m'i »;iSi m'm FFfCE --NAVY EX-GUNNER AND CHIEF PETT OF THE FdRBIGN LEGION Of FRANCE CAPTAIN GUN TURRET, FRENCH BATTLESNfP CASSAKD" ̂ ^ 6 WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUEfcfcE m 11 * -*»-*-- «--fV" CHAPTER XHI--Continue#. --12-- Coining back along the same road we Malted to let another convoy of mules go past, and an officer of the Royal naval division came tip and begah talking to our officers. He was telling them how he and his men had landed fit "X" beach, aad how they had to Wnde ashore through barbed wire. "And, you kuow," he said in a sur prised way, as if he himself could hardly believe It, "die beggars were actually firing on us!" That is Just like the. Limeys, though. Their Idea la not to appenr excited about any thing at any time, but to act as though they were playing cricket--standing around on a lawn with paddles in their hands, half asleep. The Limeys are 0rtainly cool under fire, though, and I think that because the Anzacs did 80 well at Gallipoli people have not ^sure they were not having any worse given enough credit to the British jugulars and R. N. D.'s, who were there too, and did their share of the Work, and did It as well as any inen could. , After a while this officer started on his way agate, and as be cut across the road a French officer came up. The Limey wore a monocle, which caused the French officer to stare at him a minute before he saluted. After the Englishman had passed him the Frenchman took a large French penny out of his pocket, screwed it into his eye and turned toward us so that we Gould see it, but the Limey could not. That was not the right thing to do, ^ especially before enlisted men, so our officers did not laugh, but the men did, and so loud that Limey turned around and caught sight of the Frenchman. Be started back toward him and I thought sure there would be a light, i\or that, more likely, the Limey would * report him. Our officers should have ' placed the Frenchman under arrest, at that. f The Frenchman „ expected trouble, too* for he pulled up very straight and mm but he left the penny in his eye. ;. The Limey came up to him, halted a few paces off and, without saying 41 word, took the monocle out of his 4^ lye, twibbled It three or four feet in the air and caught It In- his other eye when it came down. f , , "Do that, you blighter," he said and Jfeced about and was on his way down Hie road. They had it on the French- hum after that. This Phillippe Pierre, of whom I have spoken, told me a story about two Limey officers that I hardly be lieved, yet Phillippe swore It was the truth. He had been in America before Ihe war, and he said he had seen one \^vthe officers that the story Is about feany times in. New York. i -k i He said there were-two Limey offi cers going along the road arguing •bout the German shells which the Turks were using. One of the officers Sid they were no good because they d not bant; lost about that time 4 shell came along and they picked T'- themselves up quite a distance from Where they had been standing. An other shell whizzed by and landed flat :v «n the side of the road. The officer e ^ iralked over, dug it out of the ground, .ffid took away the detonator and fuse --to prove that they did not explode! The only thing that would make E. believe that story is that Phillippe erre said they were Limey officers. He one bnt a Limey would remem ber such an argument after being knocked galley west by 'a shell con cussion. I do not doubt that a Limey ;5 Would do It If It could be done, though. .'Mr.iW/* T > . CHAPTER XIV. . „ . 'r . . . r-- . '* ' . f? v "6 • The Croix do Guerre. . When we had been on the shore ,4 for about three weeks we found our- Oelves one morning somewhere near rtdd-el-Bahr under the heaviest flrel ever experienced. Our guns and the j'/ •, Turks' were at it full blast, and the ftolse was worse than deafening. ^ A section of my company was lying j.