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If BEST MEDiCINE m What Lyd ist E. Pinknam's Vegetable Compound Did For Ohio Woman. Portsmouth, Ohio.—" I suffered front jjfegulariues, pains in my side and was so weak at times I could hardly get around to do my work, and as I had four in my family and three boarders it made it very hard for me. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound was recommended to mo. I took it and it has restored my health. It is certainly the best medicine for woman's ailments I ever saw."—Mrs. Sara Shaw, P w No. 1, Portsmouth, Ohio. Mrs. Shaw proved the merit of this medicine and wrote this letter in order that other suffering women may find relief a3 she did. Women who are suffering as she was ihould not drag along from day to day without giving this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pihkham's Vege table Compound, a trial. For special advice in regard to such ailments write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of its forty year» experience is at your service. iKii 'MACARONI v yon m MÂCAFOn' Eat Them Quickly. One storage egg. at 12 cents, is the weekly egg ration of Berliners. The papers state that as a large part of the eggs from which this modest ra tion is derived are products of the re frigerator, buyers are urged to "fetch them promptly and consume them without unnecessary delay." Soothe Itching Scalp*. On retiring gently rub spots of dan druff and itching with Cutlcura Oint ment. Next morning shampoo with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. For free «impies address. "Cutlcura, Dept. X, Boston." At druggists and by mall. Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50 .—Adv. Great Men. The thoroughly great men are those who have done everything thoroughly, and who have never despised anything, however small, of God's making. John Iluskln. Important to Mother® Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria A Hull fishing Skipper has earned 5125,000 since the war broke out, and another made 575,000 in two years. A HINT TO WISE WOMEN. Don't suffer torture when all female troubles will vanish in thin air after using "Femenina." Price 50c and >i oo Adv. Chicago may quarantine to check pneumonia. __ HEALTH WAS WRECKED Nothing Brought Relief Until Doan'» Were Used. Wonderful Improvement Wit Effected. in Hn WktkMlt* 'T had such awful cutting pains the small of my back and hips, 1 often had to cry out," says Mrs. Lr nest Wiethoelter, 550 Madison bU St. Charles, Mo. "The pain • knife-like and I couldn't turn in bed, in fact I was almost helpless. My feet and ankles swelled badly, my hands were puffed up and there were swellings under my eyes. "I often got so dizzy I had to sit down to keep from „ mn i P te falling and my health was enn Iv broken down. The kidney • tions pained terribly in passage.and in spite of all the medicine I took. I kept getting worse until I W '^By" chance I read about fïÂÂs-* and my health returned. Sworn to before me, p WM. F. WOLTEB. AW g at AIOST TWO YEARS Wiwv, May 25, 1917. Mrs. Wn»thoelter add • "I think as highly of D ' ' ^ Whenever I nave used them, have benefited me. 60caBa , CetDW.etA»jS kidNEY DOAN 3 pills FOSTER-MÎLBURN CO-. BUFFALO. N. Y. A BAD COUGH PISO'S elf: m Not Commence Until Nation's Army Is Most Powerful in Field. Î0 FACE SIX MILLION MEN Strength of German Forces United States Must Meet and Overcome Can Be Closely Esti mated. By JOHN LLOYD BALDERSTON. (Copyright, 1917. by the M. dure Newspa per Syndicate.) London.—The first phase of this war on the western front was the French phase. It lasted until five o'clock on the morning of July 1, llilt», when Brit ish Tommies went over the top on the Somme, relieved the pressure on Yer d the P' :• ;;d phase use. Jules rcntly that the Ameri lumiiug of dun, and connu«*»«' of t lie war, the I Cambon said in I'aris re the third phase of the war can phase, began with Hu American troops in Frai-ce. But strictly speaking, the American phase will not commence until the American army is the most powerful in tin* field, ready to carry on lo vic tory when the French and British have done their part. That will not come before the autumn of 1918. What will the American armies next year be up against in France? It is possible to answer that question, with in a margin of error of not more than 10 or 15 per cent. To do so Involves the use of figures. Figures are dry and tiresome—most figures—but not these. The blood-curdling and incred ible adventures packed into