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THE YALE EXPOSITOR For Mothers who aro Weak and Nervous Lansing. Mich. ''Dr. Plerce'a Fa YOrtto Prescription did me a world of good. After motherhood I was In a very weak ened and run down condition. I was nervous and, in fact, was all brokenrdown In health. I wns ad vised to tr ) the Prescription and It was only nec essary' for me to take two bottles to completely build me up in health. Favorite Prescription made me feel like a new woman and I tun glad to recommend it." MRS. CLIFFORD STARKWEATHER, 1621 Keller St. t Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for trial package of Prescription tablets. BULGARIANS live close to Nature Bulgarian Blood Tea la Nature's purest herbs. Take It hot to kill colds, flush the kidneys, sweeten the stomach and purify the blood. Sold by druggists and grocers everywhere. M& Stomoh ifor (0 Years flOVZ A DIFFERENT WOUaII Earnestly Pralsos Eatonlo My wife was a prrent sufferer from acid stomach for 10 years," writes II. D. Crippen, "but is a different woman El nee taking Eatonic." Sufferers from acid stomach let Ea tonic help you also. It quickly takes up and carries out the excess acidity and gases and makes the stomach cool and comfortable. You digest easily, Ret the full strength from your food, feel well and strong, free from bloat ing, belching, food repeating, etc. IJlg box costs costs only a trifle with your druggist's guarantee. LUCKY STRIKE cigarette. Flavor is sealed in by toasting Gall Cure Collars Hade of Rubberised Fabrle Will not Call the Horse or Mule The Curled Hair Pad retaliates and dries out the collar, making It last a year longer. They add from 10 to 25 to work dose. Made by GALL CURE COLLAR PAD CO. North Baltimore, Ohl Sold by all Jlrit-clatt dealtrt His Method. The negro men were discussing the eloquence of a certain member of the. faculty of an educational institution for negroes in the southern states. "That Professor Biggs sure does like to use hlgh-soundin' words, don't he?" asked one of them. "Maybe dafs jest an affection on his part," said the other darky. "Some folks do like to put on airs in talkin'." "No; I don't flgger it out dat way," said the other. "I klnda thinks he uses them big words because he's afraid dat if people knew what . he was talkin' about they'd know he didn't know what he was talkin abouV Harper's Magazine. It la better to be single and dream than to be married and wake up. Back Given Out 1 There's surely some reason for that lame, achy back. Likely it's your kid neys. A cold or strain of ttimes congests the kidneys and slows them up. That may be the reason for that nagging backache, those sharp pains, that tired, worn-out feeling. You may have head aches and dizzy spells, too, with annoy ing bladder irregularity. Use Doan't Kidney Pillt. They hare helped thou sands. A$k your neighbor! A Michigan Case Albert Carroll. 20 Iuck 8t., Oxford, Mich., says: "Heavy work weakened my kid neys, and I suffered quite a- bit from Irregularity of my kidneys and lame baok. Jt felt as though a heavy load were rest In? cross the small of my back and it was hard for me in atonn Mv nlarht'a sleep was broken and mornings I got up feeling 1 hadn't slept at all. I had frequent dizzy spells, headaches and my hands were swollen. Three boxes of Doan's Kidney rills cured me of all the trouble." Cat Dean's at Any Store, 60e Box doan's y M.1V FOSTER . MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. hub Jet 1Kb fit A A TALE OF THE FILATWOODiS1 0 COPYRJGrtT BV THE CHAPTER IX Continued. 13 Jumping lightly from rock to rook In the shallow water of the pool, the bandit approached the cataract, the third leap landing him upon the flat top of a rock almost within the very wash of the falling water. . Pausing an instant to pull his hnt tight and turn up the collar of his coat, he sprang straight Into the thin blade of the falls. His leap must have car ried him completely through to the other side. It was the first the Pearl hunter knew, or even suspected, that there was an open space beyond. So completely did the falling water hide everything back of it that probably the man who had Just leaped and the man' who watched him were the only two who knew there was any thing back of It! The Pearlhunter stretched himself flat under cover of a clump of sprouts growing about an old white, oak stump, and kept his eyes fixed on the waterfall. Time goes slowly to one who watches and waits. It was probably not more than ten minutes, though it seemed far longer, when, without so much as a diverted fleck of ppray in warning, the1 waterfall flung forth up on the flat-topped rock a lithe and ac tive figure that sprang lightly, to shore over the two intervening stones. Pausing on . the brink, of the pool bareJy long enough to shake his coat by the lapels and to knock his hat against his hand, he Immediately set out along the bluffs toward the vil lage, as unconcerned as if he had not Just pulled off about the most sensa tional stunt