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STOP THAT BACKACHE There's nothing mor? discouraging than a constant backache. You are lame when you awake. Pains pierce you when you bend or lift It's hard to rest and next day it's the same old story. Pain in the back is nature's warning of kidney ills. Neglect may pave the way to dropsy, gravel, or other serious kidney sickness. Don't delay?begin using Doan's Kid ney Pills?the remedy that has been curing backache and kidney trouble for over fifty years. ~ A NEW JERSEY CASE Lonls Hunter, 40 Bast 82nd St., Bayonno, N. J., says: "I was In such bad shape with kidney tiou tle that I often fell, be ing too weak to stand dp. The suffering would have killed any other man. I spent hundreds of dollars doctoring. but nothing helped me ana one doctor said I ^uidn't live. I used Doan's Kidnej Pills and they cared me. I haven't bad a Bifjn of kldnej trouble or buck* ache since." Gat Down's ?t Any Store. 50c a Box DOAN'S VJLIV FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. The Editorial Usage. The Club Duffer?Boy, we've made another mistake?we're In the bunker over the green. The Caddie (resenting the use of the pronoun)?So we are, sir. What price us for a couple o' proper bloom in' dud golfers, eh??London Opinion. A 25-YEAR CASE OF ECZEMA CURED Mr. Butler Edgar of Danville, Pa., writes: "I have had an aggravated case of Eczema for over 25 years. My hands were unsightly for a great part of that long period. I have used seven oOc. bottles of Hancock s Sulpnur Compound and one jar of Hancock's Sulphur Ointment. I feel as though I had a brand new pair of hands.. My case has been such an aggravated one. Hancock's Sulphur Compound has cured me and I am certain it will cure anyone if they persist in using it according to directions." Hancock's Sulphur Compound and Ointment are Bold by all dealers. Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, Md.?Adv. , Faint Heart "I'm" rather afraid Clara Vere de Vere is going into a decline." "Why do you think so?" "I'm going to propose to her this evening if I get a chance."?Judge. It Is Good for Man. To heal cuts, sores, burns, lameness ind other external ailments quickly 288 Hanford's Balsam. It is a valu able household remedy and should *1 Frays be kept in every home. Adv. The Highway. Green?What! Fifty cents toll for my auto! l ean go by the other road Eor only ten. Tollgate Keeper?Yep. This is the highway.?Judge. No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX This is a prescription prepared es Kecially ; for Malaria or Chills and Pirn nr civ HncPQ will hrP^lf my case, and if taken then as a tonic ;he fever will not return. 25c.?Adv. Solomon Not in It. Two old vagrants were discussing low wise the large-rimmed tortoise shell mandarin spectacles made Magis trate Freschi look. "It makes him look as wise as Sol jmon," said one. -"Solomon ain't in It," replied the )ther, "in them big cheeters the judge * * A ?..11 ?? ooks as wise as ircts iuh ui uvvui. ? Sew York World. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle or 3AST0RIA, a safe and sure remedy for ufants and children, and see that it n Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria The people who are content ar? nerely those who don't know any letter. Dr, Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure eon itipation. Constipation is the cause of nany diseases. Cure the cause and you :ure the disease. Easy to take. Adv. When a man has more money than le knows what to do with other peo ple want to lend him some of theirs. rhe Lost Roses n:.i. in oi oick women -ife would be full of hope, and imbition would lighten your labor f you possessed that strength vhich you have a right to claim rom nature. 