THE MISERY OF BACKACHE Removed by Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. Muskegon, Mich.—“For six years I wae so weak in my back at times that I could hardly walk. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound was recom mended to me and it made me good and strong again so that I am able to do all my work. 1 highly recommend your medicine and tell everyone I meet what it did for me. ” —Mrs. G. Schoon FIELD, 240 Wood Are, Muskegon, Mich. Woman’s Precious Gift The one which she should most zeal ously guard is her health, but she often neglects to do so in season until some ailment peculiar to her sex has fastened itself upon her. When so affected women may rely upon Lydia E. I%k ham’s Vegetable Compound, a remedy that has been wonderfully successful in restoring health to suffering women. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound will help you, write to Lydia E. I’ink ham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a Woman, and held in strict confidence. Heredity. “Lj you think the baby will take after Jim?” “l'es, if there is anything to lake.” lifToffcorns! Fteezone is magic! Corns lift off with fingers without pain ' PLATFORM SUGGESTIONS TO THE G. O. P. . WIN COLLEGE BOYS $10,000 IN PRIZES . tWRin iuow»' at, That Baby should have a bed of own all are agreed. Yet ft is more reasonable for an infant to sleep with gTown-ups than to use a man’s medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of. that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. Neither would be tolerated by specialists in children’s diseases. < • Your Physician will tell you that Baby’s medicine must b* prepared with even greater care than Baby’s food. A Baby’s stomach when in good health is too often disarranged ' by improper food. • Could you for a moment, then, think of giving to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared ’ for Infants and Children ? Don’t be deceived. Make a mental note of this:—It is important, Mothers, that you should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of your Baby must receive special care. No Baby is so abnormal that the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily prepared for grown-ups. MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVCRY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTOMA GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS sy Bears the Signature of ^— t ' Exact Copy ot Wrapper. the centaur comeant new yore cty. e little Freezone on that touchy corn, Instantly It stops aching, then you lift that bothersome corn right off. Yes, magic i Costs only a few cents. Try Freezone! Your druggist sells a liny bottle, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or com between the toes, and calluses, without one particle of pain, soreness or irri tation. Freezone is the mysterious ether discovery of a Cincinnati genius. —Adv. A policeman should watch that oth ers do not prey. When one suspects, he is right at least half the time. Sure Relief 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief Be ll-ans FOR INDIGESTION 16799 DIED in New York City alone from kid ney trouble last year. Don’t allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against this trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL The world’s standard remedy {or kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles. Holland's national remedy since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed. Leak (or the nemo Gold Modal on eaerp boa and accept no imitation Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap.— Cuticura Cuticura Soap ia thafaaorita for safety r&mr aba ving 61CUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 26-1920. jp .«* Morning __ Keep Your Eyes Clean - Clear •"* Hee'thy s'rita fa; free C/» Car* 8oek Mitrlr* Cc. CMo» '11 k*. Carl Smith J&slyn (left), Howard U. Wilson and (below) E. P. Smith. After competing with thousands of young men and women under 25 years of age, these youths are the winners in the Walker Blaine Beale $10,000 platform contest. The contest was conducted by the republican national committee for educational purposes. The first prize of $6,000 was awarded to Carl Smith Joslyn, of Springfield, Mass.; the second of $3,000 to How ard B. Wilson, of Philadelphia; the third of $1,000 to E. P. Smith, of Ann Arbor, Mich. All are college men at tending respectively the Universities of Harvard, Pennsylvania and Michi gan. Motor Rules In Japan. From World Outlook. You must drive your automobile at the speed of 8 knots per hour on the city roads and at 12 knots per hour on the country roada In narrow place of road corner and bridge speed slowly. When you see the policeman throw ing up his hand you must not drive In front of him. When you pass the comer and the bridge ring the horn. When you get ahead of tho passenger on foot or the cow or the horse, you must ring the horn. When you meet the cow or the horse speed slowly and take the care to ring the horn and not been afraid of them. Drive slowly when