•- '•" "* r.^v :^-1 '* >7 ' -V ^ - \ <" t* t 1 *-*•,*• •»" * £1 mis HeHBNltT FLAINDEiLBEf McHishKT, XLI*. -, "'•ft'*' ¥ 4p>\* Delicate Frocks YOUTH TIPS "CRIME «s< CAREER"I is JAILED M k_:._ •;. - i f.; Xace 1* one element In the subject f 4ff dress that needs no urging. The very word conveys the Idea of luxury, of refinement, of elegance. As a mode lace appears In cycles. It was accepted years ago as the proper trimming for every dress occasion, and everybody that aspired to be anybody bought, inherited or otherwise acquired fine laces. Every woman of fashion had collars, berthas, flounces of lace. The frocks of children of the affluent were trimmed with sheer valenclennes, dowagers wore shawls and garnishment of point duchesse or other rare variety, and a bride who bad family tradition Was expected to display its evidence In a wedding veil of old lace. Then, wearying of the usual, the Women of fashion used no lace, or almost none, for season after season. One reason was, perhaps, that the old sort was Incongruous with modern j dress, and little that was new come out. Another was the extreme simplicity of the styles that.have been the rage until Just lately. Now, because women are bored with severity and unrelieved plainness, lace has come back "atrong.". The vogue has been growing for three seasons and has engaged the talent of some of the leading artists of Paris, whose lace gowns are achievements made possible by the great variety of charming novelty laces and the revival of some of the beautiful old types, real and Imitation. Spanish, Bohemian, chantilly, shadow laces are popular for entire gowns, or In combination with the material, and •ome particularly charming models have been established by prominent hemlan or chantilly, the erase for which has not lessened. Nothing, after all, approaches chantilly in beauty and decorative quality, and an evening dress of white chantilly Is the very quintessence ot daintiness. A three-piece costume presented by Doucet as one of bis season's Butcesses It built on a foundation of ivory Budding Holdup Is Alio• gether Too Trustful. Chicago.--To hum! An enterprising young holdup man simply doesn't know whom to trust these days. Take the case of James Allen. James resides at 507 West Madison street and Is twenty-one. James Is ambitious. He reads the crime news and even keeps a scrap book. Some day, he hopes to see his own lurid exploits recorded In type. James, however, Is a trusting soul, withal. Had he not been, he doubtless would have thought twice before he strolled up to an unknown young man of about his own age at the corner of Madison and Jefferson streets the other night and began to unburden his suppressed desires. "See," he said, 'Tve got a gun and everything." James displayed a revolver, which he had concealed by th£ novel means of hanging it down his back with a strap. Then he produced his clippings. "It's easy," he boasted. "See all these Jobs. I was In on all of 'em/' The stranger appeared properly impressed. '•Tell you what," said James, "you come back at ll.:30 and we'll pull something." The stranger kept his promise, but with him came Policeman McNamara of the Desplaines street station. James today is in a cell. "Just a kid," the police say, *wh6 thinks he's a hard egg." > • Bsru Silk Lace Over Peach-Colored Satin. nodlstes for summer afternoon and evening gowns. Tulle net and chiffon have been almost entirely superseded by the new lace gowns, and some important styles of striking character have been received by exclusive shops In New York. White Lace Gowns. In white the lace gowns are enchanting, particularly In Spanish, Bo- Gray Lace Over Mauve Satin, With Sash. crepe de chine. The gown Is of the fjpiain crepe, simply made and slightly draped by being caught up with a cluster of small tucks over each hip. It Is round at the neck, which is bound simply with the material. The coat, seven-eighths length, is straight and has around the bottom a heavy applique Ivory lace, with which also the straight coat sleeves are finished. A narrow collar of white fox adds a touch of importance to thi« charming ensemble. In addition tq the conventional black or white in gowns of nice, some new things have been successfully presented, illustrating the artistic possibilities of the colored laces. A dream of ja gown Is made of gray lace over a .slip of mauve satin, to which Is added a sash of powder blue satin ribbon with a bow and long ends directly in front Doucet has illustrated in one of his latest creations the charm of silver gray satin over black satin, and another successful combination is achieved by Berthe Hermance with ecru lace over flesh-colored crepe marocaln, with a lace sba^rl aRpllqued, and draped in most effectively. An effort is made by some prominent couturieres to bring Irish lace back into favor. It Is chic and smart, as always, on linen frocks. Summer silks, crepes and voiles, as collars, yokes, cuffs or trimming, and some of the new patterns are lovely. But the present Styles in