TMSCARETS" FOR
A BILIOUS LIVER
Fir sick headache, bad breath,
Sour Stomach and
constipation.
Oat a 10-cent box now.
Ms odds how bad your liver, stomach
ar bowels; how much your - bead
Mhsa, how miserable and uncomfort
able yon are from constipation, indiges-
Man. biliousness and sluggish bowels
> |Bt always get the desired results
yrtfk Cascarets.
Don't let your stomach, liver and
tovals make y3V miserable. Take
Chwiai i In to-night; put an end to the
fcaadacbe. biliousness, dizziness, nerv
•assess, sick, sour, gassy stomach,
feackache and all other distress;
your Inside organs of all the
gases and constipated matter
Vfck* is producing the misery.
▲ lucent box means health, happi
•Mas and a clear head for months.
Mo more days of gloom and distress
flf you will take a Cascaret now and
thea. All stores sell Cascarets. Don't
ferget the children—their little in
•Uea need a cleansing, too. Adv.
OH, Quit It!
The tea drinking of Great Rrltnip
amounts to about 3,000 cups per lndi
VttfuAl for a year, accordinK to statls
tfae, which probably accounts for the
tannin' fier athletes get whenever
they enter into competition with us.—
Vkfladelpliia Inquirer.
THICK, GLOSSY HAIR
FREE FROM DANDRUFF
Atrial Beautify Your Hair! Make It
Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant—Try
the Moist Cloth.
*
Try as you will, after an application
af Dander! ne, you caunot find a single
teace of dandruff or failing hair and
foar eealp will not itch, but what will
please you most, will be after a few
weeks' use, when you see new hair,
Une and downy at first—yes—but real
ly new hair—growing all over the
—alp
A little Danderine Immediately dou-
Maa the beauty of your hair. Nodiffer
mmee bow dull, faded, brittle and
aeraggy. Just moisten a cloth with
Standerine and carefully draw it I
Sttoagh your hair, taking one small
atrand at a time. The effect Is im-
BMdiate and amazing—your hair will
fee light, fluffy and wavy, and have an
appearance of abundanco; an incom
parable luster, softness and luxuri
■aee, d»e beauty and shimmer of true
ftatr health.
Oet a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine from any store and prove
that your hair is as pretty and soft
aa any—that it has been neglected or
tajsred by careless treatment—that's
aIL Adv.
t
The Original Cause.
. , '"He 'bent every effort to make
teoney."
1 cnppoee that is how he became so
crooked in his dealings."
COLDS & LaGRIPPE
*' .lor 6 doses 666 will break any case
at -Chills &. Fever, Colds & IjftGrlppe; j
It acts on the liver better than Calo
asel and does not gripe or sicken,
ttico 25c. —Adv.
-j, Our idea of a fussy man is one who
ten t on speaking terms with his own
conscience half the time. ,
For Every
Kind of Wk
Lameness
Rub It on and I
Rub it W
Thoroughly
HANFORD'B
Balsam of MyiTh
Tor Cuts, Burns,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
I Jim* R«plf )
, Old Sores, Open Wounds,
9mA aU External Injuries. 1
kate Sines 1848.
Price 25c, 80c and SIXO
, M Dealers
(TBOOTH3VERTO^
Dyspepsia Tablets
S* latastfoal Fermentation, Immediately.
BeaemOasaod Distress after Eating. One
Mc. Money refunded It they do
MlMa, or write for free Sample Box and
TKT Uwm Bra If yon wish.
ti mmtm nOTwaTwca lew rat
SORE EYES
Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion
fgßaaas seal cores sore and inflamed eye• ii
as 48 hoars. Helps the weak eyed, cure
aMaamuL Ask your druggist or dealer te
Minors. Only from Reform Dispensary
St 8. Broad. Atlanta. Georgia
For Handu BOBS and
■
Girls to Make and Do
r / '• i
f 1
I
(Copyright by A. Neebr Hafl)
By A. NEELY HALL.
A PORTABLE WRITING DESK.
I Every boy needs a writing desk,
and the plans below show an entirely
! new idea for a desk. It has no legs,
I bnt is made to stand upon a table.
J The front drops down to write upon,
: just like a drop-leaf of any desk.
