Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians foe } Colds Headache Neuritis > Lumbago ^ p£in Toothachejr « Neuralgia^ Rheumatisli Accent onlv "ftnvfr" r HrV 1 (TA y4«»AA^>. -\ 1 Catarrh VJ7;>r 4- i SAY "BAYER" when you buy. Insist! ; •{ Fackafe, *Vna SOFTENS HARD PUB-NO-MORE WASHING POWDEB ^ >AcicA® Km mw nwi more money by buying the large package. Cleans, purifies and sterilize* dairy vessels, dishes and all kitchen utenciU. Make* dish and clothea washing es»y Save* soap! BUY IT FMOM YOUR GXOCSM SAVE THE TRADE MARKS -A 'vv€ | :» ; $ CLINICAL tests hare ^ that Zonite, the World War antiseptic, is highly effective i> cases of nasal catarrh. The antiseptic is used in riilatioa ^4/; as a nasal spray for this trouble. ^ I t s e f f e c t i s t o c l e a n s e t h e m » - 1 ^ . cous membrane and reduce ab- r: •* normal discharges* tfius clearing the nasal passages. Note: A more copious flow of mucous may be expected after spraying; it will soon disappear. Atomizer fittings must be of hard rubber. J*'v$ ' -V\ ii toMw SOc and 91.00 SBBSBS Near to It. > 9Fwd friends were discussing the new Mg owned by one of them. Breed-r dash of Iriafc, remainder problematical. "What do you call him?" asked one. "Paddy," was the owner's reply. •Paddy? But he ain't Irtsli!" V "No," came the rejoinder, "but he's tike next best thing." Hall's Catarrh Medicine Treatment, both fecal and internal, and has been success* Ad to the treatment of Catarrh for owi forty years. Sold by all druggists. P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio Creation. Ifabel--Where did you get that cutc little parasol? Elsie--My daddle says he made It out of a rib from his umbrella. Going Up. Teacher (in art class)-- How It Mercury generally pictured? Student--In a thermometer BACK ACHY? Lame and achy in the morning? Tortared with backache all day long? No wonder you feel worn out and discouraged 1 But have you given any thought to your kidneys? Weak kidneys cause just such troubles; and you are likely to have headaches, too, with dizziness, stabbling pains and bladder irregularities. Don t risk neglect! Use Doan'$ Kidney Pills. Doan't hay* helped thousands. They should help yon. Ask your neighbor! An Illinois Case Mrs. Millie Sonjopa Tl r, derup, S13 E. Sem- **.iwlpole St., Dwlght, 1U&T 1 1 1 . , s a y s : " I caught cold and It settled In my kidfx nneys. I had a lama n In^r IfViLbftck aiid the pains r£kjrtile®UZj®Bln my back soon had me run down, f I got dtzzy and specks danced betore my e y e a. blurring my sight. IMPIW" My kidneys were ... ... active and weak. After taking a couple boxes ot Doan's Kidney Pills my kidneys were strengthened and I was cured or backache." Get Dms'i at Aap 9»ss®, «0c a Bos K1DNKT PILLS DOAN'S fOBTEK-MlLBURN CO.. BUFFAI^ ^ $tgfj 7>u> Sold EwrywHmr* hall a ruckel, n.y^ mfrs. GREEN MOUNTAIN ASTHMA COMPOUND quickly relleres the distressing ptroijrtm. Used Hot B jure ud result ©f i--. experience In treatment of throat a ud lung diseases by Dr. J H. Guild. >RKK TRIAL BOX, Treatise on Astluna, Ita CMues, treatment, etc., seat on request. Me and ll.OS at erogglsta. '• H. Ootid Co., Box 75, Rupert, Vt Let Cntkura Be Your Beauty Doctor Sas» 2Sc, Ohfc--at 2S sat Sfc, Tales 2Se. IF VOW HAVE tm WILJL START VOL Uk f f " Ott*ine*« no competition, should net I'M MM17 weekly, experience unnecessary MerhsnlcaJ Machine V?r,rks. Baltimore, Hi BSS-SiKsSS: ItMnare^auwrtmoMiaia fsralsk li wsjtoa UnWeraaJ Iafor^afaCT aD<j Berries < Sur.B&lderm* W, Muleo Otty, Mexico. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO, 44-1023. •».» ... - " •.. "Wt • <^OZ7Z5A27D SZ&K? fRZSCrfjET By JOHN DICKINSON SHCRMAN MADS bared! Faces to the Eart 1 It Is the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month--the fifth returning of the moment when silence fell upon the guns and the cheers of victory replaced the clamor of conflict; when Joy came once more upon the earth; when hope, . which springs eternal In the human breast rose high; when personal loss was swallowed up in thanksgiving. It is a moment sacred beyond all telling. Let each good • American Interpret its silence accord* ing to his experience and capacity, with a prayer for better understanding. And may each recurring November 11 forever find the American people in reverent silence with heads bared and faces to the East. May they in that sacred moment say, each to himself: "I will remember while the light lasts «•* Is the darkness I shall not forget" At Arlington America's tribute# to her "Unknown Soldier" will be paid by the highest officials of the government. Two years ago President Harding's address was the feature of the elaborate burial services. Last year President Harding, accompanied by Secretaries Weeks and Denby of the War and Navy departments, placed a wreath of red,, white and blue blossoms on this national shrine. Then the president saluted and | turned away. Not a word was spoken. The