'he glow of youth was yours before health eparted, but the vigor of your mind and rill force has been sapped by that most eacherous of ills, fetr.ale disorders. It teals its way, draining tn? nerve tissues f their strength, taking away the richness om the blood, clogging the mind and re udng mental and bodily activity?it is a erpent in a Garden of Eden. TELLA-VITAE has put new hope into ie hearts of thousands of despairing romen every year for the past thirty years. I has renewed their strength, corrected leir irregular periods, put the roses of ealth into their cheeks and given them ack the joy of Jiving. in. Trissie Wataon, of Swain, Ark., says; - ? i-j . i?..i? ctpt.t.a Alter tatting viuy uuc uuuio u. w. ?? HTAE I feel better than I have felt forsix tears. It does away with that dragging, 11-gone feeling, so common to women, and I think it will do all that is claimed for it." tTELLA-VITAE will do all that is \laimed for it. We are so confident of lis and want you to know it so much that ire authorize your dealer to sell you a lottle under the positive promise to give Lack your money if that first bottle does Jot benefit you. Then you have tried the first bottle and know what it will do you may buy six lottles for $5.00 and continue using until fou are again a well woman. Thacher Medicine Co. Chattanooga. Tena. ' :v-:. ' " The man who is on the winning 6ide is most apt to preach the triumph of right. Worms expelled promptly from the human | system with Dr. Peery'e Vermi/iitfe "De?J Shot." Adv. Oh, No. She?All extremely Jsright men are conclted, anyway. He?Oh, I don't know; I'm not. Acid Stomach, heartburn and tausea quickly disappear with the use of Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills. Send for trial box to 372 Pearl St., New York. Adv. Must Have Pleased Whistler. Richard A. Canfield, who has parted with his superb collection of Whistler paintings and pastels for $300,000, said the other day in New York: "It would be a wise criticism to wtr WViio+Iat* la thfl DiaiC lllj HUlOUVl VVI1VVV4WU wuv best in the world. And this reminds me of the unwisest criticism going? a criticism that a pretty English girl made to Whistler about my Whistler portrait of Count Robert de Mon tesquious Fezensac. "This pretty girl, gazing at the fa mous portrait with enthusiastic ?yes, cried in a gushing voice: " 'Oh, Mr. Whistler, I do think your foreshortening of the skin tints is per fectly wonderful!'" THE SERVANT QUESTION SOLVED So Far as This Lady is Concerned ?She Doesn't Seem to Need One. Pollock, La.?Mrs. T. S. Blair, of this town, has the following to Bay, | which should be of interest to women ; generally: "For months, my health was very bad, and the medicines I took did not seem to do me any good. I was very weak and nervous, and some days, I could not be up. I asked my husband to get me a bottle of Cardui, the woman's tonic, to try, and before I had taken one bot tle I was up and doing my work. Bej fore I commenced taking Cardui, I had such spells I was not able to do any thing. Now, I have only taken three bottles of Cardui !n all, and I feel fine. A few months ago I weighed 135 pounds. Now I weigh 158, and I do all my own work, cook, wash and milk?and feel like I did when I was 'sweet sixteen.' Taking Cardui has cured me." As a relief from the distressing symptoms of womanly ailments, noth ing has been found during the past 50 years that would take the place of Cardui. Its superiority Is still unquestioned as a mild, building tonic for cases of womanly weakness where tired nature needs help. Made from purely vege table ingredients, Cardui has no bad after effects and can do you nothing but good. Try Cardui.?Adv. New Evil Laid to the Cigarette. Lucy Page Gaston of the Anti-Ciga rette league recites the following case of "total depravity." "There is no hope," says Miss Gaston, ."for a young person who, even when he knowB he's doing something wrong, and knows the consequtiic?8, goes v ahead and does it. "A Chicago teacher discovered one of her little pupils smoking. 'Willie,' she said, 'do you know what happens to small boys who smoke?' "Willie looked up innocently at hia preceptress. 'Yes,' he replied, coolly; 'mother tells me they get poisoned by Nicodemus.'" Or the Bottle. i "Sir, J want to make a complaint against one of your students. He threw a bottle at me." "Can't entertain your complaint, sir. There's nothing in it." Opportune Philanthropy. Jonas?You know, Silas, it is our duty to look out for those who come after us. Silas?Especially when it's the sheriff. Not an Honor. . "Did Jones tr.ke a prize at the dog show?" "No, although some judges thought he might have been entered on his face for once." Arms and the Woman. The Venus of Milo explained: "A suffragette did it.?New York Sun. j The hardest task many a man has is trying to keep his