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LOOK AT 'S TONGUE feverish, constipated, -California Syrup of Figs" today saves a sick child Children simply will not from play to empty their become clogged up with gets sluggish; stomach de tongue, mother! If coat child is listless, cross, fev bad, restless, doesn't eat i Sof cold or has sore throat cbildren's ailment, give a of "California Syrup of don't worry. because it is i ermless. and in a few hours gstipation poison, sour bile 1 ag waste will gently o the bowels, and you have bI1fnl child again. A thor cleansing" is ofttimes all uessary. It should be the I t given in any sickness. of counterfeit fig syrups. tore for a 50-cent bottle of Syrup of Figs," which has a for babies, children of and for grown-ups plainly c the bottle. Adv. the Style Book. are pajamas?" medium, whose parents t king jacket and a Mother I RUB-MY-TISM your Rheumatism and all aches and pains-Neuralgia, " lc, 8prains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, etc. Antiseptlo Price 25c.-Adv. Dewn the Laughing Stuff. see a new step-ladder that and cannot be upset, and prevent a cow kicking or her tall while being milked, patented. k-If they keep on nothing left for a fellow to FOR CHILDREN'S Skin With Cuticura. Noth. Easier. Trial Free. to cleanse and purify the scalp, the Ointment to heal rashes, itchings, red dandruff, etc. Noth than these fragrant super llents for preserving and the skin, scalp and hair Ich free by mail with Book. psateard, Cuticura, Dept. XY, 'Md everywhere.-Adv. Disappointing. postmistress, says Every e, was reading a postal the morning mail. Finally it over to the address. she said, in a disappointed card is for me!" Evidently. are you going?" Inquired t , as Mr. Juniper left his stills directly the curtain Arst act. I heard an alarm of fire," solicitously, "and I must go ahbout it." t en later he returned. "It 4 Ire," he said briefly. was not water," she sniffed He Had It Coming. Sr you so crazy to take mud 1 TYheres nothing the matter way, doctor. I was brought I *hen collar and a Fauntleroy I always vowed that I would share of playing in the mud I 7.--Loulsville Courler-Jour Educating Him. wants half a dozen I stld Nellie the other day to man. IB It you want?" he In soewhat puzzled. Ilt a half-dozen 'emons," re- I Slittle one wrathfIlly. "Don't I Swhat a half-dozen is?--it's it BAD DREAMS Caused by Coffee. bun a cofee drinker, more I mer salnce I can remember, un- I Smoinths ago I became more E nervous and irritable, and I seld not sleep at night for I t 7 disturbed by dreams of t Und a species of distressing . after hearing the experi Sanmbers of friends who had sad were drinking Postum, of the great benefits they I concluded coffee must C eas of my trouble, so I got It and had it made strictly to directions. stonilshed at the flavor and It entirely took the place of th to my very great satisfac SIIn to sleep peacefully and My nerves improved, and I i R ald wean every man. woman from the unwholesome drug- I do not really appreciate or I w hat a powerful drug it is and ssblle effect it has on the hu - If they did, hardly a Scote would be sold. 1 would I thi of going back to coffee I would almost as soon think my hand in a fire after I been burned. Yours for 4 comes in two forms: I Peotum - must be well - and 25e packages. Potum--is a soluble pow D tsapoonful dissolves quickly -V hot water and, with -ream , makee a delicious beverage S30e and 50c tins. .5t Per cup of both kinds is a Reuon" for Postuem. -oold by GQrocs. SFarmers' Educational and Co-Operative Union of America Natewai Esecil Ieent t the Prngrep i Apic trit A forced -mile gives itself away. Trouble shies at a good digestion. Limited wants make contentment. Abuse will take money out of your pocket. t'lodding is a greater winner than plunging Some women are not as bad as they are painted. The speculator's vision of wealth is usually a mirage. Try petting the cows and see how quickly they respond. The silo is a sign of contentment. and contentment is a sign of suc cess. The economic distribution of farm products is today the world's great est problem. In many a business consolidation one man furnishes the "con" and the other the "solid." Every man is gullible about every business save his own, and not infre quently about that. Are the eyes of the children all right? Sometimes dullness in school is merely dullness of sight. If a business can be run without large wastes and graft, why not run the state in the same way? Performing each task well is a pair of easy rising steps to a final ambi tion or any limit of height. Why does the man who raises hogs buy packing-house hams? A leather medal is offered for the best reason. Political fences are quite often nec essary in order to keep the politician's constituents unaware of his political offenses. Many a man who cannot afford to get his wife a washing machine would think nothing of a $255 coffin-and store flowers! What if the cost of living is some what higher