silence was broken only by the clatter of the hoofs of the cavalry escort and the booming of distant guns In the national salute. I This year another hand must place that wreath. I And when America stands with bared head and face to the East there will be remembrance of Ihe kindly gentleman and true patriot, unspoiled by pride of place, who has "Gone West" to Join the boys "Over There." For Warren G. Harding was a good American and had understanding*-- witness these words of his at Arlington, which should never be forgotten: "We do not know the eminence of his birth, but we do know the glory of his death. He died for his country, and greater devotion hath no man than this. He died unquestioning, uncomplaining, with faith in his heart and hope on Ms lips, that his country should triumph and its civilization survive. As a typical soldier of this representative democracy, he fought and died, believing in the indisputable justice of his country's Ause. "Sleeping In these hallowed grounds are thousands of Americans who have given their blood for the baptism of freedom and its maintenanoe, armed exponents of the nation's conscience. It is better and nobler for their deeds. Burial here is rather more than a sign of the government's favor; It is a suggestion of a tomb In the heart of the nation, sorrowing for Its noble dead. "Today's ceremonies proclaim that the hero unknown is not unhonored. We gather him to the nation's breast, within the shadow of the Capitol, of the towering shaft that honors Washington, the great father, and of the exquisite monument to Lincoln, the martyred savior. Here the inspirations of yesterday and the conscience of today forever unite to make the Republic worthy of his death for flag and country. "I speak not as a pacifist fearing war, but aa one who loves justice and hates war. I speak aa one who believes the highest function of governmett Is to give Its citizens the security of peace, the opportunity to achieve, and the pursuit of happiness. "As we return tikis poor clay to its mother sell, garlanded by love and covered with the decorations that only nations can bestow, I can sense the prayers of our people, of alt people*, that this Armistice day shall mark the beginning of a new and lasting era of peace on earth, good will among men. Let me Joln^ln that prayer. " 'Our Father who art In heavert, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be dl on earth, as It Is in heaven. Give us this day our dally bread, and forgive us our trespasses aa forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not Into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for Thine Is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen.'" And what of the intervening years rikS Wovember 11, 1018? t>avld Lloyd George puts Europe's condition thus: "Fifteen million picked men killed, twenty million crippled for life, tens of billions of wealth, gathered through the centuries, squandered in a moment, commerce destroyed, nothing left except hate." But not so in America. We have no hate. Per eontra, we have fed starving Europe without thought of payment or reward. And America emerges from the World war the wealthiest and most powerful nation of earth. Food for thought in the sacred moment of alienee! And what of Germany? It begins to look ad If she were on her knees at last. Apparently--It Is not safe to put It more strongly--the truth at last been forced upon the German consciousness that In the great four-year struggle which convulsed the world and impoverished it In life and treasure Germany was decisively and conclusively beaten. Never, until the official and public and unconditional abandonment of passive resistance In the Ruhr, has Germany given acknowledgment that the victory in the test eC war was absolute. . So 1023 sees a second surrender by Germany^ of hardly leas Importance than that of ArmfstfiM day of 1018. Another thought for the moment of silence! * November 11 at the eight American cemeteries in France, Belgium and England, tbere remain the bodies of 30,363 soldiers, sailors and marinas who gave their lives during the war. At each of these, from the Meuse-Argonne, Aisne-Marne, Suresnes, St Mlhlel, the Somme, Oise-Aisne In France, In Flanders field In Belgium and at Brookwood in England, appropriate services wera held thoughout the day with American diplomatic or (nilitary and naval officials paylag tribute. November 11 Is not the only "Armistice dayi* The year is full of days that are "Armistice day# in spirit. In June the disabled American veteran* through National Commander J. A. McFarland*. placed a wreath on the tomb at Arlington. On the Fourth of July was unveiled In Paris S monument to the American volunteers who efc> listed in the French army in 1914-15. The statue which surmounts the monument strikingly sufgests Alan Seeger, the soldier poet who wrote that immortal poem "I Have a Bendesvous With Death." In