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(RUNYON'S il TAP emf Big Success Shown by Numbers of Callers at Philadelphia Headquarters. LOCAL MAN TELLS OF REMARKABLE RELIEF FROM RHEUMATISM IN YEAR'S TIME. The apparent success with which Pro fessor James M. Munyon, the world famous health authority, has been meet ing has started much discussion. Every street car brings dozens of callers to his Laboratories at 53d and Jefferson Streets. Philadelphia. Pa., and every mall brings thousands of letters from people inquir ing about Munyon's Famous Health Cult. Professor Munyon's corps of expert phy sicians ls kept busy seeing . callers and answering the mall. Peculiar to say. these physicians prescribe no medicine at all for 50 per cent, of thc callers and mail Inquiries: health hints, health ad vice and rules for right living are given absolutely free. Medical advice and con sultation absolutely free. Munyon's followers seem to be enor mous. Those who believe In his theories seem to think he possesses the most marvelous powers for" the healing of all sorts of diseases. Munyon, himself, laughs at this. He says: "The hundreds of cures which you are hearing about every day In Philadelphia are not in any ?way due to my personal skill. It is my remedies, which represent the combined brains of the greatest medical specialists science has ever known, that are doing the work. I have paid thousands of dol lars for a single formula and thc ex clusive right to manufacture it. I have paid tenB of thousands of dollars for oth ers of my various forms of treatment. This is why I get such remarkable re sults. I have simply bought the best products of the best brains In the world and placed this knowledge within the reach of the general public." Among Munyon's callers yesterday were many who were enthusiastic In their praise of the man. One of these said: "For six years I suffered with rheumatism. My arms and legs were af flicted so badly that I could hardly work, and I could not raise my arms to my head. The pain ws.s most severe in the back, however, and I was in perfect tor ture. I tried In many ways to get cured, or even to secure temporary relief, but nothing seemed to help me until I was persuaded by a friend to try Dr. Mun yon's Uric Add Course. It was the most marvelously acting remedy I ever saw. within a week the pain had most gone and inside of a month I considered my self entirely cured. I can now go out m the worst weather-cold, wet or any thing else, and I have not felt any sus picion of a return of the disease. I think that every person who has rheumatism and does not take the Uric Acid Course ls making a great mistake." The continuous stream of callers and mall that comes to Professor James M. Munvon at his laboratories at 53d and Jefferson Sts.. Philadelphia. Pa., keeps Dr. Munyon and his enormous corps of expert physicians busy. "Write today to Professor James M. Munvon personally. Munyon's Labora tories. 53d and Jefferson Sts.. Philadel phia. Pa. Give ful. particulars In refer ence to vonr case. Your Inquiry will be held strictly confidential and answered In a plain envelope. You will be given the best medical advice, and asked morq questions. Remember there is no chargq of any kind for consultation, or medical advice. The only charge Munyon makes ls. when his physicians prescribe his remedies vou pav the retail selling price, It ls Immaterial whether you buy from him or from the nearest druggist THE DIFFERENCE. Pitcher Malony-When I see a man trying to steal I try to throw him out Officer Doolan-Yez do! Whin Ol Bee a mon trying to steal Ol run him te As Waists Used to Be. A London paper prints an article from the ladies' treasury of 1866, In which a prize is offered for the woman with the smallest waist in proportion to her size. A silk dress was the first prize, and a gold watch second prize. In the school in which the prize was offered by the principal the pupil* were required to sleep in corsets, which could, however, be loosened when retiring. A Grandson of Bums. James Glencairn Thomson, a grand Eon o Robert Burns, died in Glas gow recently in his e'ghty-fourth year. He was the son of Betty Burns, daughter of the poet, and was a bach elor. Mr. Thomson resided nearly all his life In the suburbs of Glasgow and was a frequent guest at social gatherings, where his singing of Burns' songs was a feature. He pos sessed a small civil list pension. Pall Mall Gazette. Important tn Mothers Examine carefuhy 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 Hi* Inspiration. Wagner tolu where he got his Inspir