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IIIIL IT'S HIERCU Straighten Up! Don't Lose a Day Liver and Bowels With "D Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take a dose of the vile, dangerous drug to night and tomorrow you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Poll-Anal wlion It r?nmea Into contact with "souf bile crashes into it, break ing it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you feel sluggish and "all knocked out," if your liver is torpid and bowels consti pated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour, just try a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. * Here's my guarantee?Go to any drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take a spoonful tonignt ana ii it aoeBmjbi WINCH | Smokeles ci "LEADE k?m? Am. BhG? *MflKiM | The supe: ! Smokele ! undisputed ( shooters tl ! ularity, re > qualities. > r -1 _ I J ror nei? Ask Y( A good cigarette must be made of pure tobacco and the most choice leaf. Such is Fatima?the most popular, mild Turkish blend cigarette, now smoked almost universally in this country! "Distinctively Individual" If you cannot secure Fatima Cigarettes from your dealer, we tuill be pleased to send you three packages postpaid on receipt of SOc. Address Fatimi i>ept.. 212 Fifth Ave* New York.N.Y. i^Jo?uccoCcr. 20 jr? WANTED: STUDENTS ??e to leam Cotton grading ar- J general cotton bnslness, big opportnnitr for high salaried positions. We also teach Telegraphy by experts and guarantee positions. wi Charlotte CottoniTeleo raphy School!. Charlotte, N.C. A man seldom feels out of sight just because he is head over ears in debt. Hanford's Balsam should relieve even the worst burns. Adv. po Fortunate is the man who succeeds in penetrating the disguise of his Klaooin era Lightweight Orator. "Mr. Scadson delivers himself of the most trivial opinion with a grand flourish." "Yes. He's the sort of man who thinks a sweeping gesture makes up for a lack of gray matter and goes in more for sound than sense. Too Much for Him. It was dark, and as he stumbled on his way he called out, "Are you there, Fritz?" A French soldier with a knowl edge of German shouted back, "Here." ?Daily Mail. At the critical moment his knowl edge of German seems to have failed him.?Punch. In the Shopping District. Small boy (to his mother, who is o hoh--Whv H r\ hofe UUJiUf, C* ?*?"/ " "J ?V V.WOw more than houses? Mother?What makes you think they do, Bobby? Small Boy?Well that sign says, "Hats, $10 up." and I saw a sign yes terday that said, "Houses, $10 down." ?Judge. Grf??nwich Time. "Gol durn that clock!" exclaimed Farmer Binks. "What's wrong now, Obadiah?" asked his wife. "It's one of them French clocks. When the minute hand is at four and ; * the other hand is at nine and it | strikes eleven I got to stop work and figure out that It's seventeen minutes to eight.?Philadelphia Ledger. Highest Tribute. An automobilist last summer stopped one night at the only hotel In a back-country town. After supper he joined the usual crowd of loung ers on the porch. The sole topic of discussion seemed to be a citizen who had been buried the day before. At last the visitor, becoming interested, asked: "Was the deceased popular?" "Was he?" echoed the chief speak er. "Was he! Stranger, every dog's tail in town stopped wagging for five rtdautes while the funeral passed." SICK, UGH! IHT AND SALIVATES 's Work! Clean Your Sluggish odson's Liver Tone." raighten you right up and make you el fine and vigorous by morning I ant you to go back to the store and it your money. Dodson's Liver Tone destroying the sale of calomel be use it is real liver medicine; entire vegetable, therefore it cannot sali ,te or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of )dson's Liver Tone will put your jggish liver to work and clean your >wels of that sour bile and consu lted waBte which is clogging your Btem and making you feel miserable, guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's ver Tone will keep your entire fam ' feeling fine for months. Give it to ur children. It is harmless; doesn't ipe and they like its pleasant tasttt. WnR ?c Pnw^f Shells H A V TT V4V4 R" and "REPEATER" ? riority of Winchester S s s Powder Shells is !! I. Among intelligent J | ley stand first in pop- ] | cords and shooting !! - Always use them j j I orTraf) Sbootlng. j|j >ur Dealer For Them. jij Owner Properly Dealt With. About this time a little more than a indred years ago in the history of at building at Pittsburgh and down rer there was much complaint of un rupulous work, which brought great as to owners on account of the sink g of vessels and ruin of cargoes. 