all the dime novels and movies of the world would not equal those which have gone to make up these figures, figures whose genesis and compilation must be hid den under the mystic word, intel ligence. be ligence. Figures are Authorized. After the war, when the intelli gence gives up its secrets, nobody in search of excitement will need to read fiction. Today, all that can he said is that details here given of the strength and composition of the enemy armies are authorized for publication. They are details whose main interest for America lies not in how they were compiled, but in the meaning they hold for the United States, the duty they point out. If the war goes on, and the allied armies continue killing Germans at tho average rate maintained since Au gust. 1914. there will be approximate ly 5,971,000 German soldiers left in November, 1918, when the British phase of the war will probably have closed and the American phase begun Of these, 4.232,000 will he fighting men at the front. ITow this figure Is arrived at will be made clear in the course of a detailed analysis of the German armies as they exist today. This analysis comes un der three heads. (1) How many divi sions have the Germans In the field? (2) IIow many reserves lias Germany available to fill up the gaps in the divi sions, the fighting units? (3) What is the rate of wastage of the German armies? The most Important of the three, and the one concerning which the «reutest accuracy is possible, is the enumeration, und Incidentally the loca tion, of the German divisions. There are today on all the fronts 231 German divisions. Of these l.>.> are at present stationed on the west front and 70 on the east front. Ger man divisions vary enormously In value, and to a considerable extent in numbers. But it is now believed tliut the process of subtracting three regi ments from each German division, one regiment from each of the division s three brigades, has been completed. This was commenced last winter, with the object of forming a large number of n ew divisions at the expense of the existing ones. line tals The der 000 be of existing ones. Strength of Divisions Reduced. Accordingly the strength of the av erage German division has been re duced, since the close of the battle «if the Somme, by about one-fourih. stead of the 20,000 men which merlv represented the full strength a German division, each division now contains 16.000. This does not mean 10,000 bayonets; in modern warfare so' many troops must be detailed for communication and other duties that not more than 9.000 men in a division of three brigades of three regiments each—now the standard German size —can man the trenches or attack at any one time. This reduction in strength was undertaken not, us was hastily assumed at the time, because Germany was running short of men, but because fresh divisions wore want ed to over-run Roumania and take part in the great offensive this year on the west front that seems to have been perforce abandoned. The 231 existing German divisions, assuming that all are at full strength, account for 3.696.000 men. This does not take Into account the central re serve in Germany from which gaps are filled the great quantities of inferior landwehr and landsturm troops gar risoning occupied territories more than half as big as Germany, nor the young hoys who have been or shortly will be* called up for service. Reserve Strength More Uncertain. The second part of our analysis of the Gorman armies, the problem of In for Of to !1;:M wild 111 M.at elf: lilt iruin pn servos lived ! able nceurncy possibl liediting divisions. Ii is known ,<hk) tioys reach the age of every year in Germany, and rs captured and tho n»o<l! if the French and British armies in dealing wtUi -imilar mate ria! tin* number <f the. «* boys who are incorporated in the enemy armies can be cumulated almost exactly. But the ouest inn of the central reserve und of the number «ff troops on garrison duties in Belgium. France, Poland, Russia, Roumania and Serbia, is more difficult. It is impossible to go lnl<> details about the methods used in assessing tiies«; figures, which obviously are more involved, more tortuous and more mysterious In the case of troops in the Interior of Germany or Belgium or Poland than with divisions some where near the firing line. The esti mate of General de Lacroix in Paris, based upon official data, is that on June 1 tlu re were, ex«-lttdin 098,000 men in the 12*1 exis man divisions, 1.739,0011 oil»' on duty in the rear. Most men are landwehr and I troops regarded as utterly us« for the tiring line <«n the Lu>s They « an never appear I11 the first I no matter how desperate Germai straights for met*, may become, they perforin invaluable s«*r\ leasing tin* whole lit inanhoi country for the front. 