fore attaining land. Rat the nature of flint unknown coast was so doubtful I determined to den! out the provisions sparingly, saving every crumb possible. The men grumbled at the smnllness of the ration, yet munched away contentedly enough, once convinced that we all shared alike. "All right, lads," I said cheerfully. "Now we understand each other and can get at work. We'll divide Into watched first of all--two men aft here t»»»milllnmHIIIIHmHm»Hir 5 and one at tlie bow. Watkins and I will take, It watch and watch, but there Is enough right now for all hands 5 ' to turn to and make the cfaft ship- 5 j shape. Two of you bail out that water 5 1 till she's dry, and the others get out S that extra sail forward and rig up a s Jib. She'll ride easier and make better 5 . progress with more canvas showing." 5 j The men gradually knocked off work --t .........E i and lay down, and finally I yielded to iiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiimimiuiiiiiiiiis • Covrright br A. C. McClurg A Oo. of the SEA •«*: RANDALL, PARRISH CHAPTER XXV--Continued. :4 .. ~i7- " J. She turned her head, and I felt her fyes searching the dim outline of my free questioningly. . . *Jj "Of course I did everything I knew," pbe replied. "Why should I not? You Dorothy's pleadings and fell into a sound sleep. It seemed as though I scarcely lost consciousness, yet I must have slept for an hour or more, my head pillowed on her lap. When I awoke Schmitt was again at the steering paddle, and both he and Dorothy were staring across me out over the port quarter. _ • < here. Captain Carlyle, for my sake; "What is Itr I asked eagerly, but I owe y°° service." ' , before the words were entirely uttened 4 "And must I be content mere.T with . a hoarse voice forward bawled out ex- ;|bat thought?" I urged, far fromJ cltedly: Messed. "This would mean tliat your j "There you see It ; straight out agin inly interest in me arises from gratl- j that rt0Ud edge. It*"*: full-rigged lode." schooner." V -And friendship," her voice as confl-1 ..Ay," boomed another, "aft* headin' ,4en;lal as my own. "There Is no res- j straight cross our course astern." *»n why you should doubt that surely." I i reached my feet, clinging to the "It would be easier for ine to under. raast to keep erect and, as the boat not even fire, was more to than a visitation of this awfilt on shipboard. Charnel sbf^ this might be. It was safer ttf j the cockleshell towing alo "Let's find out the truth first. Wen," I said quietly. "Hold your tongues. There is no use giving up until ws know what the danger Is. Will you come with me?" The terror In Sam's eye* caused m« to laugh and my own courage cams back with a rush. "Afraid of dead men, are you? Then we'll face them together, my lads, and have It over with. Come on, now, both of you. Buckle up; there Is nothing to fear, If you do what I tell you-- this isn't the first cholera ship I've been aboard." It was no pleasant Job confronting us, although we had less dead men to handle than I anticipated. Indeed, we found only five bodies on board. There were only two on deck, a giant, coalblack negro, and a gray-bearded white man. his face pitted with smallpox. Determined on what was to be done, I wasted no time with either body. The two sailors hung back, terrorized at the mere thought of touching these victims of plague. I steeled myself to the job and handled them alone, dragging the bodies across the deck and launching them over the low rail into the sea. I ordered Schmitt to cut the lashings and take charge of the wheel. "See here, Sam, and you too, Schmitt, I am in love with that girl in the boat. Do yon suppose I would ever have her come on this deck If I A SPAS Chftab^st^hino at the Mosf j*&- \ 8018,1 places where the wagers ^ ' range from $5 to $56 at roulette, hazmous of American Resorts ard and one or two other contrivances Is Money. ;?V;^T •• - * -a SOCIAL BARRIERS LOWERED .vjfrand, bnt for the memory of what I am--a bond slave." Tour meaning is that true friendship has as a basis equality?" "Does it not? Can real friendship ixtst otherwise?" "No," she acknowledged gravely. JpAnd the fact that such friendship j Ooes exist between us evidences my frith in you. I have never felt this Social distinction. Captain Carlyle, have given it no thought: This may Seem strange to