1 interesting case was tried before istice Richardson of Pittsburgh, iose decision was rendered Novem ir 7, 1807. A boat owned by Mr. inchester struck on a rock a few lies below Pittsburgh, was stove, and nk. The owner brought suit against e master, claiming the disaster was ie to his carelessness. The master nriiirAd a rotten nlank that had been oken by the Impact, and claimed at had it not been for this the ac 3ent would not have happened. The aster was discharged by the justice, id Winchester had to lose his boat id several thousand dollars' worth of erchandise. This and other similar currences led to the appointment of spectors, but not until 1812. Fooling the Caterpillars. A small boy seated on the curb by telephone pole, with a tin can by his 3e, attracted the attention of an old ntleman who happened to be pass S "Going fishing?" he inquired, good ituredly. "Nope," the youngster replied. "Take peek in there." An invesugauuii snuwcu mc iu i partly filled with caterpillars of tha ssock moth. "What in the world are you doing ith them?" "They crawl up trees and eat off the ives." "So I understand." "Well, I'm fooling a few of them." "How?" "Sending them up this telephone ile."?Judge. Classed as Spring Chicken. Motorist (who had run over a pa "On* flia fa rortr Idl UUUt 1U"?/ 4-?Ul tiiu jftkvw ? v*,; gh. The bird's in his second child tod! Irish Peasant?It's the thrue word :r honor's spakin'. Thim young chick is is terrible dear at this saison. Two Afflictions. "I have an electric runabout on y hands." "And I have a shocking run-a-round l mine." Accurate ir?rr A iiiiimitg ? does much to make the difference between success and failure. And the food a person eats goes a long way toward deciding the difference. Grape-Nuts FOOD ?with its delicious flavour and rich in the concentrat- j ed, nourishing elements of whole wheat and malted I barley, is the favorite breakfast cereal of thou sands of successful men and women ? "There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts ?sold by Grocers. Dr. Marden's Uplift Talks j! By ORISON SWETT MARDEN. ;j; Copyright by McClaro Newspaper SrndleM* THE ENEMIES IN OUR VOCABU LARY. Did you ever think that many of the words and phrases which you con stantly- use are your real enemies, that they leave their hideous pictures and black shadows in your mind? "In the dictionary of fools we find 'I can i very ouen, pieniy 01 ub, iuid of words like 'luck' and 'destiny,' and phrases like 'If I only had time or a chance like other people.'" How many times have you been kept from doing a good deed by such phrases ae "Oh, I know I can't do that," "Somebody else can do that a great deal better," "I am afraid to try," "I haven't the courage," "I fear I shall take cold or catch some disease if I do this or that"? I believe that those two words "I can't" have ruined more prospects and have kept more ability doing the work of mediocrity than any other two words in our language. Did you ever know a person who has a great many "I can'ts" in his vo cabulary to accomplish very much? Some people are always using the wurus, uu, x can i anoru 10 gu mere, "I can't undertake euch a hard task, let somebody else do that." "I am afraid of this or that" is a terrible hinderer, a terrible blighter of ambi tion, a cooler of enthusiasm. All achievement and $11 efficiency depend upon initiative, and that is easily killed by the fear words, the words which express doubt and uncertainty. "By thy words thou shalt be Justi fied, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned." Every person indicates his strength or his weakness by the preponderance of strong or weak words in Jlis habitual vocabulary. Negative, weak words, words of doubt, uncertainty or hesitation, predomi nate in the vocabulary of a negative man; while the positive, plus, crea tive, vigorous, progressive words, which indicate mental dominion, pre vail in the vocabulary of a positive, viguruus, pru{5rt5tSB1VB uuuracter, aa they did in Webster's vocabulary. Did you ever think that every time you say "I can't" you weaken your confidence in yourself and your power to do things? Confidence is the greatest factor in achievement. Self-faith is a powerful asset, better than money capital without it. No body believes in the youth who thinks he cannot do things, who has no con fidence in himself, no faith in his ability, because Everybody knows that he cannot do a thing until he thinks he can. He must first believe in himself, must be convinced that he can accomplish it. I know a young man who seems very ambitious in a general sort of way, but when the opportunity which, perhaps, he had been working a long time for, comes, he wilts, his stamina ooies out, his ambition wavers, and he does not feel equal to it. He does not have faith in himself equal to his ambition. Of course his life is a,dis appointment. The man who never wants to give a decided opinion, who always wants to reserve his judg ment, or who says he doesn't know, or that he Is afraid, the man who does not dare to begin things, who shrinks from responsibility, or who always thinks he cannot do this or that, is not the man for great responsibility. But