to* ' t?"S onAn AUTHOR ^*rHE ADVENTUREJ <j SHERLOCK likMz: LHEJ COPvmoHT CYA.COHAff *1 HAVE LIVED." Synopsis --Writing long after the events descrlber. Jack C&lder, Boot farmer of West Inch, tells how, in his childhood, the fear, of invasion by Napoleon, at that time complete master of Europe, had gripped the British nation. Following a false alarm that the French had landed, Jim Horscroft, the doctor's son, a youi.h of fifteen, quarrels with his father over Joining the army, and from that Incident a lifelong friendship begins between the boys. They go together to school at Berwick, where Jim is cock boy ^from the first. After two years Jim goes to Edinburgh to study medicine. Jack stays Ave years more at school, becoming cock boy in his turn. When Jack is eighteen Cousin Edie of Eyemouth comes to live at West Inch. Jack falls in live at first sight with his handsome, romantic, selfish and autocratic cousin of seventeen. They watch from the cliffs the victory of an English merchantman over two French privateers. Reproached by Edie for staying at home. Jack starts to enlist. Edie tells him to stay. Jack says he will stay and marry her. She acquiesces. Jim comes home. Jack sees Jim kissing Edie. Jack and Jim compare notes and force Edie to choose between them. She chooses Jim. Jack trlves up Edie to Jim. A half-dead shipwrecked foreigner drifts ashore at West Inch. He says he Is Bonaventure de Lapp, a soldier of for. tune. The C&lders take him In. CHAPTER VI--Continued. there is "a man out yonder. Maybe he is the one who your father said would carry my letters to the post." ••Yes, he Is fanner Whitehead's man Shall I give them to him?" "Well, he would be more careful of them If he had them from your hand.' He took them from his pocket, and gave them over to me. I hurried out with them, and as I did so my eyes fell upon the address of the topmost one. It was written very large and clear.. ;:v ' -,^-«A£Jlaje6t* =, *u Rol d» Suede - *Stockhola£F* -:is I did not know very much French, but I had enough tb make that out. What sort of eagle was this which had flown lotf our humble' nest? CHAPTER VII. P7 "What think ye ef that, Martha ft aaid be. "You've sold the two black tups after all?" 1 "No, but It's a month's pay for board and lodging from Jock's friend and as much to come every four weeks* But my mother shook her head when die htard It "Two pounds a week Is overmuch," said she. "And it is not wfien the poor gentleman is in1 distress that we should put such a price on his bit of food." "Why, woman, he's turned youi head wi' his foreign trick of speech,- tried my father. "Aye, and it would be a good thing If Scottish men had a little more of that kindly way," she said, and that was the first time in all my life that I had ever heard her answer him back. Our visitor came down soon, and asked me to come out with him. When we were in the sunshine he held out a little cross made of red stones, one of the bonniest things that ever I had set eyes upon. "These are rubies," said he, "and I got it at Tudela, in Spain. I pray that you will take this as a memory of your exceeding kindness to me yesterday. It will fashion into a pin for your cravat" I could but thank him for the present, which was of more value than anything I bad ever owned in my life **1 am off to the upper muir to count the lambs," said L "Maybe you , would care to come up with me and see something of the country?" He hesitated for a moment, and then he shook his head. "I have some letters," be said "which I ought to write as soon as possible. I think that I will stay at quiet this morning and get them written." , • All forenoon I was wandering over tlfe links, and when I got back he looked as though he had been born and bred in the steading. He sat in the .Mg wooden-armed single chair, with the black cat on his knee. His arms were out, and he held a 6kein of worsted from hand to hand, which my mother was busily rolling into a ball. Cousin Edie was sitting near, and could see by her eyes that she had ftiMn orvlnir -Hullo! Hdie," said I; "what's the trouble?" "Ah 1 mademoiselle, like all good and true women, has a soft heart," said he; *1 didn't thought it would have moved her, or I should have been si tent. I have been talking of the suffering of some troops of which I knew something, when they were crossing the Guadarama mountains in the winter of 1808. Ah, yes, it was very bad, for they were fine men and fine horses. It Is strange to see men blown by the wind over