Seiaiasomaieamertasamosmarr—s———————— If Back Hurts | | | . Begin on Salts { by Drinking Quarts of | Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally | Good Water J No man or woman can make a | | | | | | mis- | take by flushing the kidneys occasion- well-known authority. food ally, Too says a much rich creates acids | which clog the kidney pores so that | or strain poisons from Rheu- trouble, dizziness, filter and Then you get sick. matism, headaches, liver nervousness, constipation, sleeplessness, bladder disorders often come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage, or at- they sluggishly part of the waste the blood. only | | D000 M TRAIL SOAREY edn by ARTHUR D. HOWDEN SMITH AUTHOR of PORTO BELLO GOLD ETC. W.NU. SERVICE CHAPTER XI—Continued Be Peter answered him with the Iro- tended by a sensation of scalding, be- | @uois war-whoop, and we sprang from i : Ae the sumac clump, dodging right and gin to drink soft water in quantities; also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of wa- ter before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush clogged kid- neys and stimulate them to activity, also to help neutralize the acids in the system so they no longer cause frritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders. | left through the tree trunks. “Here they come,” yelled Bolling in warning. | wind of Its bullet on my cheek. | two Cahnuagas— Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot | efferves- every- injure; makes a delightful cent lithia-water drink, which one can take now and then keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby often preventing serious kidney complications. Pain Kin SALVE An efficient and guick-acting oint- ment, made of wool fat (lanoline) com- bined with antiseptic, healing, pain- relieving medicine. Recommended for burns, cuts, sores, wounds, bruises, chapped and cracked skin, bolls, piles and felons. Used as a local application to relieve colds on the chest, croup, lumbago, varicose veins and eczema. The Geo, H. Rundle Co., Pigna, 0. DON’T LET WORMS to help | I felt the Tom WO He fired his musket, and shot with no better results. The surviving Cahnuagas threw away their guns and fled. “I will take care of them, brothers,” Ta-wan-ne-ars, casting aside “One Seneca against that should be fair shouted his own inusket. odds.” He put on speed as he spoke, waved his hand and was gone, running like a grevhound after the two frightened savages, who were scurrying around the swamp. The field was left to Peter and me and the two ruffilans whom the frontier called Red Death and Black Death. They seemed nothing loath to meet us. “Ho, ho, ho,” roared Bolling. *“D’ye see who it is, Tom? Waall, young teller’—this to me—'"was you intend- in’ to amuse me some?” “I'm intending to let & } air into your diety skin,” I He threw back his head as if much amused. “Ho, ho, ho! Now ain't you got the smart way o' puttin’ things? Young feller, I'll tell yer what: you're too good for the frontier. You—" As quick as lightning, and without an indication in advance to warn me, e clean iswered. | he flung his tomahawk at my head. I you?” TORTURE CHILDREN " Children who have worms have not a chance of being healthy. Watch for the symp- toms. Gritting the teeth, pick- ing the nostrils, disordered stomach. Rid your child’s body of these ruin- ous parasites. Give him Frey's Ver- mifuge—America’s safe, vegetable worm medicine for 75 years. Buy it today. At all drug stores. Frey’s Vermifuge Expels Worms Schoolboys’ Ambitions A London schoolmaster gives the re- sult of a ballot from more than 100 hoys of preparatory school age as to the profession or occupation in life that each hoped to adopt: “Air force 21, motor engineers 10, electrical engi- neers 13, navy 12, army 10, commerce 6, law 5, stage 4, politics 3, journalism and literature 3, private detectives 3, architects 3, explorers 2, civil engi- neers 2, painters 1, church 1, school- masters 1. Helping the Dream Along Mrs. Binks—My dear, I want a hat —a perfect dream of a hat. Will you get it for me? Binks—Sure. I'll make a Welsh rarebit for you to eat just before you £o to bed. Shade Makes Health Appeal After Surprising Recovery from Indigestion and AilmentsCaused by Run-Down Condition and Ty- phoid Fever, Father of 7 Children Wants Everyoneto Know Tanlac. Cassius W. Shade, 416 S. Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa., an Armstrong em- ploye, says: “A few simple preventive measures will often forestall pain. When 1 began taking Tan- lac, I had almost given up hope of re- covering my lost health, ravaged by Typhoid Fever. For 18 years I was a nervous wreck. From morning till night I suffered tormenting pain. My nerves were so worn that I couldn't sleep. Indigestion almost made it im- possible for me to eat. “] want the world to know about Tanlac, for it has returned to me my lost health, banished all signs of stom- ach troubles, built up my strength.” Tanlac, Nature's remedy, made from roots, barks and herbs according to the famous Tanlac formula, relieves con- stipation, tones up sluggish liver, puts stomach in shape, vanquishes pain and builds strength. Regain good health. Take this wonder tonic and remedy. #t your druggist’s. saw it coming, and instinctively did the only thing possible to save my- gelf—raised my own ax to guard. Boll- ipg’s hatchet struck mine and knocked it from my hand, leaving my arm sore and tingling. “You wasn’t expectin’ that, was he gibed. “Waall, young feller, there’s a heap © other things you ain't expectin’, but they're a-goin’ to happen. Yes, right now. You watch.” He poised himself on the balls of his feet, and pranced around me, his big, double-edged scalping knife held ready in his right hand. “I'm aimin’ to carve you, my lad,” he warned me. “You ain't get the chance a squirrel has ag'in an éagle. There ain't a knife-fighter in these parts can stand up to me. Boy, I'm | ‘most ready to be sorry for ye. I feel that bloody-minded I ain't got no mercy left at all.” He attacked me with a peculiar sweeping blow that was aimed at my shoulder, but fell at the level of the waist. Had it passed my guard, 'twould have disemboweled me. I parried his blade with mine, and struck back for the first time with such venom that he leaped away in alarm. The suspension in his attack gave me opportunity to glance over my shoulder toward the edge of the swamp, where Peter and the negro were circling each other warily, toma- hawk poised for throwing. The sight put an idea in my mind. I remembered my duel with the Cahnu- aga in the glade by the Great Trail and the discovery that he was at a disadvantage when 1 used the knife as I had learned to use the sword. I promptly shifted my grip on the knife- hilt and held it straight before me as if it were a rapier. At the same time 1 inclined my other arm behind me to balance it Bolling viewed this maneuver with derision, “Ye pore baby,” he sneered. “Think ye can meet a knife-fighter like me with one arm? Or fight me off with the point? I'll show ye.” He charged upon me like a batter- ing-ram, his knife a whirling point of steel, its broad blade slashing in both directions, I retired slowly, anxious to increase his self-confidence. “Stand up to me now!” he yelled finally. “Be ye feared?” I laughed at this, and it made him furious. He stamped around me, slashing and stabbing, and it was sev- eral minutes before he discovered that however viciously he struck 1 was al ways able to parry him with an econ- omy of effort. He crept forward like a huge cat, feet spread wide, shoulders crouched, knife a menacing flame. Somewhat to his surprise I did not give ground to him this time, but met him squarely as he advanced. My arm was extended, full-length, tipped with a good ten inches of steel. He struck, and 1 parried the blow. He slashed, and I put it aside. He struck again, and I almost succeeded in twisting his blade from his hand by an old trick of the salle des armes. But my knife was not long enough to get the neces- gary purchase with it, He charged with wonderful celerity, dropped to his knee and slashed up- ward so effectively that his point cut the skirt of nv leather shirt, “I'll got ye yet,” he howled with thee. COPYRIGHT BY BRENTANO'S But I refused to be intimidated. In- deed, I was no longer doubtful of the issue. 1 knew that I could outfight him or any fighter of his caliber by my adaptation of sword-play ' to knife- fighting. I leaped upon him by way of answer, and pressed the fighting. He yielded ground to me, seeking to retreat into the woods by the trail; but I rounded him up and herded him steadily toward the edge of the swamp. I shortened our fighting-range, and gave him the point, drawing blood oc- casionally. He kept his head and parried desperately, trying to escape to one side, but I was on him down, | THE PATTON COURIER Dazea and with a mouthful of shat tered teeth, Tom struggled feebly, but | Peter twisted him, bore | without avail. him to the ground, shifted grip rapidly, drove his knee into the quivering belly and throttled the life out of the black throat. “So I make an endt of him,” panted the Dutchman as he staggered to hls feet. “Aye, we have made an end to Red | Death and Black Death,” 1 answered. “md 1 slew the two who added Ta-wan-ne-ars, touching two scalps whose clustered feathers pro- truded from his belt. “A clean sweep,” 1 said. “There will be none to carry the tale to La Vierge du Bois.” CHAPTER XII Governor Burnet Is Defied "Twas early autumn when we re turned to Albany. battlements of Fort Orange stood out straight from its staff. The citizens who thronged the street leading up to the fort gate must needs hold on to their hat-brims. “Are the streets