f <'44 '• ' i* i $*^ii f-jsatwi sfcsfcv* I 3$ fte4^ ;^E jjlSfelf* *»&¥& Concrete walks will keep the,, mud out of the kitchen Marquette Cement driveways and walks cm jaat /farm give you ready access to the different buiM- -ings the year round. They are easy to keep jclean, are attractive and permiQpnt Thftyjadd 4p^ the value of your property. £%'•*/#&• X*; '1*" Any good contractor can lay Marquette Cemant . walks around the average farm in a few day*. Or, you can do the work yourself in between tiiMi You will find the cost is surprisingly low. *For best results, use Marquette Cement on all ' farm improvements. Your local Marquette dealer will assist you in planning durable concrete feeding floors, silos, troughs, fence posts and other farm improvemen.t. !. i lii.s hpi' Marquette Cement M anufacturing Cow Marquette Building, Chicago The BoneheadI •I lfn. Smaller, who loved to air ber , Trench, met a male acquaintance just ^fllter she had parted with a young ^jroman whom she understood be jfartlcularly disliked. "Oh," she said archly, "did yon nolice me just now speaking to your ste noire?" "Pardon me," he professed, "you are listaken there; I never was in love 1th the lady."--Boston Transcript. m and Insist! ><J Unless you see the name "Bayer1" on ' r, lockage or m tablets you are not get* % ting the genuine Bayer product preh scribed by physicians over twenty-two ? * • - I""1 fMpt* «>y muiioM Xor " * "Cttda •_ y Headache \ ToothaClUt ; Lumbago Ebrache Rheumatism Neuralgia* Pain, Pain . Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Silly. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of IWelve tablets*cost few cents. Drug- ^ gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. ; - Asperhi is the trade mark of Bayer I; Ifanufacture of Monoacetlcaddeater ot V !>t •alicylicacid.--Advertisement •y 'pif. \C "i Psvchotooy. | That paychoioKy is everybody's' ||ieDC« ts the assertion majde by liob- «rt Chenault Glvler, author of a new book on that subject. He says in his Introduction: "Our important plans and projects, onr business schemes and interviews, our investments of aponey and friendship are one and. all Spunples at applied psychology." /i » " s| . Important. « "Here seme giiy has proposed by X|dio." "Well, I hope he picked up |§e right station." !' #•! ' A i rifling Matter. "Is he eligible in every way 3?" "Almost. All he needs Igib* divorce front his present wife." - Remarkable Recovery Cass In Serious Kidney Caae. This letter, from George Roberts of Church street, Malpas. Cheshire, England, sounds almost unbelievable, yet every word 'is true and was signed before a notary public. For eleven years I suffered acute pain and sickness. I consulted several prominent doctors and each one had a different opinion At last I v|as put under X-rays and it was found I was suffering from gall stones. My doctors and the specialist at the Royal Infirmary, Chester, told me they were not porous and no medicine in the world would move them, so there remained nothing for it but an operation. When my wife heard this she told me to get Dodd's Kidney Pills, as tliey had cured her wiien she suffered from black jaundice and gall stones. It Is now nineteen years since my wife felt any symtoms of these troubles. I purchased a quantity of Dodd's Kidney Pills and took them according to directions. This Is seven years ago and I have had no return of the trouble. •It was a surprise for all the doctor*. They had to admit the fact as I was under 4he X-rays several times, and for a while they dul not know what to make of it, until they found thev had disappeared altogether. They asked me what I had been taking and were not pleased when I told them Dodd's Kidney PIUs. I am enjoying the best of health and have lost no time through sickness. I also suffered with rheumatism as well as gall stones before I was cured by iflWinj Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I declare the above stats* went to be true." Declared at White Church In the County of Salop this fourth day of March, 1922, A. W. Smith, a Commissioner for Catha. The genuine DODD'S--three D's ht nanas --are sold by every good druggist, if your druggist isn't stocked up, send «0o for a large box to Dodd's Medicine Coingsay, Buffalo, N. Y.--AdvertlrenjjpBfct Compound Fracture. A: "So her heart was broken?" ' * "Yes: in two places. Southampton and Newport."