the precipices, but the ground was so slippy, and there was nothing to which they could, hold. So companies all linked arms, and they did better in that fashion; but one artilleryman's hand came off as I held tt, for he had had the frost bite for three days." I stood staring, with my mouth open, gjf "And the old grenadiers, too, who were not so active as they used t6 be, they could not keep up; and yet if they lingered the peasants would catch them and crucify them to tlM bam doors with their feet up and a "flfe under their heads, which was a pity for these fine old soldiers. Fo when they could go no farther It was Interesting to see what they would do. BVm- they would sit down and say their prayers, sitting on an old saddle, or their knapsacks, maybe, and then take •ff their boot and stocking, and lean tbelr chin on the barrel of their musket. Then they would put their toe on the trigger, and pouf! It was all over, and there was no more marchtog for those fine old grenadiers. Oh I |t was very rough work up there on the Guadarama mountains." • "And what army was this?" I asked *Oh! I have Served in so many ar- . . Mtles that I mix them up sometimes. |Fes, I have seen nrneh of war. Bit So** that there Joke In his ?The Corrlemulr Pert Tower. * C Well, It would weary me, and I am very-sure that it would weary you also If I were to attempt fo tell you how life went with us after this man came under our roof, or the way in which he gradually came to win the affections of everyone of us. With the women It was quick work enough, but soon he had thawed my father, too, which was bo such easy matter, and had gained Jim Horpcroft's good will as well as my own. One of his first acts was to give my father the boat In which he had come, reserving only the right to have It back in case he should have need of It The herring were down on the coast that autumn, and my uncle, before he died, had given us a fine set of nets, so the gift was worth many a pound to us. Sometimes De Lapp would go out in the boat alone, and I have seen him for a whole summer day rowing slowly along, and, stopping every half-dosten strokes to throw over a stone at the end of a string. I could not think what he was doing until he told me of his own free will. "I am fond of studying all that has to do with the military," said he, "and I never lose a chance. I was wondering If It would be a difficult matter for the commander of an army corps to throw his men ashore here." "If the wind were not from the east," said I. "Ah, quite so, If the wind were not from the east Have yon taken soundings here?" "No." "Your llne-of-battleships would have to - lie outside, bnt there is water enough for a forty-gun frigate right up within musket range. Cram your boats with tirailleurs, deploy them behind these sand-hills, then back with the launches for more, and a stream of grape over their heads from the frigate. It could be done! It could be done!" His mustaches bristl&d out more like a cat's than ever, and I could see by the flash of his eyes that he was carried away by his dream. "You forget that our soldiers would be upon the beach," said I Indignantly. "Ta, ta, ta!" he cried. "Of course, it takes two sides to make a battle. Let us see now! Let us work it out! What could you get together? Shall we say twenty--thirty thousand? A few regiments of good troops. The rest, pouf!--conscripts, bourgeois with arms, how do you call them--volunteers." "Brave men!" I shouted. "Oh yes, very brave men, but Imbecile; ah, mon Dleu, It is Incredible how Imbecile they would be. Not they alone, I mean, but all young troops. War must be learned, my young friend. Just the same as the farming of sheep." "Pooh!" said I, not to be outcrowed by a foreigner. "If we bad thirty thousand men on the line of the hill yonder you would come to be very glad that you had your boats behind you." Sometimes, when he talked, thought he was joking, and at other times It was not quite so easy to say I well remember one evening that summer when he was sitting in the kitchen with my father, Jim, and me, after the women had gone to bed, he began about Scotland and Its relation to England "You used to have your own king, and your own laws made at Edln burgh," said he; "does it not fill you with rage and despair when you think that it all comes to y6u from London now?" Jim took his pipe out of his mouth "It was we who put our king over the English, so if there's any rage It should have been over yonder," said he. This