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* Does Backache Worry You? Many who suffer with backache and weak kidneys are unnaturally irritable and fretful. Bad kidneys fail to elim inate all the uric acid from the sys tem, keeping you "on edge’’ and caus ing rheumatic, neuralgia pains. When your back aches, and you notice signs of bladder irregularities, suspect your kidneys and begin using Doan's Kidney Pills, the best recommended special kidney remedy. A Tennessee Case I Mrs. Bayllfs Mar- I shall, Fayetteville, l T* 9 Tenn., says: “I was ' Y treated by the best ~ * physicians in this iEi locality bnt nothing jf helped me and I S 6 ?—-^4 steadily ran down nntll I weighed but ' mm 9 t I v! Ik-saM 86 ponnds. My back ached terribly, kid- Alf Mai ney secretions were “ " l—mT , il irregular and I felt *ll worn out. 1 stead- Ml\ 'xf \\iW ily improved under \ V/f the use of Doan’s Kid- , \ W ney Pills, however. VN V L ' 1 and when I had used -J)I 6 boxes, was entirely cured. 1 now weigh 135 * Kunds and enjoy the it of health.* Every Picture Tells a Story. *• Gat Dots 1 ! at Any Store* 50c a Box DOAN’S/ k p?ll y FOSTER-MILBURNCO.. Buffalo. New YoA SPECIAL TOWOMEP Do you realize the fact that thousand of women are now using A Soluble Antiseptic Powder as a remedy for mucous membrane al fections, such as sore throat, nasal o: pelvic catarrh, Inflammation or ulcera tion, caused by female ills? Womei who have been cured say “it is wortl Its weight in gold.” Dissolve in watei and apply locally. For ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtine in their private correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet uses it has no equal. Only 50c a large box at Drug gists or sent postpaid on receipt of price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. REALLY A SOUND INVESTMENT Sanatorium Where the Tuberculosis May Be Cured Is Worth Much to Any State or City. Dr. H. L. Barnes, superintendent of the Rhode Island State sanatorium, has recently demonstrated by some In teresting studies of patients discharg ed as “apparently cured” from that in stitution, that a sanatorium is a sound investment for any state or city. The gross earnings of 170 ex-patients ob tained in 1911 amounted to $102,752, and those of 211 cases in 1912 to $112,- 021. By applying the same average earning to all ex-patients of the sana torium living in 1911 and 1912, Dr. Barnes concludes that their Income in these two years was $551,000. This sum is more than three times the cost of maintenance of the sanatorium in cluding interest at 4 per cent, on the original Investment and depreciation charges. Dr. Barnes concludes, how ever, “White institutions for the cure of tuberclosis are good investments, there is good reason for thinking that Institutions for the isolation of far ad vanced cases would be still better in vestments.” Scissors for Memorial Wreaths. The police of Berlin applied the censorship of the scissors to a recent demonstration at the cemetery where are buried the socialists and anarch ists who fell in the revolution in Ber lin March 18, 1848. Hundreds of visi tors brought wreaths, the socialists red and the anarchists black, to lay on the graves. The police, with scis sors, stood at the entrance to the cemetery. Every wreath was sub mitted to them, and the sentiments on the ribbons had to undergo the cen sorship of the scissors. Cook and the £uckoo. Mistress —Bridget, what ails the cuckoo clock? I haven’t heard it to day. Bridget—Well, mum, there do be a strange cat around the kitchen an’ likely the poor bur-rd's afeared to come out. Most Intensive. “Do you believe in Intensive gar dening, Mrs. Hoerake?” asked the vis itor. “Well, rather,” said Mrs. Hoerake. “I spent ell last winter raising one geranium in a soap box.” —Harper’s Weekly. Admiring Solicitude. “What do you think of our new bat tleship?” asked the naval expert. “Wonderful,” replied the plain busi ness man; “only it does seem a shame to risk anything so handsome and ex pensive in a fight.” Her Weapon Gone. Hewitt —I hear that your wife has lost her voice. Jewett —Yes; she is a non-combat ant now. No day is long enough to waste any of it nursing a grouch. Everybody From Kid To Grandad Likes Post Toasties Thin, crisp bits of white Indian Com, cooked to perfection and toasted to a delicate brown without the touch of human hand. You get them in the sealed package Ready to Eat A dish of Post Toasties for breakfast and lunch, with thick cream or nch fruit juice, is a dish that ep icures might chortle over. Nourishing, economical, delicious, “‘more-ish.” HAVE CHANGE OF DIET J SOMETIMES BETTER THAN THE e MOST EXPENSIVE