PnMicSa!es Me ha\e purchased 122,000 pair ^ tuny Munson last shoes, sizes {2 which was the entire sur ^ ' of one of the largest U. "f.ovenunent shoe contractors. hoc is guaranteed one hun tc!'cut soiid ieather, color dark ;.!-!!<)" s tongue, dirt and water ^ \ The actue! value of this shoe ! <)} <?<) Owning to this tremen ' buy wo run otter same to the public a'< correct size. Pay postman , tir ire: y or send money order. If ^ ^ ;n e not as rep!-esented we will cheerfully refund your money "0"" request. MHOME B/ir SMrE SHOE COMP^WK 29b Hroaelway, New York, N. Y. —The play "William Tell" is be ; produced on every stage available throughout the ocupied area of Ger many to stiffen the passive resistance of the people of the French. Sweet C!over and Honey Sweet clover seed and pure honey (comb and extracted) direct from producing point at lowest possible price. Quality guaranteed. White for prices and circulars. JOHN A SHEEH4N R D \o. 4. FALMOUTH, KY. (3-2-3tx) i After Etteyy Meat WRKtEYS Top oii each mean with a bit of sweet in the iorm oi WRIGLEY'S. it satisfies the sweet tooth and aids digestion. Pieasnre and benefit combined. FOR C o n t r a c ting and budding get my esti mates. Satisfaction guaranteed. L. D. MEBANE PRESCRIPTIONS The most important ingredients in any prescription is quality.. .There is little value indeed, in any drug or combination of drugs if those drugs do not possess quality that deter mines the remedial power. Pure and quality drugs, are. the ordy kind we handle.. . We don't stock anything less than the first grade and there is nothing less than the best that we can sell to you. Knowledge and experience are in corporated into all compounding work. Double and Triple checking methods preclude possibility of mis takes. These are essentials which go with your prescriptions—combina tions of pure, high quality drugs the tine value of which, exercises, bene Mcial effects on the ill. Xu all cass of illness, your first thought should be your doctor. Your second thought should be that we fiil prescriptions and should fill yours. Our prescription work is known far sm l wide for value through the exer cise of extreme knowledge and great care as we follow the dictates of science in onr great work. Bring your prescriptions. to us or ask your doctor to send them to us. it is important for you both. The patient—yourself or others—will ap preciate the benefits that good medi cines properly put up provide. PUTMAN'S DRUG STORE (Odd Fellows Building) / } THE NOVELETTE WHEN HARRY PROPOSED (By H. Irving King) j Allie, I am in love." Harry Dray I ton popped this out at the end of a short silence which had supervened in the conversation between himself and Allison Gower. He accompanied the remark with a sigh. They were on a hotel piazza; the moon was on the ; Mountains and moonlight on the riv I er. You must have seen, Allie," ! went on the young man, "the—er— j state of my heart. I—I—must I know my fate tomorrow. I am sure yom--" "Oh, Harry," cried Allison, "please don't say any more tonight-—please .don't. I will give you an answer to morrow morning." She had risen from her chair and stood ready for flight. Harry with agasp sat up straight in his chair. "But Allie,' 'he cried "you don't understand what I am trying to-" "Oh, yes, I understand," broae in the agitated Allie. "Good-night, dear"—and she was gone. Drayton gairly collapsed into the depths of his chair. "Well, of all the-!" Words failed him for fur ther remark. He sat staring out blankly into the moonlit night. He And Allie Gower had been friends from childhood. From the time he could remember, he had always con fided in Allie. And now, when he had attempted to tell her that he was in love with Annie Blair, Allison had gone and taken his attempt as a pro posal of marriage to herself. 'By George," he thought, "what's to be done From the way she took it, her answer to my supposed pro-* posal will be yes. Then I shall be in a pretty pickle! What's to be done? What's the way out? Danged if I know." The more he thought, the more bewildered he became. He spent mogt of the dark hours that night revolving over and over again the siuation in which he found himself and seeing no way out. As for Allison, she went straight to her room after leaving Harry and, turn ing on the light, sat down to think. If Harry was in a daze so was Allie. She had always looked upon marriage as a most respectable and*almost uni versal custom to which, some day, she might possibly be called upto to con form. But now it jumped from the realm of the abstract into the realm j of the concrete with a suddenness j which wa srather startling. There; was Harry Drayton suddenly changed ) from a life-long friend and confidant j into a lover and would-be husband. If she really had to take a husband ^ she could not just then think of anybody she preferred in that ca pacity to Harry. But how much bet ter he w asas a friend. She won dered how other girls felt when they had been proposed to. There came a tap at the door, it i was Annie Blair, who always stopped j for a chat with her dear friend Allie ; on her way to bed. Allie sometimes j wished that Annie, who was a great} ! talker, would occasionally omit this j i nightly visit, but tonight she hailed , ther as a visitant angel. For Allie : ! regarded Annie as so worldly wise ! and experienced—whic hshe was not! } —that counsel from her could be of ; [value. Therefore, when Annie paused for breath after her first budget of !hot gossip Allie sad: "Annie, what j do you think of marriage?" ! "What a question!" cried Annie. "1 ! think it's something greatly to be de sired, of course—provided you get the right man. And since you have broached this most interesting sub ject, I will confide in you that I ex pect to be married myself before long _in fact, I know I'm going to be. But you must not tell a living soul until I tell you to." "Oh, Annie," cried Allison, "how did you feel when he proposed?" "Oh, he hasn't proposed yet," re turned Annie calmly, "but he's going to tomorrow." <<How—how do you know?" gasped Allie. "How^do I know?" retorted Annie. "How do those figures in the baro meter know when to come in and go out in advance of the weather? I am as sure Harry Drayton is going to propose to me tomorrow as I am that I am going to accept him. Hasn'a he told you he was in love with me? You and he-are such chums and confi dants that I supposed he had told you before this. But, dear me, how late it's getting. Goodnight, dear. And e was gone. Now Allison Gower was a simple ul, but not without sense and re urce when driven into a corner. ,xt morning Harry Drayton re ived the following note signed Ai lie:" "Dear Harry— I ought not to have ^yNose stopped up? MENTHOLATUM ^quickly dears it. CASTOR !A For Infants and Children tn Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of been so perturbed last night. when ! you confide in me your attention of proposing to Annie Blair, for, of course I have long seen how you felt toward her.You may have thought it} strange in me to run away as I did,! but the fact is marriage is such a se- j rious matter that no advice should be j given without due consideration con-! coming it —no hasty aproval or dis approval. _ I wanted time to think, and I have thought. And, after due consideration, I have come to the con clusion that Annie is a dear good girl and just the one to make you a good wife. So I give you both my bless ings in the capacity of an old maid sister, and hope both of you will con tinue to make me your confidant." Harry Drayton-swallowed this let ter "hook, line and sinker," as the saying is. True, he could not re member having mentioned Annie j Blair's name in his attempted confi dence—but, then, of course Allie must haYe seen. His attentions to Annie had been rather pronounced, j He told Annie about it after he had, proposed, and Annie said, "Oh, in- j deed, yes, of course," with a rather! queer look on her face. But neither j by word nor sign did she ever inti mate to Allie that she suspected the ] truth. Perhaps she didn't. Of course you want to know if Allison Gower was ever married. She was, tand she knew that the young man she eventually married was going tc pro pose to her two months before he did so—just as.Annie had told her she would. Excellent Remedy For Constipation. It would be hard to find a better remedy for constipation than Cham berlain's Tablets. They are easy to take and mild and gentle in effect.' Give them a trial when you - have j need. < }'}-}'§ig)§§j TOO COLD AT HOME? ' THEN GO SKATING Fresh Air Folk Know How To Main tain Warmth Outdoors. The young woman sat before the ra diator and shivered. "Guess I'll have to go skating to keep warm," she murmured, as she powdered her nose-preparatory to de parting. To get warm!" echoed the visiting aunt, astonished. j 'Easiest way to keep warm if you know the ropes," the fresh air en thusiast replied. "The trouble is most people don't know how to be comfortable out of doors. The first thing to do is to wear loose clothing. And if you are taking violent exer cise you don't need a great deal of clothtng. A heavy sweater is enough. Then you can slip your regular win ter coat on over that coming and go ing and you are comfortable. 'Keeping your feet warm is the main problem. Most persons toast their feet before the fire expecting them to stay warm. They won't. They get cold twice as quick after that. The thing to do is let them get cold when you first go out on the ice, then take off your shoes, out doors, and rub your feet until the blood is circulating sufficiently to warm them up. After that they NOTICE. The portion of stock classed as in the hardware* line, contained in the store building in which until recent ly C .D. Ray & Son have conducted a general hardware and builders sup plies business, and certain fixtures also contained in said store building, have been sold by C. D. Roy & Sou to J. M. Baird. The remainder of the stock class ed as in the builders supplies line, and certain fixtures, have been re moved by C. D. Ray & Son to their Lumber and Building Material Yards. J. M. Baird will conduct a hard ware business in said store building unde$ the style, Baird Hardware. C. D. Ray & Son will continue to con duct their Lumber, Building Mater ial and Coal Business as heretofore near the Southern Railway Station. C. D. RAY & SON. J. M. BAIRD. don't get chilled again as !ong as you keep moving." 