Hahke it easy1 I for your Stomach, Liver cad Bom tIs to perform their I proper functions by toning and strength ening them m tth ^ This I plan corrects aay tendency tomards ■ | * spell of Indigestion, I Dvspepsia, Constipation, Bi lousnrss and Spring Ail ^«t» or General Veakn^^J Getting tres Closer. V< know it i* Bald Thai tr>- prop er distasor be’a r« lb»- eves 1* the * dU. of one eye mu) the sweet >«es* thing oa the sofa M •-'• mm- up ckmt-T. then. sog trtue. »he genilanwa present. . 4*4.'? nad' ffc’v fall off that some p—-t«r kf .» lt.: crimmals. while among married men the ratio is only lh per thousand.” said the sweet young thing. Would you." he said. IdBking wist fully at the girl—"would you keep me from being a criminal, or at least get me in the lf» per-thousand class?” P" tor up thai Cough—Dean's Mentho Cough Drop* are a sure relief for all coughs and colds—5c at Druggists. A well-trained conscience will stretch as long as the fun lasts. Why blame a doctor for thinking ill of his patients? \\ HES ta* food rnorhao the stomach it is subjected to n peculiar^ ' , >t us let no dead rooster escape— or any other debris, animal, vegeta bie or mineral, on the streets of this beautiful capital city of New Mexico — Santa Fe New Mexican. At Forty. 'ir> Harry Payne Whitney, congrat ulated on her Ttiantic memorial, said at a tea at the Brevoort in New York: "Success, in sculpture as in other •n nrr. s very pleasant. But even fail ure is hearable. Failure admits of so much hope A failure, running his hand through : is i«-f per-and-salf hair, said in my -tudki in Mclknigal alley: Today is my fortieth birthday When we reach forty we begin to look up the name* of men who become famous after forty-five.' ” •The Proper Kind '•rain experts declare that fish is the be»t brain diet.” Then some people I know must live on sheep's head fish.” Explained. i alxa.f call 9 spade a spade." Thai s because you always like to give a dig at things." WANTED TO KNOW Tnc Truth About Grape-Nuts Food. It dotn't matter so much what you uear ab >ut a thing, it s what you know that counts. And correct knowledge ; is most likely to come from personal experience About a year ago," writes a X. Y man. "1 was bothered by Indigestion. especu»-l\ during the forenoon. 1 tried several remedies without any perma nent improvement. My breakfast usually consisted of oaunea.. steak or chops, bread, coffee and some fruit. Hearing so much about Grape-Nuts. 1 concluded to give it a trial and fine out if all 1 had beard of it was true. "So I began with Grape-Nuts and cream, soft boiled eggs toast, a cup of Postum and some fruit. Before the end of the first week I was rid of the acidity of the stomach and felt much ! relieved. "By the end of the second week all traces of indigestion had disappeared and 1 was in first rate health once more. Before beginning this course of diet. 1 never had any appetite for lunch, hut now 1 can enjoy the meal at noon time.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Read "The Road ti j Wellvflle.” in pkgs. "There’s a Rea j son.” Ever read the above letter? i^ea STAR PITCHER TO RETURN TO ATHLETICS j jpWrfAs- J»y/A * 3pr0 Jack Coombs. One of Connie Mack's Best. -lack Coombs, the star pitcher of the Athletics, will be in shape to pitch again by July 1. according to Ira Thomas, the catcher of the Athletics, who visited Coombs at his home in Kennebunk. Maine. Thomas says Coombs is fast recovering his strength and will be in good shape by mid summer It is Coombs' intention to return to Philadelphia soon, when ar, X-ra\ photograph will be taken of his injured spine and the steel braces will be removed After that Coombs and his w ife will go south, where he will do his preliminary wanning up. after which he wall return to the Athletics, prepared to take his place in the bos J _____ I "Sox players win at Monte Cailo." said a headline No. they didn't play bail there • • » George Davis, former White Sox shortstop, is head baseball coach at Amherst college. • • * All this talk about the "pink of con dition" is rather wearing. Why not the "budding green?" • • • Kid ^Gleason has a recipe for mak ing the White Sox hit consistently, bnt it ien't for publication. • • • Charles M Hayes has been elected president of the Chicago Motor club to succeed W. E. Stalnaker. • * • Manager Branch Rickey will have his ball players indulge in handball while in training at St. Petersburg • • • Cactus Cravath. the "home run" king of the National league, expects to bet ter his mark in circuit smashes next season • • • It was announced from Boston that the Red Sox will be strong on south paws in Collins. Leonard, Coumbe and Radloff. • • • Sometimes it pays to visit Manager Huggins paid a visit to George Whit ted and the latter Figned a Cardinal contract. * * • W. H. Watkins one-time manager of the Indianapolis A. A. team, has been signed as business manager of the Indianapolis Feds. * # • Graney may have to do a share of the pitching for the Naps this season. Old-timers can remember when