TONICS. i- I ! Appetite, ?s a General Thing, Is the Best Guide to Follow—Some s Good Breakfast Dishes to 1 Start the Day. "My little family has no appetite at breakfast,” complained the young housewife to the elderly one, while they were sipping tea together, k j “I’m afraid we all need tonics. My j i husband certainly ought to take one, I i for he went to his office this morning j with nothing but a cup of coffee for j breakfast. I urged him to eat, but he said he didn’t feel hungry.” "What did you give him for break fast?” asked the older woman. “I gave him what he has been en joying all winter, his ‘very special,’ as , he calls it —buckwheat cakes and saus ! ages. He can’t be well if he won’t , even look at his favorite dishes. What “ tonic would you recommend?” y “My dear,” remarked her compan .N ion, “people dose themselves with ex- Ja pensive tonics when all they need is a change of diet. Have a new order of | menu, and if your little family do not ‘prick up’ their appetites then resort to tonics.” Our appetites are excellent guides at thio season, heterodox though it may seem to those who insist that f what one likes is just exactly what i one must not have. )r j a . • In the spring one craves green n things, and salad for breakfast is not h a bad idea. Then, fish and eggs are sr j cheap now and abundant. Lamb’s e liver has a sweeter flavor than calf’s 3 liver and is not used as often. e | “For those who like hearty break- I fasts there are veal and lamb cutlets and chops, of course, but as the season ’( progresses a growing distaste for t, meat will be noticed. Fish, too, may come under the ban. One can, how = ever, make the desire for meat and r fish last longer by serving them with some fresh green salad or some tart s accompaniment. “A favorite breakfast of mine is one of cereal, lamb’s kidneys and bacon — English style—crisp toast, orange mar f malade and coffee. Bitter orange mar 1, malade is even more delicious with - toast and coffee than it is with toast and tea. With the exception of bacon, used as a garnish, it is better to avoid 1 pork.” 3 “I see the Housewives’ league is * trying to get New Yorkers to eat , onions,” interrupted the younger wo ■ man, rather Inclined to change the 5 subject. ‘They’ll have us celebrated in song and story as the ‘onion city.’ ” “Eat onions In May and doctors will 1 play,” answered the other. “There is * more truth than fiction in that old t adage.” Bubble and Squeak. 1 “Bubble and squeak” was something I used to be very fond of, and was ! simply a “warmed over” dish of cold ; meat and cabbage, the meat being usu ally corned beef, though cold boiled or baked beef was also used. Cut about two pounds of lean cold meat in small, rather thin slices. Put them in a pan with one tablespoon of hot dripping and let them color quickly. Chop the cold 1 boiled cabbage and put it into a sauce pan with two tablespoons of butter, salt and pepper to taste, and stir over the fire until smoking hot and just beginning to color. Turn it out on a heated platter and press it down in the center. In the hollow arrange the browned meat and serve at once.— Boston Globe. Sardine Bouchees, Pound a few boned sardines in a mortar together with a small quantity of cheese and add salt, pepper and chili vinegar until the mixture lea soft paste. Mix in a few chopped oys ters and put the mixture into small cases of bread fried in butter. Gar nish with hard-boiled yolk of egg rubbed through a sieve and mixed with finely chopped parsley. Anange on a napkin on a small platter and serve. Paganini Tartlets. Beat the whites of three eggs to a froth, adding by degrees five or six ounces of sifted, crushed loaf sugar. Have in readiness a tartlet or patty pan lined with puff paste, put a little orange or apricot marmalade in the center of each and bake In a moderate oven for fifteen minutes. When done remove and heap the egg mixture on top and serve either hot or cold. New Portieres. Some very good looking portieres are made of a fabric known as sun fast madras, a lacy openwork stuff. The manufacturers guarantee that this material will not fade. As for color ing, this new material is shown in soft shades of brown, gold, rose, green and ' blue; also in two-toned effects and a very attractive combination of rose, 1 Prune Salad. Wash, soak and steam one pound of , prunes until tender. Do not sweeten ■ them. When cold remove the stones , | and fill the vacancies with chopped walnuts. Arrange some lettuce leaves j on Individual dishes, place five prunes ! in the center, sprinkle over with lemon , Juice, and place two tablespoonfuls of , i mayonnaise on top. Serve very cold. t Use for Old Brooms. ( When a long-handled broom is ] worn out, Instead of throwing it away, j i tie a piece of felt or flannel round the i head, and make a floor polisher. It will make work much easier, and keep | linoleum In good condition. Foot marks can be rubbed off at any time j j without stooping. ( i Children’s Gingham Dresses. i Some of the pretty gingham dresses ( ! for the small daughter are finished i j with the white machine embroidery < | around the collarless neck, and with 1 | belts of velvet or patent leather.