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V PAGE 2 BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, S, C. ■v M ►at A Babies Smile when stomsche dd their work and bowels move naturally. Fretful, cry ip g babies need MRS. WINS LOW’S , SYRUP to make the stomach digest food, and bowels to move as they should. Contains no alcohol, opiates, narcotics, or other 7 harmful ingredients. At yosr Jrmggitt* Get the f Genuine and l Avoid gusMft V Waste/** INDIGESTION Quickly relieved by KA l.-SI'EAK-MINTO. Bend 25 cents tn eta nips for large trial boa to The bud-Spear-MInto Co., New York, who will refund money If results are not satisfactory. A_iri4*s is as g**o*l It doesn't g**t anybody as* a mile, ariv whew*. but CARBON! Rid System of Clog^ed-up Waste and Poisons*, with "Cascarets.” “DIED TODAY, S. WALLEN.” Synopsis Star,*. / Wallen, first mule pf tin* bark t'polo. In the Java sea. Is the boI*\ Survivor of the erfey, all victims of yellow fever. Tin# Wall, Chinese sailor, lit*t man to die, tells Waken lie and live other Chinamen* were sent aboard by "Drink-House Saio.” notorious character of Singapore, to kill him. This recalls to Wallen an Incident of his childhood which seems .con nected with the confession. CHAPTER I—Continued. w- — - - — - - - . 1-.,-, . *■ Liko onrbon cloys and chokes a m*v tor, so the excess bile in liver, and the constipated waste In the bowels, produce foggy brains, headache, sour, add stomach, indigestion, sallow skin, sleepless, nights, and had colds Let gentle, harmless “Cascarets” rid the system of the toxins, acids, gases, and poTs?)n?~wMoh are lwping set. ^ -• Take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest. Ami flunfti had shaken liis hea<fj»s ie hml answereil. “I have looked, sahib, and the hand Is whole?’ .Spellbound lie had stood there on the stairs, a lad of fourteen, and Gunga had‘lifted the Thing In his arms and gone away with it ; and the great figure of his father, dressed in pajamas, hud stood motionless for n long time, then ‘turning had faced the stairs and caught sight of him—and suddenly had sent a wild, unnatural -I«H4g4t~elf»g*mMhr«.iigh the, hniisc “You then*, eh, Stacey?” he had laughed out, as though unmanned. cbefrvy for him, fell to his side, a ghast ly whiteness.spread over-bis face, he -reeled, clutched at the ^skylight for support, and slipped prone upon the deck. It was the nausea upon him again. . . The virulence of the attack passed afJLgr-a. while, hut for a long time he lay where, he—had fallen, weak and exhausted. H<T' was scmf-dellrldus when he stood up again, and hung limply against the skylight. Medicine—yes, that wa$ what It meant—that stuff there spilled all aboirh He put some, into |iis mouth. Ilis eyes fnstened’on the ship’s lug open in front of him. What kind of a book was that? What ttas it doing there? Had he been read ing? lie couldn’t read- when he was sick. ; - It was very strange. No; be re membered now, he had been writing in it. Whenever any of the crew died .tie wrote it down in the book, And now the crew was all dead, abd he would be> dead. too. very soon; therefore he should also write his own name down while he cpuld still Tit’ll be that- black devil in Slogs pOrel” ejaculated th$ trader, screw Ing up his wizened fhee and pulling viciously at his beard/ “You’ll no play,j th^fool, Wallen. It’s not fit. you are to go. Listen to me, mon: It’s^n mat ter o’ twenty miles across,.the Island, us ye know** well, and no Coi^’eyance. yd mind. And It’s ho regular trader* that’s cailed, for none is + due—sh«*’H£ have put in for water or the like,"and will be sailing agaij} at daybreak,” “I can make it by daybreak, Mac- Knight,” Wallen state 1 quietly. For a moment MaeKnight, stated at Wallen, then his hands dropped from Wallen’s shoulders. "Well, guv and be damned to you, then-!” he said gruffly, (Jeep down in ’his throat to hide his emotion—-And, * 0 turning, stepped abruptly outside. There were not many preparations to make—very few. Wallen’s ^brldly possessions’'were his only through tin* generosity of the trader. Hut MaeKnight did not stop at that now, for, five minutes later, as Wullerr started for. the night's •tramp across the island, a Malay guide, well loaded with supplies, start ed with him, while MaeKnight cursed with earnest profanity as they wrung each other's hand. At the edge of the Clearing Wallen looked hack. On the great bearded figure that leaned against the door frame of the solitary trading station Wallen’s eyes' lingered. The ,man waved his hand and Christ and Nicodemus .7: sill V H'geJ-MiirKjiiLhl ' forgeF '"Mai Kliiglif write, lie remembered it all perfectly i 11 »yroed-wire t * now—that was what the" book was for. ' f,> noer as a w b Uted: - ‘ .Mon. ye Arm!' Ye nion’!