Qeraniums, in bloom 1.00 .75 Palm .1 o '.tj 'rube' Roses', Tin bloom* *'.'. * l'.Qil 2<> Variegated Foliage 2.00 1.00 Cut Flowers. Asters, one vase .50 .25 China Asters, display . . 1.50 .75 .50 Cosmos 1.00 .5u Dahlias, show 1.00 .50 Dahlias, Cactus 1.00 .50 Dahlias, any other variety .. 1.00 .50 Display <"ut Flowers 2.00 1.00 Display Sweet i'eas 2.00 1.00 Display Ferns, Mosses and Wild Flowers 2.00 1.00 Gladiclas 2.00 1.00 Marigold (any variety) 1.00 .50 Morning Bride 75 .50 Nasturtiums 1.00 .50 Pansies 1.00 .50 Roses (Cut Flowers) 1.50 .75 Scarlet Sage 75 .50 Table Bouquet 1.00 .75 .50 fi var. Verbenas, cut flowers 1.00 .50 Winter Bouquet 1.00 .50 „ Fine Arts. Class 2 —China, Royal Worcester, Fancy China. 1-2 doz. Dinner Plates 1.00 .50 1-2 doz. Dessert Plates 1.00 .50 * 1-2 doz. Bread. Buter Plates 1.00 .50 1-2 doz. cups and saucers . . 1.00 .50 1-2 doz. Dinner Cups, Saucers 1.00 .50 1-2 doz. After Dinners 1.00 .5 0 Ice Cream Set 1.00 .50 Pitcher 75 .50 Vase 75 .50 Dish 75 .50 Jardiniere 1.00 .50 Display 2.00 1.00 Class 3—Hand Painted China. Any specimen 2.00 1.00 After Dinners, 1-2 doz 1.50 .75 Belt Pin 50 .25 Baking Dish 1.50 .75 Bon Bon (with cover) 75 .s'i Bon Bon (without cover) ... .75 .50 Brush and Comb Tray 75 .50 Cake Plate 1.00 .50 Chop Dish or Plate 1.50 .7.. Cheese Dish 75 .50 Cracker Jar 1.-00 .50 Cider Jug 100 .50 Celery Dish 1-00 .s<» Candlestick or Sticks 7a .50 <'ups and Saucers, 1-2 doz. ... 1.50 ,7-> Chocolate Set 2.00 1.00 Chocolate Pot 1.00 .s'i Coffee Pot 1.00 .5h .Coffee S< t 2.00 1.00 ('ijiidit.ic.il Set 75 .5 ) Dinner Plates, 1-2 doz 1.50 .o Ice Cream Plates, 1-2 doz. ... 1.50 .7. Dozen 1.50 .<>> Poll Tray 75 .50 Raised Paste Work, any spec. 1.50 .<;» Rose Jar 75 .50 Salt ond Peppers: — 1-2 dozen individual 7<> .50 Salad Bowl 1.00 .50 Salt and Peppers 75 .50 Sandwich Tray 1.00 .50 Sauce or Fruit Dish 1.00 .50 Serving Plate Sherbets, 1-2 dozen 75 .50 Shirt Waist Set 1.00 .50 Smoker Set 1.00 .50 Spoon Tray 75 .50 .Stein 1-00 .75 Sugar Basket 75 .50 Sugar and Creamer 1.00 .50 Syrup .Tug 1.00 .50 Tea Set 1.50 .75 Tea Pot 1.00 .50 hay 1.00 .50 Tankard 1.50 .75 Veil Pin 75 .50 Vase 1.00 .50 Class 4—Hand Fainted China Enamel Ware. Any specimen 1.50 .75 Bowl 1.00 .50 Brush and Comb Tray 1.00 .50 Comport 1.00 .50 Display 2.00 1.00 Fruit Dish 1.00 .50 Nut Bowl 1.00 .50 Rose Jar 75 .50 Vase 100 .50 Class s —Etched Ware. Display 3.00 1.50 Pitched ware will be judged only as display. Class 6—Pierced Brass. Candle Sticks 1.00 .51' Display 2.00 1.00 ••love Box 75 .50 Handkerchief Box 75 .51- Necktie Holder 75 .50 Scrap Basket 1.00 .50 Specimen 75 .50 Class 7—Burnt Wood. Any specimen 1.00 .50 Boot Rack 75 .50 Display 2.00 1.00 Glove Box _ 75 .50 Handkerchief Box 75 .50 Necktie Box 75 .50 Placque 75 .50 Scrap Basket 1.00 .50 Class B—Burnt Leather. Anv specimen 1.00 .50 Display 2.00 1.00 Class 9—Baffia Work. Any specimen 1.00 .50 Basket 75 .50 Card Tray 75 .50 Comb Tray 75 .50 - Display 1.50 1.00 Hair Receiver 50 .25 Jewel Case 50 .25 Pin Tray 50 .25 Work Bag 75 .50 Any specimen 1.50 1.00 Display 2.00 1.00 Lamp 1.00 .50 Sandwich Tray 75 .50 Serving Tray 1.00 .50 Class 11—Beed Work. Any specimen 1.00 .50 Basket 75 .50 Display 1.00 .50 Fruit Basket 75 .50 Reed and Raflia Basket 1.00 .50 Class 12—Paintings and Drawing's, Oil Paintings. Landscape, Animals or Birds, Fruit or Flowers, other subjects, first premium .75; second .50. Water Colors. Landscape. Animals or Birds, FruP or Flowers, other subjects, first premium .75; second .50. Crayon. Landscape, Animals or Birds. Fruit or Flowers, other subjects, first premium .75; second .50. Pencil. Landscape, Animals or Birds, Portrait, first premium .75; second .50; Collection <5 or more), first premium $1.00; second .75. Pen and Xnk. Landscape. Portrait, Original Illustra tions, Collection (5 or more) first prem ium, .75; second .50. Miscellaneous. Coll. Butterflies, etc 1.00 .50 Painting on Satin 1.00 .50 Pastel Painting 1.00 .50 Specimen Sepia, from life ... 