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A Doctor's F Quest "How are Your BowetsT" A Sim ple Remedy that Guarantees Good Bowel Action. Trace the origin of the commoner Ills of life and almost invariably you Will find that constipation was the / cause. It is not to be expected that a mass o', fermented food can remain in the system beyond its time without vi tiating the blood and affecting the nerves and muscles. It congests the entire body. The results are colds, fevers, piles/ headaches, and nervousness, with its accompanying indigestion and. sleep lessnessi There is only one thing to do, and that is to remove the trouble; and when nature seems unable to do It, outside aid is necessary. You will i find the best of all outside aids a rem- 1 edy that many thousands are now us* ] lng for this very purpose, called Dr. i Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Many hun- : dreds of letters are received by Dr. i Caldwell telling of the good results j obtained, and among the enthusiastic < letters is one from Lieut. G. W. j Vaughan, of 623 W. North St, Decatur, < 111. He is 72 and has had a bad liver i and stomach since he came out of the ' army. He says he tried about every- i thing, but never succeeded in getting 1 permanent relief until he took Dr. Caldwell'n Syrup Pepsin. He Is never ] without a bottle in the house, and he < is nevft* without good health. J It has untold advantages over pills, < oHo onil +V>q vnrlniia rnnrnA CAthartiCB I 1 h|e Knew Him W^M. "What's the trouble, John?" "Why, sir, here's a note from Mr. Mahlstick, in which he tells, me tha' ] he is off on a little trip and he wants me' to send his' drawing materials along." "Well, and isn't that plain enough?" < "Hardly, 6ir. I don't think, sir, that you know Mr. Mahlstick. I don't know j whether to send his paints and brushes or only & corkscrew."?Stray Stories. ] TAKES OFF DANDRUFF i HAIR STOPS FALLING i - i . Girlsl Try Thisl Makes Hair Thick, Glossy, Fluffy, Beautiful?No I . More Itching Scalp. Within ten minutes after an appli cation of Danderine you cannot find a qlngle trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first?yes?but really new hair?growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No dif ference how dull, faded, brittl^ and scraggy, Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through yonr hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect is amaz ing?your hair will be light, fluffy and "wavy, antr nave an appearance i>i . abundance; an incomparable luBter, softness and luxuriance. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine froih any Btore, and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft as any?that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment?that's all?you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you 'will Just try a lit tle Danderine. Adv. What It Means. Hip?What does it mean to say that a girl is as pretty as a-picture? Hop?Merely a frame of mind.? . Michigan Gargoyle. Alabama Man 8ays Tetterlne Cures Eczema. Morvln, Ala., August 1. 1908. I received your Tetterlne all O. K. I have used it for Eczema and Tetter, Rlng worms, Old Sores and Risings and can gladly recommend It as a sure cure. J. R. DeBrlde. j Tetterlne cures Eczema. Tetter. Bolls, Ring Worm, Dandruff, Cankered Scalp, Bunions, Itching Piles, Chilblains and ev- ] ery form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tet terlne 50c: Tetterlne Soap 25c. At drug gists or by mall direct from The Shup ' trine Col. Savannah, Ga. 1 With every mall order for Tetterlne we ? gve a box qf Shuptrlne's 10c Liver Pills i ee. Adv. Motor Circles. "\uo tney move you in a circie. "By no means. We have a six-cylin der car.' They move in a four-cylin der set" , RUB-MY-T1SM Will cure your Rheumatism and all kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia, Cramp?, Colic, Sprains, Bruises,'Cuts, Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne. Price 25c.?Adv. A Gastronomic Test. "That girl's a peach!" "SureI She's sweet enough to eat" ?Baltimore American. Deep cuts should be healed hy Han. fnrrl'o "Rnlcftm AHv The Obstacle, "Can't you pull 6ome wire* to get an interest In that company?