*N And then swMe’iily a inist ilimmi'l Wallen’s eyes. lie tried to shout’ back- and could only wave his own hand in return. And tiled the trees hid the trader from view. Forget MacKniglirb The fmin who had nursed him back to life as a mother would nurse her child !_~Kor get that solitary human outpost <>f civilization—a man with an iron list • * . bjirbed-wire tongue and a heart as No ; no woni'I TT JtlL, .I'l.I telL you something ‘in>A l^nTTCsr "la XTrrtre-- mttrrrttc—rntr . ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ —■ t - . .fH™ Experienced;" nrsmrers |Tn *rrrT grtpt?-. i Never f o t^^lfiast.^ifgnOTSBer pnsliilt srf-^. , imnlt.y^iuv fncli'H, ^ I* sicken, or cause Inconvenience. They work while you sleep. A box of Cas carets costs so little too.—Adv. How many a man fools rntaself when he think** lie is fooling lib* wife. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There It only one way to cure Cn’arrhal Deafness, and that Is by a constitutional remedy. HALL’S CATAKHH M EDICT NK acts through the Hlood on the Mucoux Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness It caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely rinsed. Deafness Is the result Unless the Inflammation can be re duced and this tube restored to Its nor mal condition, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE All Druggists 75c. Circular# free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Rest Is the sweet sauce that is dish ed up in connection with hard labor. A Feeling of Security You naturally feel secure when you, know that the medicine you are about to take is absolutely pure and contains no harmful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine is l>r. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, kidney, liyer and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained in every bottle of Swamp-Root. * - It is scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoonful doses. 1 ■ It is not recommended for everything. It ia nature’s great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and tyad- never go to the Ka.^J." And then he had pulled himself to gether, and his fare had set sternly as Iip had pointed up the stairs. "Go back to your bed!” he had command ed sharply. “Go hack to your bed in stantly !” “Yes,” said Wallen aloud to himself. “That’s what he said: ‘Never go to the Hast—never go to the East.’” But he had mine to the Hast and six Chinamen had shipped aboard the I’polo to kill him. ' Ilis father had -been quite right in telling liiin not to go to the East. How was It that he had come there? He had run away t from that gray house after that night, and he had never heard of his father since. That was In California. He had gone to Frisco, and gone to sea. He had he#n ut sen ever since In all kinds of ships, and he had done ! pretty well, He had his master’s cer tificate already. But that did not account for Ills be ing here in the Java sea, and for those six Chinamen, lie had been fourtli officer of the*Tokainaj*u when they had touched at Shanghai a few weeks ago. She was a fine ship, the ToRa* nmru, the biggest passenger liner in the fleet—only a fourth officer’s pay was very small. He had met Captain Mltehell of the Dpolo ashore there, and Captain Mit chell had persuaded him to ship as first mate- on the I’polo for double the pay he hnd*h«*en getting. The I’polo. mans -He ‘lurched- forward and picked up **ot forget MaeKnight 1 ! the fountain pen from where it had He forced a smile to his lips. On* in these' f«i ut ffrmt qn lilt nr. —Hr~ hrrrhed again heavily as hi* leaped over the book. A nervous twitch of his hand gouged the pen-point intd the page and left a blot. He shook his head