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Show flontents 15 Fluid Diachn Children For Gs HUH ife OF ROADS DURABILITY VARY 5) Classification of Passenger and Freight Highways Is Predicted by Chairman Diehl. ALCOHOL-- 3 PER CENt. J AVegefattelYcparationfprAs similatingtheFood by tinitihaStomadis and Bowels jf tit: Mineral. Not Narcotic JhmptinS iSenru JkcbUeSaO JjuseSml ISEf CariMSugtjP &ritjyrwihrtr mitt m M C AhclpMRemedyfor Constipation and Diarrhoea ana and Feverishness SLEEP OF . loss resulting IherefromnMaMy. J fE5 & JisS'S MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT CLf0. las Centaur is.50'."' That Baby should have a bed of its ownali are agreed. Yet It is more reasonable for an Infant to sleep with grown-up-s than to use a mans medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of that same infant. Either practice is to he shunned.' Neither would be tolerated by specialists in childrens diseases. Your Physician will tell you that Babys medicine must be prepared with even greater care than Babys food. A Babys 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 ? Dont 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 he had from the use of medicines primarily prepared for grown-up18 AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA CASTORIA always GENUINE CowP-oo-t EWYORN' of the country, according to Chairman George C.. Diehl of the' A. A. A. good roods board, .who has sent a communication to this effect to the office of the chief of engineers of the War department.-. Mr. .Diehl thus comments on the highways problem: There will never be a time when all roads are of equal durability and Highways and carrying capacity. railroads are analogous, In that they are both designed to carry traffic, and general rules which have been developed through scientific management of railroads apply as well almost in-- t variably to highways. The heaviest locomotives and rolling stock are carried on roqds like the New York Central and Pennsylvania and Union PaTheir use over lighter concific. structed railroads would ruin the roads in a comparatively brief period. There must come a classification of highways. Over class 1 the heav-lemotortrucks and trailers would be permitted; teach truck should have , large figures conspicuously placed on-total the to weight Indicate sides the that it was permitted to carry ; oper-- . ators and owners of trucks should be prosecuted for using the heaviest, trucks oa roads designed for lighter traffic. It would ' be comparatively rnforce such provisions as to simple there seems to be no defense of the proposition permitting one or two heavy trucks to ruin an investment of many thousand dollars on the lighter constructed highways, v At the rood intersection the highway capacity could be Indicated, aa the highway department should, I believe, have a traffic department under a chief traffic engineer, having to do, not with construction and maintenance but merely with the control of traffic. It is extremely likely that It would result ultimately in a system of freight roads and passenger roads, and that wider and parallel roads would result ultimately in a system of freight roads and passenger roads, and that wider and parallel roads . s. Facsimile Sijnatareof r4 S5l' comparatively near future' in congested sections. Special Care of Baby. sm Thereby Promoting Digest Cheerfulness and RestCoutai nor neither Opium, Morphine Bears the Signature of te Bad Blood Disfigures Young Faces With Unsightly Eruptions The mortifying and unsightly ties must be cast out and the vital skin and facial disfigurements on fluid enriched before the disfigureyoung people from 14 to 20 years ments are cleared up. For this you old are seldom due to anything naturally want an efficient, tested worse than impure blood. The blood remedy like S.S.S., the famous old herb medicine. young bodies are undergoing important changes, Start the young folks and the blood stream is with S.S.S. today (your temporarily disordered druggist has it), and often filled with poisonwrite us about their conous waste matter. dition, addressing Chief In such cases only inMedical Advisor, 841 Swift Laboratory. At' ternal blood remedies can Mu DRUGGISVS relieve. The impuri lanta, Georgia. Time Enough. right in surmising that you liae something of serious import to say to my daughter? Oh, no, sir. Im merely going to propose' to her. Ill talk over the serious details with you after the wedDetroit Times. ding. Am 1 Wt DRUGGISTS SWAMP-ROO- . RECOMMEND What to Tgke for- T SICK - For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record main lined by Dr. Kilmers Swamp-RooAbe eat kidney, liver mediTake a good Little Liver Pills cine. then take 2 or- - for a few nights after. A If is a physicians prescription. few doses restore your organs to their Swamp-Roo- t is a strengthening medicine. It helps the kidneys, liver and Madproper functions and the Headache and the der do' the work nature intended they causes of it pass awajfc lit the same manner should, do. They regulate the Bowels arid prevent Constipation. Swaiiip-Roo- t has stood the test of years. 