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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Feb 1925, p. 2

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*®mm "' ?W *'<|* * s T Vi. * ^??r** ~ : * •' > , >. ' ", r," * * * - .'. -* %• ?"-& £t t pt- ',-still r . ~ /s >. • " : ^ *„« v - f , - 1! •* " - & . £?# «HE McHENRT PLAIXDEALKR, X0HENBT, Hiit ' 5^. * pf v ' ^ ^ * " *"", ' r" j; i--^t^'fe'">:ft Wmaihai Expert* to Malm Study of Ocean T» influence which the ocean has apon the weather la Terr great. "The study of the waters of the oceans," declares Lieutenant Commander George E. Brandt of the United States navy, "will yield results worth millions of dollars to the agriculture and industry of the nation, because from this study we can get a better understanding of the weather, and will probably be able to predict the weather a year in advance, especially the periods of rainfall and dronth and their duration." Commander Brandt says that the waters, of the ocean are a great reservoir for storing and distributing the heat which comes from solar radiation. During each hour of sunshine more hetft Is being added to this great reservoir. Thin heat in turn is given off again by the ocean, influencing very materially the weather over land and sea. Observations made by the Smithsonian institution show that the radiation of the sun varies considerably from time to time. It is this variation, says Commander 'Brandt, which makes the study of weather so complicated. "Since the waters of the ocean act as an intermediate reservoir," he says, "the full effect of change In solar radiation is not felt Until some years after the change takes place. Mi m SICK WOMEN 52s?"! SHOULD BE EHCOUBMiED lib Hit frm tbe Kefr f «f Ly£tE. PiiUai't egetaMe Conpoiai Turtle Lake, Wisconsin. -- "I R Pink ham's Vegetable Compound for weakness, backache and nervousness. these troubles . for years and had taken other medicines for them, bat I have found no medicine so as the Vegeta- Com pound and I o mm end it to my >nds who have troubles similar to mine I saw it advertised and thought I would trv it and It has helped ine in all my troubles. * I have had six children and I have taken the Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound before each one was born, for weakness, vomiting, poor appetite and backache, and again after childbirth because of dizzy headaches. It is a good medicine for it always helns me. I nave also taken Lydia L. Pinkham's Liver Pills for the last eight years for con gWpation." -- Mrs. MABEL LA POINT, R. F. D. No. 1, Turtle Lake. Wisconsin. ' In a recent canvass, 98 out of every 100 women say they were benefited by taking Lydia EL Pmkham's Vegetable Compound. SINNERS IN HEAVEN BY CUVE ARDEN Wasteful Man llijbhy--Are you aware, my dear, that it tnkes three-fourths of my salary to meet your bills? Wifey--Good gracious! What do ymi rlo with the rest of your m^neyfc--r The Progressive Grocer. DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN Take Tablets Without Fear If You See the Safety "Bayer Cross." *OH, HUQHIE1" SYNOPSIS.--Living In the small English village of Darhury, oldfashioned and sedate place, Barbara Stockley, daughter of a widowed mother, la soon to celebrate her marriage to Hugh Rochdale, rich and well connected. Barbara Is adventurous, and has planned, with an aunt, an airplane trip to Australia. Major Alan Croft. famous as an aviator, is to be the pilot. At her first meeting- with Croft Barbara is attracted by his manner and conversation, different from the cut-and-dried conventions of her small town. They set out, Barbara, her aunt, Croft, and a mechanician. Word in a few days comes to Darbury that the plane is missing and its occupants believed lost. Croft and Barbara, after the wreck of the airplane in a furious storm, reach an apparently uninhabited lsl.iiTd in the Pai^ftc ocean. -The other two members of the party had perished. Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets yon ate not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and pepscrlbed by physicians for 23 years^J ISav "Bayer" w hen you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.