* "No; it'8 a wireless company." The road to hell is paved with good Intentions and the pavement makes smooth riding. That Weak afcccmpanied by pain here or there?extrom sleeplessness?may bo faint spell*?or spasms? distress for a woman. She may be growing fr womanhood?passing from womanhood to moth Buffering from that change into middle life whic wrecks of women. At any or all of these periods < ai?e should take a tonic and nervine prescribed fc by a physician of vast experience in the disc DR. PIERCE'! Favorite Presc ha* successfully treated more cases in past for can now be had in sugar-coated, tablet form dealers or trial box by mail on receipt of 60 cen Mis? Eileabeth Lord ah) of Berkeley, Cal.. in a ret broken do ?/n in health, I was acMng and had pains a] lo' If anyone talked to ma, bat I had the (rood fortune t Prescription. I have never had an occasion to yr Dr. Pteree'a Pleasant Pel Urn tad bowels-ansar< - . v,. .1 . i . . .. ,w. irst ion Is LIEUT. G. W. VAUGHAN and purgatives, for while these do hut temporary good, Syrup Pepsin curen permanently. The effect of its action is to train the stomach and bowel muscles to do their work naturally again, and in a short time all forms of medicine can be dispensed with. It can be bought without inconvenience at any nearby drug store for fifty cents and one dollar a bottle, the latter size being regularly bought by thoso who already know its value. Results are always guaranteed or woney will be refunded. Families wishing to try a free sam ple bottle can obtain it postpaid by ad Jressing Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 203 Wash ington St., Monticello, 111. A postal card with your name and address on It will do. Never Too Late. Rev. Madison Peters said of New Year's resolutions the other day in Brooklyn: "I'd advise every onek witia a bad "labit?whether It's alcohol or profan ity, gambling or morphine?to swear Dff hopeful1/. "Some poor fellows, especially among the alcohol, think it'* too late ?their livss are ruined?no hope is left "But, as 7. always point out to them, i man Is r-ever too old to reform, though frequently he Is too zoung to realize the *.Pith." , SALTS IF BACKACHY OR ' KIDNEYS TROUBLE YOU I Less Meat If Your Kidneys Aren't Acting Right or If Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers You: When you wake up with backache md dull misery in the kidney region t generally >means you have been eat ng too much meat, says a well-known luthority. Meat forms uric acid which )verworks the kidiieys In their effort :o filter It from the blood and they be? >ome sort of paralyzed and loggy. 5Vhen your kidneys get sluggish and ;log you must relieve them, like you elieve your bowels; remoVing all the body's urinous waste, else you have jackache, sick headache, dizzy spells; rour stomach sours, tongue is coated, tnd when the weather Is bad you have rue U 111 tt LIU UViUgCS. Alio UilUO io :loudy, full of sediment, channels oft >n get sore-, water scalds and you are )bliged to sefek relief two or three :imes during the pight Either consult a good, reliable physi :ian at once or get from your pharma ;ist about four ounces of Jad Salts; ;ake a tablespoonful in a glass of vrfter before breakfast for a few days ind your kidneys will then act fine, rhis famous salts is made from the icid of grapes and lemon juice, com jined with lithia, and has been used 'or generations to clean and stimulate rtuggish kidneys, also to neutralize icids in the urine so it no longer irri* ates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a. life saver for regular neat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot njure and makes a delightful, effer vescent lithla-water drink.?Adv. / Everything. "How's everything in your house?" isked Smith. "Oh," replied Brown, "she's all ight." Bs sure that you ask for Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills, and look for the signa '.iira nf Wm Wrlo-hf. on wrannpr alld box. Mir Constipation, Biliousness and Indigo .loo. Adv. Sacrificed. Ethel?So Kate is finally married. How did she come to take the plunge? Marie?She didn't. She was shoved jff by three younger* sisters. Only One "BROMO QUININE" rhat Is LAXATIVE BROMO QUIN1NB. Look for ,he signature of HL W. OROVB. Ceres a Cold In One Day, Cares Grip In Two Days. 26c. The Property. Krlss?The Browns are divorced. Kross?Who has the custody of the jar??To?n Topics. Putnam Fadeless Dyes will last^un il the goods wear out. Adv. Speaking Lines. "Who Miss Antique away svtien she finally got married?" "Her wrinkles."