5mn Pill; Snwll Dow; Small Pric. It is sold by all' druggists on. its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. Re sure to get Swamp-Roand start1 treatment at once. ALL FRUIT GROWERS TRIENDS However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Birds That Should Be Protected Are Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton, N.'Y., for al. Listed by the American For--i ample bottle. When writing be sure ind: estry Association. aiention this paper. Adv. t, j M5SHJDM3 dqgof arters ' Barters ipw I!LL.s asar' , VICTIMS RESCUED ' The American Forestry association has published the fact that a cliff Sydney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles are most dangerous beswallow will eat 1,000 flies, mosquidays in successiqn, and her teacher; a cause of their insidious attacks. in or beetles wheat midgets, look her to tusk for it, saying, Can! toes, chicka lees Heed the first warning they give four of The day. crops me a good reason for your! you give showed 1.028 eggs of the eankerworm. that they need attention by taking being latte? Betty was quiet for a Take A notice, Mr. Fruit Grower. We Just' moment; and then said; fieid cotton a kUled Texas in ;quail sleeps Is ail' I know.:' had eaten 127 boll weevils, and a prairie chicken had over 300 of them in ;its crop. The bob white has been iijiuhihim iknown to eat 135 different kinds of insects. It has been estimated that The worlds standard remedy for these this bird will consume an average of disorders, will often ward off these diseases and strengthen the body against ;75,000 Insects and 6,000,000 weed seeds further attacks. Three sizes, all druggists, in a year. House martins, swallows, for the name Gold Medal on r Los and swifts eat rose beetles, may bee- bolt flies. house and beetles cucumber tles, THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS The quail eats Texas 'XT 6 Bell-an- s .ticks; the killdeer and other shore1 that make a horse Wheeze, birds feed on the larvae of dlsease-- : Roar, hare Thick Wind Hot water can be or Choke-dowcarrying mosquitoes; a Sure Relief ievenlng meal consists of 500 adult j reduced with LL-A- NS mosquitoes. Really Quite Simple. Hetty was late for school several ) , GOLD MEDAL Sure Relief nA fever-carryin- m INDIGESTION FOR Cuticura Soap Complexions j lAre f I Healtby Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcam 25c. 126 MAMMOTH JACKS it I have a bargain for yon, come quick. W. U DeC LOWS JACK FARM Cedar Rapid, Iowa FREGKLES POSmVfcLY Truth, crushed to earth, will rise gain, but when pa steps on one of Idas flowers she has just set out he will be crushed by her, Its a lead pipe, jfirich. d. A bullet- from through a1 six-inc- a big h gun can go wall pretty quick, a bandit can go through a fat man swiftly, but a scandal can go through a neighborhood at the speed of a eomet. Jacksonville She Knew. also other Bunches or Swellings. No blister, her con- - no hair gone, and horse kept at woik. Econafew drops featured at an appliof her omical-only cation. $2. 50 per bottle delivered, look 3 B tret. . Ethel had taken Edith Into Ifldence touching the manner ihusbands proposal. ABSORBIN!. JR, the antiseptic liniment for manWhy, I felt so sorry for the poor kinds reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, Swollen Ifellow, said Ethel, do you know his Veins and Ulcers. $1.25 a bottle atdealers or ,J ' in throat? his stuck 'voice nctually free. delivered. Book Evidence I dont doubt it in the least, said IV. P. YOUNG, lne 310 Temple St., Sprinefleld, Mass, Edith, but however did you know he . iwas proposing? Well, you see," said Ethel, with a course at Iblush, I took a 'college. Freed From Torture , REMOVED by Dr. Barry Freckle Gutnieot Your drwriat or by doII, 65e. Froe book. Dr. C. H. Sorry Co.. 297S Michigan Avanuo, Chicago train Theres one thing certain may be late, but it always gets in a little behind the engine. copper-rivete- n, night-hawk- RE $op 25c. g Times-Unlo- Valuable. ; Grabcoin seems to have a of confidence In his private deal great Mr. secretary. The young man is worth $20,000 a year to Mr. Grabcoin. v' Yes?, Why, he can send callers away, thinking that the only reason why they see that great man,, who may i cant .be telling a funny story to another 'dummy director, Is because hes working sixteen hours a day to keep the country from going to- smash." . Eatonic Cleared His Up-S- at Stomach The people who have seen me suffer tortures from neuralgia brought on up-sstomach now see me perfectly sound and well absolutely due to Eatonic, writes R. Long. Profit by Mr. Longs experience, keep your stomach In healthy condition, fresh and cool, and avoid the ailments tlyit ' come from an acid condition. Eatonic brings relief by taking up and carrying out the excess acidity and does it quickly. Take an Eatonic gases Food for Pugilists. and see how wonderfully after, eating Correspondent intrigued by "stewed ijt helps $ou. Big box costs only a he of fare on bill a says uppercuts trifle with' your druggists guarantee. ordered some. The dish turned out to wTV. U., Salt Lake City, No. the stewed apricots. by an . . - 25-19- 21. ' . M t - -- Athens and the Acropolis. Sowith Athenians. .In addition there are now, at various points in the kingdom Minor, against the Turkish Nationalists, where