--Adv. Valuable deposits of gypsum and borate of liihe and Epsom salts have been discovered in Nevada by use of the airplane. IF MOTHERS ONLY KNEVT During these uays how many children are complaining of Headache, Fever- Isbness, Stomach Troubles and Irregular Bowels and take cold easily, If mothers only knew what Mother Gray's Sweet Powders would do for their children no family would ever be without them for use when needed. These powders are so easy and pleasant to take and so effective In their action that mothers who once use them always tell others about them. Used by mothers for over 30 years. Sold by druggists everywhere. Trial Package . sent FREE. Address Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y. "During 60 years of Married Life" Three (fenerations Kept H e a l t h y and Happy "Beecham's Pills were always •idered indispensable by my parents duringsixty years of married life and I am never without them in my home, as they are used when quired by myself (aged sixty-one), and wife and children. This coven a period of over eighty years. My wife and son* also believe there Is no remedjfforconstipation and biliousness equal to Beccham's Pills. Sotnany so-called "cures"for biliousness and kindred troubles leave after \ effects that are certainly injurious, but Beecham's Pills give prompt relief and leave one in a healthy and happy condition." N. J. M, \ Ramsay, N.J. lju Berdiom'! PiUs far constipation, biiiousnest and tick headache. FREE SAMPLE-Write today foffreeHmpli to B. F. Allen Co.,4 17 Canal St., New York Buy them from your druggist X{€ and {M • for Better Health, Take Beecham's Pills Beware Of Cougiu That Hangs On Pneumonia and serious lung trouble usually start with a cough. So If yon kave a cold or cuugh--stop it at once with a few doses of that fine old medicine, Kemp s Balsam. This famous Balsam soothes the nerves of the throat, stops the tickling cough and aaiuro du.-b thereat. Nofurmof couchi syrup so good fur children's coughs. v0 cents at all stores. For that Cough/ KEMP'S BALSAM Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother's Remedy For every stomach and intestinal ill. This good old-fashioned herb home remedy for constipation, stomach ills and other derangements of the system so prevalent these days is In even greater favor AS a family medietas than In your grandmother's day. END CROUP • # f Nocautefor UjUiCKr • vhy.icten s .1S> M«f old prescription on hand. without vomiting In 15 miuutis. Stops Coughs, Croup, ColdsandWhoopiuaCough. ^ DR. DRAKES GLESSCO ntttoittu* RESINOL Soofhinq and He&linq Aids Poor Complexions PART TWO--Continued. . --3-- "Let u»e do that. Shall If* ibe asked. ' "Don't you mind blood?" "Of course not!" she answered Indignantly. He handed her the blood-stained wet handkerchief without a word. Inclining his head toward her. In a few minutes he rose to his feet, all traces of blood washed away, his head bandaged adroitly with her own handkerchief twisted in his. "I'm going up that hill, to view the land," lie said, with abrupt decision, proceeding toward It as If oblivious of her presence. •"I'm coming too!" she exclaimed, hastening after him. "Fm dot going to be left alone down here! There may be alligators and things!" He gave an Impatient smile. "Come •long, then; I'll help you up." "Oh, no, thanks! I can manage quite well," she Replied rather coldly, nettled by his tone and manner. He said no more, but began to climb the rugged rock-strewn hillside with the agility of a mountain goat. Barbara struggled after him, slipping, bruising herself, panting for breath. The shock had left her weak and unnerved. She sank upon the ground, drawing hard sobbing breaths. Croft, without a backward glance, was disappearing among the larger boulders at the summit. Fearful of being left, she rose again and scrambled on. Her aching head throbbed wildly now; sudden dizziness caused everything to swim around her. . . . Stumbling over a half-concealed rock, she fell prone upon the groutd.- . . . There she laj\ conscious of a terrible Bilence. No other sentient being seemed to move within a world so full of awful loneliness that it appalled her; it was almost tangible. A great wave of fear, grief, loss, homesickness, wild--almost childlike-- longing for Hugh, swept her away. For the first time since the horror be» gan, she found relief in tears. Shf lay there alone, sobbing weakly. . . . From the top of the hill Croft scanned what was visible of the land along the north, east and west coasts. This was, he concluded, an Island of volcanic origin, with the exceptionally high reef more or less surrounding it, sometimes at a considerable distance from, and sometimes fairly nenr, the shore. He surveyed the view critically, a purpose forming In his mind. The gradient inland culminated in a short, fairly