dead past buried. CAUSE AND EFFECT Good Digestion Follows Right Food, j Indigestion and the attendant dis- I comforts of mind and body are cer- ; tain to follow continued use of im-; proper food. Those who are still young and ro-' bust are likely to overlook the fact that, as dropping water will wear a stone away at last, so will the use of ! heavy, greasy, rich food, finally cause ! ; loss 01 appeuie anu muiscauuu. Fortunately many are thoughtful | enough to study themselves and note I the principle of cause and effect in j I their daily food. A N. Y. young worn- j j an writes her experience thus: "Sometime ago 1 had a lot of trou- j j ble from indigestion, caused by too rich food. I got so I was unable to digest scarcely anything, and medl- ! cines seemed useless. "A friend advised me to try Grape- i Nuts food, praising it highly ana as a last resort, I tried It. I am thankful | to say that Grape-Nuts not only re- j lieved me of my trouble, but built me j up and strengthened my digestive or- | gans so that I can now eat anything I desire. But I stick to Grape-Nuts." Name given by Postum Co., Battlii Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Rea son." lOver rend the nltovt- loiter? A net* one nppcnrs from time to lliiir. They fire genuine, true, and full of human Interest. i 1 Co-Opera Products ] $ How It Is Done in Eu in America to t) Farmer am By MATTHEW r Cop>rijrtii. l:*14. Wcai (Courtesy ?n *>. U. jrta?.cii.;! Co-operative Conci WHY DENMARK PRODUCES BE Copenhagen, Denmark.?How has Denmark, a little country with less than fifteen thousand square miles of area, established itself as one of the best agricultural centers in the world? Why is it that Denmark produces the best butter, the best bacon, the best eggs, that have ever been placed upon the markets of Europe? How can this little country export each year fifty oaa million aonars worm 01 Duixer, over four million dollars' worth of cream and milk, thirty odd million dol lars' worth of the finest bacon and eight million dollars' worth of eggs? Nature Left Denmark Poor. Denmark has no rich mines, no great forests, no water power. The soil, the one resource, Is not naturally fer tile. In fact, Denmark Is a low-lying expanse of wind-swept sand dunes, with here and there small stretches of richer soil. Much of its more- pro ductive soil is the result of scientific drainage, fertilization and rotation of crops. Chilling winds sweep over the country the year around, and these, with the prevailing fogs, render the climate an inhospitable one. Copen hagen has each year only fifty days of sunshine, and there are only three months out of this twelve during which Danish cattle can be pastured., That Denmark should be a leading agricul tural nation does not seem the plan which nature originally had for these islands and this peninsula. Repeated Hardships. Man has been no kinder than nature to this little country. In the eight eenth century the nobility and the crown owned all the valuable lands, while the peasantry were either serfs or tenants under impossible condi tions. Export duties made foreign U fkA cujuli uieruc? uii^ji uutauic. uauj iu iuv> nineteenth century economic condi tions had only begun to improve when the Napoleonic wars again spread dis aster and poverty over the country. Still a little later Denmark's Ger manic neighbors to the south took from the already small nation the province of Schleswig-Holstein. Then Germany, in the early eighties, built up a high tariff wall whioh excluded Danish products. The commerce upon Which the people depended for their revenues was gone, and the country was still again grievously stricken. Its Present Prosperity. Yet today, in spite of all these handi caps, Denmark is in proportion to its population the wealthiest country in Europe. Eighty-nine per cent of the agriculturists own their own land. Her farmers have been called the best farmers and the most skilled rural business men in the world. Rural Denmark produces the best bacon, but ter and eggs ever produced; their pigs turn feed into pork more scientifical ly than the porkers of any other na tion; their hens lay more eggs, and their cows are more effective as milk and butter producing machines. These farmers have worked out a system of co-operative marketing