in a gravely puz zled way. It was queer that the pen wouldn't write as it had written before; It seemed to travel all over the page, and—he paused, his hand going to his eyes again—It was struoge that he couldn't think of his own name! l(e was first mute, lie knew that; but—yes, his name came back to him now. He wrote on laboriously. He finished the entry, dropped tin* pen. and stared at what he hud written, noddipg his head. ^ *. “Died today, S. Wallen, first mate.” He read the words aloud, and nod ded his head again. It was true, quite true. When that damnable sun that was tormenting him through the uwii- Ing was gone, -that would he tlie end of today and ho would bo dead. ’ Ills eyes strayed forward along the deck—and widened with a dawning fear. What were those shapes there! He began tq_ mumble'to himself,'and suddenly shrieked out aloud. It was a horror ship. He shrieked aloud, rushed to the rail, and In the delirium of his mind crouched low to hide himself from this dead throng that raved like demons for medicine, ran screaming forward to where the ship's boat bumped mo notonous! v In its rise and tall against the vcsi'i s hull. He hurled himself over *the side, purts of the. world. an<J nui.de then-, under strange circiiinstamjes. Thf der troubles, A eworn statement of purity is with every bottle of Dr. Kilmfcr’e $W- a ®P’ ^ oot ’ ' should--> him and that torturin in of course, traded through tlq; Java and Banda seas—that was w hat his ' the Kont lonsiv and snatching at father had meant by the Fast—touch ing at Shanghai as a port of call In a liner wasn't the same thing. How that sun burned through the awning! It seeipcd to stab and drill Into iiis skiill with little shafts of ex ilic oars began to pull like a madman away from the. ship. Two hundred yards oft he stood up and shook both fists and yelled tauntingly—they could not renc.h him now. But why not? Suppose they^ should swim after,him! quisite pnm. He could, get aevay froth- —1 K‘ Hung himself to the seat again and cttldn, by ptrtling tb< -it- you need -* medicine, .you have the best. On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and Urge. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation send ten cents to DF7 Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Yr, for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. It, of course, 1»y going below*' into the eok between ball of fire, but dn't breathe. Cap- A small boy snl<D!t was in to Judge the effect otJa^sJIpp sl»e. !s»ib!e by Its the cabin one co Om> couldn’t live in ttie cabin tain. Mitchell was there and Captain Mitchell was dead. I T~ Had Captain Mitclvell. anything to do With those six Chinamen? Or any thing to do with Drink-House Sam In Singapore? And where tvas it those six Chinamen had Joined—at Shanghai like himself? ' . ]f he could remember that he would know whether Captain Mitchell had had a hand in the cursed game. Hadn’t Johnson said something about new hands? But then native crews were everlastingly shifting about. It was a long way from Singapore to Shanghai. Who was thi> DrinkTlnuse Sam? What was It Ting Wah had j?ald? “Diink-House Sam—him know.” “Him know, him know him know”-*- the words*began to run through his mind in n.-singsnng, crazy fashion- throat ir- u, >d then a passionate, merciless anger BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. A cold Is probably the most com mon of all disorders and when neglect ed Is apt to he most dangerous. Sta tistics show Unit more than three times as‘many people died fro.ni In fluenza last year, as were killed in the greatest war, the world has ever known. For the last fifty-three years Boschee’s Syrup has been used for coughs, bronchitis, cob rltation and ^specially lung troubles. W’lzed upon him, and the splendid six- It gives the‘patient a good night’s f°<>t hulk of the man heaved up from rest* free from coughing, with easy the chair, and,-clenched list raised, he expectoration In the morning. Made swayed upon his feet. 9 in America and used in the homes of They had got him! Not the way thousands of families all over the they had thought to get him—hut they Civilized world. Sold everywhere.