?Stray StorieB. Bnfore we censure a man for seem ing to be what he is not, we should be sure to know what he is. Nothing venture, nothiDg have?ex cept trouble. e nervousness? all are signals of om girlhood into erhood?or later h leaves so many of a woman's life >r just such cases laaea of women. rlption ty years than any other known remedy. Ift as well as in the liquid. Sold by medietas ts in stamps. ?nt letter to Dr. Plerco said: "I was completely ver my body and was bo nervous that I could scream 9 meet a nurse who had been cured by Dr. Pierce'* lsult a physician since?am In excellent health." llets regulate stomach, coated, tiny graanlM A r "'A. X-' I For Handi Girls to M (Copyright b By A. NEELY HALL. A UrtMC MflUIKIfl DirXllDF cwnw n mvitiu mv ? imvi aw w * _ w? ? w .. The fun of the little moving pictun Bhow commences the minute you be gin work upon it, and it lasts as lonj as you want it to because there ar< always new pictures to plan and make The very first thing to prepare if the support for the "picture screen,' for which you will need a box. A1 most any kind of a grocery box wil do, approximately 18 inches wide anc 2 feet long. Remove the bottom boardt of the box (Fig.^1) for a doorway Then cut a piece of cardboard long enough to reach across the top of th( box from side to side (A, Fig 2). Cul an oblong opening in its center as shown and tack to the box edges ir the position shown in Fig. 6. The upper and lower boards B sup port the picture rollers D. Make then about 12 inchefe longer than the widtt of the box, and with a saw cut a 1-incl square notch in opposite corners, at shown Figs. 3 and 7. These notches form pockets for the picture-rollei ends to set in, and the strips C (Fig 3), nailed to the edges of boards.E hold the rollers in the notches. Nai boards B to the two ends of the boJ with the front edges projecting aboui an inch beyond the front edges of th< box, and with the pair of roller pock ets In the upper board directly ovei the pair in the lower board. Broom-handles,(curtain-poles, or anj other wooden sticks that you can fine are needed for the rollers JD. Cul them of the right length so their tops will stick several inches above th< top board B when they are placed ir their pockets (Pig. 6). A diagram ol a roller is shown fin Fig. 4, and a de tail of the crank for turning it i? shown in Fig. 5. For the crank (Fig 5) fasten a thread spool (E) to the end of a short stick (F), and then nail the upper end of the roller to the end of the stick. The nails G (Fig 4) are driven into the roller, after th roller ends have *been slipped intc their pockets. Their purpose is tc keep the rollers from slipping up oi down (Fig. 6). The picture strips are made of white cloth and are cut about an inch widei than the oblong opening in the piece nt nnrrthnarH A. Tn thpfip fltrfns the pictures are pasted. Enough of the strips should be sewed end to end tc make a continuous strip at least 20 feet In length. Select your pictures from newspa pers and magazines. Color them with crayons or water-colors, and arrange upon the cloth strip in spme interest ing order. Fasten them with floui paste. Tack each end of the picture Btrip to a picture roller, passing the cloth over the front of the opening in the piece of cardboard A. To complete the work, there re mains onfy the enclosing of the front of the framework so the audience cannot see you operating the roller cranks. This is done with cloth. Gflt a piece large enough to reach froai upper board B to lower board B, and from end to end. and tafck it to tte two edges of these boards, stretching it tightly. Then cut an opening in the center exactly in front of the open ing in the piece of cardboad A. A board nailed across the top of the framework will conceal the cranks Reel the pictures from one roller on to the other, then back again, by turn ing first one crank, and then the oth er. A light placed inside of the box, through the doorway, will illuminate the pictures from the back. "Agnes" Still Lives. It is not generally known that the c inal from whom Dickens drew hie inspiration for Agnes in "David Cop perfield" is still Hying. In a flat just off the Cromwell road, in a delightful early Victorian atmosphere that is the real thing and not achieved by a firm of skillful decorators, lives Miss Geor gina Hogarth. One can trace in this gracious old lady the charm that at tracted Dickens, for Mrs. Hogarth pas sesses the rare gift of growing old gracefully?London Daily Sketch. :1 i 'M'v,' -i - l'r v. ' ' ,y- . \ , bifcltfyft&ii'il'' * >*v 'v.