ever seen by a Flutwoods man. The Pearlhunter slipped out of the cover and softly followed; trailed him up the bluffs, through the corner of the woods and out to the river road where it angles north through the cut in the cliffs; listened at the fence, near where the path crossed it, till the re ceding steps were well on their way to the village. CHAPTER X. The Candle in the Cranny. All the way back to Fallen Rock the Pearlhunter pondered the scene he had gazed on through the chink in the cabin wall: the man's transfigured face ; his actions with the picture that above all the picture. It puzzled him, angered him. That such a man should have her picture; his mother's with the darkly beautiful face and wonder ful eyes warm against his breast I It was another reason why he should hunt him down. The Pearlhunter was as brave as the woods make them but it is no dis credit to his manhood to say that his blood ran a little faster as he stepped down off the rock Into the water and waded through the falls. Every inch of the way had to be felt out with his fingers before his feet could be trusted to follow. The roar of the falls had dulled a little when suddenly a sound came out of the dark Just ahead a sound like a garment rubbing against some rough surface. The Pearlhunter stepped to one side of the passage and flattened himself against the wall. Out of the dead silence the sound came again. A gTin loosened his face. The very sound he had half expected a horse contentedly munching his hay. The Pearlhunter came out from against the wall and inched his way deeper Into the blackness of the pass age. It abruptly widened until he was no longer able to reach from one wall to the other with his outstretched arms. Though denied the use of his eyes, he knew that the passage broad ly expanded Just there and became a cave. He stood In the very entrance tf It The next step there was no help for It light I Desperate and danger ous the first spark, and the cave might spring to life. Still, It was bet ter than to stumble over a sleeping man; or walk into a knife. With his revolver balanced, his face to the open cave, he reached his left hand along the wall to the farthest stretch of his arm, bringing his body as-far as possi ble from the light, and with his fin gers fumbled out a epot suitably smooth and dry for there must be no failure. The match scraped. A tiny flame leaped away from the rock. It lighted up the place surprisingly. The cave was not large hardly twice the size of an ordinary room. The first swift glance showed him that except for the horse it was empty. The stub of a candlo caught his eye, stuck by Its own tallow to an out standing stool of shale Just beyond the mouth of the passage. He crossed the passage and held the match to the wick. In the better light he studied 'he place more closely. The cave .ou!d not have been far mIov the ground, for a oak root had V BOBBS - MERKJLL COMPANY found its way through the wall. It was to this that the horse was tied. For a moment he was strongly tempted to stay where hit was till his prey returned the following night and then rid the Flatwoods of him, and trust what evidence he already had to provo his case. Rut a better plan had been forming ever since he came into the cave, and there was much yet to be done; though the.cnvd would have made a good hid ing place during the coming day al ways provided the bandldt did not chance to return before his time. Selecting a spot thai he Judged to be about right for the take-off, he leaped at the falls, and, hnl to his surprise, lunded on the flat rock outside. It was like breaking through the crust of creation Into a new world. Mar veling at the small amount of water that had clung to him, he sprang over the two Intervening rocks to the shore. He hurried around to the front of the cabin, railed the latch, entered and closed tte door. Snatching up some cold biscuits and strips of fried bacon, he hurriedly made six sand wiches and stuffed them into his pock ets. ' Resting nt the spring long enough to eat two of his sandwiches, he "He Leaped at the Falls . . . Landed on the Flat Rock. and drained a gourd of water, crossed the branch below the falls and hurried away up the bluffs into the deep woods. A mile and more north of the wa terfall, Wolf Run bends west to dou ble and twist and loop through a tan gle of hills and gulches known as Fox Den, the wildest and most Inaccessi ble district of the Flatwoods. The Pearlhunter had heard of the place. He resolved to take his chances there. The spot was no great distance above the three-gabled cabin. Away up the bare front of a cliff his eye lighted on the mouth of what ap peared to be a cleft In the rock. Wolf Run washed against a narrow ledge at the very foot of this cliff, ne spread himself flat against the face of the rock and strained from crevice to crev ice. It was a prodigious task, but all tasks have an end either at the bot tom or at the top. The Pearlhunter's task Anally ended at the top. It had