ALMOST HELPLESS Mr. Reuter Went Through a Terrible Siege of Kidney Trouble. Doan’s Brought Back His Health. “After an injury 1 was in terrible shape from kidney trouble,” says D. Reuter, North St., West Chicago, 111. “I couldn’t stoop because of the awful pains in my back and the steady, dull misery alniost drove me frantic. I had to be help- ed out of bed mornings, the pains across my kid- neys were so bad and no- body knows the agony I went through. I couldn't do anything and was al- most helpless; it seemed I would never get well. “The urine (Jateeq he af too often and burned like scalding water. The pas- Mr. Reuter sages were scanty and 5 had no Sontrol over them. At times every Wing In front of me grew dark and I couldn’ see for several minutes. 1 a profusely and I was thirsty all the time. For twq years I suffered, trying medicine after medicine without relief. I was just about discouraged and didn’t think 1 would ever be able to work again. “Hearing about Doan's Kidney Pills I used them and four boxes cured me. My kidneys became normal, my back got well and strong and all the other troubles disappeared.’ Sworn to before m 12, JAS. W. CARR, Notary Public. Cet Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S ®i5Ner PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. Envy. “Gosh.” aid the “but I surely envy fine home-cooked meals you get every day.” “Gosh,” replied the at-home, “hut I certainly envy you travel ing men who ean eat whatever lke In a hotel, while 1 must against the skimpy that wife thinks necessary u MOTH ER! Have you ever gsed M YTHER'S SALVE for Colds, Coughs, Pneumonia, Asthma, and tarrh? “If you haven't get it at once. It will cure you.—Adv. traveling you, those stuy- menls 3 JOY Insurance in Australia. insurance Australia gratifying results. It has been found yossible to pay a bonus of 10 | sn ordinary policies, and to er concessions, Reserves built up and expenses met, puirkable rery which is about 12 per cent of the net premium income. HEAL BABY RASHES That itch, Burn and Torture With Cuti. cura—Trial Free. State in mak are Success is low A hot Cuticura Soap bath is soothing to irritated skins ment. Use Cuticura for every-day tol let preparations to prevent such trou bles. After this treatment baby sleeps mother rests and healment follows. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. Ly Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv, Sure, Blotter : i Caleneds are numbered, Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver, bowels and stomach, One little Pellet for a laxative, three for a cathartic, Satisfactory. Bess—Tloes he husband? June—Very- nal ens tify ry make a satisfactory emies, for her en Horses Horsemen agree that Yager’'s Liniment 1s the best and most eco ' nomicalliniment for gener alist able use. For strained Kgaments, spavin harness galls, sweeny, wounds or of sora, cuts and a ‘enlargements, it gives quick d any A 33c¢ bottle contains more than the usual $0c-botiie of lisiment. 35¢ PER BOTTLE AT ALL DEALERS YAGER’S INIMENT GILBERT BROS. & C0, Baltimore, Md, RAW FURS WANTED 1 BUY Rav FURS-DIRBOT FROM the hunter fr, the eo fur Da or, of the local fy Pol uy or 00 Die OF toh thousand hides, y pri TR fey ged \ Foguiacly throughont retam ee, will bo reasonable. we will a Abie 10 very nieely and be of benefit EE th ew we cv BON. HARRY LEVY 134-136 West 26th 34.1 New York City Member of the Raw Fur nt’ Association OF OF the City of New EVES SSE ns : Poy EEE take & prompt and effective that acts quickly and i Tinedy-me no opiates, You ean get such a remedy by asking for pisos New York.~The woman who has been going the rounds will be abie to check off on her fingers the French models that have been over-copled al- ready, although the season of wearing new clothes has scarcely begun, She may even know the names that have been given to these frocks in the Paris salon, but if, through lack of inter- est, she does not go that far, she knows the name of the maker and the source from which the gown sprang. There is the Bulloz gown which goes merrily on its way into the realms of the ready-to-wear departments, Its velours folds clings to many a figure, This evening gown has a straight | silhouette and ic made of black chif. | fon velvet, with bodice and low girdle | of white satin. The front of the bod- and the short sleeves are of white chiffon. and the broad gold mesh bag that cov- ers the front of the figure and forms a peplum to the belt, dangles and | The gown Cheri, Jenny called Ma its creator a snug by would bring You know this gown, It It with its slim bodice the waistline into a which the skirt Is its cravat girdles the waist, Its] elbow ves finished with al turn-over cuff of white satin, and the! broad, folded surplice-bib of white satin put around the neck and tucked into the waistline, Odd Origin of Name. | y, however, you do not know | my named this gown Ma | It is a copy de luxe of the don't you? is quite simple, that runs below curve to gathered, encir slightly that loose, 1 ber ’ loosely cle glee Possibl soldiers in Paris | 1 in the canteens, American soldier has learned to nll these helpful and agreeable nitresses by the French phrase has quickly learned, “Ma Cherle.” Paris, with its quick love of a kname, has adopted the title for its {tresses who serve the soldiers, iny quickly saw the possibilities popular gown in this friendly lit. salute and therefore copled the and white uniform