gowns are too soft for Irish lace, and the lighter more cobwebby laces are preferred. The real laces In flounces, wide and narrow and in "sets," now being shown by some of the best houses, are a Joy. There are beautiful examples of duchesse, rose point, point d" Alencon. point de Venlse, point applique. In graceful shaped berthas, cape collars and straight. Valenciennes is seen somewhat, but more than anything on lingerie, baby clothes and for trimming boudoir trappings. Metal Lace on Evening Gowns Metal lace is seen on some of the evening gowns. Redfern, for example, has designed a stunning dinner gown * which will answer as well for dancing. The dress itself Is made of liberty aatin, sheathlike, decollete and sleeveless. At the line of the knee is appllqued a circular flounce in points where it meets the satin, or silver gui- " pare lace over chiffon. Another luscious thing is an evening (own of Beers' designing, in rose-colored chiffon beaded In crystal. The beading is done In narrow strips from neck to hem, each finished Just below the knee with long tasseled drops, over a circular flounce of the chiffon, of which is made also a long scarf, attached to the skirt at the back and long enough to be carried over the yf. arms and shoulders. The beaded gowns rival in favor the new styles In colored laces which / women are finding to be most complimentary to figure and complexion. The laces, softly tinted golden brown, veiling the slips of Ivory, peach or yellow, are Indescribably delicate, with a cobwebby effect, and are even more elegant than the black lace--especially In the warm weather evening models. Doeuillet has made for midsummer wear several of these tinted lace gowns. One of cocoa color, very sheer, veils an apricot-colored satin slip and has touches of gold lace introduced in the bodice and the slightly draped skirt. A large gold rose -Is attached at one side, where the skirt is lifted at the hip line. Silver gray silk lace over aquamarine satin Is a beautifully conceived combination that suggests moonlight on a summer sea. The colors run the scale In shades of ecru, beige, brown, gray, tangerine, blue and even bright scarlet, It Is In the scarf that lace is most happily used, and the Ideas expressed In the arrangement of a lace scarf In the drapery of a gown are many and i»hnrn)lny Popular Color Scheme Bright red used alone or red and white combined are conspicuously featured in the modes of summer. Summer Silhouette Is Straight and Slender The summer silhouette remains straight and slender but Is gradually discarding its simplicity, says a fash- Ion writer in the New York Herald- Tribune A charming evening model j§ developed In brilliant cerise crepe and is embroidered with red crystal beads and Imitation seed pearls. This embroidery follows the lines that swatlie the figure and ripple off into borders which outline a series of scant flounces. A beautiful flower In mauve and cerise tones marks the rendezvous for the numerous ripples of an intricate outline. Full-length, tight fitting sleeves are a characteristic of the mid-season evening dresses for semi-formal occasions. Ruby red fulgurante is the most modish fabric for these frocks which are entirely devoid of any trimming detail, the straight, chemise line Is often broken by scarf-like draperies which cross the front and then disappear In flowing Oriental lines, giving somewhat the effect of the harem skirt. &«cb dresses an Mtleae and formless though revealing every curve of the figure. The decotyetage is at square outline. « Fashion in Wraps . Stoee far more women watch spott* lng events than take part In them, the wrap this year has taken on particular importance. The cape of three-quarter length Is one of the outstanding features of the season, with the shawl cape, the newest development This resembles a shawl loosely thrown about the shoulders, but usually It la attached to the dress itself at the neckline. Thirteened to Death, /> Justice's Verdict Fort Worth, Tex.--Thirteen was an tmlocky number for II. B. Craig. At 8:13 o'clock Friday, the 13th; he was killed by an Interurban train running between Dallas and Fort Worth. When the Inquest was conducted by a justice of the peace It was discovered that In his pocketbook he had 13 cents and a rabbit's foot. A poll tax receipt was found on his person. The receipt was Issued In 1921, which added together, totals 13. The man's age was forty-nine, which also totals 13. He lived on the 1300 block of a Fort Worth street and his voting precinct was numbered 58, also totaling 13. The justice of the peace, after announcing his verdict, added the following to the coroner's report: "It is also my opinion that the deceased was thirteened to death." Sleep Disturbed, Man Shoots Snoring Pigeons Detroit.