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FULTON CO. TIUIHNE, WAT SEOX, THURSDAY, APRIL -13 fe- IlP -sw-ffl Irffllll - fTl i l.v N. W Cf V - n.lv" In this little old house In the Italian papal throne as Pope Plus XI, successor NOVEL READING MACHINE ' V ' . ''',:vv.::-.., The f"lske reading machine has been Invented by Bear Admiral Bradley A. Flske of Washington. The Instrument consists of a tiny lens and a small roller for operating this eyepiece np and down a vertical column of reading matter. Ordinary typewritten copy, when photographically reduced to one hundredth of the space originally oc cupied, can be read by the use of this Instrument with the same facility as the Impression of conventional print ing type. The device Is only six and a Quarter Inches long and weighs five and a half ounces. WOMAN PSYCHOLOGIST . Miss Emma Retinan, supervisor of the Arkansas parental school at Little Rock, is a psychological doctor for the mental and moral Ills and defects of the entire Little Rock student body. She takes charge of the delinquent and Incorrigible children of the city, irons out their mental kinks and sends ;them back among the normal chil dren "satisfactorily adjusted," as she calls It. Description Fits Him. Charles Gibson tells us of a down-end-outer who came Into the railroad office with a tale of woe, not long ago, and tried to work him for transporta tion out of town. "I came to Cleveland with good prospects three months ago," ex plained the unfortunate' one. "I thought I could find a good position with a certain company on account of the work I'd done In my own town In their line. But they didn't know any thing about me, and they turned me down. I took my letters of lntroduc tlon to another firm; same result. I was some pumpkins at home, but they couldn't see me here. I didn't have no pull. Then I tried the railroads. useter work In the deepo back there. But In Cleveland, they didn't seem to think that amounted to anything, I wants go back. Now, as I said, I useter be a railroader. Could I git a pass?" "My dear man," explained Mr. Gib son kindly, "the law allows s to give pusses to nobody. There's no excep tion nobody I" "That's niel" cried the derelict. "Gimme the pass!" Cleveland Plain Dealer. Done by an Expert. I was talking with a group of wom en. The topic wns the warm, bright, though early spring weather. An ex mllllner, now the wife of a prominent business mun of the town, had the lloor. "Yesterday," she said, "was such a nice day that I felt Just . like new cprlng clothes, and so I made myself a new spring hat." "Why didn't you wear It today?" I asked artlessly. "I did." was the Icy reply. Chicago Tribune. Month When the Earth Stirs. . March Is fl month when the needle of my nature dips toward the coun try. I am away,-greeting everything as it wakes out of a winter sleep, stretches arms upward and legs down ward, and drinks goblet after goblet of young sunstiloe. James Lane Al len. Wlien Lieutenant Macready broke the altitude record by going np 40, 800 feet the cold was so Intense 50 below zelow that the oxygen pipes from 11' . I - W fr .. ViiL i i Et; , ' 1 ' -aS rT?r&s$ .): r ':;;;v!psl i i .. r ... , v I S 1 a ".K .. y . f'i House Where Pope Pius XI Was Born town of Deslo, Achille Kattl was born. of the late Pope Benedict. ' They Will Serenade the Martians Leopold Godowsky aid his daughter, Mrs. Dagmar Godowsky Maye, avia tion enthusiasts, are planning in San Francisco to equip an all-metal biplane with an upright piano from which Mars and the rest of the placets will be given aerial concerts, Dispersing Gold Mine Rioters w 5. iff 4 v - a ' , : 'Air O 3 -La a- iv-.,i . Constables, both mounted and unmounted, charging and scattering crowds during a demonstration by strikers from the famous Band gold mines. In the market place of Johannesburg, South Africa. Government forces led by Premier Smuts now are In control of the center of the trouble where scores of rebels and soldiers lost their lives. Wrecking Daniel Many old Washlngtonlaus, proud of ; Vc A -r T!i:CA -h.t7'w - sill gnevea to see the famous old Corcoran house, once the home of Daniel Web ster, being torn down to make way for huge new home of the United States chamber of commerce. TAKEN FROM EXCHANGES A crowd of 1,000,000 persons with easy standing room would cover 70 acres. There are now more than five times as many steamers in the world as sail ing vessels. Eiffel supplied $700,000 and the French government $300,000 for build ing the Eiffel tower. Vancouver (B. C.) civic employees who demanded an increase of 25 cents a day have returned to duty after win ning a complete victory. Norwegian Interests with a conces sion covering several hundred square miles of territory will betfln the manu facture of paper pulp from papyrus grass In Zululand. In Berlin the shops are opened on each of the three Sundays before Christmas, known as the Copper. Sil ver and Gold Sundays, and customers flock to them