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^ j ' 3 t »,i>ttwr»T.T. SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THAI* X': ■/ // HOOK JIT CHILD'S | TONGUE IF CROSS, (Copyright: Little, Brdwn & Co.) By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVE POI SONS FROM LITTLE STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS. CHAPTER XVIII—Continued. —16— “I am pleased to welcome you back to Gott’s country, Mrs. Vagstaff,” he said. “Und Jet me carry dot suld case alretty." , . They walked two blocks to the King’s hotel, where Lauer’s family was housed. - He was In for supplies, he told her, and, of course, his wife and children accompanied hint. dut Gredda iss afraid. She lss so goot a man as I ou der ranch ven I am gone,” he explained. “But for dem It lss a change. Und I brlng by der town a vaigonloat off bobadoes. By cosh, dem bobadoes iss sell high.” It dashed into Hazel’s mind that here was a heaven-sent opportunity to reach the cabin without facing that hundred miles in the company of chance-hired strangers. But she did not broach*the -subject at once. Ri- goods in a weather-beaten. old log house which sprawled a hundred feet back from the street. Thirty yeurs. he told her, he had kept that store In Fort George.. .She guessed that Bill- had selected him /because he was a fixture. , J. She sat down at his counter and wrote her message. Just a few terse lines. And when she had delivered it to Courvolseur. she went back to the hotel. There was.nothing now to dp but wait. And with the message un der way she found herself impatient to reach the cabin, to spend the wait ing days where she had first found Happiness.. She could set her house in order against her ninn’s coming. And if the days dragged, and the great, lone land seemed to close inland press inexorably upon her, j=he would have to be pationVvory patient. ‘ . Jake was held up, waiting for sup- X stead she asked eagerly of BiirrXauer plies. Fort George suffered a sugar famine. Two days later the belated freight arrived. He loaded his wagon, a ton of goods for himself, a like weight of Hazel’s supplies and be longings. A goodly load, but .be drove out of Fort Geofrge with four strap ping bays arching their powerful necks, and champing on theRlt, ~ “Four days make it by der ranch,” Jake chuckled. “Mlt der mule und Gretehen, dot cow, von veek It take me, mlt half der loat.” Four Altogether pleasant and satis fying days Jhey were to Hazel, The worst of the fly pests were vanished for the season. A crisp touch of frost sharpened the night winds. Indian summer hung Its mellow haze over the land. The clean, pungent nlr that sift ed through the forests seemed doubly sweet after the vitiated atmosphere of town. Fresh from a gridiron of dusty streets and stone pavements, and but stepped, as one might say, front days of imprisonment in the narrow con fines of a railway coach, she drank the wtney irtr in hungry gulps, and Joyed in the soft yielding of the Jurf be neath her feet, the fern and peavlne carpet of the forest floor. » It was her pleasure at night to sleep ns she and Bill had slept, with her face bared to the stars. She would draw her.bed n little aside from the camp fire and from the low .seclusion of a thicket lie watching the nimble flames nt their merry dance, smiling lazily at the" grotesque shadows cast by Jake, and his frau as they moved about the Ssr Xx told her thdt Fill had tarried n few days iit the cabin, and then struck out alone for the mines. And he had not said when he would he hack. Mrs. letter, unchanged from a year earlier, welcomed her with pleased friendliness. And Jake left the two of them and the chubb.v kiddies in the King’s office while he betook himself about .his business. Hazel-haled his wife and..the..children to her room as soon ns one was assigned to her. And there, almost -before she knew it, she was murmuring brokenly her story in to an ear that listened with sympathy and understanding. Only a woman can grasp some of a woman’s needs. « Grettn Lauer patted Hazel’s shoulder with a motherly hand, and hade her cheer up. * . “Home’s the place for you, dear,” she said, smilingly. “You just cbme right along with us. Your man will come quick enough when he gets* word. And we’ll take good care of you In the meantime, La; I’m all excited oyer.lt. It’s the finest thing could hap- pehsfor you both. Take It from me, dear mV I know. We’ve had our trou bles. JiXe and I. And. seeing I’m only six months short of being a graduate nurse, you needn’t fenr. Well, well!” “I’ll need to fiftve food hauled In," Hazel reflected. “And some things