yon, yet is most natwas again flung upward, gained clearly llie glimpse I sought. "Ay, you're right, lads!" I exclaimed "It's a schooner, headed to clear us bf a hundred fathoms. Port your helm, Schmitt--hard down, man. Now, Sanw off with that red shirt; tie it on th«' boat hook and let fly. They can't, help seeing us If there Is any watch oil, deck." •'* We swept about In a wide circle, headed straight across the bows of th«' on-coming vessel. All eyes stared out' ttral. You bear an honorable name. ] watchfully, Sam's shirt flapping above •»d belong to a family of gentlemen, j tts> nnd both watfcifts Jtfid Schmitt v^oa bpld a position of command, won j straining their muscles to hold the ky your own efforts. You bore the ; plunging quarter-boat agafhst the force j,;, «*art of a man in a revolution ; If guilty j of the wind. A man forward on Jiis st any crime, it was a political one, in J knees growled out a curse. Bo way sullying your honor. I have j "What's the matter aboard there?" _«very reason to believe yon were fftlw- I he yellM. "Did yer ever see a boat ly accused and convicted. Consequently that conviction does not exist between us; you are not my uncle's servant, but my friend--you undej$tand Jfte now?" §; "And you would actually hare me ^t>eak with Voti as of your own class-- S free man, worthy to claim your Dricndsbip in life?" v j | "Yes," frankly, her face uplifted. I •Why should it be otherwise? No man ' %«>nld have done more, or proved him- i yaw like that, afore? Damn me, if I believe they got a hand at the wheel." The same thought had leaped into my mind. The schooner was headed to pass us on the port quarter, yet yawing so crazily at times as to make me fearful of being run down. I could perceive no sign of life aboard, no signal that we had been seen. The sight angered me. "Stand by, all hands," I cried desperately. "We'll board whether they sen more stanch and true. We are in j want us or not Slip across. Miss Fairosnger yet, but such peril Is nothing j faXi out 0f the way. Now. Watkins, compared with what I have escaped. I ,'iat y°nr and courage will | ea8y man, don't let her strike us. Lay fry' • "rtas us safely to land. I am no long- j quick, lads, and hang on for your run us In under those fore-chains; us. * afraid, for I have learned to trust i lives. Give me that end of rope-- you. You possess my entire confl- ready now, all of you; I'll make the leap. Now then--hold hard!" t fence. Asvj. "But do you understand fully?" I ^: ftiestioned anxiously. "All I have done < 'tor yoc vrcold have been done for any ether woman under the same conditions of danger. Such service to an- Stber woold have been a duty, and no •ore. But to be with you. aiding and ; % protecting, has been a delight, a Joy. have served Dorothy Fairfax for her -fl*'11 sake--not as I would any other." "Did you not suppose I knew?" U~" ' Her Elance flashed into mine through He star-gleam, with a sudden message », 0f revealment. }f , S "lou knew--that--tliat It was you f-v#ersonaI!y I served ?'\ < !•.%"A... "Of course 1 knew. *A woman is jBerer unaware of such things. Now, If ever, I must tell you the truth. I know you care for me, nnd have cared 4tace first we met. An Interest no less frteful has led me to seek your acquaintance, and give you my aid. Surely it Is not unniaidenly for me to confess this when we face the chance of vieath together?" (^ * "Bnt," I stammered, "I can scarcely ^Ijeiieve you realize your words. I--I •l'* iDve you Dorothy." "And is it not also possible f# me • ,4/i# love?" . - ;* "YOG--yon mean, yon love me?t. ? "I love you--are you sorry?" a' "Sorry! I am mad with the Joy of #; yet stricken dumb. Dorothy Fair- I have never even dured dream of a message from your lips. Dear, -- girl, do you forget who I am? .What my future?" "I forget nothing," she said, proud- "It is because I know what you . . >fa|re that my heart responds. Nor is ' your future so clouded. You are to- i u '* free man if we escape these ^ v Jwrils, for whether Roger Fairfax be <jjUTe. or dead, he will never seek you f ' f>g«ln to hold in servitude. |f alive he Trtll Join his efforts with mine to ob- . tala a pardon because of these serv- ":. " • ices, and we have Influence in Engr ; land. Yet should such effort fail, you •re a sailor, and the seas of the world • are free. It