PRESIDENT SERVES HIS CO I N TRY WELL Praised Everwhere For His Attic:, ir. Settling The Dispute Uetwecu The Engine-inert and The Westcra Rail Roads A Tie I'p of all Wts'oni Roads t'as Imminent. Washing-ton, D. C, Sept. 2. Cy ef fecting a .-t-ttiement of the liim'teii fd V.'tstein Kailway strike, L'reoii.ont Wilson x".)inl a U'iuit-ipn of peaco," which has a ilnwl and imorlaiil beari:g i,;.o.i the wv.v vnsis. It is uiiivt-i saily admitted that 'J:;-moAl-im-u '-;:- grain crop pro!:i.M. to oiiVet the heavy .ionietio iosc caused by the titanic iiiiij;!'.1 that ! a iV.i- Ini.'f uajs has crippled the world':- uade. What is wove itr.poi tant, this vast output of rich Ameri can soil will soon be desperately need ed for the sustenance oi the millions composing iho population of th.e stricken countries ot Europe. I r.ppf aliaif to the pat.ietis-ii oi the i;M!.vay manage"" and the labor organisations, an agreement to arhi tr.it was secured aad continued o( : ation .if tiie railways during the crit ical weeks now beginning was u-aircd. An important difficulty in the way of carrying the i rep to market was over tome. Other measures planned by the ad ministration and overwhelmingly en dorsed in Congres will solve other phases o: the transportation problem. The change of the shipping laws, ad mitting foieign ships to American registry under easier terms, is cer tain to be immediately taken advan tage of to increase th.9 number of ocean-going steamships flying the American flag. If enough merchant men cannot be had Secretary of the Navy Daniels is assured of Congres sional authorization to use naval ves sels. These facts, in conjunction with the liklihood that the British and French lines will be kept in service, notwithstanding the war conditions, are regarded as amply guaranteeing a market for the crop. Early last week the outlook for com posing the differences between the trainmen and the managers of the Western roads seemed hopeless. The railway managers had refused fhitly to agree to arbitration under the Erd mann act. Apparently, a tie-up that would halt the movement of grains and meats to the seaboard b. inevit able. Then, at request of President Wi' son, representatives of the railroads and the trainmen came to Washing ton. The President met them end talk ed freely with them. Ke appealed to their patriotism, pointing out that if the free movement of foodstuffs in this country was interfered with, it would impose fearful hardships, not only upon Europe, but upon this coun try also. Hence, the "national disaster." which the situation has threatened to entai'. w-as averted. After an all-night siting, the official spokesman of ninety-eight western roads agreed to withdraw their refusal to arbitrate. The agreement definitely guaranteed peace in the railway world for ninety davs. The arbitration conferences will he held in Chicago. The railroads and the employees are to name two arbitrators each and they are to se lect t"0 others. If the four conferee? 1h'.-s chosen cannot agree upon the two others, the Federal Board of ar bitration provided for in the Erdmann; Act. will serve. Illustrative of the general editorial opinion of the President's achieve ment -'n averting the strike are the following extracts: Boston Advertiser (Inrl. Rep.) "A victory of peace, more significant than any battle so far recorded in the Eu ropean war, is the acceptance of arbi tration by both faction in the wages dispute on the ninety-eight lines west of Chicago. The.e roads afford an outlet for the products of a third of the people of this country; they serve more than half of the territory of the United States and part of Western Canada. Were the strike to be called in the present r.eriod of business un certainty, the industries of America would bp paralyzed as complet'dv n? those of thf warring nations of Eu rope. The President is to be ronp.rat ulated upon his success in inducing the parties to agree to arbitration." C" ' ''tv.' ' find.) "TiMUgi A. W. Treholm, their chairman, the Western railroad managers vesterday informed Presi.-l.Tt V.'P.