-':'" 5 r j Bous and j ake and Do ! y A. Neely Hall) By DOROTHY PERKINS. AN IMPRESSION SCRAP-BOOK. 3 A pretty and simple way to pre i- serve the memories of summer leaves J ,'n U.. J ; ctuu iiuweia io uy tailing iiupi esaiuuo 3 of them on paper, and then pasting i. the pieces of paper on pages of a 3 blank book. A book containing such impressions might appropriately be called a memory ecrap-book. All the materials necessary toy mak ing leaf impressions are several sheets 1 of white paper?common note paper will do nicely?a tin or china plate, a piece of cotton rolled up into a ball and covered with a piece of silk or. soft cotton cloth, and about, half a teaspoonful of printer's ink, or half a teaspoonrui or Diacn snoe-paste mixed with a quarter of that quantity of lard. Spread a litfle of the printer's ink or shoe-paste mixture upon the china plate or tin plate. Then taking the little ball of cotton which you have covered With silk or cotton cloth, pat the surface of the plate until the ink or shoe-paste mixture is spread evenly over the center. All is then ready for making the Impressions. Place the lotfer side of a leaf, the side on which the veins are most prominent, upon the inked surface ot the plate. Then lay .a blotter, or piece of heavy paper, over the leaf? and press down upon every part to bring the leaf into perfect contact with the inked plate. If you have a small pho ) tograph mronting roller, you can get good results by using that to roll down the leaf. After pressing down or rolling down" the leaf, reipove it r carefully, and place the blackened I surface on a sheet of white pa'per and I press dovjn as before. Then remove \ the leaf, being careful in doing bo to lift it without sliding sideways, in order not to blur the impression. You J will find a very perfect picture of the leaf impressed upon the paper, with i the delicate veins shown extending in ! all directions, each accurately 1o ' cated, making a much more correct 1 copy of the leaf than you could pos A-mnrrr V Fern Woodbine OXU1J uiarr. % Impressions of flowers are more difficult to make than those of leaves, because flowers are more delicate to handle; yet there are many kinds of which splendid Impressions can be made. By using printer's ink of different colors, or coloring the shoe-paste mix ture with oil colors, very pretty com binations can be obtained. A little later, when the leases assume their variegated colors of autumn, you can try your hand at making impressions in as near these colors as you can mix up. And you will be surprised to see how beautiful colored Im pressions are. The illustrations have been reproduced from a few sample impressions made in black. With the hundreds of different forms of leaves and flowers to be found in'the garden and in the woods, 1 just think of the possibilities for mak ing a large scrap-book, and what a fine thing it will be to have such a book to refer to. Of course you must find out the names of all the leaves and flowers you make impressions of, and write them below the impressions, so you will feel well enough acquainted with them next time you see them to call them by name. i Besides making a memory scrap i book, another novel idea that you girls can try is that of decorating . your letter paper with impressions of dainty ferns and grasses. This will i make your paper different from that of your girl friends. If you want to have your monogram on your paper, i in addition to the leaf impression, cut your initials in the leaf with a pen knife. Then when you make the im* 1 pression, you will find your initial! outlined In white. . .* ?' , . S'pfy'.