Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Oct 1918, p. 2

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* By Albert N. Bepew UHGiibner and Chief Petty Officer, U.S. Navy of the Foreign Legion of France i Gun Turret, French Battleship Catfard Winner of the Croix de Guerre „ Copyright, IMS. br Rellly Britten Co., TVmi|k Special AmM|«B«nt With the G«orge Matthew AAamb 8l»k« GUNNER DEPEW SHOWS THE POILUS HOW AN AMERICAN M NAVAL GUNNER CAN SHOOT. ̂ Synopsis. - Ajbert N. Pepew, author of the story, tells of his service in the United States navy, during which he attained the ranfi V)f chief petty officer, first-class gunner. The world' *war Starts soon after he receives his honorable discharge from the navy, and he leaves for France with a determination to eallst. - ••M' ^ - CHA^_R uu It/ Foreign Leglon.^'^1 *ThIs time I was determined to en- C' " * ' '1st So, when vftt landed at St. Na~ «a!re, I drew my pay from the VSr- p/r* . . sgioian and, after spending a week "fwtth my grandmotlier, I went out and "£ \ \> lasfced the first gendarme I met where p. f " the enlistment station was. I had to JttfV* ^ torSue 'lIm 5:01116 time before he would even direct me to it. Of course \\f ' ^ ^ad no PassP°rt and this made him '.C , rk suspicious of me. V' The officer in charge of the station Itk jjt-<was no warmer in his welcome than K,&- jt>f_ **, the gendarme, and this surprised me, '*!V i because Murray and Brown had no ^ ... ..Vrpnhip at all in Joining, The French, £3 -i,. * ' L"e-i Went Out and Asked the First Gendarme Where to Enlist.* ^ 4 ¥ ** «f course, often speak of the Foreign XfH« | H Xeglon as "the convicts," because so "* fmany legionaries are wanted by the police of their respective countries, K;f'«' . but a criminal Tecord never had been yf ta bar to service with the legion, and I fv f ' not see why It should be now--If Kr-.' ? s(< they suspected me of having one. I iiad heard there were not a few <3er- fr®"®1"*11 the legion--later on I became ^acquainted with some--and believe $ * ' - * '*• w: ;me, no Alsatian ever fought harder i| jagainst the Huns than these former i * Deufcsch 1 tmdera did. It occurred to |L jme then that if they thought I was ja German, because I had no passport, X might have to prove I had been In k* J , [trouble with the kaiser's crew before ^t5j%hey would accept me. I do not know What the real trouble was, but I solved '. jtae problem by showing them my dis- ;¥ charge papers from the American P.": & Aavy. Even then, they were suspicious fit"- f&t they thought I was too young jlto have been a G. Pi Oi When they ^challenged me on this point, I said I '•would prove It to them by taking an ^examination. if They examined me very carefully, ita English, although I know enough JPrench to get by on a subject like gannery. But foreign officers are very jproud of their knowledge of English-- and most of them can speak it--and I •think this one wanted to show off, as ferou might say. Anyway. I passed my ^examination without any trouble, |waa accepted for service in the For- Jstgn Legion and received my commis­ si #don a* «»nner. dated Friday, January | - f c 1 9 1 5 . . , ^ There is no usein my describing the foreign Legion. It is one of the most /'.i1; #ir=cs3 fighting organisations in the Jaorid, and has made a wonderful rec- ©rd during the war. When i joined La |lt numbered p.bout 60,000 men. ;?V ?bday 11 has ,eas than 9,000. They t - aay that since August, 1914, the legion • has been wiped out three timed, and • 1 ' these are only a few men still in 'i^«SP^pe who belonged to the original •efSon. I believe it to be true. In waauary of Oils yeac the French gov- i- t feroment decided to let the legion die. L I wm sorry to hear it The legion fetalres were a fine body of men, and Hvonderful fighters. But the whole ftiyilized world is now fighting the | ̂ Jftuiis, and Americans do not have to ^ fjolist with Ihe French or the Limeys 'g|§ ,'^ny longer. •' But one Uting about the legion, that i V J And many people do not know, is that *he legioQCfllres are used for either |F" ' #und or sea service. They are sent wher- Y;J' ®ver they c<aja be used. I do not know < whether this was the case before the "i" jpreaent war--I think not--but in my ^Eae' many of the men were put Ota -ahftie. Most- people, however, have th* idea that they are only used in the in­ fantry. With my commission as gunner, I received others to go to Brest and Join the dreadnought Cassard. This as­ signment tickled me, for my pal Mur­ ray was aboard, and I had expected trouble in transferring to his ship in case I was assigned elsewhere. We had framed it up to stick together as long as we could. We did, too. Murray was as glad as I was when 1 came aboard, and he told me he had heard Brown, our other pal, had been made a sergeant in