ed?" 1 asked Peter. He shook his head, and a tavern keeper who stood in his door« way, regarding the passers-by with an usually 1 accosted The flag over the | ran,” | | Legion | | so crowd- | AMERICAN LEGION (Copy for This Department Supplied by the American Legion News Service.) WANT UNIFORM LAWS TO HELP CHILDREN program of the national child committee of the American was announced recently with the appointment of State Senator Sher- man W. Child of Minneapolis, Minn., as vice chairman to be in charge of The welfare | the legislative work of the committee, The legislative phase of child wel- fare will be the most important part of the work this year, according to Miss Emma C. Puschner, director of the national child welfare division at national headquarters in Indianapolis, | Ind. ticipation of the harvest he would reap | later. “Piz his excellency the governor” he explained. “The governor and Mas- ter Colden of his council have sum- moned certain gentry and merchants and the officers of the troops to meet them in the great hall of tke fort this | afternoon.” se swiftly that he was afraid of a blow from the rear, and must needs stand to defend himself. At last he | stood on the very brink of the morass, with no avenue of escape open. “How will you die, my friend?" I asked. “You can smother to death if you prefer it?” His answer was a of sate rage and his knife, thrown point- first at my By luck 1 caught its point on my hilt, aside and ganet rush. He wrapped his arms around me, intent carry- ing with him into the and slime. But I stabbed him to the heart before his bear's hug was completed, and he fell away from mie, arms spread wide, and lay in a heap by the tussocks of marsh bellow insen- chest. sheer his on me 007Ze noisome grass, I stood over him, panting from my exertions, when a shout from Ta-wan- ne-ars attracted my attention. The Seneca was returning from his pursuit of the two Cahnuagas, He again and pointed behind me. to see Peter and the negro locked in each other's arms, and as I looked, Tom heaved Peter into the air and tried to throw him. But Peter locked his legs around the negro’s waist, and they rolled over and over across the ground. I reached them just as they strug- gled to their feet, grips unrelaxed. Pe- ter warned me off. “Standt clear,” he croaked. “I fin- {sh this myself.” Certes, nobody but Peter could have finished it. The negro's strength was colossal. He fought like a wildeat, with teeth and nails and legs. But Peter met him phlegmatically, refusing to be angered by the vilest attempt. They had torn the clothing from each shoulders and flanks. They Their skins shone with other's dripped blood. sweat, effort for breath. Tom stooped and flung arms around Peter's waist, driving his head for the Dutchman's loins. Peter retal- jated by bringing up his knee against his the negro’'s chin. Tom reeled back, | and Peter swooped upon him. One | arm hooked Tom's waist, the other | caught him by the neck. { moned to attend upon him. turned ft | | I am deeply in your debt. We came to the fort gate and gave our names to the sentry who stopped all save the few the governor had sum A messen ger he dispatched brought back wort that and we were escorted across and into the of the joining the great hall. Master met we were to enter, the parade quarters commandant ad- (olden us in the door. “Zooks, but 1 am right glad to see vou,” he cried. “And his excellency ls overjoyed.” ush He opened an inner door and | islation “The main objective will be uniform legislation in nearly every state in the Union.” Miss Puschner said. The leg- will look to improve condi- tions not only of children of World war veterans, but children generally. “The Legion will avoid any attitude | of attampting to force legislation in | any | Legion officials of each ered us into the presence of the gov- | ernor. Master Burnet rose and came forward with hand outstretched. “Master Ormerod, this could not have been better! 1 wished above all things for speech with you. Corlaer. Ta-wan-ne ars, you have again incurred the grati- tude of the province.” “Did you receive my report from » Oswego, sir?’ 1 asked. “Certes, 'twas that—and this”"—he tapped a document which lay before him on the table—*“which brought me here,” He proffered it. "Twas a report from a secret agent at Montreal, quoting the decision of the French fur dealers, acting in conjunction with their gov- | ernment, to raise the price of beaver | thirty men awaited him. shouted | I turned | from two livres, or one shilling six- pence in English currency, the pound, level of four three the established price then at the English trading- to the livres, or shillings prevaili posts. “That, mind you,” continued the gov- ernor as I returned the paper to him, “was the first reaction in Canada to the tidings that Murray had succeeded in legitimatizing his