-'td'k. . v: i, . ' NoR * There's no rest and bnt little peace for a person whos^j kidneys are out of or<Lsr. Lame in the morning, suffering cricks in the back and sharp stabs of pain with every sudden strain, the day is Just one round of pain and trouble. It would be strange if all-day back ache did not wear on the temper, but ! it is not only on that account that people who suffer with weak kidneys are nervous, cross and irritable. Uric acid is poison to the nerves, and when the kidneys are not working well, this acid collects in the blood and works upon the nerves, causing headache, dizziness, languor, an in clination to worry over trifles, and a suspicious', short temper. ' Rheumatic pain, neuralgia, sciatica, lumbago, neuritis and gravel are fur 1 th^r Bteps in uric acid poisoning. Don't neglect kidney weakness. An 1 VionV wifVi nnnfltural Ttacaa (toq of the kidney secretions, is cause enough to suspect the kidneys. Use Doan's Kidney Pills, a remedy which has been used for years, thfi world over, for -weak kidneys, backache, ir regular kidney action and uric acid "When DGAN Sold by all Dealers Overpayment k A certain statesman, condemning the International marriage that ' is based on mercenary and sordid grounds, said in Washington: "Another pretty American countess ?she inherited eight millions from her father's wholesale hardware plant ?has found marriage a disappoint ment' "Her dyed and corseted old htfsband said bitterly to her one day: "'Ours was a business marriage. You bought my title with your mil lions, as you'd buy a yard of cloth in a shop.' "'Yes,' blazed the young covntess, 'yes?but I ought to have got some change!'" Home Medicine Chest Keep your medicines in one place, out of reach of children. Be sure to have Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh on hand for emergency use. It should take the fire out of burns, heal' cuts, remove soreness and be worth many times over Its cost Adv. Plaster. "They say absinthe is the favorite French drink." "Plaster of Paris, eh?" Obstinate sores should be cured by Hanford's Balsam. Adv. , Queer Reasons foj* PrWe. ,i ? Some weeks ago when the Volturnc burned in midocean a few of the men. rushed the boats and were knocked down by the captain. What becomes of such.men in after days? Do tbey hide in shame from their fellows, feur ful that they may be recognized and their infamy proclaimed? Not neces sarily. A public librarian was once visited by a mail who came to him for a book on notable shipwrecks. He searched the pages eagerly, then point ed out a passage referring to a sea man who tried to take a woman's place In a lifeboat, and hid been 3tot by the captain. "I'm that man," he declared, proud that his exploit should appear in print, and offered to show the shot wound to support his claim! -Mistaken Sneer. "It' is cheaper, not dearer, to ' con fjulf a onnnloHof 99 oa M Df QItt ATI DU1I? a Dp^^iUllOL, UU1U V ? Flexner, head of the Rockefeller in stitute, at a medical dinner. , "It is very stupid and erroneouBt-to hold the opinions of Blank, to whom a friend said: " "Was the doctor who examined your lungs a specialist?' " 'No. I don't think so,' Blank traeered. 'He couldn't find anything tfie matter with 'em.'" Making Conversation. Smith (on steam# in midocean)? Going across, old chap? Brown?Yes. You? ANOTHER COFFEE WRECk What's the Use When There's an Easy Way Out? * Along with the coffee habit has grown the prevalent "American Dis ease"?nervous prostration. The following letter shows the way out of the trouble: "Five years ago I was a gre^t cof fee drinker and from its use I be came so nervous I could scarcely *leep at all nights. My condition grew worse and worse until finally the phy liclan I consulted declared my trou bles were due to coffee. "But being so wedded to the bev erage I did not see how I could do without it, especially at breakfast, as that meal seemed 'incomplete with out coffee. ,. "On a visit, my friends deprived me of coffee to prove that It was harm ful. At the end of about eight days 1 was less nervous, but the craving /or coffee was Intense, so I went back to the old habit as soon as I got home and the old sleepless nights came near making a wreck of me. "I heard of Postum and decided to try it. I did not like it at first, be cause, as I afterwards discovered, it was "not made properly. I found, how ever, that when made