so effective that it is estimated that over ninety per cent of what the consumer pays for Danish farm products actually reaches the pocket-book of the man who produces it?a rather significant figure compared with the generally accented estimate that the American farmer gets only from thirty-five to forty-six per cent of what the city-con sumer pays for his product. How has Denmark reached this posi-' tion agriculturally? Why is it that she can produce the best bacon, butter and eggs? The answer seems to be: First, because she has an efficient educa tional system; second, because the government is giving aid which, while effective, is not unduly paternalistic; third, because of co-operation. Danish Farmer an Educated Man. It takes brains to raise the most aristocratic sort of products that are produced in Denmark. No ignorant people could take the bleak, sandy plains of Denmark and make great gardens of them, gardens supporting a splendid aggressive, progressive, pros perous race. It requires native shrewdness to do these things, but it requires something more. It requires in addition scientific agricultural knowledge, a big conception of the agri ' ? Vvili P + V\ <"? /lAlinfrV O Tt /"? tUILUiai puooiuuiliva Ul lUC vvuuvij unu a generous loyalty to state and com munity?an aggregate of qualities that none but an educated man possesses. And the Dane is indeed in very truth in every sense of the word an educated man. He has been trained to make the best use of himself and of his en vironment. As a boy he wa? compelled by law to attend school until he was fourteen. His teachers were mature, well-trained men of good intellectual ability, well paid, and, in most cases, community leaders and organizers. Maurice Francis Egan- American tive Farm Marketing rope and May Be Done ie Profit of Both i Consumer S. DUDGEON. em Newspaper Union. - jm srn in Copenhagen. iST BUTTER, BACON AND EGGS minister to Copenhagen and a high authority on' Denmark and all things Danish, say^: "The Dan'es are prob ably the best educated people of the world, because the Danish farmer un derstands that the kind of education his sons and daughters get will fit them for the work they are to do, without limiting' them in narrow bonds. The boy begins his farm work as soon as he can handle a spade or feed the chickens, and his school edu cation goes' hand In hand with his work. He does not waste time on thines that' cannot he correlated with his work. Arithmetic becomes part of his daily life, and he must count the number of eggs, weigh the slaugh tered pigs, calculate the profit that is to be made jipon them. The geogra phy of England ia made actual by the connection with the port to which the co-operative society of which his fa ther is a member;sends his butter, eggs and bacon. He is bound to the soil by both interest and patriotism, and is desirous of following the tra ditions of his father. He finds every thing in his home which makes life agreeable. His tastes are simple. He must be frugal to live, but- this fru gality does not prevent farmers' houses from being cheerful homes, for good pictures, musical instruments, and books are found in them all." From fourteen to eighteen is an age when Danish boys and girls are grow ing physically and working at prac tical things, for the young Dane can not enter the folk high school until he is eighteen. Farm Apprenticeship. The prospective farmer, however, has not stopped his educative proc esses during this period. There is tn Denmark a recognized Bystem of farm apprenticeship for the future farmer. It is a common practise here for the father who wishes his son to .become a farmer to put Him for a period of three years upon some of the accredit ed mpdel farms of the country. Gen erally he stays on one farm for one year, moving on to a second and then a third in order that he may get dif ferent and broader points of view and may see agriculture specialized alonij different lines upon the different farms On these farms he is given an oppor tunity to learn, but for the most parti his time is spent in hard labor. He] learns to farm by farming. Folk Schools and Patriotism. After his apprenticeship is complet ed he goes for at least a few months to one of the folk high schools, which j aro in the broadest sense