I brought with me. I wish Bill were here. I’m afraid I’ll be a lot v of both er. Won’t you be heavily loaded, as It is?” She recalled swiftly the odd, make shift team that Lauer depended on— the mule, lop-eared and solemn, “und Gretehen. der cow.” She had cash and drafts for over three thousand dol lars on her person. She wondered If It would offend the sturdy independ ence of these simple, kindly neighbor's, If she offered to supply a four-horse team and wrtgci.n for their mutual use? But she had been forestalled there, she learned In the next breath. “Oh. bother nothing,” Mrs. Lauer de clared. “Why, we’d be ashamed If we couldn’t help a little. And far’s the lotfd goes, you ought to see the four beautiful horses your husband let Jakeiiav.e. You don’t know how much Jake appreciates it, nor wl\at x a fine man )ie thinks your husband is.' We needed horses so bad, and didn’t have the money to buy. So Mr. Wagstuff didn’t SHy a thing but got the team for us, and Jake’s paying for them in clearing and plowing and making im provements on your land. Honest, they could pull twice the load we’ll have. There’s a good wagon road most of the way now. Quite a lot of settlers,, too. as much as fifty or sixty miles out. And we’ve got the finest garden you ever saw. Vegetables enough to feed four families all win ter. Oh, your old cities! I never want to live in one again. Never a day have the kiddles been sick. Suppose it is a bit out of the world? You're all .the .more __ pleased when somebody ' does happen along. Folks is so different In a new country like this. Thpre’s plen ty for everybody—and everybody, helps, like neighbors ought to.” Lauer came up after a time, and Hazel found herself unequivocally in their hands. With the matter of trans posing herself and supplies thus •solved, she set out to find Felix Cour volseur—who would know how to get word to Kill. He might come back to the cabin in a month or so; he might not come back at all unless he heard from her. She was smitten with a great fear that he might give her up as lost to him, and plunge deeper Into the wilderness in.some mood of reck lessness. And she wanted him, longed for liinvtf only so that she could make amends.' She easily found Courvolseur, a tall spare Frenchman, past middle age. Yes, he could deliver a message to BUI Wagstaff; ♦hat Is, he could send a man. Rill Wugstaff-was in the Klap- pan range. ' X _ - But If he should have left there?" ... a. ~ -i J » » to carry her, through whatever black days might come to‘Tier there alone. She would gladly have cooked her supper In fitter kitchen firepluce, and laid down to .sleep Under her o>vn roof. It seemed the natural thing to do. But she had not expected to find the cabin livably arranged, and she had prom ised the Lauers to spend the night with them.- So presently she closed the door and walked away through the woods. A ? '■ . .. :; . - . j- * • • e' September and October -trooped past, and as they marched the willow thickets and poplar groves grew yel low aud brown, and carpeted the floo; of the woods with fallen leaves. Shrub and tree bared gaunt limbs to every autumn wind. Only-the spruce and pine stood forth,,in their year-round habiliments of green. The days short ened steadily. The nights grew Jong, and bitter with frost. Snow fell, blank eting softly The dead leaves. Old Win ter cracked his whip masterfully over. all the North. Day by day, between tasks, and would linger on the edges of the clear-' ing. Often nt night she would-lift her self on elbow at some unexpected sound, heF heart leaping wild'with ex pectation. And always she would lie down again, and sometimes press her clenched hand to her lips'to keep back the despairing cry. Always she ad jured herself to be patient, to wait doggedly as Bill woiitfi have waited, pr mak4 due allowance for immen.sity'of distance, for the manifold delays which might overtake a messenger furing across those silent miles or amanTiur- rying to his home. Many things might hold him back. But be would come. It was Inconceivable that he might not come.. Meantime, with only a dim con sciousness of the fact, she underwent a marvelous- schooling in adaptation, self-restraint. . She had work of a sort, tasks such as every, housewife finds self-imposed in her own home. ^She was seldom lonely. She marveled at that. It was unique In her experi ence. All her 6ld dread of the pro found silence, the pathless forests which Infolded like a prison wall, dis tances which seemed impossible of span, had.vanished. In its. place had fallen over her un abiding sense of peace, of Security. The lusty storm