is not necessary that your vessel fly the English flag." "You give me hope--a wonderful hope." / "And courage," her hands firmly clasping mine. "Courage to fight on I in faith. I would have that iny gift to , J you, Geoffry. We are in peril still, «rsat peril, but you will face it beside . me, knowing that whether we live or • die we art together. I am not afraid , f «ay more." It was five feet, and up, my purchase the tossing boat, but I made it, one hand desperately gripping a shroud, until I gained balance and was flung inboard by a sharp plunge of *he vessel. My head was at a level with the rail, yet I saw nothing, my whole effort being to make fast before the grip of the men should. be torn loose. This done, I glanced back Into the upturned faces below. "Hand In slowly, lads; yes, let go, the rope will hold, and the boat ride safely through. Let a couple of men come up till we see what's wrong with the hooker--the nest, of you trail on. Let Schmitt and Sam come with me." I helped them clamber up and then lifted my body onto the rail, from which position I had a clear view of the forward deck. It was inexpressibly dirty, yet otherwise shipshape enough. Nothing human greeted me. and conscious of a strange feeling of horror, I slipped over onto the deck. The next moment the negro and Dutchman Joined me. the former staring about wildly, the whites of his eyes revealing his terror. "My Gawd, sah," he ejaculated. "Ah done know dis boat--it's shore de Santa Marie. Ah's cookfed in dat gal- W* Swept Cly In'a La*ge CII-els. was slaver, sah. : I Aided Her Over the RiH, believed she might contract cholera? You do as I say and you are perfectly safe. Now. Schmitt, remain at the wheel, and you, Sam, come with me. There will be a dead nigger aboard unless you Jump when I speak." He trotted close at my heels as I flung open the door leading Into the cabin. The air seemed fresh enough and I noted two of the ports wide open. A tall, smooth-shaven man, with an ugly scar down one cheek, lay outstretched on a divan at the foot of the after mast, his very posture proclaiming him dead. His face was the color of parchment, wrinkled with age. The negro crept up behind me and stared at the upturned face. "My Gaud, sah, he wus de ol* captain. Paradilla, sah; damn his soul!" In what was evidently the captain's room I discovered a pricked chart and log-book, with no entry in It for three days. Without waiting to examine these I stowed them away in my pocket. Between us we forced the stiffened form of the captain through the open after port and heard it splash into the sea astern. There were two dead seamen in the forecastle, both swarthy fellows, with long Indian hair. I never saw a dirtier hole, the filth overpowering, and once satisfied that both men were beyond help, I was4 content to lower the scuttle and leave them there. God! It was a relief to return once more to the open deck and breaths in the fresh air. I hailed the boat towing below. "Come aboard, Watkins," I called sharply. "Pass the lady up first and turn the boat adrift." . I caught Dorothy's hands and aided lier over the rail. "Why was the vssset' abandoned?" she asked. "What has happened? Do you know?" * Quietly I told her the truth and assured her that if we staid on deck and used' our own bedding and provisions we were in no danger. ( "How can I help you?*1 **Teil the men Just what I have told you," I said gravely. "They will be ashamed to show, less courage than yoti;w ' ' ' We turned and faced them together as they formed a little group against Ae rail. Hallin was first to ^peak. ^ . (TO Bg CONTINUED,) To Make Attar Of RosiiL ^fter having gathered a quantity of ros£s» place them to a Jar, then pour upon them some spring water. Cover the, top with thin muslin to keep out the dust, and expose the Jar to the heat of the sun for a few days, until oily particles are observed to be floating on the surface of the water. Take off tlds oll jsubstance anikplace It In a bottle, This is the perfume known s* "attar of roftes." CHAPTER XXVI. M Floating Coffin. The laboring boat rested so low In ! sniffed the air. "A kin smell dem nig New|y-ftH*de Millionaires Strut About the Place to Display the Wealth They Acquired During the War --Gambling Is Heavy. Saratoga, N. Y--The cheapest thing In Saratoga Is money. Everybody