--Life. DYED HER SKIRT, DRESS, t JWEATER AND DRAPERIES WITH "DIAMOND DYES" Each _ package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple any woman cas dye or tint her worn, shabby dresses, skirts, waists, coats, stockings, sweater^ coverings, draperies, hangings, everything, even if she has never dyea before. Buy "Diamond Dyes"--no other kind--then perfect home dyeing is sure because Dia» inond Dyes are guaranteed not to spot, fade, streak, or ran. Tell your druggist whether the material you wich to dye ia wool or silk, or whether it is linen, Cotton or mixed goods.--Advertisement. .Simplicity Most Difficult. It Is far more difficult to be simple thsn to be complicated; far more difficult to sacrifice skill and cease exerw tlon in the proper place than to e*> _ .TTfr » V * -J* $ " We clothes for each new season, wben shown for the first time, naturally give rise to a great deal of discussion of fashions. They seem to turn things topsy-turvy in the realm of clothes for a few weeks at least. There is usually a universal Impression that ":ere are to be radical changes in fashions--an impression, observes a fashion writer in the New York Tribune, which is made by the multitude of ideas set adrift to be picked up by any buyer who fancies any one of them. In very few weeks, however, the best that has been shown in dress is adopted. W# hnvA nnt hnd anv . Wrap of Gold and Rod Cloth With Embroidery on .Collar. tic changes In fashions or anything very hizarre worn In a number of. years. Wraps of various sorts are claiming a great deal of attention at the present time. The one-piece dress, so universally worn, has mad«.- the separate coat very Important. It took coatmakers some time to realise the harvest in store for them through the popularity of the one-piece dress. During the years that it has been the backbone of every woman's wardrobe the two-piece suit has periodically been thrust before the public Ij some guise In the hope that It would srle Its old place In populnr favor* -- SI'mmer Outline. \ Various measures of sacresi rewarded those who hacked these movements. Women always like a change, and each time the tailored suit has been forced to the foreground they have eagerly ordered It. but the demand has quickly died out again. One of the most definite tendencies In street costs for this autumn is toward glimmer lines. While they cannot bfe described an fitted coats, they are more on the lines of the chemise frock--that Is. very straight and of slender appearance. In fact, many of them lpok almost like dresses. Sleeves of street coats are diminishing In si<e, thus adding ttf the sllmness of the garment. Velours de lalne Is still one of the favorite materials for daytime coats. A model in this fabric and typical of the latest developments In coats is trimmed with fine tucks, a type' of trimming which seems to increase in popularity daily. An additional bit of trimming is added by the slashed panels at either side, which are bound with braid. In colors, various shades of brown and black are favored. * Fancy beige end black cloth arc used for another model. The background of the cloth Is beige repp, the stripe being in the form of-a black cord which looks almost like an applied trimming of fine black braid. Demand for Coatliks Frocks. Coatlike frocks give their wearers a trim, well-dressed appearance, and for this reasons they should be exceedingly popular. This type of costume for years has beet, dear to the Smartly dressed French woman, who Song has recognized its desirable qualities. It took the American woman some time to adopt it, for she ever has been a stanch adherent of the tailored salt for street wear, but each season for the "t few years has seen a further departure from the suit for women who have passed the flapper age. They have come to see that one Is really never well dressed In a blouse and skirt after removing the Jacket of a suit, and It is not possible to wear the suit Jacket both indoors: and out. Tc do so Interferes with one's comfort. Fur is very important as a trimming this season. Such furs as rabbit and squirrel are being dyed to exactly match cloths. These will prove , formidable rivals to the more costly pelts. Many of the new fur collars on cloth coats are of the standing variety, flaring from the neckline. The same type of collar is used on evening wraps. It may be made entirely of fur or ot fabric edged with fur, such as monkey skin. There is no abatement in the demand for monkey fur. This demnn<) makes one wonder where all the monkey fur is to come from, for tin fact is well