wlnti«r~Whistling about the cabin sang blaze. And she would wuke In .the "a resfful ’fullahy. When the wolves morning clear-headed, alert* grateful for the pleasant woodland smells arising wholesomely from the fecund bosom of the earth. Lauer pulled up before his own cab in nt mid-afternoon of the fourth day. unloaded his own^ stuff, and drove to his neighbor’s with the rest. “I’ll walk back after a little,” Hazel told him, when he had piled her goods In one corner of the kitchen. The rattle of the wagon died away. She was alone—nt home. Her eyes filled as she 1 roved restlessly from kitchen to living-room and on Into the bedroom nt the end. Bill had .un packed:- The rugs were down, the books stowed In familiar disarray up on their shelves, the bedding spread in semi-disorder where he had last slept und gone away without troubling to smooth It out In housewifely-fashion. She camp back to the living-room and seated herself In the big chair. She had expected to he lonely, very lonely. But she was not. Perhaps that would come later. For the pres ent it seemed as if she had reached the end of something, as If she were very tired, und had gratefully come to Hazel suggested uneasily. - X, “ ’E weel leave weeth W’ltey Levees word of w’ere > go,” Courvolseur reas sured heri “An’ my man, w’ich ees my v bruzzer-law, w’ich l ean mos* fnfiy trus’, ’e weel follow ’eem. So Beel'e ees arrange. ‘ *B ees say mos’ partee- Jftlnr if madame ees come or weesh for forward message, geet hvem to me fueeck*-/ Long tam Beel ees know me. I-am for. depend always.” Oourvolserr kept a' trader’s stock of gannot enjoy biung allfe. So many I length admiringly—“do - you want to iss struggle und sluve under terrible i know trow strong T am for taking a conditions. Und it iss largely because chance with you? Well, I was on my off ignorance. Ve know not vot ve can | way out to flag the next train Fast. Just to see—Just to see If you still cared,, GIVE CALIFORNIA SY&UP OF FIQ8 AT ONCE IF BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED. do—Aifid ve shrink vrdm der unknown Here iss acres by- der dousand vree to der man vot -can off it make use— und dousnnds vot liffs und dies und neffer bass a home. Here lss goot, glean air—und , in der -steiohe 4 und shmells und dirty streets iss a ravage two pins; -to see If you still thought your game" wasTTetter than mlri'e." ‘ “Well, you don’t have to take any eaxtbound train to find that out," she cried gaily. “I’m here to tell you I care a lot more than any number of of .tutuTculoslSL Der hnjnnoq J«s7qot. pins. ,Ph. I’ve learned a. Kit In the last., triu*. Und in tier own vuy der rich six months, Bill. I-had to hurt my- iss full off drouble—drunk mlt eggeite* self, and you, too. I had to get a jolt 'Uiettt* veary mit Pleasures. Ach. der tojar me out of my self-centered little veoils und mountains und -streams, orbit. I got It, und \t, did me good, blenty off food, und a kindly neighbor And it’s, funny. 1 came buck here be fitted their weird, melancholy plaint to the cold, star-jeweled skies, she lis tened without the old shudder. These things, which were wont to oppress her, to send her Imagination reefing along morbid ways, seemed but a na tural aspect of life, of which she her self was a part.^ „ . Often, sitting before her glowing firepluce, watching a flame kindled with her own hands with wood she herself carried from the pile outside, she pondered this. H defied her pow ers of self-analysis. She could only accept It us a fact, und be glad. Gran ville and all that Granville stood for djad withdrawn to a more or less re- background. ‘She could look over the^wtgt-spangled forests and feel that she lacked nothing—nothing save her mate, There was no impression of transient abiding no chafing to be £ ■» • Walked Away Through the Wood*. \ * ■. a 'welcome resting place. She turned £er gaze out the open door where the forest fell away 1ft vast undulations to a range of snow-capped mountains purple In the autumn haze, and a versA 1 that Bill had once quoted came back th her: <r" \ ■ Ohv.to feel the wind grow strong Where tHe trail leapt down., I could neYfeV learn the way And wisdom of the town. J - She blinked. The town—It seemed to have grown remote,, a fantasy In which she had played a poppet part. But she was home again. If only the gladness of-It endured strong enough 1 elsewhere, to do'" otherwise. It was home, she refleett)*!'; perhaps that was why. A simple routine served to fill her days. She kept her house shining, she cooked her food, carried ip .her fuel. Except on days of- forthright storm she put on her snowshoes,' and