after directions on the package, it was delicious. "It had a soothing effect on my nerves, and none of the bad effects that coffee had, so I bade farewell to coffee and have used only Postum since. The most wonderfhl account of the benefit to be derived from Postum could not exceed my own ex perience." Name given by Postum Co.,. Battle Creek, Mich. Write for a copy of "The Road to Wellville." Postum now comes In two forms: Regular Postum?must be well boiled. Instant Postum?is a soluble pow der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly In a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious bever age Instantly. Grocers sell both kindB. "There's a Reason" for Postum. , J- | J : ' est?No I .X "Oh, I shall go mad.** c Your Back is Lame?Remember the fSKiDNETJ i.,PHcc 50 cents. Foster-Mflburn Co, Buffalo, ; ? Snail's Real Pace. "At a stall's pace" Is a common em presslon and usually signifies very slow gait, but what do you suppose is the actual speed by a snail In trav eling? We can give It to you in accurate 'figures. One foot In four minutes, or at the rate of one mile in 16 days, if travel ing continuously. These are figures given by George Zahnizer, a civil engineer'-of this city,' taken from fcctuai<>bservatlon. A short time since* Mr. Zahriizerwas standing along the Western New York & Pennsylvania railroad waiting for train. He had nothing in particular to do and "killed a little time" by timing1 a snail which was creeping along the': ground; That snail traveled just exactly one foot in four minutes', Mr. Zahnizer says, and computing distance at the, rate of travel shown Mr. Zahnizer has figured ont that it would require 16 days for that snail to move a. mile. V is mm I FEVERISH, SICK Look, Mother! . If tongue is coated, give "California Syrup of Figs." Children love this "fruit laxative," and nothing else cleanse?, the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result is they become tightly cltogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat, sleep or act naturally, .breath is bad, system full of cold, bas sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen,. Mother! See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passeq out of the sys tem, and you have a well child again. Millions of mothers give "Califontfa Syrug of Figs" because it is perfectly harmless; children love it, and it nev er falls to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Adv. ? Deathless Fame. ? "I would > rather have written the 'Elegy in a Country Churchyard' than be as rich as Rockefeller." "Why?" "How can you ask? The author of that poem won deathless fame," "Did he? Who wae the chaj>?" "Let's'see. His name has escaped me; but it certainly is great stuff, all right." SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR Look Year? Youngerl Try Grandma'? R?cId? of Sane and 8ulohur and Nobody Will Know. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly Compound ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; alBo ends dandruff, Itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get thie mixture was to make It at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Hair Remedy." You will get a large bottle for about 50 cents. Every body uses this old, famous recipe, be cause no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, ae it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair disappears, and ! after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy and you look years younger. ?Adv. Prepared. "I told you to look sharp, didn't I?" "Well, I guess I did. I had an edge on." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate, stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coatea tiny granules. Adv. The man who attends strictly to his own business is never overworked Dr. Peery's- Vermifuge "Dead Shot" kills and expels Worms Id a very few hours. Ad 7. Poverty is no disgrace, but wealth . can't always say as much. , .. 'eace *'<?!