in velvet and atin, adding some brilliant, ornament. buttons; and the Ameri. can buyers swung it into line as the women who serve the it the restaurants an one There are two other gowns that were on the crest of the wave of popularity us well ag Ma Cherie. One is Jeanne Laavin's Pershing, which is in a re- markable tone of army gray and what Is ealled American blue. It could real | ly be called Maryland blue along with the Maryland brown, for it is the ex-! act shade of the wild ducks that one shoots and eats on the Maryland shores, This Pershing gown looks some- what like an army overcoat. It hangs straight, in the form of a chemise, and is loosely and roughly girdled in. Lanvin has another cowboy costume that runs in the same channel with “Pershing.” It is of khaki cloth trimmed with itself slashed into the deep fringes Ly the Arizona men, It has a sturdy, slouchy, artistic air, it is quite adorable on the youngster who pitches on a cowboy hat of black panne velvet as an adjunct to its khak! tones, Then there Is another gown by Bulloz which is well known and which carries out his idea of using the Per- glan tree of life ns a means of or namenting the skirt. You may re. member that the sensational gown called “Griselidis” which was worn last season by Mary Garden when she sang the opera by that name, also had this symbolic Persian embroidery its claim to fame, Blazing Embroidery on Skirt. This new gown is of black tulle and satin, with slight cascades formed by rufiles that go across the front of the figure and ripple down the sides; these ruffles are edged with silver ribbon, and they display, as though they were a lifted curtain, the audacious and blazing embroidery on the front of the skirt. In the center, just where thes¢ curtain rufiles are lifted, there is 8 huge Persian ornament that might have been worn by Haroun-al-Raschid This gown is for the few, not the many. It is well that a woman should know most of the over-popular French mod els before she spends money on clothes, certain designers, she is apt to buy 8 gown of which she will become ex ceedingly weary before However, she Is the only one something different. The French models, nals at any The J are often nals, houette, a peculiar kind of material or trimming, a high neck or a sleeve, and we make a salad of our own of these ingredients. it should be. on the one-plece frock and by all the people. There are frocks that enough for the street with a bit of fur one of the swinging, army ion by popularity. protection. There are frocks that may serve, as far as color and fabric go, for restaurant and the coat, any kind of ceremonial occasion. worn by the individualists and those who feel that they are fortably dressed unless they are One-Piece Frocks Popular. plays and the millionarie in Red Cross activities are different types of womer need in life by adopting this kicd of costumery. Never before has there been such s They greet one at ever) glance of the eye. No one-has tried The severe ones, are the best ones, have the now mous surplice bodice which is fa Here is a primitive fur collar for the street. It is a broad scarf of skunk lined with brilliant satin and pulled it fastens at the front with a Barrel shaped muff made of the same peltry. collar. neross the bust and passed around the waist to tie in the back or brought for ward to tie in the front. The skirt has a bias tunic to give slimness, ol an almost imperceptible Inward curve at the hem. Velveteen is offered for serviceabl frocks, and chiffon velvet for Iindoo gowns. Beige colored frocks trimmed with Kolinsky, putols and Judson seal are common and nltogether satisfying When these tina frocks have fur hems there is a velvet and fur coat that goes over them. (Copyright, 1017, by the McClure Newspa per Syndicate.) it's a Year of Plaids. Plaids are having a strong vogue this season. Perhaps the recent popu. larity of checked ginghams has some thing to do with the matter, In any event plaid taffetas and plaid worsted: are popular for entire dresses and sep arate skirts, and also as combination fabrics to accompany plain color ma terials. BOSCHEE'S GERMAN SYRUP will quiet your cough, soothe the In- flammation of a sore throat and Jungs, stop irritation in the bronchial tubes, in the morning, Made and sold America for fifty-two years. A won- derful prescription, assisting Nature in building up your general health and | throwing off the disease. Especially useful in lung trouble, asthma, croup, bronchitis, ete. ized countries.— Adv. Apple Full of Gold. by a minister in Albany, Ore, a short time ago. The apple was n gift from to eat it he found it contained a suffi- | clent quantity of gold coins to pay | the expense of himsel? and family on a trip to the minister's old home in Ohio. He had been panning to visit his mother and the congregation, learn- ing of this, decided to pay his ex- penses, ELIXIR BABEK WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD IN THE PHILIPPINES, “1 contracted malaria in 1806, and after a ear's fruitless treatment by a prominent ashington phjwician, your Elixir Babek entirely cur me. On arriving here I came down with tropical malaria—~the worst form —and sent home for Babek. Again It proved its value—It Is worth its weight in old here.” Brasie O'Hagan, Troop E, 8th 8. Cavalry, Balayan, Phi ip ines. Elixir Babek, 50 cents, all druggists or by Washiz igton, D. C, Didn't Give Her a Chance, “You'll have to pay fare