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CALOMEL IS ill STOP USI! Don't Lose a Day's Work! If Yi Constipated Take "DodsorV You're bilious! .Your .liver .is sluggish! You feel lazy, dizzy and all knocked out. Your head 1b dull, your tongue Is coated; breath bad; stomach sour and bowels constipated. But don't take salivating calomel. It makes you sick, you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosiB of the bones. Calomel crashes into sour btle like dynamite, breaking It up. That's when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you want to enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful or Harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Your druggiBt or dealer sells you a 50-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone under my personal money-back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your A Substitute. "Do you enjoy u problem play?" "Sometimes," replied Miss Cayenne. "It's the only way I know of to talk scandal without harming somebody who actually exists." A silent man often hns a reputation for knowing about ten times as much as he really does know. THOUSANDS HAVE I TR0UBLEA1 Weak and unhealthy kidneys cause so much sickness and suffering and when through neglect or other causes, kidney trouble is permitted to continue, serious results may be expected. Your other organs may need attention ? but your kidneys should have attention flrst because their work is most important. If you feel that your kidneys are the cause of your sickness 01 run down condition commence taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because if it proves to be the remedy you need and your kidneys begin to improve they will help all the other organs to heclth. Prevalency of Kidney Disease. Moat people do not realize the alarming increase and remarkable prevalency of kidney disease. While kidney dia oraer* are among tne most common diseases that prevail, they are almost the last recognized by patients, xvho usually content themselves with doctoring the effects, while the original disease constantly undermines the system. , SPECIAL NOTE?You may obtain a earn ten cents to l>r. Kilmer ii Co., Binghamtoi to prove the remarkable merit of this medi valuable information, containing many of t from men and women who Bay they found i in kidney, liver and bladder troubles. The well known that our readers are advised to t Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When wi Moth Traps. An acetylene gaslight, placed In a large glass globe, attracts thousands of cutworm moths, which have proved so destructive to the best ranches of southern California. A pan of oil Is set below the globe, nnd Into the pan as many as several thousand moths will often fall In a single night. Vermont's oldest marble quarry, opened about 179.r>, still Is being operated profitably. A firm will commands fnte. Honest I Jim, yon doal need a cocktail. What your ctomerh vmu u a couple of doere of okiewh auoust flowee Iota of thr boya uae it to rweetrn their stomaeha ami carry off the miserable atuff in their bow el??it etopa aervoueneee and headache, makes you feel like a new mas Blip 'round le the drvg store and try it It will pat sew life Into you, 1 know from experience.?Remember Green's August Flower Most men think they need a cocktail j or a drink when their stomach Is out of order and they "feel had" with nervous indigestion, or constipation. i What they really do need is two or three doses ol "AUOUST FLOWER" which quickly restores the stomach, cleansing the whole system generally. BofFi Quality: And Quantity Try Yager's Liniment, thegreatexternal remedy for rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, sprains, chest pains, backache, cuts and bruises. This liniment has wonderful curative powers, pen?- i trates instantly, and gives prompt relief from pain. It is the most economical liniment to buy, for the large 25 cent bottle contains four times as much as the usual bottle of liniment sold at that price. At all dealers. YAGER'S L1NKMERT GILBERT BROS. & CO. * . BALTIMORE. MD. 1 & ' ' IT, U SICKENS! 16 SALIVATING DRUG Dur Liver Is Sluggish or Bowels 's Liver Tone."