-o" ' ' had decided to take his advice ami a creed to arbitration of their dispute with the enginemen in accordance with the plan proposed by the govern ment board of conciliation and media tion. "The whole country will breathe easier. The assurance of a peaceful settlement of a great industrial con troversy that threatened to hamper or halt railroad traffic over half the na tion will help enormously iu meeting the financial and business troubles thrust upon us by the general war in Europe. "President Wilson deserves, and will receive, great credit from the whole country for the firm and fair attitude he took on the question. It was fair, in that it clearly saw. that this is no time to enter into the merits of the merely technical points at is sue that the patriotic duty of the hour is to avoid industrial warfare and secure domestic peace. "It waa firm, ir that it distinctly implied that unless the contending forces could and would yield some where far enough to make an amica ble settlement possible, the whole power Of "the government would be put forth to avert what Mr, Wilson truly said would be, "in view, of the world-wide conditions, a calamity of incalculable magnitude." "There are times when the claims of any group of citizens, however just when considered by themselves, must yield to the greater interest of all citizens. This is such a time, and Woodrow Wilson, in perceiving and enforcing that truth, has deserved well of the Republic." t ' It is said that President Wilson has been requested by at least four Eu ropean eoverignu to give them his re- Y1NDK ATION FOR PRESIDENT tl :.t act: 'ally till F.uri.pe ... t .-i '. p:i;;u;vi! - var oe' a pc Kt that er.'.-i b- considered tiifiing -ind?el ah; ..I:: te'y cntemptib!e in of tk untold human misery in .:. I it is tJ he hoped that fair iaded Arte; Vans will begin to e.-ti-;" iv.-ire at their true value the '.s !e;-i and ju.-tice of that policy of Uu!u:! waiting V.iuh has proved so , i'-st'-.-l i i president Wi'sons .i.i.ring of the Mexican question, he I'uited States ha 1 far more pio v itioii f'r iir.fi vcr.tion in Mexico ' ill. -.n Aut.ia-K:ugary had for its ti'.'-i.ler.t altitude tvar! Servia. Hu eita prove I himsiu a peculiarly ex ;."cva.i!!tr person, u!i much more a :.: :y and a ( ouiinu'i ! of le- .-niti .es thin we: e at first credited to !v':i an. the; e ca.i be no doubt that i ;.. nt invasion, and possibly even i pi emanent occipation, would have ,):-. veM p inilar v-i'. i a largo part of the At..Vcu-i public. After the ktnd !; Yo'Ti Cruz r.o; hintf would have bee l easier than t find a pretext for s.-h a warlike policy. h is infinitely t.) the credit of Pies M.Mit V.'ilso.i a:id his a ivisers that not vi.hstai'dim;- ihe sneers and jeers of the amt.'ty-headed, the malevolent and the seliish interests that desired to ex.i'oii Mcxi.e for the benefit of their own pockets, he refused to take ad vantage of a sister republic, but ad hered firnvy to a ii::e cf action that was hij'h-niinded and patriotic. Con trasted with the bullying arrogance of Aostria-H'.mgary, which has set all Europe aflame, the President's course has shown the highest states manship, and his country has bene fitted immensely by his patience and tact. This fact is now generally recog nized by intelligent Republicans. The Boston Herald, a loyal stan.lpat organ after praising the President for re sisting the clamor to attact Mexico and comparing his course with that of the authorities in Yienna under less provocation says: "But the President exercised a stay ing and a steadying hand. We did not go in. We have saved ourselves the horrors of war, and the long legacy of hat throughout Latin America which would surely have followed. If the example or our own President could find imitators r.mong the crown ed heads of Europe it would be a blessing to humanity." The Phila delphia Record. DIARRHOEA QUICKLY CURED "My attention was first called to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy as much as twelve years ago. At that time I was seri ously iil with summer complaint. One dose of this remedy checked the trou ble." writes Mrs." C. W Florence, Rocktield, Ind. For sale by all deal ers. FROM THE GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS The peace proposition is now up to Villa. The Belgians simply beat it from Brussels. Little Joe Brown, of Georgia, is be coming littler. Are the Germans still retreating in the general direction of Paris? ' Oh, well, the circus is on the way. Whv worry about the price cf sugar? Which is going to prove the more disconcerting, the aeroplanes or the submarines ? Drugs have gone up but it may do us good to cet back to the good old home remedies. Mr. Bryan has had to forego Chau tauqua, but he may yet get that No bel vieace prize. ' 'Il'easr sm' is Dead"--Headline in Columbia State. Nothing like rejoic ing while you have a chance. We have a gnawing fear that some benighted contemporary is going to spell it "Xmas" again this year. What if commerce is parily7d? We have i :h.-l.!i:: .1 t; .