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ELIXIR DAREK A GOOD TOXIC And Driven Malaria oat of the System. "Your 'Ilabelc' acts like magic; I have given it to numerous people in my par ish who were suffering: with chills, ma laria and fever. I recommend it to those who are sufferers and in need of a good tonic."?Rev. S. Szymanow6ki. St. Stephen's Church. Perth Amboy. N. J." Elixir Bnbek 50 cents, all druggists or by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczew aki & Co.. Washington. D. C. When a man puts his foot in it he feels like kicking himself. Win? and Cramping! STELLA-VITAE STOPPED IT! This has a world of meaning to every woman who suffers as Mrs. J. S. Blair, of Enter prise, Okla., suffered and there are many thousands such. Mrs. Blair tells the story of her suf Jering and cure much better than we can tell it. We quote her own words: "I bad been flooding, cramping and omiting for five months and taking medicine from as good a doctor as the country affords, but be did me no good. I got tired of doctor's medicine and sent to the drug store for a woman's medi cine and tbe druggist sent me STELLA VITAE. "One bottle stopped everything and I felt like a different woman. I have osed six bottles already and will continue to use and praise STELLA VITAE whenever I need a woman'* medicine." What STELLA-VITAE did for Mrs. Blair it will do for you. We guar mil CO mc /U t/U I. i- to IV j vw? Your money back if it don't. You cannot afford to not try it?when you have all to gain and not a penny to lose. Go to your dealer today and begin trying STELLA-VITAE, trying to become well. We lose the price if you are not benefited. In many years of guaranteeing STELLA VITAE less than one bottle out of every thousand has failed to benefit. Your chancom of being benefited mro m thousand to onol 1 Thacher Medicine Co. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. BEGIN NOW If you have not decided upon what Spring Medicine to take, try By arousing the liver They cleanse the system of accumulated ' impurities and PUKiri inc dluuu *^AKE5 r^ittfs Joy A . CROUP AMD PNEUMONIA. ACTS U*f ), \ HMK; Nrvurwu ALSO GOOD I f0? ASmnAiXrAHW.PHiJ tr ^GOOSE GREASE CQy Goose Grease Liniment cares all aches and pains GILT EDGE the only ladies' shoe droning that posi tively contain* OIL. Blacks and polishes ladies' and children's boob and shoes, shines without rub* bing. 25c, "French Gtoss," 10c. STAR combination for dramas and polishing all kindi of russet or tan shoes, 10c. "Dandy" size 25c. "QUICK WHITE" (in liquid form with sponge) quickly cleans and whitens dirty canvas shoe*. 10c and 25c. BABY ELITE combination (or gentlemen who take pride in having their shoes look Al. Restores color and lustre to all black shoes. Polish with a brush or doth, 10c. "Elite" size 25c. If your dealer does not keep the kind you want, send m the price in stamps for a full size package, charge* paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO. 30-26 Albany St Cambridge, Mm The Oldest and Largest Manufacturers cuf Shoe Polishes in the World W.L.DOUGLAS SHOES Mel's 838 Women's U Misses, Boys,Children $1.50 $:.7S$2 $2-50 S3 Big.n Bu.ln... In 1878; now ths largest msksr of $3,$8.50,$*,\ ?od?4.60?ho?. In IK* world. $1,006,279 _ Doaglai thoot la 191$ orer 1111. Tills la the reason we give you the same values tor S3.00. S3.5U. S4.00 and 54.50 noiwkha-andlng the enormous Increase In the cost of leather. Our standards have not been lowered and the price to you remains the same. gMk your dealer to show you the klnoof w. L. Douslas shoes he Is seMlru for *3.00. S3.50. S4.0'Jand $4,50. You will then be convinced that W.L.Douglas shoes are abso lutely as good as other makes sold at higher prices. The only dtflerence Is the prico. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Hons gamins without W. L. Douglas' naos itampsd on ths bottom. If W. L. Doupisi shoe* are not for wis In your Tlchiltjr. order direct from f.ctorv. Shoes for every member ol the fsrollr ?t nil prices. postsas free. L Write for iltuatratcd catalog "bowing how \ to order by mail. W. 1>. DOUGLAS, ' 210 Bpari Stmt, Brockton, Uui. llf M HTPII Men to learn barber trade. eSJ uN ! Pu Few weeks required. ? Steady position for com petent graduates. Wonderful demand for bar bers. Wages while earning; freecatalog; writ* RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE. Richmond, Va. KODAKS and High Grade Finishing. Mail orders given Spe cial attention. Price? reasonable. Service prompt. Send for Price List. LAS.MtAU>S AJiX STORK CHARUWTOS. b. C. CALOMEL IS DANGEROUS and is being displaced now in many sections of the South by DR. G. B. WILLIAMS' LIVER & KIDNEY PILLS l*hese pills stimulate the liver and Bowels wlthoct the weakening after effect caused by Calomel. 