?It's Fine I sluggish. liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that it won't make you sick. Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morning because you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will be working, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. You will feel like working; you'll be cheerful; full of vigor and ambition. Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and cannot salivate. Give it to your children! Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dangerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel is almost stopped entirely here.?Adv. Dress in Primitive Style. The Conebo, Sliippo, Cocoauio and Yah tin tribes of Amazon Indians are j si 111 wearing clothes of grass. Occasionally a full-bearded man tells a bare-faced lie. i A sewing machine has been Invented to stitch together baseball covers. SIDNEY I IDDON'T KNOW IT A Trial Will Convince Anyone. Thousands of people nave testified that the mild and immediate eflcct of Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, is soon realized and that it stands the highest for its remarkable results in the most distressing cases. Symptoms of Kidney Trouble Swamp-Root is not recommended for everything but if you suffer from annoy- j ing bladder troubles, frequently passing water night and day, smarting or irritation in passing, brick-dust or sediment, headache, backache, lame back, dizzinesa. nnnr Hiffputinn clnnnlooenno. , , -.w^.voouvoo, MCI ? . ousnesa, heart disturbance due to bad kidney trouble, skin eruptions from bad ! bloou, neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago, bloating, irritability, worn-out feeling, lack of ambition, may be loss of flesh or sallow complexion, kidney trouble in its worst form may be stealing upou you. Swamp-Root Is Pleasant to Take. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and onedollar size bottles at all drug stores. pie size bottle of Swamp Root by enclosing a, N. Y. This gives you the opportunity j icine. They will also send you a book of he thousands of grateful letters received 5wamp-Root to be just the remedy needed i value and success of Swamp-Root are so tend for a sample size bottle. Address Dr. riting be 6ure and mention this paper. Its Style. ! "What do you think of this bottliugup story?" "It's a corker." Anuric cures Backache Lumbago, Rheumatism. Send 10c. Dr. V. M. Pierce, Buffalo V. V for Inr?- 1 , . ?5^ ***?* jiowamjc.? Adv. Heredity. "The football player who did such fine work Is the son of a professional cook." "Then no wonder he took naturally to work on the gridiron." MOTHER'S JOY SALVE for Colds, Croup, Pneumonia nnd Asthma ; GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT for Neuralgia, Rheumntlsm and Sprains. For sale by all Druggists. GOOSE GREASE COMPANY, MFK'EL, Greensboro, N. C.?Adv. Preposterous Suggestion. "John, aren't you going to get an overcoat for the winter?" "Overcoat !" exclaimed Mr. Mlfflea. ' "What do I want with an overcoat? An overcoat won't keep our automobile from freezing up In cold wenther." To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know ; what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cents. Equable Temperature. The temperature of southern Australia varies not more than 20 degrees 1 during the year. Forbearance. "How does the theory of evolution Impress you?" "Well, I'm not so sure that 1 approve of It. I know some men I might sus- ( peet of having descended from an ourang-outan. But why should I humiliate the ournng-outun?" TORTURING SKIN TROUBLES That Itch, Burn and Disfigure Healed by Cuticura. Trial Free. Bathe with plenty of Cuticura Soap and hot water to cloauso and purify. Dry lightly and apply Cuticura Ointment to soothe nnd heal. This stops Itching instantly, clears away pimples, removes dandruff and scalp irritations, and heals red, rough, soro hands. Fro? sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.?Adv. Wrong Impression. "Football Is a great game," said the enthusiast. "No doubt about that," answered the elderly gentleman, "but It sometimes puts false notions in a young man's mind." "How Is that?" "He's apt to think after he has made it phenomenally long run for a touchdown, or kicked a goal from the field, that there Is nothing else in life really north doing." I ?y i December the 24th ! By SADIE B. ATKINS 5 T WAS the morning before { AI Christinas, clear and cold, L nnd the feel of the winter Holidays was in the air. InV-ilft'* *',e harhed wire fence /I which Inclosed the first dwell. mfff lng on the outskirts of the litthe town a man was standing. j "T?