1 When the front is closed and hooked,
| the desk is in a compact form, and it
j may be lifted from the table by
means of the handle attached to the
j top and stood in some out of the way
! corner until wanted for use again.
A grocery box, together with its
| cover or some additional box boards,
is needed for working material.
After renalling any hoards that
may bo loose, cut the board A of a
length equal to the inside length of
the box, and of a width equal to the
inside depth of the box (Fig. 4), and
the piece B of equal width and 2 Vfc
inches high; Fasten piece B across
the center board A, with nails driv
en through A into the edge of 13. Then
fasten the nailed together pieces in
THE FDRTABLC WRITING- DESK CLOJCD
the upper part of the box, as Bhown
in Fig. 3, to form pigeon-holes. Nail
through the ends of the bok' into the
ends of board A and down through
the top into the edge of board B, to
hold the pieces in place.
Strip C (Fig. 5) forms the front to
a rack for stationery and loose papers
(Figs. 2 and and has four screw
hooks screwed into it (Fig. 5) for pen
and pencil racks. Cut this strip of a
length equal to the inside length of
the box, and about 2 inches wide, and
fasten it between the ends of the box,
about 1 inch out from the box bot
tom, by driving nails through the box
endß into its ends.
The box-cover boards should be
fastened together with two strips
placed across them near the ends as
shown in Fig. 1, for the front drop
leaf. Either nail or screw these cross
pieces to the boards, using nails or
screws short enough so they will not
THE PORTABLE WHITING-DESK OPEN
go all the way through the two thick
nesses of wood. Hinge the drop-leaf
to the inside of the desk bottom with
a pair of 2-inch hinges, as shown in
Fig. 2. Fasten a small hook to each
end of the desk, and screw a small
screw-eye into each end of the drop
leaf in the proper position for it to
hook Into, as a means for hooking the
drop-leaf when closed.
A parcel handle will make a satis
factory hnndle for carrying the desk
by (Fig! 7).
It would not be safe to keep an Ink
bottle in your portable desk without
fastening it. There would bo too
many chances of upsetting it.. A good
way of securing it is that shown in
Fig. 6. Get a long, hoavy rubber
band, or a piece of elastic, and tack
7 A «CEL HANDLE
\
V WI" U f . \
s .
i Its ends to the Inside of one desk
end, as indicated In Fig. 3. This
form a pocket into which the bottle
. may be slipped with safety, as the
i rubber will hold the bottle tight
! against the desk end (Fig. f).
'• . .' . I ,
THE ENTERPRISE, WILUAMSTON, WORTH CAROLINA.
By DOROTHY PERKINS.
A DANCING DOLL.
The little dancing doll in the illus
tration will dance as gracefully as a
fairy and keep perfect time to any
musk: you may furnish. All the ma
terials required to make it are a piece
of thin white cardboard, a coarse
!jiJ| ■; Lr * I
thread and needle, some pink water
color paint or a pink crayon pencil,
four broom straws, and a piece of
tissue paper.
The flrßt thing to do 1B to prepare
the different parts of the doll, and as
these are shown natural size in FlgS.
4, 6, 6 and 7, they can be cut right
out of this page. Only one arm and
one leg 1b shown, however, and you
will have to use these , parts as patr
terns for marking out the second arm
and leg. Paste the paper parts upon
lightweight cardboard to give them
stiffness. To fasten the parts togeth
er, pierce holes through them with a
f t*. ' y i
( i J
V ,
pencil point or a hat-pia, at the points
A, II and C (Figs. 4, 5, « and 7), and
join the correspondingly lettered holes
with thread, tying a knot on each end
of each thread enough) larger than
the holes to keep the parts from slip
ping off. ) Figure 2 shows the doll
assembled/ cemplete. The circular
piece /With thie center cut out of it,
shown in Fig. 3, fits dawn over the
doll's body, resting upo» its hips, as
shown in Fig. 2. It is cat through on
one side to make it easier to slip it
over the doll's body. ThSa piece forms
the top of tiue standard which sup
ports the doll while dancing. Pierce
four holes through it, near the outer
edge, and at equal distances apart;
\J 7 3 -
t
insert a broom straw In each hole,
bend over the top, and glue it to the
cardboard so it wlfl not slip out Cut
off the lower ends of the straps so
they will extend lust a trifle below
the doll's feet when the doll is stood
upon its broomstraw standard.