has ft ic< abundance off and on and spends it with the abandon of the drunken sailor In the old song. Cierks bet $1,000 on a horse at the rac- tracks. Newly made rich pile up checks and counters on cards and the elusive roulette ball. Men throw dollars around as they tised to toss dimes. Women accustomed to ginghams and rhiuestones gladden the eye and stimulate- the sense of humor In their efforts to carry with grace silks and dinmonds. The most suitable .is discarded for the most expensive. Extravagance nnd a contempt for money values intrudes itself at every turn on the picturesque streets of the most famous of American resorts, and oldest of the cures, In the corridors Of the great barn-like hotels, at the race track, In the dining places and in the lake sections and flits by in the bewildering parade of flashy motorcars. Natives Reaping Harvest. And anybody who knows the ruling passion of Saratoga doesn't. need to be told that the prudent native is getting his. What escapes him falls to the hotel keepers, the bookmakers, the sleek and rat-faced gentry that cap for sequfstered resorts of chance where the; green cloth, the dealing box and the other Implements of their craft are to be found without much difficulty. , The crowds that flock to the race courses are greater by thousands than ever before. AH the old socfal barriers have been broken down and trampled under foot by the crowd that comes from the financial marts of Wall street, the resorts of upper Broadway, the bench nnd forge, and forest and mine and farm, upon which the fortunes of war "have smiled. The number of resorts where women are admitted to the gaming tables Is probably less1 than four; In the. for getting the money women are not admitted. It is not considered clubby to advertise the location or names of the owners of the gaming establishment because it might stir the local officials to interpret too literally the legal inhibition against such enterprises. There has already been more or less trouble--for the gaming purveyors-- as It Is. During the first week of the racing season all games were closed up for three days, due to a misunderstanding as to the number that were to be privileged--and the failure of certain other negotiations that afre of interest to politicians. The greater part (It the women are ot the middle class type. The display of gowns and gems Is, If anything. more striking than in the other days when Saratoga had "atmosphere." Almost every woman that passes in review seems to have prospered from the wai. if diamonds be accepted as convincing evidence. One woman was at the Union whose maid--she had one--had displayed great Ingenuity in finding vacant spaces on her mistresses' frock on which to pin a stupendous assortment of brilliants. Her husband made a fortune out of scrap Iron in Chicago. Another woman, whose costume no san* man would attempt to describe, seemed to run to pearls. She wore more than any two women has ariy right to possess. Each Beauty in Harem Demanded a Gold Tooth. Trials of a toothpuller in a harem were described by Dr. A. S. Hungerford of Teheran. Persia, who visited Toledo on his wsy back to the Pacific coast. Fourteen years as the royal dentist for his majesty, the Shah of Persia, who has a nifty harem in his palace, has convinced the dentist that life with a surplus of beautiful spouses does not have all the traditional Joys. One of the doctor's first duties In the Shah's palace was to pull a tooth for a. member of the harem. When the dentist finished her beauty had been enhanced by a brilliantly flashing gold bicuspid. Such Jealousy did this addition to her beauty strike in the hearts of the harem that forthwith th(?y all went salaming and sobbing to the Shah, charging his majesty with partiality. His majesty got out of the difficulty by ordering a gold tooth for each of them, but to even matters up ordered three United States molars for himself. , lng that woman up is like putting gold harness on a mufe." 4 But for all the vanities and Jealousies the women seem to be having as gooo a time as the men and to be as well supplied as they with all the money necessary to pay for It. Because the statement made at the be- The combination of j ginning of this chronicle holds good dazzling colors and gems provoked one | to the end. The cheapest thing In of the new voters to cohiment, "Dress-1 Saratoga is money. „ „ , ERUPTIONS FOR THE SCIENTISTS Juneau, Alaska.