1.50 l.Oy Taxidermical display 3.00 1.5t» Class 14—School Boom Work. Graded School, same as Class 11, and same Premiums. Under this head are included the In diana Normal, Indiana, Blairsville, Ho mer City, Saltsburg and the select schools and academies of Indiana coun ty. Crayon Drawing. Landscape, Animals or Birds, Fruit oi Flowers, Other subjects. Specimen cop ied crayon drawing, first premium .75; second, .50; Pencil drawing from life, $l.OO first; .50 second. Pen and Ink Work. Landscape, Animal or Birds, Fruit or Flowers, Oilier subjects, first premium 75; second .50. Miscellaneous. Display modeling in clay. Map of In diana cojnty. Display niup drawing from any school, Display industrial drawing Class 13—Ungraded School. Same as Class 14 and Same Premiums. The society invites the exhibition o. any and everything that may be useful and convenient in the practice of agr: culture or horticulture or in the pro- I duct of either; all articles or impU men.-• i ->f convenience or use in domestic or sc j cial life, or of all the products of art or skill, and for such things of merit, ilthough not enumerated in the foreg >- ing list, premiums or diplomas may be I awarded by the managers. Ladies' Biding Race. The date and prize fcr this interost -1 irg feature will be announced in tb-~ ; county papers later. Dark Ages. The term is applied to a portion of the Middle Ages, including the period of j about 1,000 years from the fall of ; Kome to revival of letters in the fif teenth century. It is generally re garded as beginning with invasion of France by Clovis, 486 A. D., and clos ing with invasion of Naples by Charles | VIII in 1495. Learning was at a low ebb during this period. Mineral Lake. A lake near Biggar, Saskatchewan, has been found to be saturated with | sodium sulphate, and the deposits un ! der the lake and alongside the edge I to be nearly f)7 per cent pure sulphate. The mineral is used extensively in the j manufacture of sulphuric acid, in pho ] tography and other industrial pur ' poses. Important Rivers. Just as Egypt has been made by the Nile, so Mesopotamia has been made by the Tigris and the Euphrates. The view put forward with some an thority that the rivers should he kept exclusively for irrigation and not be depended upon for transport is chal lenged on many grounds, one of which is that irrigation and navigation can be effectively combined, and indeed made mutually advantageous for many years to come. The First Gas Respirator. The first apparatus to enable per i sons to enter a noxious inflammable j atmosphere was called an "^erophore'' ; and was the invention of M. Den ay r i rouse, a French inventor and scientist, j It was first tested at Chatham, Eng | land, 44 years ago, and was reported I successful. Vast improvements on i this device, which comprised an air j pump, lamp and flexible tubing, have sir.ee been made and these have saved the lives of hundreds in mine accidents and other disastt rs where rescue work would be impossible without their use. A Class Horn. An innovation in phonographs is an : Instrument equipped with a horn of I beveled mirror glass. The claim of the makers is that the horn of a talk ing machine best amplifies the tone ! when its surface is smooth and rigid, : hence one of heavy glass is preferable to one of wood or metal. — Ordering One's Life. Take time to scrutinize your life. Try to define just why you are "run" j and decide for yourself that if you are going to be ruled, as most of us are, it must be by something or somebody well worth the arduous sprinting we jare all indulging in. If the goal to ward which we are being steered is worth while, only then can we look back and feel that the race has been well run. Time Is Mcney. In Korea, both among prosperous ! Christians and among those to whom money is a hasty and infrequent vis itor, a favorite subscription blank is one which says: "I promise to give days to church work this year." The days thus given are devoted to evangelistic services or to the building of churches and schools. —World Out