*v#ut In a shell hole near the commu- fi* ideation trench with nothing to do Irat wait for a shell to find them. We *vere stiff and thirsty and uncomfort- ; able, and had not slept for two nights. , . |a that time we had been under con- t jrtaat fire and had stood off several raiding parties and small attacks from J?] enemy trenches. )" ? We had no sooner got used to the Phell hole and were making ourselves •£ Jhs comfortable a? possible in it when g along came a shell of what must have V the Jack Johnson size, and we ! > «wfcre swamped. We flad to dig three the men out, and though one of Ithem was badly wounded we could not aend him back to the hospital, in ; fact, the shelling was so heavy that bone of us ever expected to come out «f It alive. m Hke keeping your own .death watch, with the shells tuning tap for the dirge. It was impossible to 0 the sheila. If you kept your /• land on the noise for any length of tli^e It would split your eardrums. I am sure. So all we could do was to i.; Uy low In ttt6 shell bole tod WAit for • something to happen. Then they began using shrapnel on •M, total olie of our machine gunners, , fit dp from his knees to change had his head taken clean off ^boulders, and the rest of htm 7 war my feet and squirmed a Wte a dUdrn that had just been It «a«'awfel to see the body any hod move around that •-'1. »• \ * ; WAihC*t. A+m way, and we could hardly make our selves touch It fort some time. Theft we Ailed It to the other side of the hole. „ Then, to one side of us, there was a more violent explosion than any yet. The earth spouted up and fell on us, and big clouds of black smoke, sliding along the ground, covered our shell -hole and hung there for some time. One of our sergeants, from the regular French infantry, said it was a shell from a Turkish 155-mm. howitzer. JThat was only the first one. The worst thing about them was the smoke --people who think Pittsburgh Is smoky ought to see about fifty of those big howitzer shells bursting, one after another. , We could not tell what the rest of our line was doing or how we were standing the awful fire, but we felt time than we were. In a few minutes we heard the good old "75s" start pounding, and it was like hearing an old friend's voice over the telephone, and everybody In , our shell hole cheered, though no one could hear us and we could barely hear each other. Still we knew that if the "75s" got going In their usual style they would do for an enemy battery or two, and that looked good to us. The "758" made the noise worse, but it was al ready about as bad as ]| could be, fend a thousand guns more or less would not have made it any harder to stand. One of oar men shouted In the ser geant's ear that the men In line ahead of us and to the Tight were trying to give us a message of some kind. The sergeant stuck his head above the parapet and had a look. But I stayed where I was--the sergeant could see for himself and am, too, as far as I was concerned. He shouted at us that the men in the other trench were trying to signal something, but he could not make It out because the clouds of smoke would roll between them and break up the words. So he laid down again In the bottom of the hole. But after a while he looked over the parapet and saw a man Just leaving their trench, evi dently with a message for us, and be had not gone five steps before he was blown to pieces, and the lad who fol lowed him got his, too* so they stopped trying then. And all the time the "758" were sending theirs to tha-Turks not far over our heads to 900 yards behind us, and the howitzers were dropping their 240-pound bits of Iron In every vacant space and some that were not vacant. It was Just one big roar and screech and growl all at once, lika turning the whole dog pound loose on a piece of meat. The concussions ftelt like one long string of boxes on the ear, and our throats were so dry that it hurt to swallow, which always makes your ears feel better aftey a strong concus sion. One after another of our boys was slipping to the ground and digging his fists into his ears, and the rest of them sat on the parapet̂ -e step with their heads between knees and their arms wrapped \ around their heads. ?. Our sergeant came to me after i while and began acting just like people do at a show, only he shouted instead of whispered in my ear. When people are looking at one show they always want to tell you how good some other show is, and that was the way with the sergeant. - "You should see what they did to us at Elol," he said. "They juirt baptized us with the big fellows. They Pit mS- Ft'. \ „ < His Head Taken Clean 6ff His thoul* ders. did not know when to stop. When yon see shelling that Is Shelling, you will know it, my son." 