another regiment of the legion. We were both surprised at some of the differences between the French navy 'and ours, but after we got used " U, w tfeoofM smar aC their e» tonjs improvements over ours. "But we tould not get used to it, at first. For Instance, on an American ship, when ytra are pounding your ear in a nice warm hammock end lt is time to re­ lieve the watch on deck, like as not you will be awakened gently by a burly garby armed with a fairy wand about ffi? size of a bed slat, whereas in French ships, when they call the watch, you would think you were in a swell hotel and had left word at the desk. It was hard to turn out at first, without the aid of a club, and harder still to break ourselves of the habit of calling our relief in the gay and festive American manner, but, as I say, we got to like it after a while. Then, too, they do not do any hazing in the French navy, and this surprised us. We had expected to go through the, mill just as we did when we Joined the American service, but nobody slung a hand at us. On the contrary, every garby aboard was kind and decent and extremely courteous, and the fact that we were from the States counted a lot with them. They used to brag about it to the crews of other ships that Were not so honored. But this kindness we might have ex­ pected. It Is Just like Frenchmen in any walk of life, With hardly an ex­ ception, I have never met one of this nationality who was not anxious to help you in every way he could; ex­ tremely generous* though not reckless with small change, and almost always cheery and there with a smile in any weather. A fellow asked me once why lt was that almost the whole world loves the French, and I told him lt was because the French love almost the whole world, and show It. And I think that is the reason, too. About the only way you can describe the Poilus, on land or sea, is that they are gentle. That Is, you always think that word when you see ^ne and talk to him--unless you happen to see him within bayonet distance of Fritz. The French sailors sleep between decks In bunks. Instead of hammocks, and as I had not slept In a bunk since my Southerndown days, it was pretty hard on me. So I got bold of some heaving line, which is one-quarter-Inch rope, and rigged up a hammock. In my spare time I taught the others how to make them, and pretty soon every­ body was doing it.< When I taught the sailors to make hammocks, I figured, of course, that they would use them as vpe did--that is, sleep in them. They were greatly pleased at first, but after they had tried the stunt of getting in and stay­ ing in, It was another story. A ham­ mock Is like some other things--It works while you sleep--and If you are not on to it, you spend most of your sleeping time hitting the floor. Our gun captain thought I had put over a trick hammock on him, but I did not need to; every hammock is a trick hammock. Also, I taught them the way we make mats out of rope, to use while sleeping on the steel gratings hear the entrance to stoke holes. In cold weath­ er this part of the ship is more com­ fortable than the ordinary sleeping quarters, but without a mat lt gets too hot , American soldiers and sailors get the best food' in the world, but while the French navy chow was not fancy, it was clean and hearty, as they say "With a Fourteen-lnch Qua | fccored Three D'i." down Bast For breakfast we had bread and coffee and sardines; at noon a boiled dinner, mostly beans, which were old friends of mine, and of the well-named navy variety; at four in the afternoon, a pint of vino, and at six, a supper of soup, coffee, bread and beans. Although the French "seventy-five" Is the best gun in the world, their na­ val guns are not as good as ours, and their gunners are mostly older men Bu| they will glve% youngster a gun rating if he shows the stuff. Shortly after I went aboard the Cas­ sard, we received instructions to pro­ ceed to Spezia, Italy, the large Italian naval base. The voyage was without incident bat when we drooped ""K^t CHAPTER IV. • Qn the Filing UmU * , When I reported on the* Cegeafd after my fourteen days' leave, I was detailed with a detachment of the legion to go to the Flanders front I changed Into the regular uniform of the legion, which is about like that of the Infantry, with the regimental badge--a seven-flamed grenade. We traveled from Brest by rail, in third-class care, passing through La Havre and St. Pol, and finally arriving at Bergues. From Bergues we made the trip to Dlxmude by truck--a dis­ tance of about twenty miles. We car­ ried no rations with us, but at certain places along the line the train stopped, and we got out to eat our meals. At every railroad station they have booths or counters, and French girls work day and nlgjit feeding the Poilus. It was a wyonderful