Sltnrda.Tr 1715? lSlt'
Tar"- r "- .
iF riEWDRQ'S HEhP
ICIDE
YOU WON'T HEED ANY
III TIME
FALSE HI
earing artificial hair is a harm
deceit of which many ladies are
ty. Tneae -women ara au o ejects
sympathy rather than criticism,
arly neglect In the earn of the
p nan chuku mo iudo ui mu niuuu
that their personal appearance is
ly marred. To correct this defect
resort to artificial hair. .
tost ladies would resent any Im
tlon of personal carelessness and
lect.: And yet very many women
Ink their natural hair to become
lull brittle, and lusterlesa that it
Ls no bettor than the artificial.
II this is as unfortunate as It Is
ecessary. Hair that is unsightly or
may usual y be attributed to the
evolent activity of the . dundruft
This vicious germ burrows
into the hair follicle, shortly
destroying Its life. The hair becomes
dead, loose and finally drops out.
There is a remedy sold by all drug
gists, the Intelligent use of which will
remove all traces of dandruff.- It alsoj
cleanses tho scalp of all aecumula
tions and makes the hair shine with
the luster of life and. beauty.
That remedy is Newbro's Herplclde,
"tho Original Dandruff Germ De
stroyer." "
Newbro's Herplclde in 60c and
1.00 sizes Is sold by all dealers who
guarantee it to do all that ls claimed
If you are not satisfied your money
will bo refunded.
Applications may be obtained at
the best Harbor shops and hair dress
ing parlors. - v
Tho Horplcide "Co., Dept. R., De
trolt, Mich., will send a nice sample
and booklet to any address upon re
celpt of 10c in postage or silver.
Socialist Columns;
U columns are published every Saturday, and controlled by the Socialist
local 01 Asnovuie, wiucn alone la responsible for the opinions ex
pressed. i '
V Aslievilie Socialist Local meets every Sunday at 10 a. m., In its reading
room, ventral juaoor Union nail. . All interested are invited.
lSoytown Railroad. ;
(By Fred D. Warren). .
til, Tommy, como and ride on my
lun cur, - crieo young tsw enort,
hia boon companion passed' the
den gate. Tom came over und ln
cted the "steam car." Itconslstud
a platform about three by five
k. mounted on a running gear or
abandoned hand car. A truck was
do of old scantlings, boards, etc,
fe carefully laid out for a distance
100 feet or so. .
Ain't it u daisy?" said Bill, as he
f ed his 'work with admiration,
t on, and I'll give you a free
."Tom mounted the car, and Bill
ted the thing going by pushing
along. -: - '
Golly, but that nice," exclaimed
in, as tne end or tne journey was
ched. "Lemme ride back. .
All right," said Bill, "if you buy
icket" , .
Eh? Av ticket? How much?" In-
red Tom In surprise.
What's you got?" asked Bill
ewdly, with the air of a financier.
m emptied his pockets and took In
ptory. It disclosed' tho usual lissort-
nt of articles. Bill looked the coi
tion' over with a critical eye, "and
That will buy four tickets." ...
After considerable haggling the
dn was made. . -
:y this time rumors of the new
road project had spread through
tho village, and boys of ulj sizes
i descriptions .appeared ., on the
me: Bill was soon doing a land of-
business. His" exchequer disalosed
fact that he was getting wealthy.
u he became weary of pushing the
and decided to hire a couple of
s to do the propelling act This he
and soon the improvised train
going 'at a merry clip. Bill found
much more to his liking, and he
file as much "money" as before.
n a few days Bill had every marble.
i-y pin, every ball and ball bat In
n, besides a miscellaneous assort
nt of kittens, dogs, cats, etc. Hut,
withstanding he distributed his
ors In the way of labor to the dlf
nt boys, there was a falling off In
intse. He couldn't understand It.
boys were there and wanted to
tho train was ready to start, and
re were plenty of- willing hands to
the pushing. Finally he hit upon a
n of offering reduced rates. This
anulated business a little, but after
short spurt the- business fell off
in.