was clearly news to the stranger, and it silenced him for the moment. "Well, bnt your laws are made down there, and surely that Is not good," he said at last "No; It would be well to have a parliament back in Edinburgh," said my father; "but I am kept so busy with the sheep that I have little enough time to think of such things." "It Is for fine young men like you two to think of it," said De Lapp. "When a country is injured It is to Its young men that it looks to Avenge It" "Aye, the English take too much upon themselves sometimes," said Jim. "Well, if there are many of that way of thinking about why should we not form them Into battalions and march them upon London?" cried De Lapp. "That would be a rare little picnic," said I, laughing; "and who would lead usf hand** "If you honor P hi we were laugh also, wap really n% mind. I could never make ottt what his age could • be, cor could Jtm Horscroft either. Sometkiaqp (|ve thought that he was an oltfiftfc' toanl that looked youpg, and at that he was a youngish man who Jpoked old. On the whole, we thought that he might be about forty or forty-five, though it was hard to see how be could have seen 80 much of life in the. time. But* one day we got talking of ageis, and then be surprised us. I had been saying that I was Jtiat twenty, and Jim said thai he was twenty-seven. ' ' "Then I am the most, old of the three," said De Lapp. We laughed at this, for by our reckoning he might almost have iieen our father. "But not by so much," said he, arching his brows. "I was nlne-and-twenty in December." And It was this even more than his talk which made us understand what an extraordinary life it must have been that he had led. He saw our astonishment, and laughed at it "I have lived. I have lived," he cried. "I have spent my days and my nights. I led a company In a battle where five nations were engaged when I was but fourteen. I made a king turn pale at the words I whispered in his ear when I was twenty. I had a hand In remaking a kingdom and putting a .fresh king upon a fresh throne the very year that I came of age. Mon Dleu! I have lived my life." That was the most that I ever heard him confess of his past life, and he only shopk his head and laughed when we tried to get something more out of him. There were times when we thought that he was but a clever impostor-- for what could a man of such influence and talents be loitering here in Berwickshire for?--but one day there came an Incident which showed us that he had, indeed, a history in the past. Yon will remember that there was an old officer of the Peninsular war who lived no great way from us, the same who danced round the bonfire with his sister and the two maids. He had gone up to London on some business about bis pension and his wound money and the choice of having some work given him, so that he did not come back until late in the autumn. One of the first days after his return he came down to see us, and there for the first time he clapped eyes on De Lapp. Never in my life did I look upon' so astonished a face, and he stared at our friend for a long minute without so much as a word. De Lapp looked back at him equally hard, but there was no recognition In his eyes. I do not know who you are, sir," he said at last "but you look it me as if you had seen me before." "So I have," answered the major. t' "JJgver to my knowledge." "But I'll swear it!" . "Where, then?" "At the village of Astorga, la the year '8." De Lapp started, and stared again at our neighbor. "Mon Dleu! what a chance!" he cried; "and you were the English parllamentalre! I remember you very well Indeed, str. Let me have a whisper In your ear." He took him aside, and talked very earnestly with him in French for a quarter of an hour, gesticulating with his hands, and explaining something, while the major nodded his old grizzled head from time to time. At last they seemed to come to some agreement, and I heard the major say "parole d'honneur" several times, and afterwards "fortune de la guerre." But after that I always noticed that the major never used the same free fash- Ion of speech that we did toward our lodger, but bowed when he addressed him, and treated him with a wonderful deal of respect Fabrics Must Be Warm Enough - to Save Wearing Coats Until Cooler Fall Day*. •Sjts.,. BEAOHGB , IS STILL IN EAVQB . y*~ Decoration Molds Sway Despite Recant Adverse Criticism -- Red Belts, Bindings and Fac. tfie'first"breath o? cool weather the dying season's wardrobe