26c at all dealers. Sample sent free ou request. THE 6. B.WILLIAMS CO., Quitman, 6a. TORREON OCCUPIED By VILLA'S REBELS REPEATED ATTACKS ON FEDER AL STRONGHOLD RESULT IN VICTORY. 6,000 KILLED AND WOUNDED Fighting Continued Almost- Continu ously For Six Days.?There Were About ^0,000 Men on Each Side and Both Reported Heavy Looses. Torreon, Mexico.?Torreon strewr A'ith victims of a six-day battle is oc cupied by Villa's rebels while the fed erals are fled. The capture marks the climax of the first campaign of the revolution to oust Victoriano Huerta from Mexico City. It gives the constitutionalists virtual control over j the whole northern tier of Mexican states. , Positions were taken and lost time. , and time again. Several night attacks j sent tho foHornls Rfiirrvin er from strong positions, but at daybreak the captors would be compelled to aban- ( don them because of the strength and accuracy of the enemy's artillery fire, much of which was said to have been directed by French and German gun ners. Losses have not been compiled, but General Villa estimates his own losses at 500 killed and 1,500 wounded, and the federal loss at 1,000 killed and 2, 000 wounded, with an unknown num ber of prisoners. Villa believes the federals, whom his cavalry is pursuing to the south, forms but a remnant of the Huerta force whose loss he says probably is close to being total. All the subordi nate generals have not yet reported, however, and until they do just how many were captured can not be accu rately stated. The battle line was four miles long and the field was outlined by three great hills formed like carpenter's square at either end of which lay the towns of Gomez Palacio and Torreon. There were about 10,000 men in each army. The federals had fortified/the hills with rifle pits, trenches and barb wire entanglements. The nature of the ground made it difficult to recover the wounded and many of them died of thirst and hunger or lack of atten- 1 tion where they fell. Automobiles I were employed in rescue work but they could not ascend the hillsides. 1 / i CRITICISE RESERVE CITIES ' Indications Are That Disappointed J Municipalities Will Contest ] Selection. 1 Washington.?There was every in- < Jication here that the announcement ' of the reserve districts and cities" by < the reserve bank organizations com- 1 mittee had given the signal for a de- I terminel struggle upon the part of 1 several cities whi^h were disappoint- ( el, to overturn the committee on the ( /toiisiAn onH hrir??r ahnnt a redistric- 1 tion of the country, or at least a 1 change In the reserve cities named. Under the law the decision of the 1 organization committee is not sub- 1 Jeet to review except by the Federal reserve board. This board probably will not be named by President Wil- ' son for several weeks, but, in the meantime, it is believed that those 5 disappointed with the committee's an- ^ nouncement will bend every :effort to ward paving the way for changes. It | was pointed out that both Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo and Comp troller of the Currency Williams, of the organization committee, are ex officio members of the reserve board anl hardly could be counted upon to reverse themselves. The president has given no intimation as to who the other five members will be. Congressman Richardson's Funeral, j Huntsville, Ala.?The funeral of I the late William Richardson, con- I n-KAfiornon frrtrvi fVio TTMcrVitln A 1o Kom Q glCOCUiaU JL1 ViU UUt JUlglitil rtiwuauiw district, was held here from the Epis copal church, Rev. Cary Gamble of ficiating. At the conclusion of the brief service many followed the body to Maple Hill Cemetery. People of county and town of this congressional iistrict attended. Work on Anti-Trust Bill. Washington. ? While the Panama tolls exemption legislation has over- i shadowed all other legislation for ] several days members of the senate committee on interstate commerce hav continued to work in preparation of the anti-trust bill which is to be