* ' y* *' trouble. Thousands of grateful recoup . mendations throughout the country prove their worth. A PHYSICAL WRECK Nmw York City Woman Telltof AwfulSaffaring Mrs. Edith Dykeman, 154 W. 84th St, New York City, N. Y., says: "Three years ago I was so run down In health that X was a nervous wreck. I was afflicted with a severe case ,of disordered kld neys and doctors treated me without benefit. My kidneys acted either too free Sor else the action was retarded and e passages of the secretions caused ma much pain. My back ached frightfully day and night and I often rolled and .V tossed for hoars, unable to go to sleep. In the morning I felt all worn out and was hardly able to do my housework. Whenever I stooped to pick up anything from the floor, I was hardly -able io " V straighten again. I had terrible dizzy ' spells and specks seemed to be floating in s front of me. If I walked up or down stairs, I was completely worn out frpra weakness. The least excitement brought on an attack of nervousness and I got so bad that it was hard for pie to he up and' around. My health'-was all run down. , Someone advised me tb take JDoan's Kid-. ney Pills and the first, few doses helped me. I kept right on until I was entirely cured and I am now In the bast of health. ' I feel like a different woman and "Dean's Kidney Pills alone deservb the credit" k Y? Prpprictocs' Stiff Muse ftre quickly relieved by Sloan' Liniment. Lay it on?no rub bing. Try it / AnkU Sprain and DUsut*J H fp. t" I sprained my anlde and dislocate mr . Up by falling out of a third atari window. Went on crotches tar torn months. Then I started to \is$ you Liniment, according to directions 1 must nay it is helping me wonderfully We will never without Sloan's Uw ment anymore."?Cku*. Johnson, Lautt* KilbPain Splendid for Sprains. -y>' " I fen and sprained my arm ,we<fc ago and wai In terrible pain. <|-couJd'. notnaemy handorarmnntfl.1 Applied your Liniment. I shall never be with out a bottle of Sloan's Liniment.,,-?*?? IL B. Springer, ?Ii*ab*th, X /. > . l\ , ' & Fine for StSbM "Sloan's Liniment baa done more mod than anything 1 bare ever tried for stiff joints.- I got my band hurt to badly that I bad to stop wock right in. the bosiiest time of the year. I thought at first that I would hare to have my band taken off; bat I got a bottls.of Span's I^im wt^ndcured my band. At all Dealers. 25c* 50 c. and $1X0 # Send for Sloan's free, instructive J book on horses, r cattle, bogs and y poultry. Address This Handsome Ford Automobile Dr. EMS. SI OAN, lac . B8ST0X. MASS. r ??ra Tfcor MotorcycJel A?da sUatfy .1 InMMof flO* diytadiplp |im{ . your (par* Mm* tddni.or^M tor Bfenahla TaUered-to-Orier Clattaa. Read Carefnfly! JKJffiSRfc NMntatir* for the Umom Reliable ?Ude-to Ordac Clothee, we havw* plan to equip ran with new, 1914 Model Ford Touring CerorTnor Motor cycle ekaeieMy free end tdrt yoa la i bmlnw wttlch will eey yee $10 eaa ea m tn tat joet roar tgm am. Here'e bew we.eaa naka UUe offaf? Tbe antanpt^eer | RnJABl^AMRD|^0^|Jl^J?dg?BjjMJjaw^ wtados. Nouyofaact miUMft irrllr? l|wd.M>l?ir?|WI?MtoM**l<W. Send for Free $10-a-Day Book -*od'.b-t,~u-1 Doat mmsxm a mmi ^ CTVr ] '.v #.?? liL sfll Ml Why Scratch? "Hunt's Cure" js guar* anteeth to stop and permarientlycure thatf terrible itching. It is compounded for that purpose and your money j will be promptly refunded WITHOUT QUESTION if Hunt's Cure fails to euro Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring Worm or any other Sltia Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mafl direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by " A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Sharaan. Texas ^UhatisHoESi wirH^OTHEta?? CURES CROUP StPNEUMOMIA ''v LIKE MAGIC GOOSE GREASE CO. GREENSBORO. N.C. FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS If you feel 'out of sorts' 'RfK down1 'got the blum* buyrtu irom kid.nev, guuvui, ntumuo isisjubh, chronic WEAKNESS, ULCEUS. HKJN ERUPTIONS, pilm, writ? for FREE cloth bound medical boos oil these diseases and wonderful cures effected by THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY No.1No.2No.3 THERAPION ycnrieli'lc*1u* the remedy for your own ailment. Absolutely FREE* no'follow up'circulars. No obligations. Dr. LeClero Med. Co., Hayerstook kd.. Hampstead, London, Kim. WE want to PROVE therapion WILL CURE you. FOR SALE?82 A. IN GASTON CO.. N. C.S 12 a. cult., all tillable, 7 r. home, barn, out bldgs. Addr. Wm. T. Walker. Stanley, N. C. Beit Coogh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by Druggists. ,1s*.