--How much noise does a pigeon make when it Is asleep? The police were called on a report that some one In the neighborhood was firing a number of shots. They found Albert Swatek, No. 3208 Wesson avenue, leaning from his bedroom window, firing a small caliber rifle at a spot on the roof. He was shooting at pigeons. Investigation disclosed, and he had killed several of them. "I can't sleep," Swatek told the police. "These pigeons sleep on my roof and t^ey make so much noise they keep me awake." Impressed by the shicerlty of his story, the police did not arrest Swatek. Bride Frightens Kin in Poison Hoax During Scrap Cedar Rapids, Iowa.--Mrs. Fern Eagle, her husband and her small son had come from the country to visit her sister at Marion. There WJP* a family quarrel and the young bridt'went In apother room crying and came out saying she had swallowed poison. She was rushed to a hospital. Physicians made an examination and declared none of the drug had entered her mouth. She confessed she only smeared her lips with the poison to frighten her relatives. Now they say there will be no more family scrap*. Young Interne Cuts Out Own Tonsils Norfolk, Va.--Dr. Benjamin F. Bailey, young interne at St. Vincent's hospital, with a set of borrowed Instruments and by the manipulation of small mirrors, successfully removed his own tonsils, to the amazement of several surgeons who waited in an adjoining room for the daring medico to faint. He Is resting easy, the hospital reports. Local medical men declare they never heard of a similar Incident. Buried Fifteen Years, Watch Keeps Time J Kodak, Tenn. -- After being J' lost 15 years, a watch was un- i earthed by T. L. Mount In a cornfield at kodak. The case, originally nickel, was badly tarnished, the crystal scarred, but not broken, and the ring missing from the stem, but outside of this the watch was found to be In excellent condition, with only one small rust spot visible. The watch was washed with gasoline and began running without rewinding. It is still running and keeps correct time. • Roman Striped Ribbons The vogue of Roman striped ribbons which recently returned has offered a clever means of lengthening too short dresses, as well as adding a note ot gayety. On taffeta two wide bands of Roman striped ribbon are set In tha skirt, which is gathered on a tight tilting basquewaist. A Bear of a Curfew! Westchester, Pa.--There is no need of a curfew law at Elkview, a small town In the southern section of Chester county. A big Canadian bear Is taking care of that. Timid women and children are remaining Indoors after sunset and traveling but little during the day outside the dooryards. Bruin was a pet in the family of Mr. C. Chambers. It was turned loose for exercise recently, and since then has been wandering about the locality. " DYING BANDIT SOBS PRAYER . MOTHER TAIJCHT Jazz-Mad Youth Is Shot to Death While Attempt• ing a Holdup* • V Eos Angeles, Cal.--A boy bandit, M the flash of a moment of realization after the first shock and pain of gunfire that had brought the universe tumbling on him in a blaze of colored lights and crushing his life out with its falling weight, foxppsd Ui Hp« tt words and said: "Gentle Jesus--H " Seven men, standing about a card table with the smoke still curling from the throat of a pistol In the hands of one, caught but the last word and took It for the curse of a #hard guy" In the teeth of fate, says a copyright dispatch to the Detroit News. But when they told her about It, the boy's mother knew---for the words brought back memories of the evenings when he knelt at her knee, and in his faltering childish voice repeated after her: ' - v.;*::',' "Gentle Jesus, meek and mild Look down upon a little chllth-* Her Only Consolation. She knew that lier boy had died with a prayer on his lips, and therein lies her consolation. For she believes' that the prayer, the cry of a dying sinner, winged ltsway to the high ft Cultivation Is Very Important Feeding Roots of Plants Must Be Given Chance to Penetrate Soil. All the fertiliser in the world without proper cultivation won't make a good garden. If a gardener expects to have a garden without cultivating early and ofteu, he will be disappointed. He might as well give tip at the start. Cultivation not only acts as a fertilizer, but saves fertilizer. It also saves water bills In dry weather. The first object of cultivation Is to secure tilth--that Is a fine powdery condition of the soli so that when turned over It will fall apart easily and not separate Into big, soggy lumps that need to be hammered to be broken. It Is apparent that the small feeding roots of plants can penetrate and secure their food much more readily in a well-tilled, friable soil than in a heavy, lumpy, soggy one. >7- Cultivate Every Week. The garden ^should be gone over rind cultivated once a week. By this is meant not only the destruction of weeds but the stirring of the soil about the plants. Cultivation should be done after a rain, as soon as the soil has drie£l out enough so as not to be muddy and stick to the tools. This would result only In a lumpy condition. Cultivation just before watering in dry times will also tend to make the soil lumpy. Cultivate after watering to keep the moisture In the ground. There