In thousands to buy their Christmas presents. Cavendish, the English chemist, had a- back stair built In his house to avoid seeing any of lis women serv ants. American typists are said to surpass those of Great Britain, largely owing to the fact that they learn the "touch" system, whereby the eyes never rest on the keyboard. Originally the famous dlnmond mines of Klmberley, now controlled by one group of capitalists, were worked as 3,238 separate claims, each 31 feet square, with n 7-foot roadway, be tween every pair of claims. A few weeks ago he ascended tht 1- Webster's Home the traditions of the old capital, are The republic of Haiti covers an area about equal to that of the state of Massachusetts. Between California and Honolulu steamers move In a direct line, while sailing vessels make better time by detours. There are records of snuff having been used In the West Indies and else where long before the introduction of tobacco to Europe. Isinglass Is known as kanten In Jnpan,.where it is made from seaweed Exports of tht preduct in 1917 were valued at $1,000,000. Decayed teeth, a sign of toothache, have' been found in a skull thousands of years old, thus proving that this ail ment Is not a modern one due to civi lization. A Baltimore man was the Inventor of a cap for soda-water bottles which ninde him a millionaire. He carried the patent in his pocket for six years before he succeeded in getting it on the market. An equivalent for jute is being made In Russia from a plant known as "kenafe," which grows abundantly In that country. Chemists from paper manufacturing houses are experimenting with certain deposits of peat In Ireland, the' peat being used In place of wood pulp In the making of paper. In Tibet one lion at least of every fnmlly must Join a church, partly from spiritual motives and partly to gain the temporal protection of the monas teries, the most powerful factor In the country. Daddy's Eveiii Fairy Tale TAARY GRAHAM BONNER LADY'S SLIPPER "Effie Elf," said Daddy, "had gone walking in the woods, and had met there a lovely Lady's Slipper flower. "The Lady's Slipper was growing in the ground and was looking very hand suine and iovely. " 'Hello, Lady's Slipper,' said Effle Elf. 'May I call you Lady for a pet name?' " 'Certainly,' said the Lady's Slipper Lady shall my name be to you !' " "I have met some of the small yel low flowers which are relatives of yours. They were so sweet and fra grant and It was a great pleasure to see them. But I've' long wanted to have a chat with you. "'Tell me, Lady, will you talk with me and tell me a story which I hear you have to tell me, an adventure story I believe it Is?' " 'Indeed I wiy tell you my story. I am sure that the Wood Fairy must have told you I had a story. Was that how you heard of it?' "'That was the way,' said Effie Elf. " 'Sometimes I am ' known as th Moccasin Flower because I look some thing like a moccasin. ' 'Also I am known as the Lady's Slipper because I look like a lady's slipper. Sometimes I am known as the Stemless Lady's Slipper because 1 haven't the greatest amount of stem to me that one might imagine I might have. 'Though, again, no one might ex pect much of a stem to me after all don't know. I don't think any ol my names suit me as well as that oi Pink Slipper, for I am like a Pink Slipper. Still Moccasin Flower suits me pretty well. And Lady's Slippei is all right, too. "'After all, I think most of my names are nice. I really, really do. ' 'But I wanted to tell you my story. for I may not get another chance. ' 'We are picked so much because ive look like orcnias ana because or chids are rich and fine flowers. ' 'It is true, we belong to the Orchid family. ' 'My story Is this but before I go further. I think I'd like to be called "Hello, Lady's Slipper." Pink Lady's Slipper, or Pink Lady fo short. That sounds very pretty I think.' "All right. Pink Lady,' smiled Effie Elf. " 'I am eager to hear the story,' she said. " 'A day or so ago, said Pink Lady, 'a bee came along and asked if lie might have a little meal. " 'I told him he could have all the meals he wanted to have and so he came In, and had a gorgeous meal in our best banquet ball. " 'He came In from the sloping side entrances which we have on the way to tlie banquet hall and he thought it was a beautiful place with much rich food. " 'Then, 'when he had had enough he wanted to come out again. At first he thought he was in a trap, for he buzzed away and couldn't seem to find his way out. " 'But after a time he saw the two little hall lights I have beyond my banquet hall. They are really little openings at the other end of my passage-hall which let the light shine through them Into the banquet hall. " 'He followed these lights and came along the narrow, narrow hall of .mine and as he walked along he had to push his way through and the sticky decorations I had along' the way, the sticky curtains and so forth, caught the pollen he had on his back and head which