he was a southpaw twirler. * • • The outlaws are costing the Na tional league more than the players are costing the Federal league, ac cording to iatest statistics. • • • Robert McRoy s successor as secre tary' of the Boston Americans is Eddie Riley, who has been confirmed in the office after acting as temporary secre tary'. • • • Clyde Milan found the Detroit catch ers easiest to steal on. Clyde stole twelve bases last season out of fif teen attempts against Jenning's catch ers. • • • A diamond trophy valued at $500 is to be donated by Randolph Rose of Chattanooga to the most valuable play - er in the South Atlantic league this season. • • • Germany Schaefer was so lonesome without Nick Altrock on the tour of ‘ the world that be went and purchased a Chinese idol with which to amuse himseif. • • • A1 BridweL is reported to have signed on with Miner Brown's Federal ! team. Brid went good last reason and , may have & couple of more years of ! usefulness left. • • • Joe Jackson is picked by many as i one of the best and fastest fielding j outfielders in the American league. Last season Joe pegged out men at first on what looked like sure safeties. j CAREER OF MANAGER O'DAY New Leader of Chicago Cubs Got His First Job With Toledo Club— Played With New York. Hank O'Day old-time pitcher and umpire and new manager of the Cubs, is a native Chicagoan He was born | about 50 years ago on a farm "way out j on the West side." located at what ! would now be the intersection of Jack son boulevard and Campbell avenue, i Dan O'Day. father of Hank, was employed by the city as a plumber and later became engineer of the Hayes school at Walnut street and Oakley avenue O'Day s first job was with a club in Toledo. O. In 1888 O'Day got into the big leagues as a member of the Washing ton club. Connie Mack present man ager af the Athletics, was his battery ; partner. The following year O'Day , joined the New York Giants, where he i Manager Hank O'Day. made his reputation. New York won the pennant in 1889 and played a four- j game post-season series against Brook lyn. O'Day pitched and won the first j game. New York lost the second Hank was called upon to pitch the j third and fourth games in the series. New York won them both. Later O'Day drifted West and spent, a year or two in Nebraska and lows. ' after which he returned tc. the national game as an umpire in the early '90s He filled the role of National league arbitrator for about 2o years, and was - considered one of the best in the busi ness. He resigned his position as an umpire to become manager of the Cin cinnati Reds in 1912. Cassidy Goes With Tinker. Harry Cassidy, fcr seven years an J outfielder with the Denver team of the i Western league, and who expected to retire this season, believing that his days of usefulness were gone, has reconsidered that determination, the reason being a contract from the Chi cago Federal league club that calls for $3,600 for the season. Cassidy es tablished a playing record by not miss ing a game for Denver for six years, but last year his legs bothered him and he announced that he was done with baseball and would take up fanning. Quinlan With Terre Haute. Terre Haute, of the Central league, has signed Larry Quinlan, former Ma jor league outfielder, to manage the club during the campaign of 1914. Ha will report early in the spring. TYRUS COBB PLAYS AT GOLF Diamond King Has Unique System of Driving Ball—Catches Sphere With Face of His Club. Tyrus Cobb, the king of ball players, has become a strong golf enthusiast Ty has perfected a new system of driving a golf ball Instead of teeing ■ it up ou a little mound of sand, gluing j his eve on it and swatting it. Tyrus prefers tc have his caddy pitch the ball to him In such a way that It sails along very close to the ground or else strikes the grounds In front of him and bounces up an inch or so. The first and final rule for erwry’ other golfer in the world except Tyrus ! Cobb is to keep the eye on the ball But Tyrus. having gotten his prelim inary golf training in the American league, where all pitchers look more or less alike to his batting timber, is not accustomed to keeping his eye on the ball. As he says, a ball player at the bat doesn’t keep his eye on the ball—or even try to. That is. keeping his eye on the ball is not the thing that enables him tc connect. “A man hits a baseball by instinct." | says Tyrus. “He sees the ball leave | the pitcher, of course. But he doesn’t ! try to keep his eye on it right up to the i moment of hitting it. If he did. his bat i ting average would be minus zero or thereabouts. A man hits by instinct I in the game of baseball." And so it was the element of in stinct that interfered with Tyrus when I he took up the royal and ancient game : of golf on the lir.ksv of the Country ! club. in Augusta Keeping his eye on the ball didn't seem to help him a lit tle 'bit. He seemed to connect better 1 i if he would locate the ball, as you might say. let his batting eye wander where it would, and turn loose