with a little rifle in the crook of her arm prowled at random through the woods ! —partly because It gave her pleasure to range, sturdily afield, partly-for the physical brace of exertion in the crisp sir. Otherwise she curled comfortably before the fireplace nndlsewed, or read something out of Bill’s catholic as sortment of books. —It was given heiUaJsi), to learn the true meaning of nelghhorliness, that kindliness of spirit which Is stifled by stress In the crowded plffees, and stim ulated by like stress amid surround ings where fife is qoncomplex, direct, where cause and effect treinl.i>n each other’s heels. Every day, if she failed- to drop into their cabin, came one of her neighbors to see If all were well with' her. , Quite as a matter of course Jake kept steadily replenished -for her a great pile of firewood. Or they would come, bullies and all. bundled in furs of Jftke'g"~trapping, jingling up of an evening behind the frisky bays, And while the bays munched hay in Roar ing Bill Wagstaff’s stable, they wimlld cluster about the open hearth, popping corn for the children, talking, always with cheerful optimism. iss not dot enough? Only der ab normal vants ifijM'e as dot. Und I dink der drouble iss largely dot der modern, high-bressure cifllization makes for tier abnormal, vedder a man iss a million aire or vorks in der brewery, content ment iss a state off der mind—und if der mind vorks mit logic it vill content find in der simple dings.^- It sounded like a pronouncement of Bill’s. But Lauer did not often grow serious.. Mastly ..fie was jovially cheer ful, and his wifjj likewise. The. North had emancipated them, and they were loyal to the source of their deliver ance. And Hazel understood, because she herself hail found the wild lund a benefactor, kindly in its silence, rest ful in Its forested peuce, a cure for sickness of-soul. Twice now it hud rescued her from herself. November and December went their ’'appointed way—and still - no word of Bill. If now and then her pillow was wet she struggled mightily agulnst de pression. She wus not lonely in the dire significance of the word—but she longed passionately lor him. And she held fust to her fuith that he would come; The last of the old yeur she went little abroad, ventured seldom beyond the clearingT^Ahd'fin J NT k w'Year’s eVe Juke Lauer’s wife came to the cabin to 'stay. Hazel sat up, wide awake, on the In stant. There \yas not the' slightest „ sound. She had been deep In sleep. Nevertheless she felt, rather than knew, that some one was in the living- room. Perhaps the sound of the door opening hud filtered through her slum ber. She hesitated an instunt, nqt through fear, because In the months of living alone fear had utterly forsaken her ;- but hope had leaped so often, only to fall slckenlngly, that she was half• persuaded it must be a dream. Still the impression strengthened. She slipped out of bed. The door of the bedroom stood slightly ajar. Bill stood before the fireplace, his shaggy fur cup-pushed far buck on his head, his gauntlets swinging from the cord about bid neck. She had left a great bed of coals on the hearth, and the glow shone redly on his frost-scub- bed face. But the marks of bitter trail bucking, the marks of frostbite, the stubby beard, the tiny icicles' that still clustered on his eyebrows; while these traces of hardship tugged at her heart they were forgotten when she saw the expression that overshadowed his face. Wonder and unbelief and longing were all mirrored there, c She' took a shy step forward to 4 see what riveted his gaze. And despite the choking sen sation in her throat she smiled—for she had tuken off her little, beaded moccasins and left them lying on the bearskin before the fire, and he was staring down ut them.like a man fresh- wakened from a dream, unbelieving and bewildered. - * With that she opened the door und rnn to him. He started, as if she had been a ghost. Then he opened his arms and drew Jier close to him. “Bill, Bill, what made you so long?" she whispered. “I guess it served me right, but It seemed a never-ending time.” cause I thought I ought to; because It was our home, but rather drejulln’g It.. And ; I’ve been quite contented and ImpMf;—only' hungry, oh, so dreadfully hungry, for you.” . Bill kissed her/ . . “I didn’t make any mistake fn you, after all,", he said. '‘You’re a real partner. You’re the right stuff. I love you more than ever. If you made a mistake you paid for It, like a dead- game sport. What’s a few month;}? ■We’ve ull our fife before us, irnn It’s plain sailing now we’ve got our bear ings again.” % “Amen!" she