'Well, if this is not shelling, what the devil Is tt? Are they trying to kid us or are you, mon vkux?" which is a French expression that means something like "old timer." 4 - "My Son, when you see dugouts caved In, roads pushed all over the map, guns wrecked, bodies twisted up in knots and forty men killed by one ^ - will • shell--then you seeing shelling." Then one of our men sat up straight mme. So wakrow An$ another mam jrate|^;!^fttr a while, and then he TwpiTi to shake, too. The sergeant Skid th&t if we stayed there much»longer we would not be fit to repel aa attack, so he ordered us Into thfe two dugouts we had made in the hole, and only himself and another man stayed outside on watch. The men in the dugout kept asking each other when the bombardment would end,vand why we were not rein forced, and what was happening, and whether the Turks wWld attack us. It was easy to see why wa *wre not rein forced--no body of £ou!d have got to us from the reae£ye trenches. The, communication trendies were quite a distance from us and were battered up at that. Soupw of the men said we had been forgotten and that the rest of our troopi®||. either re tired or advanced an^ t^at we and the men in the trench who had tried to signal us were the cttiljr detachments left there. - ^ Pretty soon another man and I relieved the two men' who were dbt- side on watch, and as he went down into the dugout the sergeant shouted to us that he thought thi Turks were afraid to attack. He also ordered one of us to keep a live eye toward our rear In case any of on* troops should try to signal us. When I looked through a little gully at the top of the hole, toward the other trench, all could see was barbed wire and smoke and two or three corpses. I began to shiver a little, and I was afraid I would get shell shock, too. So I began to think about Murray and how ho looked when they took him off the wall. But that did not stop the shivering, so I thought about my grand mother and how she looked the last time I saw her. I was thinking about her, I guess, and not keeping a vefy good lookout, when a man rolled over the edge and almost fell on me. He was from the other trenches. I carried him into the dugout and then went out again and stood my watch until the relief came. We were doing half-hour shifts. When I got Into the dugout again the man was coming to. He was just about as near shell shock as I had been--by this time I was shivering only once In a while, when I did not watch myself. He said four men had been sliced up trying to get to us be fore he came; that they had lost 11 men out of their 32, Including the sergeant-major In command and two corporals; that they were almost out of ammunition; that the trenches on both sides of them had been blown In and that they were likely to go to pieces at any moment- He «aid they all thought the Turks would attack behind their barrage, for he said the curtain of fire did not extend more than a hundred yards in front of their trench. What they wanted us to do was to relay a man back with the news and either get the word to ad vance or retire or await reinforce ments, they did not care which--only to be ordered to do something. There was not a commissioned officer left with either of the detachments, you see, and yon might sax we were up in the air--only we were really as far in the ground as we. could get. The man thought there were other of our lines not far behind us, but we knew better; so then he said he did not see how any one could get back from there to our nearest lines. I did not see either. Then we all fig ured we were fotygotten and would not come out of there alive, and you can believe me or not, but I did not much care. Anything would be better than just staying there in that awful noise with nothing to do, and no water. Our'sergeant said he would not ask any man to attempt to carry the mes sage, because he said it was not only certain death, but absolutely useless. And he began to show thai ho waa near shell shock himself. Then I began to shiver again, and I thoqght to myself that anything would be better than sitting in this hole wait ing to go "cafard," so I decided to vol unteer. I did not think there was any chance to get through, but it seemed as if I just had to do something, no matter what I had never felt that way before, and had never been anxious to "go west" with a shell for company, but