Then, j oot day. quite by accident. Tyrus hit I upon his system. "The thing is still—that's why you can’t hit." remarked a baseball fan. an admirer of tcbb's prowess with the. Ty Cobb. oid hickory. “If yon had somebody pitching to yen. you'd hit it a mile.' said this friend as they were driving off tfle first tee. The idea caught Tgrus between the eyes. “Get out there, caddy, and throw me the ball," he commanded, which invitation Mr Pickaninny accepted with alacrity. “Throw it low.” said Tyrus, so I can caret it with the face of my club " The caddy bent way over, as a kid does when “sheeting" flat pebbles over the watfir, and delivered to the cham pion batsman a beautiful fast one. Tyrus missed, tried another, and tha second time he caught the ball right 'on the nose with the exact center of the face of his club. It went about a mile. ™ Preparing Polo Field. The champion Meadow Brook Polo club at Hempstead, bong Island, in or der to make the polo field, where two international matches against English challengers have been contested, one of the finest, if not the finest, in the world, have dressed the field with 150 cubic yards of top soil and a large quantity of grass seed, with a cover ing of several tons of salt hay. which in the early spring will be rolled and cut again for matches with the Eng lishmen. Felds Nos 2 and 3, where the preliminary matches are played, will be improved and the stands on the main field w ill be enlarged. Hundreds Eligible for Futurity. Eight hundred and forty-two year lings were kept eligible for the $26.- J OOfi Kentucky Futurity on the second payment. January 1, according to the announcement from the officers of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders as sociation. Walnut Hall form is in first position with 70 entries for the Fu turity. Fate-hen Wilkes farm is sec ond in the list with 58 nominations. Empire City farms of 'Cuba. N. Y., ; third, w ith ME. and Allen farm of Pitts field. Mass., fourth, with 24. — Hit Bail Too Lovingly. Walter Travie the golf expert, ae-1 clares the pi&ying methods of MlBses Ravenscroft and Dodd are precisely j the same as those of Miss Rhona Adair and her compatriots of a decade ago. He summed up the differences , between the foreign and domestic ar ticle tbuf.lv ‘ American women hit the ball too timidly, too carelessly, as it were: as though it was a lovable j thing: the English women hit firmly, not to say. vindictively, as if they hated the ball and delighted in bit ting it " Numbers at New York. Capt.-ELect Earl Huntley of the New York university football team an nounces that the team will use num bers in all games played next season. T%e plan has been under consideration since the close of last season, and it has the indorsement of Physical Di rector Frank Cam. as well as Captain Huntley. i Swimming Pool for Whitney Home. Payne Whitney's country home at Greentree, at Fanhasset. Long island, is being Improved by an addition, three stories high. The first floor life be devoted to guest rooms and a swim ming pool. The second floor will pro vide one of the most complete tennis courts in the country. It will be en closed in glass and will be heated. A FREE BOOK That Teaches the People Hew to Avoid Catching Cold. The thirteenth edition of the *“1118 of Life" is* now ready for distribution. Be ginning on page three of this popular work on medicine, is an article stating in plain language how any one ean avoid catching cold. The article was written by a doctor. It ; was written by a doctor eighty-four years old. who is a hale and hearty man. It is his boast, founded upon fact, that he does not catch cold. He thinks he knows the reason why. He explains it in detail in this book. Every family ought to have a copy of it. Sent free by the Peruna Co., 1 Columbus. Ohio. Mr. O. Fred Linstrum. 1923 University ! Ave.. St. Paul. Mmn.. writes: “I con tracted a severe cold several years ago. Through tr.e use of Peruna I fully recov- ( ered. I have never had any trouble since." Mrs. Henry Martin. La Motte, Iowa. 8ay«: ”1 hawi found Peruna to be a great remedy for coughs #nd colds of children. A dose at bedtime will relieve them all night."—Adv. “Pape's Diapepsin” cures sick, sour stomachs in five minutes —Time It! “Really does” put bad Btomachs in order—"really doe6" overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas. heartburn and sourness in five minutes—that—just that—makes Pape’6 Diapepsin the lar gest selling stomach regulator in tba world. If what you eat ferments into stubbern lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, re member the moment “Pape’s Diapep sin" comes In contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It’s truly astonishing—almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape’s Dia pepsin will give you a hundred dollars’ worth of satisfaction. It’s worth its weight in gold to men and women who can’t get their stom achs regulated. It belongs in your home—should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It’s the quickest, surest and most harmless stoma :h doctor in the world.