you meet the horse or the cattle, do not make them afraid and carefully make the sound. If they afraid the sound you must escape a little while at the side of the road until they pass away. When you drive the motor car do not leave the driver seat and take care lest unexpected trouble happen. Do not drive the motor car when you get drunk and do not smoke on the driver seat. When two cars are driving in the same road, if there is another car in front of yours or behind yours you must keep 60 yards away from him. If you go ahead of him ring horn and pass him. When you cross the railway, wait un til the other train and other cars pass through. When an fthing matter with your car you go pol:|e station and tell him. When you want to have a driver or exchange another, you must enclose driver's address, career and age. SPECIAL NOTICE. You must never put overload on your automobile. The licensed capacity of your Ford car Is 6 pasengers—two in front and three in Need Coal and Tools. From the New York Times. The Davison plan to use $500,000,000* In extending long term credits to se lected manufacturers in central Europe, so that the chimneys of their mills can send out smoke again, appears not only as wise philanthropy but as sound busi ness. The point seems to be lost on •ongress. It is a pure gift, cries senator Borah, and America ought not to give anything to people who will not work. But the whole aim. is to enable them to work. It is eminently a kind of bounty which blesses him who gives as well as him who takes. The economics of the operation would seem to be within the grasp of a child, but congress fumbles the matter. It appears to have little heart in the affair and still less head. -i HELP STARTS AT HOME. Editor Sioux City Tribune. I just read in your paper where Wtfson is sked to aid the farmers, as there is *>t to be a shortage in the food sup '^vv; that millions of acres of land are uncultivated. I think that if these farmers who are around 30 years of age would spend more of their time in the field instead of riding around the coun try in their cars and leaving the hired man to do a day’s work in the field and then come in and do all the chores, inen wouldn’t be so hard to keep on the farm; and these men who have their tend laying idle should be made to rent It at reasonable figures. Then, maybe some of the boys who spent their time In the army in the past struggle would Uke to try farming; but no, we haven’t got anything for them. From a Subscriber. An Eskimo Banquet. From World Outlook. The feast had already begun when I arrived at Napsangoak’s tent. The men were sitting in the open, behind some seal skins which were hung in front of the opening of the tent in order to keep the cold wind out. They were all dressed alike in blue fox and I'olar bear furs, and each had a "pillaut,” or butcher knife, in his hand. They cut into the carcass with these knives dripping with blood, and tore the raw moat with their strong, beautiful teeth. Tn the midst of this savage looking en tertainment, however, there was appar ent the most genuine courtesy. The men often helped each other to what they considered the best part of the seal, and the host, selecting a huge piece of meat, handed it to me with the smile of a gourmand, saying: *‘i hope you will find it to your tasto.” I tooVlhe meat and thanked him, but sat down' .At a little distance from the others, for J hoped in an unobserved moment to giVsC the nauseous mess to the dogs, As lULual. on such occasions : they were standing around as closely as they dared come, greedily watching their opportunity to snatch or catch a bit of the meat. Alas, my host anxious, 1 suppose, to see that I was happy and satisfied, kept his eyes on me! And when he say that I was in no hurry to eat the meat, remarked kindly: "Yes, it smells so good It is truly a sin to eat it, but let it sink down into your stomach, anyhow—I will afterwards give you another piece to smell on!" Cause of The Blush. From the London Mail. Blushing is the most peculiar and the most human of all expressions, and it is inherent in some people and not in others, for the tendency to blushing rune in families. Unlike the expression of other emotions, which may be caused by physical means, we cannot cause a blush by any action of the body—it la the mind which must be affected. Blush ing is not only involuntary, but also the wish to restrain it, by leading to self attention, actually increases the ten dency to blush. It has been said that blushing is ac quired as an ornament, In support of which theory the argument is put for ward that a slight blush adds to the beauty of a woman’s face. Incidentally It Is on record that women candidates for the harem of the sultan who are capable of blushing invariably fetch a higher price. But the true cause of this strange expression is the intimate re i latlonship between the sensory nerves i of the face and the minute capillaries whose supply of blood is regulated by these nerves. Thus anything which di rects attention, perhaps