—Adv. had got him. Ami he could pot ti;hr there was no. one t*» fight—he could" only die^ like a trapped rat,* while this Drink-House Sam laughed a thousand miles away! “Him know, him know, hlnfknow”— the word*.-counted til*? fire through hi- bi tin. He shouted, aloud, anti-the m»lls -of ids lingers in his Hencbed fist hit into the )<altn of his Lund, lie could not choke the jlfc, as his own went out. from this devil in Singapore plied . the oars furiously. Ahd then slowly the strokes les sened. and presently an oar fell from his grasp, and after that, with a. moan, he pitched forward into the bottom f Hie boat—and all was blackness. I CHAPTER II. Final. “What did Mr. Blank say when you asked to take him apart?” "Said he wasn’t a prize puzzle.’’ . ■ ■ 1 ■ — BronchialT roubles the Irritation sod you trbryg 'fhm , Do both aokkly and sffreuyYIy PI SO'S On the Roacl to Pobl. “Mon,” expostulated the Scotch trader,* “but you’re fair daft! You’re -but out of the jaws of death, and I’d no say you’re all the way. out at that. Bide a, hit, there’ll be nnlther in a month—or in two, anyhow.” Wallen, standing In the center of the little galvanized-iron-roofed store house, his eyes on the native who had entered a moment before, shook his head. 1- “I’ve got to get away, MaeKnight,” lie said earnestly. “There’s no use talking about it. What kiud of a ship does b.e say it is?” » - - ' Mm Knight flung out a question in Jhe native tongue. . ' “lie says it is a big smoke-boat,” translated the Ifadet- “which will he by wTiv of saying It’s some measly »teum,jCoaster that’s so small it’s no- able to oecommodate , its^ own,-cock roaches, d’ye mind! Mon; pay-no at tention to it. What’s anithev nmntb ■qr'siY-^-nmt yen’ll he strong then, and-:— ah, o*m, but I hate to luiNe ye go!" ‘Wallen, gaunt and thin-from his illness shook his _ head decisively agqin. though the Other’s words had brought j a quick responsive stnile to - his lips. . * %■ Six wtreks ago a-jtron from the, vil lage here had jrtekeff Iff tn ajr at s**n’ Crouched Low to Hide Himself. chances wer^e a thousand to otic t.iat he and MaeKnight would never meet ITgTiTTP^TTuT for all rUTTf; It—WTP?—IT friendship that would last. Twenty miles across the island be fore daybreak! * Wallen f>ll to wondering what sort of a ship and. more pertinent still, what sort of a skipper was on the ship that had put into I’ohi. He had re fused MaeKnight*s offer of an advance .of-money, anti Im hadn’t a peimy—hut By REV. GEORGE GUILLE Extension Department .Moody Bible Institute. Chicago TEXT.—Ye must be born again.—John 8:7. The moon and all the stars are out to llght'a trembling traveler'upon a darkened road. One of the best - n en of Ills time has come to Jesus 'Christ—a man of the highest mor ality and the ut most devotion tn religion. By com ing at all to this "I’rophet of Naza reth Ms reputa tion ns a religious leader Is imper iled ; so he ,coines> ’ by night. But he has come to the Light, and night for him ean he no more; in future he’ll walk in the light. “A man of the Pharisees, named Nic odemus,” so upright, so good, so r€*- ligious, Mjidi a charming gentleman, surely the Lord will welcome him wftli open arms! But no. Abruptly be de clares that thi< splendid man lias not Vet begun to live: “Except a man he born'again, he cannot perceive flu* kingdoRp-cf God." He cannot even have right Mioirghts about 4t, to say nothing of his entering it. iTe 1,as. come, saving: . “We know that thou art a teacher come from God. for no man can do these 'miracles that tlioll doest. except God be with him.” And, oh. whqt a lesson this Teacher, ■(■•.me from' Cod ha*! for film!—"TTl'H'.“— ttiltiks Ji*>. “is one who can teach me . something that shnll make in** a better man than I am.” and file learns that ,s nnf-Tf(V'll B cause It has been Judged; that nil that Is bom of It is still but flesh ; and that n an in the rt*-sh cannot he made fit for God. lb* puisL hv second birth In ' the power of the Holy Spirit, be brought Into the new creation. And nothing short of this can ever meet the mind of God. Xleodemus speaks 1 of mlrneles. hut the Iyord will not stop hi discuss such trltb-b. He Will tell at once *if. the greatest and most Important of all miracles: the regeneration of n soul. Men think that If they can understand