steep rise to a grove of cocoa palms, near which a clearing was'visible, covered with little groups of something,--possibly caves or rocks. Nowhere did there api>ear to be sign of human life. It would be easy, he saw, to reach* those possible caves by following the neck of high ground running inland from the top of his hill. Turning seaward, he shaded his eyes with his bands and scanned the horizon. No indication of life was visible. No smoke, no mast, i»o sail. He swept the small island with another keen critical glance." From his knowledge of the South Pacitlc--in which ocean, somewhere, this island must lie--he guessed it to be of littie or no use for trade, either in copra or other exports, in spite of Its patches of luxuriant verdure. Therefore, probably,, it was never visited by the outside world I Unless there were habitations in the south, it was conceivubly uninhabited--possibly unknown. For some moments he stood motionless, facing these probabilities. Then, with a grim face, he turned In search of his companion. Barbara, her head burled In l>er arms, did not hear his approach. It was with a start of surprint* thut >h«t •found herself suddenly lifted bodily, as if she were but a fuatherwfi^ut. Feeling again very small and ashami'd, Blie would have struggled free, but bis grip tightened. "Keep still! It's a rough climb." He spoke abruptly, ever his way In moments of stress. The tears of weakness rose again In her eyes. She closed them, but too late to hide what she felt he would despise. She turned her face away Into his wet shoulder; and he strode along In silence. Stray rocks lay about the ridge; small shrubs. Interspersed with ferns and club mosses, made progress difficult; but he never paused until they were among -the tall trees of the palm grove. Then he set the girl upon her feet. "Where are we going?" she asked. "Listen!" he commanded, without answering her quetsion. From near at hand came the noise of rushing water. He turned farther Inland, amid tall avenues of bamboo, toward the sound, Barbara closely following. Presently a pleased exclamation escaped his lips, and he halted. From the high ground the river tumbled down, a sheer waterfall Of dancing crystals splashing from great boulders high up among the forest trees to smaller ones on the lower level; thence hurrying arid gurgling over little rocks, which encircled small pools of translucent green. Into a clear, softly flowing stream some six feet deep. This after a time spread out and grew shallow. Anally disappearing betweea rustling walls of bamboo ennes toward the cove where It joined the lagoon. From the nature of this deeper stretch of water and the comparative clearing of undergrowth on the banks, Croft judged It fo be partly t,he work of man's hand, not entirely the result of nature. But he forebore tp suggest this to the girl. Croft led the way back to the grove, then on to the clearing beyond. , Suddenly Bart are stood atili, with a little cry. , : ; . "What's that?**. \ He stopped, looking aside In the direction Indicated. Stooping swiftly, he lifted a queer bleached object and examined if closely. She drew hear, glnncing curiously at the hideous thing. "It's a skull! Isn't it?" , "Yes," he replied, "and--of the negroid type!" -~ She looked tip, startled. Until then it had not occurred to her to wonder concerning the island. The past with its tragedy had expunged all else from her mind. . He continued to examine the skull, with puzzled brows. "There are some curious holes which I cannot understand," he said. "They might have been caused by bullets. But It is doubtful 4f natives would possess bullets here." "Do you think there IN any here now--any natives?" £. • \J • He met the eyes raised In trepidation to his own. "I can't tell, yet. But they are friendly enough to white people." Throwing away the skull, he went on tward the open space. The apparent caves proved to be moss-covered ruins of bamboo huts. Many had fallen into rough heaps upon the ground; of others, bits of all retlon what once had seemed strong and full of life. "It's quite possible," he said, "that the whole colony w'Mcb lived here has died out. Populations dwindle Very much In the Pacific Islands." > She gave a little shudder. "It's horrible here--I don't know why! Let's go down to the shore. There seems to he a hut standing dOnu ...ere." she pointed toward a •mall, sheltered structure half-way down the lower slope, sheltered l>eneath the hill which they had climbed. Oroft