■ 1 j S IImKBUHBHI ijjgj Cement Talk No. 2 Portland Cement docs not come from Portland, Maine, or Portland, Ore gon, and it was not first made at cither of these places. It is called Portland because it was given this name by the Englishman who first made it. lie called it Portland because he thought it resembled cer tain natural deposits on the Isle of Port land in England. Portland Cement is the fine powder produced by pulver izing the clinker resulting from the burning together of various materials of prop er chemical composition. In tie case of Universal Portland Cement, these raw mater ials are blast furnace slag and pure limestone. There are many brands of Portland Cement on the market, produced by different manu facturers. Universal is one of the best known and highest grade Portland Cements. You can always tell it by the name Universal and the blue trade mark printed on each sack. Forty million sacks of Vni ground."—Llppincott's ; Magazine. Avoid Disputation. The disputatious person never makes I a good friend. In friendship, men look for peace and concord and some j measure of content. There are i enough battles to fight outside, enough Jarring and Jostling in the street, enough disputing in the market place, I enough discord in the workaday I world, without having to look for con- J j tention in the realm of the inner life ] ' also. There, if anywhere, we ask for j j an end of strife. Friendship is the | sanctuary of the heart, and the peace j of the sanctuary should brood over it. j j Its chiefest glory is that the dust and noise of contest are excluded. —Hugh | Ulack. GET POWER. The Supply Comes From Food. If we get power from food why not i strive to get all the power we can. ; That Is only possible by use of skil ; fully selected food that exactly tits | the requirements of the body. Poor fuel makes a poor Are and a I poor Are is not a good steam producer. "From not knowing how to select | the right food to fit my needs, I suf | fered grievously for a long time from j stomach troubles," writes a lady from a little town in Missouri. "It seemed as if I would never be ' i able to find out the sort of food that j was best for me hardly anything that 1 [ could eat would stay on my stomach. E»ery attempt gave me heartburn and fUled my stomach with gas. 1 got thinner and thinner until I literally b«caine a living skeleton, and in time was compelled to keep to my bed. A few months ago I was persuaded to try Grape-Nuts food, and it had such good effect from the very beginning that I have kept up its use ever since. I was surprised at the ease with which I digested it. It proved to be just what I needed. "All my unpleasant symptoms, the heartburn, the inflated feeling which gave me so much pain disappeared. My weight gradually Increased from 9ii to 116 pounds, my ligure rounded out, my strength came back, and I am now able to do my housework and en joy it. Grape-Nuts food did it." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. A ten days' trial will show anyone some facts about food. Read the little book, "The Road to Weliville," in pkgs. "There's a reason." Ever rend the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are lenalu, true, ud full of bssus Interest. Tuberculolsis Patients Neglected. Out of more than 225 public hos- J pitals for the insane, with a popula tion of fully 150,000, only 70, or less than one-third, make any provision for their tuberculous inmates, and this, too, in spite of the fact that the percentage of deaths from this disease i3 very high among this class of peo ple. Such is the substance of a state ment made recently by the National Association for the Study and Preven tion of Tuberculosis. Seventy hos pitals in 28 states, providing all told about 3,350 beds for tuberculosis in sane patients, sums up the provision made for this class of sufferers, al though the percentage of deaths from tuberculosis among the insane ranges from 50 to 200 per cent, higher than among the general population. A Human Cruet-Stand. Several villagers were discussing a departed sister who had been given to good deeds but was rather too fond of dispensing sharp spoken advice. "She was an excellent woman." said the deceased lady's pastor. "She was constantly in the homes of the poor and afflicted. In fact, she was the salt of the earth." "She was more than that," remark ed a villager. "She was the vinegar, the