the man who says, "I can do the thing, and I will," the man who be lieves in himself and in his ability to carry through what he undertakes is the masterful man?the one who will do things, not dream about them. THE TRAGEDY OF NOTHING TO DO. Not long ago a rich woman was ar rested In Chicago for stealing, and this was her excuse: "The most wretched, the most absolutely to-he pitied human being on earth is the woman with nothing to do. I believe I'd steal and burgle and set fire to the police station, or do anything else un der the shining sun to keep myself from being bored to death. "I'd rather scrub floors for a living, and go home at night so tired I could hardly climb the steps to my attic with my little dollar and a half of honest money jingling in my good red hand, than to sit all day long with the gnawing devil of idleness eating my heart out and driving me to mad ness." Steal? I should think 6he would steal or commit nrann nr crot >!? > -- v. v.^ WA peditions to the North pole or go down in diving bells or up in balloons, or do anything on earth to get something to to think of besides her own little silly, uninteresting, useless self,' shouldn't you? Isn't it pitiable to see so many peo ple in the most glorious country in the world, where 10,000 opportunities and unlimited resources are awaiting honest endeavor, resorting to all sorts of devices for diversion, just to drive away ennui, just to keep themselves from going mad. Think of the rich people giving monkey dinners and squandering money like water on all sorts of fool ish things, resorting to all sorts of demoralizing practices, dissipating, and wasting time, life's most precious capital, just because they have noth ing to do?just because they do not Mister and Missis. J 1 iuc uemana or me Leamington rall waymen that they shall be addressed as "mister" reminds ono of the re markable artificiality of this word. "Master" was the original English form of respectful address, repre senting the Latin "magister." But somehow or other "master" has slipped down to be a title for boys, while man must receive the corrupted pronunciation, of which our language is still so ashamed that "mister" looks hopelessly vulgar when written out. I have to work for a living, because somebody else has done the work fc: them. Just as though all that lite meant was to provide for the eating and drinking, the hewing of oiC' bodies and indulgence in luxuries. A steady occupation is man's grea? life preserver, without whica, if he is able to work, he cannot possibly keep from a fatal deterioration. Our powers were given us for exer cise, for achievement, and if not used, man cannot long remain a man. He will soon dwindle back to the brute. Man's chief purpose in life, the great object of his existence is achievement. He was made to do things, and idleness is fatal paralysis. The moment we divert anything planned, made to serve .a particular purpose, we ruin it. A watch was made to keep time. That was its sole purpose and object; and if we attempt to use it for any other purpose we rob it of its power. When this woman was asked wny she stole, she said she had nothing else on earth to do. When she was a young girl she picked up a ring on the street and gave it to a little boy with "the most glorious red hair," she said, "that ever flamed." "I knew whose ring it was, but I made myself think I didn't know, and then after ward when t_ . red-haired boy got in trouble my mother pinned a placard on my back, and made me wear it to school for a whole week of misery. The word 'thief in large letters was written on the placard, and I thought I should die before the end of the week. But I did not die. I lived to hate the word thief worse than any other word in the English language." And yet, in spite of all this, a life of idleness induced her to steal for di version. What Makes a Girl Popular. Every girl has the perfectly natural desire to be popular with the other sex, and every girl is interested in knowing the secret of such popularity. Some girls have^the idea that the way to have a good time is to break away from the recognized rules of social life. The free-and-easy, reckless type of girl may receive a good deal of attention of a certain kind, but it ia safe to say that men do not really core fnr nnrh a girl. Certainly they do not have any respect for her. They may enjoy a summer flirtation with her, but such a girl never enters seri ously into their thoughts. The girl who is kind and thoughtful to her par ents is the girl whom they admire. The girl who is disrespectful to her parents will not long retain the re spect of others. Men know very well that a girl who deceives her mother I cannot be trusted. A good daughter j has in her the making of a good wife, and a man remembers this when he begins to think seriously of matrt [ mony.?Leslie's. Value of the "Old Man." Mnw ahnnt fhe "old man" and the