I've heard dad talk about panics;
ybe we're havln' one. Still, I've got
nty."
llll, who was a shrewd financier.
about to, relieve the distress. BUI
noticed that the "legal tender"
ch he paid to the boys te'push the
flowed back Into his hands rapid-.
an easily.
Now. I'll just have these boys do
t of .things for me, and get some
re money In circulation, then my
mlns will be good again."
-o, accordingly, Bill made It known
a he wanted laborers to build a
put. The applications for places
re numerous. He selected his gang-
then made it known that he
uld buV-boxes, boards, nails, te-.
on the back yard of Bill's parents
the scene of active Industry.
x. boards and fences paling w.r
rreutitously hooked and brought to
scene and exchanged by, the tys
for the very articles they had gfv
for tickets on Bill's railroad.
t was a busy scene, and activity In
ry department was stimulated. The
Iroad resumed operations on a
r scale, and the- depot was rad
' searing completion. The work
finlihed and the miniature town
4 plenty of funds and the railroad
II ran lively. In a few days, however
' railroad business dropped of f and
"n -to a standstill. BUI took an In
"tory and found that he had ac
mutated a large amount of 'wealth,'
Ides having his building up and
la for. i
"Must ba another panic," h solo-
lld, as. with hands deep ' In his
kns, he gaied out through the lit-
window of his depot at the anx-
looking faces of the boy with-
' "I guess I'll have to dfsomthlb
Mmulate business again."
Hi fertile brain conceived 'numer-
) of giving employ-me nt to the
"'who were anxious to' ride. The
ws cleaned and the Un"f and
whitewashed, th g.tetn . was
rlrd. for aii f h fh h said lib'
''. knowing full nt th "i
and he began to cast about in his
own iriind for a means to circumvent
the youthful railroad niagnato. He
first concluded to build a road of his
own, but he abandoned this idea, for
he realized that the boys would have
nothing with whleh to buy u rldo
At lust ho conceived an Idea. He
called a meeting in Jerry Simpson's
barn, just across the alley from Bill's'
railroad project. Bill viewed the meet.
Ins with some misgivings. He did not
altogether like it .He sent his bosom
friend and lieutenant, Skinny Jones,
over to repont the progress of the
meeting.
Tom called the meeting to order
and commenced: "Now feller citizens,
It won t be' any use for me to ex
plain the situation. Youse know It al
ready. We fellers want to ride, but
we ain't got nuthin' to ride with,
notwithstandln' the fact that we've
worked hard. Of course, there air
times ..when we've plenty of marbles,
pins, chalk and sich, but s Bill's got
it all,, we can only get it over again
when ho has something for us to do,
on' then wo'uns go an' spend it wi,th
him over again un' he soon has the
money an' the product of our labor.
At this point he was interrupted by
thunderous applause.
"Now, feller citizens, I have a plan
that I think will work whereby we
can have nil the rides we want".
"What is it?" shouted a dozen eag
er voices.
. "It's this way: We'll build a road
of our own."
"Can't be did-" shouted a voice In
the rear.
"Oh, yes, we can," replied the
speaker. We'll issue a notice to all
the boys- of this 'ere town an' tell
them that if they wants to help they
can have ail the. rides they wanC,,..
Contributions of material, etc., were
called for, and by evening an assort
ment of wheels, boards and timbers
were gathered together. In a few days
the Boytown Co-Operative Railway
was well under way. Little slips uf pa
per were prepared on which was
sera Wind the number of hours encn
boy labored. When the road was
completed, lots were cast to see who
would . ba the first passengers. Atter
that tile boys pushed nnd rode tn
turn. ' '
BUI, the capitalist, was nonplussed.
As he looked across the way and no
ticed the business the other roud was
doing, he became envious. He viewed
with alarm hi now rusty car.'