To dress the doll, cut a strip of
tissue-paper three and one-half Inches
wide and 25 Inches long, pleat or gath
er it, and sew it around the doll's
waist for a skirt Then make a waist
out of the same material and sew It
In place. Cut a pretty head of the
right size from a magazine, and paste
It to thq doll's head.
When the doll is finished, place her
on a piece of cardboard with the end
t of the cardboard extending over the
edge of the table, tap the cardboard
with your fingers, and' you will be de
lighted upon discovering how grace'
fully die can dance.
GAS, DYSPEPSIA
UNO INDIGESTION
"Pape's Diapepsin" settles sour,
gassy stomachs in five
minutea—Time It!
You don't want a slow remedy when
your stomach is bad—or an uncertain
one—or a harmful one —your stomach
is too valuable; you mustn't injure It
Pape's Dispepsin is noted for Its
speed in giving relief; its harmless
ness; Its certain unfailing action in
regulating sick, sour, gaasy stomachs.
Its millions of cures In indigestion,
dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach
trouble has mado it famous the world
over.
Keep this perfect stomach doctor in
your home —keep it handy—get a large
fifty-cent case from any dealer and
then if anyone should eat something
which doesn't agree with them; if
what they eat lays like lead, ferments
and sours and forms gas; causes head*
ache, dizziness and nausea; eructa
tions of acid and undigested food
remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin
comes in contact with the stomach all j
such distress vanishes. Its prompt I
ness, certainty and ease in overcoming I
the worat stomach disorders Is a rev*
lation to those who try it. —Adv. *
His Guess.
Uacon-~rl see Kansas City, Kan., had
881 divorces In 1912 against 1,234 In
1911.
Egbert—l take it that some of the
1,234 divorced in 1911 didn't marry
again, then.
"'TWOULD BE
SWEET TO DIE"
Thought This Lady, While Under*
going 'Frightful Experience,
Here Told First Time.
Linn, W. Va.—"There is no doubt
but that my life was saved by the use
of Cardui, the woman's tonic," Bays
Mrs. Abble Shackleford, of this town.
"Before using Cardui, I was very bad
off—would have nervous and shaking
spells through my entire body, terri
ble sick headaches, and would find
myself gasping for breath, I often
thought during those trying times
that it would be sweet to die.
I took many different medicines and
treatments, but they did me no good.
I got weaker and weaker every day.
Finally, I decided to try Cardui and
got two bottles. I was certainly great
ly surprised to note the quick change
for the better, after taking only one
third of the first bottle. The shaky
spellß and sick headache have entirely
disappeared. Can now walk one mile
to church and back, apd not fssl
tired.
Cardui also proved a blessing to my
oldest daughter. Everyone thought
she had appendicitis, on account of a
bad pain in her side, but Cardui
brought her back to good health.
I will never be vitytbout Cardui In
the house."
Cardui will surely do for you, what
It has done for so many thousands of
other women. It will help you.
Get a bottle at the dmjr store, today.
W. R- WrH. fo Ladle*' Advleory Dept.. Chatts
nooga Medicine Co., Tenn., for
/fufrucMoni, and 64-pase book, "Home Treat
ment for Women," seat m plain wrapper, on
request. Adv.
Engagement Rings.
To, what's the stone age?"
"It usually depends on how attract
ive the girl is."
GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA
TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR
Bbe Made Up a Mixture ef Sage Tes
and SulpWur to Bring Back Color,
Gloss, Thickneaa.
Almost everyone knowfc that Sags
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound
ed, brings back the natural color and
lnstre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it at home, which la
mussy and troublesome. Nowadays,
by asking at any atore for "Wyeth's
Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you
will get a large bottle of this famous
old recipe for about 50 cents.
Don't stay gray! Try It! No one
ean possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as It does It so naturally
and evenly. You dampen a sponge or
soft brush with it and draw this
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time ; by morning the gray
hair disappears, and after another ap
plication or two, your hair becomes
beautifully dark, thick and glossy. Adr»
The man who wastes his time
doesn't seem to realize that he will
need it all before he dies.