apprentice? I have always felt and contended In my work that the "old man," as he Is slightingly deferred to, has a place In industry. His experi ence is valuable. He can be used as trainer and coach. He may not be fast, but he Is sure. He may, on the | other hand, provfc to be both skillful and rapid on certain work. At any rate, for the sake, of his past services don't turn him adrift. If he is too old and cannot work pension him. If he i can work find out what is best for | him to do and give him a schedule with a sufficient allowance added thereto to justify him in continuing to do his best. It won't cost much, if anything. The apprentice should also have an allowance added to his sched ule that will warrant him In exerting himself. The apprentice, the average | mechanic and the "old man" will' have different wage rates, so there is little likelihood of a clash on account of bonus earnings.?Engineering Maga zine. Origin of a Mark Twain Story. Of all the witty things said on writ ten by Mark Twain no phrasfe has been quoted oftener than his reply to an alarmist report, "Rumor of my death greatly exaggerated." The his tory of this now celebrated bon mot will doubtless be of Interest. Mark Twain was on a visit to London some years ago, and had been secured as the chief guest at a dinner to be given by a literary club. On the morning of the day when the dinner was to take place the secretary was shocked to hear a rumor that Mark Twain had died suddenly. At his wit's end, he sought to verify it by a diplomatic note to Mrs. Clemens, in which he mentioned the rumor. Mark Twain got hold of the note and telegraphed the now famous reply, "Rumor of my death greatly exag gerated." ? From "After Dinner Stories," by N. C. Fowler, Jr. Von Moltke'B Sage Remark. In the "Life of Von Moltke," by his nephew, the field marshal, we read that at ninety he had among his favor ite books Treitschke's "German His tory of the Nineteenth Century" and Sybel's "Foundation of the German Empire." In his travel diaries he writes scornfully of the British, whom he complains of meeting every where?"Pesth. On the yacht there were 12 travelers, of course some Englishmen among them. They seem as indispensable as the salt in our food, though they do not always sea- I son society. . . . The English men kept to themselves, playing j chess." Of a party of Americans ho met on a Danube river boat he writes: "Albion's stepsons are not very ami able. If the Yankee turns out thus after having traveled all over Eu rope, how disagreeable must he be at home!" The case is outdone only by "Mrs." No woman would like to be called | "Mistress " nowadays, but to ad dress an envelope to her as "Missis " would be even worse.?London Chronicle. No Time to Lcse. Author?Don't you think I'd better wait until the war is over before I get out this book about it? Publisher?Wait! I should say not. Why, if we wait until then all the offi cial facts may be known.?Lifa. Our affections, however laudable, 1b this transitory world, should never master us; we should guide them. There Is nothing little to the really great spirit. HELPFUL HINTS AND CHERISHED RECIPES. All lovers of fruit cake know how hard It Is to have a well baked cake with no hard or burned edges. This is a method which obviates such diffi culty. After the cake is all ready for oven except to add the nuts and fruit, a portion of cake mixture is added to flour to make a stiff dough which will roll out very thin. This is used for lining in the pan, covering both sides and bottom just as if it were a pie crust, then the fruits, nuts and spices may be added to the cake mixture and the pan filled. When the cake is baked the value of this process will be seen as the fruit cannot sink into this outer layer, so they are not scorched and there is no blemish in the cake. This same outer crust serves to keep the cake moist. Genuine German Torte.?Take six eggs, one and a half cupfuls of sugar, one cupful of grated ginger snaps, one cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of baking powder, half a pound of chopped walnuts, a quarter of a pound of mixed candied fruit, a quarter of a pound of citron, a quarter of a pound of figs, one glass of currant jelly, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, and the rind of one lemon. Beat the whites of the eees stiff, beat the yolks and add the sugar. Slice the figs in strips and put the other fruit and nuts through a meat chopper, reserve one cupful of the mixture for the filling. Combine with the eggs and sugar, add one cupful of flour sifted with a tea* spoonful of baking powder, add the ginger snap crumbs and fold in the white of the eggs. Babe in two well greased layer cake tins for 12 minutes. When done spread the jelly over one layer while warm, sprinkle thickly with fruit reserved for this purpose, put on the other layer and spread with the following icing: Beat the white of one