* now tracing with rough weath| or-boaten finger imaginary j ff/t lines on the gutepost, then Zk turned with keen anxiety toward the closely curtained front room ol iue small dwelling and then letting his troubled gaze wander , far up the section line where a soli- j tury figure was just discernible coming i slowly southward. Just so he had stood five years ago toduy and watched a figure strikingly j | similar to this wending its way towurd | the North, while beside him his pleading wife had begged that he recull the boy. But u stubborn soiuethiug within gave assurance that he was in the right, and so he remained silent while the boyish figure grew smaller aud t smaller Jn the hazy distance and the woman went Inside and the cold North j j wind chilled every tender impulse of j ! the heart. I The traveler had reached the fence now and his gray-blue eyes looked Into j the faded brown ones before him, and i In wordless greeting he held out his i hand, but the older man was again , tracing the pattern on the gatepost and did not see it. Limply it fell to ; the prodigal's side. At length he ventured to say: "To- | morrow is Christmas day." "Yes," responded the other, bitterly, i "and I didn't think," with a glance toward the curtained window, "I didn't think she could last to see Christmas." 1 The prodlgul started and grew deathly white. "Is my?Is someone so very low?" he gasped. "Yes, someone," replied the other, j tremblingly, "Is very low; a mother who had a son for whom she worked and prayed and lived for twenty years, i and then?" his voice broke; "then for- : getful of her love and the heartache he was leaving he went away, and for ! five long years that mother hoped and ! hungered for his home-coming all In vain." The prodigal strefched out his hands appeallngly. "What If he returned today and on his knees begged Letting His Gaze Wander Far Up the i Section Line. forgiveness und promised balm for every heartache?" The hopeless look from the faded , brown eyes answered even better thuu 1 his words, "lie Is too late." Tears were coursing down the cheek 1 of the younger man as lie leaned over the gatepost and whispered: "Could I sec?but something in the hard ; face of the other arrested his words ; and he did not llnish. For u moment of untold length both stood in silence, and then the tracer i of imaginary lines moved from the , gateway, motloninir the other IikIiIo "It might ease her Inst hours, and then?" He pointed toward the section line down which the prodigal had come, "that will take you hack to your old haunts, wherever they may be; that," pointing toward the south, "you'd best not take; it's not much but a trail, and leads to God knows where, but north or south, take oue." Hours luter, as the village doctor drew up before the house, the prodigal emerged from the sickroom, and, taking his hat from the peg, strode with faltering step out into the gathering twilight. At the road he hulted a moment and stood with bared head, then turned?southward. Almost out of sight of his boyhood home he hesitated und turned for one last look. Suddenly the crnckllng of footsteps in the stubble and the labored breathing of a man caught his ear, nnd in a moment his father was beside him, but how changed. The face before so cold and hard was softened now with pity and compassion, and from out the faded brown eyes shone mingled hope und love and forgiveness. With hands clasped and henits receptive to the spirit of the morrow, they stood, while the elder whispered :"She will live; come home," and then two kneeling figures were dimly silhouetted against the darkening sky, while a prayer almost Inaudible nscetided to the mercy seat. He arose, and with his father's arm about him and