sight to see these girls, and lt made you feel good to think you were going to fight for them. It was not only what they did, but the way they did It, and lt Is at things like this that the French beat the world. They could tell Just what kind of treatment each Pollu needed) nnd they saw to it that he got it. They took special pains with the men of the legion, because, as they say, we are "strangers," and that means, "the best we have is yours" to the French. These French women, young and old, could be a mother and a sweetheart and a sister all at the same time to any hairy old ex-convict In the legion, and do It In a way that made him feel like a lit­ tle boy at the time and a rich church member afterwards. The only thing we did not like about this trip was that there were not enough stations along that line. There Is a tip that the French .engineers will not take, I am afraid. There Is another thing about the French women that I have noticed, and *hat is this: There are pretty girls la !k>" ^ is**: 4Sn * - Ah i Stl \h, in Spezia, the Italian port officials quarantined ua for fourteen days on account of smallpox. During this period our food was pretty bad; in fact, the meat became rotten. This could hard­ ly have happened on an American ship, because they are provisioned with canned stuff and preserved meats, but the French ships, like the Italian, de­ pend on live stock, fresh vegetables, etc., which they carry on board, and we had expected to get a large supply of such stuff at Spezia. Long before the fourteen days were up we were out of these things, and had to live on anything we could get hold of--mostly hardtack, coffee and cocoa. We loaded a cargo of airplanes for the Italian aviators at the French fly­ ing schools, and started back to Brest On the way back we had target prac­ tice. In fact, at most times on the open sea, it was a regular part of the routine. It was during one of these practices that the French officers wanted to find out what the Yankee gunner knew about gunnery. At a range of eight miles, while the ship was making eight knots an hour, with a fourteen-lnch gun L scored three d's--that Is, three direct hits out of five trials. After that there was no question about It. As a result, I was awarded three bars. These bars, which are strips of red braid, are worn on the left sleeve, and signify extra marksmanship. I also received two hundred and fifty francs, or about fifty dollars in American money, and fourteen days' shore leave. AH this made me very angry, oh, very much wrought up Indeed--not.l I saw a merry life for myself on the French rolling wave if thpy felt that way about gunnery. I spent most of my leave with my grandmother in St. Nazaire, except for a short trip I made to a star-shell fac­ tory. This factory was Just about like one I saw later somewhere in Amer­ ica, only in the French works, all the hands were women. Only the guards were men, and they were "blesses" (wounded). When my leave was up and I said good-by to my grandmother, she man­ aged a smile for me, though I could see that lt was pretty stiff work. And without getting soft, or anything like that, I can tell you that smile stayed with me and it did me more good than you would believe, because it gave me something good to think about when I was up against the real thing. » I hope a lot of you people who read this book are women, because I have had it in mind for some time to tell all the women I could a little thing they can do that will help a lot. I am not trying ta.be fancy about it and I hope you will take itJCrom me the way I mean it When you say good-by to your son or your husband or your sweetheart work up a smile for him. What you want to do Is to give him something he can think about over there, and some­ thing he will like to think about. There is so much dirt and blood, and hunger, and cold, and all that around you, that you have just got to quit thinking about it or you will go crazy. And so, when you can think about something nice, you can pretty nearly forget all the rest for a while. The nicest things you can think about are^he things you ilked back home. 1 Now, you can take It from me that what your boy will like to remember the best of all Is your face with a smile on It. He has got enough hell on his hands without a lot of weeps to re­ member, if you will excuse the word. But don't forget that the chances are on his side that he gets back to you; the fl:5mres prove lt. That will help you some. At that, it will be hard work; you will feel more like crying, and so will he, maybe. But smile for him. That smile is your bit I will back a smile against the weeps In a race to Berlin any time. So I am telling you, and I cannot make it strong enough--send him away with a smile. Mt the :er than 'They but about plain the