schools of ; patriotism. Inspiring lectures are used for instruction more widely than are text books. The history and liter ature of the country is the theme of many an hour. Every class is opened with a song, either patriotic or re ligious, and each day extensive read ings upon patriotic and religious topics are given. Practical political economy and sociology are included in the daily . J I worn. i>U uiie uuuei ciguiccu ua; Oi tend these folk high schools, but many an older man or woman in later life finds there that for which there was no opportunity in youth. The schools are co-educational, but are co-educa tional in a thoroughly segregated way, for the men attend in winter and the women only in the summer months. These schools are privately owned and not absolutely free. The cost of Qve months' instruction and board for the men for the winter months is about $55, while the women, who gen erally attend these schools in summer, pay only about $30 for three months' instruction, including board and lodg ing. Small as these fees seem to be, , the state has various ways of re ducing the fees, especially for the sons' and daughters of the small holders. Thp total number of students in these j | summer and winter schools the last j few years has never been less than ten thousand. University Extension, j These folk high schools have, too, | an extension form of education some what similar to the university exten i sion courses given by some of our I American colleges. The high school professors frequently go out to the schoolhouses for popular lectures upon I history and literature, and upon soci | ologieal subjects. Generally a little I association is formed for the course of J from six to ten lectures. Possibly one crona (twenty-seven cents) for the year is charged, or 'there may be a charge of twenty ora (four cents) for each lecture. Here at the high school building they also hold in the fall a special community meeting for three j or four days during which three lec j tures per day on subjects similar to j those taught in the school are given, and in addition men of learning or re nown from the outside are brought in. I At this folk school the youns farm* && ' ' ' ' & M er who has had his common school training, with all its contact with the realities of life, and who has learned in three yeat-s' apprenticeship how to farm, has an opportunity to learn how to be a citizen and a patriot. But he has not yet completed his school work. Upon the farm he has learned how to do things. He has yet to learn why. So he goes to an agricultural college and learns the theoretical and scien tific why which is back of the prac tical how. This is the story of Den mark's farmer in the making, through common school, apprenticeship, folk high school and agricultural college. One has put to travel through the ru ral sections of Denmark to satisfy mmseu tnat tne outcome 01 mis process of education is a finished product of extremely high efficiency. The State and the Farmer. The Danish government is. not chary In the aid which it extends to the farm er. The aid, however, is always ex tended upon the fundamental theory that the best way to help the farmer is to help him to help himself. Pos sibly In no other way has the govern ment so greatly furthered the inter ests of agriculture as in assisting in the acquisition by each farmer of the soil which h3 tills. Thanks to the joint activities of the government and the co-operative credit societies, it is easy to buy a farm "in Denmark. If the would-be buyer has forty per cent of the price to be paid for the farm and. all its equipment he may apply to a credit society for a loan of sixty per cent of,the value, the loan to run fnr frnm fnrfv.fiva fn sevpntv nine years. Each year the farmer pays from four to six per cent of the prin cipal amount borrowed. This, how ever) is not wholly interest, but in cludes a small installment of principal, so that at the end of the period for which the money was borrowed not only has the interest been kept up, but the principal has been automatically discharged. There are, however, other forms of loans even more advantageous to the borrower, particularly if he be one of the poorer farm laborers. If such a laborer is anxious to become a land owner on a small scale