Important to Mothers
, Examine carefully every bottle of
CABTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
In Use For Over 80 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Csstoria
Pate sometimes makes a hero of a
man, but it generally takes more than
that to enable him to hold a Job.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet* regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and l>owel».
Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take
as candy. Adv.
Man has always had a tendency to
go up in the air.
KfflHlffllONAL'
SuNMrSaiooL
LESSON
(By K. O. BEL.LERH, Director of Even In*
Department, the Moody Bible Institute,
Chicago.)
LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 15.
CHRIST'S HATRED OF SHAMS.
LESSON TEXT—Luke 11:37-84.
GOLDEN TEXT—"Be not deceived; Ood
la not mocked."—Gal. t;l.
This Is a atrange breakfast episode
(to "dine" means literally, to break
fast). Jesus accepted three 1 such
Invitations from the Pharisees and
was accused of being a glutton and a
wine blfcber, Matt. 11-19; Luke 7:36, j
39, 44. fin this instance we are told
plainly (v. 54) why be had been asked
to this feast. At a later time, e.g.,
during the Passion week, Jesus deliv
ered a special discourse against the
Pharisees (Matt. 23) in which he re- j
peated many of the things we study I
; today.
Must Be Cltan.
I. False vs. True cleansing (vv. 37- i
44). The orthodox Jew is very punc- j
tlllous to avoid ceremonial uncleanli- ,
ness. In Christ's time this ceremoni- ;
alism was at its highest development- j
To be defiled was far worse than to be
morally unclean. This Pharisee "mar
veled" that Jesus was not likewise
concerned with his outward acts (v. i
39. se also Matt. 23:25, 26). To have
a clean cup and platter was more im
portant than to have a clean heart. |
In a fragment of Gospel found at j
Oxyrhyncus, Jesus is reputed to have ,
said to a Pharisee: "Thou hast ]
washed in waters wherein dogs and |
swine have been cast, and wiped the I
outside skin which alßo harlots j
anoint and beautify, but within they i
are full of scorpions and all wicked
ness. But I have been dipped in the
waters of eternal life which come
from the throne of God." Pious plat
ters, presented In pride, must be in
wardly purified.
Jesus pronounces three "woes,"
griefs that like an avenging nemesis
hang over men of such a character. !
(1) A "woe" against those who make I
a show of tithing the commop garden
mint and herbs and at the same time
avoid the weightier matters of Just re
lations to their fellow men and love
to Ood (v. 42). We are not to neg
lect our churchly duties at all, but
these cannot be substituted for
righteousness (see Mlcha 6:8). (2)
A "woe" against' those who love the
places of pre-eminence (v. 43, cf. Matt
23:6, 7). This spirit has not departed
from the church after a lapse of cen
turies. It Is unchristian, unchristlike.
The great one must be the servant of
all (Matt. 23:11, 20:28, John IS: 14, 15.
Phil. 2:5-8), (3) (v. 43), The third
"woe" la directed against hypocrisy.
To touch a grave was to become un
clean, and hence they were white
washed to give men warning. Many
Christians are without beautiful to be
hold, yet within full of dead men'l
bones and all manner of uncleanliness.
The Thres Woes.
11. Real va. Sham Lives (vv. 45-
54). The lawyers were the theologians,
the expounders of the Mosaic law Ev
idently the words of Jesus produced
great conviction. The word "feproach
est" (v. 45) means "to entreat spite
fully," and the probabilities are that
he spoke to Jesus as if to rebuke him.
Jesus at once pronounces three woes
•upon him and his class. (1) A "woe"
because they laid burdens upon others
which they themselves would not even
touch with j>ne of their fingers (Matt
23:4). That is, they added to the law
minute and troublesome details,
which they declared to be more im
portant than the law itself. (2)
(v. 47) A "woe" Is pronounced upon
them for honoring the dead prophets
and at the same time rejecting and
persecuting those that were living.
To honor dead teachers, to praise the
prophets of the past, those whom we
cannot endure while living, is a form
of hypocrisy which coßta but little. It
implies that had they lived in the days
of their fathers their conduct would
have been indifferent, yet they are with
the living prophets, following the ex
ample of their fathers. God foresaw
this (v. 49) and the faithful minister
of his word must expect a like treat
ment (Mk. 10:29, 30). (3) (v. 12) The
third "woe" was pronounced against
these religious teachers because, pos
sessing the key to knowledge, they
neither entered themselves nor would 1
they allow others to enter; "ye enter
not in yourselves, neither suffer ye
them that are entering in to enter."