— I Christian Science Monitor. For a Tough Fowl. ) When boiling an old fowl or tough ( j meat, add a pinch of soda to the wa- s 1 ter. Simmer gently, and the meat will < I be perfectly tender. £ Nerve Restored. Jude Johnson, claiming he needed something for his nerves, called on a f ■doctor today. After the physician had f given him a prescription Jude bor- 1 rowed a dollar from him.—Atchison \ Globe. j i Perils of “Bridge.” “Your wife doesn’t play bridge at all, does she?” “No; she’s stopped entirely.’’ "What was the cure?” “She c lest $7 to her dearest friend.” “Lost “ both her money and her friend, eh?” p “Exactly.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. i j-i WORTH KEEPING IN MEMORY Some Helpful Suggestions That Will Have a Tendency to Add to E Comfort of Home. To keep a glass or cup from burst ing when any boiling mixture is put in, try putting a silver spoon in it and * pouring the mixture on it; that gen erally keeps the glass from cracking or breaking. When lace curtains become old there is always danger of their being t torn in washing. This can positively g be avoided if the curtains .Are handled e lengthwise, not crosswise. Never at tempt to handle a curtain from the y side edge. Try it and be convinced. . Many who have old curtains which g they wish to preserve because of their r beautiful patterns will rejoice at hav e ing made the attempt. This is simple, but valuable. .. Avoid trying to light matches on walls, window casings and so on. For _ a couple of cents purchase a sheet or s so of sandpaper and some little brass , headed tacks. Tack one of these In t each room directly under the gas jet. t Anyone troubled with rats or mice can get rid of them very quickly if . they will sprinkle pepper on a cloth and stuff this into the hole where they j appear. f An easy way to keep your kitchen t cupboard neat and tidy is to take t your cereals, coffee, sugar, in fact all of your staple goods, directly they 3 come from the store and place them in t glass jars, so that when your cup t board door is opened you can place t your hands on any article wanted at once without upsetting shelves and t scattering things around. You have t no Idea how nice It looks to see every , thing shining through glass jars and ’ how much extra work it saves you ( hunting for articles. APPLE, CHEESE TURNOVERS Delicacy That May Be a Novelty, and in Any Event Is Sure to Please. Make a crust using six heaping tablespoonfuls of flour, three table ; spoonfuls of lard and butter, half and half, and saltspoonful of salt and just enough water to rool out. Have ready some nice tart apples sliced fine, and also cheese sliced very thin. Fill each one with apples, sprinkle sugar and cinnamon over the apple, put a tiny piece of butter on top, then turn up the edges of the crust, overlapping the upper side about two Inches. Wet the edges of the crust with milk, bake a nice brown. Remove from the oven, raise the upper crust, put in the cheese, recover, turn a tin over the turnovers and stand in the oven again for ten minutes, leaving the oven door open. This softens the cheese. Eat while warm. Caraway seed may be used instead of cinnamon if desired. The turnovers may be eaten plain with cream or with a liquid sauce as preferred. Geneva Pudding. Heat four cups of milk in a double boiler, stir in seven-eighths cup of corn meal and, when smooth,' add three cups of coarsely chopped, pared sweet apples, one-half cup of molasses, one-half cup of sugar and one-quarter level teaspoon of salt. Mix all well together, add four more cups of milk, which need not be heated, and pour into a large buttered pudding dish or Into a kettle or pan of the tireless cooker, which must be buttered the same as a baking dish. Set in a moderate oven for four hours or In the cooker for eight or ten hours. Baked Hash. One and a quarter pounds of shoul der or neck of mutton; lean as you ! can get it. Cover with boiling water and cook tender. Remove the bones and gristle and chop meat very fine. Add three boiled and creamed pota toes, a tablespoonful salt, peper to taste, tablespoon of parsley