-hips, .h"'r"i everything is bound to be all right. Tf Gevmnnv has wined her feet on -. .- . - .;':';. a:i .lea., .'....t she has ai.-j .,I.:i'u:ii out il;e d::st. We imagine tat the Belgian army v ii! now cease failing back since if thev go any further they will have ti wane. Another reaso n for not committing suicide today is the fact that the Greensboro fair is less than two months off. ACUTE INDIGESTION "I was annoyed for over a year by attacks of acute indigestion, followed constipation," writes Mrs. M. J. Galla gher, Geneva, N. Y. "I tried every thing that was recommended to me for this complaint but nothing did me much good until about four months ago I saw Chamberlain s Tablets ad vertised and procured a bottle of them from our druggist. I soon vealized that I had gotten the right thing for they helped me at once. Since taking two bottles I can eat heartily without any bad effects." Sold by all dealers, The most beautiful fact in the farmer's work is that everything he plants is a lesson in laith. CASTOR I A Tor InianU &ad Children. T3 Kind YcataAlwaji Bought Bears th Signature of ceipt for avoiding an "inevitable" war war. -New York Evening Post TAKING CALOMEL A BAD HABIT So Powerful it Shocks Liver and Loaes it Weaker Than Rehire Hudson's Liver Tone is Better To Take. Nearly everybody who has tried calomel has found that it only a temporary relief. For ca is '.'. ch a iK.worful drug that is s and weakens the liver and mal: !et.s able i.i'tci w an! to do its than in the i'ust place. This is one of the reasons wh evr gi- es duty y the Ash'-M.ir Drug Company gnu at: tee p'ace i' .' a Dodson's Liver Tone to take t -,o of calomel. Dodson's Liver Tn:t iiu;e vegetable liquid tonic that euro constipation quickly and without any dong'.T of bad viy foots. It is guaranteed to do ti'.is wiii idly. v-ef-with fair. Liver 'Iron, takes ya to 1 get a iruinv.itoe that is simple and If yo.i buy a bottle of Dodson's Tone for yourself or your .hi and do not V:v that it perfect'; the pla.e o." calomel, then reus the store whore you bought it an vour money back with a smile. REALIZES WILSON'S ACHIEVE MENTS Speaking of the European war and President Wilson's achievement in averting war between the United States and Mexico, a prominent Wyo ming Republican said recently: "I did not vote for Wilson in 1012. but I am free to say that as 1 see it now, I will vote for him in l'.nfl." That is the trend of thought among patriot ic citizens in all parts of the country. People are just begining to realize what a great service Woodrow Wilson has rendered the nations of America. Cheyenne State Leader, August 7. RHEUMATISM PAINS STOPPED The first aplication of Sloan's Lin iment goes right to the painful part it penetrates without rubbing it stops the Rheumatic Pains around the ioints and gives relief and comfort. Don't suffer! Get a bottle today! It is a family medicine for all pains, hurts, bruises," cuts sore throat, neuragia and chest pains. Prevents infection. Mr. Chas. H. Wentworth, California, writes: "It did wonders for ny Rheumatism, pain is gone as soon as I aply it. I recommend it to all my friends as the best Liniment I ever used." Guaranteed. 25c. at your Druggist. PARIS SADDEST PLACE OF ALL London, Aug. SI, 0:40 p. m. "Paris is the saddest place in the world," said Miss Cornelia B. Sage, director of the Albright Art Gallery, Buffa'o. N. ., who arrived in London today from the French capital. "Ail the artists, poets and authors have gone to the war. Every man able to carry arms has answered the call Only small boys have been left to work in the hotels and cafes. All the studios are deserted. ,'The flower of French manhood, ail the men of genius are at the front. The wives and mothers and sisters re joiee that these talented men went with their humbler brothers in de fense of France." COMMENDED RECIPES Sandwich Biscuits Roll some bis cuit dough thin like pie crust and cut with a small biscuit cutter. Spread one-half of it with a mixture of finely chonued ham seasoned to taste with salt, pepper and a little mustard. Cov er with the remaining half of b'.scuits and bake in ahot oven. Pocketbook Roils Roll biscuit dough very thin and cut with ordinary biscuit cutter. Foid each one into triangular shape, brush with milk and bake. After removing from oven open and cover bottom of roihvith grated cheese, mammalade or jelly. THE HOPE OF THE WORLD We are in position ofadvantage be cause of the work that has been done in America during the past one hun dred vea-'s. Bvt if the asailents of Mr. Wilson had had their way, we would have lost all of these natural