the Christmas spirit fillleg both their hearts, the prodigal turned back from the road that led to "God kuowfc where" Wood Distillers Busy. It Is estimated by the New York state college of forestry that over cords of beech, birch and maple wood are used every day In the wood distillation Industry In New York state. The industry has been greatly stimulated by the European war Inasmuch ns acetate of lime, one of the principal products of the Industry, Is used In the manufacture of high explosives. The price of wood alcohol, another product of the Industry, has also risen very largely as a result of the wur. A Mother's Burden A mother who suffers kidney trouble, finds It hard to keep up her daily work. Lameness, backache, sharp pains when stooping and "blue", nervous or dizzy spells, make home lite dreary. Active kidneys bring back vigor, health and a pleasure in family duties. If the kidneys are weak try a box of Doan's Kidney Pills. A North Carolina Cam - - -v Mrs. J. N. Bryan, ; 1 x . 112 E. Davis St.. .f I T says: "I suffered ??^ 3^ 4 BpJ terribly from baekrST la a ache and pains f^^Cthrough my loins. n?Y/^TV\ Tl /'Some days I could '*??J hardly stand up /(' ^^jLfsflCs/ffaf and It was all I IV t-could do to attend ,\N my housework. I |VN^ A didn't rent well anil was lam? and sore. "Bvry Doan's Kidney "nSP^t'' Pictwr* puis cured the T<"' ? backache and fixed Slor\T up my kidneys In Rood shape. Nothing else ever did me so much good." GatDoan'sat Any Store, SOc a Box DOAN'S "VfJiV FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. | Willi Hnnl'i Lightning Oil. Rhrnmntliini, neuralgia. ?orr mua Laa cIch. headacbeR, cut*. burns and bruise* vanish ns If by magic when lUnjJ Lightning oil Is applied to affected Jfci'T', yp^3 parts. No other llnlnieut brings |? | snch quick and soothing relief. I V il Oet a laittle of this valuable home l AsSa. 1 remedy today. Druggists eell It L aJJa a at 5" cents the bottle, or the A. B. r*^AJ?J RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. I T Dept. Z. Sherman. Texsa. will ' Bend It on receipt of price. Consumes Much Lumber. St. Louis lias one factory which will this year consume 100,000,000 feet of lumber. y The Quinine Thst Does Not Affect The Hcud Bemuse of Its tonlo and laxative effect. Laxative llromn Qnlnlne can be takeu by anyone elthout can si in; nervousness or ringing In the head Therv la only one "Uromo Qulnlno." K. W. UlluVHt) signature la on each box. 2Jc. Germany claims leadership of the world in the use of machinery directly driven by electric motors. Lady Uses Tetterine *or Eczema. Edgnr Springe, Mo./ July 15. 190S. Tho E<zs-ma on my face usually appears In tho 8p/.ng and your salve always helps It. I u??u no other preparation but Tetterine and And It superior to any on the market. Respectfully, Elsie M Judvlne. Tetterine cures Eczema. Tetter, Itching Piles, King Worm and every form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterine 60c; Tetterine Soup 25c. At druggists or by mall direct frotn The Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Via. With every mall order for Tetterine we give a box of Shuptrine's 10c Liver Pills free. Adv. Jamaica Depends on United States. More than 70 per cent of the exports of Jamaica come to the United States. She is a poor cook who Is unable to ninke good. The nccaalonal .u*<< of Roman Eye Unlearn at night upon retiring will prevent and relieve tired iijru, watery tyee. anil eye strain. Adv. CURIOSITY "KILLED A CAT" But in This Instance It Brought Nickels to a Very Lively Salesman. Out of a shop entrance he dashed with n small length of cane, with which he manfully attacked a ralnplpe. He struck It repeatedly, then thrust it upward as far as It would go. Next moment the passer-by heard the familiar squeaking of an Imprisoned rut. Women fenfully ran away with uplifted skirts; men and boys gathered round. The man prodded and prodded, and the squeaks became shriller. Carts drew up by the curb and advice came from all quarters. "Get a long stick, mate!" 