only indirectly, to the face puts into action its sensitive nerve supply and thus excites the facial capillaries to relax and fill with blood. This primary cause of blushing has by a process of years come to bring about a blush when there is no suspicion as to anything about the face itself, but merely the suggestion of some general depreciation or criticism. It is easy there fore to understand the blushing of the blind, and why younger people are af fected more than old, and also why the opposite sexes excite each other’s blush es. It will also be understood why, be cause of this control of the capillaries of the face by its censory nerves, shy ness is the most powerful cause of blush ing, for shyness relates to the presence and opinion of others, and the shy art always more or less self-conscious. Nature Is Obstinate. From Munsey’s Magazine. The government learns by experience* just as individuals do. In the conscious ness of the public sinks a lesson which eventually becomes a policy, a statute, the race for water with which to irri' gate arid lands of the west and south west has been run with scant thought of those old, abandoned ditches of soutlr America, of Egypt, of other far places; but we are learning now that not all irrigation is surely profitable. In one place, for instance, water is poured upon the level valleys until it fills the basin, and the water table rises to the grass roots. The ground is sat urated, and the crops are drowned. Of course, there is an easy remedy—turn off the water; but In that case deadly alkali boils up through the soil and spreads like perpetual snow on the sur' face. This will make the land to salt for crops, as Is already the case in some parts of the Imperial Valley, in soutlr ern California. Efforts to commercialize the agricul tural resources of a dry valley of a great desert, must inevitably change the value of that desert to neighboring valleys. The desert is the stored heat, the reservoir of thin, pure air, for all the neighboring region; destroy it at your peril! But Nature has its own remedy —it turns irrigated Lands worth $200 an acre into acres of gypsum, of *alt ground.” In our country it has put one great area of rich land below the sea level, and thus forbidden drair^ge; and after a few futile decades of alleged success in irrigation and vegetation, up boils that cold, salt crystal to mock the feeble efforts of short sighted men. The Plain Truth. From the Boston Transcript. He (after the quarrel)—Then what did you marry me (pr? She—Mother figured it up at the time and said it was for about $J 500,000 I think. Swat! From the Cincinnati Enquirer. The fly had landed on the revoltring phonograph record and was taking a joy rid« "Whoopee!” yeJlcd the fly. •Tin going at:\rceord speed!" Different Kinds. He—Dancing Is the poetry of mo tion, you know. She—Yours Is the Wank verse stuff. The prices of cotton and linen have been doubled by the war. Lengthen their service by using Red Cross Ball Blue In the laundry. All grocers, 5c. A Warning. “Harry asked my band for the next 8ance.” "Then give it to him on con dition he keeps off your feet.” ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE DOES IT. When your shoes pinch or your corns and ©unions ache so that you are tired all over, ret Allen’s Foot = Ease, the antlseptlo pow ler to be shaken Into the shoes and iprlnkled in the foot-bath. It will take tha iting out of corns and bunions and give In Pant relief to Smarting, Aching, Swollen, ender feet. 1,600,000 pounds of powder for .he feet were used by our Army and Navy luring |^ie war. Sold everywhere.—Adv. No, Alfred, a girl never suspects a young man’s Intentions until he asks her whether she can cook. Cutlcura fcr Pimply Face*. To remove pimples and blackheads imear them with Cutlcura Ointment. Wash off In five minutes with Cutl cura Soap and hot water. Once clear ceep your skin clear by using them for Sally toilet purposes. Don’t fall to In :lude Cutlcura Talcum.—Adv. TIME MAKES LITTLE CHANGE Booth Tarkington Relates Anecdote to Show How Characteristics Pre 4 L a ET r* rl Delayed. "Started work in your garden yet?” “No. My neighbor's been so busy working in his 1 haven’t had the heart to borrow Ids tools.” ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine | lne Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over ■ twenty yeurs. Accept only an unbrokeD “Bayer package” which contains proper directions to relieve Headache, Tooth ache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. DrugglstB also sell larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin Is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mon oacetlcacidester of Salicylicacid.