advantages, and would ourselves have been at war with Mexico, demanding a.i of . :e puwdc. a..d gi.iu ao.d 6ul a and steel and clothing anil tood that we could produce, while our soldiers were marching in ever-lessening nnm Leis from oi:e battlf.i.eld to another. We are in a condition to avail our sr'ves of this opportunity of a century b e ve have reformed our tariff and recuwctrui ..; d our financial sys tem. We are the hope of the world in a period of almost universal warfare. Louisville I ost. THE WILSON WAY By conceding that the voluntary withdrawal of Huerta from Mexico re presents an achievement for which the higher honor is due President Wilson, the independent press of the country undoubtedly reflects the opin ion of all patriotic and intelligently honest Americans. If nothing more is accomplished, President Wilson's Mexican policy has brought 4 govern ment by assassination" into practical as well moral direpute among the nations within the zone of American influence and responsibility. Imperi al (Cal.) Enterprise. STOP THAT FIRST FALL COUGH Check your fall cough or cold at once don't wait it may lead to se rious lung trouble, weaken your vital ity and develope a chronic lung ail ment. Get a bottle of Dr. Bell's Pine Tar Honey today ;it is pure and harm less use it freely for that fall coukh or cold. If Baby or Children are sick give it to them, it will relieve q lickly and permanently. It soothes the irri tated throat, lungs and air passages. Losens pniegm, is anti-sentic and for tifies the system against colds. It surely prevents cold germs from get U ,r a hold. Guaranteed. Only 25c. at I yo. aruggut. MANY PEOPLE FOLLOW AC.RI Cl'LTFRAL OCCl PATIONS IN NORTH CAROLINA Wr. 71;. in V living ;; , .1 in '1 to a i '.-ii' Of the person- t i al pursuits, the farm c-peratois a The ope; a n 1 n.'ir : 2-U,!4-;, are "i a i-m la i.'iul are an.! 'JJT.81 are laer. ;. won. en. hTere a: e :!"''.. i' borers in the state and '- males an.l 1-Ji.i4l tenia;. s. Tltei e :re 14; dairy farms i i the ?tato and they employ .'14" Inhere' s :nd If' foremen. There are alro .'10 persons in tiie state wnos1 principal income is stock raising. I he ntiinoer of cowboys ami sheep herders i this state is 67. In the entire United States tnere are 1,umi,ziU persons over r.cn years of age, and SS,167,'.i:3 , or "'? per cent, of t::is number are engage 1 in gainful occuuatior.s. Of the j,a;nr'.i'.!,; occu p:od 12,65:.20", or "'J pe" cent, are en- fcged in agncu U:ro. ii'ere are o,- S(io,000 farm operators in the nation and they employ 5,1)73,000 laborers. DIDN'T KNOW HIM SHAVED So Wife Kicked Lem out of Bed and Over the Fence. Enfield, Me.. Aug. o0. Lem Hutch- ins is in bed with a smooth face and a sprained hip cause and effect. Lem read somewhere that whiskers were unsanitary, and, without consulting his wife, Mirandy, he walked to the village barber and had his growth of twenty-live years, almost a "quarter section of alfalfa," removed. Lem went home in the moonlight, feeling like a picked hen, and sneaked to bed without awakening Mirandy. She awoke at dawn and noticed an unfamiliar face on the pillow beside her. She placed her feet in the mid dle of Lem's back and followed this up with a kick that rolled him down stairs. Then she kicked him over the fence, where he lay until he told a neighbor who he was. NORTH CAROLINA COMMERCIAL SCHOOLS AND BUSINESS COLLEGES Washington, D. C, Aug. 31. A re port issued today by the Federal Bu reau of Education shows that there are six commercial schools and busi ness colleces in N'ortn Carolina. The 1913 enrollment was 97S pupils. It is estimated that more than half this number completed commercial courses and a large number are now employed in North Carolina business institu tions. In the entire nation there are 61 S business colleges and commercial schools and they accomodate IfaO.ooi students annually. This is an average annual attendance of 2G0 pupils per school. PAPER MUST BE PAID FOR At a trial held before Judge Clea- er in Martinsville, 111., a jury has awarded E. S. Cloyton, editor of the Planet, $3 damages in a sv.it brought to collect a subscrintion which the de fendant said he didn't owe as he had ordered his paper stopped. The jury held that as long as the paper was taken out ot the omce. it was surely read and that the defen dant must pay. A WORD FROM THE SUN I. "Thev talk of the fire of genu's" Down there on that little old earth, Which was flung like a spark From my for min the dark, Where planets to bet on had birth. II. They boast of that "fire of genius!" 