look. The Village Stocks. The curious old habit of punishing offenders by placing them in the pub lic stocks seems very far in the shad owy past, yet a number of these old wooden machines may still be seen In England. Usually they stand, or they stood, on the village green, near the church ; and it is not such a long while since stocks ceased to be used in the land. The World Is Chee "ml. Doctor Johnson's old shoolmate said that he could not be a philosopher be cause "cheerfulness was always break ing in." Our world of mankind cannot be that kind of a philosopher, either for the same reason. It may have Its moods and depressions, or prove to the utmost the reasonableness of despair; but there is an Inexhaustible well spring of vigor within It, and vigor Is another word for joy.—From the Un t popular Review. The Lee Family. The Lee family of which Gen. Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate army during the Civil war. was a mem ber. was of English origin. One of his ancestors emigrated to Virginia in the reign of Charles I, and the family was pronflnent then, during and after the Revolutionary war. —Columbus Dis patch. Their Surprising Way. M I was never more disappointed In anybody in my life than I was in my cousins up to Kay See,"' admitted Gabe Gosnell of Grudge, who was just back from a visit to the Big Burg. "Why, with everything on earth going on and anything you could think of liable to happen at any moment. I'll be switched If they don't poke off to bed at between nine and ten o'clock every night of the world!"— Kansas City Star. YES, \X'S ALL RIGHT" TO UVE tM COUtffcY IF I NOU OWN AN AUTO —KVERY iSO DOWN 7- VJTO MY COUNTRY FiACE \ ALWAYS RUN MY OF HOUR.5 r '' To the" BUTiTHIS 1$ HOW HE DIDJTN ! S />! IKS? JT 164 ymi * geor ge Autkor of "At Good-Old Siwaeh" *£r P—3S FINISHING SCHOOLS WHEN a girl is too refined or too exclusive or too stupid to be sent to a public school any longer, her fond parents send her to a finishing school. These schools are so named because of what they do to father. Finishing schools are conducted by eminent financiers. Their object is to get $BOO a year and extras per head from their students. The fin ishing school can take a raw, timid girl with a fair-sized bundle of money and by judiciously separating the two can produce in time a beau tiful young lady who car, read French, play "The Rosary," Jilk about the drama, get in and out of a room like a princess and snub a poor relation so tactfully that the latter will thank her v/ifh tears In his eyes for the favor. It costs from $BOO to $5,000 a year to varnish e young lady in this style, and after she is properly finished it costs $5,000 a year ior uoCOia* tions until some brave young man comes around for her. The educa tion® part comes cheap in these schools, but the extras are better than they are in the contracting business. There was once a private school proprietor who radiated a wonderful atmosphere of repose, and he used to make $lO,OOO a year charg ing up extras for the wear and tear on his atmosphere - > Private schools are very strict in discipline, and Jt really seems a pity that so many efficient guards are wasted on nice young ladies all over our land while desperate criminals are leaking from their prisons on every hand. > In the best private schools parents are only allowed to see their daughters once a year, and then only If their influence is deemed desirable by the head jailer. 43 42 V 4 .° - s 38 i 70. . .7, ■« •*<> 43 47 88 • "*■«■ fcfa 4 . 7 * 49 4 >. «W •' '«* V 73 37 *5: LS so* % " 7S 52 tf. *'• «• . 77 ,-7 54. 51 # 00 ;7 e 4 6 55 k 341 59 f mmmm ■■*1 . I | , 7 1' V 5 + "■ ."H ** 12 . 