egg slightly, add three quarters of a cupful of sugar. Then alternately add one teaspoonful of sugar and cream until a cupful of cream and one and three quarters cupfuls of confec tlnnem' uncar havfl been used. Final ly a&d a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Some of your griefs you have cured. And the sharpest you still have sur vived, But what torments of pain you tn dured For evils that never arrived. Thanksgiving Is thanks living. THE THANKSGIVING DINNER. This is the one day in the year -when the good old-fashioned dishes of our grandmother's day have chief pla/ce of honor. The turkey may be prepared and stuffed the day before, to save time, and the cranberry Jelly made, as well as the mince and pumpkin pies, so that the meal, if but one pair of hands are to prepare it, may be as simole as possible as to preparation. The cider jelly may be made and ready to be turned from its mold, the nuts cracked and mixed with the raisinB, the candy made, for who would not prefer the home-made candy? This will leave the vegetables and salad to prepare, which may be done while the turkey is roasting and aftei the table is set. The table decoration may be just what one can easily obtain. Fruit and leaves are considered more appropri ate than flowers. Chrysanthemums are the fall, flower, if one desires to use them, and "Autumn leaves as decoration for place cards are always appropriate. Small pump kins to hold candies or any toy fruit boxes may be used with good effect. Cider Jelly.?Soften 2% tablespoon fuls of gelatin In a half cupful of cold water; poursover this one cupful ol boiling hot cider, add a cupful of su gar, a third of a cupful of lemon juice. When the gelatin is dissolved add two cupfuls of cider and pour into a mold to harden. This may be served in individual molds. The chestnut dressing for the tur key is prepared from a quart of chest nuts which have been blanched and then cooked until tender, adding a cup ful of fresh bread crumbs, two table spoonfuls of butter, a teaspoonful ol salt, chopped parsley, pepper and milt or stock to moisten. To Prevent Mold on Books. During continued damp weather books often become musty and even moldv. This can be prevented by placing a few drops of oil of lavender and Canada balsam in the back corner of each bookshelf. His Answer Was Correct. Papa (concealing something in his hand)?"Willie, can you tell me what it is with head on one side and tail oq the other?" Willie (triumphantly) ?"Oh, I know! It's a rooster on o fence?"?Judge. Shockingly Unfit. The subaltern was being put through an examination in geography, where* in he proved himself astonishingly ig norant. At last, after a failure on his part of unusual flagrance, the exam iner scowled at him and thundered: "Idiot, you want to defend your coun try, and you don't know where it is!" Good in Self-Conceit. Self-conceit is a good asset. A man can't hope to be popular with his friends unless ho is popular with himself. Gentlemen Only. "Will the gentlemen please move up forward a little?" called out the polite conductor of the trolley car. "I won't," growled M. Grouch, who hung to a strap near the door. "Oh, I didn't ask you," said the con? ductor. Wai Getting More Than His Share. An ex-soldier in Little Rock, Ark., tella of a young American trooper who was one of a company that was am bushed during the Philippine wrt. The boy was shot in 'che right shoulder and thei> in the left leg. As he was falling he received a bullet in his right leg. Raising himself on his good arm he yelled toward the bushes from which the Filipinos were shooting: Shoot some of the others, you darned fools. I am not the whole American army." Paradoxical. "Funny thing about political white wash." "What?" "It's generally made up of black 1'ef' & ir & k Us i s 8 imiiimiiiiimiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiii I 1 ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AVegetable Prcparalion for As - similating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Infants/Children Promotes Digestion;Cheerful nessand Rest.Contains neither L t J M nj I Co fe & & ? If I k Opium,Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic fietrpe SOU DrSAMVEimWER Pumpkin S**d - j41x Smna ? JfcxMJt Sa/ti A tut SttJ * ftyptrmiiU - BiCtrritrui U Scdti Winn - Clcri/itd Sujttr ffi'nkfyrttn Ftnvor A perfect Remedy forConstipa tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and loss OF SLEEP facsimile Signature of The Centaur Company, NEW YORK. At6 months old Dose^> -35 G E NTS Guaranteed under the Food and ? i, Exact Copy of Wrapper. Relics of the Past. > "I'd like to see a one-horse shay," remarked the city visitor. "Out of date," said liis country host. "The nearest we can come to it now is a one-cylinder car." ? T~r7u HOW TO HEAL SKIN < AND SCALP TROUBLES A Baltimore doctor suggests this simple, but reliable and inexpensive, home treatment for