begtns to look like nothing at all, observes a New York fashion correspondent. And what is to be done for clothes, for something that resembles the proper sort of clothes, for «bl» halfway period? That Is the problem, and It is comparatively easy to solve when one regards the array of mid-season dresses that the shops are' offering. Even on the streets and in the restaurants there have been evidences that among fashionable women, there has been some thought of preparedness, for maay are the new street frocks that have made thei: appearance. A study of them ipay< save many mistakes. , The dresses of the Intervening season are serge, or satin, for they must be worn without coats and on the street, with hats and furs, just as any suit of the later fall days. Taffeta had Its run through the summer months, but it has reached the time of discard. Black satin or meteor or any of the allied materials Is the thing for street wear, and It has come back Into Its owp. The newer black satin dresses are charming enough to lure even the purchaser who has decided to wait until winter is really upon us. It sounds like an old story to say that the simpler the satin dress the more beautiful It Is. Most of the newer satin gowns for the street are in black--a very few in the darkest of blues or In black--and they are cut on the stralghtest lines possible, with skirts Just a trifle fuller than they have been and necks that are round or pointed, as the case of the individual taste may dictate. A touch of some white thing about the throat and the neckline is a usual thing. It Is more demure in aspect than were the flaunting fichus of the spring and summer. . 4 Skirts Are Fufa»c >; The* skirts of these fitter mewes are full, and they take on this extra width in various, and interesting manners. For Instance, there is the paneled skirt, with loose and flopping breadths at front and back or at both sides, but usually there is a suggestion of an underskirt which gently bugs the figure and allows the fullness of the outer skirt to hang loosely over it. The sleeves are long and loose or tight, as the case may be. Some of them are fitted at the armholes and others are cut in so baggy a fashion as to have almost no shape at all. It all depends on the figure and what It can stand and what is chosen for a particular case, for there is coming to be more and more of a regard for the individual note. Each woman for her own charm and expression Of personality--that Is the new slogan, and tt Is expressing Itself '*i every direction, especially In this case of the street frock. Then there Is the serge dress? which at this season of the year particularly demonstrates Its place In the wardrobe of seasonable frocks. There Is nothing to take Its place--nothing that can step in to make the assertion that it is "just as good." About this blue serge frock there Is everything that Is smart and chle. Vhe newer serge Jim goes back to hk stadias h Edinburgh. frocks are almost sure to be embroidered, at least those which are shown now are so trimmed. JTfctt'ls an em* broidery that can show ^originality, and there Is the best of chances for a distinctive gown when taste is cmptyfred In the selection. The most bprofnl of the embroideries are done by hand, of course; they show all colors of the rainbow combined In one narrow strip. The Oriental quality of tbOse stltcblngs is most charming, and, with the darkness and plainness and richness of a background of blue serge, they have the character of uttermost fineness. A few hand stitches can go a great way in this particular, especially If they are cleverly distributed and if their colors are chosen with a view to making the most of a smaH space. Woolen Stitches Effective. Woolen stitches, on blue serge or trtcotlne, or on any of these materials that In some way resemble one another, ~ are as effective as anything can be, and on many of the newer fell frocks they are seen. Red Is the color that does the most in this respect There are some serge dresses that show only long red woolen stitches, with here and there a stray motif to accentuate the idea of the color combination. Then there are others which are more lavishly worked hp In this same color combination. It if a combination that carries an appeal be* cause of its cheerfulness. . Embroideries following the Roumanian designs or those from Czechoslovakia are the most popular. It to the strip of many colors that has the first place In fashionable trimmings, and, applied to