I have felt that way since then several times, I can tell you. The man waa telling ns that some time before they had seen the Turks bringing up ammunition from some storehouses, but they did not come anywhere near. He Aid their sergeant wanted our messenger to tell them that too. He would say a few words very fast then he would shiver again, and his jaws would clip together and he would try to raise his hand, bat could not Then our sergeant asked the name of the other sergeant, and when the man told him he said the man was senior to himself and therefore in command and Would have to be obeyed. He seemed to cheer up a lot after he said this aqd did not shiver any more, so I thought I would volunteer then, so I said to him, "Well, mon vieux, do you think we are seeing real shelling now?" And then I Was going tb say I would go, but he looked at me In a funny way for a second and then said, "Well, my son, suppose you go and find out." ' " I thought he was kidding me at first but then 1 saw be meant It I thought two things about it--one was that any thing was better than staying there, and the other was that the old dugout was a pretty fair place after all. But I, did not say anything to the ser geant or the other meu--Just went out of the dugout. The sergeant and another man went with me and boost ed me over the back wall of the hole. I lay flat on the ground for a minute to get my bearings, and then started off. I set my course for where I thought the communication trenches were, to the right, and I just stood up and ran, for I figured that as the shells were falling so thick and It was open ground I would not have any better chance if I crawled. 1 tripped several times and went down, and each time thought I *»# time. thlpfc I woijitf] #*§!» I re*< communication tre&c& a not iiiy. had. been the I felt I had dona the wont part of it, and I began to wish very hard that, I would get through--I was not at all crax* about going west .. '-r / ' " The mouth, of the communication trench had b&en battered in and the trenches it joined wfth were-all filled up. There wei?e rifles sticking oaf of them In several places, and l thought probably the men had been buried alive in them. But It Was too late then, if they had been caught, so I climbed over tile blocked entrance to the communication tren^ lM^ jitarted back along it It led up through a sort of guliy. and I thought it was a bad place to'dig a communication trench in, because it gave tile Turks some thing like the side of a hill to shoot at Every once in a while 1 would have to climb in and out of a shell hole, and pprts of them were blocked where a shell had caved In the walls. Ia Ono place I saw corpses all torn to plecesi so I knew the Turks had found the range and had got to this trench In great shape. At another place-I found lots of blood and equipment but no bodies, and I figured that reinforce ments had been caught at this spot and that they had retired, taking their casualties with them. The Turks still had thp range, and they were sending a shell Into the trench every once in a while, and I was knocked down again, though the All I Could See Was barbed Wire and Smoke. shell was so far away that it knocked me down with force of habit more than anything else. I felt dizzy and shivered a lot, and kept trying to think of Murray or anything else but myself. So finally I got to the top of the little hill over which the gully ran, and on the other side I felt almost safe. Just down from the crest of the hill was one of our artillery positions, with the good old "75s" giving it to the Turks as fast as they could. .1 told the artillery officers what had hap pened, had a drink of water and thought I would take a nap. But when they telephoned the message back to division headquarters the man at the receiver said something to the officer and he told me to stay there and be ready. I thought sure he would send me back to where I came from and I knew I never could make it again, bat I did not say anything. (TO BE CONTINUED.) NOT WISE TO GO HUNGRY Writer Criticises -the "No-Breakfast* Fad Which Still Retains a Hold * on Some People. 