ation. "It was from the garbage cans be ing emptied at night," he confessed. TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA ANO BUILD Ul* THE SYSTEM Take- the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILI. TONIC. Von know what jou are taking. The formula ls plainly printed on eyery bottle, ?bowing i t Is simply Quinine and Iron In a tasteless form, and the most effectual form, tor grown people and children, 50 cents. Lively. "Is this the kind of cheese that you want?" "Keep it still, so that I can look at lt." The next time you feel that swallowing sensation (cargie ??amlins Wizard Oil im mediately with three parts water. It will save j ou days and perhaps weeks of mis er}' from sore throat. Prevention is better than a cure. Poverty keeps off the gout. : FIR3T EVERY summer thousands of Americans make their initial trips across the Atlantic to tour Europe. All bad sailors know the moment when it is best to seek a chair and keep still, if the situ ation ls to be saved. The man in the picture has reached this stage. All would probably be well had not the woman with the baby dropped the feeding-bottle. Her maid, in the back ground, is past hope. The man's duty is clear. But. then if he moves? One of thjp most interesting features of an American's first European tour Is the comparison of transatlantic cus toms in hotel and railway with those of the land of the brave and the home of the free. Many things that to the seasoned traveler have become com monplace long ago strike the tourist on his Initial trip as highly amusing. Col. Brotherton of Kentucky, for in stance, had been recommended to a quiet Italian hotel. Returning late from San Carlo, where almost every tourist goes on his first night in Na ples, he was amazed in passing along the corridor to see outside nearly ev ery door in addition to the boots on the floor sundry dress skirts and trou sers hung upon large branching brass hooks. A garcon who was sitting in the corridor tried in broken English to explain it was the custom for trav elers to leave the clothing they had worn during the day outside their doors to be brushed. But the colonel was incredulous. "Never saw any thing like lt in America," he said. "Likely as not it's some sort of skin game, and all those fools will wake up in the morning and find their clothes stolen. Not I! I'll brush my own." Wouldn't Leave Her Key. Miss Clarissa Blythe of Vermont was perfectly astounded at having her chambermaid rush after her as she carefully deposited the key of her room in her beaded reticule, and ex claimed: "But, madam! Please ?eave your key beside the door. I must have lt to go in and do your room." "But where is your passkey?" she demanded. "I have none," the maid replied. "See." she said, pointing to the hook at the side of the door, the same hook dedicated to skirts and trousers, "you must hang your key here when you go out." An Englishman who was sailing from Boston not long ago was reduced to one pair of really comfortable boots. These he placed outside his door to be polished on the eve of his departure, and he woke In the cold gray dawn to find his boots gone and not a porter in the hotel who could trace them. He was forced to descend in his slippers and buy a new pair of stiff, uncomfortable hoots tc wear to the steamer, and to this day he has not ceased to curse American hotels. In Germany one of the up to date hotels has a little locker in every guest room between the bedroom and the corridor, with a door on either side. He opens the door in hlB room, puts in his trousers and boots or what ever clothing needs attention. The valet passes along the corridor, opens each door with his own pass key, and removes the clothing to brush it, re turning it and locking the door care fully upon lt. and when the owner awakes he has only to open his little door, and there are his clothes all ready for him. The European bed always strikes the uninitiated American traveler as a huge joke. In France they commence to impress him with their height and narrowness and he looks dubiously at the enormous Turkey-red cotton "couvre-pied" of eiderdown which looks something like a mountain; and he wonders how he is ever going to bear all that extra weight on his per son. But when he has slipped be tween the sheets and the grateful warmth communicates Itself to his cold bones-if it ls winter they are Bure to be like icicles-he discovers that It is deceptively light and deli ciously comfortable. In Switzerland the beds attain a little more height, but it is in Germany that they become of such an altitude as to