is a right time to cultivate and It will pay a gardener to study the soil until he recognizes the condition which will permit fine cultivation as soon after a rain or after watering as possible. Cultivation helps to retain moisture • in the soil by establishing a thin covering of thinly divided soil often called a dust mulch. This does not evaporate moisture as rapidly as a closely packed surface nor does It act as a Bponge to draw up moisture from below as rapidly as does firm and unstirred soil. Drawn to the surface by capillary attraction the sun and winds soon take moisture away. Cultivate more frequently in dry than wet weather. An Inch or_tsouln Formed His Lips to Words and Said: "Gentle Jesus--" gates of Heaven and earned forgiveness. . - - : . - So comes this boy bandit, with the dying prayer on his lips, to complicate the problem of modern life, Just as Its solution was being accepted as a matter of home and home surroundings. Seven men were grouped about a table in the dining room of the home t>f Fred Harlow, playing cards. One of these was Ernest R. Werdln, president of the Los Angeles Paving company and formerly an undersherlff of tried experience with crime and criminals. Another was Capt. Jesse D. Hunter, chief of the homicide squad of the district attorney's office, trained to the capture of desperate criminals. The outside doors of the room flew open and two figures entered. The card players looked up into a face masked with a handkerchief and found themselves covered by the muzzles of two pistols. Werdln and Hunter without a move watched for their opportunity. Werdln was the first to find it. He rose and fired. Two bullets tore their way through the breast of the masked bandit and with a scream of terror qnd pain he toppled and fell. His companion fl£d. 'The Identity of the dead boy was established through the Loyola college belt buckle he wore. He was Franklin John Morrison, seventeen years old, son of F. C. Morrison, manager of the Mowder Realty company. Well Brought Up. Young Morrison had Ifeen brought up under ideal home surroundings, with a devout and loving mother and a prosperous and liberal father, who gave him every advantage. At Loyola college, where he would have been the youngest student to graduate at the coming exercises, young Morrison had made a brilliant record. He was an officer In the Reserve Officers' Training corps, was on the football team, was advertising manager for the college paper, held honors In the debating society and, as the youngest senior of the college, held the respect of faculty and student body. Unmanageable Airplane Tears Roof Off House Milford, Conn. -- Engine trouble caused a biplane to crash into an_uhoccupied cottage at Merwln's Beach, on the shore of Long Island Sound, partly unroofing the building. The aviators were slightly injured and the machine was wrecked. The biplane was owned by the Pride Aerial corporation of New Haven. On it were Ralph W. Pride, president of the company, and Arthur Holland, a pilot of International experience. The machine had Just been started from a hill for a flight to Mitchel field. The engine went dead 100 feet in the air.. The plane went' into a dive and hit the cottage. * Cat Seta Off Alarm Modesto, Cal.--A common alley, cat was responsible for summoning the entire Modesto police force to the O. P. Schafer store at a late hour one night recently. Kitty stepped on the burglar alarm and remained there until the arrival of the force. depth is sufficient It will let air into the soil to keep It sweet and kessuUM* moisture from escaping. Morning Best Time. • The best time for cultivating Is ly In the morning to conserve such moisture as has descended during the night and prepare for the, sun and winds during the day. \ The common hoe and the rake are excellent tools for this purpose small gardens, but to make a good J< of It In gardens of any size, a whe hoe should be brought into action. You can go over the garden In a hurry and It can be cultivated twice or more times In the time It would take to yover It once with a hoe besides savin k the weariness and backache that follow svringing a hoe for any length of time. REMARKABLE RECOVERY OF MRS. SPINK Gives Lydia E. Pinkhanrff „ Vegetable Compound Full Credit Bees Quite Valuable to Many Growers of Fruit Commercial beekeepers of today move their bees many times each year toli&ep them busy making honey after the. honey flow slows down In one location. To move a colony of bees care must be taken to give them plenty of air, as the Jarring and excitement cause them to create a great amount of heat. This excess heat will melt the combs and honey. By removing the lid of the beehive and nailing a screen on top of the hive In place of the Ud the bee man will give this heat a chance to escape. The bees should be moved on a cool night if possible. In some fruit districts the fruit growers pay the beekeepers 50 cents a colony and move them besides to their orchards, to pollinate the fruit bloom. There are many fruit and berry yields that would be raised at a loss If It were not for tluf bees pollinating the flowers. "Minn. Jure , TTis.