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NEWS AND CITIZEN, FEBRUARY 11, 1914 JOHNSON Oarn Courtney was in S;owo last Wed nesday, Evolyn and Puarl Collins aro ill of tlio mumps. Howard Waterman is out after a two weekh' illnt'NH. II. R. IIolmen of Shoruham la viHitiiig friends in town. Milliml (Jrey was at home from Hard Wick over Sunday. Miss Julia Ili-yiiolds, wlio lias been ill of luumpti, is belUT. Mrs. I. L. Bailey is quite sick at,d is under the care of a uurse. Mrs. Uii Chiillie and daughter, Doris, have beeu ill from mumps. Mrs. N. A. Waterman went, to Burling ton Friday for a few days' visit. Phil Li"!s liom tl,e U. V. M. was a guest at h. K. llolmeh' over Sunday. The Jiipnnese entertainment, civen by Mr. and Mrs. ti.il u, wai api)ieci.iu-.d by all. Mrs. Chester Sanders and Mrs. K. Gauthier iiiMeil last Thursday in Morris ville. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Porter and daugh ter, Ktba, visited in Monisville last Fri day. Miss Esther Ayer of the U. V. M. visit ed her friend, Mis! Joauio Maxfitsld, last week. Mr. N. G. VV od of Hyde Park visited Mrs. Hattie Pearl last week Friday audi Saturday. Fifteen fr.im Hyde Park were in John son Friday night to attend the "Newrich Reception." Kev.C. A. Reney was one of the preacher at the Allday meeting at Wolcott on Tuesday, the 10th Asa Gates and Miss Fernwood Loner gan of Johnsou were married in Burliug ton Monday, Feb. 2. Miss Jennie Maxfield of the U. V. M' has been at home for a few days, return ing to Burlington Monday. Mrs. Will Sinclair was in Burlington Thursday with her little boy, Junior, to consult a doctor about, his lameness. Miss Winnie Perkins spent Satuiday and Sunday with her sister3, Misses Joyce and Amy Perkins at Mrs. Annis. Misses Gladys Dimond and Kathreue Barnum ofj Hardwick were guests of Miss Edith Leslie Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Lottie Rushford and Mrs. George Atwel! aud daughter, Gladys, attended Pomona Grange in Stowe last Wednesday. Earl Holmes of the U. V. M. was at home one day last week, going from here to Montreal to spend the remained of his vacation. The annual meeting of the ways and Means Society for the election tf officers will be held Thursday p. m., Feb. 12, at Mrs. W. H. Leslie's. A. T. Freeman from Montpelier Sem inary preached at the Methodist Church last Sunday. He was entertained at Carlos CUkes' while in town. The attendance at the Congregation Sunday School Feb. 8 was 120; collection $1.71; at the Methodist Sunday School attendance 84, collection $1.8". Speciil revival meetings will "com mence at the Pentecostal Church of the Xaz irene on Wednesday, Feb. 11th, meeting on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights. Everybody invited. Mrs. O. II. Wilson and Mrs. R. G. Pren tiss went to Burlington laut Thursday night to be with their sister, Miss Mabel Austin, who underwent an operation f r appendicitis Friday morning. She is doing well at this writing. East Cambridge Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moiles spent Fri day at X. J. Nye's. Carl M mchester was a business visitor in Monisville Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Tatro of Johnson were visitors at Harry Rice's Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, A. M. Carpenter of Cam bridge Junction visited at F. H. Fulling ton's Sunday Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Murphy of Corinth were guests of the latter's sister, Mrs. A. . Rousseau Friday night. George Griggs has moved his family from the Arthur Thompson farm to North Troy, where he has employment. About thirty member of the Christian Endeavor Society of Jefferson ville attend ed a sleigh-ride party at X. J. Xye's last Monday uigbt. All enjoyed a fine time. Undivided Attention Demanded. Not giving your whole undivided at tention to the task in which you have invested your life and money, means that you are wasting your own preci ous time and that of others. What ever you do, do it with your , whole heart and mind or get out add try something else. It takes pretty nearly all of a man's time to perfect an un dertaking provided it be a big and worthy