necessitate a pair of steps to mount them. Tricks Played on the Traveler. Sometimes in European hotels the tourist !s taken solemnly to one side and told that by paying a few francs or lire more he can have the royal bedchamber. A certain hotel in Sor rento, where a dozen or more royal heads have lain in one season, is even more generous, for If tb? rooms aro empty they make no extra charge. And the traveler lives to recount when be is back on his native heath how his cheek pressed the same pillow that had been used by the little queen of Holland cr the king of Saxony. But that is not a purely European custom, for to thifi day in a certain Boston ho tel the sicred chamber occupied by Prince Henry of Prussia is listed at about $10 a day more than any other room in the house. Most American travelers on their first trips abroad are astounded when upon the day of their departure from a hotel they are presented with their bill by the head waiter instead of by the landlord or by his chief clerk. But it is the custom and this important In dividual is thus assured of his tip. The traveler thinks it a little strange that coffee is always extra at luncheon and dinner, but when he or ders coffee, at an average of 5 or 6 cents extra, the cup, lt ls freshly made expressly for him and is not the cof fee that has stood for hours In the pot. Another thing that strikes him as funny is the fact that there are ele vators to go up, but that he cannot use them to go down. One European sign in a Rmall hotel reads: "No one ls allowed to descend in the elevator but invalids and the aged." In the larger hotels the lifts are used as they are in America, but BO leisurely are they that one usually prefers to run downstairs on Bhank's mare. Economy in lights is another trait, and where, as uuual, there are two electric lights in the room, one over the bed to read by and another in the celling, one cannot be turned on without turning the other off. But a young American engineer solved the difficulty by unscrewing the porcelain cap of the switch and sticking in a hairpin to' make the connection. He had two lights, and no one was ever the wiser. And his conscience? It never troubled him at all; lt was one of those elastic ones you read about. It does not take long to remember, after you once know, that if you want to buy salt in Italy you must go to a tobacco shop to get it; for both salt and tobacco are government mo nopolies. And lt is a pleasure to learn that in France you can buy stamps and postcards at tobacco shops, which are under government Jurisdiction there as well. Also that, in both coun tries you can send telegrams at as low a rate as 14 cents for ten words, and that special delivery letters will go for 6 cents in Pari3 if you remember to write across your envelope "Pneu matique," which means that the letter will be shunted through a pneumatic tube in no time at all. and delivered almost as soon as a telegram. Manuring With Mud. In China and Japan, according to Professor F. H. King, as much labor and time are spent in special fertiliza tion of the soil as In seeding and har vesting the crops. In addition to barnyard and household manure, great quantities of bean, rape seed, cotton seen and peanut oil cake are used as fertilizers, and an enormous tonnage of canal, reservoir and river mud ?B also applied. Single dressings of mud sometimes amount to from 70 to 100 tons per acre. The practice of irri gation is very extensive, and all ir rigated areas are placed under condi tions which practically eliminate sur face erosion. Both canal and reser voir mud are fermented in organic matter to be used as fertilizers. The Mongolians practice systematically the culture of legumes as a source of nitrogen. The dense population and increasingly smaller holdings both necessitate and render possible the bestowal of extreme personal care upon the crops. Hard Luck. "I hear tho play you wrote was a failure." "Yes. I always was unlucky." "Do you think it was merely a case of luck?" "Certainly lt was. It happened that the leading critic of the town in which the play was produced wore a pair of new shbes to the opening perform ance. How was it possible in the cir cumstances for us to get a fair write up?" Candor. "Do you enjoy fishing?" she asked "Yes," replied the glib promoter, "bul not for fn;h." I HE presence of a large Jsm amount of cellulose in food en ibles us often to sitisfy^ the appetite without injury from over-eating. RELISHES SERVED WITH MEATS. The old-fashioned chutney, which one always finds in every English household, is a relish which