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THOUSANDS PROCLAIM THE MERITS OF PE-RU-NA leai Ttair Letters Mrs. Martha C. Dale, R. F. D. 1, Cannon, DeL, writes: "I am en tirely cured of chronic catarrh of the stomach and bowels by PE-EU-NA." Mr. J. Bayer, Glendale, Oregon: There is no medicine like PE-KU-2?A for catarrhal deafness." Mrs. Kate Marquis, Middleburg, Ohio: "PE-RU-NA cured me of catarrh of the head and throat." Mr. J. II. Collins, Wesson, Mis teissippi: "PE-RU-NA makes me feel vigorous and able to work without that tired, weak feeling I usually have otherwise." Mrs. P. Ludvigsen, Austin, Min nesota: "I got rid of my liver trouble and can eat anything since taking PE-RU-NA." Mrs. L. Hearing, 283 East 169th St, New York City: "For catarrh of the head and stomach, I have found PE-RU-NA better than any other medicine." Mr. W. H. Edgar, 49 Cooper St., Atlanta, Georgia: "PE-RU-NA cured me after I had suffered fifteen years with rheumatism." Mrs. Leona Dodd, R. No. 3, Medon, Tennessee: "PE-RU-NA is a grand medicine for coughs and colds." So many diseases are due to ca tarrh and catarrhal conditions, makes TE-RU-NA the best medi cine in the world to have on hand for emergencies and general health protection. Thousands of families are never without a bottle of PE-RU-NA or a box of PE-RU-NA Tablets in the medicine cabinet. That is the safe way. You can buy PE-RU-NA any where in tablet or liquid form. Skin Troubles Soothed With Guticura Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. Up-to-Date Economy. Charity Collector Have you any particular use for your old clothes? Surly Citizen Sure. I'm wearing them. "ROSY-FIT" If Bilious, get your Pep and Color back with "Cascarets" l' MTeu loiine, iiaU i ame, Indiges tion, Sallow Skin, and Miserable Head aches come from n torpid liver and sluggish bowels, which cause the stom ach to become filled with undigested food which sours and ferments, form ing acids, gases, and poisons. Cascarets tonight will give your bilious liver and constipated bowels a thorough cleans ing and have you feeling clear, bright and as fit as a fiddle by morning. Cascarets never sicken or incon venience you like nasty Calomel, Salts, Oil, or griping Pills. They work while you sleep. Adv. Men who think money will do ev erything may be suspected of doing anything for money. To Have a Clear Sweet Skin. Touch pimples, redness, roughness or itching, if any, with Cutlcura Oint ment, then bathe with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. Rinse, dry gently and dust on a little Cutlcura Talcum to leave a fascinating fragrnnce on skin. Everywhere 25c each. Adv. The average man never casts his bread upon the waters until it becomes plale. WAS DISCOURAGED St. Charles Man Tells How He Suffered Before Doan's Cured Him. "Heavy strains on my back and being exposed to all kinds of weather, weak ened my kidneys," savs John S. Shel ton of St. Charles, Mo. "The miHery in my back was constant and 1 had to get up several times during the night to pass the kidney secretions. 1 got no rest night or day and lost twenty two pounds in weight. My eyes burned as if there were (ire in them. I also had dizzy spells and would feel as if 1 were going to pitch forward. Sharp catches would take me in my back as if someone were driving a sharp knife into my Nr. Shtlton back. My kidneys were so weak I had no control over them and the secretions Were scanty and burned in passage. I had pains in my bladder too. I was discouraged. I tried different remedies but received no benefit. I was advised to use Roan's Kidnep Pill and when I did so l was soon relieved of my mis ery. Loan's cured mc." Gat Doan's at Anr Stora. 60c a Bex DOAN'S XLV FOSTER-M ILB URN CO, BUFFALO. N. V, Baby Coughs aqtlire treatment with a remtaly that roa taint no opiatra. Puo'a U mild but effec tive; pleasant to take. Aik your drugaiit for WORLD'S CHAMPION FELTON CHALLENGED BY PADDON, NOTED AUSTRALIAN OARSMAN ? 1 Jetsam tf&yr Paddon, the famed Australian sculler, has challenged Felton to a cham pionship match, the race to be for $2,500 a side and to be contested on the Parramatta river, Australia. Felton, who Is shown in the Insert, recently won the world's championship from Ernest Barry of England. YOUNG BOB AVOIDS MANAGER Son of Former Champion of World Refuses to Place Himself Under Care of Director. Speaking of managers, we heard a story that throws an interesting side light on the reason why Young Bob Fitzslmnions is doing his own mana gerial work. We mentioned the other day that the son of the former cham pion of the world ought to put himself under the careful eye of some man who knew the game, says a writer in Bob Fitzsimmons. Brooklyn Eagle. The story was re-, sponsible for a phone message from a man who knows Young Bob and knows him well. "What you said the other day about Young Bob needing a manager," said the man at the other end of the wire, "is fine dope, but I'll tell you some thing you don't know. "Bob's father is responsible," said our informant. "Before he died he warned Young Bob about managers and told lilm to do all of his own ring business himself. Young Pob believes everything his father told him. That is the reason why he won't have a manager." This twenty-two-year-old youngster, Is son of the former champion heavy weight, whose recent debut in Newark has caused him to be the most sought for boxer In the country today. Young Fitz Is a light heavyweight, and Is said to be one of the cleverest big fellows ever seen In a ring. PASSING OF CARLISLE STARS One of Greatest Drawing Cards In Football