known that this prolonged vogue has threatened the extermination of the monkey. ' Autumn Evening Wrap*. While daytime wraps are slender, those for evening wear are voluminous. In the matter of color, too. the pendulum swings far In the opposite direction. The shades for evening are as vivid as those for daytime are subdued. In materials velvets and metallic brocades lead. ^Main metallic cloth.» woven on a background of color are most effective. They are used either alone or with handsome fur trimmings or in combination with velvet. The evening wraps being prepared for this winter are extremely magnificent in fabric, in embroidery and fur •trimmings. Linings are exceedingly beautiful. Often a velvet brocaded chiffon is used to veil a lining of sjlk Old-fashioned shirring is used profusely on evening wraps. It is seen in both vertical and horizontal lines. This Is a favorltei method of orna menting upstanding collars which are edged with fur. The amount of embroidery being used on fall clothes Indicates that those making the models for the newseason firmly believe that women have not tired of this way ot ornamenting apparel--and, after all, they are perfectly justified in this supposition, for It is one of the oldest methods of trimming and one of which the feminine world apparently has never be- 15 Fluid ALCOHOL'S PBR CEKT. A>fe$efobfeftcpanti(»trfe similatin$tt>eKod by fejshlh> 6 the Stands and Bawfag IMAMS, (liunurv j Thereby Promoting IHiestfofi | CheeffchiessuMlRestCaBtiios Opium, Morphine nor [ >Bn»ral. NotKahcotic is JkOt , A helpful Remedy _ Constipation and Diarrhcw and Feverishness and . Loss of Six lfestittH^ref^iplnfanv fteSimaeSi4n*tnrerf The GENT*c*GoH,»«®t wriffYDRK; ® -M Special Care of Baby. ? That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Y«t It >; fl ia more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups tea** •**'*3- a man's medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism <f that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned, neither be tolerated by specialists in children's Tour Physician will tell you that Baby's prepared with even greater care than, Baby's food. A Baby's stomach when in good health is too often disa by improper food. Could yon for a moment, then, of t>_. to your ailing child anything but a mtdicine especially piepcnd for Infants and Children ? Dont be deceived. Make a mental note of this?--It is important, Xotfcen, that you should remember that to function well, tha digestive organs your Baby must receive special care. Ho Baby is to lUtaal the desired results may be had from the use of medicine* prjewfly prepared for grown-ups. MOTHERS SHOULD REM) THE BOOKLET 1MT » MOMO EVERY MTTU «f RETORTS CMIHU GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of End Copy of Wrapper. w4 W *0 TMCCKNTAUN COMPANY, NIW YORK CITY, 10 Cents BBI6HTENS, REFRESHES, ADDS HEW DEUfiKT TO QUI BMP™" PUTNAM FADELESS DYES--dyes or tints as yen Willi Housefly Quick Thinker. The housefly Is the cleverest of Insects, Its Intelligence surpassing that of the ant and the bee. An authority asserts that It can think 100 tiroes quicker than a .nan. .5^ CwbollwlTt <%aleklr H*Uctm and heals burning, ltchin* and torturing skin diseases. It Instantly stops the pain of burns. Hpals without scars. 30c and 60c. Ask your drusrelst. or send 30c to The J. Cole Co.. Ro^kford. III., for a pack* --Advertisement. HOB SEX rorr.HING? USE Spohn's Distemper Largest Buvmd. The kind of seaweed known as kelp la said to be the largest, or at least the longest. In the world, sometimes attaining a length of 1.500 feet. come weary. WRAP TO MATCH EACH GOWN pgp At tne beginning of MX slf * | color* on your walla tobaiuumf ize best with your rugs and drm- • peries--Artistic effects always I: comeoutofthepackagewiththe ctom and circle printed m red. mm mm Instead of Kalsomine or Wktt Paver* Black velvet wraps lined with white ermine or rabbit are among the luxurious models for this winter. Deaigners consider it well worth their while to spend a great deal of their valuable time on the evening wrap. For many seasons, while It waa more or leas of a coatly affah. It waa quite uninteresting. Few changes were made In It from season to season, the reason for this tielng that most womeii bdught only une evening wrap during the season, or perhaps one In two or three seasons. Now those who have only one evening wrap for the entire winter are very old-fashioned, Indeed. Smart women who can possibly afford