is unusual with us, but is very good. To make chutney, take one and a half pounds of apples, peeled and quar tered, one pound of ripe tomatoes, one pound of raisins, stoned, one pound of brown sugar, two ounces of mustard, one ounce, of pepper, one quart of cider vinegar and a teaspoon ful of salt Simmer gently for two hours and bottle. Another recipe calls for onion and chill peppers. For Virginia Mixed Pickle, choose small cucumbers, string beans, button onions, cauliflower and any vegetable one's fancy suggests. Pack in a stone Jar in layers of salt; cover the top layer with salt and put over a plate with a weight. Leave in this brine for a month, stirring to the bottom each day. When ready to put them up, look over each pickle carefully, discarding any which Seems soft Cov er the pickles with cold fresh water and change the next day, letting them stand another twenty-four hours. Line a two-gallon preserve kettle with grape leaves and pack In,the pickles, strewing powdered alum between the layers, using a tablespoon rounding full. Fill with^cold water and cover with three layers of grape leaves. Cover closely and cook very slowly six hours, never allowing the water to boil. The pickles will then be a fine green. Lay them tai: cold water to chilL To a gallon of cider vinegar add three dozen black peppercorns and as many cloves, eighteen allspice and a dozen blades of mace. Stir into the spiced vinegar a cup of sugar and boll, covered, to keep In the aroma. Drain and wipe the pickles anl pack in a Jar, then pour the scalding vinegar over them. Cover tightly; two days later scald the vinegar again and pour over. Repeat in three days and again in a week from that time. Fit a tight lid and cover with a waxed cloth. Keep in a cool place, and in two months they will be ready. They will keep for your grandchildren's wed ding if a tablespoonful of sugar ls added once every month. This keeps the acid of the vinegar from soften ing the pickles. ?HAVE no other than a wom an's reason; I think bim so-because I think him so. -Shakespeare. MELONS, MUSK AND WATER. To the true melon^Lver nothing added In the way of flavor to a ripe, rich melon Improves IL A melon, either musk or water melon, should be thoroughly chilled before serving. Water melon scooped from the pink deliciousness with an Ice cream scoop and served on well-washed grape leaves makes a delightful dessert When wanted to take the place of a preserve for tea, musk melon may be cut in dice and sprinkled with a grating of nutmeg and sugar and a few drops of lemon juice. Such a dish will not go begging. Water Melon Sherbet-Scrape the ripe pulp from the melon, saving all the juice; to two quarts of the mix ture add a cup of sugar and a cup of finely chopped nut meats; freeze, and when partly frozen stir in the beaten whites of two eggs and finish freezing. A little lemon juice added before freezing improves the flavor. A most delicious dessert when one has company and wants an extra at tractive dessert ls prepared as fol lows: Cut ripe musk melons in halves crosswise, remove the seeds and AU with vanilla ice cream; decorate with almonds dipped in chocolate to resem ble- seeds and serve on plates covered with grape leaves. Water Melon Pickles.-Peel and cut the melon rind Into small pieces and put them into a stone jar; sprinkle with salt and let them stand over night To every pound of melon al low a half pound of sugar, a pint of vinegar and stick of cinnamon, and cloves to taste. Cook the Ingredients together, then add the melon, which has been parboiled until tender in clear water. Add to the sirup and scald. Then put away in a jar cov ered with a cloth. Preserved Melon Rind.-Peel and chop the rind, then cook together with lemons sliced with seeds removed. Add three-fourths of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit and cook in the sirup until clear. Fill the jars with the preserve, pour over the hot sirup and seal when cool. Music Ever ! .'ul. Music is the ne' at band, the most orderly, the .? delicate and the most perfec all bodily pleas ures; lt is als ..ie only one which ls equally bel; al to all the ages of man; helpful from the nurse's song to her Infant-to the music, unheard of others, which often, if not most fre quently, haunts the deathbed of pure and innocent opirits.-Ruskin. Emerson's Advice to Writers. If you learn to write, 'Us in the street you must learn. You must fre quent the public square. There you must defend your every view and at titude. The people and not the col lege is the writer's home. Keep In touch with your fellow man.