the frock of blue serge, certainly shows beauty and wealth of its texture. • frock of blue serge, one of the very newest to be seen anywhere, has a high girdle sort of belt curved In front to a width greater than at any other place around the waist. This strip Is embroidered solidly in reds and greens and purples. Then, to repeat this brilliant bit of color, there are bands at the hips, each about two and a half Inches broad and twelve Inches long. They are applied so that they hold extra side fullness for the skirt The neck of the frock Is plainly finished by a cord, and the sleeves are ended la the same way, so that all the trimmings are gathered about the waist and the hips. It Is a novel grouping of embroidered strips, and it Is bedutlfuje as an example of what can be done with a small amount of embroidered trimming cleverly applied. Beading on blue serge--and on satin, for the matter of that--criticized not long ago as not going well together, Is 'still "going 6trong," one might say. This only goes to prove that the American woman wants what she wants when she wants It and will not be told that her cherished triipmlng may not be used In this combination. . Red Belts and Bindings. Red belts and red bindings and red facings are popular with the newer bine serge frocks. These touches go a long way toward providing that necessary element of style. One little girl at tea In a gay hotel >.ad a blue serge frock with a short and very full skirt Hke the Parlslennes are wearing. The bodice was short and tightly fitted and a bit "bloussy." The sleeves were tight. The one bit of trimming was a handsomely steel-studded red leather belt not .more than an Inch wide. And with this she wore a fu4zy turban of yellowish tan beaver cloth made to flop over one side of her head. She had tied this on with a tandotted veil, under which her dark hair peeped out at little places, and her appearance was just about as smart a tiling as one could hope to see. Pdrl MtuuM Ttel [ I HOI (•HMHIA _ JUVPHW Bears the Signature -W& aad Rwerfetof®1» Exact Copy of Wrapper CASTORIA THE OCMTMia OOMMKV, MtW VMM «IVT. Soft la Right Say, Mike, wanna make a soft halfdollar?" "Betcha." "Melt it"--American Legion Weekly. ^ ~ Lack of credit prevents some people from living beyond their means. Diplomacy is the art of getting wh3 ^ you want by pretending you don't want It -e,, ' ' ' ' •- '*>' / The man who never looks up la ran* failure when It comes to llf|»";'V lng up. AIMS TO REACH H Pittsburgher, Who Caused' a Sensation, TePs of Results* ANCIENT TONIC HIS SECRET •RI Hundreds ef Thousands Of Families Found Hetlth antf Happlneea bj|" Following His Inetrtictiona. Six years ago H.' H. Von Schlick could be seen any day visiting prominent Pittsburgh business men in their downtown offices. He carried a satchel, and his arrival was always greeted by a smile Indicating welcome. These men were his customers. They drank at his "fountain of youth." They accredit him with a new lease of life and the healthy condition of their families. Von Schlick has bright eyes and his cheeks indicate that pure red blood flows through his veins. He says be was younger at fifty than he was at thirty-five. He has never had a sick spell or any of the symptoms of the ailments Which afflicted him before he began uslug a tea, the Ingredients of which were conveyed to him by an old Bulgarian 20 years ago. Von Schlick makes this statement: "I was recovering from the grippe, was run down, and a dizzy feeling in the head, and .felt like the victim of the hqok-worm* This old Bulgarian knew of my sickness and while in the office suggested, *1 give you Something to make you feel better.' He returned next day with a package and told me to use one teaspoonful In a cup of hot water, and to repeat the <€ose once each night for a little while. He promised I would never be troubled from sickness again. I followed the prescription, skeptical, of 1 'was seek- -f MOTIFS OF PATENT WEATHER <Mr (TO BE CONTINUED.) MANAGED DRAGON BY WIRE Opera House Manager Had Unique Idea for the Direction ef Impw tant Stage "Property." Our Chinese friends would be h^tepested to learn of the way "foreign devils" control dragons. In one of the operas produced at the Metropolitan Opera house In New York the Inside of the dragon, which Is made of canvas and papier-mache, consists of two small boys, who are supposed to guide the beast's movements In accordance with the music. They are rarely equal to doing that correctly, even after