whispered. “I—but, si*y, man of mine, you’ve been on the trail, and I know' wlioL-the trail Is. You must be hungry. I’ve got all kinds of goodies cooked In the kitchen. Take off your clothes, und I’ll get you something to eat.” “I’ll go you,” Re said. "I am hungry. Made a long mush to get here for the night. I got six huskies running loose outside, so If you hear ’em scuffling Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, It is u sunsjrign thut your lit?., tie ..one's stomach, fiver and bowels., needs a gentle, thorough cleansing at •x. 7- once. | When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, doesn’t eat or act natu rally, or is feverish/ stomach sour, breath bad;, has ftonmeh-ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoohful of “California Syrup of Figs," and lp a few hours all the foul, constipated -vtme, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of the little b'owels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. * You needn’t coax sick children to take this harmless “fruit laxative;” they love Its delicious taste, and *lt always makes .them feel splendid. - Ask your druggist for a bottle of - “California Syrup of Figs," which has : directions for babies, children of nil ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. To he sure you get the genuine, ask to.see that It Is made by the “Cali fornia Fig Syrup Company.” Refuse any other kind with contempt.—Adv. Behind Laudr’s mild blue eyes lurk ed a mind that burrowed Incessantly to the .roots^ of things. He had lived and worked and read, and. pondering It all, he had summed up a few of the verities. ’• \. “Life. It tea ftffen. m, nnrt re BHffT off It make der best ve can." he said once ta Ha£e), fondling a few hooks he had borrowed to read at home. “Life iss gaol, yust der lifting of life, If onHf ve go not astray afder der vool- i+h dings—and If der self-breaervatlon struggle veara ua -oor'out so dot ve "^3 - v ■ -ir —- “What made me *o long?"”' he echoed, bending Ills rough cheek down against the warm smoothness of hers. “Lord. I didn’t know you wanted me. I ain’t no telepathist, hon. You never peeped; one little" word since I left. How long you been here?" “Since lust September.” She smiled up at him. "Didn’t Courvoiseuf’s man deliver a messuge from me to the mine? Didn’t you come in answer to my note?” *■ “Great Caesar’s ghost—since Sep tember-alone! You poor little girl!” he murmured. “No, If you sent word to me through Courvolseur I never'got it. Maybe something happened to his man. I left the Klnppan with the first snow. Went poking Aimlessly' tumr. -k ./ Young European Capital. Helsingfors, the capital of Finland, Is .among the youngest of the Kurui. . 4/’ penn capitals, for It Is but little oter a hundred years since Czar Alexlandi-r I. shortly after th,e annexation of the/ grand duchy'-by Russia, transferred \ the “capital thither from Abo. which was, lti his opinion. t«si near Sweden. y* wf Get New Kidneys! The kidney* are the moat overwork rga fail .jiil orgaha of the human body, and whenyfhey jn their work of filtering out ana t around the Finlay river with & couple of trappers. Couldn’t settle down. Never heard a word from you. I’d given you up. I just Mew in this way by sheer accident. Gift, girl, you don’t know how good.it is to see you again, to have this warm body of yours cud dled up to*.me again. AmLyou came right here and planted yourself to wait till I turned up?” “Sure!” She laughed happily. “But I sent yaur word, even if ymi never got It. Oh, will, It doesn’t matter. Noth ing matters now'. You’re here, and I’m here, and— Oh,'Billy-boy, I was an awful pig-headed Idiot. Do you think you can take another chance with me?” • “Say"—he held her nff »t arm’s He Held Her Off at Arm’e Length, Ad> ■. * miringly. around you’ll know it’s not the wolves. Say, It was some welcome surprise to find a fire when I came In. Thought first somebody traveling through had put up. Then I saw those slippers ly ing there. That was sure making me take notice when you stepped out." He chuckled at the recollection. Hazel fit the lamp, and stirred up the fife, plying It with wood. Then she slipped a heavy bathrobe over' her plghtgown and went Into the chilly kitchen, eftMTjfing therefrom presently with a trnyrof food and a kettle of wa ter to make ooffee. This she set on the tire. Wherever she moved Bill’s eyes fpMowed her with a gleam of Joy, tlfic- 'tured with smiling Incredulousness. When the kettle was safely bestowed on the coals, he drew her on his knee. There for a minute she perched In rich content. Then she rose. “Come very quietly with me, Bill,” she whispered, with a fine air of mys- teVy. “I want to Show.you something.” “Sure! What is it?" he asked. “Come- and see," she smiled, and took up the lamp. Bill fdllowed obedi ently. • Close up beside her, bed stood a small, square crib. Hazel set thejjffnp on a table and, turning to the bundle of blankets which filled this ne,w piece of furniture, drew back one corner, re vealing a round, puckered.