'Twas mine at the very beginning; It takes the fiery glow Of real genius, you kiww To keep all these mad worlds a-spin-ning. Fiank L. Stanton. Differed as to Needed Sleep. Sir Philip Sydney calls sleep "the poor man's weal'h," and he might have added, "it is every man's htakii." The "immortal Alfred" of England divided the day into three portions of eight hours ftch, cssijrd.r-.s one for refresh ment and health of the body by sleep and exercise, another for business and the third for study and devotion. Bishop Taylor considered three hours' and Richard Baxter four hours' sleep sulEcicnt fcr any man. That Was Not In His Line. The man who learns many lan guages does not always enlarge his mind. A porter in a Swiss hotel who spoke many languages with equal fa cility and Inaccuracy, was once asked what was his native tongue. He re plied that he did not know, but that he spoke all languages. "But in what language do you think?" asked the persistent questioner. "I neva tink," was the prompt reply. Youth's Com panion. World's Largest Plant. The largest plant in the world Is said to be a species of sub-tropical seaweed which grows sometimes 600 feet in length. NpTICE Having qualified as Extr. on the es tate of Milton C. k'parna AanoacoA before W. C. Hammond, Clerk of the' superior iourt or Kandolph County, all persons having claims againtt said estate are notified to presene them to the undersigned, duly verified, on or before the 3rd day of September, 19- 15. Or this Tinfina TL-ill JJ bar of their receovery ; and all persons ooiu cb bate wiu come xorwara and make immediate settlement. This 27th day of August, 1914. PAUL H. KEARNS, Extr. Norman, N. C. ' NEW RULING GIVES TOBACCO CUSTOMER UNTIL OCTOBER 23 TO DISCOUNT BILLS. New York, Aug. 22. President Percival S. Hill, of the American To bacco Company, has sent the follow ing notice to all the company's custo mers in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee and Tex:;s: "We have become aware of the em barrassment brought on the cotton growing sections by the European war, and the resulting inability to market cotton crops. We earnestly hope and believe that this embarrass ment is temporary. We are earnestly anxious, though, to contribute, so far as we can. to the relief of it. On that account we will admit our customers i:i the states above mentioned to dis count their bills, on account of pur chases made hereafter, within ten days after October 13, 1914. This ap plies to all purchases of all our lines, and whether of drop shipments or stock shipments." CHAMBEDLAIN'S COLIC, CHOL ERA AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY "I advised the 'bevs' when thpv en listed for the Spanish war to take Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Di arrhoea Remedy with them, and have received many thanks for the advice given," writes J. H. Houghland, El don. Iowa. "No nerson whether trav eling or at home should be without this great remedy." For sale by all dealers. WHAT THEY WANT What We Want." a Rennhlienn earn. Daien manaeer in Massachusetts is quoted as having said to a traveling commisioner oi the Washington Star, "is a Republican House, with a work ing Republican majority to absolute ly block further Democratic legisla tion." That is a candid, true statement nt all that the Republicans stand for at this time. It contains a typical stand- pat idea, tiy way of substitution for or improvement upon the great re form accomplished under President Wilson, they propose nothing at all! In so far as they have confided in the public, just such would be their policy if restored to control of all branches of the government. Well, their quite recent and yet well remembered record undoubtedly qualifies them to enter a blocking competition. When in power they were the champion blockers of pro gressive legislation that clocks above the rostrlums of House and Senate ever looked down unon. Which re calls the significant fact that the late political corpse, your Uncle Joseph G. Cannon, turned over in his grave last week and announced himself as a can didate for renomination and reelection to Congress. If the blocking gets good, Cannon wants a hand in it. "I am a simple working man," says Huerta. He worked Mexico all right. WHAT ONE MAN IS f.. T- t . -r i y iear cir: i Know you are 51f9 f v m.arket,and th,"sAs,t0 ea" opportunities in and around Colon. The soil is between a sand and clav with a cay subsoil. Ihe land is level and easily cultivated. Mr. Thomas Gross, through intensive methods, is not only making a living, but is making money on two acres of ground at