rehearsal. A recent performance Is stated to have been given without a sipgle stage rehearsal, since no time could be found for the preparation of the opera. It was, therefore, more than ever necessary to have the occupants of the dragon's Inside kept up to their business. The stage manager decided to install a telephone In the beast It connected with the opera house switchboard. On one end was the stage manager, and at the other were two receivers strapped to the heads of the two boys, who received from moment to moment directions as to what they should do. The dragon under the circumstances covered himself with glory. t Material Used In Appliqwed Form is jpfees as to Make SmaH to Trim Frocks. Among the trimmings, patent leather is used In the form of appllqued motifs, as well as to make small bows to trim frocks of both cloth and velvet An interesting suit In dual tone brown gabardine is ornamented wl^h motifs of btack patent leather. The skirt Is very narrow, but the jacket flares at the sides. It Is lined with a glossy black satin, glimpses of which are shown Inside the standing collnr« the cuffs and at the undulating edge of the basque fullness. Two Interesting suits were made by one of our formost American designers In which patent leather is used in a remarkable way to *orm the trimming. A country suit of rose-colored homespun has very narrow bands of patent leather encircling the bottom of a rather long box coat as well as the bottom of the skirt. There are at least a dozen of these ^ands. They are worked The "Swkn S«n§J* There is an old superstition that the swan breaks into song at the approach of death. Hence the expression "swan song" is often used to refer to a last poem or musical work written just before the composers death. The expression has also been extended to apply to t* last speech of a politician before being forced into obscurity. Columbus Properly Honored. According to the Postal Guide, there are 21 cities and towns In the United States by this name. Stereotyping was Invented In 1726, plaster casts being used in the origover with hear/ gray yarn to form a design of black and gray. The skirt of this model is somewhat fuller than those intended for town wear and is set onto a yoke at hip length. A second «qlt la of 'midnight blue velours banded In the same way With' patent leather, which Is worked over and over with a heavy tan silk to form a checkerboard pattern of black and tan. Fantastic Footwear, The imart Parlslenne conttaMS to manifest the greatest Interest In fancy shoes. Perhaps the very high cost of footwear tn Patls Is one of the reasons why the fantastic styles are so popular. The fair Parlslenne must have somfthlng to make a show for her money. Tfce shoemaker, therefore, must, like the high-priced milliner, create an Individual style for every customer. There Is still n great vogue for strap slippers In black and whltet with touches of bright color. CHOOSE WOOL JERSEY CLOTH Fabric Affords Type of Dreae Dlstlnet- • |?-^,HY©rth. While for • Cool Day* •• A type of dress that Is distinctly worth while for cool days and that Is excellent for the autumn day Is that made of lightweight wool Jersey cloth. In selecting this material It Is important that a firmly woven piece be selected, otherwise it will stretch and the dress lose its smart lines. Tills tendency to stretch out of all shape has been the main objection to the knitted ellk and imitation silk fabrics that have had Buch a run of favor for two or three seasons. A dress of one of these materials usually stretches In length with corresponding shrinkage In width, so that at the end of the season It Is practically un wearable. Much the same thing may happen to the wool Jersey frock unless a closely woven, firm piece of material Is selected. Many of these dresses are made quite straight and entirely nit- Some of the wool jersey dresses being shown are trimmed with ornamental braids in contrasting color. An especially charming one recently seen was of pale tan-colored wool jersey, with an Inch wide satin-finished braid applied as banding about the sound neck, long sleeves and tunite, ' „ For Class-Room Wear. Cotton crepe, often too warm for summer, is Ideal for class-room wear It is a material that lends Itself readily to tubbing, while the Ironing of It is almost a minus quantity. It can be had In the warm, medium shades, lovely deep blues, bright tans, rose pinks, leaf greens, etc., which are becoming to young folks and are almost as