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Show THF. FTfH rOTTNTV NFwq. PA WWLPH. ITT AH - DOES LAUIIDRY if it THE WORK AND HOUSEWORK TOO Surprised to Find HerIn fallback and legs so badly, with other troubles that women sometimeshave,that my doctor ordered me to stay in bed a week in every month. It didnt do me much good, so one day after talking with a friend who took Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound for about the same troubles I had, I thought I would try it also. I find that I can work in the laundry all through the time and do my housework, too. Last month I was so surprised at myself to be up and around and feeling good while before I used to feel lifeless. I have told some of the rls who work with me and have such oubles to try Lydia E.Pinkham'sVege-tabl- e Compound, and I tell them how it has helped me. You can use my testiMrs. monial for the good of others.' Blanche Silvia, 69 Grant St, Taunton, com-inete- ly Mass. Its the same story one friend telling another of the value of Lydia E. 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We do not make ne cent of profit until the Aoes are sold to you. it if worth dollars for you to remember that when you buy shoes at our stores oKPBorrr. lovmovti liresboe lie matter rh ereyou dosfees oao supply you with JaDouIu shoes Theyeost in Francisco plautlp sUtm sols. Kmere do in8aa New England. 7 and $4 g hr uk Is WwddMk eur MVKPARF shoes withany mi fir fail cat. IB or fi'J shoes made. TO MSH0HANT8 dealer In pour (men .... ..WtL.0 eaqtas thee, tents toPresident daw for exciunve nphie to VT.X. Doublets Shoe On, f dandle this quick seUtng, Stuck tumotr turn. far tteulmirtta r Tlawir pNMraf-eieateh mar furs mi, Mmm ear sKwirr " mi everrtfclnr When Wher How is Trap and m at Better trap and tnppti supplies deaUnr7S6.Oo6.OUO gW Hto iriU aqaar ataad behind every iranearrinn 6f Where people are queer there is a deal of food for thought in what say. :oofl SHE DYED A SWEATER, SKIRT AND CHILDS COAT WITH DIAMOND DYES Each package ef Diamond Dyes" direction con-itn- a so simple any woman caa her worn, shabby dr- - ea, ye or tint kirtB, waists, coats, stooldngg, sweaters, uveruies, draperies, hangings, everything, yen m mm has never dyea before. Buy 'ham end Dyes ns other kind then a rfeot heme dyeing ia sure because are guaranteed aot te spot, or run. Tell your druggist material you wish to dye ia ... or whether it ia linen, cotton mixed goeda. Advertisement. Dia-Dye- Yon can fltoye. tell a sloven by the fit of cr WB JIv'Morningsl Eyfes FCeepVbur - Clear Healthy Bloon SUCee OmliHiirl CCWrwa 1 1 il i n ill m Copyright, 1922, by the Macmillan Co. "I used to have pains Cores, j ALLEN WHITE n u in uirniTiTt ; : : i i u n il il i inil self Feeling So Well HINDERCORNS Removes ensures louses, all fi KING OF li I BOYVILLE ffwILLIAM H Taunton, Mass. and he had a right to look straight ahead of him, as If he did not hear the question, and say: Lookie here, Mealy, I wish you would go and tell Abe I want him to hurry up, for I want to see him. Abe was Piggy's nearest friend. His other name was Carpenter. Piggy only wished to be rid of the frecklefaced boy. But the freckle-face- d boy was not used to royalty and Its ways, so he pushed his Inquiry. ' Say. Piggy, have you got your red in that bundle? There as no reply. They had gone a block when the freckle-face- d boy could stand it no longer and said: Say, Piggy, you neednt be so smart about your old bundle; now honest. Piggy, what have you got In that bundle? Aw soft soap, take a bite good ter yer appetite, said the king, as he faced about and drew up his left cheek and lower eye-lipugnaciously. The freckle-faceboy saw he would have to fight If he stayed, so he turned to go, and said, as though nothing had happened, Where do you suppose old Abe Is, anyhow?" J; st before school was called Piggy Pennington was playing scrub" with all his might, and a little girl his Hearts Desire was taking out of her desk a wreath of roses, tied to a shaky wire frame. There was a crj d of girls around her admiring it, and speculating about the possible author of the gift; but to these she did not show the patent medicine card, on which was scrawled, over the druggists advertisement : Yours truly, W. H. P. When the last bell rang. Piggy Pennington was the last boy in, and he did not look toward the desk where he had put the flowers, until after the singing. Then he stole a sidewise glance that way, and his Hearts Desire was deep in her geography. It was an age before she filed past him with