than it was in the early nineties? Most of us now have the price to pay for it. Ignorance is the mother of suspi cion, hate, backbiting, lies, slander, and the whole brood of evil imagin ings that keep people apart. The eyes have a very large bear ing on the efficiency of men, not only directly in defective vision, but Indi rectly upon the general health. Violent energy is always spectacu lar, but the power shown in the grad ual growth of a plant is as wonderful as that exhibited by a cyclone. FARMER IS PRACTICAL MAN Really Marvelous What Old-Fashioned Tiller of Soil Knows and Doe- Is No Braggart. (By R. G. WEATHERSTONE.) The man of the soil is a well equipped personage in spite of all his seeming deficiencies. He can't stop to theorize when things want doing. He must plod along and get work out of the way. Sometimes a couple of hours means the saving of a big field of hay or corn. The man on the job has to know how and has to act on the hour. A hurry-up call to get in five or six loads of hay before rain falls or to finish planting a field of grain means quick work and hard sweating hustle. The practical farm er meets all such problems as a mat ter of course. Usually he does not brag about what he accomplished. That is one trouble-he does not know how to put up a bluff and a lot of peo ple think he 'does not know anything. I want to say that it is really marvel ous what the old-fashioned farmer knows and does. VALUE OF MARKET REPORTS Farmer Who Does Not Keep Himself Posted on Conditions and Prices Makes Serious Mistake. The farmer who fails to keep fully informed as to the condition of thei markets and the value of the products which he has for sale is making a se rious business mistake. Such a mis take if made in any other business would mean immediate bankruptcy. Most buyers of stock and produce are not philanthropists, but are look ing for the dollars, and they usually look closely. They are also well post ed concerning the market value. There is no excuse in these modern times for dereliction in this respect on the part of farmers. The mail lrings the daily newspapers containing the market reports and the telephone may be brought into use when required. Keep in touch with the markets, es pecially for those products which you hav, for sale or may soon have to offer. Success With Poultry. A certain poultryman in northern Missouri lives on a 40-acre farm, most ly woodland. and keeps 500 brown Leghorn hens. He ships the eggs each week to Chicago in fillers placed i in heavy cases. The eggs are care fully graded and sold on a special mar ket. Over all expenses he makes ten to fifteen cents a dozen above market price. It is paying him. Some farm. ers, with smaller flocks, co-operate and make as good profit by sending their eggs to these far-off special mar kets. Community Study Club. Now is a good time to organize a community study club. Some of the meetings might well be devoted to a', study of garden flowers, shrubs and t vegetables. "IBetter Home Surround ings" is a topic that should be of in-. terest to all. American Farmer. The American farmer produces more per man than any other farmer in the world. In acre yields American farms fall far below those of several 1 other countries 1 WINTER JOBS FOR FARMERS Splendid Opportunity Offered for Clearing Fields of Old Stumps Other Odds and Ends. On many farms this is considered a between-seasons period, with little de manding inimediate attention. How ever, the successful farmer is com ing to see that if his plant is to pay dividends there must be no period of idleness, but that there must be em ployment every working day in the year for men, horses, machinery and capital. iight now we wouli call attention to the stumlp-ridden fields that can never be farmed satisfactorily and most profitably until the stumlpe are removed. True, stumping large fielde is no small-sized job, and calls for the expenditur,. of both energy and cash; but it is a job that can only be done by going about it persistently and deteriniaedly, and the 1iresest %winter dais offer a spltendid clportu nity for prorecuting tlli sort of work. Anothcir job that ue may cell tackle at this eason is that of reclaiming the waste, nonproductive sler about the place. Ilh.-.e are mainly the galled, gullied areas that have come as a result of our not properly look ing after our hillside lands; and the cet spots that now retuse to grow crops but which, by the use of a few open ditches or some rain tile. may be made the most productive areas on the farm. Look your place over, and if you fail to find such easte spots as these, then you are entitled to place your farm in the blue-ribbon class. Other jobs that may claim cur st tention are looking after the farm manure and seeing that none of it is allowed to go to waste; housirn and repairing the farm impltminents; pro viding plenty of good dry wood for mother; breaking lands that are not occupied by cover crole; and arrang ing for our fertilizer purchases for 1915. Compared with the North, the South, by reason of its mild winter climate, possesses a tremendous eco nomic advantage. Let's make this ad vantage count by filling the winter days with work that will make our farms more sightly, productive and profltable.