--Volcanic peaks in the far southwestern corner of Alaska are in eruption this summer, evidently for the benefit of a party of scientists sent by the National Geographic society to study Mount Ivatniai, the greatest of Alaska's smoking mountains, and its "Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes." Persons who have returned recently from the volcanic country to the westward said Shishaklin peak, on Udimak island, In the Aleutian chain, was in eruption recently. They also reported HOST REMARKABLE SHIP LAUNCHING > The Luke Kugxrd, uu emergency Heel vessel luuuched ut Bulhilo. lipped to the extraordinary angle of 73.8 degrees and in seven seconds righted herself. A ship usually capsizes if it tips to an angle of 60 degrees. The Lake Fugard Was launched with engines aud everything else Installed und steam up. It was believed Mount Bavloff on the southwestern Alaskan mainland, also had spouted, as the sqow about the summit was.coal black. - When the party of scientists left Anchorage. Alaska, on their way to the Katmai country, they said they believed there- was little likelihood of an eruption this summer and declared they were certain there was absolutely no danger attached to the investigation. Katmai's last big "blowoff" was In June, 1912. The party of twenty-six scientists is headed by Professor Robert A. Griggs of the University of Ohio, and some are from Carnegie Institute. They were planning to make observations of the botanical, biological and geological effects of the 1912 eruption. In 1913 Professor Griggs headed a party of scientists to Katmai and Veturne^ with the announcement that the crater was the largest on the globe and that near Katmai. lay a great valley whose floor was dotted with thousands of mouths vomiting gray vapory gas and smoke. This valley Prof. Griggs named "The Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes." Instead of 10,000, K Is sa Id there are literally millions of smoking vents. Congress recently set aside "The Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes" as national property, and It is believed that some day It will be a second Yellowstone geyser field. Steaming springs, it is said, will eventually take the place of the present smoking vents. Professor Griggs and his party expected to remain in the Katmai district until the middle of September. Until they return nothing probably will be heard from them, as there Is no direct means of communication. Moving pictures of the smoking mountain and valley are being taken. YAP AND ITS PEOPLE Interesting Facts About the tittlo Pacific Island .. ! v water It was only as we were thrown upward on the crest of a wave that I could gain any view about through the pallid light of the dawn. It was all a desolate, restless waste In the midst of which we tossed, while above hung masses of dark clouds obscuring the sky. We were but a hur- ; tling speck between the gray above and the gray below. The first thing needing my attention •was the food and water. I crept for- , ward cautiously and soon had San* busily engaged in passing out the varl# ous articles for inspection. Only es» •entlals had been chosen, yet the supply seemed ample for the distance I believed we would have to eover begers right now;, sah. Ah suah reckon dars a bunch o* ded ones under dem hatches right dis minute." Schmltt's hand fell heavily on my sleeve and I glanced Into his stolid face. "I Just bet I know, vat min der ble." "What, man?" "Cholera," he wMsptradV boarded a death ship." v "7. "M, . CHAPTER XXVtl. ^ . .i" ' tin Board the Slaver. The terror of the two men as this thought dawned upon them in all its horr«jr was apparent enough. Nothing, '••i :.v '• ' K" Soul That Is Trolly Great. Ttnerson, that greatest of modern philosophers, has told us that It Is easy when in a crowd to allow ourselves to be swayed 1>y the opinions about us and comparatively easy to keep our individuality and sweetness when alone, but that the great soul Is he who In the midst of a mass of other individuals I can still k«ep the poise and sweetness of solitude, ^ \ . ^ Work and Worker* > There-is not so much difference tn the world's work as in the world'* workers. It is not so much difference what we are doing--so long as It Is useful--that counts as the way In which we are doing it. The work of which we are ashamed we either have no right to do, or we are nut doing It as we should. Food, Drink and Clothes All Obtained From Trees--Men .Jtovi* . Bachelor Clubs. Washington.