-Emer son. The Important Thing. We can understand the ease wltb which a fool and his money are part ed. but what puzzles u~ ls how thc fool got the money to part with. as - ' The Importance i ^/Knowing God By Rev. Alexander S. Taylor Rector of St. Mark's Reformed Episcopal durch, Chicago. TEXT.-That they might know Thee, the only true God. and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent.-John 17:3. In these days when knowledge la spread through the whole earth, while the making of many books goes mer rily on and much study is a weariness to the flesh, it. may be timely to call attention to the importance of know ing God. While man ls in this mundane life there are many things which owing to the limitations of this life he shall never know. It is not for him to know the time, and the seasons, but, if he be wise, he may understand the signs of the times. Yet we?^ire ex pressly told that far away above even the imaginations of the human mind in its ghostic flight In the one great indestructible truth that a man may -nay, that a man must-know God. If man would cease his moielike fer reting after the mysterious earth worms of philosophy, and come out of his pessimistic darkness, and try to know God and to serve hi#i now, many of his doubts would resolve themselves. If a man does not know God, he has missed the one great, im portant thing; he has not yet found the key by which he may enter the holy place of his own life. How he came here, why he came here, why, he goes from here and whither he goes-these things hi knows not The work of God speaks In no un certain tones on this subject. It tells us that knowledge of God is de pendent upon a spiritual awakening and a revelation from God himself. We are told that there was a time when Samuel "did not know the Lord, for the word of the Lord was not yet revealed to him." We are further told that there came a time when Samuel did know the Lord, and all Is rael knew that Samuel knew the Lord. And the knowledge of God so impressed Itself on the lay mind that the servant of Saul testified of him: "Now, there is a man of God in this city." A man who knew God; who walked with God; who made himself felt in the national and individual life of Israel. Tho key which David handed to young Solomon was the key of Di vine knowledge. "And thou, Solo mon, my son, know thou the God of thy father, and serve him with a perfect heart and a willing mind." Jeremiah told the men of his day that wdrldly wisdom, might and rich es never would bring a man to glory: that if any man would glory, "Let him glory In that he knoweth the Lord." God's controversy with Israel through his prophets was concern ing their lack of knowledge. Isaiah goes so. far in his rebuke as to ac cuse them of the densest stupidity and calls upon the heavens to hear and the earth to give ear. He ls astonished that the ox knows bis owner, and the ass the place for his fodder, but God's people do not know. The depravity of that day was not on account of the lack of religious observance. The stroke from the morning and evening sacrifice went up as regularly as the days came and went It was a time of decent, decorous, esthetic, eye pleasing, ear tickling service; but it had no core; there was no heart in iL It was all exter nal-it was something which the Lord could not get away with; lt was abomination to him, and we have no reason to think that God has changed his mind in this year of grace. They offered incense; God wanted clean hearts and pure lives, and these come from knowing Go<f. The apostle Paul denounced the church at Cor inth for this very thing, and a strange denunciation lt is to come in his matchless argument for the resurrec tion. Awake to righteousness and sin not. for some have not the knowledge of God. I speak this to your shame." Is it any less disgraceful in any Chris tian community, in any Christian land, not to know God? We trow not! But the great reason given by the matchless Son of God ought to set all men seeking for God. It is given not to the disciples, though heard by them. It is spoken in the holy place of prayer. Any man, be he a sin cere man, is most sincere, is at his best, is approaching his zenith, when in his closet, after shutting the door, he prays to his Father. This is no fitting place for cant, dilettantism or sham. It is the one real moment of his life, and the Son of God tells his Father that: "It is life eternal to know the true God, and Jesus Christ, whom he had sent" Friends, what an opportunity! To grow in the knowledge of the Father and the Son; this is worth while. To