755,000 in Reserve. In addition to this fore** and less fit men, the German in reserve to fill up the gai lighting divisions somi Of these general cannor ne jmiv'i i — in dealing 1 Ai. tlu* and «ni the ili« put by tie the 3 ng Gcr ' these dsturm ian front. ne. but e in re 1 of the of ffdor have in their 755.000 men. Lacroix estimates that there' are 220,000 in depots at i!i«' front, ready to be drafted as ueoiled into the divisions that nre constantly being withdrawn In a battered condi tion from the active sectors. In depots in the Interior are 355.000 more, while 180,000 are training In Germany but not yet ready to fight. Besides these men. there remain to be considered the 750.000 boys who reach the age of eighteen every year. Approximately 500.000, or two-thirds of these lads are drafted into the army. The German class of 191S—or tin- 500.000 soldiers who are nineteen this year—have already been put into line and are counted in the general to tals of German soldiers given above. The class «ff 1919, the boys now eighteen, will yield 5O0.000 more troops, and only a few of them have t been identified by the allied armies. It is believed that most of these lads will be made cannon fod der before November. In calculations regarding tlie German strength n«*xt winter and next year, they must all be included. if re of The strength of the German army, then, is today roughly this: there are 3,690,000 combatants, with additional reserves of 750.000 men plus a re-en forcement of between 450,000 and 500. 000 boys of eighteen all of whom will be available by next winter. And In addition to the fighting men there are about 1.739.000 older or unfit men on duties in the rear who will never be able to face the guns. The fighting men. Including these boys not yet ready, total almost exactly 5,000,000, not including the landwehr and land sturm and other "etnppcn" or com munication troops who, to the number of nearly two million, will never ap pear In the trenches. Losses Important Factor. The third factor in an analysis of the strength of the German armies is now reached. What are tho German losses? To accept the German official lists for this part of the calculation will be to err, If unythlng, on the side of cau tion. There are military men in Din don and Paris who believe that these lists, allowing for unavoidable errors and delays, are accurate. There are others who are convinced that for two years the Germans have "doctored" the lists and deliberately minimized their losses. After examining a good deal of the evidence brought forward by both sides, I incline to the belief that the lists are accurate. The Germans have published lists for the first 33 months of the war. ap proximately up to May 1, which when totalled by allied statisticians have re vealed a total loss <ff 4,356,760 men. Of these, 998,439 were killed in ac tion, 69,688 «lied of sickness, 30.>,30J are prisoners or missing. In adilition to these men admittedly <>ut «ff the war, some 789,000 reported "severely wounded" are supposed to he totally disabled for further service. Of the remainder about 1,850,000 reported "wounded" and "wounded remaining with units" are classed by the allies as men who were able to go hack to fight. Net Wastage Estimated. Accepting the German lists as ac curate, the net wastage during 33 months of war to May 1, was about 2, 500,760 men who will never fight again. This estimate is not based in the sim ple fashion indicated above, upon the German reports of men as "severely wounded" and "wounded," but upon tons and tons of statistics and curves plotted upon charts by British and French intelligence ollicers. German bodies are the same as French and British, the weapons In use are the same on both sides, and years of light ing have enabled the allies not only to figure out to a remote decimal just what proportion of their ow n men who are hit will find their way hack into the firing line, but to apply the same figure, with certainty of being about right, to the Germans. The average rate of German wast age from the beginning of the wa.r to the first day of May this year is thus seen to have been about 76,000 men a month. This figure does not in 'j elude men wounded and afterward i to 'T I of to