"Ill go over and see tho blamed
thing," ho said . to himself, ' as lie
closed the door of the little depot and
went out. lie was greeted cordially
by his foyner passengers, who took
pleasure and delight In explaining to
him Just , how the thing operated.
"I see tHat." replied Bill, "but
where does, the profit come who'
makln' any money outen It?".-
"Thre aint any profit, an no ones
a. makln' any money. We're all ridln'
n' pusiicn' an' every feller gets about
six rides to one push. When we'te
workln on your road, w had to push
twice to get enough to rid once. Oh.
I tell yer it's a greaL acheme!" ).
"Believe 'II rid." said Bill, as he
stepped upon the. car. He tendered
th conductor some of the collateral
that was good on his road, but the
functionary refused It disdainfully.
Dat don't go on this line. If oat's
all you'v got. you 11 have to get on
an' walk, see?"
Wall, that all I v got How'm I
to get what you fellers-have got?" he
anxiously inquired. .
Get off an' puin.de car, an" aen
you can ride on tnts line, moot umki
her.", . . ' ' ;
children usually "side step" when the
torm break no rifle business for
them they let others "meet the
storm" which their poetry and teach
ing helped stir up. The war song pote
and the war song school teacher, if
you please, are too "cultivated and
respectable" to be patriotically butch
ered.
Under no circumstances should a
working class father and mother keep
silent while a public school teacher or
Sunday school teacher thrills the
children's blood and blasts the glori
ous sentiments of human brotherhood
with recitals of war tales and fulsome
praise of men whose "glory" is red
with the blood of tens of thousands of
working class men.- Such stories and
such praise scar and brutalize tho so
clal natures of tho children as dis
tinctly as a hot brunding Iron would
disfigure their tender faces.
Tho mother who will think about
this matter somewhat will promptly
realize mat mere is somenting Disas
trously wrong with the education
which stings her little lovers with a
murderer's aspiration. There la some
thing wrong when the gracious ne;gn
borliness and charming sociability of
children glv0 way to swaggering lnso
lencc and savage blood lust.
Let tho mother think of It: Even
their playthings, their toys, are craft
lly used to sting, to debauch tho imag
ination of children, to write the hopes
of brutes in tho hearts of gentle child
ren.. Lately there has been enormous
increase In tho business of manufuc
turing toy soldiers, toy cavulry horses,
toy cannon and toy Gutllng guns, al
khaki soldier clothing lor ' Jhe
children. . "One hundred and twenty
thousand bales of scrap tin from the
Puget sound. , canneries were' sent ro
cently to Hamburg, Germany, .to be
made into toy solillers." ..Thci'o can be
no doubt about .the results of using
such garb and . such playthings. That
the child -is- thus scarred is rovealcil
when tho liny boy assumes tho atti
tudes and the strut and swagger- of
the professional man slaughterer. His
very conversation with his military
toys shows ho is marked ready.
William Lloyd Garrison wrote:
"My country Is the world; my
countrymen, are all mankind.
(From War what for, by George
R. Kirkpatrlck.)
P.O. DEPARTMENT AIOS
F
Rural Carriers Instructed to
Report Forest Fires "to"
. Proper Authorities.
V The Cax of The American Family
$1050
Completely Equipped
With Electric Starter and
Lights. Oversize Tires, De
mountable Kims, 11200 i
Washington, May 16. The postof
flcc department has just repeated. In
tho current postal guide supplement.
the instructions through which rural
carriers are to report forest fires to
the proper authorities during tho
coming season. These Instructions
were first issued in May 1912, and
during the past two years the co-operation
has resulted In the detection
and suppression of many fires.