--"T was under treat* ment, but nothing seemed to help me, and I was run-down and so weak that I had to remain in bed much of the time and was like an invalid. I had pains in my abdomen and in the female organs, and my stomach bothered me. My husband saw Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised. thought it njkust be good, and brought it homo to me and advised me to try it After taking one bottle I was able to eat, and after six bottles I was doing my own work, which I hadn't been able to do for ^ars. I have a new baby who is doing nicely, and I am still taking the Vegetable Compound and feelingbetter than I I have for four years. The medicine is surely wonder ful and a good thing to have in the house."--Mrs. George SpoH^ Minnesota Junction, Wisconsin. A country-wide canvass of purchasers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coot pound reports 98 per cent, benefited For sale by druggists everywhere. >tf'm * Silo Is Cheap and Best Means of Providing Feed The silo Is the best and cheapest means of providing succulent feed not only for winter, but as a supplement to short pastures during the long, dry summer months, according to the Missouri College of Agriculture, which states In a recent bulletin: It Is the cheapest farm building that can be erected." It will house feed at lower cost per pound than hay or roughage can be protected from the weather by barn or hay mow. » It Increases the producing capacity of the farm at least 10 per cent and will often Increase its stock-carrying capacity 25 per cent. It Is the cheapest and most effective method of soiling. It Is the cheapest place to store the corn crop, and, in fact, one of the silo's greatest advantages Is the possibility It affords If utilizing all of the corn crop. An acre of corn can be placed in the silo nt a cost not exceeding that OF shocking, husking, grinding and shredding and will preserve more nutrients and will produce more milk per acre than any other system of handling the crop. It saves a third of the value of the corn crop that Is otherwise largely wasted. It supplies feed at less labor and there Is less waste of fodder J>y cows. Cutworms Destroyed by Poisoning With Mixture Cutworms in gardens can be destroyed, by poisoning them with poisoned bran mash. This material Is prepared In small quantities for garden use by thoroughly mixing one ounce of parls green or white arsenic »wlth one pound of bran. To this Is adde<| three ounces of syrup, one and one-half pints of water, and one-fourth of an orange which Is chopped up Into small bits. As soon as the cutworms appear, sow or scatter this poison bran mash thinly along the rows or around the plants to be protected. Since cutworms generally feed at night, the best results will be had by putting ^this material out in the evening. Mow Pastures Regularly to Prevent Weed Growth The pasture should be moved regularly to prevent any weeds from going to seed. If a pasture Is mowed regularly for two seasons, the majority of weeds will be eradicated. Mowing will not only prevent many weeds from going to seed, but It will reduce the low shade In the pasture and thus give the native grasses and legumes plenty of sunlight and a chance to grow, says S. L. Jeffords, forage crops specialist at Clemson college, who Insists that one mowing will not do and that to get thicker and better stands of the desirable grasses and legumes the mowing must be regular. Co-Operative Marketing Co-operative marketing of wheat offers many opportunities to Increase farm profits. These opportunities are most fully realised when a co-operative concern Is under efficient management, Is adequately financed, has a satisfactory accounting system, avoids speculation, has a sufficient volume of business, Is controlled by the membership on the one-man, one-vote basis, and the membership Is loyal and has confidence in the movement Green Feed for Chicks Growing chicks need green feed. If the ground gets picked bare of all tender green feed, move the brooder coops or brooder house to new green food, which should be young and tender. For summer pasture alfalfa, sweet clover and sudan grass are exceptionally good. They are sending out new tender shoots all summer and grow high enough to furnish shade and protection from the wind. Spray Best for Tubers In comparative experiment* with bordeaux mixture applied as a dust and as a spray for the control of late potato blight at the Rhode Island experiment station the yield from the dusted plants was only 70 per cent as much as from the plants which were sprayed. Other GoQd Silo Crops Corn Is^used more extensively for filling silos t"hun any other crop and gives the best results where It can be grown most successfully, but other crops, as kaflr, alfalfa, clover, peas, sweet sorghum and Russian sunflowers can be used for this purpose. Get Rid ol Dandruff By Cuficura Shampoos $fr<e*ep o. fO JntmIe*baotr.