reported in the near future. Senator Newlands, chairman of the committee, said that the bill, insofar as its sali ent features are concerned is practi cally complete. It embraces provis ions for establishment of an inter state trade commission. Lumber Companfes Consolidate. Savannah. Ga.?Announcement of the consolidation of lumber compan ies in Georgia with a total capital amounting to $2,000,000, was made here. The consolidation will be known as the Seaboard Lumber Company. The latter company already is char tered under New York state laws and application for a charter in Georgia has been made at Springfield. Com panies included in the merger are the uuurgia sawnun company, uie South Georgia Lumber Company and the Georgia-Carolina Lumber Co. St. Augustine's Loss $750,000. St. Augustine, Fla.?Insurance ad justers are hard at work estimating the loss in the recent fire which they believe will be $750,000 as stated, with about one-third covered by in surance. The militia which has been on guard since the fire was dismissed as there was no lootina: and no at tempt at it. Miss Alice M. Smith, of Amherst, Arova Scotia, who was so seriously injured, will recover, the surgeons annonce. The owners of the five hotels destroyed are preparing to rebuild. <khwhx^^xmx~x~x^~x~:~:~xx?: For Handy ? Girls to M; (Copyright by J A TOY SHOOTING-GALLERY. By A. NEELY HALL. This interesting toy, with its funny animal targets, and a harmless pistol with which to shoot at them, will pro vide an endless amount of fun for a winter's evening or a stormy after noon. Fig. 1 shows the completed toy, and Fig. 2 the box that forms the framework. The targets can be ar ranged to suit the form of box that you find, and the number may be in creased or decreased to suit, the space. Fig. 3 shows how the target should be hinged in place tp the hori zontal strip A. Tack or glue the low er edge of the piece of cardboard to a block of wood B. Then cut a hinge strip out of a piece of dress lining, and either tack or glue one-half of it to fig. 2 The box framework block B and the other half to the tar get support. , - The animal targets are made with pictures cut from magazines and news papers. The pictures should be col ored with crayons or water-colors to make them as nearly their right colors is possible. After cutting them out, paste them upon cardboard, mount the pieces of cardboard upon blocks af wood, as shown at,B and C (Figs. J and 4) and hinge the blocks to the target supports with cloth hinges. B shows the method of hinging the tar gets to strip A and to the lower side Df the box, and C shows the method af hinging the targets to the ends of the box. The former targetB fall back wards when struck; the latter targets swing in sideways when struck. Pig. 5 shows the completed card shooting pistol, and Figs. 6, 7 and 8 show the details for making, it. Cut block A about 8 inches long, and block B about 3 inches long. Nail A to B is shown. Then take two rubber bands, loop them together end to end, is shown In Fig. 7, and fasten one end of the looped bands to the end of block A by means of a nail driven into CLOTH Hir.GE Pig. 6. Cut a piece of cardboard ibout one inch square, notch the cen ter of two opposite edges (Fig. 8), and tit the loop of the free end of the rubber bands over' the piece 3f cardboard and into the notches, as shown in Figs. 6 and 7. This com pletes the pistol. It shoots small squares of cardboard, placed in the po sition shown in Figs. 5 and 7, with Dne corner slipped beneath tl e rubber band loop. Number the targets as shown in Fig. I, marking the circular target "25," Fig 7 our of the animal targets "10,' and he remaining four "5." Each num 'ier represents the score of that par ncular target.. Bods and j ike and Do j L Neely Hall) A HOMEMADE RECIPE CABINET. By DOROTHY PERKINS. Every girl will be interested in this little cabinet made for keeping together favorite cooking recipes. There is a place in it for every kind of recipe, and, with a guide-card to show Just where each recipe is placed, it is possible to find eractly what is wanted without a minute's delay. Make a cabinet for your mother's recipeB. men mane anoiner in wmcn to start a collection of your own. The work is easy and quickly done.