research is going on, smaller what may be called the only major museums devoted to the preservation ., war now in progress, attracis atten- of the treasures of the locality. Crowning the city of, Athens stands tion anew to the prolonged presence the sheer and mighty rock of the of the Greeks on the world stage. There are few parallels to the strik- Acropolis, dominated by the Partheof Hellenic non, matchless even in its ruins, which ing racial phenomenon vicissitudes projects the changeless purity of its the continuity throughout of 2,000 years. Modern research has lines against the background of the made penetrated the. dark byways of me- changing centuries, which have dieval Greek lii story, and we now of it in turn the shrine of the ves al, know that the Greeks, whatever their the church of the Christian, the temporary fate, have preserved un- mosque of the Moslem, and now and broken the thread of tbelr national ever the Ideal of all lovers of the ' ' beautiful. existence. Near at hand cluster the chief remThe firmest bond which unites the Greek of today with his illustrious nants of the glory that was Greece; forebears of the golden age is the on the one side the tiny gem of the Greek language, the essential ele- Temple of the Wingless Victory, so ments of which remain as they were chaste and delicate in its proportions in the days when the tongue served and outline, and on the other the as the medium of the noblest poetry Erechtheum, with its unique porch of and the sublimest philosophy which the Caryatides. Hard by the stairs of the imposing the race has yet produced. This tongue traces Its unbroken lineage Propylaea rises the sturdy rock of back through medieval and New Tes- the Hill of Mars, whence St. Paul tament Greek to the classic speech of declared the unknown God and incidentally took the Athenian measure Plato and of his contemporaries. And yet, with all this continuity for all intervening time. At a little Beina, of- language, there exists now in distance, stands the rough-hew- n Greece a linguistic condition of af- where. Demosthenes and Ctesiphon fairs around which centers a contro- strove in matchless phrase, while Just columns of versy at once comic or tragic; for below rise the ivory-tinte- d there are in Greece two languages, the Temple of Theseus, best preserved or, rather, the one language in two of all the classic remains. . Against such a background it is forms one written by the newspapers, spoken by the educated classes, easy to project the ties of sentiment and used in parliamentary debates which bind the life of the Greek of and In public documents. Including today to that, of the classic worthies the Scriptures, the circulation of from whom he claims direct descent. ; which is regulated and thqj With only a slight shock one will other a vernacular used by the mass- learn that the man who gives him es of the people, containing many his morning coffee bears tl.e tremen words of foreign origin, especially dous name of Themistocles. And yet Turkish and, Italian, arising from it is difficult to visualize the modern those periods of foreign occupation, Athenian with those who once walked with a much simplified grammar rare- his streets. It is only in the Islands or deep in ly reduced to writing, except for private' communications. The former Is the country, where the Alba tan flood the cultured tongue; the latter the which swept across the Atiic plain popular Idiom; and between the two has never reached, that one finds the there rages a merciless warfare, in facial lineaments and the bodfty grace which fanatical' students of the uni- which the ancient sculptor has taught versity have lost their lives, ministers the modern world as being common their portfolios, and a Metropolitan to ail Greeks of classic time. Its Agriculture Backward. ' of Athens his miter. Greece is essentially a land of agriGreece of Today Almost New. intended to be Greece of today' looks back only culture, three genera .ions. If one places Its such ; but, owing to 'the tremendous origin in the war for independence, draih by emigration from the rural which was concluded by the protocol districts, the progress of agricul.ure lit many of London In 1830; and, witnessing has been painfully deficient. the progress which in that brief span places the land is tilled only by womhas been made in a land of such en and girls. Many of the men have sparse resources, one cannot see how gone off to America. Many find the Athenian climate praise can be. withheld from a people who have accomplished so much. agreeable. Cold winds there are, to When the city of Athens passed be sure, In winter, blowing down from d hills above the town from Turkish control and was des- the ignated as the capital of the new free or blowing up from the sea at Phal-erobut .there are no frosts; the kingdom of Greece, It was a mere handful of wre ched huts clustered roses bloom during every month of about the Acropolis. Today It is a the year; oranges ripen in the open thoroughly modern city, with splen- air, one may pick his breakfast fruit did streets, magnificent public build- from the trees outside his window. ings, handsome residences, attractive The summer beat is easily