minced very fine, and a few drops of onion j Juice. Mix all together and turn into a baking dish. Pour over it a table spoonful of milk. Add fine bread- j crumbs mixed with melted butter, and bake a nice brown —about twenty min utes. Serve from same dish. Preserve Puffs. Take sufficient puff paste to make the desired number. Cut and roll out thin to about six inches in diameter. | Place in it, a little from the center, a teaspoonful of raspberry preserves, spread a little, and fold the small part over the preserve, allowing the top edges to lie back from the front edge at least one-fourth of an inch. This folding forms a half-circle. Wash 1 with water or egg and water, dust with powdered sugar, cut a few deep but short cuts across the top over the preserve, and bake. The preserve will show through the cut. Keep Lace Fresh. White lace should never be put away without first being cleaned and repaired. It should ? then be laid in a box lined with blue tissue paper, and sprinkled all over with a little pow dered magnesia, the paper being then wrapped round the lace so that it is completely protected from the air. j When the lace is again required the i magnesia can easily be shaken out. Onion With Duck. Many people dislike the taste of i wild duck, but by boiling ducks in water enough to cover, with one good sized onion and a pinch of baking ! soda, until onion is tender, that strong : taste will vanish. Then your duck is ready to bake, or, if jointed, drain a 1 few minutes, roll In flour and fry in hot fat until a nice brown. Ham Sandwiches. Ham should always be finely chop- ! ped when used for sandwich filling, as this chopping frees the meat from all \ gristle. To a cup of chopped ham add a saltspoonful of mustard, a dash of j cayenne pepper and thick cream or ! melted butter until the ham spreads j easily. Spreacl between thin slices of ( buttered white bread. Using Spinach Dye. Wash a handful of young spinach leaves, pound them in a mortar; put i the bruised leaves into muslin and j squeeze out as much juice as re- j quired; use sparingly until desired : shade is obtained. Worth Knowing. “Pluck, pluck, pluck, first, second, | and thirdly, my boy, is the secret of I success.” said Mr. Magnate, the mil- I lionaire. “Ah'" sighed the pale, over- I worked clerk, “I guess so; but I wish , you'd tell me your method of pluck ; Ing'’ Doing a Man’s Part. “What arc you doing for our >. cause?” asked a suffragette worker j “Doing?” replied the man. “I’m sup- { porting one of your most enthusiastic j members.” —Detroit Free Press Street Ethics in Chicago . Oircci c-cniua in ' A law h?a been enacted in Prussli which makes it a prison offense foi I* any one to fail to answer a cry foi help or to go to the rescue of a per son in danger when it is possible t< do so without endangering one's owi t- life. Such a law would not be amis! t in Chicago. Not only ethics, but or 3 dinary decency and manliness are to( i- frequently forgotten here. Let a thuj 5 assault a person in the street and th< majority of men who happen along d instead of going to the assistance o ? the person assaulted, wall scurry awat y so as not to be dragged into the affair d Let a person be injured by a stree > car half the people who witnessed th< 0 accident will refuse to give theii 1 names to be called upon as witnessei 1 by the victim. r Whether all the ethics of citizenshii can be enforced effectively througl ! . i laws and ordinances may be doubted ! yet the legal declaration of some pri i mary duties would help to develop i r I conscience in such matters now' appar t | ently sadly lacking.—Chicago Tribune i All He Wanted. • { A Boston man tells of a certain Ir s ; represslble bore who always made f use of a formula when anyone sought 1 i to put him off and thus spare the ob f j jects of his attention the annoyance oi I an interview with him. This formula 1 | was: “But I assure you I w r ant but one 3 word with him —only one word!” I , On one occasion he sought out a r ; noted lawyer. The latter’s clerk met 1 j him very solemnly with: “Why, ■ j haven’t you heard? Mr. Blank died 3 | last night.” t f The w'ords were scarcely out of the I I clerk’s mouth when the applicant was ' saying, conciliatingly: “But I assure • | you I want but one word with him — I I only one word!” i Alarmed for His Mother. Little Harry, hanging about the 1 kitchen, saw' a stuffed fowl sewed up before roasting. He was much im pressed by the sight. A few nights later his mother, hastily dressing to go out, found that a new frock had been sent home without the proper al lowance of hooks and eyes. Summon ing aid, her sister basted the frock to gether up the ,back. “Grandma,” said Harry, seeking the source of perennial sympathy and comprehension, “come and see what auntie’s doing to mamma. I thinlf she’s going to roast her, for she’s sew ing her all up.” The Cause. “George is raising mutton-chop whiskers.” "That accounts for his sheepish expression.” f I DOES TOrR HEAD ACHE? Try Hicks’ CAPUDINE. It’B liquid —pleas ant to take —effects Immediate—good to prevent : Sick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also. Your money back if not satisfied. 