It have an evening wrap-to match or harmonise with each dress. An interesting fashion note Is the making of evening bags, purses or vanity cases to match each wrap. This Is a very clever idea, in which dressmakers and bag makers have united. OcitHoua Fabrics. Oorgeons fabrics will hold the footer of the fashion stage during the I coming'autumn. every new season strenuous efforts are made to divert attention from the previous season's styles, hut since dressmakers realise that It is next to Impossible to compel the present-day woman to adopt a new silhouette they have turned their attention toward fabrics and trimmings. There Is something so pre-eminently youthful about the-simple, straightline dress, which has become almost a uniform, that It is difficult to persuade women to accept anything else, although dresses with a bouffant tendency are claiming considerable attention for evening wear. With so little change In silhouette It is logical that fabrics and trimmings should become more Interesting. For the evening there are gorgeous Oriental broAdes in velvet, satin and lame, together with embroideries In metal and silk heavily weighted with crystal heads, bugles and cabochons. There are fabrics studded with steel, gold and imitation Jewels. Lame, especially in silver tffects, is extremely popular," v TOE NEW PARIS SEPARATE BLdUSE Winsome Little Garment Suitable for Wear With Any Sort of Separate Dress Skirt. Coming from Paris is the separate blouse, which makes a coat or something that resembles a coat One of these Is made of a combination of ?lain satin and a p^re of printed satin ippjied us a sort at u -side undervest. tod at tire same time serves to face lie sleeves which ore silt to the elbow, 'n this way a decorative sort of blouse s obtained, and It can be worn, often irlth the sort of separate skirt which ron happen to have ibout the honae, saving worn it for many years with Jlonses which were more or leas satisfactory. The jacket blouse is really , one of the hardest notes of the season, for it promises to carry off 11 the honors and to lift the silhouette right out of the class of one color from head to foot Into the class '.vhere the colors are somewhat divided »t the watftllne. ffcere are Jaqoettes ma*t «f a!) *- manner of printed silks with plain silks for their linings -nd furs or Imitation furs used for their high and tightly fitting collars. The blouse portions of these costumes are. In the main, quite colorful, and -he skirts are made of plain materials either In woolens or In silks.' The jacquettes must have the elements of being a contrast to the skirt that Is worn below them. There can. for Instance, be those Jaquettes which fold oloSel^ about the hips. Then there r.*-e those which are made In the box-coat manner an J which have to be worn with those very plain black satin skirts that are plaited In wide plaits or are done In accordion plaiting, which 1s a much ^asier and more, usual way of getting th?5amp cffcct. ........ %r. ,/Antique Idea Sprsa^X-; •*'" ' The vogue for antique earrings and bracelets not only continues but has resulted in a de®iisj Jtpjc chains, brooches, ' Cutlcura Comforts Baby's tklft When red, rough and itching, by hot baths of Cuticura Soap and touches of Cutlcura Ointment. Also make use now and then of that exquisitely scented dusting powder, Cutlcura Talcum, one of the indispensable Cutlcura- Toilet Trio.--Advert Isemen L MALE SHOPPERS ARE "WISE" City Grocery Clerk Denies It Is Easier «e Mefce Salea to Men TtHM to Women.' "Whoever says that It Is easier to sell groceries to men than to women Is not acquainted with the facts." said n grocery clerk the other day. "I've seen cartoons in the papers of binbonds bringing home cleansing powder instead of rat poison and forgetting half of their wives' orders, but I've never seen it in real life. "Men are hard customers. I think they read more about the cost of foods, particularly advertising, than women. They s«em to know the different brands better, at any rate. I've often substituted brands for a housewife, only to be refused by her husband wlien I tried it again. I'd rather attempt to talk a woman Into buying a new brand of canned peas, for example, than tw face ber husband with the same sales talk. The male shoppers know too much about food--perhaps because they do most of the eating."