one to begin with. Furnished a Text Topic. Tillie Clinger says that Sunday be fore last she went to church and ab sentmindedly dropped her vinaigrette In the collection basket, and last Sun day the minister preached on the sub ject of "Vials of Wrath." Galveston News. UNZQlALHD For W' fl? Corehs CM. Colt 4 13PJj3i Sprains, Si'd. Cut iV -i Burns, .i 'ihr.,nt r.. vii.'J Chilblains orSoreFet-t f rtur-d by (he nirWAT Weii-jxf Co.. Vir:ijr.i.c A SEALLY TASTELESS . CASTOR OIL AT LAST Something That Scionco Tried To Get for 3000 Years Good bye, drugs and pills! The perfect laxative has arrived Kellogg's Tisteless Castor Oil made tistelesH by a method which chemists have tried to rind for R'OOO years. Tliis is not a il ivored or disguised cut-tor oil. It is just pure castor oil with out taste or odor. Kellogg's Tasteless Castor Oil is a bet ter castor oil than the "Id evil tasting, evil smelling kind. While uone of the taste remains, none of t he good has been taken out. Kdlhigg's Tasteless operates quickly and freely, without RripinK, causes no gas ami noes iiol iuiu wo stomach. Children take it easily and re tain it. The drug stores have all been Biipplied. You have only to ask for Kellogg's Taste less 0 i-t 'i- Od, 2!5o or ouo size, it is not sold in bulk. The trade mark is a green ca-tor leaf on the hibul, bearing the Kel logg signature. Made only by Spencer Kellogg & Sons. Inc., Builalo, N. 1 ., reliners or vegetaoie oils. auv Banquet ti,a K.i n.mol IihM in nnnfifn with mMri llf The 'fimater V,r. mont Association, by the Association aud the Burlington Merchants' Associati6n, will be held at the Hotel Vermont Bur lington, on Tuesday evening. February 24th at 7 o'clock. The speakers at the banquet will be Mr. Howard Elliott, Mr. Geo. Harvey Hon. C. A. Prouty, and Mr. Theodore N. Vail. All desiling tickets for the banquet should send in their application at once to James P. Taylor, Secretary, room 17, The Strong Building, Burlington, Vt. On account of the necessary limitation, in the number of tickets, applications should be sent in at once. DreBs will be informal. The price Of the tickets is $1. 50. The Truth About Early Rising Gibbs 1 believe in early rising, don't you? Uibbs Well, there's no abstract excel lence in early rising; it all depends on what you do after you rise. It would be better for the world if some people never got up. Bosion Transcript. The Affliction of the Righteous Boies Penrose anuounces his candidacy for the Senate wP,h brutal disregard of the fact that Bill Flinn is wearied of standing at Armageddon. Boston Tran script. om II Our Starts Week of Feb. 16, 1914 Toil NIT REVERSE In Class 2 you may start with 84 cents the first week, and pay 2 cents less every week until the last payment will be 2 cents. In Class 5 you may start with $2.10 the first week and pay 5 cts less every week until the last payment is 5 cents. PAYMENTS MUST BE MADE EVERY WEEK, OR MAY BE MADE IN ADVANCE. Can 3-0U think of an easier way to provide money for Christ mas Presents? Join yourself get everyone in the family to join. Show this to your friends and get them to join. Everybody welcome to join 1Alio Clixlfttiis4 Clul Opens Alontlor, Ieljrttfir-y lO, lOM, and you can join any time during the week of Feb. 16th Call and let ' us tell you all about our plan. tomoille Gounty Savings Bank V:V1 'TKUSST CO., HYDE PARK, - VERMONT The Ford Automobile The Foid plant at Detroit alone would support a city from 75.000 to 100. 000 people and the branch assembling plan's are located at Buffalo, Cambridge, Chi cago, Columbm, Dallas, Denver, Menu ton, Kansas City, Long Island City, L" Angelen, Memphis, Philadelphia, Pitts burg, Portland, Ore.. San Francisco, Seattle and St. Louis in this country, and beside t'lose there is the Ford Motor Co. Lid. uf Canada, with a factory at Ford, Out . across the Detroit Kiver from Detroit aud Canadian Service station, at Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, LoudoD Ont., Calgary, Moutreal, Hamilton, Sas katoon and Wiunepeg. 