trade over the Doom Trail. But come with me, It may be I shall appeal to you for first- hand testimony.” We deposited our muskets in a cor- ner of the room, and filed into the larger chamber adjoining, where some Several were gentry who were members of his coun- ¢il. Three were officers in command of the frontier garrisons. The remain- der were merchants, dealing to greater or lesser extent in the fur-trade, the great export staple of the province. His excellency wasted no time in preliminaries or generalities. He de- posited several papers on the table in front of him, and addressed to his task. “Gentlemen,” he began, “I have sum- moned you to meet me here because a situation has arisen which is of the utmost gravity to the welfare of the province and the larger interests of his majesty’s realm. Recently I have been in receipt of a communication in the form of a petition sigred by many of the chief merchants of the province, beseeching me to abandon my oppo- sition to the retention of the free trade high A | with Canada which is now temporarily I'heir chests heaved with the | secured to them by the action of the lords of trade in suspending decision upon the law prohibiting the trade in Indian goods which I secured to be passed last year.” “That petition represented the sober thought of a majority of the mer- chants and traders, your excellency,” spoke up a prosperous-looking man. (TO BE CONTINUED.) XXX Device Called Upon to Detect Balance Detecting the unbalanced portion of any revolving mass, such as a flying wheel of an engine or a dynamo ar- mature, is declared a simple matter by the inventor of a device that is called a “balance detector.” The theory of the instrument is based on the principle that any reveiving body or disk, perfectly balanced and loose- ly supported on its axis, will, when re- volving, seek its own course of revo- lution and rotate steadily, irrespec- tive of the course of its axis. The device consists essentially of a case or housing. Through this runs an axle, universally supported, on which is a rotating disk. The bearing member protrudes from the casing, and when testing, is placed against the end of the shaft of the piece of machinery in question. This is al lowed to rotate until it has attained the maximum spied of the shaft. Im the casting is a pointer which shows the irend of the motion, greatly exag- gerated. The machine is then stopped, with the device still connected, and the pointer will then show the side out of balance. Southern Expression Riddall's. “Facet, Faney and Fable” says that the expression “Nigger in the woodpile” originated in the South and refers to the thieving propensity of slaves. We've Noticed It, Too Often when you think you are losing you are winning, and when you think you are winning you are losing. Time will tell the story, too.—Wateriown Standard. county state, but Senator Child has drawn up & mizimum legislative pro- | gram that will be u®ed as a guide, and state will be Emma Puschner. requested to co-operate wholehearted- ly with such state officials, legislators and committees as possible to obtain this minimum legislation. “The points as follows: family desertion and program has four distinct “First, a good non-support law. “Sécond, a widowed mother's allow- ance law which will allow help to keep children in their own homes (in ac- cordance with the financial ability of There are 41 states that have a mother's pension or a mother’s allowance law, but the law in each case has some serious defect. Usually the husband must die before aid is extended the family. “Third, is a provision for the ap- pointment of an unpaid county child welfare board of three or more mem- bers in each county to advise with the probation officers, ities on individ- have un- the community). attorney, judges or public ¢ Very few cases. states ual | paid county boards. bu- have “Fourth, is a state children’s reau of one director who shall the duty of appeinting and advising the county child welfare boards and supervising the general administration | of the law with regard to dependent, himself | neglected and defective children.” Only Chinese Member of the Legion in U. S. Jung Lim Tew, one of the owners of the Jung Lee laundry in Rochester, N. Y. is believed to be the only Chi- nese member of the American Legion in the United States. “I am an American citizen, and be- | cause I like this country I enlisted in the army,” Tew explained recently. His service in the army made him eligible for the Legion. Born in New York city, Tew was taken to China by his parents when a baby and he remained there until he was eighteen years old, when he re- turned to America. He prospered in the laundry business and went back to China where he was married. Dur- ing the World war Tew was a mem- her of the One Hundred and Twenty- fifth infantry, serving at Camp Upton almost