-- New York Sun. Km) JUST BEEN GOING ALONG to brpak It vp and *$t them fesek In condtthm. u«e has made "SPOHN'S" Indispensable In treating GasalW l Colds, Influenza and Distemper with their remttlar tuiapMUS Hons, and all disease* of the throet. aoee and lunffa. Aeta raarvelously as preventive; acta eqaaltf well aa eore. BeM tm two ftizes at all drug stores. SPOHJt MEDICAL COAgPAHT eOSHKK. gppMMA Kbenezer's Explanation Surely Should Have Carried Weight, Under the Circumstances. Ebenezer Washington was up before the city recorder for being drank. The judge looked at him for a moment and said;. "You have been up here twice for being drunly E|>enezer, and, seeing you are an old man, I am going to let you off 'with a fine of $5. Now, see that you don't come here again. It's the rood, if you do." The old negro thanked him and walked out of the court room. The next morning Ebenezer waa up In court again for being drunk. Hla case was called. The judge 'looked at hipi reprovingly and remarked: "Ebenezer, I told you hot to come up here again and here you are. Have yeu anything to say?" The old negro looked up and replied: "No, salt, Jedge, only dat die am de same drunk."--Judge. Student Who Agreed. Socialist Agitator--Think of the potential musicians who lack the money to buy an instrument; think of the artists who will never have the opportunity to paint; think of the greatminded ones who cannot study-- Stude--Yes. dammit, that's me.-- Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. No. Chance for Her. Ton ought to choose the time for asking money from your busbund. For instance, whenever I want a new dress I always wait until my husband has had a food round'of golf, Then I spring It on him and he is easy to deal with." 'That's all right for you. Your husband can play the game, but my husband never has shot a deceut rf'P'1 In hla life." 'h.'Wf; Certain Test Two fishermen were angling In a river, when one suddenly dropped hla rod. "Say!" he ejaculated, "Did you see that feller fall off that cliff over there into the river?"* "Don't get excited, Bill," soothed the other. "Mebbe it was a movie actor makln' pictures." "But. my stars! How kin we tell?' "Well," counseled the Judicious one. "If be drowns, be ain't."--Epworth Herald. Your noblest natures are most credulous. Original Chinese in J. F. Itock, adventurous ptast jtaater, reports from Kengttmg, BsnM, te tt» Agricultural department that fee !•»' found a village of the -'it'**' €Mm0B referred to In the oldest htettffltst book of China, which dates back years before Cbrist. "They are MMll Miao," he says, "and do not eat er grow any rice, but only corn. They cut dow n the forests an4 plant corn 0ti elevation of 3,500 to 4,080 feet egt>j elephant-shaped m--t»lti of Chung on which they live.. the dirtiest people I ever not even the Tibetans. children wallow in the mift^ pigs. They are natives of province, China, but have over into Yunnan and even Slam.--Science Service. John Bull and Hia Wool. Australia's biggest lawsuit la te tried. Tlie wool commlsale^ serting the British gov« bringing action against the Ai wool growers and exporters, (UWm damages of about $4£0(M)Olk . Ifcft. wool commission alleges the AMfiMAlan wool dealers disposed of Ufa! contrary to tbeir arrangement Ittk the British government. The tiff's brief covers no fewer than pages. Hia Version. Little Frank's parents have bee* trying to Impress nu the lad the necessity of saying "if yea please" vbca asking the things he desired. One evening at dinner the foOowhig conveiaa tlon took place: Frank--Mother* b r e a d . • . : . < > . • i . - Mother--Nowv ftahk I J* what? reach it Dubioua Compliment. Wife--Whenever I sing the i howls. Hub--The Instinct of imitation, : dear.--Boston Evening Transcript A fellow fee!in* drous kind. •v v.- one way to keep sound* perfect teeth?, rjpHE only way to keep the priceless blessing ot SMI perfect teeth is to eat the kind of food that » them not only with proper nourishment but gives work to do. Grape-Nuts not only induces thorough cation, but also supplies the lime and other clewcal quired (or building firm tooth structure. This wholesome, healthful cereal food Is made whole wheat flour and malted barley . AO the tautriOMflt of these splendid grains, including the vital mineral d|> ments so often lacking in so-called "reined" food% it retained. A delicious, appetizing dish, Grape-Nuts, with or good milk, provides complete nourishment far bone and nerves, in readily digestible fonp» Sold by Grocers Everywhere! i. . "There's a Reason" A *r Grape-Nuts --THE BODY BUILDER - &£ &>>#£ ' • • ' - " • - ~ i i*