10c., Ssc. and 60c. at medicine stores. Adv. The old fashioned mother and her slipper have qualified many a man j for the presidential chair —even if he I didn’t land. And some men talk to themselves because they like an appreciative au | dience. A soft answer may not turn away wrath, but it saves a lot of useless talk. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children | teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion,allay s pain, cures wind a bottle-Att Many a man fails to forge ahead be i cause he has the looking backward habit. Temptation may come to the woman | w’ho sits down and waits, but a man i usually meets it half way. to women mniimimmimminimma I THOSE HEADACHES I ' B If accompanied with backache, B dragging:-down pain, do not have tS B to be. Nature never intended that B 21 women should suffer in this S B manner. 21 S Dr. Pierce’s | FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION | S For forty years has proved won- g ” derfully efficient as a remedy S B for woman's peculiar weaknesses 3 B and derangements. “ Ollilllllllllllll You Druggist hu it u Stodk RESINOL HEALS ITCHING SKINS And Clears Unsightly Complexions. Resinol Ointment, with Reslnol Soap, stops itching instantly, quickly and easily heals the most distressing cases of eczema, rash, ringworm, tetter or other tormenting skin or scalp erup tions, and clears aw'ay pimples, black heads, redness, roughness, and dan druff, w'hen other treatments have proven only a waste of time and money. But we do not ask you to accept our unsupported word for it. You can send today for a generous trial of Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment, and test them to your own complete satlsfac | tion, at no cost whatever, while thou j sands who have been cured say, “What Resinol did for us it will do for you.” Physicians have prescribed Res inol for eighteen years and every drug gist in the country sells Resinol Soap (25 cts.) and Resinol Ointment (in opal jars, 50 cts. and $1). For free samples of each, with full directions for use, write to Dept. 9-K, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. jA IfK —act surely and n i pTrP' r gently on ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE Genuine must bear Signature HAROLD SOMERS. 150 DeKalb Ave . Brooklyn, K Y f MOTHER GRAf’S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN Relieve I'cvcrishness, Constipa tion .Colds and correct disorders of the stomach and bowels. Used fa \ Mot/it fS for 22 years. At all Drug gists 25c. Sample mailed FK HR. a tt-LAh- A* L* Roy. N. Y la i The Holy : Spirit )0 • lg >e By REV. JAMES M. GRAY. D. D. S< Dean of the Moody Bible Institute M Chicago ty r. 3t le TEXT—"Have ye received the Hoi; * r Ghost since ye believed?” Acts XIX, 2. 3 r 1 Paul met cei tain disciples it ? Ephesus whom a 1 & ' first he supposei J:’ c to 1 30 Christiai ' Jp disciples, but It ° which led to tin I : - Inquiry, “Have y< 1. received the Hoi; Ghost since yt 6 Wt m believed?” It ii u - evident, therefore from these words and from the se a quel that it is out e thing to be a dis ciple, and anothe: a thing to “receive the Holy Ghost.’ This brings up the whole question at to the relation of the Holy Spirit t( d the disciple, or the believer it Christ e 1. The personality of the Holj 8 Spirit. We should keep In mind that e the Holy Spirit is a divine person Personality consists in self-conscious ness and free will, and that the Holj Spirit possesses personality in this sense is evident from three things: e (a) He has the attributes of person P ality; (b) He does the works of a per l " sonairty; (c) He has the names ol s a personality. Speaking of his at 0 tributes, there is one w'hlch, mort than any other, helps to a realization I- of his personality. His attribute ol love, which is referred to only in '■ Romans 15:30. Do you know that the Holy Spirit loves you, as a believer in e Christ, with a love in some sense dis -1 tinct from that either of the Fathei t or the Son? How marvelously near * that brings him to our hearts! The - Father’s love manifested Itself In the giving of his Son; the Son’s love in the offering of himself upon the cross, and the Holy Spirit’s love in taking up ) his abode in us. 2. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit 1 This brings us to the second thought, viz., the Indwelling of the Holy Spirit That indwelling w r as promised in John 14:16-17. He had dwelt “with” the dis t clples therefore, but he was to dwell j “in them” by and by. He had been as a power acting on them from with out but thereafter he was to influ ence them from within. The prom i ise was renewed again in Acts * 1:4-5, where the indwelling was spoken of as the “baptism” of the Holy Spirit The realization came on 1 the day of Pentecost, when the dis ciples were indwelt, baptized and in filled with the Holy Spirit at one and the same time. This transaction, however, as far as the first two terms are concern ed, was not limited to the church as sembled on that day, but applies to the whole church since. Such would seem to be suggested by 1. Corin thians, 12:12-14, where 20 years after Pentecost we are taught that as be lievers “we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body.” What “body” is means if not the body of Christ, the church? And what “baptism” if not that “one baptism” on the day of Pen tecost? Is it not in consideration of this fast that Paul Is able to say to this same church, in another place, “What? Know ye not that your bod ies are the temples of the Holy Ghost?” 3. The filing of the Holy Spirit. But while the first two terms of that transaction on the day of Pentecost, the indwelling and the baptism (which are one) were for the whole church potentially, and for all time, yet the same does not apply to the third, the filling of the Holy Spirit. There is but one indwelling, but many fillings. We gather this from Acts 5:31, where the same persons who were "filled” on the ’day of Pentecost were re filled on a subsequent occasion. And Again, in Acts 6, when men are to be chosen to the ofiice of deacon it must be by those who are “full of the Holy Spirit,” as if some were thus spiritually equipped while others were not. It is something corresponding to this, therefore, which Paul has in mind in our text, when he said: "Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?” The reception of the Holy Ghost on their part resulted in an en duement of power, but In other places of the Acts, notably the fourth chap ter, if is seen to have resulted not only in the spirit of power, but of unity and love. It is .his that we min isters, evangelists and Christian work ers need and that the whole church needs In order to accomplish her mis sion for Jesus Christ on earth. How may the fillings of the Holy Spirit be received by the believer on the Lord Jesus Christ? Prayer, obe dience and faith seem to be the only conditions, if they may be called con ditions. Speaking of faith, there is a sense In which the gift of the Holy Spirit, i. e., the filling of the Holy Spirit, should be received by as defi nite an act on our part as that by which we laid hold of salvation through Jesus Christ; but this faith is not likely to be experiencec. where j obedience is not present. “God giveth the Holy Ghost to them that obey him,” Pter says (Acts V.), and this agrees perfectly with the teaching of the Old Testament in Proveib? I.: “Turn ye at my reproof, behold, I will pour out my spirit unto you.” Nor is this obedience merely occasional with some great thing, but it is to be usual and common In the little things. The Christian whose habit it is to please God after the examples of his well beloved Son, is one to whom the Holy Spirit is not given by measure. May God in his grace teach us this lea- j son. Be always doing something service able to mankind, and let this constant generosity be your only pleasure.—■ Marcus Aurelius. The true way to be humble is not to stoop till you are smaller than yourself, but to stand at your real height against some higher nature ! that will show you what the real I smallness of your greatest greatness ! Is. —Phillips Brooks. Could you with the bodily eye see j the moments as they fly, you would j see them all pass by you, as the bee that has rifled the heather, charged with the promise, or it may be with the menace, of the future.