to. The strata gaped apart half the height of a man, leaving a wide-open scar In the face of the cliff. It was per haps ten feet deep, and seemed to be closed at the back by the dipping to gether of the two strata. Rolling back as far within the open ing as the converging strata would comfortably allow, he dropped his bat tered head upon his arm to sleep the rest of the night away. The Pearlhunter waked with the woods. His limbs and breast and shoulders were so sore that he was half glad for the snug place to lie In. like a fox In his burrow, while the hounds beat up the woods at fault. Lack of water was the greatest drawback. Thirst was already begin ning to annoy him. He took out his sandwiches and ate two more of them, saving the other two until later In the day. The snlty bacon made the wa ter more tempting still. He drew back a little space from the brink of tin ledge out of sight of It. The sound of It still tempted him. Voices reached him suddenly, break lng upon the silence from around Kharp turn of the gorge down stream He drew his face batkfrojn the briuk of tne ledge and lay listening. Tt was far too risky to look. His cars made out three of them three tongues, all going at top spiVd. a sure sign that eyes and ears were not as busy us they might have been. Opposite the cliff whore1 the fugitive lay, the steps stopped. "What's that hole up there?" It wna a gruff and heavy voice that asked, thick still with the flare of tem per that had not yet cooled. "Wolf den, more'n likely," answered one of the others. "If we wus up th bluff cross there furnlnst the hole, we could see In,' suggested a voice. The other voices grunted; and the t'enrlhunter heard them hopping back across the stream, heard them clawing their way through the tangled under brush up the opposite bluff. The scar in which he lay dipped slightly to ward the roar. He rolled back as far as possible, so as to have the protec tion afforded by the slightly higher edge; stretched himself on his right side; and waited for them to come into view. Fortunately the sun hit their side of the gorge, and the Pearlhunter could see them well, while, beint on the shady side, and back in the dark ness of the scar, they could not see him at all. The three of them drew together In consultation. The Pearl hunter could not make out their words, but the manner in which they handled their rifles, which they had managed to drag up with them, Indicated only too plainly, the general drift of what was being said. With a final nod all around, they faced the pocket, rind one of them raised his rifle. The bullet struck the roof of the scar Just in front of him, showering him with dust and bits of shale. The second fired. The bullet passed close to his foot and lost It self far back in the crevice where the two strata of shale converged. It was now the .third-one's turn. There came the hot spit of smoke; the vicious slap of the report. Rut even before he saw the one, or heard the other, he felt something like a red coal sting his side Just under the armpit. His side! A thousand flames had got nt it. Something warm and sticky ran down under his tattered shirt and made It mussy. The flames rendi his face and twisted it. The ulr seemed to forsake the pocket. He crawleii to the front of the scar. He couldn't take his eyes away from the water glancing along at the root of the cliff. The flames had scorched him dry. If he could only have one sup of the water to moisten his lips so that the breath could got through. He crawled a little nearer the open ing; held his face out over the ledge. The ledge seemed to be rocking up and down ; the trees were dipping and going around In a queer whirl that made him dizzy. He had never known trees to act tike that. The tops of the gorge were bending together. The gorge came together slowly shut out the air shut out the sky. CHAPTER XI. Only the Hunted Know. For a long time the Pearlhunter lay wondering why the gorge didn't fall in. While he lay and wondered, an other strange thing happened the very strangest of all. The top of the gorge began to open opened and let iu two little patches of sky. He kept his eyes on them two little spots of blue set between clouds of pink and gold. The gorge top opened wider. He came back to the two patches of sky; smiled oddly they had transfigured; had become the eyes of the Wild Rose. The shooting had brought her. Her arm was under his head, and she wns saying something. A tinge of crimson deepened the pink In her cheeks when his eyes came open. What If he had heard I But she met his eyes with frank directness. He lay looking up at her a long time; trying to compre hend It all; the wonder of It! that she was there ! She helped him edge a little nearer the brink of the ledge, raised him, and he drank out of her cupped palm. Whether It was the cup he drank from, or the thirst that parched him, he took no thought, but It was the sweetest drink that ever passed his Hps. She eased him back upon the ledge, her arm still under his