Stale and federal forest officers
will make a special effort this year
to got even more value out of the
service than has been obtained, here
tofore. The usual procedure has been
for the state firo wardens or federal
forest officers to send the postmasters
lists of local wardens and patrolmen,
with ' their addresses' and telephone
numbers. These listh are given to the
carriers with, instructions to report
forest fires to; men whose names ap
pear: thereon, . or. to other responsible
person. This year a special effort will
be made to follow up the sending out
of the lists by having the patrolmen
and wardens to meet the carriers per
sonally to take - the inlative in ar
ranging such meetings, and also to
map out a plan -of action to be fol
lowed, l , 1 , .' . ; '
Cn-opcration between the rural car
riers and the federal forest " oMieerS
will be effective in the twenty states
in which national- forests exist nnd
with state; forest officers In the twen
ty states which have established their
own firo protective systems. If is ex
pected that the services of the carriers
will be particularly valuable In help-
ng to protect the new national forest
areas in the southern Appalachians.
Hupmobile pulls up at curb; driver accosted by stranger on sidewalk.'
After preliminaries, stranger says," Fm on the fence between the Hup
and the Blank car "
Hup owner, as usual, tells him he won't make mistake on theiiup;
says this one 1914 model is his second; tells of low running cost;
rare repairs, etc
MOTHER TONGUES OF U. 5.
E
English and Celtie Largest
Group Among 32,243,382
. Foreigners.
mopey"
ould com back ,Hbi M good
r a while, but was t llU4 by th
stagnation whtn'tbi monty was
. - r -
his time thr was1 ' mutUrlng
mtnt th boy. Tom, th first pas-
nr, appeared to be unuiuslly
"nonstraUve. H aaw Bill e
Hm-latlns; th. w'Hh of Soylown
"houl th. Ic ".fort on hi part,
Rivals
TTu a HP
lDOOSl, 11 OO
Eternal Fitness of Things.
Warden . ' to new' prisoner) What
work cau you do? Wlmt was rour oc
cupation? Prisoner I was a 'cellist in
un orchestra. Warden-Well, hen.
we'll set you to sawing wood.-Bostoii
Transcript. -
Stranger then tells of asking a friend--a salesman for theDasIj
car about the Hup. "
"For heaven's sake," the salesman-friend said, "don't buy the Blariki
Take the Hup it's the best car of it's classpn the market
. .... . . ..... , t - .
This really happened.
jSiot only Hup owners, but salesman for other cars BoostfigS?
boosting hard for the Hup.
Your local dealer can tell you a score of reasons why-tilings like this
take place. ..;:;';' , ':.''vS--:7r
Hupp Motor Car Company:Detroit
Western Carolina Auto Go.
Phone 890 Lexington Ave.. and Walnut St :
Practice Trials Demonstrate Cup Defender's Possibilities
Boy Scoot Read This.
Boy, kilr on human bln and you
will "b. 'called a murdered despised
and tinged. But kill a' thousand hu
man belna in war-and you becom
"great!" Deluded women smile upon
you,. Hill cnuuren . sle i Jf"".
preacher praise you, politician pet
you, orator glorify you. capitalist
rrln at you. and th government med
al and pension you but lonely, war
orphaned children ana war roooea
widow. thM desplM you exactly In
proportion a they understand you.)
. R.m.mbM, oy, th oldler' sword
reacke throoih th ' flaughtertd
father vto othr reaehe tn neart
of h.lpies women and helpless cnua
rn.
.Whl would you rather b, boy, a
dead and useless slaughtorsr or men,
or lv gnd useful man of pacT
Jfid butcher or a lv broth.rT
' . ' 'V " -'
'rotirf ffoim! riflemen, form.
" t.y! b ready to meet th atormt
Rlfi'ari.! riflemnt riflemen, form.
A school taehr can make a fool
and a murderer of a boy of eight or
ten years with sunh II nM. Rem.mb.r
that ( tad teacher who furnish
th war song chloi&trm for school
Washington, May 10. The English
and CelticA:( Including Irish, Scotch,
or Welsh) eroup was the largest
number umong the 32,243,382 persons
of foreign white stock in the United
States In 1910', wlio represented 19.5
per cent of thfr total white popula
tion bf this country; according to the
mother toneue bulletin which has
been Issued recently by Director Wil
liam i,. Harris of the bureau of the
censur, department oi commerce, uy
mother tongue Is meant the native
language, or that spoken before !mmi
gratlon, and the report covers all
white persons of foreign stock, in
cluding the foreign born and also the
natives, on or both of whose par.ts
wero foreign born.