'Tiring a dog, someone!" "Let him come out and we'll get him!" Rut the hunter took no notice. He meant to catch that rat in his own way. At length, when a crowd of about 100 had gathered, he turned round and produced a tiny whistle from his mouth. "Ladies and gentlemen," lie cried, "the funniest top of the age! Amuses boys and girls for hours. Imitate every | bird ever known, ns well as mice and rats. Itoars of laughter when used at a mixed party. One nickel each, gentlemen J"?New York Globe. Most people gladly take advice from a stranger. | 1 i I iT"?H _ I Childish Craving ?-for something sweet finds pleasant realization in the pure, wholesome, wheat and barley food GrapeNuts No danger of upsetting the stomach ? and remember, Grape-Nuts is a true food, good for any mcai or between meals. "There's a Reason" (Christmas Treat I By MARTHA HOLDEN V*^nRS- WOODHULL lived 1 In a oue-story brick nf wjrr i house, whose warm sit- j tinff rnni^i Ir* ? ' I smeiled of dry wood burning in an air-tight "**" stove, and of apples ripening in the nearby puntry. It was a v arm, fruity smell that no amount of onion or cabbage cooking could : obliterate. Mrs. Woodhnll, called "old" by her ' neighbors, is only sixty-eight, and as trim and slender as a girl. It is sad ; experience, rather than years that wrenches youthfulness from the heart j and quenches the thirst for life, so it was that Mrs. Wodhull spent most , of her days quietly rocking and 1 | knitting. Her padded wooden rocker [ faced u daguerreotype that hung on the brightly papered wall of the cozy , front room. Christmas was a lonesome time for ' the shriveled little old lady who had, forty years ago, to give up the curled gentleman In the daguerreotype, who ! | happened to be her husband, to a worn- { an much younger, who happened to ; need a sweetheart. Christmas brings a train of memories, and Mrs. Woodhnll lived over the j , old sad days as she cooked and knitted. She recalled the happy hours, | too, which was worse. She talked to I Herself a koo<1 deal. "If thnt Armster girl had only let him alone," she would wall softly. ; "He was all right till she set her cap ( i for him. I bet she's suffering somej where. "But I must rend my Bible and try to Torsive her. Lord help me to forgive her," and so she would pray. The children of the neighborhood ; J liked to go to see Mrs. Woodhull for she always opened the cooky jar or brought out a pan of apples. | . Of all the children In the neighborhood who came to see her Mrs. Wood- J j hull liked Llsbeth Baker best. Her > ' mother being dead, Llsbeth lived with ; her gloomy, rheumatic grandmother at 1 j the end of the street. c She had only been here a year, linv- t i lng been handed over from her moth- t | er's mother, out West, to her father's j mother at the end of the street. LIsj both was fair and wistful, and, like Mrs. Woodhull she was very much ( o 1 /> I Today, the day before Christmas, Llsbeth stood at the window. "My < other grandma's coming tomorrow," j I she suld ; "my grandma Hull. We just ( : got the letter today." ! "Two grandmus for Christmas," said I Mrs. Woodhull. "You'll not come near I me. What'll I do, all alone?" I "We'll all come over and see you > ! Christmas afternoon." snid Llsbeth, t dancing home to tell Grandmother ' Baker. I ' Mrs. Woodhull became, in this way, j I the possessor of a Christmas plan. "I j i must have a little treat for them," she i said. She got out her good white I dishes, and set the big table in the slt! ting room. In the center she placed a , i blooming red geranhun. "I'll make it , into a Christmas tree," she joyously t j exclaimed, and she wrapped into threa 1 neat parcels a length of each of her r j knitted lace inscribing them with j : "Merry Christmas" and the name of ( i each guest. , Next day she put the finishing touches to her table. She had a glass dish of candy, and one of nuts and < I raisins. ' At three o'clock Llsbeth arrived with j the new grandmother. Grandma Baker I couldn't come on account of rlieumu! tlsm. The ladles sat talking, and Lls| beth hovered happily about. Then she } wandered out to the middle room j where stood the fine table, and she ! came dnncing in to hug Mrs. Woodhull. "You Just ought to see it, grandma." Llsbeth's eyes were shining. "We'll go and visit it, as soon as the coffee is