the past as performers as well as have Francis O'Boyle, William Wren and William Spellman, the other members of the cast. Thomas Evans, who needs no Introduction to the people of Scranton, has been supervising the cast in rehearsals for the past two months. He believes the play wil surpass by far any performance staged by the society.

Edward Boyle, president of the society and also chairman of the committee on arrangements and W. E. Lavelle, secretary, have been kept busy for the past two weeks supplying the demands for tickets. The capacity of St. John's Hall will be exhausted on both evenings is the belief.

rnneral of Mrs. Charles Heier. The funeral of Mrs. Charles Heier, of 439 Birch was held yesterday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from her late home and was attended by hundreds of sorrowing friends and relatives. Services were conducted at the house by Rev.

Theo. F. Hahn, pastor of the First German Presbyterian church and Rev. W. A.

Nordt, pastor emeritus. The deceased was a devout member of the above church. A fitting tribute was paid to her memory by the pastor in a eulogy he delivered. During the services a quartet from the church, Mtas Margaret Haag, Miss Mary D. Wirth, John Stoeher and Herman Dornheim, rendered several hymns.

The floral offerings were strewn about Card of Thanks. We desire to express our sincere thanks to all who so kindly assisted us in the late death of Carey Hrazill and especially to the doners of flowers. Mrs. and Mrs. P.

J. Needham Adv. TAKE SALTS TO nilU OIC VUl VX .1111., Iklll lb shocking? BOY SCOUTS TO STAGE A MINSTREL SHOW In St. Luke's Parish house on Friday evening. May 12, the Boy Scouts of St.

Luke's will give a minstrel show under the auspices of the Woman's Guild of the church. The show will be for the benefit of the Summer camp fund of the Scouts and also the $1,000 the Women's guild have pledged to the church fund. The entertainment promises to be most enjoyable and a large attendance is expected. Carnation Social a Success TIT 1 1 r. noimp 1)0.

Willi u.i a LLC ul.ii iivi lore tnrongea Atnietic nail tne uiuita wjfmww frtlMTniTfl auxiliary of the Scranton Saenger I'l I It'll lrLVV runde conducted an unusually fine Car I I Aii I If IIF. I Just take your shoes oil and then put those weary, shoe crinkled, aching, corn pestered, tortured feet of yours in a "Tiz" bath. Tour toes will wiggle with joy; they'll look up at you and almost talk and then they'll take another dive in that "Tiz" bath. When your feet feel liks lumps of lead all tired out just try "Tiz." It's grand it's glorious. Your feet will dance with joy; also you will find all pain gone from corns, callouses and bunions.

There's nothing like "Tiz." It's the only remedy that draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up your feet and cause foot torture. Get a 25 cent box of "Tiz" at any drug or department store don't wait. Ah! how glad your feet get; how comfortable your shoes feel. Tou can wear shoes a size smaller If you desire. nation social.

As the guests entered I A IJ VMAA lUirl mMm A SEVERE ITCHING OF Eat less meat if you feel Back achy or have Bladder trouble. the hall they were presented witn a beautiful carnation, an emblem of welcome. Music for the occasion was furnished by Whalen's orchestra. The hall was attractively garbed In appropriate decorations from dome to floor and the affair as a whole was a most enjoyable one. The following were the committee in charge: Mrs.

Charles Rillstone, chairwoman, Mrs. Edward Claus, Mrs. Henry Kiefer. Mrs. 'William Garbrecht, Mrs.

C. A. Hagen, Mrs. L. C.

King. Mrs. William Kirst and Mrs. Harry Whalen. memtiok The ladies' section of the Junger Maennerchor met last evening in their quarters in the South Side Bank, build Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the kidneys in their ef forts to filter it from the system.

Res! PIMPLESON FACE Very Big and Hard. Obliged to Scratch and Was Disfigured. Lost Sleep at Night. HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT lar eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; re tountains, moving pictures me telegraph, cash register, Rays, skyscrapers, aeroplanes, adding machines, wireless telegraphy, picture post cards, and many others along these lines.

This is assuredly an age of expansion and great possibilities. Printing materials, newspapers, magazines, development of steam, have made a new civilization. There is big inspiration that is unmistakable about the treasures of the olden day, "the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome," yet, are we not introducing modern youth too much to the intellectual inheritance of the ages past and keeping too much from them the practical values of the present? How many of us, if we were to answer honestly to our own conscience, would acknowledge that we began to dislike Shakespeare because we studied Macbeth, and Scott's beautiful romances had no attractiveness for us since we read I van hoe at school: that poetry meant the abyss of unthinkable desolation since we chopped to pieces lines from the Golden Treasury. No one denies the value of a precise study of Burke's "Speech on Conciliation," Macaulay's "Essays on Johnson," Milton's "Minor Poems" or an intensified interest in "Macbeth," and yet, for the goodly number, for the vast majority, is it not, as Mr. Churchill says, "a providing with antique China when what is needed is a most ordinary soup plate?" There is need of self reliant citizens: the boys and girls of our school room are going into the world of trade and industry.