p1ltfft'1tst*'.!h might not sjww It la in action . there is them that you cannot explain. I have never seen an ugly French girl who was not easy to look at. We finally got to Dlxmude, after having spent about eighteen nours on the way. On our arrival one company was sent to the reserve trenches and my company went to the front line trench. We were hot placed in train- Ing camps, because most of us had been under fire before. I never had, but that was not sup&MIMt to make any difference, They si^'.lf you can stand the legion you Can atapd any­ thing.' "*• ^ Before we entered tlM oimmunlca- tlo» ttfenfch, we were drawa up along­ side of a crossroad for a rest, and to receive certain accoutrements. Prettf soon we saw a bunch of Boches com­ ing along the road, without their guns, a few of them being slightly wounded. Some of them looked scared and oth­ ers happy, but they all seemed tired. Then we heard some singing, and pret­ ty soon we could see an Irish corporal stepping along behind the Huns, with his rifle slung over his back, and every once in a while he would shuf­ fle a bit andw(heiii sing somejppre. He had a gria oil him that pushed hie ears back. , i f ' The British"* noncom who was de­ tailed as our guide sang out: "What kind of time are you having, Patf" * The Irishman saluted with one hand, dug the other into his pocket and pulled out enough watches to make you think you were in a pawn shop. "Oh, a foin tolm I'm havin'" he says. "I got wan from each of thlm fellas." We counted fourteen prison­ ers In the bunch. Pat sure thought he was rolling in Wealth. 1 After we 'were rested up !ws were Issued rifles, shrapnel heli&ets and belts, and then started down the com­ munication trench. These trenches are entrances to the fighting trenches and run at varying angles and vary­ ing distances apart. They are sel­ dom wide enough to hold more than one man, so you have to march single file in them. They wind In and out, according to the lay of the land, some parts of them being more dangerous than others. When you come to a dangerous spot you have to crawl sometimes. "* There are so many cross, trenches and blind alleys that you have to have a guide for a long time, because with­ out one - you are apt to walk through Good Looking, and Wei Behaved, Offers Self for Matrimony Mr "Ct" IN "I Qet Wan Pram Each «f Thlm Fel* 'las.1' ( y 4 ' an embrasure in a fire trench and right out into the open, between the German front line and your own. Which Is hardly worth while! If any part of the line is under fir* the guide at the head of the line Is on the lookout for shells, and when he hears one coming he gives the signal and you drop to the ground and Walt until it bursts. You never get all the time you want, but at that you have plenty of time to think about things while you are lying there with your face in the mud, waiting to hear the sound of the explosion. When you hear It, you know you have; got at least One more to dodge. If you do not hear it--well, most likely you are worrying more about tuning your thousand- string harp than anything else. Depew gets his first experience In the front line trenches at Dlxmude and learns how tho% British Tommies "parry on." He tells about it in the next In­ stallment. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Slow Growth of Languages. 8o Jong as government was conduct* ed exclusively )>y a throne and aris­ tocracy, the ruling class was con­ strained to speak one language, that of the court and of polite society. All cultivated people in the land were edu­ cated in the same literary tongue, which was naturally need in official transactions. The uneducated classes talked their own dialects and cared little what their rulers spoke. They have not al­ ways objected even when these men' affected a foreign culture^ Frederick the Great thought himself a French litterateur and spelled bis name like a Frenchman. But when popular elec­ tions were Introduced, and still more whejpi primary schools became univer­ sal, the question of language assumed a far greater importance, A. Lawrence Towell writes in the Independent New Tork. Then the matter of race was hfeaght to the forefront • ^ V ̂ • ' 8he Earned (t 'h£ •' My little daughter came In with a penny. I asked her where she found It, and she said: "I earned it. You fee. Carter called me a bad girl and I was going to fight him, but he had some pennies, so I told him if he would give me a nenny I wouldn't fight him--and he did." Candidate Must Be Nice/lkftlher Bn»> Aette or Blende, but Neither Tpe .targe. Nor-T^ ,, .