hurried In its direction. It consisted of one small room. The bamboo walls were Intact, but the thatch forming the roof showed large rents; on the ground within, amid musty, dead leaves, were scattered utensils similar to those which they had already seen. Croft glanced round critically, then at the girl, who had'followed him, then out through the opening seaward. "We can make this sufficiently habitable to carry on with," he observed. His words went out Into silence. They brought Instantly a vivid realisation of the immediate present to her mind, followed quickly by thoughts of the future. A new fear shot up, clutching her heart with a horrible, clammy hand. She looked with sudden dread at her companion's profile; and something about his tense Hps seemed to confirm the awful foreboding1. The faint color revived in her cheeks by" exercise ebbed away, leaving her white. She clenched her teeth and her hands; then, with an effort, put her dread to the test. "We--shall soon be rescued? Ships are certain to--call here? It will only mean a few hours--or days?" The moment which Croft had dreaded, yet known to be inevitable, was at hand; and he felt the utter inadequacy of l.is sex in dealing with delicate situations. S; From his prolonged silence Barbara guessed the truth of his convictions; words were unnecessary. She clasped her hands In agony, uttering a little moaning cry like some dumb animal receiving its death-wound. Croft turned quickly. He looked down at the quivering, -girlish form, meeting the frightened eyes turned to him, trusting in-his judgment and resource, ^nd all at once he realized that, In this ghastly predicament, her very life lay in his hands. He leaned forward and took her clasped hands ih both of his. "Don't give up hope." he said earnestly. "It's very doubtful If ships call; but they may pass this way. We will do all we can." . . She clung to his hands, breathing hard, seeming to find the old magnetism of his personality draw her up, deriving mental as well as physical support from his grip. Her eyes fixed upon his, as if searching for help. . . . Suddenly, like a plucky ray of sunshine in a stormy sk-y, a faint smile flitted tremulously across her pale lips. "We must--as you said--buck up." she whispered, the trembling words scarcely audible. would get on better alone. We shuil only die lingering deaths beret H rescue doesn't come." "Dashed If I mean to die!" he protested, between two large mouthfuls of fruit. "Nor shall you!" Throwing away his banana-skins, he rose and surveyed the water; then he came close to her, towering over her, as It seemed to her excited fancy. "RAN GOJNW TN POAPH TBE ***** chine. I may be able to rescue oar luggage and provisions--" "Oh! no, no, no!" she cried wildly. "Suppose you get drowned? Never mind luggage! What does that mat* ter? Oh! don't leave me all alone--" Terrified, she tried to reach some part of hlm> to restrain him by force. He caught her arms, raising ber to her feet and supporting her. "Listen!" he commanded In a tone which checked her agitation. "It's not only luggage! I want to save the wireless transmitting set--" "Wireless!" Radiant relief overspread her face. "Why--then--we can soon get rescued after all? I forgot about that." "You mustn't rely too much on it. It will be only the short range 'set. The long range used on board ob- "Let Me Do Thai, mnlned standing, guarding like sentinels the broken portions resting wearily against their base. Lying about, half-hidden in undergrowth, were oddly shaped household utensils made of wood or rough kind of pottery; also large shells, rude cups fashioned from coconut shell, broken spears. The scene was desolate, giving the impression of Death, of the relentless hand of Tin.e sweeping away to extinc- II At mid-day the heat became excessive. Mercilessly the sun, like a quivering mass of molten steel, beat down upon the shore; no breath of wind stirred the hot air; the lagoon, with its almost indigo blue, assumed an oily, sluggish appearance, as if sinking to sleep with the lowering tide. Within the shade of the angle formed by one side of the hut and the hill behind, Barbara lay Inert upon a soft, if simple, couch of sun-dried coats. Find- . ,ing that the ground swayed and rolled like a mountainous sea if she endeavored to rise, she gave up the attempt, and lay motionless, with closed eyes. : Nearby were some untouched bananas and a broken coconut, the shell cl which was filled with water and placed upright between