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I ASPIRIN tl Back Lame and Achy? vou cet un morninc-a tired and achyi? Kveninu find vou "all worn- Name "Bayer" on Genuinfi out'? Likely your kidneys are to Hurry and worry, lack of rest. blani and 1 eating too niucli meat, throw a straih on the kidneys. Y our back eives out;t vou are tirpri flnH lil;flv uiiffor heaii iiches and rlizzv snplla TnL-p thintra eajjidr and help the kidneys with Doan's Kidhcy Pills. Doan's have brought new strength to thousands. Ask your neig bor! Mai Mat A Massachusetts Case Wis Holbrook, 40 le St., Attleboro, says: "My ktdrteys were weak and! I coulil hardly bend over. Mornings I had awful back ache and such a soreness over my kidneys I could hardly bend to put on my shoes. My kidneys distressed me by their irregu lar action. I used four boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills i mcy cureu me. Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c a Bos DOAN'S VfiSV FOSTER-M1LBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y. and WATCH THE "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Is genu ine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an unbroken "Bayer package" w hich contains proper directions to relieve Headache, Tooth ache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger "Bayer packages." Aspirin Is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mon oaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Adv. BIG 4 v tomach 'Kidneys-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly'taking the world's stand ard remedy for . kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL 6S 7- The National Remedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen Wilhel mina. At all druggfsts, three sizes. Look for the name Cold Medal on aver? boa and accept no imitatioD Kills Pesky Bed Bugs !p.d.q: Just think, a SSc box of P. D. Q. (Pesky Devilb Quietus), makes a quart, enough to kill 4 million bedbugs, roaches, fleas or cooties and stops future generations by killing the eggs and does not injure the clothing. Liqtiid fire to the bedbugs is what P. r. t . is like; bedbugs stand as good chanie as a snowball in a Justly famed heat resort. Patent spout free in every pack ge of P. D. Q. to enable you to kill them and their egg nests in the cracks. Your druggist has it or he can get it for you, or sent prepaid on receipt of pricetby the Owl Chemical Works, Terre Hautjfc, Indiana. The Joy Of A Perfect Skin w Know the joy and 7 happiness that comes to one thru possessing a skin of purity and beautv. The soft. dis tinguished appearanceitfl natural beauty to its full' est. In use over 70 years. VJa I I I Pi n '1m 1,1 1 V 1 J A Self-Starter. t "Are -you an, expert salesman?" asked the manager. . "Can sell anything from an Ice nick to an automobile. For instance, that car of yours outside " "Yes, yes." "Well, I sold it to a guy who was passing." Boston Transcript. Father and Daughter Get Relief by Eatonic jit. J. "'Powell, Sweetwater, Texas, says, "Eatonic helped me at once, but it was my (laughter who got the marvelous benefits. She could not even take a drink of water without awful misery, but it relieved her; she is feeling much better. . All this from one box, so send me four more at once." Hundreds of people now take eatonic ; one or two tablets after each meal keeps them in good health, feeling fine, full of pop. Eatonic simply takes up the excess acidity and poisons and carries them right out of the system. Of course, when the cause of the misery is removed, the sufferer cannot help but get well. You will find it a quick, sure relief for heartburn, Indigestion, sour, acid, gassy, bloated stomach. It costs but a trifle and your druggist will supply you. If you don't feel well, you give eatonic a test. Adv. A Leading Clue. "What made the prohibition .enforce ment agents suspect a staid, respect able elderly women of having whisky bottles concealed about her?" "I'm sure I don't know, unless It was her cork screw curls." Cuticura Soothes Baby Rashes That Itch and burn with hot baths of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle anointings of Cuticura Ointment. Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe cially if a little of the fragrant Cuti cura Talcum is dusted on at the fin ish. 25c each everywhere. Adv. Only Thinks He Is. "Mrs. Jones, is your husband a member of any secret society?" lie thinks he is, but he talks in his sleep." A man may be a hopeless idiot, but no woman will admit it after lie has proposed to her. ' . , i ' i 11- r- . StNct Contents lSPluidPrachrtj I (Ma.iviMiTgrgSEmh I 'I " j77 7 . 'I ii". irnnnr.-!t PER CEN'R yVVcelaUerrcparatioii&rJ-LsimilatinUicFoodbyRcuti- 1inailcStomacisaruowc3 f. Tlcrcb'PfomotinDitcsUn i LhCCnUinC55oJlun""--- 1 nclMrOpium.Morphinenor lltoeraLNoTNAnTIC, - . r t l Jhxktllt SaKt Aniit !" Harm Sfd Clarified ty1 hSnUrcmnnmr AhclpfulRcmedyfof ConstipaUonandDmrrjoea undFeverishnessand facsimile SinatLor NEW 7"itrv. For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always . . I Bears the Signature of In iff In . Use For Over Thirty Years .H..!'! .i llMTUT 1 I" 1-1 ' -1 Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE CCNTAUR COMPANY, NCW YORK CITY. ii uti li uniii i ! in il n-m MARJORIE DIX'S 110MU MADH Pecan Prawlinea The Famous Flat Pecan Prawltairea M The Rich and Creamy Roll Pecan Prawle The Criip Nut Cluitere FBOM T11H KITOHUN TO YOU U1H11CT The pare, dnllcloas confections of the Houth that bare takon Now Vork bf at4rtii. A IrnKti 9 pound assortment packed e&pnclallf to Tour order. Hund I'i and pmpate for a doUgbtful lurprlae, Varool post prepaid. AdrirAM, atarjorle biz, Mluihurst Tillage, Long Island, V. T, TIIKKK SMAI,!. FAMILY CASH .1KK KltY KTOKftei in IcHillnK nilninK town; very little competition, low expense, nood profits. New slock bounht fer ciish, Fixtures and stock will Invoice Hhout $s,000. Meal proposition for any thienO'iied with tubercular or throat trouble, us winter climate Is dry and warm. Also the only now and second hand furniture store; will Invoice about $7,000. will be sold for cash only. Orocory stores fine for family of three or four. With rlKht man agement will mnke Rood money. Don't de lay. UcKoo Investment Co., Ray, Arizona, iri w m0 im WAH the ihifkhA s WAMiS"W'- IS h o r s e of Jp'Jks JXq) ffl : iCL ry? This N fhe topic of topics wherever lovers -pmtl ""''t n W tf Wt of the thoroughbred and racing enthusiasts M " hPv vTl gather. The eastern race-going public has gone JVjLL v f CLsi") yr&&lr simply crazy over this 3-year-old chestnut colt . ''dr Y . n lT by Fair I'lay-Mahubah, by ltock Sand, bred by W "C- XJT H Maj. August Ivelinont, owned ny Samuel I). lClddle iXi'-ftr) "v- Tj. v ( 7) simply crazy over this 3-year-old chestnut colt by Fair I'lay-Mahubah, by ltock Sand, bred by Maj. August Ik'lmont, owned by Samuel D. Riddle of Philadelphia, trained by Louis Feustel, ridden by Jockey Clarence Kummer.j and meed In the name of the Glen Riddle farm. Ills appearance packs the frnck to capacity. Crowds mill around tho paddock to get i "close-up" of him. Tho thousands of horse-lovers can't bet him his odds are prohibitive. They just want to se him. And the applause be gets well, it's past all de scribing. There's only one trouble he practically scares out all competitors. Rut to make amends fie usually breaks a record. Even veteran professional turf writers permit themselves to speak of Man o' War as the "un disputed champion of the American turf," "cham pion of champions among thoroughbreds past and present, nno so on.- some oi mem get hiiiiosl hysterical. Here's the New York Tribune, for in stance, on Man o' War's performance In the Dwyer stakes at Aqueduct: "Man o' War, the handsome 3-yenr-old chestnut colt of Samuel D. Riddle, which earlier this sea son had established himself as the greatest thor oughbred of the age, proved himself the horse of eternity at Aqueduct yesterday afternoon. One stops, awestruck, In contemplation of this, God's mildest handiwork In horstjllesh. Words are In adequate to describe him.