•man. 1 'goj^dfSapS ft tslii'Because there are so many available JaCkies in town'. -Or perhaps Alvin L. An­ drews, like many Ohi&ago boys, }g a shrinking violet.;; But* at any rate, the girls around here seem to have overlooked a bet. Bashfulness. as in the case of John Aldeh, may be carried too far. .Rath- qt than let things go to stich extremes young Andrews, who Is a city hall employee, advertised i£r a wife in the Elgin newspapers. He has been to Elgin once and seen the girls. He couldn't describe the type exactly, but they were the kind he liked. They were "nice girls*1* as be expressed it. Here's What He Offers. Andrews wants a wife, and: offers the following Inducements: A husband who stays home nights and who never plays cards. A husband who. neither drlpks nor chews. v., • Good looks--tall and attractive. . ,K- Money in the bank. r ^ Two Liberty bonds. \ A good salary. v W v "Yes, he said, "I "«v«r meeting the kind of girl I want While Ililways have lived at home, I'm very lonesome. What I want. Is a home of my own--a little bungalow, yon know* m a l&stf • Plant That Geughs. -j^rench botanist has discovered % plant In Africa that literally cougke !• dear dust from its leaf pore* He Couldn't Describe the Type Exactly. among the birches with a nice girl waiting for you, and a little, curly head with ttrown, bramble-scratched knees, running down the pathway call­ ing "Daddy." "Tlier6 are two other bachelors In "this office. They're getting on to­ ward forty. They want to get mar­ ried the worst kind of way, but they don't know how to go about lt" Here's His Dream Girl* Asked to describe his dream girl, Andrews said: "Shie can be either a brunette or a blonde, but neither too large nor too small. She must be' nice. 1 don't want any girl who dances, as that kind wants to go around with other men. I'd like if if she went to church and was quiet and domes­ tic in her tastes." "Like the girls in Elgin?" he was asked. "Yes--like Elgin girls." WIFE BEATS UP HUSBAND Comes Home Drunk, Starts Rough Houae and Qete the Worst' , of It Akron, O.--The other night officers found an Akron man lying on the side­ walk in front of his home. He was bleeding from several Wounds, and looked as though he had passed through a thrashing machine. He could not tell what happened to him. The officers questioned his wife. "Sure, I did it," she said. "He came home intoxicated and raised a rough house with me and the children, so I beat him up.** on ̂ j Refrigerator cars for carrying meat are pdkes traveling oil wheels. Most people in America wbdld have without fresh meat, or would have to pay more for what they could get, if J* wem not for these traveling ice hoses. ̂r: w * v Gustavus 17. Swift, the first Swift in the packing industry, saw the need of these traveling icei boxes before others. \ > •*% He asked the railroads to build th îri. railroads refused. They were equipped, and preferred to haul cattle rather than dressed beef. So Gustavus F. Swift had to make the cats ' himself. The first one was a box car rigged up to hold ice.. Now there are 7,000 Swift ± refrigerator cars. Bach one is as fine an toft 1% box as you have in your home. iy and night, fair weather said foul, through heat and cold, these 7,000 cars go rolling up and down the country, keeping meat just right, on its way to you. > Thus another phase of Swift & Company's activities has grown to meet a need no one else could or would supply, in way that matched Swift & Company ideas of being ^Useful. : " - * > * V When you see one of these Swift & Company cars in a train, or on a siding, you will be reminded of what is being done for you as the fruit of experience and a desire to serve* Swift & Company, U. S. A. Lend the Way They Fight k - ' : §1;; Caustle Comment Belle--Will is just crazy about me. Nell--Yes. I heard h« had insanity In his family* . ' ' * As soon as a man is elected to offlcf^v; he begins to work tor a second nomlfr * nation. • United States may tax mules and donkeys. It's a queer world but It's th+ queer people' who are in lt that makiy. it so. ^ * - GOOD-BYE BACKACHE, AND BLADDER TROUBLES \ Ends Life by Dynamite* Prentice, Wis.--Worried over family troubles, Charles Peterson, a native of Swedeit and a farmer of this vicinity for twenty years, went out Into a field near his home, 1* Thted the fuse of a Mick of dynamite. Had then calmly bfew himself to pieces. His body was scattered in small bits oyer a Wide radios of his farm. Petflght Fire hi Dream--Hurt New Albany, In<L--Kobert A* TJtss, a city fireman here, dreamed he was fighting a blaze and during his eieep fce twisted his body in such a manner that his shoulder was dislocated. He will not be able to return to his duties for some time. He had a similar caE» perlence some time ago., Pulls Off Man'# Toe. ; Latrobe, Pa.--John Nlmlck Is mlnOS a toe and a local "bonesetter" Is in trouble as a result. When the toe did not respond to treatment, Niinlck says, a strap was fastened to it and the doctor and an assistant pulled until the toe came off at the second ioiat Steals ave and Haircut. Atlanta, Ga.