pepper and the mustard as well. She was a perfect cruet stand of Vir tues." —London Tit-Bits. Little Pitcher Lady Visitor —I am coming to your mamma's company tomorrow, Tom my. Tommy—Well, you won't get a good supper. Tommy's Papa—Tommy, what do you mean, talking like that? Tommy—Well, you know, pa, you told ma you'd have to get some chicken feed for her old lien party tomorrow. Advice. "Now that you've heard my daugh ter sing, what would you advise me to do?" "Well," the music master replied. "I hardly know. Don't you suppose you could get her interested in settlement work or horseback riding or some thing like that?" SHAKE INTO VOI R SHOES Allen's Foot- Kuae, the antiseptic powder. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot ttase makes or now shoes feel easy. It Is a certain relief for sweating, callous, swullen, tired, i aching feet, Alwaysuse It to Break in New shoes. 1 Try It Sold everywhere, 25 cents. l>ou't accept avu *ub*titute. For FKHSE trial package, address Allen 8, Olmsted, Le Hoy- N Y. Manv a man who claims to be self made has a wife who superintended the job. Airs. Wtnslow's Sooth In? Syrup for Children teethiup:. softens the gums. reduces Inflamma turn, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. A live goose is worth more than a dead ancestor. C flSTOfti A .pr - ""1 For Infants and Children. Kind You Have jjnS"' « Always Bought t ! ALCOHOL —3 PER CENT m U j !|f ! ANegcfable Preparation for As- M ! similating the Food and Regula- "Roara +Ti« 0 t Ung the Stomachs and Bowels of -DcaiO llLt? Simia.i.nrA Z/i if Promotes Digestion, Cheerfu- ff jj nessandßesl.Confainsneither n£ l l> i Opium.Morphine nor Mineral ■ *** ff 1\ 1/* NOT NARCOTIC i iJL y l| & : KwptofOMDrSAMSir/riffEß 3$ I Pumpkin S*«d - A r l ftcnheUe Sa/it •. J | A _ i(J Anis* Sttd # 112 I |/.l | 3>l hpptrmint > jPI % I R •v» HiCffrlonaUSv ? THE STANDARD OF QUALITY MrSm W-.' FOR OVER 30 YEARS The workmanship which has madeW. L. Jj Douglas shoes famous the world over is 112/ maintained in every pair. j If I could take you into my large fadtories / at Brockton, Mass., and show you how I carefully W.L.Douglas shoes are made, you /V would then understand why they are war- >ga Sv / ranted to hold their shape, fit better |L /| jfeffijbft. wear longer than any other make for the price Egg yfesnul'y [ CAUTION Th « K* nll,ne lisve W. L. Douglas BWfißßffll \ / i iwil nauip anil price stamped on bottom Kjj KHw ggaKKwSSa If you cannot obtain W. I* Douglas shoes in jour town, wrltfl fot catalog. Shoes ««nt dirm-t ONE PAIR of mr HOYS' or from factory to wearsr, all eliarsres prepaid. W.1,. *3.00 SHOES wtll positiTrlyoutwaar DODOLAg, 14S Spark SU, Brockton, Mass. TWO FAIBSof ordinary boys'shosl INFLAM MATION ANDPAIN Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Creston, lowa.—" I was troubled for i a long time with inflammation, pains | | ill my si n so many medi jpM W cinos that 1 was w/® /SjEfi' discouraged and W **'*¥■ thought I would • IjffL jL r never got well. A |||j|i\ w * /i|: friend told me of . tT " l Lydia E. Pinkham's i '' Vegetable Com i f([(([ //*> P° und ft nd it ru- I /j JL SI [ 112 / stored me to health. \v /(rft II ! / IT have 110 mora Sain, my nerves aro stronger and I can omy own work. Lydia E. Pinkham's | Vegetable Compound cured me after j everything else had failed, and I rec ommend it to other suffering women." | —MRS. WM. SKALS 605 W. Howard St., ! Creston, lowa. Thousands of unsolicited and genu ■ ine testimonials like the above prove the efliciency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is mada : exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you want special ndvicewrifo to Mrs. Finkhani, at Lynn, Mass. Sho will treat your letter as Htrictly confidential. For 2<) years she has been helping' sick women in this way, free of charge. l>on't hesitate—write at once. Don't Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They art brutal, harsh, unnecessary'. Trv^y^^ . CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS rtflfpa a Purely vegetable. Act ntrrVr l ; gently on the livei. I LKi eliminate bile, and 'SM HIS ITTI T soot h c t he del ic n t cjsfbb/lr |sf . wr-i-T membrane of Ri I VEK bowel. Cur IS PILLS. Constipation, \ ' m 1 biliousness, 1 ' ache and Indigestion, as millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE* Genuine must bear Signature ' W. N. U.. NEW YORK, NO. 34-1911.