-Progressive Farmer. ADVICE GIVEN TO FARMERS Every Branch of Business is Bens fited by Interchange of Views Practical Suggestions. (By A. N. NMII..ER.) Sometimes I feel annoyed at the freedom with which people give ad vice to farmers. At times it looks as though all the farmers needed guard ians, judging by the amount of un solicited advice they receive from city people. I do not mean to resent good, timely, sensible talk giving new ideas or practical suggestions. We all need that. Every branch of business is helped by an interchange of views, but it will relieve my mind to say that the average farmer knows his business better than any other people possibly can. The chief trouble with the man in the country is that he is what they call unsophisticated. He does not put up much of a front. Re is slow and careful, but that does not mean that he is stupid. Some of the best thinkers I have ever known were men who could not express themselves well and could not meet people in a bright way and let them know what was on their minds. Such farmers make poor bargains. They buy wrong and sell wrong and are apt to be imposed upon by glib brokers, agents, merchants and other city people with whom they have to do business. GOOD AMERICAN FARM HANDS Workman Who Does Not Ifatch Sun Too Closely and Who is Indus trious Is Appreciated. Some of the arguments used by union organizers are that unless we organize our conditions will be as bad as they are In England. 1 don't be lieve the time will ever come in America when farm workmen will be treated as slaves-half-fed, over worked and poorly paid. American farmer-s, so far as I can judge by 20 years of experience, are disposed to treat workmen decently and pay fair wages. Of course, there are excep tions, but as a rule a good workman who does not watch the sun too close ly and who is willing and industrious is appreciated. The class of Ameri can farm workmen is a great deal better than in England now, and as the condition of our farms is steadily improving the quality of workmen will grow better, not worse.-A Farm Hand. Ideals. Have you ever noticed that in al most every case the successful farm ers are men who have definite aims that they are men with ideals? A thinking man who plans to get the better things usually gets them, too. We need more ideals in farming. Especially is it important that the young men should get the right ideals. Unless a man starts out with a belief in live stock farming and a determina tion to get something out of life be sides money he cannot make the greatest success. In forming these ideals a good plan is to consider the methods used by the successful farm ers in your community quite care fully. Growing Sudan Grass. In growing Sudan grass there are three things to consider: It,will not do well in a cold climate or high alti tude; seed is expensive, and, owing to the similarity of its seeds to those of Johnson grass, there is danger of adulteration. Applying Fertilizer. Better results were shown by Oeor gia state experiments through apply ing complete fertilizser at the time of the second cultivation of corn than before olantin. An Ohio Druggist Wm. Vogel, 86 May St., Akros, Ohio, writes: "Through cold and exposure andI improper food during the Sood.I was taken with appendicitis an d *cute Intestinal catarrh. In June and July my 'life was despaired of, but recovered aft cciently to be up and around. My bowels seemed paralyzed. Could eat no solid food. "The first of last December I de cided to try Peruna. My appetite Improved, and very soon solid foods could be taken. In two months time I gained 18 pounds. Now I am heavier than I ever was before. When I began to use Peruna my bowels sommenced to move at once. Those who object to liquid medi einae see now presuie Peruna is Tablet form TO SECURE SOUND SLUMBER Conditions Must Be Right, Especially To Man Who Must Quiet As tivity of Brain. Many men and women, especially those past their first youth, fnd diffi eulty in procuring the sound, restful sleep so necessary to keep mind and body fit. Although, physically, the body is tired out, the brain is as alert as ever, and perfect oblivion is impos eible. A well-known physician gives some interesting advice on the matter "Insomnia," he states, "is one of the penalties of the increasing strain modern life throws upon our brains The man who works with his muscles end lives in the open air is rarely a victim of sleeplessness. "The essentials for a good night's rest are mental repose, a requisite emount of muscular fatigue, comfort able body heat end plenty of ventila tion. "The most 8ificult to secure is lee sened brain activity. An excellent plan is to take a brisk half-hour's walk just before bedtime, followed by - hot bath and a rub-down, and then a