0* • • ^ • " A few years ago someone started a boom tctr the breakfastless day as con ducive to longevity. I know persona who have clung stubbornly to this ab surdity, Meredith Nicholson writes In the Tale Review. The despicable habit contributes to domestic unsociability and is, I am convinced by my own ex periments, detrimental to health. The chief business of the world-Is trans acted In the morning hours, and I am reluctant to believe that ' it is "most successfully done on empty stomachs. Fasting as a spiritual discipline Is, of course, quite another thing, hat test ing by a tired business man undeir med ical compulsion can hardly be lifted to the piano of things spiritual* To delete breakfast from the day's pro- pram Is a sheer coWardlce, a con fession of invalidism which Is well calculated to reduce the powers of resistance. The man who begins the day with a prescription that' sets him apart from his neighbors may ven ture Into the open jauntily, persuad ing himself that his abstinence proves his snperior qualities; but In his heart to say nothing of his stomach, he knows that he has been guilty of a sneaking evasion. If he were a nor mal, healthy being he would not be skulking out of the house breakfast- less. Early rising, a prompt response to the breakfast bell, a joyous break ing of the night's fast. Is a rtt%î ,to be despised la ctWllsed homes. Terrible Experience in the ftr- l||onne Toid ty Returneti ̂ Hette* ^ was know you are j hit, because when I got it in*the thigh at Dlxmude it felt a good deal as . j, . ^ . though 1 had tripped over a rope, a^lnst the parapet and rtpred »• us. And uuc Uum» I fell a aheU «*- >: . •;<r m M Would Take the Job. Into the office of the Wall Street Journal there ventured a small boy, awed by the great adventure of getting his first job. Timidly he approached an editor aad explained what ha wanted. "Hm," quoth the veteran to the would-be recruit, "It's too bad, hut there are no vacancies now, unless you would like to be managing editor. How about that?" The youngster began'to back away. "Oh," he gasped, "I wouldn't like that at all." ' Yesterday he came back, with 'des peration in his eye, and marched ap to the veteran. # "I've changed my mind," ho an- nouner' "When do I start . , Optimistic Thought,, / >> i ^ Safety built upon vengeance contains the* seeds of Its own destruction. Fumes Filtered Through Mask* and lien "Fell in Their Tracks -̂dna IliWie With Hair Turned White --Mostly Westerners. | > • '• ~ . 1 ' ' v New Xork, Dec. 24.~-Hundreds of Illinois men In the Thirty-third divi sion were among the victims of a shell bombardment in the Argonne forest which started the night of Octo ber 7 and lasted 24 hours. Many of the men who are recover ing from the noxious fumes arrived on the Mongolia, which brought 4,700 officers and men. They said it was the worst gas "strafing" they had ever experienced. Nearly all the men gassed were bad ly burned about the body, and a num ber said they had been blind for five weeks. Many wore smoked glasses and eye Shades. They will be sent to hospitals hear this dty for special treatment Surgeons say they will re cover completely. The One Hundred and Twenty-ninth infantry, which has many members of the Third Illinois in its ranks, appears to have been the hardest bit, judging from the stories of the wounded men on the Mongolia. •The casualties of tlie regiment In the attack amounted to at least 50 per cent. Few of the gassed men died, however. The gas attack lasted so long that the fumes finally filtered through the masks and the men fell In their tracks. Fifty men of Company F of the One Hundred and Thirty-first infantry fought their way through 200 Prus sian guardsmen who had surrounded them 4n the Argonne November 8 and got back to the American lines. This story was toid by Corp. Elmer Sauerinan, 714 Cornelia avenue, Chi cago, one of the fifty. Sauerman was shot by a sniper. The byllet pierced his left lung, glanced off a rib and went up into his shoulder. Surgeons marveled at his escape. Pals of Sau erman carried him back to safety. Sauerman said the 50 men were sent On a raid Into the German lines for prisoners and information. The Ger mans spotted them and sent 20 guards men out to capture them. Only about fifteen of the party Sauerman was In got back without being wounded. To be sent on patrol In No Man's land In the Toul sector for 14 nights In a f&w was the experience of Pri vate Fred Farley, who has seen forty-, six years and was the oldest enlisted man on board. Farley's hair has turned white since he landed In France over a year and a half ago with the Sixteenth Infantry. He lives at Paris; HI. s f Farley got Into the "army a week after war was declared by telling the doctors he was only thirty-five years of age. He is of powerful build and for that reason was constantly picked for patrol work, the most dangerous of tasks. ITAUANS BEGIN AIR SERVICE Two Giant Planes Carry Twenty Pas sengers Each Distance of 640 Miles.. -Roipe, Dec. 24.