'Then there are the Manchester. Ei:g. factory and service stations at Hamburg, Germany, and Paris, France. The whole purpose of this gigantic system of branch plants is to facilitate! manufacturing and shipoii.g and to assure Ford owners iu every pare of the world the highest type of service after they have purchased their car. But not on'y do these branch factories, each one of them a meat institution in ,t,r , .ut.. v.... . ! jioilUl Ui HUES lUUCMUIl, UUt bUPj tllV backed up by the selling and dis'ribuUDir organization or me company, wnicu nv . , . I cludes individual agents in every com- ... . ; , . , munity, irom the cities down to the ham- let. . . j works to perfjet this service. Eeiy Ford agent, no matter how tew cars he handles, is required by his contiact to carry a supply of Ford parts so tli.it Ford owners never have their cars out uf com. mission except for a few d tys, or gener ally only hours, u iless the car has met with a serious accident. If it were not for the branch assembling plants the Ford oompany could not mar ket its enormous out out because railroad facilities could not be provided for ship, i ping the cars if they were all assembled at the Detroit factory. But shipped in knockdown form a single car will carry as many motor cars as could be carried in a train if the cars were shipped in the in the ordinary fashion. Of course, all the parts a e tested before shipping and standardization lias made it easy for the assemblers and when these parts arrive at the assembling plants here and in the various other cities il requires but little labor to put the cars together and they are soon iD proper running condition. U1.J, First to Manufacture Silk. The wife of a Chinese emperor made the first silk in 2600 B. C. In 350 Aristotle first mentions silk among the Greeks. In the twelfth century the manufacture of silk was earned on in Sicily, later spreading to Italy, Spain and the south of France. It was not manufactured in England before 1604.J EE3SBHB32EBSUE instil; LI .4 In Class 2 pay 2c the 1st week, 4c the second week. 6c the third week, and so on for 42 weeks, and we will mail you a check two weeks before Christmas for $18.06, with interest at 2 per cent. Or in Class f, pay 5c the 1st week, 10c the second week, 15c the third week, and so on, and we will mail you a check two weeks before Christmas (or $45.15, with interest at 2 per cent. HE OF IF 30,000 VOICES! And Many Aro The Yoicos Of Monisville People Thirty thousand voices What a grand chorus! Aud that's the number of American men and women who are publicly praising Doan's Kidny Pills for relief from backache, kidney and bladder ills. They say it to friends. They tell it in the home papers. Monisville people are in this chorus. Here's a Monisville case. Mrs.' Henry Parker, Elmore St., Monis ville, Vt., says: "I suffered intensely from pains in the small of my b.ick and often my limbs swelled. The kidney secretion bothered me and I had head aches. I lost strength and was steadily j '-'rowing worse. A friend told me about j the cures Doan's Kidney Pills had made i in similar cases and I procured a box at Cheney's Drug Store. Doan's Kidney j Pills helped mo at one.e and by the time i I finished oue box, I had improved in evel-y way At that time I publicly rec- and now statemeut. The , . beueht they brought me bis been per- . ... , , , ., , manent and I have had no further need ,-, ,..' of a kidney medicine. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milbiirn Co.. Buffalo, New York, sole agent for the United States. Remember the name Doan' and take uo other. adv The Value of Air There were 514 fewer deaths in Chicago in the last six weeks than in the same period a year ago. The weather in those six weeks was much milder than the weather of the last winter. It i- a striking demoustra'ion of the benellioial effects of fresh air. The city ',t'a'1'1 dp.ti finent calls attention to the r..F. more and have been able to veutila'e their houses more freely this year than last. So i hey have beeu freer from dis ease. In summer, swat the fly. In winter, air the houst ! Kansas City Star. Tliis is just as true for Vermout, A chief cause of "colds" is to be found in sniffy, airless houses; stores, and other places of public meeting. Air them out! Dividing