cup ful of warm milk and a biscuit or two as one gets Into bed. "If. in addition, the mind be focused an some pleasant but not exciting topic. a night's rest is assured to all but the most chronic sufferer. "The type in which the sleeper snd denly awakes an hour or so after hav Inl fallen asleep usually means that more out-door muscular exercise is re quired." THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDORUFF Girisl Beautify Your Hairl Make It Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant-Try the Moist Cloth. Try as you will, after as application of Danderine, you cannot End a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will sot itch, but what will please you most, will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, ins and downy at first-yes-but real ly new hair--rowing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately doe lies the beauty of your hair. No differ ence how dull, faded, brittle ad scraggy, Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw It through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The ffect is im mediate and amazing-your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an ineao parable luster, softness and luru ance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store and prsve that your hair Is a pretty and soft as any-that it has bean asglucted or _njured by merelem treatmet-4at'e all Adv. A Millionaire Sneer. "Uncle Joe" Oanan was tolking the other day about education. "Every millionaire today," he sid, "wants to dve his son a so llego edu cation. I remember the time when our millionaire enoered at education. As one of them once said to me, vole lag the general opiniaon: "'These here felilers with a mnlat et knowledge can never coin it into good hard cash.'" DON'T TAKE CALOMEL when your liver geats Muggish, sad you suffer from Headaches, Billiou nseas, Conatlpation or Dizziness, gt a 25c bottle of BOND'S LIVER PILLS, from your dealer. They are small, mild, safe, effective and inexpenlve and they will relieve you.-Adv. Too Severe "'Man was made to mourn,' " quoted the philosopher. "That's right!" snapped the misogy nist. "And women wss to put on earth to see that he does it." Sure Enough. "I strongly object to antiseptic kisses." "Why so?" "How can they possibly express the germ of affection?" COLDS & LaGRIPPE 5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe; it acts on the liver better than Cal mel and does not gripe or sicken. Price 25--Adv. Fbr motorists who smoke a new electric torch is equipped with a cigar lighter on one side. Y o us11111 tuly, Sy . - s Us M OUWLE" NAIR D.SUUR PWOE, SLO. IAN. HIGH IN DARKTOWN'S *400"'4 Surely Little Question se to the socIal Statuse of M. Samuel Brewn. Senator Morris Sheppard of Texae is an ardent advocate of river im provements. Apropoe of the river steamers, before the advent of the railroad, he tells the following anee dote: la "he o' do war" time it was cuu tomary. among the dusky hellos, to regard the stoker on a asteamerl as one o of high social status. At a negro ball 1 one night. on the Missilsippi river ,bank. a crtain Sam itrown was ti troduced to a dutky betlle Facing her iormter partler. she turned tp her sone atnd remarked: "What fur does etr thterdure mn' ter sihek low down trash as ramnt I trovwn!" "Sam un roan it dow-own trnasth" ex Plainlt, the man. rooli:g the whites if his eyes in surprise "VWh. omann. We ,4n'tm know what ye is talking abeit'' W\'hy. lSam rotn is the bh:tg,,t mian In hMississippit- he fres de tiddhle Purt race on de River Queeu all by his self" MORE POTASH COMING. American crops and soils are still as hungry for Potash as before the out break of the European War. waich curtailed the Potash shipments. Some of the Fertilizer ('ompanies are trying to Induce farmers to buy the one-sided low Potash or no Potash fertilizers of a generation ago. This means a fertilizer that is profitable to the manufacturer, but not the best for the farmer. When the Syndicate in 1910 started the direct sales of Potash to dealers and farmers at reasonable prices. Potash sales increased 63 per cent. in one year, a clear proof that farmers know that Potash Pays. They know that Potash gives good yields. good quality and resistance to plant diseases. Many of the Fertilizer Manufactur ere are willing to meet the farmer's wishes and sell him what he thinks he needs. These manufacturers are now willing to furnish as much Potash as they can secure. They offer goods with g per cent, and even in some casee 10 per cent. Potash, if the farmers Insist on it. Shipping conditions are improving, more Potash is coming forward al though the costs of production and t-ansportation are higher. The higher price of fertilisers is not due wholly to the slightly higher cost of Potash. Muck of the Potash that will be used in next spring's fertiliser had reached America before the war started. There Is no substitute for Potash. We can no more return te the fer tlliser of twenty years ago than we 1 can return to the inefficient farm Im plements or unprofitable livestock of that period.