IZMLrSIX DDADffi (EMMES EMM ■ (Copyright by Pearson Pub. Co.) Jr LOVE your hair!" he Bald. And Helene Cast smiled content. "Shake down your rsm splendid hair." tho lover H| said. "The sun will light «i| it glorious!" In lazy hap- Cfl piness the Alpine village girl Atfj took out four pins, threw SBni'jflß hack her head, and gave a BjgiiSsSj shake; down came the rip pling, billowing cascade. Exultant, he who seemed but a dull Dauphinois peasant, without poetry or esthetics, spread tho maßslve ash blond tresses for the sun to strike flr« and gay gilt reflects from them. "I love your hair, Helene," he said, and he said true.< But in his heart he dreamed: "I might get eight hun dred francs for It, if I could bluff that Paris buyer: One hair was bought only by the hair-lacking. The old, easy-going hair-buyer, half a peddler, went through Brittany, the Limousin and the Correze with a stock of gay shawls, parasols and umbrellas, and by throwing a gold-piece here and there li« could pick up the standard shades and qualities from poor girls who were Ignorant or hopeless. At present false hair unashamed (ally confessed, is rampant on heads beautifully endowed by nature. The vast hats of two years required great quantities of puffing to frame the face beneath them. And now that rich woman of America and Europe •eem confirmed in the craze of match es their own splendid tresses, to pile hair on hair, in great coifTures with large hats, small hats or no hats at all, the price of standard qualities has quadrupled; fancy hair attains extraordinary prices. Paris hairdressers rejoice In this new style "buyer. Such a one had come to Saint Mar tin d'Uriage. He was scouring all Savoy and Dauphlny, but to nine peasant girls In ten he remained the peddler out of whom good money might be luckily extorted for long and wavy heads of hair, in standard browns, blacks, pale blonds and red blonds. It was his rich dealings with the tenth girl that sent them flutter ing, and all the more because the re cent prize-winner had been Mere Grivonne, aged sixty-seven, but still lively in wind and limb. After a week of dickering, the buyer had given her sixty dollars in bright ten-franc gold pieces, and clipped— what no one on the mountain-side had noticed she possessed —-a heavy head of silvery white hair of the rarest tint and qual ity. The buyer, boarding with Monbelun, the miller, was going over his stock and his correspondance. The Paris wholesale house for which he traveled In connection with the most expensive of the world's hair dressers urged by mail and telegram for hair, more hair! Hair for twists and turbans! The era of frlzettes and chlchis has pass ed. No more does milady stick a dozen little pufTs around her head. Do you remember how she used to sit pensive? You thought she was dream ing of you, but she was only wonder ing if her frlzettes were coming out. Her present alert confidence is due to the knowledge that her Immense false twist is surely tight. Wound round and round, it makes the whole back of her present low coiffure. Hair for wigs! The ultrafashlon ables pull their own beautiful hair back and wind it tight. On with the wig! Is it because they have not very lovely hair of their own? Un deceive yourself. They have enough, but they want more. The new flat coiffures may look simple; but the great turbans demand long. thick hair. Moreover, the beauty of the ef fect depends on unmussed smooth ness, hard to attain day by day. Our women have the habit of false hair. The present style Is suited to the wig. The wig is always smooth and smart. On with the wig! The automobile was the first pre text for wigs. Speed and dust will cut and dirty Mndame's precious locks, and the w!nd breaks down the undulations of the hot irons. Women who can not stand severely flat ef fects cline to th*>ir swelling Marcelle waves upon the sides. Now, you ran run the hot iron through false undu lations without injuring your precious hair; whence transformations. If the foundation of a wig is like a cap, that transformation is a mere band. See the fair one putting on her transformation! Fresh from the hot Iron, waving splendidly, it is a crown of up-swelling tresses. Delicately sho crowns herself with It. Upwards she smooths its rising wavelets, mixing j them slightly with her own hair, tin- | derneath to where they meet at the crown, and then the big false braid conceals the meeting. Hair! More hair! The buyer going over stock and correspondence saw that he must ■hear what girls he could on market flay, and quit Saint Martin d'Uriage I r ~., i t \ : c % '' ' ' ' \ V' . i Jfc ' J for a more ignorant locality. His Paris bouso was selling long torsades of standard blond and brunette at $lB 1 apiece, and the hair to make them was averaging sl2. Transformations of the same tint* and quality were selling at between $25 and 50. Wigs were selling at between S4O and s6# per kilo. Yet here were girls wltfc less than half a kilo on their heads refusing to be shorn for less than S3O. Do not be surprised at these figures. They are moderate — for "live" hair cut from vigorous Eu ropean girls. The cheap article is brittle from strong chemical treat ment—and dead Chinese women! Half the present false hair comes from China. Some comes from an island in the Caribbean sea where the most ma lignant leprosy cases are sent by the Cuban authorities. A little while ago the head of the glove department of a New Yorw department store pur chased a switch In the false hair de partment. Within two weeks from the time she began to wear the switch the upper part of her body was at tacked with a disease which several doctors after consultation pronounced to be leprosy. Cheap