the spring at Seicheprey the First division, A. E. F., was honored by France by the dedication of a monument, a photograph of which Is reproduced herewith. The First division fought the battle of Seicheprey early In 1018. Gen. Henri Gouraud, "Lion of the Argonne," who lost his right arm In the service of his country, was a visitor here In July and placed wreaths upon the Arlington tomb. * Another photograph shows the crosses, row on row, which mark the graves of American soldiers in the national cemetery at Arlington. They died In France and were brought back by the American government American kindergarten leaders, visiting American kindergartens in France, decorated the grave of France's "Unknown Soldier** under the Arc de Trlornphe. Chateau Thierry recently unveiled monuments to the Americans who there gave their Uvea to block the German drive to Paris in 1018. Centlgny has erected an elaborate fountain as a memorial to the Americans of the First division who captured tfce town {row y the In' May, 1818. r.v, -V w JtLANZlBteS "Belleau Wood," a corner of the forest preserve at Rand and Ballard roads, has been made •Cook county's first living memorial to(her war soldiers of Cook county, Illinois. in accordance with the plan of the coutv „ to name forest preserve tracts after battles of the World war, commemorates the deeds of the $ Second division at the famous wooded hill near Chateau Thierry. Judging from reports from druggists A $2,000,000 memorial, testifying to the regard , w^° are constantlv in direct touch with of the people of Tennessee for her sons who gave whe ^ublic' there on! ,pr<ipar&tion thlt thoir iivm 1- ,Vaii, , tll , , "M been very tuccessful in overcoming their lhes In the World war, soon will take Its these conditions. The mild and heal,3 place among the most beautiful and elaborate influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root is buildings of the kind In this country. The state f°on realized. It stands the highest ff>r Both Necessary. To execrate war Is like the execration of "gold" by the early pcets. Both have seemed necessary in many Instances. Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Appkicints for Insurance Oftm Rejected. ita remarkable record of success. An' examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview on the subject, made the astonishing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance ire rejected is because kidney trouble is so have the disease. Dr. Kilmer's 8wamp Root is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A CY>., Binghamton, N. Y., for s sample bottle. When writing be sore sad mention this paper.--Advertisement. They Can't Prove It There has been considerable mean talk about me; but I thank the Lord I have made It difficult for my enemies to prove the worst of it--Ed Howe's Monthly. A Lady of Distinction Jm recognized by the delicate, fascinating influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores followed by a dusting with Cutlcura Talcum powder usually means a clear, sweet healthy skin.--Advertisement 1 If a man once haa it, It never diee-- the taste for showy neckties. SOCIETY LOOKS DOWN ON HATRED appropriated $1,000,000, the city of Nashville raised $300,000 and the county of Davidson put up $400,000. The General Federation of Women's Clubs, comprising the majority of the clubs of the entire nation, has indorsed and its component clubs will take an active part In the campaign for border- common to the American people, and the Ing the Victory highway, national memorial trans- large 1,1,1 i°rit? of thoBe who*e applications continental highway, with living monuments to dedin^ do not even "l"veci th,t they the soldier dead of the United States, In the form of trees planted and cared for by the local clubs which are members of the general federation. Hattonchatel, the little village which was almost wiped out five years ago In the course of the hard, swift drive by which General Pershing's men cleared the St Mlhlel salient of German troops, in September celebrated Its resurrection, ^thanks to American generosity, along with the flfth anniversary of the deliverance of the village from the Germans. Miss Belle Skinner of Holyoke, Mass., Is the wealthy American woman to whose generosity the village Is Indebted for -- its restoration. At Chaumont In June a monument was dedicated to "Franco-American friendship." Chaumont was the headquarters of the American getf* eral staff. The French nation has begun the erection of a magnificent and colossal monument to the American soldiers. It will stand upon the Polnte de . Grave, the lonely cape upon the stormy Bay of •iBlscay, where the American soldiers first landed j In the great World war. The monument will rise to a height of 850 feet. It will be by far the greatest monument of Its kind in the world. The principal sculptural feature of the work will be a gigantic figure of France on the