- The great colt, the perfect horse, the Irrepressible son of Fair Play, Sguln did what no other horse of history ever ad done : he ran a mile and a furlong in 1 !-10 l-;"." ' Man o' War is a great horse. Now, to discuss ja thing Intelligently it must be defined. S, what jls a great horse? Well, a' great horse, like a gen itleman. Is bard to define. Hut it is axiomatic !that a great horse must have certain qualities. jlle must have speed. He must have courage. He must tie lime to curry weigiiT. Jie must ne nine to go a distance.' He must have the Intelligence ;to play the game. He must be consistent In per- iformance. He must be willing to do his best, i Other desirable qualities are a good disposition, an equable temperament, a rugged constitution and ja sound body. And abovto all he must have that I indefinable something called class that something which enables the stake horse to hook up with the plater in the stretch, look him In the eye and g on to win. ;' It would seem too much to expect of horseflesh that any one Individual should have all these quali iles. Nevertheless, Man o' War apparently has them all. Anyway, here are some of the exact fflets about this sensation of the racing season ot 1920: i Man o' War Is an aristocrat of aristocrats. Here, !n brief, are his immediate family connections: I'alry Gold, by Rend Or-Haine Mashnm, by Gal llard, was foaled in 1800 In England. Maj. Au gust Relmont bought her in 1903 for $18,000 nt tho MeCalmont stud dispersal sale, sent her to his Nursery stud In Kentucky and mated her with Hastings. From this union In 1905 camo Fair Play, the rival of the phenomenal unbeaten Colin in 1907 and 1008. When Colin broke down in tho Tidal of 1008, Fair Play went on fo win the Law ivico Realization, Coney Island, Jerome, First Special and Municipal, giving ten pounds to such h roses as King James, Frank Gill and Hessian. Fair Play was a great racer. Ho Is great sire, In that he hns produced In Man o' War a horse greater than himself. Fairy Gold, In 1013, (rave to the turf Friar Rock, by Rock Sand, who In 1910 won both tho Rrooklyn and Suburban something no other 3-year-old hau ever done. J. E. Madden bought him for $")0,000 and retired him to the stud.; , J. II. Rosseter, the California sportsman and breeder, bought Friar Rock and some mares and their foals for $100,000. One of these foals, Inchcape, hailed as a second Man o' War, was bought the other day by S. C. Hildreth for $1,"0.000. Mr. Rosseter let Inchcape go because he thinks some iof the others of this first crop of Friar Rock youiilrsters nre better still, but he refused Ilildreth's iffer of $2T)0,000 for Friar Rock. 1 Mr. Riddle bought Man o' War on a bid of $.",000 at tho Relmont yearling sale of 1918 at Saratoga, at which three other colts brought upward of ?1.1,0)0 each. ; As a 2-year-old Man o' Wr ran nine races and won them nil except the Sanford Memorial at Saratoga. In that stake J. Loft us got him practi cally left at the post and he was beaten a neck by II. I'. Whitney's Upset In jl :11 1-5. At the next meeting Man o' War beat J Upset like breaking sticks. Incidentally, J. Loftus could get no license to ride this year. I ( I'p to July 10 Man o' War had run five races this year and had won them all the Freakness, Withers, Stuyvesant, Relmont and Dwyer. As a 2-yenr-old he won ?S;.,32r. Ills victory In the Dwyer brought his 1020 winnings to $44,475, and made him the leading of the year. Were his owndr of a sportsman, he could d ubtless have won the rlrh Kentucky and Latonla derbies with the colt. . Man o War as a 2-year-bld met and defeated the best of. his age. lncl idlng Upset, Golden Pirooni, Blazes, King Thrush, Cleopatra, Dnmln- money-wlnnlng horse r a stake-hog Instead ique and John P. Grier. ognlzed his quality and askd a 3-year-old?" Man o' War by winning the Preakness fhe racing world rec- 1: "Will be go on as hnswered the question t Pinillco last spring with 120 pounds up. iirance