--Since the little Island of Yap was mentioned the other day st the White House conference between the president and senate foreign relations committee, there hus been a general demand for Information about this former German |K>ssession, which the American navy wants for a cable and wireless station. v According to the National Geographic society It Is the westernmost of the western Caroline islands, ia situated kbout 500 miles southwest of Guam aud SU0 miles east of the island of Mindanao of the Philippine group. It has s population of about 7.000. Ynp> Is strangely old and strangely up to date. Its Inhabitants are still In the stone age of progress. The natives are strict prohibitionists. Bachelor clubs closed to the women dot the lslauds. Food and drink and clothes all grow on trees. In Yap wealth Is truly a burden. A single coin of their stone money sometimes weighs hundreds of pounds. Yap, or Uap,* when translated, means the land, and Is the only land that many of the Islanders know. Married aud unmarried men aIKe belong to the cfttb, Which maintains a fine fallu. or bachelor house, the hostess of which must be secured by force or cunning from some distant tribe. There she lives under a polyandrous system where no man becomes Jealous and the wives of the village never object to their husbands' evenings at the club. The chief decoration of the male Is m string of pink shells made into a necklace, and since no man Is rich enough to own such a treasure the best ones are louned out for such a period as the wearer may choose to be dressed In the height of fashion. As there are no button holes, the man may wear two bouquets In each ear, a sort of cordage bunch In a large hole In the lower lobe and a small boutonnlere in a smaller hole in the ear higher up. Shell cuff? made of conchs add the finishing tou£b to the correct attire. Yap women do not wear the veil. Their only dress is a voluminous skirt, made of leaves of fiber and composed of four or five thicknesses. Although one month Is the average life of a woman's dress, the style does not chuige. ' ;"i~i Preacher'Weds at Ninety-Four. New York.--ltev. Moses Allen, itinera p' preacher, applying for a marriage'license, gave his age as ninetyfoui. "I atn In the golden seasou of life. It Is not good that man should be alone," he said. Hia bride-to-be la only half his age. WANTED HER DOG UNWITCHED | that the rooster, hearing a commotion among the . younger polutry, investigated, and vanquished the Intruder aftei a vicious battle. Mr. Lauffer had 15 half grown chickens, and 16^ ducks killed before the raider met Dla doom. Pennsylvania Woman Asked the Ft* oral District Attorney for Help. v< but Got Nonet , RWHstnirg.--"My dog it bewitched; what can you do to help iue|" pleaded a woman at the district attorney's office. "Its name Is Lady. The woman that did it Is a witch. My poor dog didn't eat for two weeks. Whenever I go away from home Lady keeps house for me, but this woman bewitched It. and I want the dog to get well again." No one in the district attorney's |office knew of any mugle word ttt|t could unwltch the dog. Rooster Killed Raccoon. Greenshurg, Pa.--The mystery ofthe disappearance of many of his fine fowlr- was solved when Cletu Lauffer, near Harrison City, went to his. henhouse and was surprised to find lying dead a big raccoon.'and standing over him triumphantly crowing, one of his Aptt Vig roosters. The Watermelon Rinds a Problem. SSvannah, Ga.--From 40 to 50 tons of watermelon rinds daily are being gathered by the garbage "force of the Savannah health and sanitary department. The problem was not gathering but disposing of them. They cannot be put through the ordinary disposal process for trash and garbage--for the water In the melons puts out the flre In the Incinerator. Special teams are required to haul them outside the city and dump them in suitable places. al London-Paris Air Freight. vtXHidon.