the B" class In geography, and took a seat directly In front of him, where he could look at her all the time, unobserved by her. Once she squirmed in her place and looked toward him, but Piggy Pennington was head over heels in the Iser rolling rapidly. When their eyes did at last meet, Just as Piggy, leading the marching around piiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiuiiK of a-- A who are born In a small are born free and equal. the big city It may be different; there are doubtless good little boys who disdain bad little boys, and poor little boys who are never to be noticed under any circumstances. But in a small town, every boy, good or bad, rich or poor, stands among boys on his own merits. The son of the In hanker who owns a turning-pol- e the back yard, does homage to the bakers boy who can sit on the bar nnd drop and catch by his leg3; while the good little boy who is kept In wide collars and cuffs by a mistaken mother, gazes through the white paling of his fathers fence at the troupe headed for the swimming hole, and pays all die reverence which his dwarfed nature can muster to the sign of the two fingers. In the social order of boys who live In country towns, .a boy is measured by what he can do, and not by what his father is. And so, Winfield Hancock Pennington, whose boy name was Piggy Pennington, was the For Piggy could King of Boyville. walk on his hands, curling one foot gracefully over his back, and pointing the other straight In the air; he could hang by his heels on a flying trapeze ; he could chin a pole so many times that no one could count the number; he could turn a somersault In the air from the level ground, both backwards and forwards, he could tread water und lay his hair; he could hit any marble In any ring from taws and knucks down, and better than all, he could cut his initials in the ice on skates, and whirl around and around so many times that he looked like an animated shadow, when he would dart away up the stream, his red comfort flapping behind him like a laugh of defiance. In the story books such a boy would be the son of a widowed mother, and turn out very good or very bad, but Piggy was not a story a grobook boy, and his father cery store, from which Piggy used to steal so many dates that the boys said his father must have cut up the almanac to supply him. As he never gave the goodies to the other boy3, but kept them for his own use, his name of Piggy was his by all the rights of Boyville. There was one thing Piggy Pennington could not do, and it, was the one of all things which he most wished he could do; he could not under any circumstances say three consecutive and coherent. words to any girl under fifteen and over nine. Even after school Piggy could not Join the select coterie of boys who followed the girls down through town to the postoffice. He could not tease the girls about absent boys at such times and make up rhymes like: First the cat and then her tall; Jimmy Sears am Maggie Hale, nnd then shout them out for the crowd to hear. Instead of joining this courtly troupe Piggy Pennington went off with the boys who really didn't care for such things, and fouelit. or played tracks up, or wrestled his way leisurely home in time to get In his night wood. But Ids heart was not In these pastimes; it was with a red shawl of a peculiar shade, that was wending its way to the post office and back to(a y home In one of the few houses In the little town. Time and again had Piggy tried to make some sign to let his feelings be known, but every time he had failed.' Lying in wait for her at corners, and suddenly breaking upon her with a glory of backward nnd forward somersaults did not convey the state of Ids heart. So only one heart beat with but one single thought, and the other took motto candy nnd valentines and red apples and picture cards and other tokens of esteem from other boys, and beat on with any number of thoughts, entirely immaterial But to the uses of this narrative. Piggy Pennington did not take to the enchantment of corn silk cigarettes nnd rattan nnd grapevine c'gars; he tried to sing, and wailed dismal ballads about flie O.vpsys Warning, and The Child In the Grave With Its Mother, und Shes a Daisy, Shes a Darling, Shes a Dumpling, Shes a Lamb, whenever lie was In hearing distance of his hearts desire. In the hope of conveying to her some hint of the state of his affections; but It wns useless. Even when he tried to whistle plaintively as he passed her house In the gloamirg, his notes brought forth no responsive echo. One