was in the hls ay 29. He won from running the mile In' This is a new Ainer In actual racing. Tho from UpsrV Wlldalr and King Thrush In 1:51 3-5 for the mile and an eighth The champion's next nppc torlc Withers at Relmont Wlldalr and" David Ilarum, 1:85 4-5 with 118 pounds up, lean record, the fastest mile record displaced was that ojf 1 :3C 1-5, held jointly by Sun Rrlar and Fairy Wind. Yet Man o' War was oniy galloping; -he wis hard held and was let down only for an eighth. Iu the Relmont Man o' War, with 120 pounds up, rnn the mile and three-elgliths In 2:14 1-5, a new American record, displacing that of Sir Harton's 2 :17 2-5 In 1919. It Is also, a world record. Dean Swift ran the distance in 1008 In 2:10 2-5 at Liver pool, England. Jockey Kvunmer sat still, neither restraining nor urging his horso. Man o' War ran to suit himself and wanted to go on at the finish. The course la like the letter S and partly It Is training track. Man o' War's race In tho Dwyer at Aqueduct was a still greater performance. Here he scared out all of the 01 nominations except one. That ouo. was John P. Grler, the best of tho great II. P. Whitney string of high-class 3-year-olds. Man o' War carried 120 pounds and John P. Grier 103. The shrewdest handicappers gave John P. Grier an undeniable chance and reckoned on a thrilling race. They got It. The two horses ran neck and neck to the last sixteenth. Here they went to the whip. John P. Grier cracked and Man o' War went on to win, ridden out, by a length and a half. The time, 1:49 1-5, Is a, new world record. The previous American was one-fifth of a second slow er and was held jointly by I'.orrow and Boots. Brown Prin"e ran the distance in England in 1017 In 1:50 2-5 with 105 pounds up. The best Austra lian time Is 1:52. Man o' War rnn the quarter In 23 2-5. the half In 40. the three-quarters In 1 :00 2-5, and the mile In 1:35 3-5. So the horse ran faster than the records all the way around. Donau's half-mile In 40 1-5 at Los Angeles has stood since 1900. Artful's three-quarters over the straight course at Morris Park in 1 :09 3-5 has stood since 1904. The mile In 1:35 3-5 was one-fifth second faster than Man o' War's nevt record in tho 'Withers. ' Man o' War Is watched day and night. His personal caretaker is Frank Loftus. ('live Gor don rides him in his work. Ills stable name is Red. He hasn't a mean hair on him. He has a tremendous appetite., sleeps like a tired boy and apparently has no nerves. The cheormg crowds do not excite hiin. . A race like the Dwyer does not upset him In the least. He Is perfectly sound, has never been cut or bruised In a race and has never even sneezt'd since Mr. Riddle got him. And he'd rather run than eat. Those who know his work say he can break any record he goes after. Man V War'soems to enjoy the parade and the applause and nets his prettiest. He Is well-behaved nt the post, lie is a quick breaker. He runs with full enjoyment of the race. He travels so smoothly and with sojllttle friction that experts pronounce his fiction perfection. Clarence Kumnier rode Man o' War In all his races this year. Two days after the running of the Dwyer, Rummer's mount, Costly Colors, fell and the Jockey got a bad fall, which sent him to the hospital. It wns said later by Mr. Riddle that Kumnier would be In shape to ride Man o' War in his fall engagements. Man o' War Is not for sale at nny price. Mr. Riddle was offered $200,000 before the champion raced this year; the latest offer made public was $200,000 by Joseph Ii. Murphy of Philadelphia. Mr. Riddle plans to have Man o' War carry the, black and yellow silks for two years more andi then put him at the head of tho stud he 1st forming. "Man o' War will never b parmlttod to leave) this country," declares Mb proud owner. "lie be-i longs to tho peflple of the United States, who lovej a good horse, quite as much as he does to me. I regard myself merely as a custodian, having hlrai In trust for the benefit of the American thorough, bred qt the future," j IT