he may under certain conditions, procure a loan for nine-tenths of the purchase price of the farm and equipment. The condl tlnna whlfh ho mnot mpot nro! Hfi must have been a farm laborer for five years (the law applies to women on the farm as well as men); the land must not exqeed ten acres In ex tent, nor $2,140 In value; he must work the farm in a scientific manner, and must agree to follow a proper ro tation of crops and, by the use of manures and otherwise, insure the continued productiveness of the land. For the first five years the laborer pays three per cent interest and noth-" ing upon the principal. After that he befeins to add a small percentage upon the principal in order to discharge his debt. At no time, however, does the total annual payment for principal and interest exceed four per cent of the amount borrowed. The government is back of these co operative credit societies. By benevo lent legislation it makes their organiza tion and operation possible; It assists in supervision and inspection, and in some cases it advances to the co-op erative society the funds out of which the loans are made. There are in Denmark about half a million families, Including those in cities and villages. Co-operative credit societies have a membership of over two hundred thou sand?that is to say, two out of every five families in the entire country seem to be represented in these co operative credit organizations. In fact, it is beeause it is so easy to buy land in Denmark that the tenant is disappearing and the small land owner is taking his place. Other Government Assistance. The government has also enacted much other legislation calculated to serve the interests of the farmer. It has regulated carefully the manu facture and sale of margarine, so that It is impossible to import or export or sell It under any false representa tfon that It Is butter. It has regulated tlje quality of butter and has forbidden the export of butter containing more t<ian sixteen per cent water, of butter fur the preservation of which anything oiher than common salt is used, of butter colored with any substance de rived from coal tar. All butter must have been made from milk or cream which has been pasteurized; It must have been made in an inspected dairy; it must have upon it the Danish label guaranteeing its quality. The sanitary condition in the cream eries, the method of packing, and the process of the sale of butter, are thor oughly controlled by government au thority. If any dairy which has been authorized by the government to use a Danish label for its product violates any regulation or law the minister of agriculture has the right to take away, either temporarily or permanently, the authorization to use the national trade mark. Butter from foreign lands must not be marked in any way to imply that It has been made in Denmark, and those wishing to import butter must make a declaration and J-i. J I De properly regiauereu. \ Co-Operation Chief Factor. Those familiar with the conditions ! in Denmark concede that the educa tion of the farmer has contributed largely to the success of Danish agri culture. Every loyal Dane is proud Df the government which has seen the great importance of furthering the in terests of the farmer by every means within its power. Rut no one who knows, ever for a minute conceives that Denmark could have taken her present position as a produced of the world's best farm products, without cr , aperative organization. It is because j jf co-operation that it pays to fdrm scientifically. The production of the I [lighest grades of farm products is j made worth while because co-operation j enables the farmer to take these high- j irade products to the profitable, in ex-, laustible, and discriminating markets >f the world. It is co-operation that ias resulted in better farming, better business, better living. Co-operation iias kept the farmer's sons and daugh ters upon the land and has stopped the rush to the city. Co-operation, in fact, 3ominates the economic life of the entire nation. SCATTER MORSELS OF CHEER Impossible to Estimate How Much a Kind Word May Mean to Those In Misfortune. It Is often told that Eugene FJeld one day wandered into a basement restaurant, sat down at a table, put his chin in his hands and gazed