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Show & PITCHER SMASHE0TRIKE-OU- GOOD lOCA. RECORD T MY DAUGHTER Gum'Rwm t BjiEarHftarWv WAS CURED I By Lydia E. Pinkh&ma Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md. "I send ye here- With all the grass, so lush in June, In haymows stored or stacked a field. And Julys harvesting in tune For such a glowing, bounteous yield; With all the hot, midsummer days -- "v Reggy I wish I knew a hat character to assume at the masquerade And while we wait our y with the picture of my fifteen year old daughter Alice, who was restored to health by Lydia B. Pinkh&ms Vegetable Compound. 8h was pale, with dark circles under her eyes, weak and irri- party tomorrow night. Cholly Put a display head on yourself and go as a society column. Garnered alike in weeks gone by We wait the while the soft wind plays Through orchard boughs whose yield is nigh. play-da- -- CHILDS comes The holiday of all the year When Labors noise no longer hums, And Labors voice is heard in cheer. Then hey the picnic, is the call! And sports come on with leap and bound. The while we hear a voice Play ball! When merry Labor Day comes round. HEAD A, MASS OF HUMOR I think the Cutlcura remedies are the bet remedies for eczema I have ever heard of. My mother had a child who bad a rash on Its head when It naa real young. Doctor called it baby rash. He gave us medicine, but It did no good. In a few days the head was solid mass, a running sore. It waa awful; the child cried continually. We had to hold him and watch him to keep him from scratching the sore. Ills suffering was dreadful. At last we remembered Cutlcura Remedies. We got a dollar bottle of Cutlcura Resolvent, a box of Cutlcura Ointment, and a bar of Cutlcura Soap. We gave thenesOlvcntTis directed, washed the head with the Cutlcura Soap, and ap- plied the Cutlcura Ointment We had not used halt before the child's head was clear and free from eczema, and it has never come back again, ills head waa healthy and he had a beautiful head of hair. I think the Cutlcura Ointment very good for the hair. It makes the hair grow and prevents falling hair." (Signed) Mrs. Francis Lund. Plain City, Utah. Sept. 19, 1910. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere, a sample of each, with book, will be mailed free on application to "Cutlcura," Dept. 12 L, Boston. vm w e table. Twodi.lerenl doctors treated her and called it Green Sickness, but she grew worse aR the time. Lydia K. Pink- hams Vegetable Compound wan botand after taking!' tles she has regained her health, thanks to your medicine. I can recommend it for all female troubles. Mrs. 1 A. Corkhah, 1103 liutland Street, Balti- more, Md. Ilundreds of such letters from moth. pound has accomplished for tuera hare been received by the Lydia E. rtukhaar Medicine Company, Lynn. Mass. Young Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, bead. sensations, faint- .ache, dragging-dowlug BP,8 or Indigestion,lie should take restored to Immediate action" and health by Lydia E. llnkhams Y ego. table Compound. Thousands have been restored to health by its use. 1 n Write to Mrs. Pinkbam, Lynn liaasq for odviccw free GhooPolishcs i Finest In Quality. Largest In Varietn They meet every requirement for ctaealMf yoUitUus skoes of u. ell kiwis end egtura. f5 Suitable. "Those dress uniforms have a lot of frogs. Then tl ey ought to look well at a militia hop." to Mothers Important Examine caret uily every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Iwllet sko SressSn Signature of (hat positively enntalns OIL Macke and PoUakae In Use For Over SO Years. Indies nnd ehlldreas boots end sko, nklnoo rabbine, v. French Otoaa, Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria wlikeat j)AMV comkuuattoa for eleantnc iMtuMke. ell kind of nwl or tan shoe, SM. S(arwMaa, Mm. caavna Wme QUICK WHITEInmake dirty aolt aaa be uanndwhite, liquid Aform It isn't dlfilcult to induce the other elraa enk-klspon e la every raaily applied. foe aaa. Two dm, M fellow to compromise when be real- package, e always ready and M 001. izes thgt you have the best of it If your dealar doe not keep the kind yea - Martin OToole, Sense We pack our baskets or the wife And children do, with hearts alight All heaping full and seek the life That Nature whispers us is right We all