miracles, they could understand t’hrisf and the new birth. Oh. If they would only believe what N written, that “In him was Ilf**; und the life was the Light of men!" Once you have the life that Is In <*hr1sf J**su« y«m are In the/*lght forever, and shall never have any difficulty about miracles or about anything that you find In Holy Serlp- tuw! - • Striking IHs that the only place in qll Scripture In which th** new birth Is pressed Is here, where the Lord presses It upon this upright map.. Ah. If he. with his goodness and religion, must he horn again, what folly to claim ex ception from this necessity for any man that lives today! But how? He Is bewildered by the thought-of s*u«-h a change, “lfow can these things be?" And the I>ord makes no answer. He is not at pains to ex plain *the workings of the Holy Spir it. The question Is n**t. “Th* you un- derstand?” bnt “I><> yotl believe what God •says?” If so. there is another “milst’HYr-tMs-deosM+rSe- that exjd.'dms HEALTH RESTORED Mr. Knight Was Down With Kid* aey Complaint; Found Doan's the Remedy Needed. “Kidney trouble put^me In a bad way,” says Thomas A, Knight,-Re tired Insurance Agent, C24 N. Ninth St., East Sh Louis, 111. “It came on With pain across my back and the attacks kept getting* worse un til I had a spoil that laid me up. Morphine \yns the only relief and I couldn’t move without help. Tin* kid ney 'secretions were scanty, painful and filled with sediment. ^ “I Avas unable to leave the house, could not rest,, and became Nr. Knight utterly ex hausted. The only way I could take ease was ,by bolstering my self up with pillows. For three month's I was in that awful con dition and the doctor said I had gravel. Doan's Kidney Pills brought = me back to good health and 'I have gained wonderfully in strength' and weight.” Suorn to before me, A. M. KOGMANN, Xotary Public. Cot Doan’* at Any Store, jOc * Box DOAN’S K p , , D , N ,V f FOSTER MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. , / p\ Keep a Bottle Handy Pain whether it comes from rheu matism, neuralgia, sciatica, backache or sprain i9 usually most acute at night. If you have a bottle of Yager’s Liniment handy and use it you get quick relief. Trice 33c. The large bottle contains twice as much as the usual 50c bottle of iwH iitl. it,. Om.- iiy tor month*. At all dealers. YAGER'S LINIMENT RELIEVES PAIN GILBFKT BROS. A CO.. Baltlmoro. Ml NEGLECTING THAT COLD OR COUGH? iVhy, when Dr. King's New Discovery so promptly checks it r ’S natural you* don’t want to be careless and let that nfd cold or cough drag on or that new attack develop seriously. Not when you can get such a proved successful remedy as Dr. King's New Discovery. Cold, cough, gripp.\ or.'-;p dues not resist this standard reliever very lotlg. Its quality Is as high today as It ji 1- ways has been—and it's been growing steadily in popularity for more than fifty years. 00c. and "$1.20 a bottle at all druggists. Give it a trial. he was satisfied that he would not be refused passage in any case.* He could work hiS way. A white man w ho knew his business was worth Ids wejfcht in gold on a ship any time in -these parts. It was true he wash'-? buy too fit yet; hu'fTie-'was fit enough for that, fit enough—a dul. flush came into his f<M*e, and his eye* hardened^ fit enough to get to Singa pore somehow! <ry He had not forgotten that ghastly afternoon in the reek of the pest ship, nor the Chinaman who had died in his arms whispering of Drink-House Sam of Singapore! Forget! He had thought of nothing else all these weeks, raved of it in his delirium, so MaeKnight had told him. ' < - * There was one thing dominant in his life now—Drink-House Sam oi Singapore, the man who had tried sc mysteriously to take his life, to stat at him treacherously, without'warning, out of the dark. *' * - Singapore! Singapore l It wa# never out of his mind now. To get there, io force , tfle truth, the motive the reason, the -story behjnd alh thif from the human spidc*r that lurked it. his web, and then—his' fists clenched fiercely—and then settle with the„fuaD himself! And that was why he must get tc PotjJ before daybreuk, before this strainer sailed. and brought him. r* It hig-bearted mhn’z d*a*c «W, to thi« He owed Li Twenty mites across the island before da>treak! that be bad never •fc.