endurable, parks, and most of the modern Im- the absence of rain removing the huprovements of which western cities midity which makes American midboasi. The building of this city alone summer so intolerable. One cannot in a land of such scanty resources Is truthfully say that midsummer nights fairly comparable8 to the development in Athens are really. cool,, but there is a sensible difference from ..the heat of our own rich West( and as meritorious when all the circumstances of the day and a freshness which al' . are considered. Indeed, had the Greek ways makes sleep possible. At the beginning of the hot season, of today nothing to his credit save the building of the attractive capital there is . usually an . exodus of the of his na.ion, that alone wou'd be court, the diplomats and the wealthy sufficient to rank him among the con- from Athens. To take their places structive agencies of the modern there flock to Athens' and to the seaside hotels at Plialeron and to villas world. In this city of old memories and and resorts at Kephisia-in-the-hllnew hopes, Greek life centers now as numbers of rich Greeks from Asia in its classic days, and here ancient Minor and from Egypt., and the whole and modern Greece are inextricably city reverses the order of Its winter mingled in a curious medley , of mo- life, turning night into day :and spenddernity and antiquity, which colors the ing most of the hours between sunset affairs. and sunrise out of doors. Everywhere most ordinary' of every-du- y On every hand arise the sha tered about the town, on the roofs of clubs monuments of its splendid past, and or hotels, In the gardens or. on the even the tiniest fragments which terraces of res.aurants, beneath the serve to link the life of the present pepper trees of the parks, and qven with the days that are gone are most in the streets, tables are spread, and probably as many as 100,000 people carefully preserved. ; dine in the open air each night of an Guards Its Antiquities. ' ; The Greek government is keenly Athenian summer. Greece and indeed Throughout alive to its responsibility for the safethe entire, Balkan region guarding of its antiquities, and. the throughout muct heard, .because of the department of archaeology, under the English is of Greeks who have numbers education of great 'of the' ministry charge and religion, Jp painstakingly organi- returned home from America ; and zed- and prudently adminis ered. The few travelers In the Peloponnesus will museums at Athens are handsomely fall to recall at almost every railroad ' In at housed,- conveniently arranged, ac- station the eager face thrust Inthe carriage window and quivering curately catalogued, and open to You fellers from spection and study without fee. this with the demand, latter being a point of great pride America? (Prepared by the National Geographic ciety, Washington, D. C.) Greece, in carrying on in Asia st , - Musics Debt to Ancient Egypt. The contribution of ancient Egypt to the general history of music, is foiimi in the ..rfiechanicai excellence of its instrument-makers- , under whose dexterity anil skill the harp gained .sufficient power to be able to be played ss a solo instrument. Ev4ry other instrument of theirs lias perished, but the solo harp has remained. roads Freight roads are probabilities of the - - , . , -- -- Brick, or Concrete Roads Are Economical if There Is Considerable Heavy Traffic. would be found to be the most economical method of laying out the high-- ' way system. It is impossible to lay out all roads of the heavy form of construction ; In-the first' place, the money is not avail-- . able, and, secondly, too many yeacs would elapse, before the more sparse-' ly settled sections of the country were developed. ' It would not be at all difficult to break bulk when leaving the heavy traffic roads, and in a com- - snow-cappe- 1 n; i ' paratlvely brief time an excellent ' ls , . , - the- ory of highway construction would be developed whereby each locality would be able to determine .the amount it was feasible for them to expend on each mile of highway construction. FARMER BACK OF GOOD ROADS . ' Seasons Do Not Wait and Crops Musi Be Sowed, Cultivated Reaped and Marketed. . ' The farmer or fural dweller, in certain sections, for a long ttme stood in the way he wanted the roads, but he didnt want to pay for them. He did not realize that in the long run good roads pay for themselves out of savings made to the community In haulage of people and merchandise. But the farmer today is reckoning In units of time, for seasons do not wait and crops must be sowed and cultivated, reaped and marketed ' at the', right time. Therefore the fanner is now back of, the road improvement Much Good Road Building. corded unthought of Last year road building activities throughout Uie United States. A few years ago some narrowly bounded community might have done something to make1 the roads within its confines better. Such an act, however, was little cause for comment except locally. The automobile, with the range of travel it has brought within everyones reach, had not beeq developed and could been-useIf it had. This means that the advent of the automobile has forced good roads. ' riot-hav- ' |