As thus reported, the total foreign
white stock whose mother tongue was
English nnd Celtic (Including Irish,
Scotch, or Welsh) " numbered 10,037,
420. This number represented 12. J
per "cent of tho total white population
of the United States in 1910, which
was 81,731,057. Tho German group
numbered 8,817,271; or 10.8 per cent;
Italian. 2,151,422, or 2.8 per Cent; Po
lish. 1,707.640, or 2.1 per cent; Yid
dish ajid Hebrew, 1, 878,762, or 2.1
per cent; Swedish, 1,445,869, or 1.8
per cent; French, 1,357,169 or 1.7
per cent; and Norwegian, 1,009,854, or
I. 2 per cent.
The number of persons in the
United. State of foreign white stock
reporting . other principal mother
tongues were: Bohemian and Morav
ian. 639-,392; Spanish, 448.198; Dan
ish, 446.473: Dutch and Frisian, 324.
930; Magyar. 820.893; Slovak, 284,
444; Lithuanian and Lettish, 211,235;
Finnish, 200.688: Slovenian, 183.431;
Portuguese.' 141.288: Greek, 130,379;
Serbo-Croatian.' 129.264; (including
Croatian. .93,036; Servian, 26,762;
Dalmatian 5,603; and Montenegrin,
3.961); Russian 95.13"; Roumanian
II, 124; Syrian -and Arabic 46.717;
Flemish 44806; Ruthenlan 35.359;
Slavic (not specified) 15.195: Armen
ian 80,021: Bulgarian 19,380; Turkish
5.441; Albanian 2.366: all other, 'and
those whose mother tongue was un
known, 313,834. ...
Worth Mr Dtad,
They Uad been married seventeen
Jer.
"It there ever wt n utterly worth
less tra? Mty of man, you're It," h
told him,.
.. Bit month later b wa suing the
railway rosapaoy whose train Jiad run
over till twrthJet husband for 1,000.
-Exchange.
IMPORTANT 70 MOTHERS
A record of slity-flv. yar conting
ent use of "Mr. Window's Soothing
Cyrup" by mother In all rart of th
world, I the highest prats that any
rtm.dy for "children teething" ha
iv. r reoelved. Every rr th youag
mother follow in the fooutape ' of
her mother and find Mrs. Winalow'
toothing; Syrup to b th favorite, tad
o It ha gone en for perlcd of sli.
ty-fiv year. Million. of moth.r.
hav used It for their children while
teething with perfect uece. It
tooth the child, eoften th rums,
ally all p. In, cure wind oollo and
Is th beat, remady for dlarthoeaa
old by Druggist and m.alcln dtsl.
ere In ll part of the known wor!
Twenty-five eent a bottle.
Be eur and ask for Mrs. Winalow' i
tvotblog Byrun ad take ne ctber.
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it two vlwg of the new HrVshofr d.fend. v. Resolute. The rolut' rig I narrow and lofty rather than lrg.v hut et that, nwlni
tiderbody plan, she. moves -anally through, th water and promlte to be n witch In-Ihrhf or moderste breexe. It Is lo . nntl. eMe ths
h br she make vtry, little fuss ln th water, leave a wake aft a clean a a hmind t h.oth, and kirk up little dlurbsn-e forM
ln
t
, Herewith
to her fine und.roo
i . -.4,,f. ,i..r.Kh. nnw th. Krw.luta In her third practice' trial. The1 plctur. t the lft depict the craft cloe hsulrd on the port
' Uck. The photugraph at 'he light hot th. liwolute with her boom olf to etarboard running up harrganett Bay. . .