three stones. From within the hut came the noise of splitting sticks, as if somebody were breaking the bamboo canes which, crossed and interlaced, formed Its structure. The girl listened, wondering dully at the endurance of her companion, full of a miserable sense of shame at her own weakness. Without pausing for rest, after fetching their coats and procuring food, he had begun clearing and improving this dreary abode--carrying down broken portions from the ruins above for a door, fetching other canes and palm-leaves for mending the thatched roof. Presently, hot and disheveled, he appeared. He had shed all his clothes except breeches and shirt, and looked, she thought, strangely in keeping with the scene around them. This was her first experience c? a man whose life had been spent chiefly In wild sur roundings, often upvui but the fringe of ^civilization; .vhose abundant vitality responded to the call of untamed nature in a way that proved he had not been shackled by chains of convention closing around him, fetter by fetter, as the years passed. "That's done!" he said briefly. He sat down and proceeded to peel and eat bananas with considerable relish "I feel so useless!" site exclaimed, miserably. "Such a hindrance Instead of a help. It would have been wiser to have left me In the water. You Dried Rice Is Fatal to One Household Pest Whence do all the beetles, ants and (lies come rtiat swarm about the house, and particularly in the kitchen Mnd larder? And what Is the best way to get rid of them? These two questions are always very much In the minds of hoiiMeholdern. The first Is not easy to answer. The Intruslvencss of beetles and cockroaches Is something uncanny. They are fou«id down deep minw, and they appear In new ships tfie moment steam Is raised. Wherever there Is a moist heat there they come quickly. The entry of auts into a house Is often traceuble to some opening near the ground, such as a ventilator. Moths coiue in through the open windows after the lamps are Iffhtecl. Windows cloned or guarded by mosquito nettings after lighting up time should keep theui out. rKhe aht is, «t course, Intelligent. But ground rice, It is Mid, finds his weakness. Sprinkle the rice In his track, and he will eat of It greedily Then It swells within him and kill* him. But the rice must not be thrown down on a wet floor or it will swell before he eat* It, and lie will come to no barm. . , Negative Beauty • .Pcrfeaps ihe most to be uirned art In domdftic architecture is negatlxe beauty, a condition of things which invites or suggests beanty to those who are capable of the sentiment, because a house, truly viewed, is but a setting, a background. nr,d Is not to be pushed to the front and made mucll of for Its own sake. It Is for shelter, for comfort, for health and hospitality, to eat and aleep la, to be born in and to die In, aad it is to accord iiw .appearance with homely everyday usages, and with natural, universal ob- | jects and scenes.--John Burroughs. ay Here Until I Return." tained Its clectrtcal energy from • generator run from one of the engines, and is therefore useless now." Her eagerness for this new hope to be tested was still modified by feara concerning the risks of his venture. He pointd out the shallowness of the water and^-the scattered little coral islands. "The tide's low enough now for me to wade to that one nearest the reef. From there it's quite a short distance, if swimming is necessary." "I will wade with you--" "The devil you won't!" He suddenly wheeled round upon her. "Look here! You're never to go in the lagoon ! Bathe in the river, but don't ever go in the lagoon. Swear to me!" She gazed at him in stupefied amazement and anger. "Why not? If--if you go. in--" "I--er--I understand these waters. They're treacherous. Promise me--" "Ob!" she Interrupted impatiently, I don't want to bathe--ever--anywhere! I'll sit and watch you go." "In this blazing sun? No, indeed! You must lie down in tbe hut and sleep." Vainly she remonstrated, fearing a recurrence of the tangible loneliness she had experienced upon the hillside. His jaw set In a way she was to know well. ,Wlth a viselike grip he drew her toward tbe hut. The Interior was cleared now of rubbish, and a rough aperture for window had been made at the end facing inland. The shade was cool and welcome. Croft fetched the coats and spread thetn upon the ground. 'Now," lie said, "stay here until I return." 