Now but a Memory Some Stars Produced. The Carlisle Indians, one of the greatest drawing cards In football, have passed and their football deeds are only a memory now. The game which produced such stars as Thorpe, Bemus Pierre, Guyon, Metoxen, Mount Pleasant and Fludson Is lost forever at Carlisle and the football world grieves. L B. GOODWIN IS REINSTATED Star Swimmer Connected With New York Athletic Club Is Restored to Amateur Standing. L. B. Goodwin, star swimmer con nected with the New York Athletic club, who, during the war, ivns n war camp athletic director in the United States service, has been restored to amateur standing by a recent ruling of the Metropolitan Amateur Athletic union registration committee. lf;i LITTLE POT OF 5P0BT Tufts has been added to the Rutgers football schedule. a Professional single sculling races In England date back to 1831. Minneapolis is to have a flyers' club, run like a golf or country club. The Detroit Tigers are going South early. They set sail for Macon Feb ruary 22. a Dave Davenport of the Browns says he will pitch semi-pro ball in Ohio next season. . a a Stanislaus Zbyszko, older brother of Vladek, will shortly wrestle In the United States. a a a The Marathon race hns been added to the Olympic games program In Ant werp next year. a a a San Jose sportsmen are petitioning city councils to permit four-round amateur boxing bouts. a a The eastern Intercollegiate swim ming championships will be decided In Yale pool March 20, 1920. a a The University of Washington (Seattle) will send a baseball nine to tour Japan next summer. a Bill Clymer laments that the cron of youngsters coming to the front in baseball at present Is very small." a Up-to-date Pat Moran hns not seen fit to accept that house and lot which Cincinnati admirers planned to give him. a a a Chick ITarloy, football star of the Ohio State eleven, Is being besieged with offers from owners of baseball clubs. a a a Northwestern university students will be Instructed In wrestling. Includ ing the Japanese and Swedish methods. a a a Del Gainer and Paul Smith have been sold by the Red Sox to the Mil waukee club of the American associ ation. a a a England may raise a fund of $500, 000 to try to regain Its pre-eminence in athletics at the Antwerp Olympics next year. a a a It is reported that the veteran George McBrlde will be manager of the Nationals, now that Clark Griffith is president. a a a Brazlll, obtained by the Mackmen from the Robins by the waiver route, may win a place as regular third base man for Connie Mack. a a a There promises to be very little trading In the American league this winter. The magnates are too busy with the big squabble. a a a The Australian cricket board of con trol has invited a British cricket team to tour Australia In 1920-21 and will return the visit in 1921-22. a a Luclen Lyne, now in England, says he has signed a new contract with King Alfonso of Spain as Alfonso's chief Jockey for the 1920 season, a a a Now that waivers have been asked by the Beds on the veteran Sherwood Mapee, it Is reported he may manage a Class AA club. lie has ability. !YALE BOOKS ARMY FOR 1920, DROPS PENN TEAM Yale and Pennsylvania will not resume football relations next fall, it has been semioffi cially announced. The athletic council has decided to play West Point on the 1920 sched ule and a game with Pennsyl vania would make the cam paign too hard. POPULAR IMPRESSION OF SHEEP IS ERROR Grazing Animals on Golf Courses Is Poor Practice. Practically All of Big Clubs In Eng. land Regret Making Experiment to Help Increase Food Sup plies During the War. To the question of whether golf courses benefit by allowing sheep to graze on them comes from England an emphatic negative. In the early days of golf the belief was generally ac cepted that sheep were good for the courses, but In the process of time It was discovered that drives through the green could be made just as good in places where it was impossible or In convenient to graze sheep as on reg ular sheep runs. The war revealed the whole truth about the effect exercised by sheep on turf used for golf. Many clubs did their bit during the war to Increase the food supplies of the country, either by doing sheep farming them selves or by allowing neighboring farmers to graze sheep over their courses. Practically all of them, ac cording to London Field, have cause to regret the necessity of making the experiment Sheep do little harm, if no positive good, says the Field, on genuine links, such as St. Andrews. For one thing, the constant stream of players at St. Andrews drives them to the less fre quented spaces during the hours of daylight On a rich clay soil, which might be warranted to crop thirty hundredweight of hay to the acre in an average year, they may even do some good by fining down the growth of grass. But it is a great mistake to intro duce sheep on those courses which, If they are not quite the real thing, form the best substitute for a seaside links. Such courses are carved by in genious architects to the order of capi talist committees out of heathery wastes or virgin forests. It Is highly important to keep the fairways and putting greens poor when once they have been constructed. Not a few greens committees, in their anxiety to get a new course ready for play at the earliest possible moment, have exceeded In the use of manure and top dressing. As a result the water does not drain away from the surface so quickly as it should In winter, and in summer the soil is capable of becoming hard baked. BELMONT TO RESUME RACING Intention of Wealthy