ready," explained Mrs. @?II1P Woodhull, happy in the child's pleas* l lire. t She excused herself nnd went to the 1 kitchen. Lisbeth danced round and c round the guy table, and Grandma Hull was left alone in the front room. Presently she followed Mrs. Woodhull to the kitchen and closed the door between them and Lisbeth. "Don't you know me?" she asked, sadly. "Has no one told you? I wns Llzette Arm- 1 ster. I have suffered more then you. i He Is dead. We both loved him. May ] we not be friends?" t Through the cloned door Mrs. Wood- i hull could hear Lisbeth happily sing- 1 inc. She looked at Llzette Armster, s shaken with sobs. She put friendly 1 arms about her, nnd soothed her with kindly, broken words. ( "C'ome, now," she said at last, lend* i ing the way to the table with the 1 shining coffee pot. "Let's be inerry. < We must not spoil Llsbcth's Christmas < treat." < Beet Relish. I One quart cooked chopped beets, 1 one quart chopped raw cabbage, one t cupful chopped raw unions, one cupful sugar, one tablespoonful salt, one teaspoonful black pepper. Mix well and add to vinegar which has been boiled. Good Habit. If you have never formed the habit of washing cereals before cooking, try putting thein In n basin nnd tilling it with cold water. You will tind much trash and husks rise to the top, and it is better to strain this off. j i * What -would for the coffi Like a million other women, you can serve coffee that he would give most anything to have?coffee which starts the day "right" for all. Everyone loves the rich flavor of Arbuckles' Coffee. Of all the coffees in America today, it is by far the most popular 1 Today there are whole ti is practically the only co aione, m a year, tour poui was used for every man. State?four times as mani population of the State! At Drawing the Line. "Why don't you take up aviation initead of motoring?" "I can't see the advantage," replied dr. Chuggins. "An accident is bad >nougli as it Is. I don't want a vehicle liat'Il put me in the hospital every line It goes to the repair shop." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of 3ASTORIA, that famous old remedy 'or infants and children, and see that it I n .u- S7 signature of In TTse for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Change of Jobs. "I suppose if your candidate had >een elected some radical changes vouhl have been made in the governnent?" "Yes," replied the party worker, in i melancholy tone. "We had good men licked out for nil the important duces." Confusing. "What I want to know," x?td the nizzled student of politics, "is whether >r not the woman voters defeated Mr. seeker. "Don't nsk me," answered Mr. Twobble. "My wife is a suffragist and jit analysis or the vote Is so complicated that I sometimes forget who eally won." You never can know how superior to oth;r preparations in promptness anil efficiency is I>r. I'eery's "Dead Shot" until you lave tried it once. A single dose cleans >ut Worms or Tapeworm. Adv. War and Health. The effect of war condition* upon he health of the poorer classes Is loted by Dr. L. A. Davles, medical ofli er of Woolwich, Knglnnd, in his nniunl report. Improved working eonlltions In that munitions region count o some degree favorably, hut the etuo- i lotml strain of grief and fear more j han overbalances clean floors and jood ventilation. The increased use J >f alcohol may he traced to such cmo | ion. /veciuenis nave occurred as a ( esult of thi- dark streets ordered as irotectlon from air raids. Poor venllatlon In cellars, where hiding he onies necessary, may, Doctor Davies onslders, account for the Increase In esplrntory diseases. Fear and shock lave doubtless shortened also the life >f those enfeebled from old age. They wive caused many complications in childbirth cases. rO PREVENT OLD AGE COMING TOO SOON! "Toxic poisons In the blood are thrown out by the kidneys. The kidneys act as tllters for such poisons, [f we wish to prevent old age coming too soon and Increase our chances for , i long life, we should drink plenty of | pure water and take a little Anurlc," | mys the famous Dr. Fierce of liuffulo, i S\ Y. 1 When suffering from bnekaehe, fre- , luent or scanty