for madam,” sald the conductor. “But he's only eight years old.” “We collect for all children geven.” “Well, why don't you have your silly old rules put up where people can see them?” over scalded, Ro wn going to bed Adv. If your eyes smart or feel man Eye Balsam applied ups is just the thing to relieve them and If a fel- minute Mistakes wil low isn't on they'll pile | happen the job up. too. every ACID POISONING! The most eminent physicians recognize that uric scld stored up in the system in the cause of gout and rheumatism, that | this uric acid polson is present in the! joints, muscles, or nerves. Dy experi. menting and analysis at the Invalids'| Hotel and Burgical Institute in Buffalo, | iN, Y., Dr. Plerce discovered a combing | | tion of native remedies that he called! | An-u-rie, which drives out the uric acid | from the system, and in this way the pis swelling and Inflammation subside, f you are a sufferer from rheumatism, backache, pains here or there, you can ob- | tain Anuric, double strength, at any drug | store for 60 cents, and get relief from the paing and ills brought about by uric acid; or send Dr. Plerce 10c for tris! pkg. Anu- | ric which you will find many times more | potent than lithia and eliminates uric acid | almost as hot water melts sugar. A short | trial will convince you. Bend a sample of | your water to Dr. Plerce and it will be | tested free of charge. | Anuric is a regular insurance and life- | | saver for all big meat eaters and those | DELAWARE ENEWS Bethany Bench, Del —*1 had a come breakdown from overwork, so the doctor said. I surely was a come | plete wreck and suffered terribly from i bladder and kidney trouble; in fact, 5 was down on the fiat of ny back for about two weeks, could not do any» thing. My suffering was so great I can’t explain it. The doctor said I had inflammation of bladder and kidneys still was a great sufferer. 1 never god much relief until I began to take Dr, and from the very first dose I began to get relief, and in two days I felt well, and I never have had one symptom since. I ecan's praise this medicine enough. I have been waiting to see if the pain would return, but I believe I am cured = | MRS, ‘ALMIRA I. HENDERSON, Write Dr. V. M, Plerce, Buffalo, XM for free medical adyice—Adv. human being, young or old. TUTT'S tion get DR. used for this Dr. Tut's Liver Pills Write now for our WE CHARGE NO COMMISSION Aberdeen, Idaho. — friend asked me to try table Compound and 1 A I have now taken mend it to all sufferin PRESTIDGE, Aberdeen, nd is the an recom. The doctor asked me to Compound. well and strong, have no tell them Lydia E. “All There. “Good heavens! The star has for- “Oh, well, the leading lady hasn't That gown she's sets off her figure to perfec- ho- Ymportant to ‘Mothers Examine carefully every bottie of that famous old remedy Bears the Zt Tia Children Cry for Fletcher's 8 Castoria Very Bad Taste, We We Say. We have always thought him witty, but now we have discovered that he is merely offensive. The other day we told him that we were intending to bring out our poems in book form. “All of ‘em?’ he asked, “Well, practically all of them." “Good I” he grunted. “That's putting ‘em where they won't bother anybody.” «(leveland Plain Dealer, a To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The S$ Take the Old lad GROVE'S oi megriodien ovo iw Roe wl are as a is an every label, showing it is tie ry The inine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 60 cents Most amateur photographers prove conclusively that truth is stranger than fiction. . Baltimore is to have a $1,500,000 enamel ware faery. ggists His Own Words. With an idea of testing hi | knowledge of their { Boston school ts | blackboard the wink is as go horse.” Then he the to rewrite this saying, using their own words, but retaining the original meaning of the sentence, One youagster wrote, “A spasmodic the is ax adequate as a slight indication of the cranium to an equine quadruped devold of its visionary capacities.” 8 pupils’ mother tongue, a acher wrote on well-known proverb, * wi 68 a nod to a blind told class movement of » optic One bottle of Dr. Peery's will save you money, time, health, One dose sufficient, Oll in addition. Adv, Wealth ot Australia. wealth In Australin shows that the | country’s net assets are equal to $1. 675 per head of the population. The | migration returns show a loss of 279, | 000 males since the war began and white women now outnumber the men | by 85,000, | $100 Reward, $100 Catarrh is a local disease greatly enced by Senstitutional Sanitions, | therefore requires constitut reat. ment HALLS CATARRH M EniCiRE is taken internally and acts th Hined TAL BCA dia Bu LI'8 CATA fastroys se ent sirens 57, the : oro Yes tien rengt mn roving | general heal th and assl assists no doy 00.00 for an y cane ng lis that SeALL'S TA Cats ho falls to cure. te THe. Testimonials free. , J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, —— A Sure Way. y "1 wish 1 knew how to Kili time” “Why don’t you join an amateur mu- | sleal soclety?” There's one thing about politeness it never has to be apologized for after wards, Excellent for Coughs & Colds ei] NAME i Pr - BALTIMORE HIOC- oO ane FVR CO. Le SHIP VS YOVR x RAW IFURJ HIDES" WOOL-TALLOW ~- Sieh RL GF Ce] RACE fie le SHECPSKINS, ETC. WE PAY HIGHEST MARKET PRICES ND COMMISSIONS CHARGED CHECK SENT SAMLC DAY SHIP MENT IS babs — 310 rT S10 oe RB AON . oe TIM2REL. v