false hair Is dangerous. It all comes from Indian and Chinese people. If you must have false hair, see to it that it is live hair. It will cost more, but it's safe. It is said that there are three qualities of hair in the market: fine soft hair, cut from the heads of live white girls, cheap hair that comes from dead women of other races, and still cheaper which is made into so-called "rata" and is said to derive its being mostly from different kinds of animals and to be "filthy, beastly stuff." "I will put a notice In the "Place" that I am quitting Saint Martin d'Url age after next market day."he said to Monzelun, the miller. "The young men are standing in their own light not to order their own girls to come up and get their money!" "The young men are willing to sell," replied the miller, "but they yearn for better prices. A poor girl's hair Is her marriage portion; but at the rates you offer, it Is as safe on her head You can always walk down to Gren oble and sell it at need; and mean while more liberal buyers may hap pen along. Our young men know that hair is gone up." "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing," the buyer anskered. "Because I have have given heavy prices for a few rare heads, they must not think that common hair is scarce. In the next village I will find twenty marri ageable girls who are willing to trade off their useless locks for the price of a young donkey." He knew the miller would retail his talk on market day. The miller In these remote centers Is the general exchange. Incoming peasants bring their bag of grist to him across the donkey's back, take home a third in (lour, and trade the rest. Not twice a year do they goto Grenoble, twenty miles down and back, up the innum erable steep lacets of the mountain side . Tliey fear the city's unknown ways. The buyer knew this when he added: "As for t..e girls Felling at Gren oble, why, we send hair to Grenoble ready made up!" But the buyer would not leave Saint Martin d'Uriago without a certain treasure. "Our client is a millionaire Ameri caine," the great hair-dresser wrote, j "We can offer you one hundred per j cent on he lowest price you have to j pay in cese you succeed; and as the : lady ha|i honored us with practically unlimited order, I will not conceal from yrj»i that I ain giving this same »ommis»ion to several buyers. Yon have carte blanche to match the sair pie." I i CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 30. 1911. Long the buyer had been waiting for a certain young man to com* to him. Now the young man, having seen the miller, happened to stroll by. "Have you the cutting?" questioned the buyer. "No." the young man answered. "I refuse to ask her for It till I know your price. I will not wound her feet lngs uselessly. I will not sell my girl's hair for a trifle. Put on stamped paper that you will give $l6O and I will see about it. Don't forget that my girl's hair is naturally wavy." "Absurd!" cried the buyer. "Her®, I will tell you the whole truth. "AU depends on the matching. If your girl's hair does not match my sample absolutely, natural wavlness will add —yes, say S2O, to fine aah-blond hair —say three-quarters of a kilo; why, S2O is a ridiculously high valuation, but I will write down on stamped pa per that I will pay SIOO in case the sample matches." Georges shook his head. "One hundred and ten dollar* —I can not do better." Negation. The young man dM love her hair. "One hundred and twenty dollars in case the sample matches." And love conquered—love of don keys, heifers, goats, lambs, turkey*, chickens. "Write it down plain," said the young man,, who also loved his girl's tresses. Then, when he had the pa per safely in his pocket, he addad: "Now write what you will give in case the sample does not match." Next market day at Saint Martin d'Urlage four girls stood with their splendid hair down around the stene bench opposite the mill. "Be seated." The radiant barer motioned to two of them. He put their arms through the sleeves of a barber's apron, orer which, around his shoulders, he tied a black muslin cape. Ostensibly it was to help him cut. In truth It was to help him judge the hair's con sistency of tint before he actually sheared It. But it looked uncanny, like the preparation of an execution. The first girl went under comb and shears. Straight down the two side* of her head —so that each half fell over a shoulder —the man combed all her tresses, parted at the crown. S-z-z-z-z —! The shears made a long, continu ous sound, no snipping—and in hi* left hand he held half the girl's hair. S-z-z-z-z —! The girl was sheared. Next girl! The next girl was Helene Oast. You would not have dreamt that she wept all night. In lazy pride she took out four pins, threw her head back, gave a shake, and down came the rippling, wavy, billowing cas cade. The sun struck fire and gave gold reflects from its ash-blond glory. "Hair is such a bother," she laughed, bluffing bravely; "and the money Is important. I hope Georges won't mind much when he learns what I am doing. He so loves my hair." A Subtle Deduction. "Ha!" exclaimed Sherlock Holmes, Jr. "That man is married. He haa been married for more than two years." "Do you know him?" asked Dr. Wharton. "No. I never before saw him; but I heard him say a moment ago that he had forgotten all about St. Valentine'* day until it was past." Futile Aspirations. Manager—l wish wo could apply to deadheads the principle of trolley cars. Friend—What is that? Manager—Pay u you ante* | Rheumatism Advice j ? Give* Prominent Doctor's Beat < S Prescription—ls Easily Mixed. > "Got one ounce of syrup of Barsapa- | rllla compound anATS I Tourdruggist will refund ruoncy If PAZO OINT- i Mfc.Nl' fails to euro any cawi of Itching. Blind, Bl«:rd.ng or Protruding Piles in 6to Mdajs. 