- uplifted could 4U.lv i life to MaeKnight “Ifn no — 1 1- KUrKoight, 1 *. he no lo co.* (TO BE CONTINUED ► should be ti mttt it all: “Even so must the Son of Man be lifted up: that whosoever believeth in him shall not perish, hut have eter nal life." “Except a man be horn of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of G(at“ Water is in Scrip ture the symbol both of the Word of God and of the Spirit of God. Tlip Holy Spirit works through .the wor5 to accomplish the regeneration pf the soul, bringing the sinner face to face w’ith Christ. In tlu^L-reif^eration a it-Jzl that of which we read in Titus 3:5, '‘the Washing of regeneration," and of which the Lord spoke to Peter, declar ing that it cleanses “every whit." By the Spirit’s ministry in the'word the sinner is brought to see what the Lord pointed out to Nicodemus, that he is the antitype of the brazen serpent, en during on the cross of shame the judg merit that was the sinner’s due. The moment he accepts that he is born again. ,. . On£„ came to me saying, I cannot understand about the new birth and am so distressed over your insistence upon the necessity of it. “It is not necessary to understand It in order to attain it,” I replied, but simply to believe in him who has mads It possible.” - “But I have been taught all my life that If I was good I would go to heaven when I die." “And so was I,” I said, “hut It Is not true. But do you believe the gos pel? Do you believe that whep^ Jesus dtt*d It was for you and that because he died for you he lz exulted tn heaven?" “I do with alt-my" hfart.” “Then you believe that Jesus fs the Christ r* "Year" • "Very well, then, read this." and ns I placed my finger on I John 5:1. ah* read It alood: •WhAaorver believeth that Jeans Is the Chris* la born of God." And with a cry of Joy aha cr ; "Oh. 1 at* It oow 1 Inert !• I Tardy Bowels, Ihert Liver They Just won't let you put “pep” into your work or play. Sick head ache comes from retaining waste mat ter and impurities in the body. * Feel right for anything—make tha liver lively, the bowels function regu larly, with Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Smoothly yet positively they gvrodure results that cleanse the system and make the liver and bowels respond to the <Jemands o f a strong, healthy body. Still 25c.—at all druggists. Try them tonight - tkITCH! Mon‘v hack without qvcfctlon *f HUNT'S SAt.VK falls rn ths treatment of ITCH. ECZEMA, RIN(i *V ORM.TETTFR or other itohtnK "kin. JiHeascs. Price 75v at drujrfrists, or direct from 4.1 licharSt Medcine Co. Sherman.Tu. THE GREATEST GUSHER IN THE TEXAS OILFIELDS le not as valuable to YOTT as th<* product ot one email w-ll, located In ..the city ot Hrownwuod, Trias, giving less than one barrel of oil dally. There Is only one .well of Its kind In the great Texas oil fields—i perhaps in the entire country. Its product possesses marvelous penetrative, antiseptic, soothing a*nd curative qualities. With one small bottle In your possession you need not fear, or suffer, one moment's pain from sores, cuts, bruises, burns, scalds, bolls or skin-troubles, and the wound heals without leaving a scar. Bottled In Ks natural con dition, after thorough washing with water, and without being subjected to any r«*ftnl>ng process, (guaranteed safe for vise for exter nal Injuries on the most delicate subject. Invaluable for Injury In the case of live stock, as no scar" remains, an l—the h’alr grows back In Its natural color, and with most remarkable rafidlty. No household should be 'without one bottle of this oil, fnur ounces of which will last an averago family a - lifetime. Send $1 60 for 4 .oz. bottle of the Brownwood Wonderoll to TIIE BROWNWOOD RE\fEDV COMPANY, BROWNWOOD, TEXAS. Reference: An^ bank In Brownwood, Texas. THE DUPLEXHAIRCUTTER I 1 1 ( i *n_ . •Tnn GRHATI9T INVENTION or TUB AOMk, /nst corns your bslr six) It cots it st the lame urns. Baxter than eher.ng Uusran'ecd t.» ka*« lu cost many times every yesv A child can o-« It. W A |n un Sample sent jpostpeld lor only lioll. SeflR K st. Write Dept vf __ 4 St BILLS, MISSUS TB rm >T ,PBIUDSLPBU,PA 32% Alcohol 150 Mut OOo. ioOl EZIT Almost Instantly