will will fair not of it th«* nor 000 ing able to go hack, but only those Oer — . mans kill««! or totally in«*::pa«'itateu. In attempting to determine what the Ai. erh aii an des will have up against them when, late next year, they have attracted l<> themselves ilie bulk or at least the liest of the enemy forces, tlu* same rate of wastage may be us stitiled for the period between now and the end of the campaign next year, «ni su y November 1. On November 1, POPS, if the average remains the same, the destruction of German man power proceeds at ill«* rate of «6,000 a month, ili« 1 number of Germans permanently put out of action will have in«;re*ised by 1.362.000 since May 1 tins year. Will Call Boys of Seventeen, on November 1. 1 * 1S however, tin* class of 1920—the German boys now seventeen—but then between eighteen and nineteen—will have been in«*or porated in the enemy armies. It may tie remarked in passing that the ex perience of all armies proves that to boys of seventeen into training ■s not pay, from a military point of i u ; they are not strong enough 'u | Iid it. It is perfectly safe, then, to j nine that Germany no matter how* j {„•rate will not call out her class j 1920 Ik* fore in xi year. By N«>\ . m- : • uns. Hi« so 500,001 boys must In * ligur«'s givi a above «ff 1 duel t< ;iU of 1 lie German the present 1 armies. From the total present combatant j strength must be subtracted 1.3*18.0«»'• in,*n. ili«' total loss,-* Germany must expect to suffer by November. 191S if she goes on with the war; to that strength must he added 500.000 for the class of 1920. The German armies, then, will have declined approximately 868,000 men, on November 1, 1918, from their strength on th<* first «ff last May. To Face 5,971,000 Men. To Face 5,971,000 Men. This loss of strength will fall upon the combatant forces alone. The 1, 729.iMK) old and unfit troops on duty in the rear will remain as they were. The 5,000,00*) lighting men possessed by Germany today will have dwindled to 4.232,000. Add to these the 1,739, OO0 non-combatant troops and the fig ure of 5,971.000 men is attaint'd, the total land strength of 111«* German **m pire which it was said at tin* login ning of this story would be in Hie fields at the opening of the third, or American, phase of the war. Now this is frankly an estimate which must allow f««r a considerable margin of error. The figures of the number of divisions in tin* fiebls are officially correct; the number of Ger man net casualties, accepting their own lists, is known to within a small fraction ; but the chance of error comes In the calculation of reserve troops. I have shown these figures, however, to a high military authority who said, 'T have gone over them carefully, and I think you are safely within a margin of error of 15 per cent; the only really incalculable point at which you had to guess was whether the rate of cas ualties for the next year and a half will be the same as It has been in the past." It may be assumed that while the American armies during the year 1918 will doubtless be able to take their fair share «ff the fighting, they will not be in sufficient numbers to do most of the work, as the British are doing it now, until the end of the jeai at least. pal ami tu!« it rid ity. ics to 'j i io» t i least. American Phase in 1919. But at the beginning of the summer campaign <ff the war, in of \ si f, th i in UR by enrintr of 1919, there is no doubt that the spring oi -i. 1 i th«* "Ainorican phase will have corn o meneed in earnest. Neither the French nor British armies will then be In a position to carry out offensives on a large scale. They will not have tho men. America will have them. Tho American troops and the allies will bo faced, in tin* spring of 1919, by 4,000,* 000 German fighting men, not count ing the old and unfit In the rear. All this may sound very improb able. It is possible, and I think prob able, that the war will not go on to the bitter end. There Is grave doubt whether a campaign of 1918 will be fought to a finish, whether the "Amer ican phase" of 1919 will ever arrive. F<*r tli" sake of the world it is to be devoutly hoped that it will not. But tlie* point is that Germany will not surrender until she knows she is beaten ; and America must remember that Germany will be able to keep !. 