--One shave, one hair­ cut and nine excellent razors were stolen from Pound's uarber shop In South Broad street recently. The only due was hair scattered on the floor. For centuries all over the world GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has af­ forded relief In thousands upon thou­ sands of cases of lame back, lumbago, sciatica, rheumatism, gallstones, grav­ el and toll other affections of the kid­ neys, liver, stomach, bladder and al­ lied organs. It acts quickly. It does the work. It cleanses your kidneys and purifies the blood. It makes a new man, a new woman, of you. It frequently wards off attacks of the 49read and fatal diseases of the kid­ neys. It often completely cures the distressing diseases of the organs of the body allied with the bladder and kidneys. Bloody or cloudy urine, sed­ iment, or "briekdust" Indicate an un­ healthy condition. Do not delay a minute If your hack aches or you are sore across the loins or have difficulty when^ urinating. Go to your druggist at once and get a box of imported GOLD MEDAL Haar* ) lem Oil Capsules. They are pleasanff and easy to take. Each capsule con# tains about one dose of five dropsy- Take them Just like you would anj|^ pill. Take a small swallow of watef if you want to. They dissolve In th% stomach, and the kidneys soak up th#' • oil like a sponge does water. The&^f thoroughly cleanse and wash out th4f bladder and kidneys and throw off the ;i Inflammation wfyieh Is the cause of \he trouble. They will quickly relieve those stiffened joints, that backache^ y rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica, gall*. ^ stones, gravel, "briekdust," etc. They are an effective remedy for all di^ • js eases of the bladder, kidney, liver* stomach and allied organs. Youf^w druggist will cheerfully refund you|<..v, money if you are not satisfied after r few days' use. Accept only the pure-, ., original GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil A'; Capsules. None other genuine.----Advk* -- -fe Indigestion, Bloat, Heartburn, Caused by Acid-Stomach tbe ciim of Mtmttai. 4j» Mpaia, bloat, heartburn, food-rep«atloC. belching, gassy, tour itaMcb, and M many atomacb mtMriaa 1 Juat thu--«ctd- •tomnch--iraperaeMtty ag the doctors call lt. It iota talllloiui of tbatr fall •trongth, vitality and the power to adja? life--to be real men sad women. It la well knows that an add destroys the teeth. The acid la so power, hit that It eats right through the hart •iiHoif! and eau«es tbe te*tn to decay. This is fair warning of whaf neess acid. It/ will do to tbe delicate organisation Of the stomach; as a matter of fact, ex­ cess acidity not only produce* a great Buoy painful and disagreeable symp­ toms that we generally name ' 'Stonmch troubles," but lt is the creator of a loM train of very serious ailment*. Acla^ Stomach Interfere* with tbe digestion autl causes the food to ferment. This Mass of aonr. fermented food passes Into Um Intestines, where It becomes the breeding place for germs and toxic poisons, which In turn ^ are absorbed tBto the blood and distributed through­ out (he entire body. Wherever you go you see victims of atid-stomach -- people, who. while pot actually dowa sick are always ailing-- bare no appetite, food donn't digest, belching all the time, continually com- ' plaining of betas weak and tired and went oat. U fci this skwsb addlgr that takes the pep aod poach out leaves little or BO vitality. Strike at the very cause of all flUfc trouble and clean this excess acid oSt of the stomach. This will give the steak •ch a chance to digest tbe food properly J as tore will do tiie rest, * A wonderful new remedy removes eg- cess add without the slightest dlacota- Itort. It 1a called EATONIC. made la tbe form of tablets--they an good to eat --Just like a bit of candy. RATONIO literally absorb* the injurious sfrttaa add and carries lt away through tbe in­ testines. it drives the bloat out of tbs body--you can fairly feel tt work. Try EATONIC and see bow quickly lt banishes bloat, heartburn, belching, fbod-repeating. Indigestion, etc. Sea too, how quickly your general health Improves -- how much more of you* food is digested--bow nervousness aod Irritability disappear. Lean bow easy It Is to get back your physical aod men­ tal punch. Have the power and energy to work with vim. Bnjoy tbe good things of life. Learn what it means tt fairly bubble over with health. So get a bo* of EATONIC from yoar. druggist today. We authorise him to guarantee EATONIC to • lease you ant you can trust your druggist to maks this guarantee good. If It fail* in *r>y way, take lt back--ho will refund yo«r Kr-: c-v1 -« , i-i %£['} : Mi •i'-i *u& • vA- 'tJ&F. v :>,:V Wk-' M laii

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