mood ily into space. A waiter came to him and after the manner of his kind enu merated the long list of dishes that were ready to be served. "No, no," said Field, dejectedly, "I require none of those things. All I want is some sliced oranges and a few kind words." Whether or not the incident be true, it is suggestive.. Unquestionably, deeds weigh far more than words, and yet it is almost tragic to think how much happier and better this strug gling world would become if kind words were more often heard. We all, every day, come in contact with those ama lA Dmmavia Wal/I'a ofofa rtf *vuu aic til juugcuc x- iciu a utatu vi mind. They are in our own homes; mothers and fathers and ' children They are behind the counters of stores; they are employes on trains; they are servants in kitchens; - they are everywhere, and their name is legion. A word of appreciation would brighten the whole day and would make it easier for them to keep on trying.?Youth's Companion. i HUMOR DISFIGURED BABY Clarendon, N. C.?"My baby was broken out with a red, thick and rough-looking humor when about two months old. It would come in patches and went almost all over her in that way. The places were like ringworm and- as they would spread they would turn red and make sores and itch. The trouble went to her face and disfigured her badly. Her clothes ir ritated it. "I saw the advertisement of Cuti cura Soap and Ointment and I got a sample and. in one night's time I could Bee a change in the redness and in two days the place would be nearly gone. I sent and got one twenty-five cent cake of Cuticura Soap and two fifty-cent boxes of Cuticura Ointment, which cured my baby. She was well >> . /Olo-na/n Mre Per. ill lUiCU IllUUbUO. \kllguvu; MA?M, w* tha Sawyer, Oct. 11, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout thd world. Sample of each tree,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."?Adv. Displeased With Bargain. Jean sorely waijted a kitten, but, her mother not liking felines, this joy waa denied her until a severe operation became prospective. Then a bargain was made with the frightened child. "If you will be a brave girl, Jean, and go through the operation without fussing you shall have the nicest kit ten I can find." ' The child, delighted, climbed upon the operating table and took the ether without a struggle. As she came out of the anesthetic and began to feel horribly sick and weak, she murmured something. The nUrse leaned over to catch the faintly uttered words: . "What a bum way to get a cat!" RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism and a! kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia D^nfnna Pnfa ^ruiiiyb, luuu, oyiaiiio, iJiumos, vuv?;, Old Sores. Burns, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne. Price 25c.?Adv. Had It the Night Before. "Well, Sis," said her brother at the breakfast table as Agnes, daughter of the household, appeared at table, heavy-eyed after she had entertained a tiresome and late-staying admirer the evening before, "you look as if you need something to keep you awake." ' \ "I do not," she responded wearily, "I had it last evening." Use itoman Eye Balsam for ac&ldin? sen eat ion in eyes and inflammation of eyes or eyelids. Adv. Expended Currency. Tiaveler?I am delighted to have known the four quarters of the earth. Bumpkins?An acquaintance with 75 cents makes me feel pretty comfort able." For bad burns HenfortTs Balsam Is used to give quick relief. Adv. No Choice Variation. "Nurse, what is your patient's mean temperature?" "He hasn't got any other kind." For sores apply Hanford's Balsam lightly. Adv. The man who has no enemies us ually has the same number of friends. ADDRESSED TO WOMEN { ?In the Expec Before the coming of the lit eessed of all their natural strenj by forebodings and weaken or nervousness?if you will bi Dr. Pierced Fav< you will find that i Ing will not mak Dr. Pierce'a Favorite Prescrip ailments, disorders and irregularitiei supremacy in its particular field f assurance of the benefit to be deriv Neither narcotics nor alcohol will tion, in liquid or tablet form. Sold Bent vou by mail on receipt of 50 one Address Dr. Pierce's Inva Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet MOON SKIN! Juicy and "sweeter you want If you; ask him to get