--A new freight and passen get airplane-service between London, and P»»r's has lieen inaugurated. A machirte currying « general cargo made a round trip, starti.u.sr at 9 a. m. ft-rip TUNIS AS AERIAL CENTER African City Has Vast Program for ' Aviation Service Over the , Mediterranean Sea. Tunta.--The Tunisian eomralssidB of aerial transports has drawn up a vast program of colonial aviation and recommends that a great aerial transport center be established here to centralize aerial traffic over the Medlterraneain sea. The commission argues that Tunis occupies an advantageous position at the Junction of French nnd international Mediterranean pnd that a regular aerial service should be established between the city of Tunis and the rest of this French protectorate. Already a line of airplanes Is in operation between Gabet and the frontier'of Tripoli. Thin m*} be exteuded later to Tunis. "Tongue Her Only Weapon." London.--"Her tongue Is a wotngn't only weapon of offense; her tears hei Honnslow. County of Middlesex, and j only defense." remarked Justice Cole lUppnaHlwu to, ru'iinnM'ijf *>'4r> the aftcrnooi*. iu a «lauder suit.. - *! j t 4 '*• . ' ' . ' ' ' I teak for foot to r eould scarcely do ay work, and a* I Bvi a small farm Iraiaertx hut chickans every it made it vety foe me. v*. "I the Go x pound advertised rsfa"4 my health so I can do all my1 I arc so grateful that I am recommend* ing it to my rrienda."-- Mra. JDK ALTERS, R. K. 4, Oregon, 111 Only women who have sufforad the tor* tares of audi troubles and havedra along from day to can nun relief which this famous root and rsmedv, LydiaE* Pinkbun's Vecatabl^, Compound, brought to Urs. AKst-s. J : Women evenrwhere in Mrai AJters*|> condition should proftt by |wr recom*^ -; meadatioo, and if there are any «tn*f': g(cations writ* Lydia E. 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If vour back is lame and achv and your kidneys irregular; if you nave '^>lue spells," aick headaches, nervousness, dizziness and rheumatic pains, use Doan't Kidney Pfllt. Thev have done wonders i worn women. for thousands out An Illinois Case Mrs. John Hicks, 321 8. Thirteenth St.. Mt. Vernon, 111., says: "1 had a severe case of kidney trouble. I used to be so dizzy I would often topple over at my work. My head ached and pained all the time and there was a heavy, dragging feeling through my hips and loins. Headaches were a lot of ti-ouble and my kidneys acted too often. I got Doan's Kidney Pills and used two boxes. They put my kidneys in a healthy condition and I was cured of the backaches and other suffering." Cat Dtu t Any Store, 60e a BCB DOAN'S •VfJiV FOSTER-MfLBURN CO* BUFFALO. N. T. BAD BREATH Often Caused tyF How can -yon« with a aonr. t««l stomaoh. who ia constantly belching, hal heartburn and anifera from indigestion hav| inythlnt bat a bad breath T All of thej fltnmach disorders mean Just one thlna- Ariil-iStomarh. *.r EATONIC, the wonderful new stomaosE : remedy tn pleasant tasting tablet form you eat like a bit of candy, brings quic^ relief from theae atomach miseries. KATONi> r IC sweetens the breath because it makes tl'S. •tomach sweet, cool and comfortable. Try iff; .,, for that nasty taate, congested throat sn« "heady feeling" after too much smoking. If neglected. Acid-Stomach may cause yoi a lot of eerlous trouble. It leads to ner» vou'nese, headaches, insomnia, melancholia rheumatism, sciatica, hsart trouble, ulce and cancer of the stomach. It makes It millions of victims weak and miserably listless, lacking In energy, all tired out. often brings about chronic invalidism, pr mature old age, a shortening of one's da) Tou need the help that EATONIC can git vou If you are not feellror as strong well as you xbould. You will be aurpr to see how much better yoa will feel Just soon as yoa begin taking thla wonderfu atomach remedy. Get a big ID cent bo| from yoar druggist today. He will retu your money If you are not satisfied. FATONIC mmCTo* T60R AOP-STOMAaD FRECKLES Positively Removed by Dr. Berry's Freckle Ointment Your Druggist or by M»>! 65c--8end for Free Booklet Dr. C H. Bsny Go* 297S MtcMgan Avs. Qtfcags Bests. Befralts. SssAst, •Beessltss----KKeeeepr your E~y et Strong and Healthy. If t heytire. Smart, Itdvof _ , Burn, if Sore, Irri_ ,wjR tlU Inflamed orGranula. use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Ad At all Drumists. Write for Free Eye Bo CysBsnsCsstptBy. CMcafs* 0. S ** . * - V v ? ,