head. A strand of her hair fell upon his face. She tried to shake It off. He put up his hand and covered It. Her eyes dropped to his wounded side. "I didn't know he was the Red Mask," she said, as If In pursuance of his first remark, "till those men came this morning." Her next words were low and thought ful. "I've wondered if It could have been he that hurt Daddy?" "It was him." The girl's breath quickened, ne saw her fingers clench. But there was much to do. ner eyes turned again to his blood-stained gar ments, and she set about uncovering the wounded side. There was little enough to remove a shred or two of tattered shirt; a laying back of the torn blouse. After the first start at sight of the wound she became curi ously thoughtful. The color mounted to her face; he tried to meet her eyes, but they turned away. "Can you spare me for a minute?" ' For answer he lifted his hend. She took away her arm, eased him back upon the rock, and he heard her light step as she sprang around an angle 'f the cliff. She wns gone barely more than the .minute asked for. When she returned she wns carrying In her bands a nnm er of strips bandages of white loth. Where she got them well, hat's her u& The millet had cut a Jeep, raggA gash just below the .umpit. It hac" grazed a rib. but seemingly had no: broken It. With that encouraging faci established, and the sting of th wound much allayed, the mind of th man began reaching forward to th night; the all-Important night when a certain suave Individual in a frock coat would come to feed a certain horse. He said no word of tills to the girl already binding the bandages around the cleun-washed wouud. She would have scouted the bare sugges tion, of the things he was planning t do the moment the dark was sufficient ly dense to hide him. She drew what was left of his tat tered shirt and blouse over the ban dage at last, laid his wounded arm across his breast and slung It there by a strip of cloth passed up around hU neck, and helped him to his feet. It shamed him that he was abso lutely compelled to cling fast to her, to lean heavy upon her, or go back to the rock. His face was far too white to show the mortification he felt, but she saw it In t's eyes. Lifting his well arm and lai.-? It across her shoulders?, she caught Her left arm about his blouse waist and steadied him. The Wild Rose seemed to huv tak en toll of every bit of sunshine that ever struck the Flatwoods. That was the distinguishing feature of her per sonality. That and her good, soend sense. Her face was beaming full of both right now--the sunshine and the sense. She was smiling up at bin, he knew. He was staring away above her head but he knew. The smile grad ually drew his eyes down out of the trees. lie could no more help It than ho could help leaning upon her. She laughed a heartening little laugh like the happy water curling against the ledge. lie laughed back. He couldn't help It. The restraint was broken ; the smart gone. He glanced down at the ledge before leaving to see that no tell-tale blood spots or bits of cloth were left. A needless precaution her woodcraft was as fine as his own. How she managed to lead him, half carry him, out of the rocky and brok en gulches of Fox Den and down the rough banks of Wolf Run to the cabin of the three gables she never knew. Neither did he. It always remained a matter of wonder to him. Who does know the source of power that mys terious augmentation of strength thai comes to a womnr In a crisis? She led him Into the house and to the sofa In thb main room; the queer little leather-cohered bed that bud stirred his curiosity rl.e afternoon el his first visit two days X'l'cr-. The old man was not In Ae room. She must have caught his eye enrcb Ing for him. "Daddy?" she answered to tn yeh. "He often spends hoVrsaway. There'll be little pass In the wo-adtf today that he won't see, though notody will see him. Poor Daddy !" "We'll send for that snrgeou tomor row," he said. She was bnck in a momt, carrying a pan of water, fresh bandies, and a formidable-looking brown boi He cam phor, the universal first alj In the Flatwoods. The blood-soaked ban dages were deftTy removed and the wound re-washed. We iIcked up th brown bottle. "I am sorry to hurt jmr." she dald, "But It will keep the ferer down." "You're the doctor," w his slow answer. She uncorked the bottle nol applied some of its contents to the wound with a bit of cotton. Hurt ! It hurt so that he laughed. "Anything to get rendy for tonight," he grinned, under the bile of the pow erful antiseptic. "Tonight!" she repeated blawkly. "Why, you mustn't think " "I must, though. Big things depend on tonight." She saw a sternnest gather in his eyes. "He'll think I've left the Flatwoods," he muttered on. more to himself than to her. "It's what he's been waiting for. His game! tonight! and 1" The girl saw the fingers of his right hand clench against his palm doubt less quite unconsciously while the knotted ridges of his great forearm bunched and swelled; but the