Doubtful Glory The South Carolina Legislature hs passed a resolution favoring the repeal of the fifteenth amendment. That is tin unkind attempt to split glory 50 to 50 with Seuator James K. Vardaman ot Mississippi. Who in the world told them down there that there is any Fifteenth Amendment? ir was discourteous in the extreme to do 80i It is row $1.25 a year lor everybody 981 Cub Here There's A Will By Mary Roberts Rinehart Author of " The Circular Staircase' 'The Man In Louxrlcn," When a Man Mania," tic Illustrated by Edgar Bert Smith 1 "Perhaps,11 Miss Co"bb repTteQ in tri umph, "perhaps you will say that you don't know anything of my of my black woolen protectors?" "Never heard of them!" said Misa Summers. "What are they?" And then she eaught my eye, and I guess I looked stricken. "Oh!" she sr. id. "Mis"s Cobb was robbed tie other night," I explained, as quiftly as I could. "Somebody went into her room and took a bundle of letters." "Letters!" Miss Summers straight ened and looked at me. "And my woolen tights," said Miss Cobb indignantly. "And I'll tell you this, Miss Summers, your dog got in my room that night, and while I have no suspicions, the chambermaid found my er missing garment this morning in your closet!" "I don't believe," Miss Julia said, looking hard at me, "that Arabella would steal anything so er gro tesque! 'Do you mean to say," she added elowly, "that nothing was taken from that room but the lingerie and a bundle of letters?" "Exactly," said Miss Cobb, "and I'd thank you for the letters." "The letters!" Miss Julia retorted. "I've never been in your room. I haven't got the letters. I've never seen them." Then a light dawned in her face. I oh, it's the funniest ever!" And with that she threw her head back and laughed until the tears rolled ! down her cheeks and she held ht r i side. "Screaming!" she gasped. "It's screaming! But, oh, Minnie, to have seen your face!" Miss Cobb swept to the door and turned in a fury. "I do not . think it is funny," she stormed, "and I shall report to Mr Carter at once what I have discov ered." She banged out, and Miss Julia put her head on a card table and writhed with joy. "To have seen your face, Minnie!" she panted, wiping her eyes. "To have thought you had Dick Car ter's letters, that I keep rolled in as bestos, and then to have opened them and found they were to Miss Cobb!" "Be as happy as you like," I snapped, "but you are barking up the wrong tree. I don't know anything about any letters and as far as that goes, do you, think I've lived here fourteen years to get into the wrong room at night? If I'd wanted to get into your room, I'd have found your room, not Miss Cobb's." She sat up and pulled her hat straight, looking me right in the eye. "If you'll recall," she said, "I came into the springhouse, and Arabella pulled that garment of Mist Cobb's off a table. It was early nobody wad ! out yet You were alone, Minnie, or no," she said suddenly, "you were not alone. Minnie, who was in the pan try?" "What has that to do with it?" I managed, with my feet as cold as etone. She got up and buttoned her sweat er. "Don't trouble to lie," she said. "I can see through a stone wall as well as most people. Whoever got those letters thought they were stealing mine, and there are only two people who would try to steal my letters; one is Dick Carter, and the other is his brother-in-law. It wesn't Sam in the pantry he came in just after with his little snip of a wife." "Well?" I managed. But ehe was smiling again, not so pleasantly. j "I might have known it!" she said. "What a fool I've been, Minnie, and I how clever you are under that red thatch of yours! Dicky cannot appear aa long as I am here, and Pierce takes his place, and I help to keep the secret and to Dlay the game! Well, I car ap preciate a Joke on myself as wed as most people, but liinnie, Minnie, think of that guilty wretch of a Dicky Carter shaking in the pantry:" I don't know what you ara talking about," I said, but she only winked ard went to the door. Don't take it too much to hfatt," she advised. "Too nuch loyalty is a Tlce, not a virtue. And another piece of advice, Minnie whtn I find DIcRy Carter, stand from under; something will fall." I They had charades during the ret I !iour that afternoon, the overweivtts I headed by the bishop, against th un- derwelghts headed by Mr. Moody. They selected their words from one of Vor- ace Fletcher's books, and aa Mr. Pi..