000,000 nu*n for the campaign of 1919. Germany will not yield unless America now anti trains armies capable of smashing those 4,000.000 men. Not all th«* ships and money in the world will prevent this war from dragging on to an inglorious draw unless Amer ican soldiers in sufficient numbers are prepared to deal the finishing blow. That is the moral of these calcula tions, and indeed it Is the reason why they are permitted publication. Strength of Teuton Allies. A general view of the present war resources of the central powers de mands a consideration of the forces of Germany's allies as well as of the fatherland itself. In addition to the 231 German <livi sions. tin* Austrians have 83, the Bul garians 13 and th«* Turks, nominallj. about 52. some of which exist only hment scrolls of the upon the pa Turkish war office. The west front is held entirely by 155 German divisions. These are div ided almost equally between the Brit ish arid French fronts. The fin«*s op posite the British front are held i»y the group <ff armies under the com mand of Prince Rupprcclu of Bavaria, while tiie German crown prince corr* mands the French sector. These two ar mv groups are now apparently en tirely independent; no record exist:« j of a division having been transferred to the other during the fighi r Calomel Today! Sick Tomorrow! I Guarantee Dodson's Liver Tone Don't take nasty, Clangorous calomel when bilious, constipated, lieadacliv. Listen to me! Calomel makes you sick ; you hist* a day s work. Calomel is quicksilver and it salivates; calomel injures your liver. If you an* bilious, fool lazy, slug gish and all knoeked out. if your bow els are constipatetl and your bead aches or stomach is sour, just take a spoonful «ff harmless Hudson's Liver Tone instead «ff using sickening, sali •aloiiiel. Dodson's Liver Tone You'll know it voit will wake r will be w tirk iiz/.iness gone. vatlng is real liver nieil n«'Xt morning b* up feeling line. y« ing, vour headacl voiir ing. Yo bottl stomach will cul nr. Y<»u You'll he cl ! ' mbition. druggist ,«> f Dodson': and be sweet : will feel 1: ' •erf'd; full ml e Will if vigor u r T Li\ « Tom you a for a Cause for Glee. Mllg merry s ing the! "Ah ;• ll, . 11 , •Iwril. < 'aine ,y- as til through tie* -ii"" we with a bland It is indeed a pleasure I" <> III«, knowledge That your been well and faithfully on with joy. Sing on the nd that huv, tills and—" "Aw. voice, down : pal is Hence whoop. mule -«TV, task (lom leal' lad : piekelsV they fleered in on«* "The heating plant lias broken md our absent-minded princi freezing to <i«*ath at bis desk. raro Hi-rickt - Kansas v. hopplty. <'itv Star. I DON'T BE FOOLISH ,*t ui«' « mini tin substi •lieving i lint ami buy an imitation, i, VAGUERHALM. It is l„*tt«*r than any tu!« "Balms' for «pi Goughs, Golds. Group, and all kin bur's and soreness. The many imitations are proof it is an unusually go«»«! thing. The prie«* is only 25« • p«*r Jar or Tube. Surely it is worth that to g*'t rid of a Gough or Cold, or your ehibl's Croup. If your druggist will not supply you ami I have no agent in your lo. al ity. write for the agency. Every family needs Vai'lier-Balm. and we supply samples Free, to ihe demand. E. IV. VAGUER, New Orleans, La. Adv. ; • « ■ Hie start In«-.. Flier6 End Strike. During the recent strike of mechan ics in the airplane engine factories nt Coventry, England, a fieet of army air planes flew from their aerodrome In the west of England and circl«*d over the town, scattering through tin* streets thousands of leaflets appealing to the strikers to return to work. Later in I thi* day a chaplain atta«'h«*d to tin naval air service in France flew from tin* front of Coventry in a seaplane, ar riving will I an appeal from tlu* nmn of Ills air squadron to tin* strikers to go hack. The strike was settled the fol lowing day. through the'Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused bv an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed. Deafness is the result Unless the Inflammation can be re duced and this tube restored to Its nor mal condition, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrhal Deafness thnt ciuinot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. All Druggists 7Sr. Circulars free. F J Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There is one wav t0 cure Catarrhal Deafness, o y , s by a constitutional remedy, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE To Sharpen Razors. if razor li««ncs are placeil strong magnets, razors will be flat, and can 1««* sharpen«»«! mort idlv and accurately. IMITATION IS SÎNCERF.ST FLATTERY but like counterfeit money the imita tion has not the worth of the original. Insist on "La Creore" Hair Dressing it's the original. Darkens your hair in the natural way, but contains no dye. Brice $1.00.