lie had brought from an other Lady's Slipper flower. " 'You see we have this way of help ing each other along and the Bee does It for us but with a great deal of help from us and suggestions about how he should walk out of our banquet hall. " 'Then he goes through another lit tle passage way and gets some of our pollen to take away with him to one of our relatives who gets It from him as he leaves 1 her banquet hall just as I did.' " 'What an Interesting story,' said Effie Elf, 'and what a fine way you all have of working together, though you are separated from each other.' " Can You Guess? John Smith, whose age is forty-five, has a son aged twelve. When will John Smith be three times as old as his son? Answer: In four and a half years' time John Smith will be forty-nine and one-half and his son sixteen and one half. "Striped." "Any animal with four legs," said the teacher, "is a quadruped ; a man Is a biped. Now, can anyone tell me what a zebra is?" "Yes. miss," replied a small boy. "A 'striped'." What Am 1 1 I am a precious stone, out off my bead and I become a nolilciuan. Cut off my tail, and I am fruit. Cut off both my tail and head, and I am pari of your own body. What am IK Answer: Pearl. Find Traces of Old City. An old Roman city has been discov ered at Sant Ilianez, Spain. Traces of a highway running in the direction of .storga ; cisterns, with piping of copper; gold coins, fragments of ceramics and vases filled with ashes are said to have been unearthed In the vicinity. An Investigation has been ordered by the director of foreign arts. The new-born Infant among the an cient Jews was always rubbed with suit In order to give it greater purity. Out ?fT$ypV$ n y lttjxrl Near View of the (Prepared by the National Geographic So ciety, Washington, D. C. ) Stanley journeyed thousands of miles to lay bare the secrets of Africa to the world ; but in the northeastern corner of the same continent even more thrilling exploration has been in progress during the past few decades through a relatively few feet f sand. The excavators who with pick and shovel have been bringing to light the details of Egypt's ancient civilization and the everyday life of her people, where before only the barest outline of the nation's history was available, ' are as truly discoverers of unknown civilizations as far-faring Marco Polos or PIzarros. For a long time Egypt was to the rest of the world little more than a sea of sand with a few dominant mon uments the pyramids, the Sphinx, the colossi of "Memnon" to point to her past greatness. Relics of various dy nasties existed side by side, their re lations often unknown. The names of many kings and some of their noblest exploits were known, but there was general ignorance in re gard to the less exalted Egyptians, to the activities that. made up the life of this mysterious nation beside the Nile four and perhaps five and six or more thousands of years ago. Grave rob bers, whose activities extend back into the days long before the Ptolomies, had rifled many tombs and so made much of the early scientific excava tions barren of results. And the early excavation of Egyptologists was Itself a careless procedure aiming at the big goals and destroying and burying many small objeets of incalculable value In the Indications they might have given of manners and customs. Recent exploration In Egypt has been a vastly different matter. Modern efficiency methods have been adapted to the delving for the burled secrets of the ancients, and now every cubic foot of sand about a promising site Is combed or actually sifted that no broken fragment of pottery, scrap of papyrus, or Jeweled bauble may es cape detection. In early days the most common method of disposing of the removed sand and debris was by means or basket nrigaaes wnicn dumped their loads nearby. Now light tramways are used and care is taken to haul the discarded material to a point where it Is definitely known that nothing of value will be covered. Where formerly a "find" was "find" and was assembled with all others. now any object partially uncovered Is photographed in place frequently as the sand is removed, so that no pos sible significance of its position or re lation to other objects wlil be over looked ; and before It is stored it Is carefully tagged, numbered and card Indexed. Getting Real Picture of Ancient Life. These painstaking methods have fully Justified themselves. Instead of having a confused mass of facts, many of them most interesting In them selves, but often perplexing, we are getting by degrees a complete, intel ligible picture of Eg-yptian life over a period of thousands of years. Seem ingly unimportant things help greatly to fill In the picture. One would hard ly make the mistake of picturing the old Egyptians scratching matches to light the kitchen fire, but there was for long no true picture to take the place of fancy. None of the discovered hieroglyphics showed the making of fire, and it