-i8 wasn't either over or underwent, they asked him to be referee. Oh, they were crazy about him by that time. It was "Mr. Carter" here and "dear Mr. Carter" thrre, with .. women knitting him nerktiea and the men coming up to be bullied and ask ing for more. And h kept the v, . hand, too, once he got it. 1 But if Mr. Pierce was making a fcit I with the guests, he wasn't so pc; -'"r I with the Vw Alstrurg or the Car; or j. I The sight the cir. r stand was c' .1 ' Mr. Sam cam to me and leaned r ' the counter. "Put the key ir. a drawer," he s ' "I can slip 3owrihcre after theTTghls are out and get a smoke." "Can't do it, Mr. Van Alstyne," I said. "Got positive orders." "That doesn't inoludo me." He was still perfectly good-humored. "Sorry," I said. "Have to have a written order from Mr. Pierce." He put a silver dollar on the desk between us and looked at me over it. "Will that open the case?" he asked. But I shook my head. "Well, I'll be hanged! What the devil sort of order did he give you?" "He said," I repeated, "that I'd be coaxed and probably bribed to open the cigar case, and that you'd prob ably be tho first one to do it, but I was to iitick firm; you've been smok ing too much, and your nerves are go insf." "Insolent young puppy!" he ex claimed angrily, and stamped away. So that I was not surprised when on that night, Friday, I was told to be at the shelter-bouse at ten o'clock for a protest meeting. Mrs. Sam told me. "Something has to be done," she said. "I don't intend to stand much more. Nobody has the right to say when I shall eat or what. If I want to fat fried shoe leather, that's my af fair." We met at ten o'clock at the shelter house, everybody having gone to bed Miss Patty, the Van Alstynes and myself. The Dickys were on good terms again, for a wonder, and when we went in they were in fron; of the fire, she on a box and he at her feet, with his head buried in her lap. He didn't even look up when we entered. "They're here, Dicky," she said. "All right!" he answered in a smoth ered voice. "How many of 'em?" "Four," she said, and kissed the tip of bia ear. (TO Be Continued.) Still Unsatisfied. "He used to brag about his wife's statesmanship." -Wr;i?" "Now he complains that she is the author of too many bills in the house." Town Topics. CASTOR 'S A For Infants and Children. The Kind Ycu Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Bigger Hatches Eggs hatch better if the hens are in perfect condition. prjitts, Poultry Regulator pays big the year 'round. It prevents disease, sharp ens the appetite, improves digestion. You'll get more "live" eggs more and stronger chicks. Packages t5c. 50c, $1.00. is lb. pail, tS.50. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back. Refust substitutes; insist on Pratts. Get Pratts HO pane illustrated II Poultry Book. 5c! J ar.J i;l,-r'!''teed by . O. Thomas. Hcividete, Vt. (39S4) satin muscles are quickly relieved by Sloan's Liniment. Lay it on no rub bing. Try it Ankla Spra'n and Dislocated Hip. " I priii-1 riy ankle and dislocated mr hi p by I all. ,t of a third story window. V.'ci t 011 crutches for four months. Thru I s'larled to t:se your Liniment, im'1:.; lo directions. I must fry i' fa helping me wonderfully. we win never I e without Sloan s Lini ment anymore." 1-1. JnitMtn. Lawton Station, A. SLOAN'S LK1IMEMT am SpUnr id ?r Sprain. "Ifell ai.d ago and M 1. not use rny 1. . . your l.ininieii' out a bottle of H. B. Springe, . r-r- "Sloan 'a f -rood than r; for ptitf badly that '. the busiest at first that I hand taken o 1 iity a-m a week . ' ain. I could r- f n u.i.d I applied 1 -t-.ill never be witii s.i's Liniment." J'' ... .h,..J. - Stlffnesa. ..t lias done more ' h ive ever tried iv hand hurt so k right in .. r. I tnoujrht to have niy I .. bottle of U uum (.. At ah Dt!. 50cr oi Send for free, id.-' book n n - chum-, poultry. A. Dr.EARLiS:' 1 MTU M