- Any cardboard box can be used for work ing material. Mark out the bottom, two sides, and two ends in the form shown in the pattern of Fig. 2. Draw the lines with ruler and pencil, using the dimensions given. Then, when you have marked out the piece, cut out along the outside lines. With a pocket knife score along the outer lines of the bottom piece, as indicated by dotted lines, and bend up the side and end pieces until their ends meet. Bind the corners together with strips of linen, coated with glue and lapped over the corners as shown in Fig. 4. The pattern for the cover is shown in Fig. 3. Mark it out in the same Of r. I ^ \iL \ PATTERN-OF COVER / 1 / / /N 1 1 1 -u 5 Fig. 3' -N Oi 2* PATTERN-OF BOX / Fic.2 way that you marked out the box. Score it as indicated by the dotted lines, and bend up the Bides and ends until their ends meet. Corner A (Fig. 4) shows how the corners are brought together, and corner B shows how they are bound with the linen strips. Hinge the cover to the cabinet box with a cloth hinge strip similar to the strips bound over the corners. Make the hinge extend the full length of the cover. Then with the cover at tached, get a piece of light-weight cambric of a dark gray or other dur able color, and cover the outside of the cabinet, gluing the cloth to the cardboard, and stretching it tightly and neatly over the corners. The indexed guide cards are of cardboard, and made as shown in Fig. 5. They should measure 3% inches high by a length equal to a trifle less than the inside length of the box. Divide the upper edge of each card into three parts, and prepare the pro jecting tabs as shown, making each a trifle longer than one-third of the length of the card, and % inch high. Cut away the card either side of the qK Tho firot PQPH vnn mrill nnfl nA IU U. X L?\J w* wv -I ***** wuu^o, has the tab on the left end, the sec ond has it in the center, and the third on the right end. The fourth is the same as the first, the fifth the same as the second, the sixth the same as the third, and so on. You can make up your own recipe classifications, but the following cov er about every heading necessary: Beverages, Breads, Cake, Candies Canning, Chafing Dish, Desserts, Eggs, Fish, Frozen Desserts, Meats, Pick ling, Preserves,j Salads. Sandwiches, Sauces, Soups, Vegetables, Miscella neous. . # * .i >1 h - Uric Aci Unseen in its approach, hard to de tect in its early stages, and cruelly painful in its later forms, uric acid poisoning is a disease too often fatal. Bright's disease is one of the final stages of uric acid poisoning. It kills In our country every year more men and women than any other ailment except two?consumption and pneu monia. Bright's disease and uric acid poisoning usually start In some kidney weakness that would not be hard tc cure, if discovered early, so it 1b well to know the early signs of kidney dis ease and uric poisoning. When uric acid is formed too fasl and the kidneys are weakened by a cold, or fever, by overwork, or by over indulgences, the acid collects, the blooc gets Impure and heavy, there is head ache, dizziness, heart palpitation, and a dull, heavy-headed, drowsy feeling with disturbances of the urine. Real torture begins when the uric acid forms into gravel or stone in thf kidney, or crystallizes into jagged bltt In the muscles, joints or on the nervt tubings. Then follow the awful paint of neuralgia, rheumatism, gout, sciat ica, neuritis, lumbago or kidney colic Sold by all Dea!e When Skill. Son (a golf enthusiast)?You must acknowledge, father, that It requires a great deal of skill to drive a ball ? hundred yards? Old Farmer?Shucks! It doesn't re quire half as much skill as it does tc drive a pig 50 feet SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIF Recipe of Sage and Sulphur and Nobody Will*.Know. Almost everyone knows that Sag< Tea and Sulphur, properly compound ed, brings back the natural color am lustre to the hair when faded, streaket or gray; also ends dandruff, itchinj ???'? ofAno fa lllnc hflfr Yfian Look Years Younger! Try Grandma'i OVaiJJ OUU BVV/ye AUliiMQ ???