appeared to be entirely without religious significance. In re cent years, however, one of the new school of excavators, sifted from the sand a wellreserved fire-bow and drill and even a board with burnt holes, and the problem was solved. Temporary towns besides the sites of great engineering projects are no new thing in the world. Cities for la borers were constructed for use while some of the pyramids were under construction. One such town has been completely uncovered and gives a cross-section of life under such condi tions more than 4,000 years ago. The COPRA The word, copra. Is a Spanish adap tation of the Malay word kopperah and the Hindustani khopra, both of which mean coconut. Copra is the dried and broken kernel of the coco nut from which oil is extracted by boiling and pressing. Copra is very rich In oil which averages from 05 to 70 per cent of its bulk. The oil is nearly white when pure, and at an or dinary temperature Is of the con- Real Measure of Worth. The whole world does not revolve around any man onl; a small portion of It. When a man undertakes to make himself the center of a larger portion, he must show himself worthy. Worth today is measured by service to fellow men, not by dollars. Go to Extremes. "Some men's ideas of personal in loyment," said Uncle Eben, "is so per-lirl.'-ry. iley'd like to make It agin da ., ; ' :i- r.iy to be a policeman." Great Pyramid. town w-as congested and had sections like the slums of today with the crowded dwellings opening on narrow alleys. There were some separate dwellings and sdme barrack-like struc tures presumably for unmarried work ers. But even In the most humble houses evidences were found that their occupants lived on a higher plane than might have been supposed. Various manuscripts were found including a medical treatise, and several wills. And in the separate dwellings were found such toys as tops and dolls and tiny boats to show that the pastimes of children of that remote time were not vastly different, from those of today. At the very border line between the pre-historic and the historic in Egypt, civilization, it has been found, had reached a considerable degree of de velopment. The tombs of the first Egyptian kings, who lived anywhere from 5,000 to 7,000 years ago, are such as no barbarians could have erected a fact which pushes the be ginning of Egyptian civilization into a a very dim past Indeed. This was be fore the days of pyramid building when the tombs were underground structures. Preserved in the Tombs. The furniture of this distant period was by no means crude as one might assume it would have been. There- were ebony chests skillfully inlaid with ivory, stools with Ivory legs carved like the legs of bulls, vessels cut from alabaster and ewers of cop per wrought with he cunning that only highly skilled craftsmen could have possessed. Daintily fashioned bracelets on the withered arms of the mummy of Egypt's first known queen add further to the record of the prog ress in the arts which E7gypt had at talned when we catch our first glimpse of It down the ages. And there is a pretty little picture of the family relations of this ancient society. Besides the tomb of the first Egyptian king at Abydos is that of his daughter, and carved on her tomb the rjet name by which her father knew her "Sweetheart." Even at that early date the court was socially highly organized. Womanhood was sincerely respect ed In trncient Egypt arid especially was this true of the mothers. What might be called Egypt's substitute for the fifth commandment Ignored the father. It was an injunction: "Never forget what thy mother hath done for thee. She bare thee and nourished thee In all manner of ways. If thou forgettest her, she might blame thee; she might lift up her hands to God and He would hear her complaint In many families it was the custom for titles and property to pass not to the eldest son but to the son of the eldest daughter. There was no "mother-in-law joke" In Egypt. To the mind of the Egyptian it was the natural thing that his wife's relations should take a1 deeper interest in his affairs than his blood relations. Much of the ability of those who live today to look into the past of Egypt, to see something of Its flesh and-blood life, and to understand somewhat of the joys and sorrows of its people, must be ascribed to the preserving powers of the desert air of that sandy land. The perfect con dition of some of the objects recovered from tombs is marvelous. One of the best examples of this was the' tomb of the noble parents of the great Queen Tyi. The discoverer of the large airy chamber that was provided as a home for these important per sonages declared that It seemed the room might have been shut up only a few weeks before. Beautifully carved and inlaid armchairs stood about, on them down-stuffed cushions that could have been sat upon without in jury. In another part of the room were "twin beds" perfectly preserved. The most amazing