—Adv. A Little Too Efficient. At a banquet of efficiency engineers in Duluth T. I'nwin Harris said: "Even efficiency can be carried too far. I was talking yesterday to the president of an eastern business col- ! lege. He said to me: “ 'Our young ladies' department is j having a phenomenal success.’ "'You make the girls efficient, eh?' i “ 'In reply to that,' he answered, I ! need oniy say that 80 per cent, of our young ladies marry their employers within a year after graduation, even : (though a Reno divorce be required to 1 attain this end.' ” Only One “BROMO QUININE’’ To te: the ctai.iM call for fall name. LAX.A TIV: BROMO f f IN1NE. Look for ssgnantri of E AY. GROVE- Cares a Cold m One ha' 2Sc A wise maid rejects the silly youth who is willing to die for her. and cleaves to a man who is willing to earn her living. Be thrifty on tittle things like bluing. Don't accept water for bluing. Ask for Red truss Bail Blue, the extra godfi value blue. AdT. Many a man has been pronounced , heartless who later died of heart fail- ! ure. Every time a woman changes her mind she also airs her views. An Enjoyable Function. “You missed the most enjoyable af fair of the season, Mrs. Wombat's auc tion.” "1 dj not play bridge.” *'Yoi don’t understand. Her hus band ’ailed in business and she held an auction. Her friends had such a good time pawing over her things." Its Definition. She i angrily >—What was that noise I heard in the hall? He «candidly)—I guess it was tha day breaking. A man thinks brains do not count —if he hasn't many. Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not str.ia the hands. Adv. We never take a man s word for tha deed n a real estate transaction. CL ffieddCMie Those of Middle Age Especially. When you have found no remedy for the horrors that oppress you during change of life, when through the long hours of the day it seems as though your uack would break, when your head aches constantly, you are nervous, de pressed and suffer from those dreadful bearing down pains, don't forget that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the safest and surest remedy, and has carried hundreds of women safely through this critical period. Read what these three women say: From Mrs. Hornung, Buffalo, N. Y. Buffalo, X. Y.—“I am writing to let yon know how much your medicine has done for me. I failed terribly during the last winter and summer and every one remarked about'my appearance. I suf fered from a female trouble and always had pains in my back, no appetite and at times was very weak. *1 was visiting at a friend's house one day and she thought I needl’d l.ydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it and have gained eight pounds, have a good appetite and am fee ling better even' day. Everybody is asking me what I am doing and I recommend Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. You may publish thus letter if you wish and I hope others who have the same complaint will see it and get health from your medicine as I did "’—Mrs. A. Horsung, 91 Stanton Sd, Buffalo, X. Y. Was A Blessing To This Woman. So. Richmond, Ya.—u I was troubled with a bearing down pain and a female weakness and eould not stand long on my feet Ot all the medicines I took nothing helped me like Lydia EL Pinkham's Vege table Compound. I am now regular and am getting along fine. I cannot praise the Compound too much. It has been a blessing to me and I hope it will lie to other women.’'—Mrs. D. Tyler, 23 West Clopton bt_, South Richmond, Ya. Pains in Side, Could Hardly Stand. Lorn, Wis.—“ I was in a liad condition, suffering from a female trouble, and I had such pains in my sides I could hardly move. Be fore I had taken the whole of one bottle of Lydia EL Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound 1 felt liettcr, and now I am well and can do a good day’s work. I tell everybody what your medicine has done for me " —Mrs. John Thompson. I/idi, Wisconsin. For 30 years Lydia B. Fink ham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fee male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments does justice to herself if she does not try this fa mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it has restored so many sufferi ng women to health. M^^WritetoLTDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. (CONFIDENTIAL) LTNN. MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. '^bsstibsssxsi' / Feed and feeding stock are both expensive this year, and you can’t afford to throw away any of your hard-earned cash on any thing but the BEST ot service. Don’t “take a chance,” johnny cook ^ut get the BEST by send ee Loader of the Leaden ing yoUT live Stock tO Great Western Commission Company South Omaha, Nebraska [H B«gt Cough Syrup. Tim Good. Bn fei I’ "i tnti—. SoM by Drmtswu. TF!Hpawa!L*l'IJJ‘,!Tfli -PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A to; let preparation of merit. fclpatoariilicitenMnit toGmyor Fauled Hair. Pad 11.00 at bmgctete.