morning In the late spring, he spent half an hour before breakfast among his mothers roses, which were Just In first bloom. He had taken out there all the wire from an old broom, and all his kite string. His mother had to call three times before he would leave his work. The youngster wns the first to leave the table, and by eight o'clock he was at his task again. Before the first school bell had rung, Piggy Pennington was bound for the school house with a strange looking parcel under Ids arm. He tried to put his coat over It. but It stuck out and the newspaper that was wrapped around It, bulged into so many corners, that it looked like a home-tie-d bundle of laundry. What you got? asked the freck I boy, who was leurntag at Piggy's feet how to do the muscle grind on the turning-pole- . Bat Piggy Pennington was the King BOYS two-stor- ball-pan- Boyvlllle, ts d d Wheft a MW bay, who a dark day. didnt belong to the school, came up at recess to play. Piggy shuffled over to him and asked gruffly: Whats your name? Puddin n tame, ast me agin an Pll tell you the same, said the new boy, and then there was a fight It didnt soothe Piggys feelings one bit that he whipped the new boy, for the new boy was smaller than Piggy. And he dared not turn his flushed face towards his Heart's Desire. It was almost four oclock when Piggy Pennington walked to the masters desk to get him to work out a problem, and as he passed the desk of Hearts Desire he dropped a note In her lap. It read : Are you mad?" But he dared not look for the answer, as they marched out that night, so he contented himself with punching the boy ahead of him with a pin, and stepping on his heels, when they were in the back part of the room, where the teacher would not see him. The King of Boyville walked home that evening. The courtiers saw plainly that his majesty was troubled. After this feat the king was quiet At dusk, when the evening chores were done. Piggy Pennington walked past the home of his Hearts Desire and howled out a doleful ballad which began : You ask what makes till darkey a Hundred Calories in About EAT e. a box of little raisins when feel hungry, lazy, tired or faint In about 9 seconds a hundred calories or more of energizing nutri-me- nt will put you on your toes again. are For Little fruit sugar in .practically predigested form levulose the scientists call And levulos is real body fuel. 75' Sun-Mai- it wee-ee- Why he like others am not gay. But a man on the sidewalk passing, said: Well, son, thats pretty good, but wouldnt you just as lief sing aa to make that noise? So the king went to bed with a heavy heart. He took that heart to school with him the next morning, and dragged it over the school ground, playing crack the whip and stink-basBut when he saw Hearts Desire wearing In her hair one of the white roses from his mothers garden the Penningtons had the only white roses In the little town he knew It was from the wreath which he had given her, and so light was his boyish heart that it was with an effort that he kept It out of his throat. 'There were smiles and smiles that day. During tlffe singing they began, and every time she came past him from a class, and every time he could pry his eyes behind her geog- - 9t Needing practically no digestion, it gets to work and revives you quick. Full of energy and iron both good and good for you. Just try a box. Little Sun-Mai- ds Raisins Between-Mea- l Sc Everywhere Had Your, Iron Today? 4 $680 . o. b. Flint, Mich, He Walked on His Hands In Front of the Crowd for Nearly Halt a Block, the room, was at the door to go out for recess, the thrill amounted to a shock that sent him whirling in a pin wheel of handsprings toward the ball scrub first bat, ground, shouting first bat, first bat," from sheer, bubbling joy. Piggy made four tallies that recess, and the other boys couldnt have put him out, if they had used a hand grenade or a fire extinguisher. He received four distinct shots that day from the eyes of his Hearts Desire, and the last one sent him home on the run, tripping up every primary urchin, whom he found tagging along by the way, and whooping at the top of his voice. The next morning, Piggy Pennington astonished his friends by bringing a big armful of red and yellow and pink and white roses to school. He had never done this before, and when he iiad run the gauntlet of the big boys, who were not afraid to steal them from him, he made straight for his schoolroom, and stood holding them in his hands while the girls gathered about him teasing for the beauties. It