people suffering with eczema, ringworm, rashes, and similar itching skin and scalp troubles. At any reliable druggist's get a jar of resinol ointment and a cake of resinol soap. With the resinol soap and warm water bathe the affected parts thor oughly, until they are free from crusts nnrl rWti snftened. Drv verv gently, spread on a thin layer of the resinol ointment, and cover with a light bandage. This should be done twice a day. Usually the distressing itching and burning stops with the first treatment, and the skin soon be comes clear and healthy again.?Adv. His Method. "How did Dauber come to paint such an extraordinary picture?" "Used a revolving canvas while painting. Fop Domestic Animals. Horses, cattle and sheep are liable to sores, sprains, galls, calks, kicks, bruises and cuts, and Hanford's Bal sam of Myrrh is the standard remedy for such cases. When you consider how valuable your stock Is, having the Balaam always on hand for them is a cheap form of insurance. Adv. Any poker player will tell you that it is better to be flushed with victory than to be four-flushed out of it YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Marine Bye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting? lust Eve oomfort. Wrlto for Book of the Kye by mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, A man who doesn't exaggerate a little is seldom an interesting talker. Hanford's Balsam has cured many cases of running sores of many years' standing. Adv. Most of us would be satisfied with Ihe silver lining without the cloud. ilen Napoleon so! with a weak f pretty sure to be a poor fighter. It i almost impossible?for anyone, man if digestion is poor, to succeed in socially?or to enjoy life. In tablet 01 Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis< helps weak stomachs to strong, heall helps them to digest the food that mak rich, red blood which nourishes the < This vegetable remedy, to a great the liver into activity?oils the m; the human system so that those who s behind the counter, or in the home ar Has brought relief to many thousands relieve you and doubtless restore to you least you owoit to yourself tofrive it a trial trial box of Tablets?Dr. Pierce's Invalids' You can havo Dr. Piercs's Common Sensi WHY CATCH COLD . One-half of the Deaths and Two* thirds of the 8ickness is the Di reot Result of Catohing Cold. Nothing could be of greater vita) interest to the family than to know how to avoid catching cold. COLDS THAT KILL If it be true, as one famous doctor says, that catching cold can bo avoided, think what it means. Two thirds of the sickness that now op presses the people would be avoided. Serious interference with business. The anguish of anxious parents. The blasting of many brilliant dreams. All these things would be largely done away with If people knew hoW to avoid catching cold. Catching cold is a very common experience in numerous households. People have come to believe that there Is no way to avoid it CAN BE AVOIDED. 1- - ? J? Ik. imla rcuyin aic uvufut ui uic aub v? Life" how to avoid the ceaseless drain that catching cold makes upon the vital organs. Qet It and read It and judge for yourselves of Its value and practicability. It is Issued by the Peruna Co., of Columbus, Ohio. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought i Bears the Sirma+mYi "<*a Sprains,Bruises Stiff Muscle; Sloan's Liniment will save hours of Buffering. For bruise or sprain it gives instant relief. It arrests inflammation and thus Srevents more serious troubles eveloping. No need to rub it in?it acts at once, instantly relieving the pain, however apvpro it. mov Ho Here'* Proof Charlet Johnnon, P. 0. Box 10S, Ion's Station, N. Y., wilt*: "I sprained my ankle and dislocated my left nip by falling out of a third story window six months ago. I want on crutches for four months, then I started to use some of your Liniment, according to your direc tions, and I must say that it is helping me wonderfully. I threw my crutches away. Only used two bottle* of your Liniment and now I am walking quite well with one cane. I never will be with out Sloan's Liniment" All Dealers, 25c. Send four cents in stamp* for a TRIAL BOTTLE Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. Dept. B. v Philadelphia, Pa. SLOANS LINIMENT Kills ? - Pain Build up with .s?s?s.?ss relfable Wintersmith's f0eX" remedy for malaria, chills and Tonic lever, colds and grip. 50c. 1 w,,,v W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 48-191* said. A man stomach is is difficult? or woman, business or r liquid form sovery thv action? ;es the good, ?ntire body. extent, puts achinery of pend their working hours at the desk, e rejuvenated into vigorous health. every year for over forty years. It can I your former health and utrenitth. At !. Sold by Medicine Dealersor8end50cfor Hotel & Surgical Institute. Buffalo.N.Y. a Medical Advlstr of 1008 Pagas for 31c.