it ^71BAILEY Hot In tho Trust Good Home GOOD SOIL, GOOD CLIMA' to live with. The best all round Write for free booklet; tells all Secretary Board of Trad It's ODD to see one woman rub away for dear life?working hard?wasting time? while another take? it easy?makes dirt fall away more rapidly and "worklessly" with RUB-NO-MORE. RUB-NO -MORE WASHING POWDER . a sudless dirt re mover for clothes. It clean* your dishes, sinks, toilets and cleans and sweetens your milk crocks. It kiUj|*genns. It does not need hot water. RUB-NO-MORE Carbo Naptha Soap Five Cents?All Grocers The Rub-No-More Co., Ft Wayne, fad.. WMemorei ftShoe Polishes Finest Quality Largest Variety RUB-NO-MORE Washing Powder ^HlTUMORt. 4X ^ x Ux; i OPSSCING ,.m . ( A7N||JS| <;!' ; I nicKtsr col', tait _ GILT EDGE du only ladiet* *hoe dressing that pod* trrdy contain* OIL. Black* tad polishes Udie*' and children'* boots and ahon, shine* without rub bing. 25c, "French Glo**," lOe. S TAR combination for cleaning and potubing all kindi of nwt or tan *boe?, 10c. "Dandy" rae 25c. "QUICK WHITE" (in liquid form with fpo.ce> quickly cleans and whiten* dirty canvas ho**, 10c and 25c. # , BABY ELITE combination for gentlemen who take pride in having thrir *hoe* look Al. Restates color and lustre to all black diocs. Polish with a bnub or doth, 1 Oc. "Elite" *iie 25c. If your dealer doe* not keep tho kind yoa wfnt, tend S* the price in ttanpa for a Jul) size package, charge* paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO. 20-26 Albany St Cambridge. Maaa. The Oldest an J L argat Memafadmtr* of ' ShaePollthcM In the World. W.L.DOUGLAS SHOES Women's IJjo-4 It/ WT9- w Misses,Boys,Children! PA ii.OO $1.73 $2 $2-50 $S| is CSft OooclM shea* ia l*u mt 1M1. \S Thlaiatberea*onwe?lveyc?lU?a J;E iama value* tor tt. 00. ?3.5u.w.oo ^ and S4JS0 nciwlLhs'andto* the enormoua lucre** to the coat af leather. Oar auuxuma bur S*T '" ^\ not batn lownred and the prlea wiiiiijS to yottJwnatoe ube same. Ask your dealer to ?bow jroa a the ktodof w.l.. Doucla* shoea ha Pk Is seUto* ler W.OO. 93mTH.OOatxl At S4.50. You win then be convinced Eg that W.L.DoqglM ahoes are abao ^ lutelyaajoodasotbermaieaeoMat J^V higher prleoa. The only dlflerenoe tstfaeDTlca. TAKE NO tUMTITUTK. Hon* tannin* without W. L. Danclaa'aaau staapad en the bottan. If W.L. Doujriaa hon ara not tor salt la your rlctotty. order | dJract from feetory. 8boea torero? naaiber k of I ho f?mtly at >11 price*, poazaaa fraa. YrSv Wrtta for 11) art ratad catalog thowfny how ...A toordrrby mall. W. L. DOUOULB, igy 110 Bparfc atmt, BTickVm, Maaa. u ? ? MARCS m IC CROUP AND PHWMOWA. ACD UXZ1 . MA01C;(ffW*mu.AlS?flOOO .GOOSE GREASE < nrani .< . Goose Grease Liniment cures all aches and pains DAISY FLY KILLER placed anywntra, at* tract* aad kill* all files. Neat, clean, or I numental, convenient, cheap. Last* all aeaaoa. Had* of metal, can'taplll or tip over, will not soil or 11njare anything. Guaranteed effectives All dMltrS orGaenl ezpres* paid for tl 00t HAEOLD 80MEE8, ISO Dalalb Are., Brooklyn, V T, ,"V|V 4 BOOTH-OVERTON Dyspepsia Tablets atop Intestinal^FermentaUon, I\euev? uao auu x/ioucdd aiici UBMUK. ? size only, 60c. Money refunded If tbey do not help, or write for Free Sample Box and TRY them first If you wish. 11 Broadway BOOTH-OVERTOII CO. Nev York J I imrr Sell one dozen of our fast selTM LQUIlJ among friends and receive 17.0* commission. Wrlie quick for par Ucalars. C. COOPER CO., BELLEVUE. OHIO Pettits Eye Salve SMARTING SORE LIDS W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 20-1914* font Period ;tle one?women need to be pos gth. Instead of being harassed ed by nausea, sleeplessness, ing to your aid >rite Prescription most of the suffer 0 its appearance. ition is the result of a life otudy of a peculiar to women. Its continued Dr more than forty years is your ed from its use. [ be found in this vegetable prescrip by druggists or a trial box will be cent stamps. 1 Ida Hotel, Buffalo, N. T. A re filiate liver and bowels E CHEWING TOBACCO than chicken. That mellow flavor r dealer does not sell MOON SHINE for you. Manufactured by ' BROTHERS, Inc. WINSTON-SALEM, N. O. s in Florida rE, good water and good people farming community in Florida, about our proposition. Address e. TRENTON, FLORIDA v w ,iV ? I I4- tc-^71