--Immediately after the armistice was signed Italian avia- •tion experts • set themselves to the study of the best way to adapt their machines to commercial and traveling purposes. The first effort met with the greatest success. v Two Capronls, 35 yards long, with three motors, flew from Terrara to Home in three hours, covering a dis tance of 040 miles. Bach carried 20 passengers. imm sC* ; ALCOHOL'S fBR mm**#™**?* ain*lalin$»eIbodlyJi*«l*- Alwaya Bears the Signature of % OiectfiBtoessaadB^CfliW"* m * k*!**y8v Use For Over AhdlrftilRemerff®* and Fevrrfshness ana ftcSimfle Stfnatw*0* Bxact Copy of wrappoc. Teach the Child to Save. The American parent has an oppor* ttinity today of planting the seed of success in every American child through the Thrift Stamp movement The government allows each little saver interest on his investment just the same as big Investors on their Lib erty bonds or other large Investments. Parents should allow the child the pleasure, as well as tlie educational value, of getting this Interest and tab ulating It for himself, Instead of doing It for him. This will be not only a joy to the child as a result x>f his savings, but of great educational benefit as a foundation for future success. Cor "any*caae or ^n^t that cannot be cured by HALL>'8 CATARRH MEDICINE. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is tak en internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Sold by druggists for over forty years. " Price 75=. Testimonials free. Cheney * Co.. Toledo, on|p ^ ' ...' :*. • • * ' Greasing the Ways. P&": Said the near-cynic; "You can say what you please about elbow grease being necessary for success, but the oily tongue has got it beat a thousand ways." » i If a music teacher can't make any thing else out of the voice of an heir ess she can at least make money. ,*•-Master of Languages. Flatbush--His wife speaks fottr lan*"s ^ g u a g e s a n d h e o n l y s p e a k s o n e . I ? i ' : , 4 . Bensonhurst--I suppose the enl$ one he speaks Is English. / "That's right, but his 'Wife: English, Spanish, French and Italian.' , ' "But what gooji would It do him to learn the other languages? - She'/ vi Wouldn't give him a chance to usO v: 'em." \ ! "No, I know It, but she don't want T to be talking all the time to him an<f» , he not know what she's talking about." : Keep your liver active, your bowels etetn tnl^ taking Dr. Pierce'* Pleasant Pellets and yaa'ftf: keep healthy, wealthy and wise. Adv. Planted by Grant. , •Planted when Gen. U. S. Grant wa#5| a lieutenant stationed at Fort Van* couver, a cherry tree on the farm ol|r| Grant Farmer, on Ford's Prairie, Washington, ia still bearing at the agai| of eighty-four years, says the Ameri* can Forestry Magazine of Washington/';! It has a spread of 65 feet and its trunk measures 10 fe^t circumference. " His Position. " \ "I see the motorist has not roafe;;^^ away from the consequences of this ' A smashup. That proves he la abov«r suspicion." *'7 "Certainly he Is, because un der the auto." mrt I'hi.I.II. uti« ii. HAARLEM OIL CAPSULES • i J ,i IF YOUR BACK ACHES , RUSS WAR LOSS ENORMOUS Authoritatively Stated That Country'a ̂ Casualties /kre 9,150,00ft*. ' 1,700,000 Dead. Petrograd, Dec. 24.--Russia's war casualties aro- authoritatively given at 9,150,000, as follows: Killed, 1,- 700,000; wounded, 4,350,000; prisoners, 2,500,000. WILSON IN ROME ON JAN. 3 President to Arrive in Italian Capital m J*# Dispatch. * 24.--PrefiK£tir will arrive in Rome on January 3, ac cording to an announcement made la the Italian newspapers. - \. Krupps to Pay No Dividend. • ; Berlin, Dec. 24.--The Krupp com pany at a general meeting decided not to pay a dividend this year. The great arms concern paid a dividend of 12 pet cent in each of the first two war years and 10 per cent last year,.,-'. New Orleans Celebrates. New Orleans, Dec. 24.