are boys and girls again, Although our brows with age are crowned! We are not women now, nor men ' When merry Labor Day comes round. What .merry tales the women tell The portly ones we scarce would know As willowy Jane and slender Nell, In those dear days so long ago! What roystering yams the men spin out While pitching quoits on springy ground, The other fellows girls about When merry Labor Day comes round. And thus with sport the day goes by. The toil of all the year forgot; For cheaper tis to laugh than cry For man as well as little tot. God bless the holiday that comes Into our lives with such a bound! When Labors noise no longer hums, And merry Labor Day comes round. sal St. Paul Twlrltr. Says the sporting editor of the St Paul Dispatch: We are In 'receipt of a letter from John B. Foster, editor 3t the Spalding baseball publications In which he shows us where we were wrong a hen we announced that Marty OToole had tied up Rube WaddTa Mr. strikeout record of seventeen Foster points out that Waddells mark waa sixteen, and that in modern baseball no pitcher in Class A cr big league baseball has ever gone higher than seventeen. Mr. Foster is a recognized authority on the national pas- - ae, and when he says that OTools ilds the record with bis seventeen ihifis we are ready to believe him. Foster first informed F. H. Ms ' mley, manager of the St. Paul Spald if atore, that in quoting the record given in the Moreland book we 4ere wrong, and then he followed up t Mi s letter to us. Informing us that i e official scores of that game in t hlch Waddell established bis mark l ive Rube credit for sixteen strike-- c its. That settles It OToole is t ng. YOUNG FLETCHER IS number of games this season and 1 1 done some s work. He Is line batsman and has an average above the .300 mark for the (ires in which he has participated. A COMER When ltcome8 to developing' young players no one In the country baa anything on Manager John McGraw of the New York Oiants. Manager has several youngsters under his wing whom he expects to turn Into stars one of there days. If the little corporal has an Idea there are the makings of s good player in a ( 'WX fftunt Walsh, -- ' . the Toledo Blade thinks that those (hat conceived Labor day bullded better than they knew. They bo only taught themselves their strength, but they emphasized the idea that work Is the bond of brothel hood for all. The key of the world Is work, and more( and more thel part of the drone is becoming harden to play. That we must all work is coining to be the general thought; with it comes the thought of consideration for ones neighbor. No man can work and not feel for others. The Blade goes on to say: View might Perhaps this altered have come In the course of time anycar-way., It was preached by the But' centuries ago. penter of Nazareth abor has hastened its entrance into mis- Sber-Magee- fV being. fVtell baa played times for the Red In ?2 T r-. v V Arthur Fletcher. man he will bold on to him for several years if necessary, no matter how much criticism is' heaped on his head. In the long run his judgment osually proves better than that of bis critics. Arthur Fletcher is one of the McOraw has young players whom been bringing along and whom be is confident will make a name .for himself on the diamond some day in the near future. Fletcher is a shortstop moss A rolling stone gathers no and has supplanted A1 Bridwell at that and a man who is going down hlO station. Fletcher has been played in no coin. gathers only twenty-t- Sox of Boston.. Hi started well this year, but his job wz taken by Gardner. Bonus Lobert, the, gentlemanly 'of the Phillies, Is still tlFl baseman f wiring his $100 Panama that friend Id Udla sent him. but it needs a eluting. Men a ball player a Is suspended for a poke at an Jr foraretaking forced to draw the we um-piicon-clo$)- that baseball la becoming a msVc&ddlisb game. ey Dreyfuss, owner of the Pitt has Pirates, gained several s In weight since be purchased n OToole for the record price of t 2,500. The good luck of the Pi ra seems to date from the minute ' th tig check was written. ! .4 nQ wldress and Ike pries la stamp foe - a full li parkamt. WHITTEMORK BROS. A 00, Albatny Cambridge, Ma Oidrwt and St, Largcut if an Worn Mot PoiuAs in fM World. 