23 • - H5 . « 21 i 20 l\ ' \\V %\ »' \i\ \\ THE TANGLED DOTS. By Clifford Leon Sherman, ••hnt did r;t any I. • in the olden times," said Pearl, .J draw something that struck regularly." "Yes,"' said Harris, "and ' Hickorv-Dickory-Dock Clock, just remember that a mouse ran up instead a — (206) < Copyright, 191S, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) The life of a girl in a private school is very arduous? She must rise at seven and manicure for an hour, after which she must go to chapel and thence to breakfast, j i ~" eas:g =| Parents are only allowed to see their daughters once a year wnere her father is fined for every thing she drops. After breakfast she must study dancing, drawing, sitting down in a fluent and graceful man ner, the names of the apostles, dra matic criticism, French for botfi hands and face, piano playing, shoul der shrugging, small talking, eyebrow elevating, gown wearing, father tam ing, housework dodging, and many other useful sciences. She is also allowed half an hour a day in which to think, though in the best schools this is considered ill-bred. The trouble with private schools in this country is that they are not half private enough. They are tco easy to find. Burning Truth. Said the facetious feller: "Tb««» golf families get a lot of satisfaction out of reducin' their strokes from last season, hut the real Joy of life com* from boin' able to reduce the number of tons of coal from the winter b» fore." Beans. The common bean i 8 a native of South America and was Introduced into Europe during the sixteenth cen tury. Now it is represented by over 150 varieties. The big broad bean It probably a native of southwest Asia and northeastern Europe. The broad, hut not thick, lime bean, called by some "butter bean," Is a pole variety that comes from South America. Fats in the Body. Fats in the body occur under th» skin in the mv«clps and around certain organs. They act as a protection for the body against s njury and serve as a stored supply of fuel, in case food ean rnt be taken. Fats are liquid in the body and are stored in albuminous cells. Invisible Airplane Wings. Wings of cellulose acetate, being transparent, make an airplane Invisi ble at the height of a few thousand feet, also Increasing the operator*® field of vision. Sheets one one-hun dredth-inch thick are about as strong as the ordinary wing cover, and the weight of nine ounces to the square yard Is but slightly greater. The rap id spread of a tear when started Is m disadvantage that may be overcome with a re-enforcing of loosely woven silk. Thinking of Strenuout Days. Barber (curried away by his rerat nisconces) —"And when he'd looped the loop he did a nose dive that fairly took your breath away."—Boston Eve ning Transcript. Just a Little One. Maybe. While to l><-ure we believe fieorge Washington n< 1 *r told a lie we al» va V w!! ! wonder how he got around it if Mrs. Washington ever asked Mm jf he didn't think new way of /i. M fl> om f serving parsnips n..iem t ucv delicious. —Macon Telegraph. i ARROW COLLARI" /T LAUNDERED OR SOFT ' /''" X i~ THE BEST THAT YOU / ? ,\ IX-l X -- à:y' CAN BUYrAT THE I{< fìL J y PRICE YOU PAY ' X^v;^/ MONROE Cluett, Peahody if Co., Inc., Troy. >* F. SOFT "HOLO-TIGHT HAIR NETS FNJOY AN ENVIABLE I //S NATIONAL REPUTATION ANO THE FRIENDSHrP /aXV * »y À X OF MILLI ONS OF WOMEN— #/V\ oET >X FINEST REAL HUMAN HAIR. ALL SHADES. /£ FCR EVERY "HOLD-TICHT" HAIR NET CUARANTEEO w/uitp norciv ~>pA r H OR MONEY ORDER AT YOU* FAVO, wnilt Ur< vjKAt <:DCtALn RTTE: STORE. 1F THEY CANNOT SUPPLY YOU I CAP OR FRINGE SHAPE U RITE US. STATE COLOR AND SHAPE. i HAIR NETS I ££££,< cCTSTTTTJyTT: V}!\\ a U f \ - ImnpHV | I > I j GEM STUDIO i 7ÒO - - Pa, !; > Opposi te Moore I lutei ]> I Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you rio eat! I I * I "pi imiii Hii> ii' un imi niiiM—iiiiiih ii nm miimn iiiilbiiiiiiiiwmi ih iiirraairTna—nr"^ rwm-r Bramili ■ Il ■I'IUBHOHHMBMIB « i É ptuè I WHAT YOU SURELY NEED i U a hcalthy, acth e, industrious livcr. Small doscs of these pilla taken regularfy insure that. You niay also need a purj?ative sometiraes. Xher: take orte dose. Keep that in 'lindi it wil: pay you rich dividcnds in Health and Kappiness. t Genuino /? . Sraa'.l Pili 9 Lears S Sinaii Dos*. | éixnjture / •> yÀ* Small Price I I °aCARTER'S IRON PILLS ! 1/ dition which will be much helped by 1 J