urine, rheumatic pains , >.ere or there, or that constant tired, | worn-out feeling, the simple way to i >vercome these disorders Is merely to >htaln a little Anurie from your near- , ?st druggist and you will quickly no- , Ice the grand results. You will And i t many times more potent than * lthia, and that It dissolves uric acid i is hot water does sugar. ' ff @IL Sold for 47 years. For Mala 9k Fine General Strengthenlnj V he give ?e von serve? One woman says: "My husband used to swallow his coffee and hurry off. Nov/ we have Arbuckles' and you'd think it was Sunday the way helingers over his breakfast." Until you try Arbuckles' you will never know what a difference good coffee can make in your home. r>wns where Arbuckles' ffee used. In one State, ndsof Arbuckles' Coffee woman and child in the / pounds of coffee as the buckle Bros., Nevv Y ork. FRESH-CRISP-WHOLESOME-BEL'CIOUS I THE SAM.TARY METHODS APPLIED IN THE MAKING OF TME3E BISCUITS MAKE THEM THE STANDARD ?f EXCELLENCE J fyar Drslrr lut (hen. or if rurt h* should. I </lsk htra or wrtla us qivinq his name. I CHATTANOOGA BAKERY Women have u lot to say about model husbands, but they want the latest models. Two Kinds. "We hail shortcake for breakfast." "So had we. It was so short It wouldn't go around." IndlRcstton produces dlsnRreeahlo nnd sometimes atnrmlnn symptoms. Wrlsht's Indian Veritable Pills stimulate the dlRi'Slive processes to function naturally. Adv. Two Wants to Be Filled. "Sit down. Mr. Stylo'," said the eminent publisher to the tattered ncarerrow who had just entered Ills elaborate sanctum. "1 have read your iiiiinusevript, and I think I shall publish It." "Ah!" cried the sturving genius. "Do you really menn that?" "Yes. It seems to 1110 a good book, and I think It will till a long-felt want." "I'm glad to hear you say that. And, by the way, could you advance me two dollars and a half on account of my royalties?" "Oh, 1 think so?I think so. Hut why do you want two dollars mud a half?" "I want to begin tilling that long-felt want you spoke of." _ Ask for and Get DKiruNE***" THE HIGH EST QUALITY MACARONI 36 Pag Recipe Book Fret SKINNER MFG.CO.. OMAHA. U.JA LARGEST MACARONI FACTORY IN AMERICA. xsfc** *7S?y PARKER'S ' HAIR BALSAM r ^V.^^74?AM A toilet |>r<ptfnlioo of merit, W?GSfc> Jrjj Help.* to eradicate dandruff. li> v^7L Vn3 For Roitorln# Color and Bkv^vKBeauty toGray or Kadod llalr. '^A am* ?"fct HructriBla. KODAKS & SUPPLIES ll,'"* Wo also <lo highest class of finishing. I'riooH aud Catalogue upon request, -eld* S. Caletki Optical Co., Richmond, Va. L/IDIES-GI ML S-BOYS highly colon-.t postals anil largo Illustrated cnta log of dotoIIios if yon mill lend u> your address. TuwnoS Novelty Co., I/opt. 1>. H. Hlctmuuid, V a. Kilru l.arjn I roal proof Calihaye I'litnla.? leading v.iilotlia 1.1" II; 2U0. J' < prepaid. 70c for 1 000 Waller 1'urks, I lali. N. ('. Wact Florid? Hrrnl Oriln and UTeHlark irdloni YTCM TiJflUd u I) y .oil. KtifT limn to II,-lit aanil*. Information free. < luaatk toaaggi k H<>.ir?y. Kuril. The Old Scratch Beaten S^rT. SHE tree samplo. Uc-iieaa Co., Desk 0, Bt. E'anl, Minn. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 51-1916. WOMEN OF VIRGINIA Basic City, Va.?"1 was In bad shape with womanly trouble anil was all run-flown and confined to bed. The doctor was attending ine three times ii day but I was fitting worse. I lienrd of 'Fuvorite Prescription' through a friend who had hern benefited by It. I could hardly raise my hand and could not sit up In bed. I began taking the 'Prescription* and the first bottle gave tne strength. 1 kept It up until six bottles were used. I was then able to do all my work. I doubt riot that the use of It saved my life. When I begin to run down now I take i little anil it always helps me and Hiilds me up at once."?MRS. J. W. I'ATirSKTT. Commerce St. M This herbal tonic for women Is made ^ jp in liquid or tablet form, and can he obtained in any drug store. Contains no alcohol or narcotic, and its ingredients are printed on wrapper. Purely in herbal tonic derived from nature's roots and herbs.?Adv. smith's MM "W l Tonic ria, Chills nnri Fever. Also t Tonic. 50c md $1.00 at all Dng Stan*