—Adv. Plenty of It. She (acidly)—Talk is « leap. lit* ( mournfully)— 1 suppose that i- . ... ,,,, «biVS \\ n\ tlH Tf an no sp* < III • . __________ I Keepinsr the Quality Lp r AXATIVH5 BltuMO OL'INiNM, tho World-Famous MÂÆÂ iSÄ« ! îcif"co M ntîîned a înTÂxAl"vB BK«»M«t yUININB. It was iiroessary to Increase the price lo the orug | in: «lea«! in Greenville. Mrs. K. S. Term.. ha<l k in her home Hill. [■[«t her «1« ad baby's body i 10 rears in a metal coffin. j j To keep clean and healthy take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regu late liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv. Many I'l'llllSC a so-called smart man smarts of his allege«! smnrtix'ss. Dr Pcery'B *'D«ad Shot" not only expel. Worms or Tapeworm but cleans out the mucus in which they breed and toii«-n up the digestion. One dose sufficient. Adv. Fame night. at the -t of honor is ready Wnen Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy Ko Smarting — Jost Kye Comfort. 60 cents at nrnggLt» or malL Write for Kree Bye Book. MC KINK KL ii BKJIEDY CO., CHICAUO red guaran ur sluggish calomel; it you • m eat -,want without being sal! - mr druggist guarantees that nfui will start you liver, your bowels and straight« u you liv morning or you get your lmuicy Children gladly take Dodson'» or Toil«* tieeause it is ph sind doesn't gripe or ke them siek. am selling millions of I Ison's Liver Tone to I that lids pleasant, vege odirin«* lakes tin* pin« «* of low, 1. Buy on.* bottle on ivimble guarantee. Ask t about me.—Adv. few cents under niv pers tee that it "ill «lean > liver better than nasty won't make you sick and nnvthing vateil. Y .'tn'h spo «■lean y UP ' hack Live! ing male« I : Do«l have tabl. usant t .st cranip or bottl. s of who und. ru'ggis Meant Business. i tike til ialkii 111 « I !h men bad of old w heu knights Tin > : "All. niarr; lid they tiad a will IV tall. habit say ing. To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S I TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is : printed on every label, showing it : Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. ; Quinine drives out malaria, the ! builds up the system. 6o cents. The Iron Vanity Is Happiness. Tie* vainer ««in' i- tin* liuppi* Women <*an b«> happy <>n ve ; • « ■ : 11 i t '. until 11 i«*y lose t II« *i r g«» ;«• Is. little «inks. DON'T SNIFFLE. You run ri«i vnurself of that cold in Hie head bv taking Laxative Quinidine Tablets. Price 25c. Also used in cases of La Grippe *an«l for severe headaches. R«*m*'iub**r that. Adv. but ■ gas Dill may b« •tting it re< i*ipti a 1!'. «1 is a lit affli.'tion, lieavv one. nts prop-r food lth Wright'» A torpid liver prev ention Toil«» up you...... ...... Indian Vegetable Pill* They act^gently. Ad». Philadelphia may compel truants to go to work in factories. __ I A sthma There U no "cure* but relief i» often brought by— f/% brought by— f Hf Vlln, » Liul» Distemper Can Be Controlled by using HR. I)AV1I> Robert»* and WHITE LINIMENT W Kfad the Practical Home Veterinarian end f'« five booklet on Abortio® s Y,nv s. If Du dealer In your town. 103 Grand Lcnue, Wauktsha, WI». Ai Cr. David Robsrts' Vet. Co., POWERFUL, ^ PENETRATING # LINIMENT Qyickly healing and sooth ing the pain» of Neuralgia, Headache, Rheumatism, Cut», Bum», Sprains and Bruises. £ 35c and 70c bottle» at your 3 k druggists. ft A B tkkirdi H ti C» , be iTq Shtraii. T»m Æ ( i wnpaid so Young " Rub Dandruff and t Itching with xr Cuticura Ointment Shampoo with Cuticura Soap Sol<i fyrrqwherr Soap 2 Pint mart ?5iS0< FEATHER BED BOOK FREE YO ur3 »orthe askingi OurbrautifuUyiHu«tntedtt jMia« cmtalotf o! wonder-bargains in STRICTLY SANITARTf leather Beddin*. All feather» new. live. ODORLESS. U.S» Government-Standard FEATHERPROOF tiekinf. 90 day» trial end money back if you are not pHaeed. BEFORE YOU BUY be sure to »et «he PURITY FEATHER BED BOCK« Write for it RIGHT NOWl PUWTY BEDDING CO. NASHVHXE, TXMIH, | SHIP YOUR CATTLE, i HOGS and SHEEP to CARR SMITH & SONS Live Stock Commission Agents National Stock Yards, 111. Write, wire or phone for .pecial information AIRLESS TIRES from one casing to another as they wear out ror further particulars write DAHL PUNCTURELESS FILLER & rj M CO 1424-1426 Hennipin Ave. Minnefpol!" u PÂHKER'S " hair balsam A to. let prestation of merit. H lpstoeradicatedandrutt, vor Ke.toring Color and t0 5i ray or Faded HJr, — 66c. and » boo at w. N. u., MEMPHIS, NO. 2-19 ::r-