-H. A. HUSTON. Adv. Served His Country Well. Alfred Sully, soldier, was a distin guished son of a distinguished sire, born at Philadelphia, January 2, 1821. His father was Thomas Sully, the fa mous portrait painter. a pupil of Benje min West, painter of many of the great men of his day and ranking sec ond only to Gilbert Stuart. The son, however, had ambition for the life military, was graduated from West Point in 1841 and was immediately ap pointed a second lieutenant in the Second infantry. He campaigned against the Seminoles in Florida, was in the Mexican war, and for conspicu ous services at the siege of Vera Crus was promoted to Arst lieutenant end captal. At the outbreak of the Civil war he was appointed colonel of the Firet Minnesota volunteers, was a lit tie later given command of a brigade, distinguished hlmself at Fair Oaks and Malvern Hill, was promoted to briga dier general of volunteers and led his command with conspicuous gallastry at South Chancellorevilla After the war he was engaged tn Indis cram pailgne in which therre was evage fghting. He was brevetted brigadier general i the regular army and major general of volunteers. Decremse I Contagleus Diseem Ia view of the alarming lacrease in heart and arterial diseases, aervous trouble and ineanity, as well as ean sw, it is at least eomfortlng to find from recent statistice that the mor tality from diphtheria and cerebro spinal meninlitie has been reduced nearly 0 per cent la New York alone sfnce antitoal was first eaderstood. True cholera infantam, too, is rarely seen now that baby feeding has be come a science, while the great epl demies of typhus and smallpox whlc used to sweep the oountry, are pia* Ucally unklnow, DON'T ITCHI USE RESINOL uInst put on a little ae that eoothing, entiseptie reinol ointment and the itching and burning stOp at once. Boon all trace eof ecsenma, ringworm, rash, or other tormenting skin trouble is gone. Every druggist sells rennol ointment and reinol soap. Precribed by doctons for 20 yeare.--Adv. The Kind. "They have some swell doing in that house about this time" "'De you man society function?" "Weo; the children have the mumps." The Proper Place '"Where can I read up on the sci ence of phonetics?" "Try the phone book." Japan ia considering a plan to bridge the Shimenoseki straits at a cost ex ceeding $10,000,000. Happy is the home where Red Cross Ball Blue is used. Sure to please. All grocers. Adv. Few women are dangerous-because they usually talk before they act. One remedy with many uses-Han ford's Balsam of Myrrh. Adv. Russia is constructing 5,000 milea of new railway lines. UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK! CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS MY WAY Just Oncel Try "Dodson's Liver Tone" When Bilious, Consti pated, Headachey-Don't Lose a Day's Work. YLive up your slug.isk liver' Feel b Ins and eheerful; miake your work ni pleasure; be vigorous and full ot em- tl bition. Iut take so nasty. danger- It ous ealolel,. because it makes you sick and you mnay lose a days' work. n Calomel is mercury or quicksilver, ii Which caus.e necrosis of the bones. ii Calomel crashis lnto sour bile like y dynamite. breaking it up. Thliat' y when yol feel that awful nause and b tramling. Listen to * e' If you want to enfor v the aiiest, gentle t liver and bowel c cleansing you ever experienced jarpt d take a spo(,nful of harmless Lodson's T Liver Tolne. Your druggist of dealer a slls you a 50 rent bottle of Ikdsonas ' liver Tine under mi poreronal neouer- i 9IAID ALL hOUV ° . PINK EYE I L1C: !)SOEAISES Q ACarr the sa and scts a preventive for others. Liquid given on the Qnasue Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy; 50c and @I e bottle; 0 and 010 s dosen. Sold by all druggists and horse goods ibous% or sent. empres pid, b the mrnanufacturers. SPOHN IIDICAL CO., Chemists. GOSHEN, INDIANA SEEMED A PROPER QUESTION Wheno Vo Consider It, New Was Old Dad Bing to Know ee to stranger'e Chances? 'Eh-yah!' philosophically obsterved old IDad (ling, the veteran Oklahoma cattle baron. "You kain't never tell about some people. IAst time I ws yur in Kay See, I went up on top of the landscape o'er, as It were, and about the first thing I seen was a fel ler over near the east edge, wrinkling his face, tearing his hair and other wise acting in a sort of general way. "Going to hump, Podner?' says I. 'Yes,' he yelled. 'Jump and end it all! Ar-r-r-r-r:' "'sI judged so,' says T, 'but if it's a fair question, which way de you ex pect to go? "Well, sir, he acted like he was pro voked about something, and snarled around like a scalded dog for a spell, and then went down the way we'd both come up. lHow'n'ell did I know what kind of a life he'd been leading?" Kansas City Star. BIG EATERS HAVE BAD KIDNEYS AND BACKACHE Take a Glass of alts at Once If Your Back I. Hurting er Kidneys and Bledder Trouble You. The Americas men and women must guard eonstantly against Kidney trou ble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the elimi native tissues clog and the result is hidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is eloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, asid stomach, or you have rheu matlsm when the weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four oances of Jad Salts; take a table spoonful is a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kid neys will then act gne. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generatioa to lusk and stimulate clogged kidneya. to neutralise the acids in the urine so it na longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jare, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water beverage, and belongs in every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney gushing any time.-Adv. -* Pasing the Word Along. "Ps, why does corn popf" "Well, you see, the starch polygons are of such a nature as to facilitate expansion and render it explosive in character; there is a fraction of a particle along its two radii, the endos perm swelling very considerably, the peripheral portions cohering with the hull, but the fractured quarters turn ing back to meet below the embryo why, son, where are you going?" "I was going to tell little sister." Unfair Advantage. "Why doe Professor Dubbins lec ture so often on the ancient "Egyp tians?" "I can't imagine, unless it's because he wants to talk about somebody who can't talk back." "Money Back" Medicine. Our readers never risk a cent when they buy Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh because every dealer in this liniment ia authorized to refund the money if the Balsam is not satisfactory. Adv. "The man who tells us of our faults is our best frined," quoth the philoso pher. "Yes; but he won't be long," added the mere man.-Judge. A three-headed lifter has been pat entered to raise two stove lids and the piece between them at once. ' NfkO Eye HRmed_or Bed. Wea.. W e.t..l 3see sad 6ranulat~d Eyreldy: No !,martli bl P reg Muri e C*e v.,dy Coblekgt New York has one skyscraper to ev ery 600 buildings. back guarantee that each spoonful nill clean your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that It won't make you sick. l)dksnn's liver Tone is real liver med:.e.n.. You'll know it next morn* ing, b,cIaute ou will wake up feel ing flue, ).our liver will be working, •your he~d'; hre and dizziness gone, rour stomn:c.h will be sweet and your bos els re a,,ir. Iandson's liver Tone is entirely ,eetat,. the.rtfore harmless and annuot salivate. Give it to your chil dren. ,il:ii,a i : people are using Ibhdson'n Liver Tlon irstead of dan gerous calomnetl 0nw. Your druggist sill te.ll you that th, sale of calomel is alnost .topped ,.rtirely here. Not His First Love. 'Am I the, first girl you ever loved?" sighed the maid. "You certainly are not!" proclaimed the youth. This was not what she had been brought up to ,expect, so s~he became really Inter·est..d. "I sil not?" she repeated. "You are not. You are merely the hbest of the bunch. Are you satisfied with that?" Well, was she?-Cleveland Plain Dealer. S Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOItlA, a safe and sure remedy fot t inhnts and children, and see that It Bears the P ,sg--, l B Signs tature of 1 In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castorig Contrary Effects. "What did John say when he saw 1 your new drop ceiling?" t "He was simply floored." Pockets in which may be carried soap and brushes feature the bottom of a new pail for scrubbing. For sprains and bruises apply Han* ford's Balsam thoroughly. Put it on, and rub it in. Adv. Tobacco growing is being tested in southern California. I I- Rheumatism For Young and Old The acute agonising pain of rheumatism is soothed at once by loan's Liniment. Do not rub-it penetrates to the ma p ing'iag comfort not dreamed o untiltried Get a bottle today. RHEUMATISM Ha. What Otb.e s.a. L "I hgihly recommend your Ilaiiat wa the est remedy for rheumatism I ever 1 used. Before using it I was large samm I moed strying to gerelief oo hn e mi ma saddpe in limbsad oxy I tran S ~urt Liniaent both aint Md ez;mral ad I foud quick relief, and now am well and strongs again."-GA Cure, M N. 3sM r, SpriagAd, II Here's Fed "I wish to writs and tell you about a fall I had down fourteen teps, and bsi d a my neck and hip very bad I could sot aleep at all. I sent my wile for a s east bottle o ryour Liniment and in two days' S time I was on my feet P gain."-er. Bpde. Ists% Prairie Ass.. BL Lou is. M SLOAN ' LINIMENT or neuralgia, sciatica, sprains and Al Dreusgti, 21e. s-. TRIAL BOTTLE Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. * Dept. B. Philadelphit, Ph. lt ASSEr SUARY _ l_ _ B LACK L '1mu Tu 'sa usa Pillss excess of wak e41 shl 4ei bede, drnk er ei* t eMALARIAL. REGIONS, . r Build In With o I, . tes remedy for malaria, chillse and etr .Wla 'lever, Molds nd r p. S041. M le N Wi. N Uet. LITTLE ROCKbtd. NOwh 4thr191 r