a year. No Legs, But He Will Go Among the Legionnaires who will shove off for France next September will be Frank B. Roberts of Chase City, Va., who lost both legs as the result of war service. Roberts has ar- ranged for an able bodied escort to help him over the rough and will sail on the I. M. M. liner “Penn- Hampton Roads, Septem- and return on the same ship from Antwerp, Belgium, on Septem- ber 24. Roberts was an ambulance driver in the Twenty-ninth division during the World war. spots land” from ber 9, Rescues Old Battlefield Alamance battleground, where one of the first battles of the Revolution- ary war was fought, has been rescued from weeds and underbrush by Walter H. Ellis post No. 63 of the American Legion of Burlington, N. OC, near where the battleground is located. The post cleared scrub growth from around the monument commemorating the battle. Daniel Boone Fought in Army of Braddock | Daniel was one of the brav est of those early settlers of the Brit ish colonies in America who penetrat ed vast wildernesses, fought with hos Joone tile Indians, and faced death daily. He was brought up amid the hard ships of the frontier, when boys had to show a man's courage and do a man's work, The new country at this time was full of trouble, There was bitter hos- tility between the English and French, the French being helped by the I dians, Braddock was making his eani- | paign against the French, and the war seemed in the air everywhere, Daniel Boone was a sturdy boy, strong for his age, and fond of ad- venture. He saw an opportunity to satisfy this desire by joining the army of Braddock, and he accordingly ol- fered his services. These were ac- cepted and he was made chief wagon- er and blacksmith. 3raddock later was ambushed by | | | | | | hostile French and Indians, and in the | general rout which followed a number of British soldiers were killed. Many of the drivers who were trapped were slain. Daniel finally managed to | large | cut the traces of his team, and es- caped down a ravine followed by al hail of shot and arrows. When he was thirty-four, Boone, | with five companions, set out on the | exploration trip to Kentucky. was taken prisoner by the savages and they liked him so well that they wouldn't let him go, but finally he got away. If he had been unable to es- { cape at the time Braddock’s army was attacked, he. of would have made the trip to Kentucky, and the development of the pro- ductive which he up course, never rich and lands opened Boone | would have been delayed several years | | battle of i struggle for the posses and the march of civilization hindered Verdun Today Eleven years ago began the first phase of the greatest and bloodiest world history—the titanic ion of Verdun, key to the conquest of F ce. Armies | of millions crashed together in that | Armageddon and France reeled under the impact of the terrific blows of Ludendorff. Little is left today of that holocaust. We stood on Dead | Man's hill the other day and around could be seen a most rustic and peace- ful landscape. An early spring sun, mellow and beneficent, was turyving the fields into a deeper hue of green, peasants were busy here and there, little children played games on the roads. Near the remnants of Fort Veaux, where the blood bath once! reached such proportions that it stag- gered humanity, a small herd of sheep was nibbling at the short grass and | the boy that watg¢hed the beasts was | singing: “Aupres de Ma Blonde !"— Pierre Van Paassen, in the Atlanta Constitution. The Gregarious Habit Jeasts that prey upon other ani- | mals do not live in herds. Predatory | . ‘ . | birds are not found in flocks. Graft- | ers, thieves and criminals among men | for, you young scamyj instinetively avoid the society of oth- | er people. Viewed from this point, ity seems to be developing the grega- rious habit more widely. People are crowding into cities. They are gath- ering more often in conventions, con- ferences and of all kinds, ranging from a neighborhood birthday party to a political Jamestown Post. meetings convention.— “Dead Man’ Wandering A living “dead man” is wandering somewhere about the streets of San Francisco despite the well-meant ef- forts of Coroner Leland to get him into the morgue. Doctor Leland found a man lying on the sidewalk. He made a superficial examination and pro- nounced him dead. He then called the coroner's wagon and police detectives, When he returned from the telephone the “dead man” had walked away, leaving Doctor Leland to explain as best he could to the investigating de- tectives. Papers Delayed The railway line was flooded after heavy rainstorms, and the traveler was obliged to break his journey at a village. He made his way in the pour- ing rain to a restaurant and said to the waiter there: “It is like Deluge!” “The what? “The Deluge. Haven't about the Deluge—Noah and the