'What do you do if your nose gets cold?" asked her aunt ironically. "Powder it," replied the young wo man laconically as she picked up hef skates. —Kansas saves $200,000 in a year by printing it sown school textbooks. The air-tight sifter top keeps < the lye full - strength and always ready for instant use. The Standard for Good Lye For twenty years Red Devil Lye has been the standard for good lye. Lye must do the hard, rough work about the place. The concentrated strength of Red Devil assures quick results when there's real cleaning and work to be done. Ask your grocer for the can with the smiling Red Devil oh the label. You can depend upon every can having the same uniform strength. Red Devil is convenient to use, it is economical it sure is strong—it is the standard for good lye. Wrfte for free f?ooAZef Wm. Schield Mfg. Co., St. Louis, Mo. RED DEVIL DTE That Is More Than A Four The Facts About a Notable Advance in Automotive Engineering By Russel E. Gardner, President, The Gardner Motor Co., Inc. For years the manufacturers of four cylinder automobiles have been fight ing a common enemy—u:'&re%:on. It is with a good deal of pride and satisfaction that I am able to say now that to the Gardner organization has come the honor of finding the answer —of eliminating the dreaded 'vibra tion point " from the entire range of operating speeds of the improved Gardner Motor. ^ A Vibrationless Four Think for a moment what that means! It means a Four with the smoothness heretofore possible only with a greater number of cylinders. It means a Four capable of delivering more power than most cars of its type, without paying for this power by shaking the car to pieces. It means a swiftness of acceleration, a flexibility of operation such as you have never before associated with four cylinders. Like most big ideas, the one that has made this engineering achieve ment possible is extremely simple. The Big Idea—Five-Bearings It is the Gardner./H?e-&ear:ng*?ran^ This Gardner Motor is the only four-cylinder power plant with main crankshaft bearings—j&Je points of support for the swiftly turning shaft instead of the customary two or three —^ice bearings to hold the crankshaft smoothly in alignment, to resist the forces that tend to shorten the life of the entire motor! This principle has been successfully applied in several very high-priced cars. Two of them are Eights with five bearings, while five of the very exclusive Sixes have seven bearings— the same type of construction. A ride in one of the latest Gardner Fours will for the first time give you an idea of what a Four con be; will re-adjust your ideas as to the relative merits of the various types of motor cars; wiil give you a new respect for the four-cylinder motor. Somewhere—But Where? We do not for a minute claim that this Gardner motor has no point of vibration—please bear that in mind. As any engineer knows, such a point must exist somewhere in any engine. What we do say—and we can prove it to anyone who is interested—is that, wherever this vibration may be, H does nof /:'e tct'dn'n %Ae range oj^ speeds a% tc/dcA ?Ae car can &e driven. The Four has always been and will rW" The Gardner ' 5-Bearing Crankshaft A feature found in no other make of four cylinder motor at any price. continue to be the Great American Car. t Last year 95% of ail cars sold for less than $! ,000 were Fours. And last year the Gardner Motor Co. climbed to a place among the eight leading , exclusive manufacturers of four-cylinder cars. ^ In the latest Gardners all the quali ties which have made the Four so widely popular have been retained— operating economy, simplicity, dura bility and dependability. And because the Gardner is a Four, it provides these advantages at a moderate price—less than $1,000 at the factory—and represents through out chassis, body, finish and equip ment a &a/anced ca/ue impossible at its price except through the economies of four-cylinder production. One Year Written Guarantee Thus in turn is made possible the second outstanding Gardner advan tage—the one t/ear toriMen guarantee. Because we know the car is good throughout—because no one part has been cheapened to make sojne other part stand out—we Can fearlessly guar antee every Gardner Four for the en tire first year, which as everyone knows is the critical period in the life of an automobile. No other motor car manufacturer gives a toriMen guarantee covering so long a period. I have wtftten this acc6unt of the development of the Gardner Four and of the ^e-&ea^fng cran^sha/!? for just one purpose. 1 want every present and prospective n^otor car owner to test for himself the perform ance of the Gardner Four. There is only one way to do it—r:de in fhe car. Our dealer in your city will be very glad to have you do this. GranviMe Motor Company r

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