was nearly time for the last bell to ring, and Piggy knew that his Hearts Desire would be In the room by the time he got there. He was not mistaken. But Heart's Desire did not, clamor with the other girls for one of the roses. Piggy stood off their pleadings as long as he could with "Naw, Why naw, of course I wont, Naw, what I want to give you one for, and Go uway from here I tell you, and still Hearts Desire did not ask for her flowers. There were but a few moments left before school would be called to order, and in desperation Piggy gave one rose away. It was not a very pretty rose, but he hoped she would see that the others were to be given away, and ask for one. But she his Hearts Desire stood near a window, talking to the freckle-face- d boy. Then Piggy gave away one rose nfter another. As the last bell began to ring lie gav them to the boys, as the girls were all supplied. And still she came not. There was one rose left, the most beautiful of all. She went to her desk, und as the teacher came In, Bell in hand, Piggy surprised himself, the teacher, and the school by laying the beautiful flower, without a word on the teacher's desk. That day was rephy, or her grammar, a flood of gladness swept over his soul. That night Piggy Pennington followed the girls from the schoolhouse to the post office, and in a burst of enthusiasm he walked on his hands in front of the crowd, for nearly a block. When his Hearts Desire said: Ah, aint you afraid youll hurt yourself, doing that? Piggy pretended not to hear her. and said to the boys : Aw, that aint nothin; come down to my barn, an Ill do somepln that'll make yer head swim." He was too exuberant to 'Contain himself, and When he left the girls hi started to run after a stray chicken, that happened along, and ran till he was out of breath. He did not mean to run in the direction his Hearts Desire had taken, but he turned a corner, and came up with her suddenly. Her eyes beamed upon him, and he could hot run away, as he wished. She made room for him on the sidewalk, and he could do nothing but walk beside her. For a b'oek they were so embarrassed that neither spoke. It was Piggy who broke the silence. His words came from his heart. He had not yet learned to speak otherwise. Wheres your rose? he asked, not seeing It. Wliat rose? said the girl, as though she had never In her short life heard of such an absurd thing as a rose. Oh, you know, returned the boy, stepping Irregularly, to make the tips of his toes come on the cracks in the sidewalk. There was another pause, during which Piggy picked up a pebble and threw it at a bird In a tree. His heart was sinking rapidly. Oh, that rose? said his Hearts Desire, tnrnihg full upon him with, the enchantment of her childish eyes. Why, here It Is in my grammar. Im ml; ng It to keep with the others. Why? Oh. nothin much," replied the boy. I bet you cant do this, he added, ns he glowed up into her eyes from an impulsive handspring. And thus the King of Boyville first set Ms light, little foot upon the soil of an unknown country. 1923 SUPERIOR Chevrolet. Utility Coupg This is the d closed car on the market with Fisher Body. It is bought extensively by farmers, concerns equipping fleets for salesmen, and is popular for professional and general use where a single seat and extra large rear compartment are desired. QUALITY has been still further improved by more artistic design and added improvements. t j ECONOMY has been still further increased by engineering refinements and greatly broadened prediction and distribution facilities. SERVICE is now offered on a flat rate basis by 10,000 dealers and service stations. PRICE remains the same, in spite of added equipment and more expensive construction, which have greatly increased value. f Some distinctive features of the new line are: streamline body design with high hood and crowned, paneled fenders; vacuum feed and rear gasoline tank on all models; drum type head lamps with legal lenses. Curtains open with doors of open models. Closed models have Fisher Bodies with plate glass Ternstedt regulated windows, straight side cord tires, sun visor, windshield wiper and dash light. The Sedanette is equipped with auto trunk on rear. See these remarkable cars. Study the specifications. lowest-price- . ' Prices F. O. B. Flint, Michigan SUPERIOR SUPERIOR SUPERIOR SUPERIOR SUPERIOR SUPERIOR Two Passenger Five Passenger Two Passenger Four Passenger Five Passenger Light Delivery Roadster Touring - Utility Coupe Sedanette . 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