60c. Every man Is a comer until he reach- | es a certain age—then he's a goer. I All druggists sell the famous Herb rem- ; edy, Garfield Tea. It corrects constipation. ' Loud apparel naturally proclaims the j man. Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound A woman who is sick and suffering, and won't at least try a medicine which has the record of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, is, it would almost seem, to blame for her own wretchedness. Read what this woman says: Richmond, Mo. " When my second daughter was eighteen months old I was pronounced a hopeless invalid by specialists. I had a consultation of doctors and they said I had a severe cas« of ulceration. I was In bed for ten weeks, had sinking' spells, and was pronounced to be in a dangerous condition. My father insisted that we try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* and brought me six bottles. I soon began to improve, and be fore it had all been taken I was as well and strong as ever,—my friends hardly recognized mo so great was the change." Mrs. W oodson Brans tetter, Richmond, Mo. There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering. Read what another woman says: Jonesboro, Texas. —"I have used Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound for myself and daughter, and consider it une qualled for all female diseases. I would not bo without it for anything. I wish every mother in America could be persuaded to use it as there would bo less suffering among our sex then. I am alwavs glad to speak a word of praise for Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and you are at liberty to use this testimonial."—Mrs. James T. Lawrence, Jonesboro, Texas. Since we guarantee that all testimonials which we pub lish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had the virtue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffering from the same trouble ? For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for //IffitgYvl\C female ills. No sick woman does justice to W[ y)\ herself who will not try this famous medicine. 7 / la \ r Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and jj [7. 7/ I has thousands of cures to its credit. \l Nf-. 112 If Fan !«■** If the slightest trouble appears which CA fj\ you do not understand, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, M ass., for her advice —it is free and always helpful* A QYSJIA A c "" EDTiiBTAYCURtc mA gLM H fl SVa Km Kor«l»p«a. No return of IllVlal choking n pel Is or other asthmatic symptoms. Whet Eel sfrutem of treatment approved bj beet D. H. medical authorities aatheonlys/stem known to perm a- FBEE TEST TBEITIEHT including medicinee,prepared for an 7 one giving a full description of theoaee and sending names of 2 asthma tio sufferer®. Address FRANK WHETZEL. M. D. , Z, Amcrlcsß Express liulidlng, C)hloage. tive. You will find that you can do away ! with salts, strong cathartics, etc., which are entirely unsultcd i "Oman's require- ! ments. Mrs. Katherlne of McKeea ' Rocks, Pa., and Mrs. A. E. Herrick of i Wheeler, Mich., who was almost para lyzed In her stomach and bowels, are now ! cured by the use of this remedy. A free i sample bottle can be obtained by address ing Dr. Caldwell, and after you are con vinced of lis merits buy It of your drug gist at fifty cents and one dollar a bottle. For the free sample address Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 201 Caldwell building, Monti cello. 111. I ! Spring Medicine There is no other season when medi i cine is so much needed as in the spring. The blood is impure and impoverished -a condition indicated by pimple*, lioils and other eruptions on the face and body, by deficient vitality, loss of appetite, lack of/ i strength. The best spring medicine, according to the experience and testimony of thou sands annually, ia Hood's Sarsaparilla l It purifies and enriches the blood, cures i eruptions, builds up the system. ! Get it today in usual liquid form or 1 chocolated tablets known as Sai^atabs. r 112 Removes llarsal Enlargements* H Thickened, Nwollen Tissues, li Curbs, Filled Tendons, Soreness If from any Bruise or Ntraln; Cures fl Huavln f.ameneHH, Allays I'aip. ffi I)oes not Blister, remove the hair XI or lay up the horse. a I Before After bottle. delivered. Honk 1 K free, j ABSOKHINK, J It., liniment for mankind, roi Synovitis, Htralna, Gouty or Rheumatic Deposits, Swollen, Painful Varicose Veins. Allays I'aln. Will tell you more If you write. (1 and Ti ycr bottle at dealers or delivered. Manufactured only by W. F. YOUNG,P.D.F.,3IOTempIe St., Sprinofield.Mass. IB AWHTA Wntwi E. Coleman, Wash. PH I P M H X Ington.D.C. h-0 fi I fcila I U references. Beat results. 1 nrriflMPr QTIRril ©aslant to work with and ULrlMribL dinnun starches clothes nicest. A Country School for Girls in New York City Beit Features of Country and City Life Out-of-door Sports on School Park of 35 acres near the Hudson River. Kull Academic Course from Primary Class to Graduation. Upper Class for Advanced Special Students. Mu sic and Art. Summer Session. Cer tificate admits to College. School Coach Meets Day Pupils. Miss bngs andMKi Whilon, Mvrdolc Aw., near 252 d St., Wat YOU CAN BUY OR SELL any Real Estate in Central States thru us, without com mission. New way. Write us. OHIO REALTY SERVICE, Lima, Ohio LPILyIjMW PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and bt&utifiei the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. MBBMRT Falls to Bentore Gray tiHair to Its youthful Color. Curra scalp diseases Si hu!r falling. [ Thompson's Eye Water 7