-up Infant face. “For the love Of Mike!” BUI mut tered. "Is it-—la It-—’’ "It’s our son," she ^whispered proud ly. J'Born the tenth of January—> three weeks ago today. Don’t, don’ you great bear—you’ll wake him/ For Bill was bending dowryfo peer at the tjuy morsel of humanity, with a strange, abashed smile onTlls face, his' big, clumsy fingers touching the soft, pink cheeks. And Xhen he stood up he drew a long breath, and laid, one arm across hc-^shoulders. “Us two afro the kid," he said whim sically. „“lt should be the hardest eom- blttntion In the worl<Mo bust. Are you -happy,little person?” throw mu off the poisons developed in tha system, things begin to happen. One of the first warnings is pain or stiff- ness in the lower part ofthe back; highly colored urine; loss of appetite; indiges tion; irritation, or even stone in the blad der. These symptoms indicate a condition that may lead to that dreaded and fatal malady, Bright's disease, for which there .. is saiq to be no cure. Do not delay a minute. ‘-At the first Tb- dication of trouble in the kidney, liver, bladder or urinary organs start 'taktaf Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules, ana . save yourself before it is too late. Inatant . treatment ia necessary in kidney and Rlad- | der troubles. A delay ia often fatal. . • You can almost certainly find immediate relief in Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules. For more than 2001 years this famous prep aration has been an unfailing remedy for . all kidney, bladder and urinary troubles. It is th£ pure, original Haarlem Oil your great-grandmother used.. About two cap-,- r sules each day will keep you toned up and' feejing fihe. -Get it at any drug store, and if it does not give you almost immediate relief, your money will be refunded. Be sure you get the GOLD MEDAL brand. None other genuine. In boxes, thref sizes.—Adv. How Woman Plays Golf. ^ Parks—I set* that you have been playing golf with Perkins’ wife. Is she a good player? Lane—Fair. She goes aroijrul la .about a hundred strokes and a couple of thousand words.—Life. Nsw la the Tubs U Get Rid ef These Th*r*’s no longer tb» slightest need of feeling ashamed of jrour frvptlfs, as Otlilne—doable strength—Is guaranteed to remove theae homely spots. /V.— — Simply get ■>« ounce, of Othlne—double strength—from/yimr druggist, and apply a little of It night add moYnlng and you should soon *ee t^SLytcn/fne worst freckles have begun to dle- eppear.^whlle the lighter ones have vanished en tirely, It Is seldom that more than one ounce Is n/»ded to compiefrlv clesr the skin snd gain ■ beautiful clear complexion. Be spre to ask for the double strength Othtae, ea this Is sold under guarantee of money beck U It falls to remove freckles.—Adv. Success or Failure. As fur as appeuruncek’ go “I can" and "1 ntn’t-’ look very* much alike: But the difference between th(*Hj Is all the difference lietween success and failure. / x She nodded, {dinging to him, word lessly happy: - And presently she cov ered the baby’s face, and they went buck t<^ sit before the great fireplace, where the kettle bubbled cheerfully and the crackling blaze sent forth Its challenge to the bevy df frost sprites that held High revel outside. And, aftir a time, the blaze died to a heap of. glowing probers, and the forerunning wind of a, northeast storm soughed and "a Milled about a house deep w;rapped in contented slumber, a house no longer divided against Itself, (THE KND.r Soothe Itching Scalps. On retiring gently rub spots of dan* druff and Itching with Cuticura Oint ment. Next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. For free snfhples address, “Cuticura, Dept. X, Boston.” At druggists and by mall, Sotlp 25, Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv. • Daily Thought. Chnversatlon.la the. vent of charaeUK t.—Em< .is well as of thought. leraon. A centipede doesn’t mind a\ thing like having one footlnThe little jrave. Granulated. Kyrllda. Stic*. Inflamed Eyes relieved over night by Romas Eye Balaam. One trial provea tta merit Adv.---- ^_'_®rine menjflnd solid chmfort In bot tled liquids. When your Cm Need Cart Tty Murine Eye Remedy SKSafinSEiK