Colon. The rainfall is evenlv distributed throug out the year and the clmate for growing truck, fruits and berries is unexcell ed in the South. Colon is a new town on the Seaboard and Norfolk Southern railroad and is forty miles west of Raleigh, in Lee County where thousands of dollars have been and are being spent in building roads. You will find a ready mar ket for your produce and the nearest outside market is Sanford, which it only live miles away. Many other new enterprises are now in progress for Colon. Here you can make mony on a few acres and cultvating this soil is a genuine pleasure. Others ar grasping this opportunity, why not you? It will pay you to buy a few acres while values are low, even if you are not ready to make a change in location. You will never again have the opportuni ty of buying at present prices. Remember that land valus have ben increas ing over 10 pr cent annually. If at the end of twelve months you are not sat isfied with your purchase I will find you a purchaser at an advanced price. For further information address me at Colon, or Greensboro, N. C. Y'ours very trulv, JOHN M. HAMMER. In addition to the enterprises under way preparations for the planting of a large fig orchard are being made. Wrigiitsville Beach ' North Carolina's Famous Resort Everything Worthwhiletin Him Amiissmanls Battling Music Fishing . Boating -Prizes Dancing Most popular season Week end-and-Summer Excursion Fares Via the Atlantic Coast Line The Standard Railroad of the South For Schedule, rates cf address, , WJ-Cralf, Pis?. Traf. Mgr. Wilsicgtos, R. G. AMERCA'S STRENGTH. Chicago Tribune (Ind. Bull Mooe There is to be no great rail striU ivcaavu cum puuijv opuit hav vailed and arbitration ts io be sr.h" Pre- tuted for the folly and wasta of labor I "This means that our vast surnlug I crops will be moved to the seaboard i without hindrance, and Congress ij I now at work devising ways and means -to expand our facilities for export I To a considerable extent Europe's 1 need is our opportunity, and if I unitedly act with foresight and good judgment we shall not only save our- f selves from serious injury, but profit I legitimately by supplying in crops and I supplies of goods the great dericien. I cies created by the paralysis of wat I abroad. "What we ourselves need is to kepn rnnl rnncmx onrl mnKili, .. . I sources, avoid strikes and distur bances of our business machinery1 There is no need for fear. We ate free from entangling alliances. Our financial relations are being safe guarded to protect us from disastron. mous wheat crop. Credit is not ex-1 panded. Business enterprise, after I months of depression, is on the most I conservative looting, ine oanxs are f in a very strong position, and th ' government, oesiues naving a tremen dous reserve 'of gold and silver, has facilities for assiting the banks and through them the general public mote simply, promptly and effectually than ever before. The Aldrich-Vreeland emergency currency law permits the issuance of -500,000,000 notes, $50, 000,000 of which already printed and ready in Washington. Behind these I notes will be eleven billions of assets of the national banks. As to gold, aside from the large amount now free in the country, there is $1,040,000 in the government's hands to say noth ing of nearly $300,000,000 in silver. "Meanwhile the new Federal re serve system is in progress of organi zation and in a very short time will be in operation. By this new system our financial resources will be effect ively mobilized and utilized according to need. "Congress is in session and with the administration availing itself of ex pert opinion and the financial leaders working vigilantly and harmoniously the United States seems about to give as striking exhibition of the forces of finaniial and economic power as Eu rope is giving of the forces of war and destruction. "In this mighty and beneficient mo bilization of the national resources I we all have responsibility, just as we wuuiii rave in a war responsioiimy w keep cheerful, clear head?d, cool, con fident of our own strength." CHAMBERLAIN'S LINIMENT If you are ever troubled with aches,, pains, or soreness of the muscles, you will apreciate the good qualities of Chamberlain s Linibent. Many suffer ers from rheumatism and sciatica have used it with the best results. It is especially valuable for lumbago and lame baclc. or sale by all dealers. DOING ON TWO ACRES August 24, 1914. interested in growine truck and yourttention to the land ami I the vast fare, etc., see Ticket Agents, ci T.CWfiile, 6en. Piss. Ageot,