90-- M A J 25 Man might live by bread alone, but Ice cream. woman must have-som- e Readers? Mrs. Winslow's Rootbtne oyrnp for rblldret, the fruma. rrtue lnftamm tkm lay a pio.cum wind colic. Bbc bout ilt column ihoula imdt spec having what they uk io, miming all nihdil utra of imkalion. lived in Calling people down is not a very . uplifting proceks. Particularly tie Ladies. l. 's who Is taking place In left. Is a better phjtr than the fans give him Credit Labor Day save you dava and perhaps weeks of ery from sore throat. Not only pleasant and refreshing jo the taste, but gently cleansing and sweetening to the system, run ol Figs and Elixir of Senna is particularly adapted to ladies and children, and beneficial in all esses in which a wholesome, strengthening and effective laxative should be used. It is perfectly safe at all times and dispels colds, headaches and the pains caused by indigestion and constipation so promptly and effectively that it is the one perfect family laxative which gives satisfaction to aD and is recommended by Occidents to the bell players this millions of families who have used it and who Have personal knowledge of its exion are common. Suspensions do not seem popular In cellence. I American league this season. Its wonderful popularity, however, has Itcher Cole's success lies In the led unscrupulous dealers to offer imita4up. So does an eight day clock's tions which act unsatisfactorily. Theremfielder Arthur Griggs of Cleveland fore, when buying, to get its beneficial M been released to the Toronto club effects, always note the full name of the d (be Eastern league. Company California Fig Syrup Co, .ihseball Is a great game, but lots plainly printed on the front of every Inter-efd 'good citizens confine their t package of the genuine Syrup of Figs io the percentage columns. Elixir of Senna. Tke dt from the Cubs that if the andFor sale by all leading druggists. Price fHltdelphia team is crippled SDy 50 cents per bottle. ier seriously it may win the pen-nul- public policy. Thp union is but the expression of a consideration foi others. Each man is working for him Self works for his comrade. In prac tlce, it has other definition, othet terms, but this is the underlying principle. And as the worker has striven for the embodiment of an idea' intc his personal life, so is he bringing it into the life of all. The story ol labor is not written. Its future it only faintly guessed at by a few far seeing economists. It must march through sloughs of discord yet. heat the sound of conflict and know the bite of hunger, but in tbs end it will conquer happiness and all the world! good will and gratitude. that swstlowing sensation gargle Hamlins Wizard Oil, immediately with three parte water. It will feel first-clas- Clever Infielder Whom Manager Is Developing Promises to Be a Brilliant PIyo hi end The next time you . CALIFORNIA Irrigated railroad lands at pries to sstdarv on railroad and doe to large market center-Frui- t, alfalia and yinsyard farm and 40 acre tract' ' Chicken ranch. ' - s Writ for fulT particulars. Ksssl Allies, 920 6th SI..Saaiiacsts,CaL IOC-2- 0 I s son Eye Water svsM. tlvas qatak vaSaf Is s IwkaU al kt SsM, mb ANE K3WAED E. 3URT0U A68AVF CHLMIT Lroltf fl. w- Itct, flpoelB4i prices tsoWf. 80c. .m or 0'lri, 76c sntf folk prtes lUi sent m nvckipcs inti nmplrs norfc hoUcit-MtDLni Bulk CoK fcUfarsrsos. , 11 ft A ! I Bvi iritflifiit puaiiltitE Dnifn frefelag rH$nc for go Ntrcitn tmlfl IN pi. P 111 Gw hort it 100 Years Old W. N. Balt Lake City, No. 11- W. L. DOUGLAS, 2.50, 3.00, 3.50 & 4.00 SHOES WOMEN fitting , stylish, perfect vw WJLDoaglsbecewse 'y wkildnf boots, they five i long wear, same ns W.LDouglae Mens shoes. THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS The workmanship which has madeW. Douglas shoe fodious the world over maintained in every pair. If ! could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they are war- fit better and wear Ion ger than any other make for the price hove W. L. Peesln The PlimftM VBUIIUH BSIDegenuine end piios stamped oe bettemj ranted to hold their shape, K yon cannot obtain W. L. Dongla she in an T BOYS S!,SZSSss toon, writs for satalos. Show a n t dir ct OVR PAIR at wlU from factory to wearar, all . hare- -, prepaid. W.U 3 00 SHOES poaillwly ontwner entlaniT bnysshnn Mass. TWO fAXUSel 14 DOUGLAS, Kperk ku, Atrackien, - " |