seaward Bide, gazing straight over the Atlantic in the direction of America; The foundation stone of the monument was laid with Imposing ceremony by Prime Minister Polncare In company with the American ambassador to France. The day chosen for the ceremony was the anniversary of the landing of the American troops, and happened also to be that of the arrival Of Lafayette In America with French troops at the time of the Revolution. Belleau wood, which Marshal Foch called "the cradle of victory," was consecrated In July to the memory of the Americans who died there. The French flag, at Foch's command, was hauled down to trumpeting by French buglers and the "Maraelllaise" by the marine band from the U. S. S. Pittsburg, and the American flag was run up to the strains of the "Star Spangled Banner." A group of Americans from many states and relatives of the dead assembled inside the ring of French villages, the homes of which the Americans saved. The wood was formally dedicated as a permanent memorial by the Belleau Wood Memorial association, represented by the president, Mrs. Jsmes Carroll Frazier, who directed the plan to buy the land and preserve the battlefields, with trenches and machine gun neets and erect a monument and place descriptive tablets. A demand for a congressional investigation into the alleged deplorable condition of the American military cemetery at Belleau woods, France, was made in October by Edward E. Spafford, New York state commander of the American Legion. Vengeance. First Copper--Seems to me that were pretty severe with that speedstar, weren't you ? Second Copper--Tea, when I out that it was the dentist that pallet a wrong tooth on me. Mrs. 5. W. Knott 1r-"" Health Brings Beauty Al Wsaen Csa Lssfc Wei M b Had*, Champaign, 111.--"Ever since I •eloped into womanhood I have bem troubled with functional disturbances and fainting spells. I was under a physician's care, but a» medicine I took seemed to do me av good. A friehd, Who had goM through the same experience as mj^ self and had found such help fe? taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preacription, urged mo to try it I tried It and to my great delight the Prescription brought about a wonderfal change, every organ functionating correctly. I can speak in the' high* est praise of Dr. Pierce's Favori|» • Prescription."--Mra. S. W. KnotSL 1212 N. Market St ^ All druggists. Tablets or MeetiL' WWte Dr. Pierce, Pres. Invalid# Hotel, in Buffalo, N. Y., for fret medical advice, or eend 10c for trtal pkg. tablets. , v - - Better Than Rag. It is curious that no other commie cial use was ever found for chiohfc that abundant product el inota^ «ept to chew It » That Waa the Troubte. W-- Husband--You hadn't a rag ea yqpp . back when I married you. ^ Wife--True, but I have plenty MM* Civilization Haa Not Abolished Any ef the Vices, However, Deelaree Writer. Civilised society haa not jfrt abolished any of the vices, perhaps because it would be dull without them; but it does Its best to eliminate passions, and in one caae has virtually succeeded, Stephen Gwyn declarea. Hatred aa a passion, which takes and ahakes a man, has no longer any real existence for the spheres of life la which urbanity Is the rule. In such regions to avow your love Is rather like undressing in public, but nobody Is shy of proclaiming a hate, because what passes wtth them for hate, is not the crude stuff. Love always retains some of the primitive. all cononerlng away that Sophas something1 ocles wrote vboot in another highly civilised society two thouiwnd years ago; and even today no drawing room is without apprehension that the creature may break loose. It la not altogether a disagreeable apprehension; the discouragement of love is never whole-hearted; everybody, some one said, loves a lover, and at any rate every decent person does. But bate with its acrid atmosphere carries discomfort into sensitive circles; its sudden explosion affects people like a bad smell, and so manners, much mqte powerful than. monUv&aYe brought It very tolerably under control. The task has been easier because hate Is not a necessity of nature ; breeding earth has no use for It; and It runs counter to that instinct of association which la part of man's gregarious temperament--North American Review. Amateur Motorist No one can feel that he bee ^become habituated to motoring so long as be secretly congratulates himself WNearly everytht nounced some othe In Europe Is preway m -i I MOTHER:-- Fletcher's Castoria is< a pleasant, harmless Substitute Sifor; Castor Oil, Paregoric, TeethiQg Drops and Soothing Syrups, prepared for Infants and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere rccoauaend it Take your choice and suit jrour taste. S-B--or Menthol flavor. A sure relief for coughsC colds and hoarseness. Put one to your mouth et bedtime* Sltwmjm hup m boa on Aam& SMITH BROTHERS SB COUCHDROPS Hgasfc . «- V"'» ...... ... •