—Adv. BREAK IN TRAIN'S SCHEDULE Fair Driver of Auto Had a Hunch, and the Sequel Proved She Was Correct. Novelist Booth Tarklngton was talk ing about the cowardly attack that a gang of Germans had mnde on a soli tary French officer In the restaurant of the Hotel Adlon In Berlin. "The Germans,” he said, “were un speakable In the beginning, and they will be unspeakable to the end.” He shoook his head thoughtfully. “People can’t change,” he said. “Henry I.aboucliere was born a fear less wit, and a fearless wit he died. A few hours before his death, you know, Labouchere’s nephew upset n tiny spirit lamp that wns burning by the oedslde. The dying man awoke cut of a fitful doze and saw the miniature conflagration. “ ‘Flames?’ he said. ‘Not yet, I think.’ “And he laughed quizzically and Jozed again.” The Usual Thing. "Sir,” thundered Senator Blawhaw, “day and night, from every stump and busting, I have denounced In no un certain tones the merciless rapacity of :he soulless profiteers, and—” “But,” we asked, “what have you 3o-*“ about It?” "Done? Heavens above! Haven’t 1 lust snid I denounced It?”—Kansas City Star. IB . Let me recommend a ride In a new car with a woman driver as the best prescription for a thrill that will last a lifetime, writes a correspondent. Mine came when, after reluctnntly accept ing an Invitation to ride from a friend who had Just received her new ma chine, we mounted the incline to a grade crossing in a suburb and started across the tracks. In the exnct mid dle the engine stopped nnd nothing we could do had the slightest effect on it. While working we were ap proached by an excited flagman. “A limited is due here In two min utes,” he said, “nnd it never has stopped nt this station.” “It will today,” calmly replied my friend. And It did, but not before it had been flagged and the train crew helped boost us from the rails. He’d Heard That Before. My husband nnd I were in New York last fall. One dny while he went to attend to some business I thought I would take a ride in one of the motor busses. A man sat next to me nnd, glancing down at his shoes, I absent mindedly put my hand on his knee and said: “Sweetheart, your shoes need shining.” He smiled nnd said: “Yes, my wife said so this morning.”—Ex change. ' This time of ye^r it's a dood idea ~ ^ to comtine fresh s fruit or berries ? with your morn- g ing dish of • Gmpe=Nuts The blend of flavor proves delightful and is in tune with June. “There's a Reason * Couldn't Escape Them, “Hello, Ueorge. I lienr you can’t meet your creditors.” "You’re all wrong 1 1 meet one every live min utes.” Yes, Luke, the grass widow know* enough to make bay while the sun shines. * Love isn’t blind. It's obstinacy that alls It. Back Giving Out? That "bad back” is probably due to weak kidney*. It show* in constant dull, throbbing backache, or sharp twinge* when stooping or lifting. Yon have headaches, too, diiay spells, a tired feeling and irregular kidney ac tion. It i* usually easy to correct these early troubles, and avoid the more serious ailments by giving prompt help. Use Doan’* Kidney Pill*. Tbij have helped thouaanda the world ever. Ask your neighbor/ An Iowa Case W&& m Mrs. C h a s. A. Maiden, 8 E. Grant St.. Marshalltown, Iowa, says: "My kidneys were weak and I had dull pains across my back and loins. I I was sore and lame and became tired easily. 1 also had headaches and dizzy spells and my kidneys acted Ir regularly. Doan's Kidney Pills soon put my kidneys In good condition and relieved all the backache and other symptoms of kidney complaint.” Gat Doan’s at Any Store, 60c • Boa DOAN * S "pitLVI FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. T. Kill All Flies! *THDIS«a!«*D Placed anywhere, DAISY FLY KILLER attrwcte e.4 kill* *11 file*. Neat, clean, ornamental, c«f«l6#J MS -j—-!- e!t*a». son. «•* rf—H .'an tentil jntfpm Mil not aall or towjk anything. GoUMMiL FLY* KILLER I at your denier or | n a nnr n orvaTff ^Iio iPIllnAva..^Brooklyn. R.T. Acid Stomach Makes the Body Sour Nine Out of Ten People Suffer From It It sends its harmful acids and gases gB over the body, instead of health as strength. Day and night this ceaseless Am. age goes on. No matter how strong, its victim cannot long withstand th< health* destroying effects of an acid stomach. Good news for millions of sufferers. Chemists have found a sure remedy—***** that takes the acid up and carries it cart of the body; of course, when the cause is removed, the sufferer gets well. Bloating, indigestion, sour, acid, gassy stomach miseries all removed. This is proven by over half a million ailing folks who have taken EATONIC with wondscs ful benefits. It can be obtained from any druggist, who will cheerfully refund its trifling cost if not entirely satisfactory. Everyone should enjoy its benefits. Fits quently the first tablet gives relief. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM tovea DandrufftopsH*lrnuifl^ Restores Color and unity to Grey and Faded Hair 60c. and $1.00 at droexists. . I __ , Chem. Wk«, P»tch<>c-ne. Kjt I HSNDERCORNS Removes Corns, Cto!»* louses. fic*. stops ail paio, ensures comfort to tki ft ft, makes walking easy.,16c. by mall or ainm. Sislj. iiiscca Cbwnlcai Worts, Fatc&ccue, JL fT * J FRECKLES ilsSSjjtg Films and Photo Supplies I Finishing for Amstesn Enlarging <:> Prices on application UMMERMAN BROS., EASTMAN KODAK.CCS c ? P c- • r*, ri****y r-*-..