(Matt. 23:13, Am. RvJ, These law
yers, theologians, were professedly In
terpreters of the law, that law which
was the foundatiokfand bulwark of the
Jewish nation. In fact, however, they
had so obscured and "explained" that
law as to leave men in darkness.
Supposed to lead men Into they
were shutting them out of thetryth.
What a terrible Indictment of many
of this present age.
We quote from the letter of a Wis
consin business man: "The average
man is interested in the teachings of
the Bible. If the Bible cannot stand
upon Its own feet, it is foolish to bol
ster it up by any personal ideas. We
make too many apologies for Scrip
tures and do not stand squarely by
what It teaches." Not a few who oo
cupy the position of teachers obscure
the truth of God and they shut men
out of a real knowledge of him. Jesus
thus replies to both Pharisees and the
lawyer, that character is not a gar
ment to wear, but it is the inward fuiv
nishing of the heart. _
THIS WOMAN'S
SICKNESS
Quickly Yielded To Lydia E.
Pmkham'a Vegetable
Compound.'
Baltimore, MdL "I mm wen the
glad to tell what Lydia E. Pinkhaa**
—™ Vegetable Cop>
I°«uffered dreadful
p*®* **** **• wj
irregular. I became
W ' . , m alarmed and aent for
HI S- 11 E- Pinkham'B
-yplli Vegetable Com
pound. I took it peg
olarly until I waa
I without a cramp or
I J pain and felt like
I hv-\fc7- I another person, and
it has now been aix months since I took
any medicine at aIL I hope my little
note will assist you in helping other wo
men.' I now feel perfectly well and la
the best of health.Mrs. AUGUST
W. KONDNER, 1682 Hollins Street, Bal
timore, Md
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful
drugs, and to-day holds the record at
being the most successful remedy for
female ills we know of, and thousands
of voluntary testimonials on file in the
Pinkh&m laboratory at Lynn, Mam.,
seem to prove this fact
For thirty years it has been the stand
ard remedy for female ills, and has re
stored the health of thousands of women
who have been troubled with such ail
fcents as displacements, inflammation,
ulceration, tumors, irregularities, ate.
1/ yon want special advice
write to Lydia E. Pink ham Med
icine Co., (confidential) Lynn,
Mass. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman
and held In strict confidence.
/ Strong.
"It must be awful to have your
nerves go back on you." v
"Don't worry. Yours never wilL"
ARE YOU CONBTIPATED7
Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills have
proved their worth for 75 years. Tsst them
yourself now. Betid for sample to 873 Peal*
St., New York. Adv.
4 The Morning Bermon.
(As judged by experts.)
"Pity he b&Bn't a better delivery."
"What a perfectly lovely voice ha
has!"
"Plays to the gallery."
"These ministers think they know it
all." .
"He is so much in earnest."
"Why do you suppose he dragged la
the Bible T"
"He means well."
"I thought it was so beautifully a»
pressed."
"Punk."—L)fe.
Activities of Women.
Governor Johnston of California re
cently appointed a board of women to
assume direct control of one of the
most Important reformatory Institu
tions.
Miss Florence Sanvllle and Fanny
Cochrane, two Philadelphia women,
are taking a course in agricultural
economics "at the University of Wis
consin.
The Countess de la Guerlviere, who
was the first woman cab driver In
Paris, has gone into a new venture,
that of a nurse in a Paris hospital for
dogs, cats and birds.
There are only, 18.000,000 married
women in the United States who could
be divorced, and during the past year
110,000 couples have found that they
were mismated.
A California woman has erected a
remarkable residence for herself at
the age of seventy-three. With the
exception of the roof, frame and
floors, the house was built entirely by
her.
Appetite
Finds Ready
Satisfaction
In a bowl of
Post
Toastfes
and Cream.
Thin, crisp bits of In
dian Corn*—cooked and
toatted to that they hare a
delicious flavour—
Wholesome
Nourishing .
Easy to Serve
—•old by Giocetr every
where.