discovery of all was that of a jar of honey, 3.300 years old, still a fluid and still having Its recognizable odor. slstency of butter. In the south Pa cific It Is used in cooking, for it pos sesses good keeping qualities. In Aus tralia large quantities are used in soap and candle-making. After the oil has been extracted to a large extent, the pulp is made into animal food. Fighter Must Not Weaken. This alone is thy concern, to fight manfully, and never, however mani fold thy wounds, to lay down thine arms, or to take flight. Lorenzo Scu poll. Thumbs Down. In the gladiatorial combats which took place in ancient Home a wounded man would sometimes call for mercy by holding up his forefinger. The spec tators would thereupon either wave their handkerchiefs In token of mercy, or condemn him to death by holding out their clenched fist with the thumbs down. A Trying Week. The Face of the Karth Dear me. out their clenched fist with the thumbs down. j J 1 "The worry cow might have lived till now. If she had saved her breath: But she feared her hay wouldn't last all day, So she choked herself to death." HELPFUL HINTS WORTH NOTING Walnut meats which have become rancid may lie freshened and sweet ened by pouring over the nut meats boiling water in which a little soda lias been dissolved. Rinse in cold water and dry in a towel. Nuts in the shell which have become too brittle to crack without break ing, if treated to a bath ,,f Vwtllinfr lvntpr. will crack and seem like fresh nuis. Keep the smallest candle ends and put Into a small muslin bag. Use to polish the irons or keep the kitchen range clean and bright. A broom which is badly worn may serve longer if nil the rows of stitch ing are ripped out except the top row. Trim the broom after soaking In soap suds and drying thoroughly. A bit of ginger rdded to i doughnuts will keep them from soaking fat, which is both a saving of fat and indiges tion. The amount of bacon to be used for seasoning may be lessened if it is put through the meat grinder before add ing to the dish. It is more evenly mixed through the dish in this way. Stale bread put through t"he meat grinder, then browned in the oven, makes a tine breakfast cereal served with milk. - This is especially good for an invalid. , A run in a silk stocking mny be taken hack with a crochet hook. Old stockings may be cut in strips and used for braided rugs. Old inner tubes from auto tires make fine elastic for rompers, bloom ers and shirt sleeves. &uch elastic will survive several washings without losing its elasticity. When making mayonnaise, If It curdles, beat another egg and add the curdled mixture very slowly, beating well between each addition. Have all materials cold. Lemons placed in the oven and heat ed hot will render their juice more freely. Mend a torn hair net in an emer gency with a nair trom your neaa threaded through a needle. Contentment isn't a matter of geog raphy, and it is seldom a good plan to go away from home in search of hap piness. One can't purchase happiness, or find It at the end of a rainbow. If one doesn't contrive happiness out of his own cosmos he will never know what happiness Is. Robert Quillen. SEASONABLE DISHES If one has never eaten carrot salad made by grinding a carrot or two and a stalk or two of celery through the meat grinder and' mixing with a few nuts and a good salad dressing, there is some thing yet to try, , Pea Soup. A good pea soup is one which It la hard to equal In tastiness and wholesomeness. Take one-half cupful of dried peas soaked at least twelve hours, cook until tender, then put them through a sieve. Melt. two tablespoonfuls of butter or pork drippings in a sauce pan, add two tablespoonfuls of flour and cook a few minutes, then add one quart of milk. Add one teaspoonful of salt, a little chopped onion or onion juice, one-half teaspoonful of celery leaves powdered, and one-eighth of a teaspoonful of pepper. Peanut Fondue. Grind through the meat grinder one cupful of peanuts carefully shelled and the brown skin removed, add one cupful of soft bread crumbs, one and two-thlrtis of a cupful of milk, one and one-half teaspoonful of' salt and a dash of pepper. Mix well, then stir In the white of an egg beaten stiff. Turn into -a buttered baking dish and bake in a moderate oven for one-half hour. Pineapple pie. feel and grate a pineapple. Separate the yolks and whites of four eggs and to the yolks add two cupfuls of sugar and two tablespoonfuls of butter.- When these are well beaten add one-half cupful of cream and the grated pineapple, Pinir this custard into pastry-lined plates and bake until firm. Cover with a meringue made from the whites of the eggs. Peanut Dumplings. Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter, add three tablespoonfuls of flour and cook until well blended, then add two cupfuls of water, salt and pepper and cook until it thickens, then add three cupfuls of milk and one-quarter of a cupful of ground peanuts. When It bolls drop In the dumplings and cook covered from ten to twenty minutes, according to the size of the dumplings. Use any good dumpling recipe. ' Graham Muffins. Take one cupful each of graham flour, wheat flour and sour cream. Add one teaspoonful of sugar, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow der, one-half teaspoonful of salt and nne-quarter teaspoonful of soda. Mix fne dry ingredients. Ann the sour cream into which the soda has been stirred. Beat thoroughly and bake in (rem pans in a quick oven. Serve hot. Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union. "Documental Vessel." This term is applied to a vessel car rying official documents to establish her identity and her rights In trade. In the case of a vessel trading with foreign countries and engaging in the whale fisheries, this document is called a certificate of registry. Beats Stove for Heat. Of Kuropean invention is a sheet metal stove pipe drum which is claimed to radiate more heat in a room than the stove with which it is used. Easy Graft. "What," began the professor of agriculture, "is meant by grafting?" "Cutting in where you don't belong, and sticking there," replied the son of a prominent politician. Science and Invention. He Trained Her. "So your novelist friend has ob tained a divorce, eh?" "On what ground?" "On the ground that his wife acted MKe the heroines in his novels." Kansas City Slur. NUW UO MY WORK WITH EASE Because Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound tie stored My Health Hornell. N. Y. I was in bad health bnt there didn't seem to be any one thing tne matter with me. I was tired out all over and it was an ef fort for me to move. I was irritable and could not sleepnights and had trouble with my bowels and at my penoaa. it seemed that nearly every one around me knew of your medicine and wanted me to try it, so at last I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- giund Tablets and Lydia E. Pinkham's lood Medicine and improved eVery day. I do all my own work now except the washing and do it with ease. I can ac complish as much in a day now as it would have taken me a week to do last winter and I try to get every one I know to take your medicine to build them up. You are welcome to use this letter as a testimonial if you like." Mrs. Chas. Baker. 21 Spencer Ave., Hornell, N.Y. In almost every neighborhood there are women who know of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. They know because they have taken it and have been helped. Why don't you give it a trial T Increase Your Weight to Normal by Taking TANLAC The World' Greatest Tonic rr 1 O N I Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets stop sick headache, relieve bilious attacks, tone and regulate the eliminative organs, make you feel fine. "Better TW Pilli For Liver Ok " Herx Credit "That's Jinks, the famous million aire, over there on the left He's a wife-made man." "But I understand that his money came from oil on his farm." "Ah, yesi but It was his wife who bad finally consented to live on the farm." Kansas City Star. Children's handkerchiefs often look boneless when they come to the laun dry. Wash with good soap, rinse In rater blued with Bed Cross Ball Bine. Advertisement. Appropriate Selection. Having Just finished his sermon on Gossip and Slander," a minister in the suburbs announced the hymn, "I Love to Tell the Story." Boston Transcript. , Ah a Friend. "Is Flubdub a free thinker?" "No, he's married." Louisville Cour ier-Journal. Sure Relief FOR 1IIDIGESTIOM 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief 254 and 754 Packages. Everywhere Strengthen Your Eyes with Dr. Frank's Remedy. It re lieves inflamed, sore, itching, ach ing, discharging eye; also head aches, ulceration, eye swollen with colds, granulated and scaley lids. It's Dr. Frank's private formula, used in his practice over 30 years. Send (or a bottl keep it handy. Watch your eyes improve with its us. $1.00 postpaid. FRANK CHEMICAL COMPANY 623 Gratiot Ave. DETROIT "1 as n-otbrollr say thst Deed's KIssjst Pin Ksts dM m mors good than any kidney SMd elns 1 have ever takes. Am botoered very eel dem with kidney trouble. When I fael It oomtrnf en I take a few Oeede KMney PlUn and seen (eel all riebt Feal like e new man sines takisa year nilit When I eemmenord tnkinc them 1 erss hardly nnle te walk acroej the roeaa." Sieved, ROBERT PTJIENOR, Pin. Village. Isdauev Get DODD'S at your drogfut'i or order direct:, from DODD'S MEDICINE CO.. Bnltala. N. Y. Large sex only Ma. -:- Abselately Goran tend. COCKROACHES Watsrbuas ANTS Easily killed by using the genuine Stearns' Electric Paste Also 8CRE DEATH to rat and mice. These pests are the greatest carriers ot disease. They sestroy both food and properly. HEADY FOR USE BETTER THAN TRAPS Directions in 16 lananages In every Box. oi. slieMc. Uos. Biiell.SO. MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS W. N. U.. FOiTT WAYNE, NO. 14-1922 Minn ' m G H 1 I