'You understand? Yon promise to remain? Oc mast I barricade the door?" - She pulled her hand away, and let her aching head fall back upon the fleece lining of the coat. 'Oh, don't bully me!" she protested Irritably, trying to control the quaver fn her voice. "I won't endure it. Please --g°." He looked down at her in alienee for a moment,- his browa knit in perplexity. Then he turned and went out, setting up the Improvised door behind him. Lying motionless In the comparative gloom, a prey to rising fever, new fears assailed her. Shrinking 1l horror, she faced the fact of her Isolation. Sundered from all the sure harbors of civilization with this man of uncertain moods--a tuan whom she neither liked nor understood! . . . A care for her physical welfare had certainly been shown today. But in everything her will "had been overpowered, even to the extent of physical force. . * it was not to be borne! What might not happen? . . . The fears, accumulating, grew into feverish terror. She struggled to her feet, and hurled herself weakly at the door, with some,frenzied Idea of escape. . . . The door waa barricaded oil the outside! . As a caged "beast, half-mud -with terror and impotence, she staggered up and down the little but, her brow clammy, her clenched hands shaking. . . . With a rush of hysterical tears, she fluug herself upon the ground. "Hugh!" she sobbed, distraught. "Oh, Hughie! Hughle!" The man Intends to live. The girl is hysterical, la he strong enough for both? Porcelain HOB Long Been Known to World .Porcelain factories and stores are mentioned in Arabia in writing of the period of 800 A. D. The Arabian geographer, Mohammed-el-Efridl, who lived in Sicily at the court of Roger II, published, about 1154, a geographic Wiork In which he told of the town of Djankoy, where "Chinese glass" was made. He added that there was "no liner tcade than that of a potmaker or a pot designer," according to the Detroit News. Toward the middle of the Fourteenth century, Ibn Batttta, the Arabian traveler, described Chinese ceramic as the most beautiful in the world. The Chinese manufactured dishes and porcelain ware for a very long time, tn the hfstory of the great Chinese empire, one reads that only certain towns and villages went In for porcelain industry. The finest chinaware was made In the province of SaxiJ. It was so beautiful ahd so much like tne finest crystal that it never was exported, but was exclusively reserved for the use of the Chinese emperors. v. V . Italian Laxzaroni ¥Sr i»ame "Lazzaroni" was glv#« a class of vagabonds In Naples, Italy, which, in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries, formed a distinct caste. They annually elected a chief, called Capo Lazzaro, who was recognized by the authorities and frequently took an active part in political affairs. In 1647, headed by Masaniello, they overthrew the government and for a few days held possession of the city. In 1798, Instigated by Cardinal Ruffo, and led by Mlchele Sforza, they successfully resisted the attacks of the French. The Lazzaroni had no homes nor regular occupations. They wore ragged clothes, were filthy in their habits, and slept in the open air. They were so-called either from Lazarus, the beggar, or more probably from the hospital of St. Lazarus, which served as a place of refuge for the destitute of he . city.--Kansas Gtty Sttr. Plane* Spread Terror The terrifying effect of airplanes upon wild fowl Is so great that If any general use should be made of them In bunting, the result would be exceedingly disastrous, according to a bulletin of the biological survey of the Department of Agriculture. Probably bo other single method of pursuit of wild ducks ^»nd other game birds could parallel their deadly effect in reducing the. number of wild fowl. It Is for this reason that the biological survey has called upon all sportsmen and conservationists interested in the maintenance of this country's supply of wild fowl to gather and forward to" it in Washington accurate Information concerning such violations Qf law.:, , :v.,... • .V ' V Weigf^i Fl^m The grain is the one unit which la the same in troy and avoirdupois weight. An avoirdupois pound Is 7,000 grains, a troy pound 5,7ti0. The avoirdupois ounce ^is 437.5 grains, and the troy 480 grains. A hundred avoirdupois pounds of gold would be worth $29,166.67. The American billion Is expressed by a unit and .nine ciphers--1,000,000,- 000. In Germany, France and elsewhere In Europe the- game figure is called a milliard. The British billion and the German, too, is