Breeder Became Known When He Entered Colt In Stake Events. The maroon and red racing colors of Major August Belmont will be seen on the New York tracks once more In 1920. Among others who will race un der the silks of the chairman of the Jockey club is a coming 2-year-old named All Hours. He Is a brown son of Negofol and Hour Glass II and therefore full brother to the great Ilourless, who won a majority of the stakes on the New York tracks while racing for the Belmont stable and is now In the stud with a prospect of having winners of bis get racing dur ing the coming season. The intention of Major Belmont to resume racing of thoroughbreds of his own breeding was made known when he entered All Hours In the juvenile and Keene memorial stakes for 2-year-olds to be run during the spring meet ings at Belmont pnrk. DICK HOBLITZELL AT AKRON Former Major League First Sacker Appointed as Manager of New International Team. Dick noblltzell of Parkersburg, W. Va., first baseman, formerly member It "On Dick Hoblitzell. of the Roston Red Sox and Cincinnati Reds, has been appointed manager of the Akron International league team. ;Net Contents lSriuidDraohnv TO LCOHOL-3 PER CENT. AVetJefabicPrcparationiDrflsi aim iniinomeroc-a oy xureuia- tJngtheStomadsandB(Trf.j ChecrfulncssandKcsi.wnuuB neither Optam.Morphln.enor Mineral. Not narcotic JbUstStid )fabryranfhrrr AhclpfulRcmcdyfof Constlpationand Diarrhoea and Fevcrfehness ana TnccMT SLEEP rcsdiin thmfrorajnlnfan3r- Tflp-SlmileSinatareot fl Never Satisfied. Cholly Your daughter is all the world to me. Cotrox Take her, with my blessing. Cholly (to himself) Gee whiz! I got that so easy I wish I had asked for more. Detroit News. HEAD STUFFED FROM I CATARRH OR A COLD i X Says Cream Applied In Nostrils Opens Air Passages Right Up. Instant relief no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up ; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffing, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swol len mucous membrane and relief comes Instantly. It's Just fine. Don't stay stuffed uj with a cold or nasty catarrh. Adv. The Bad Old Days. John B. Gough Ryan of Rochester said in a temperance address : "No more of this reason losing, glory be! "A clubman In the bad old days said to another clubman during the high ball hour: " 'Lush lost his reason last night.' " 'How come,' said the second club man with a frightened look. " 'Dear knows !" said the first club man. 'He had one, and a good one, when he left here at 3 a. m., but he forgot It somehow on the way home.' " Anticlimax. She clung to him. He could feel the subtle warmth of her burning Into his soul. Something within him stirred. He touched her bare shoulders with the tips of his fingers, her hot breath in his face. "My gosh !" he said, trembling. "What would you have me do?" She lifted her eyes to his eyes in which burned an inscrutable fire. "Pick up your feet, you poor fish, and don't step on my gown again until this dance Is over," she murmured. California Pelican. Proper Medium. "Can't . you dig up anything for trumps?" "Sure; I'll make it spades." Naturally. "The poet sang to his love, 'Drink to me only with thine eyes." "She must have had liquid eyes." '' Exact Copy of Wrapper a-jol TFie entire food values of wheat and malted barley are found in GrapesNuts A food in nourishing, delicious, economical. Easy to digest because of twenty nours baking Reacty-to-serve. imwwiiwtmuni jY.mjMi.i,-ifl.'iii'Fitiiilrtfcli For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoriai Hway3 Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years Let It Go at That. McNutt So you were hit by an auto? Do you expect any damages? McPutt I'm satisfied; I've hud enough. TAKE ASPIRIN ONLY AS TOLD BY BAYER "Bayar" introduced Aspirin to tho physicians over 18 years ago. To get quick relief follow carefully the safe and proper directions in each unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." This package is plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer Cross." The "Bayer Cross" means the gen uine, world-famous Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" can be taken safely for Colds, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lum bago, Rheumatism, Joint Pains, Neuri tis, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger "Bayer" packages. Aspirin is the trade mrk of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylic acid. Adv. The Vegetarian Airman. "Hobey" Baker, the young Philadel phia athlete nnd airman, who made a brilliant flying record during the war, was talking at the Philadelphia Coun try club about his experiences in France. "I knew one chap," he said, "who crashed In Germany, nnd tramped 320 miles back to our lines. It took him a month, and he lived the whole time on raw turnips and carrots that he dug up at night." "Gee !" said a young lady. "I wonder how such an experience felt?" "The poor guy," said the airman, "told me it felt like a root march." Of Course. "Would you mind letting me off 15 minutes enrller after this?" asked the bookkeeper. "You see, I've moved over to Jersey, and I can't catch my train unless I htnve the office at a quarter of five." ' "You should have thought of thst before you moved," said his employ er. "I did," was the reply. "That's the reason I moved." Oh, So Much! Wife You complain that I am al ways asking you for money. Why don't you give me so much a year and have done with It? Hub I do give you "so much." That's Just what I complain of. A man Is never sure he knows until he makes good. everv sense: 0 m n. a s r w 3