full meaning of the muttered words hap pily missed her. (TO BE CONTINUED.) LIVED LONG ON FRUGAL DIET Englishman Who Died In 1680 Proved That It Was Possible to Eke Out Existence Cheaply. Thomas F. Curby, the champion eater of Massachusetts, declared that dyspepsia la the result of eating toe little, and not too much. His Sunday dinner consisted of thirteen lobster. sixty eces. and one hundred oysters. At the other end of the scale must be placed old Roger Crab, the first ege tarlan, who died September 11, 1C30, after proving that a man could live on 75 cents a year. Originally a hab erdasher In a big way of business at Chesham. England, a free liver and drinker of strong ales, he "got re ligion" also dyspepsia In olddl life sold his stock, gave the proceeds to tt noor. and took to living In a nat on three-farthings a week. Instead of "strong drinks and wines," he says la his autobiography, "I give the 'old man' he lived two centuries too soon to call It "Little Mary" "a cup oi water; and. Instead of roast mutton mbblt with bran, and pudding road with bran and turnip-leaves chopped together." And on this diet he lived t a ripe old age, surviving repeated cudgellngs and Imprisonment ft witchcraft. True Americans love all Cartf colors: Red, White and fttoe. DRUG CLERK TELLS HOW TO STOP BOILS-PURIFY BLOOD His Blood Was Bad, Had Boils Felt Weak, Bad. I can certainly recommend this new tonic the chemists are ruving' about because I not only know a lot of cus tomers here In Ihe drug store who have been helped, but I know myself what It will do. I used to have boils. Great big boils all the time, and hud been-going down hill for months. I seldom felt hungry had lost my pep. So I finally decided to take some thing. You don't know how hard it is to start taking medicine. I see so much of It I hate to start, but I real ized I was In need of a real system building, blood purifying tonic, and Karl's Hypo-Cod was my choice. It is a more modern medicine and is nice to taste. It does, the work quicker, too, and I know because customers have often told me what it did, and It should, because It has the stuff In it. Movie Tricks. In some photoplay tire scenes the buildings are actually burned down, und sometimes small models are burned. Usually a convincing illusion Is created by placing chemical prepa rations, known as "smoke pots." "In concealed places In the building. Then by staining the film red the illusion Is almost perfect. Movies make It easy for bricks to form themselves Into walls. Here Is how It Is done: First a brick wall Is photographed. A man hidden behind the wall pulls down a brick at a time and throws it into a pile In front of the wall. Each time he does it It is photographed. The film is reversed when It is shown, so that the last pic ture appears first. Brooklyn Eagle. AUTOMOBILE LOSSES The Increase in the number of auto mobiles used each year has greatly increased losses. Whil9 the most care ful men In the state we carrying auto mobile Insurance, it is estimated that, the loss on uninsured automobiles each year reaches a total of $1,850,000. The loss on fire alone will reach about $1:00,000, theft $500,000, liability $500, 000, and collision $500,000. Every automobile owner should real ize the danger of driving a car, not 1 only the danger of liability suits but also the loss of the car by fire or theft. During the past three years the Sec ond Hand Used Car Market dealers have been established and all cars have an established value. Used Car Market Reports are based on cars In good condition and sold for cash. These market reports are used by automobile salesmen and automobile owners when they desire to find out the cash value of their car. Old line companies have made a cer tain per cent discount on an automo bile each year, and a car four years old would not be accepted. The mu tual companies are using the Used Car Market Reports as a basis, whicli is more favorable for the automobile owners, for if the car Is lost the owner Is enabled to buy another car of same year and make. The second hand cars purchased from responsible deal ers are put in condition before offered for sale and consequently are in better condition than the average car which Is burned or stolen. Adv. Logic at Work. Teacher Thomas, will you tell me what a conjunction Is, and compose a -"ntence containing one? Thomas (after reflection) A con Junction is a word connecting any thing, such as "The horse Is hitched to the fence by his halter." "Halter" is a conjunction, because it connects the horse to the feuce. Harper's Ba tar. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured vf local applications, as they cannot each the diseased portion of the ear. Catarrhal Deafness requires constitu tional treatment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by an In flamed condition of the muoous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entire Ijr closed, Deafness is the result Unless the Inflammation can be reduced, your hearlns; may he defrayed forever. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acti through the blood on the mucous sur faces of the system, thus reducing the In flammation and restoring normal condi tions, Circulars free. All Druggists. F. J. Cheney St Co., Toledo, Ohio. Rough Stuff. Slapstick Director (Jun't you sug gest a novel from which we could adapt a comedy? Comedian My memory Isn't very accurate, but Isn't there a book called "Alice Threw the Looking Glass?" Film Fun. Cutleura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring In the hot suds of Cutleura Soap, dry and rub in Cu tleura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This Is only one of the things Cutleura will do If Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes. Adr. Wise Girl. First Nursemaid Yes, the father Is French and the mother Spanish. . Second Nursemaid Well, Is the lit tle one a Frenchman or a Spaniard? First Nursemaid Who knows I lie hasn't started to talk yet. Literary men resemble hens. The author lays a plot and the publisher sits on It. "I don't need to tell how qukitty my blood was purified. It did It in a few days. My apatite came back. Bolls left me. My color was Improved, and I was feeling fine und dandy in no time at all. It builds you up and drives out Impurities, then strengthens you all over. That Is my experience with It," declared Fred A. Hover, a well-known Drug Clerk In one of Bay City's largest drug stores. Druggists all over the state are urging people to take a more modern tonic. Grand pa's old-fashioned tonic was all right In its day, but for quick results and a nice tasting, powerful tonic, this new triumph of chemistry has them all beat. Right now Is the time to take a tonic. Build yourself up and be free of wintry colds, coughs, blood and stomach trouble all winter. Good rich blood keeps you warm these cold days. A couple bottles of Hypo-Cod cost very little, and nearly every drug gist in the State has it in stock, Adv. A Waggish Miss. Madge "Jack remarked that I have my father's eyes." Mabel "Wasn't he mean to call you pop-eyed?" Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected. ' Judging from reports from druggists who are constantly in direct touch with the public, there is one preparation that has been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest fof its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of tba prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview on the subject, made the as tonishing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are re jected is because kidney trouble is so common to the American people, and the large majority of those whose applica tions are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease. It is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y for a sample bittle. When writing be sure an mention this paper. Adv. Familiar Appeal. "Do you believe you could get wom en voters to understand a blanket ballot?" "Sure, If It was marked down." Son ire INDIGESTW 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief Children Who Are Sickly When your child cries at ntrht, tosses restlessly in its sleep, is constipated, fev erish or has symptoms of worms, you feel worried. Mothers who value their own comfort and the welfare of their children, should never be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children for nse throughout the sea son. They tend to Break tip Colds, relieve Feverish ness. Constipation, Teeth ing Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and destroy Worms. These powders are pleasant to take and easy for parents to cive. Tbey cleanse the stomach, act on the Liver and five healthful sleep by regulating the child's anv substitute, system. Und by mother t for ovrr 30 ptart. Sold by all droggists. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Mother Gray Co., Le Roy. N. Y. Da svrm you tut for aid obtain Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children. IN GIRLHOOD Detroit. Mich. "My health was Tery poor and I waa backward In derelop ment until nineteen yearftof age, when I c ommenced taking: Dr. Pierce's Farorlte Pre scription and Golden Medical Die covery. These medicines were the means of restoring me to a normal condition of health and proved so beneficial to me that I regretted very much not haying taken them earlier In life. I have nerer suffered with any form of woman's weak ness since." MRS. TILLIB SCHUSTER. 384 6th St. All drug gists sell Dr. Plerce'a medicines. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM BaoovDaniraff-StnpBalrraiUad Reatnree Color end Baty te Grey and Faded llaU oc. ana s 1 00 at Prvrcma, Runte Onrne, Gal' Innara. uv, atop all pala, rmurM comfort th ttt. snakra walklnr Ita. by mall ar at Uru . Vlaoos Cbaoiioai Works, Fatehog-ua, M. X. MKtS TNI SHIN BtauTIPVl. 1 dr for l.rt romplrtmw r-r ml, tl . Or. C. H. rr .., atie Kiri( Awmw, CMcaa W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. B-1921. Relief U5FOR INDIGESTION Trad Mirk. Don' I epeent 11