> - ?.? ago the only way to get this mixtur< was to mako It at home, which li mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at an: drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Hair Remedy." You will get i large bottle for about 50 cents. Every body uses this old, famous recipe, be cause no one can possibly tell tha you darkened your hair, ae it does i so naturally and evenly. Tou dampei a sponge or soft brush with it am draw this through your hair, takini one small strand, at a time; by morn ing the gray hair disappears, am after another application or two, you hair becomes beautifully dark, thicl and glossy and you look years youngei ?Adv. Al|^ Equally Right?or Wrong. * Former President Taft told this lil tie story to illustrate the puzzlin) character of a certain public question "I feel about that question ver: much as tne man aid wno came across a creek which, as some one told him was called the Saskaschiqualie creek He asked a resident of the neighbor hood how they spelled that name. Th native said: 'Some spells it one waj and some spells it another, but in m: judgment there ain't any correct wa; of spelling it.'"?Youth's Companion Eczema Seven Yeara?Cured by Te1 terine. "I had Eczema on my chest for sevei years and the torture was almost unbear able. One of your salesmen offered t pay for the Tetterlne if it did not cur me. I used less than three boxes and an entirely well." Clem Kinard, Ruffln, S. C Tetterine cures Eczema. Itching Piles Dandruff, Ring Worm and every form o Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c Tetterlne Soap 25c. Your druggist, or b; mail from the manufacturer, The Shup trine Co., Savannah, Ga. With every mail order for Tetterine w give a box of Shuptrine's 10c Liver Pill free. Adv. His Title. "I want to know one things." "What's that?" "If the king knighted a menagerii and show manager, would they cal him Sir Cuss?" Distress After Eating. Indigestion and Intestinal Fermen tation immediately relieved by taking a Booth-Overton Dyspepsia Tablet Buy a 50c. bottle at Druggists. Monej refunded if they do not help, or writ< for free sample. Booth-Overton Co. 11 Broadway, New York.?Adv. Or Any Other Kind. "I shouldn't think that prisone could be particularly successful in ut tering forged notes." "Why not?" "He stutters so." Rub It On and Rub It In. For lame back, stiff neck and son throat, apply Hanford's Balsam o Myrrh, and be sure to rub it in thor oughly. It is guaranteed to cure o; your money will be refunded by youi dealer. Adv. Wide Assortment. She thought she would try the nev telephone. "What number?" asked central. "Why, I don't know. What number; have you?"?Courier-Journal. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated easy to take as candy, regulate and invig orate stomach, liver and bowels. Do no gripe. Adv. Modern Question. Kriss?The Browns are divorced. Kross?Who lias the custody 01 iu< car??Town Topics. For fouls in cattle use Hanford'f Balsam. Adv. A woman never feels absolutely sun that her husband lias loose habits unti he comes home tight. , If your skin is scratched by a rustj nail, apply Hanford's Balsam at once It should prevent blood poison. Adv When a young widow makes up hei mind to marry again the man sh< spots hasn't the ghost of a show. wjftrSjfe.'/... i .jsM id is Slov 11 don't know what ails me." Your Back b Lame?Remember the J'S KIDNEY! ra,, Price 50 cents. Foster-MBbum Co? Buffalo, i tt TPys Great Divide. Bob?There is some difference be tween genius and talent. , Tom?Merely a weekly envelope. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria More Se/ious. "Were your son's hopes of victory broken in that football match?" "No, but his nose was." For old sores apply Hanford's Bal sam. Adv. * Our idea of a poor excuse of a man is one who solicits dirty linen for his wife to wash and iron. I? Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain the kettle. Adv. And many a toothless person in dulges in biting sarcasm. Nature Never Intel Woman to be Si the fact that it is she \ TSooto nmmon ran yoursel/to a delicate i If you suffer fror low Bplrita, lack of ai well again?it's onor< epeediiy regain your h Dr. Pierce's Favc (In Tab! This famous rem< research by a physici ailments a life study. Since its introduct and* of women is to ita wonderful n Try It now. Your Son can send 60 on ? V. Pierce, M. D Dr.PiemlFleauntl Yoa mast use chemical fertilizers? to get bright, smooth Sweet Potatoes Too mucl izcr prev Barnyard proper fi 8 to 10 ] appliei This! VlVW Rheumatisi Backache,' Sprained Anlt "I was ill for a long time with a severely Liniment and now I am able to be about at cause I think you deserve a lot at credit f< market and I shall always take timo to r Chat. Haiuc, ISaliimore, Ma. Aft all Dealers?25c^ 50c. and $1.00. SI oar and poultry Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. ^ WkL.t: , v Poison :t is bat a further step to dropsy or Bright's disease. Be warned by backache, by sediment n th e kidney secretions^ by painful,scant >r too frequent passages. "Cure the weak sned kidneys. Use Doan's Kidney Pills -a medicine made just for wealc kid leys, that has been proved good in years >f use, in thousands of cases?the rem* sdy that is recommended by grateful isers from coast to coast. Doctors Couldn't Help Her leorgia Woman Almost Cave Up in Despair Mrs. Sabra Burgess, Toccoa, Ga.. s^y?: 'Twelve years ago I began to suder from heumatic trouble and kidney disease. Doc ors said my system was niled with uric acid )olsonlng. The kidney secretion* were scanty ind too frequent in passage and bothered m? rreatly at night. My back got terribly weak ind painful and there was a bearing-down ensation through my loins. As the disease trogressed, severe pains ran from my head -*aw?i Krnuerh mv ?hmtMpr#L fntO ny right aide and limb. I tried almost ev* irythlng, but nothing helped me, even six nonths' treatment by doctora brought no re lef. I was In deapalr. While In this critical :ondltlon, I began ualng Doar.'e Kidney Pllia md the relief was miraculous. Bj" the time : had used six boxes, all the aliments had eft me^ That happened four years ago and have never #uftred tinet." Name' "Hunt's Cure" is guar anteed to stop and permanentlycure that terrible itching. It ia compounded for that nr^r fflun PurP?se an^ your money Jf W will be promptly refunded L*J?U mHg\ WITHOUT QUESTION I /mtfi BmWfn ^ Hnnt'8 Care fails to cure 'tc^ Eczema,Tetter,Ring aWkJHVl m Worm or any other 81dn Disease. SOc at your druggist's, or by rnn^ direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by i A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO. Sherman. Texn \ PREVENTION better than care. Tatt's Puis If taken In time .are not only a remedy for, bat will prevent SICK HEADACHE, biliousness, constipation and kindred disease*. Tuft's Pills Pettits Eye Salve RELIEVES SORE EYES W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 14-1914. 4 ?f Afl Afl a matter of fact it It ItlCll bar right and her doty to enjoy perfect health and ftlrlir strength?to be just as Clll V strong and healthy as man? ' perhaps more so?in view ot vho brings into the world the offspring: be strong and healthy. Don't resign life. a headaches, backaches, nervousness, nbition, or have lost all hope of beina ) than an even chance that you will ealth if you will try iritp Prpsrrinlinn tet or LiqnidForm) edy is the result of years of p&tient an who has made women's peculiar km?mora than forty year* ago?thou i every part of the srlobe have testified terita. You, too, will find it beneficial. dealer in mediclnea will supply you or e-eent atampe for a trial box. AddreM .. Buffalo, N.Y. Pellets regulate towrti, lirer, bewda. h ammonia in sweet potato ents early maturity. manure makes the potatoes rough. The irtilizer is a chemical mixture containing oer cent, of OTASH d at the rate of one-half ton per acre. Icind of fertilizer has given a 325-bushel per acre. For free book on Fertilizer nulas and directions, and for prices on ish Salts, write to us. We will sell any >unt of Potash from a 200-lb. bag up. GERMAN KALI WORKS. Inc. 42 Broadway, New York |o, McCormlck Block Atlanta, Empire Bld?. H?w Orlaana, Wlltnty Central Bank Bide. Bayannah, Bvik A Trait Bide. Ban Frasdico, it California 8t. m, Sprains Neuralgia :cr, that's good stuff. The pain in [1 gone?I never saw anything work Sloan's Liniment." Thousands of >le voice the same opinion. Here's oof. Relieved Pain in Back. fas troubled with a very bod pain in my [or some time. I went to a doctor but be did not do me any good, so 1 Purchased a bottle of Sloan's inimr>nt and now I am & well woman. I always keep a bot- W tlo of Sloan's Liniment in the house." ? Mist Matilda Cotton, 3bi Myrtle Alt., Brooklyn, .V. Y. Scictic Rheumatism. "We have used Sloan's Lini ment for over six years and found it the best we ever used. When my wife had sciatic rheumatism the only thing that didhcranygood was Sloan's Liniment. We cannot praise it hiplily enough." ?Mr. rerigo, Dcs Moines, Iowa. Jo Relieved. h sprained ankle. I (rot a bottle of Sloan's, id can walk a great deal. I write this be jr putting such a fino Liniment on the ecommcnd Dr. Sloan's Liniment."?Mrs. i'? instructive book on hones, cattle, boga eat free.