know God experimentally-his pur poses in creation and in redeeming grace - this is life eternal. "And Jesus Christ." The knowledge is yet one, for there is no saving knowl edge apart from him. Just as there was without him nothing made that was made. All men know him, but all men do not know him. What does this knowledge mean? Salvation alone to him. He alone paid the price of sin. His blood alone cleanseth from sin. He rose for our Justification and he will demand a reckoning for our knowledge, our faith and the use to which we put them now. There is no promise of life for ignorance and the solemn duty de volved upon every Christian. And emphatically comes the obligation to know, obey, love, serve and deny our selves for the living God. It is life eternal so to do. If we set before ourselves the high resolve that. God helping us, we shall know him better, the old hymn, 'Near er, My God, to Thee," will have a full er, grander meaning, and when the King himself returns to reign lr ighteousness and execute Judgmen >n the earth, we shall see him fae o face and know as we are known. RENEWED INTFPEST IN LIFE Something Really nuppened st Recep tion, and Old Attendant Is Encouraged. The guests at Mrs. Arthur Mize's tea yesterday afternoon detected an odor of something burning. They looked at each other knowingly and said: "Poor Mrs. Mize, something is burning up in the kitchen." But the odor grew stronger, and at last one woman said: "It smells as though feathers are burning." Then sudden ly one woman screamed: "Mrs. Chal liss, look at your hat!" Sure enough, Mrs. Jim Challiss had been standing near a lighted candle, and the aigrette on her hat was on fire. The guests had a great time putting out the fire. The aigrette was what the insurance men call a total loss. An Atchison woman who has gone to thousands of receptions says the burn ing of the aigrette yesterday is the first time she ever knew anything to really happen at a reception. She has given up going because nothing ever happened, but now will start In over again.-Atchison Globe. CHILD'S HEAD A MASS OF HUMOR "I think the Cuticura remedies are the best remedies for eczema I have ever heard of. My mother had a child who had a rash on Its head when it was real young. Doctor called it baby rash. He gave us medicine, but it did no good. In a few days the head was a solid mass, a running sore. It was awful; the child cried continually. We had to hold him and watch him to keep him from scratching the sore. His suffering was dreadful. At last we remembered Cuticura Remedies. We got a dollar bottle of Cuticura Re solvent, a box of Cuticura Ointment, and a bar of Cuticura Soap. We gave the Resolvent s.s directed, washed the head with the Cuticura Soap, and ap plied the Cuticura. Ointment. We had not used half before the child's head was clear and free from eczema, and it has never come back again. His head was healthy and he had a beau tiful head of hair. I think the Cuti cura Ointment very good for the hair. It makes the hair grow and prevents falling hair." (Signed) Mrs. Francis Lund, Plain Ci'./, Utah, Sept. 19, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Oint ment are sold everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cuti cura," Dept. 12 L, Boston. A RELIEF. . / r De Bore-Yes; I called upon Miss Clever 'he other evening and she in sisted i.pon my singing all the time. Miss Grace-So she told rae. She said that was better than having to talk to you all evening. The Brute. "Men are such rude things," said the supercilious girl. "Has any of them dared to address you without an introduction?" "No; but in a crowd one got his face all mixed up with my hatpin and never even said 'excuse me.' " For HEADACHE-Kicks' OAP?DINE Whether ironi Colds, Heat, Stomach or Nervous Troubles, Capudlne will relieve you. It'? liquid-pleasant to take-acts immedi ately. Try lt. 10e., 25c, and 50 cents at drug stores. _ If a man tells a woman she has a musical laugh she will fall for any old joke he may get off. Strong Healthy W If a woman is strong and healthy in a w erhood means to her but little suffering io the fact that the many women suffer disease of the distinctly feminine organ! lor motherhood. This con bo remedied Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pn Cares the weaknesses and disordc It acts directly on th* delicate a orion i concerned tn motherhood, healthy, strong, vigor?os, viril? "Favorite Prescription" banishes the ii period of expectancy and makes baby almost painless. It quickens and vita organs, and insures a healthy and robt testified to