--The two hundredth anniversary of the founding of this city by the French was cele brated here. Expressions of good feel ing were exehaagtd between city au thorities and the French coosai . Electric locomotives are being in creasingly adopted In South jtA-ioe fo* No Hope for Entombed Men. Negaunee, Mich., Dec. 24.--The four men caught In the cave-In of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron company's mine late Thursday are still entombed. Lit tle hope is held out that any . of the nan will be taken out allye. Air Mall Service Ha1ta& Chicago, Dec. 24.--Further attempts to establish the Chicago-New York air mall service will be suspended until January 2, according to advices 're- eelved here from Washington. All at> tempts thus far have failed. .4-, - and "worn-out?" Are you nervous and irritable? Don't Bleep well at night? Have a "dragged out" unrested feeling when you get up In the morning? Dizzy spells? Bil ious? Bad taste in the mouth, back ache, pain or soreness In the lblns, ahd abdomen? Severe distress when urinating, bloody, cloudy mine or sed iment? All these indicate gravel or stone in the bladder, <?r that the poi sonous microbes, which are always in your system, have Attacked your kid neys. You should use GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules immediately. The oil soaks gently into the walls and lining of the kidneys, and the lit tle poisonous animal germs, which are causing the Inflammation, are imme diately attacked and chased ont of your system without inconvenience or Don't Ignore the "little pains and: aches," especially backaches. They* may be little now but there is no tell*® lng how soon a dangerous or fatal dls« ease of which they are the forerun^ ners may show itself. Go after th«|g cause of that backache at once, or you§^ may find yourself In the grip of an ln4^: curable disease. Do not delay a minute. Go to yout\;A druggist and Insist on his supplying you with a box of GOLD MfiDAt^ ^ Haarlem Oil Capsules. In 24 hour# / you will feel renewed health and vigor.;" After you have cured yourself, con- . * tinue to take one or two Capsule^ each day so as to keep In first-elasah condition, and ward off the dagger of. f u t u r e a t t a c k s . M o n e y r e f u n d e d I # , they do not help you. Ask for tha , original imported GOLD MEDAXu* brand, and thus be sure of getting tha~\,^ genuine.--Adv. " ' "" 1 v.- / Ak^fp y> ',>i> * ur stom achs--Floated, gassystomachs--belchy, ~ miserable*feeling stomachs--these are Acid-Stomachs. What a lot of misery (hey cause! How Acid-Stomach, with its day- after-day sufferings, does take the joy out of life! Not only that -- Acid- Stomach is always undermining one s health. Think of what acid aoes to the teeth--how the add eats through £e enamel, causing them to decay, it any wonder, then, that Acid- Stomach saps the strength of the strongest bodies and wreck* the health. of so many people? You see ACID-STOMACH victfms everywhere always ailing. They can t Take EATONIC and gairhiof JW f & Acid-Stomach. This wonderful mod- --« f ern remedy actually takes Ihe excess jr •oid out of the stomach. It quickly ; ̂ and positively relieves bloat, heart- . :;/* burn, belching, food repeating sour, " 1 * gassy stomach, and the pains of indi- ' \ &,, : gestion. Makes tha stomach cool ' f: fmd comfortable--keeps it sweat and strong. Ban'ihes all stomach trot* g bles so completely that yotf foiget J yon have a stomach. Yon can-eat taeh that makes aood'djgeS^dWi- tood to sour and fer- Acid-Stom tt surtly E cult, isiiisns looa so soar • ment in tha boweto, weakens the blood and ftlla tha systass with yi" T A itsemMSHQ what you like aad digest your food In comfort, without fear of distressing after-effects. EATONIC helps yon ; get full strength out of every monthtel En eat--and that ia what you must \ :|5 ; ve to be well and strong--full •/ ' * strength from your food. * Cs Get a big box of EATONKJ from ' > ^ your druggist TODAY. We aathorisa aim to guarantee EATONIC to pleaaa . you. If it fails ia aay way* take Ik - •'?*• back; be whl refund your money. II V»?v jtHtr druggist doeanotkeep ̂ ATONIC, write to us aad wa will send you a Us 50c box. YcmaaiiaaiduathaOOBaflli youreoeiveit. AddvesaH L. grsiaer, Fnaident, Eatonie I WabaA._ w _ T *%; V :ET,. VJLx'J • - \ /t • , -'"j I: ?S(S{»aE* t • :
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