practical as the very dark colors. course, and one dajs later lng that old man to secure from him the Ingredients of that tonic. ONE HUNDRED YEARS YOUNQ. "He explained to me that In Bui garla the older families regarded this tonic as the great disease preventative and health restorer; that It was handed down from generation to gen eration. At the first symptom of any sickness the mother or women of tbe family made the tea for all members. It Is a well-known fact that Bulgarians are the oldest and healthiest people In the world "In Bulgaria and the Balkan countries of Eastern Europe, In spite of poor sanitary conditions, among 1,000.000 Inhabitants there are 1.600 over 100 years old. In France there is only one person In 1,000.000 over 100 years old, and In Germany only one person 1,150,000. It Is a rare news Item In the United States when a man dies after reaching the century mark. ~ "My Bulgarian friend Informed me that his progenitors reached this time of life and that they all had a healthy and happy old age. Asked for a Maunder Surveillance. Mrs. Llttiefiat--Tilly, you've left my lingerie scattered all around this room and I'm expecting company any minute. Tilly the Maid--That's all right ma'am. I'll keep my eye on 'em and see they don't pinch nothln'. son he pointed to his tonic. Aftefc i using this tonic for 15 years I aig ready to" guarantee to the world thtS:' It is the best prescription for heal^fe, ;^ existing. Every member of my family takdo one dose each week, my relatives all use it my friends and neighbors ha*|> . been keeping health by reason of tt and hundreds of thousands of peoptfev v. In this city, all sensible and well* known, consider I have done them a|Ji everlasting favor by convincing theipof Its merits. During all the terrible Influenaa' epidemic Bulgarian Blood Tea waff ; used by countless thousands of snfr • • ferers with marvelous success and mt|J: lions of people took It steaming h«|S,«- to prevent and ward off tbe disease. A 15-YEAR TEST. V "After 18 years of experience I aj|, positive that It will prevent slcknesl, It will restore your health by eliminating the poisons. It will regulate disorders of the digestive organs. II will increase poor circulation. It wfll • restore vitality, energy or strength. It will make your brain reaponS splendidly to the strain of modem business. It will give you a healthf, youthful complexion. It will prolong your life and, with proper diet yo* should live to a' ripe old age." Bulgarian Blood Tea today Is used by millions of people in every state In the Union fighting off disease and old age weaknesses. They Include happy girls budding Into womanhood or women, crossing precarious thresh" olds of life. All praise and recommend It Men regain strength and vitality, the blood becomes rich and pure and the flre and vim of robust health return! to those who were hi despair. Bulgarian Blood Tea Is guaranteed to contain just pure herbs of marvel" ous medicinal and curative power. . gathered from fields, mountains and valleys of Europe, Asia and Africa. All drug stores now keep Bulgarian Blood Tea In stock, but, owing to the enormous demand Immediate application to your druggist Is urgent on a•» count of the limited source of supply. . Distributors of Bulgarian Blood Tea are authorised to return the full purchase price If It does not materially Improve your health In three weeW time. This evidence of faith In the power of Bulgarian Blood Tea Is the guarantee of the Marvel ProduCtt' Company. Marvel Building, Plt»- bnrgh, who authorise this public announcement Adv^ . . X'lsfc'. I'Si't II jgl " .j. % k * ' i Odd, lent Itf She--"I see bicycling Is again on Al ;; rise." He--"Yes, In spite of the falt> lng off." » • . There Isn't much hope for a man so ^ deaf he Is unable to hear the note* _ "'1 of a paper dollar: : -iar »> • 'i . Coats for Fsll Sutta, The coats belonging to the new fill suits range In length all the way from the hips to the knees. Fur forms a generous part of the suits. It Is no^ only used for collars and cuffs, but It may be found around the bottom, down J,tbe fcoat or la tha socket l^npL. ^ _ « „ '•ft' Kill That Coif With CASCARA D quinine FOR Ceagks ^OM^V U GriwM Negjocted Colds are 1 Keep this standard xamedy handy for Jhe f Bfaaks np • cold in 24 hone--RaSaveo Grippe in 3 daya--BxcaUant for Haedache Qefalae la Oils form dose not affact the hand--Caaceaa Is leipllis TTn Opiate In Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT r . * - t'*' ">?