its marvelous meriti. It Makes Weak Women Strong. Honest druggists do not offer eubstit os good." Accept no seoret nostrum contains not a drop of alcohol and no drugs. Is a pure glycerin extract of hei When Buiitiing Churc or reseating same, write for Catalog X9, me agency proposition. Everything in Black-bo AMERICAN SEATING COMPANY, 21 W. L DOUCL .2,50, ?3,00, $3.50& ?4.00 SHI WOMEN wear W.LDouglas stylish, pei fitting, ?say walking boots,because they long wear, same as W.LDougias Men's si THE STANDARD OF QUALI? FOR OVER 30 YEAR The workmanship which has madeW. Douglas shoes famous the world over maintained in every pair. If I could take you into my large ratfor at Brockton, Mass., and show you he carefully W.LDouglas shoes are made, y would then understand why they are wa ranted to hold their shape, fit better a wear longer than any other make for the pri CAUTION Thp K'""'"" ??ve W. I.. Dougl mil nu me and price stamped on botte Ii von cannot obtain W. L, Douglas shoes your town. wr!t? for catalog. Shoes sent din from factory tn wearer, all iTiargos prepaid. W. DOUGLAS, 145 Spark St., Brockton, Mai MY DAUGHTER WASCURED By Lydia E. Pinkharri'a Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md.-"I send you here. with the picture of my fifteen year old j daughter Alice, who was restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Sha was paie, with dark circles under hes eyes, weak and irri table. Two different doctors treated her and called it Green Sickness, but sha grew worse all the time. Lydia E.Pink ham's Vegetable Compound was rec ommended, and after taking three bot ties she has regained her health, thanks to your medicine. I can recommend it for all female troubles."-Mrs. L. A. CORKKAN, 1103 Butland Street, Balti more, Md. Hundreds of such letters from moth ers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has accomplished for them haya teen received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. Tonng Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, head ache, dragging-down sensations, faint? lng spells or indigestion, should take immediate action and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Thousands haye been restored to health by its use. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn? Mass., for advice, free* Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief-Permanent Curt CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail Purely vegeta ble - act surely but gently on the fiver. Stop after dinner dis* tress-cure indigestion,' improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE? Genuine must bear Signature Trade Mark A LIQUID REMEDY for CHILDREN'S ILL* Makes Teething Easy BXCOHMSKOKD FOB Constipation, Diarrhoea, Convulsions, Collo, Soor Stomach, otc lt dMUOTI Wonna, illari reverisbaass lad Cold*. It aida digestion It mato* Teething au-/, Sromotaa Cbaartulosaa and ?rod noe? ulura'. 81o-p. For aal? by aU draolau and dellar? Xe a bottle. If an u/uttun? bf BABY EASE CO.. ATLANTA. GEORGIA XANTHINE FORTHt HAIR Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color HUtOTKS DAS'DB ITT A5D SCI'BOT Invlgoratesand prevents thebalrf rom falling off For Sil? by Drafgitta, ar Brat DI r??t by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Prit, fl Fer BattUi Slap!? Battla i it. Scad for drcalar. DROPSY TBBATEO. Give quick re Bn"r* 1 Uef, os-ially remove ?wel ling and short breath In a few days and entire relief in 16-45days, trial treatment FKE?. DK.GREJUSS03S,B?xA,Atlsata,Ga. and High Grada VlnlsUlng. MuU orderB given Spe Pricea reasonable. Send for Price List. rial Attention. Service prompt. LANSKAL'8 ART KTOUH. CUABXESTOX, ?. C. W A M TT F T\ PosulSavlrgsBanksoffcrfina wi D bitf chance for -rood paying GOT eminent positions. Wo can train yon inshort time. Hf?UT? Trailing Bj.lra, Dtp!. F, itO? Graad Bird., Calcara W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 35-1911. omen omanly way, moth . The trouble liea from weakness and Bm and oro unfitted ascription tn of women? nd important making them .nd elastic. P idispositions of the 'a advent easy and ilizca the feminine ut baby. Thousands of women hava It Make? Sick Women Well. ute?, and-urge them upon you as "inst in place of this ?om-secret remedy. It t a grain of habit-forming or injurious tiing, native American roots. h. School or Theater n doning class of building. Dealers, write for lards and School Supplies. Ask for Catalog SQ. 8 So. Wabash Avenue. Chicago. 111. wt ONE PAIR of my BOYS' 82,32.50 or J.. SW.OO SHOES xviii positively outwear IS. TWO l'A I Its ol ordinary boys'shoes