expressed hy a unit and; 12 ciphers--1,000,000,- 000,000.. * Different kinds of weather affect different i»eople in different ways, hut as a rule we feel better when the sun is shining. Damp Is an enemy of health ; a cool', bracing day a friend. Doctors frequently order their patients a "change of scene," and they are now learning that the benefits of such a change are greater even than they had thought, because a change of scene usually means a change of climate as well. Temperature, the amount of. moisture in the air, the height above sea-level -- all these things cut affect our^ heaKh. ^T° BE CONTINUED.) fjnpoetic Envy . .';-V j He--Do you know, I envy the birds, She--So do I. They're so gay and tree, can fly here and there, and-- He--And have oaiy one bill the jf«u round. bate "Hard to Fix If one accepts the Biblical account of the history of the race, doubtless Eve wore the first skirt, for It Is stated in Genesis that Adam and Eve made themselves coverings. The anthropologists. who believe that man as we know him evolved slowly from 'some lower form of life, say that there wars a stage In his development when he went naked, but It would probably be impossible to fix the time when men first began to wear clothing. TO OLD FOLKS^ One of TaalAC'i greatest bleaa-C """'ir lugs is the new Ufa and vigor rtM,. -- ". brings to old folks. Man aad wo mart up fn the aefventiea and writing to us every day to thank ia* , -iv-V for teniae's wondrona benefits. « natural toftfeL ifi ' drives poisons from thejilood, f np the laay liver and puts dlgesttv*^,. ^ fe;., organs lh working order. Iff-" after the famous Tanlatf^ formula from roots, barks and rat*.; : herbs, It la nature's own tonic an«y»'Vl. builder--harmless to man or childjp^ If your body is weakened an#-: run-down, if you lack ambition^ ., ... cant eat or 8leep, you'll be lighted with Tanlac's quick results^ ~ ... ^ Ml Tantae POk for Coastipatiom FOR YOUR HEJKL.TH k batot- ***** r-t"> ^M IT. h„. n ke«» °°* d£or*°coo*kt or * pootit"* thro." «£e * ., «***•* Z"te|y hmrrol«*». f< ••d »b*°,n' , r„ MFd.CO.tDXW* •23 'iseljne^ est" ThirtjRujiigSorBS Remember, I stand back of every box. Even,' druggist guarantees to refund the purchase price (35 cents) if Peterson's Ointment doesn't do all I claim. 1 guarantee it for eczema, old sores, running sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore nipples, broken breaBts, Itching skin, skin diseases, blind, bleeding and Itching piles, as well as for ehaflng. burns, Bcalds, cuts, bruises and sunburn. "I had 30 running sores on my leg for It years, "was In three different hospitals. Amputation was advised. Skin grafting was tried. I was cur«4 by using Peterson's Ointment."--Mrs. F. E. Root, 287 Michigan Street. Buffalo, N. T. Mall orders tilled by Pet*r» son Ointment Co., Buffalo. N. T. ">"» Hi* Idea "They tell ine that Gabe Glggaiy beats his wife with a bedslat. and-*^ in tbe crossroad's store began Zefc# Yawkey. "Well, that's a thunder of a way to do--pulling the bed to pieces to get a slat out every time she needs a licklng," commented Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge.--Kansas City Star. In bathing suits, men are generallytrying not to look self-conscious--and generally falling. Every man hokls dogmas abont what domestic life should be-and yon can seldom shake hta. ' * Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION ItiDKlSnOH 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief 25$ AND 75* PACKAGES My Rheumatism is gone -- •""PHERE are thousands of you men and women, jugt like I once was--slaves to rheumatism, muscle pains, joint pains; and horrible stiffness. I had the wrong idea about rheumatism for years. I didn't realize that increasing blood cells had the effect of completely knocking out rheumatic impurities from the system. \ That ia why I began using S. S. S.1 Today I have the strength I used to have years ago! I don't use my crutches any more." S. S. S. makes people talk about themselves the way it builds up their strength. Start S. S. S today for that rheumatism. You'll feel the different ahortly. 4 S. S. S. ia «old «t _ all drug stores in two stees. TTief larger aise ia more economical. Ohe World's Beat! *$lood Medicine Cuticura ToiletTrio Send for Samplai Free Booklet Send name and aildrtm to S. S. 8. Co. in s. s. a. Bid*.. Atlanta. Or, for »peclal bookie, on Rhe®- matiam & BlooS. DR. HUMPHREYS* COLDS G R I P INFLUENZA

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