ark?” #No, sir; you because of the flood we haven't had any newspapers ’ the you read see, in three days. Dog Keeps Appointment Spot, a smooth-haired fox terrier owned by a manufacturer of Birm- ingham, England, is apparently not only able to tell time, but utilizes this ability to keep appointments promptly. Once a k the deg's week owner goes to London, and Spot sees him off in the morning. At night, just 15 minutes before train time Spot leaves the house of his own accord, slips past the ticket taker at the sta- tion and goes through the train unti} he finds his master. Justice by Mail Rather than make the arduous trip of 74 miles over a mountain divide where snow is 10 feet deep, V. Lee McNew, a trapper from Sacramento, Calif., called up the judge at Weaver- ville, pleaded guilty of killing gray squirrels and was fined $25. The money was sent by mail and the ends af fustice were satisfied. it is a hopeful sign that human- | stand- | KEEP COUGHS OUT OF “DANGER ZONE” Coughing irritates your throat and & makes you cough more. The more you cough the harder it is to stop. And when vou feel the cough spread- ing down into your hronchial tubes it is nearing the “danger zone"—for these tubes lead directly into your lungs. : , Ayer's Cherry Pectoral stops coughs | quickly—almost instantly in spas- modic attacks. With the very first swallow vou feel its comforting warmth. Real medicine, reaching deep down with its soothing, healing power. Absorbed through and through the irritated throat, chest and bron- chial membranes, it quickly stops the cough, breaks up the cold and brings prompt, lasting relief, Aver’s Cherry Pectoral is hospital- proved. Prescribed by physicians. Pleasant to taste. All druggists—60c and, twice the quantity, $1.00, DEMAND GENUINE ry &>HYPO COD COD LIVER OIL“ HYPO PHOSPHITES A guaranteed remedy to prevent and overcome Coughs, Colds, Bronchial and Lung Affections, Lost Appetite, Dys- pepsia, Pains in Stomach, Indigestion, Pimples, Bad Blood, Sallow Complex- jon, Lost Weight, “rength and similar run-down conditions requiring a recon- structive tonic. TASTES LIKE RARE OLD WINE SAMPLE At your druggists FREE or by mail. NOTE: Large size HYPO-COD sells for $1.00 at drug stores or by mail The Earle Chemical Co., Wheeling, W.Va. Your Druggist Will Guarantee HYPO-COD to Help the Sick and Weak ANAKESIS || REMORRHOIDAL SUPPOSITORIES f c ] wemors (fH 60 soue FOR PILES PRICE $1.00 Write for FREE BOOKLET If your druggist cannet supply you, order forwarding charges prepaid, from KOENIG MEDICINE CO. 1045 N. WELLS ST.. CHICAGO, ILL. “IF MOTHERS ONLY KNEW Many children are com- plaining of Headache, Feverishness, Stomach Troubles and Irregular § Bowels and take cold easily. If mothers only knew what MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POW- DERS would do for their children no family would ever be without them for use when need- ed. So pleasant to take DON'T ACCEPT and so effective that ANY SUBSTITUTE mothers who once use them always tell others about them. At all Druggists. Trial Package FRE Address Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y. TRADE MARE Seemed Suspicious A butcher, hearing a boy whistling outside his shop, said: “What are you mak g all that noise “I've lost my dog,” answered the boy. “Well,” the butcher asked, “do you think I've got your dog?” “lI don’t know, guv'nor,” replied the boy, “but every time 1 whistle those | sausages move.” Special Offer to Victims of | Your Druggist Says Pleasant to Take. Elixir Must Help Poor Distressed Stomachs or Money Gladly Refunded. You can be so distressed with gas and fullness from poor digestion or dyspepsia that you think your heart is going to stop beating. Your stomach may be so distended | that your breathing is short and gaspy. You are dizzy and pray for quick relief—what’s to be done. Just one tablespoonful of Dare's Mentha Pepsin and speedily the gas disappears, the pressing on the heart ceases and you can breathe deep and naturally. Oh! What blessed relief; but why not get rid of such attacks altogether? Why have them at all? Especially when any druggist any- where guarantees Dare’s Mentha Pep- sin, a pleasant elixir, to help you or monev hack, Not Necessary ‘Mummy, may I go to the circus this afternoon?” “Why, Betty, fancy going to the circus when your Aunt Sarah is here!” Every man should keep a fair-sized cemetery in which to bury the faults of his friends. No one can be happy and not be useful. Colds Will stop tomorrow Colds break in 24 hours for the millions who use Hill's, Fever and headaches go. La Grippe yieldsin 3 days. This is the quick, scientific way to end these dangers and discomforts. Don't trust lesser helps, don't wait. Get back to normal at once. Be Sure Its qn wo Price 30¢ CASCARA & QUININE Sroms* Get Red Box with portrait OVE BEE PLASED TX FELIX- Yo OVERBID Y( ONEARTU D 3 NOR