We are moving the machinery of schools as if conditions today were Just as in the long ago. In the distant day school fitted by learned discourse, technical and daily composition for a life of splendid ease. Now things are different, the output is headed straight, in most cases, for the store, the workshop or; the factory. Insistance upon the continuation of bookish courses of study in English is unfair and illogical. The over estimated and over emphasized course of English in grammar, language and literature must eventually give way to a method that will provide for some mastery, at least, of the principles of English that have to do most with industry and trade.

The world of the school room today is to become the world of industry tomorrow. We need an English of resources and products, or methods of transportation, or Industrial activity to a greater degree than it is given. The necessities of today are somewhat different from those of fifty years ago Let us ask ourselves the question whether we have kept pace with them, whether in this industrial nation of government supported schools, we are not promoting the system of teaching and learning a mother tongue that is educating away from industry. The fact that may, not ba. fetttn moving all the acids, waste and poison else you feel a dull misery in the kid Ing.

Frank Kelly, first gunner mate on You owe yourself This Rare Treat after the. heavy, meats and the canned vegetables of the Winter with a jaded stomach and rebellious liver Shredded Wheat With Strawberries a dish that is deliciously nourishing and satisfying a perfect meal for the Spring days, and so easily and quickly prepared, For breakfast; for luncheon, or any meal. ney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach Be Careful in Using Soap on Your Hair "I bad a great deal of trouble with pun plei. First a pimple appeared on my face sad it multiplied very quickly and I picked sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine Is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get Irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times durlnz the night.

tne Datiiesnip ArKansas, rui post after spending a furlough as the guest of his mother at 440 River street. Steve Gregory, of Pittston avenue, is confined to his home with a severe attack of blood poisoning. The Young People's society of the Christ Lutheran church, met last evening and discussed arrangements for a social to be conducted the latter part of this month. DEEDS RECORDED The following deeds were recorded yesterday in the office of Recorder of Deeds Peter Haas: Steve Kluke et ux to Genevieve M. Clarke, land in Simpson, $1.

Northwest Coal company to Steve Kluke, land Simpson, $500. Charles Dittfel et ux to Kostanty Klepudlo, et ux, land in Scranton, $1,975. Alman E. Hobbs et ux to Peter W. land in South Abington, $1.

Lackawanna Laud company to Mrs. Mary Kaugher, land in Lackawanna township, 300. Lackawanna Land company to Mrs. MiYy Kaugher, land in Scranton, $100. Carbondale Machine company to Delaware Hudson company, land in Fell township, $1.

Dolph Land company to Delaware Hudson company, land In Olyphant, $1. Dolph Land company to Delaware Hudson company, land in Olyphant, $1. John T. Richard, L. A.

Watres and Mrs. Mary L. Trescott, executors of the estate of John Handley, deceased, to Michael Bosak, land In Scranton, 80.000. Arthur L. Stevens et ux, to Peter Ferko, et ux, land in Madison township, $6,600.

x.j Paul Frankowski, et ux to Andrew Mezera, et ux. land in Jermyn, $850. hai i.n nmnticinar' irrigation 'To neutralize these Irritating aelda and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts PECKVILLE the pimples and thought they would come off but they didn't. They were very big and hard and they festered all over my face. The itching was so severe that I was obliged to scratch my face, and my face was disfigured.

I alse lost my sleep at night. from any pharmacy; take a taoiespoon fnl in a glass of water before break fast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very Injurious, as It dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use la just plain mulsifled cocoanut oil, for It is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else all to pleceB.

Tou can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it In, about a tcaspoonful Is all that Is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright fluffy, wavy, and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff.

from the acid of grapes ana lemon PECKVILLE. May 10. Patron day will be observed in the Blakely schools on the following dates At No and Columbus school. Thursday. May 11.

Exercises by the pupils of the first, second and third grades 1 be held In the afternoon; by the pupils of the fourth, fifth and sixth evening. At the High school the oay will be observed on Friday. May 1 when exercises will be held by tbo. PU pils of the first to sixth grades. In the afternoon and by the pupils of the seventh, eig hth and ninth grades and by the High school department in the evening.

Specimens of the work or Juice, combined with llthia, and has.btfen used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladdei Irritation. Jad Salts is Inexpensive harmless and makes a delightful effervescent llthia water drink which mil "The trouble lasted three weeks and I tried many remedies but got no relief, "i hen I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I was entirely healed in three weeks." (Signed) Miss Anna Stiakarrez, 302 Vine Plymouth, July 14, 1916. Sample Each Free by Mall With 32 p. Skin Book on request.

Address pott card "Catlcara. Dept. Held tjjsngnottt the world. lions of men and women take now andl then, thus avoiding serious kidney and bladder diseases. for more than a century, Its first canal Made at Niagara Fall N.

V. having been begun in iit. 4 i If iiitfiW A jt.r..

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