*»t«orlelad. r»pt M. MjddSaam, mpla Blackmail Once Quite Innocent Transaction Tha crime of blackmail, had, etymological ly considered, a perfectly innocent origin. "Mall" Is merely an old French word for rent, and Chief Justice Blackstone In his famous "Commentaries" distinguished between two legal. forms of payment known respectively as "whltemair and "blackmail." The former was s rent paid In white money--1. «*, silver-- while the latter was the contrasting term applied to payment In work, and so on, says the Detroit News. Blackmail first derived its evil connotation from the practice of Highland chiefs and the marauding mosstroopers of the Scottish border, who exacted toil lit kind from neighboring fanners as the price of noninterference with their cattle. Sir Walter Scott, In "Waverley," speaks In this sense of the "blackmail" paid to Vlch Ian Vohr. The word was recognised in this significance by a Scotch act of James VI, and a statute of Elisabeth made the demand of blackmail In th® four northern counties of England felony without benefit of defjgy. The Iron Gate The Iron gate Is ne«ir Orsova just below the place where the Danube river crosses the Hungarian boundary into Yugo-Slavia. It Is a narrow pasa In the Transylvania Alps and formerly obstructed navigation in the Danube. But In 1890 Hungary undertook to remove these obstructions by a long series of great blasting operations. Since this work was completed the stream has been navigable through tha Iron gate, but the current Is rapid aad dangerous. This celebrated gap is about two miles loug.--i'atb&ader Magaklne. To Be Taken Sparingly Only those deserve freedom of speech who have wit enough not to work it too hard.--Duluth Heral«" , FIND SOY BEANS SUPERIOR TO FEED PIGS AT IOWA STATION Crop Makes Good Hogging Combination With Corn. Cow'» Kick Kills West "Branch, Mich.--L. TtockweTl, an old resident of Tipton* was killed Instantly when kicked In the head by a cdw he was milking. High-yielding soy beana of such seed rarletles as Manchu have an assured )lace In fall finishing of fattening pigs, n the light of recent tests at Iowa 3tate college. The leafy varieties, iuch as are used for hay or silage, are lot as well adapted to hog forage as iuch crops as alfalfa, clover or rape, :hese tests Indicate. Common farm jractice, particularly In hogging down rorn, would support this view. Soy beans make a strong combination vith corn for hogging down If a mln- | •ral mixture, such as wood ashes (or lmestone), acid phosphate (or boneneal) and salt. Is used. In the Iowa ests the pigs, weighing about 120 founds at the start, averaged In gain -45 pounds daily till they went to narket. when fed corn, tankage and oinerals (ail self-fed) on pasture of •Ianchu soy beans; and they ate only '45pounds for each 100 pounds' gain a weight. The mineral mixture was oade from 40 pounds spent bone black, it pounds limestone and 20 pounds tilt. So.v henns for forage did not prove, s efficient as rape for pigs in these made a poor economical showing. Soy beans do not have as long a growing season, are not as palatable and are »4re easily killed by frost as compared with clover, alfalfa or Dwarf Essex rape. These last-named forages fit In best for spring and mid-summer hog pasture, while a good seed variety of soy beans fills the need for fall finishing, balancing up the corn economically when minerals are fed in addition. lARM fACTSfe Plant lice are poor snuff-takers. Three per cent nicotine dust is death to them. Time ever speeds onward. The mtry ute you waste today is the mlimtt you lose tomorrow. • • • Which coat do you prefer on yoar exposed farm machinery?'" One of nut or one of grease? Often a little shrubbery »««^ ftirwer seeds make a homely place Into * homelike place--and there's a big iv'u tests. Soy bean hay varieties^ difference. If* More Poignatot Sweet are the uses of adversity. • toothache pmkes you forget the heart* flche.--Pullith TTrrnM. NOW YOU CAN QUICKLY END KIDNEY TROUDLES A six ounce bottle of Dr. Carey*! Marshroot Prescription 777 for 75 cent*. It yon have backache or puffed lids, swollen ankles or clammy hands. It's probably poison settled In your kidneys and the sooner you get rid of It, the further away from the grave yooil be. Roots and herbs are best for this purpose as Dr. Carey, for 40 years a practicing physician, well knew. If your kidneys are making yourUfto miserable the best medicine is none too good. Cut out this notice, take It to any good druggist and see that you get Dr. Oarey's Marshroot Prescription TTT. It comes In both liquid and tablet tifrm and the price is only 75 cents. If yoar local druggist hasn't it he can get It from the Carey Medical Laboratories at Elmira, N. Y. CLEARV^COMPLEXION CJlBERRr CO, 2975 A N\\\\\V1 FOR OVER ZOO YEARS haariem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid condition!. HAARLEM CiL BSSBSD^i correc t internal trouble*, stimulate viflsl Organs. Thre* siies. All druggists. Iusfcft QD the origuuU genuine GOLD