—W E. Gladstone. I HAS A PETRIFIED WATERFALL One of the Natural Wonders of the World That Is Located In Country of Algeria. With all the beauty of a cataract ol living water, there is in Algeria a re markable petrified waterfall which re cently has been engaging the atton tion of scletnlsts. This is the Ham mam-Meskhutln, which means “The bath of the damned,” and Is located 61 miles from Constantine. This solidified cascade Is the production of calcare j ous deposits from sulphurous and fer ruginous mineral springs, issuing from the depths of the earth at a tem r- perature of 95 degrees centigrade, in ■ “The bath of the damned,” ever it from a near viewpoint, looks for all ■d the world like a great wall of watei tn dashing into a swirling pool at its In foot, yet Its gleaming, graceful curves iy and the apparently swirling eddies al it Its base are as fixed and immovable as ie if carved from the face of a granite re cliff. ly Many centuries have, of course r e gone to the making of the deposits is and the springs were well known tc e, the ancient Romans. The name Ham Is mam-Meskhutin was given to the stone e- cataract in an allusion to a legenc ie that the waterfall was petrified by s- Allah, punishing the impiety of un jr believers by turning all the members ,” of the tribe into stone. At night, sc is the story runs, its stone dwellers ol :o I the remote ages are freed from theii n | strange fetters, come to life and re I sume their normal shapes. y >t ITCHING, BURNING ECZEMf s- 317 S. Wolfe St., Baltimore, Md.— y “My trouble was caused by a severe is sprained ankle; the bruised blood not i: having been drawn off.caused a skin 2 ‘ affection which the doctors pro r" nounced eczema. It first started with an itching and burning, with very dry *•' j skin. Constant scratching, especially 6 during the night finally broke the n skin, and during the day the watery ,f fluid that came from it would dry and a peel off like fish scales. My stocking ® would stick to my ankle as If it were “ glued. I also had it on my fingers. 3 ' “I was treated without getting any r benefit. I began using Cuticura Soap r and Ointment as directed and then ap -8 plied the Cuticura Ointment and bound 8 the ankle with a soft bandage, after 8 1 bathing It with Cuticura Soap. They ’• I cured me in about two months.” 9 (Signed) T. W. Henderson, Dec. 2, ’ll. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold ~ throughout the world. Sample of each •• free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address ~ post-card “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” 1 Adv. k- 1 Made the Indian Chief Understand. i A Kansas City minister, visiting an Indian reservation in Idaho, inquired of a government agent when the mis .- ; eionary could be found. 3 “The chief can probably tell you,” 3 ! replied the agent, pointing cut his 3 • tent. “Clasp your hands, look heaven i ward and ask, ‘Jesus man?’ He will - understand you, doubtless.” ■ The reverend gentleman did as di -1 | rected. “I presume you are seeking the mis r | sionary?” replied the Indian in excel - ! lent English. “Please be seated, sir, • he will be in presently. If you will ) j excuse me I will go down to the I j agency and lambast into unconscious - ness that fool clerk who directed you • here.” > j Nothing to Fear. ' [ “George, dear,” said the girl, “did i you ever drink anything?” . j “Yes. occasionally,” George reluc • ] tantly admitted. I “But, dear.” she went cn anxiously, i i “what do you suppose papa would say : If he should discover that the future husband of his only daughter drank?” “He discovered it this morning.” “Oh, George, and what did he say?” “He said: ‘Well, George, my boy, I don’t care if I do.’ ” FAR BETTER THAN QUININE. Elixir Babek cures malaria where quinine falls, and it can be taken with 1 impunity by old and young. “Having suffered from Malarious Fe ver for several months, getting no relief from quinine and being completely brok en down in health. ‘Elixir Babek’ effect ed a permanent cure."—'William F. Marr. Elixir Babek 50 cents, all druggists or by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczew | ski & Co.. Washington. D. C. Fitting Fate. “They are going to muzzle the pro truding hatpin now.” “I’m glad it’s stuck.” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pell*ts first put up i 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated | tiny granules. Adv. The two most important needs in a I woman’s life seems to be love and money. It’s better to deliver the goods than to be caught with them on you. Charity covers a multitude of sins that ought to be exposed I' mi ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT j Preparation for As- j ting the Stomachs and Bowels of 1 || jU^VIISAiiIi Promotes Digestion,ChecrPul nessandßest.Contains neither ty Opium. Morphine nor Mineral ft: Not Narcotic & Ftcpr o/0!H DrSAIWEL/rrCffER 3sj.' Pumpkin S**d - i Jlx Smnm - \ | PothtlU Sm/ls - I jllJ* Anist * I $ > •S Knn Seed - I £ Cfarf/md Suyar I oC Winbrortem Ffovor • O > Ca! A perfect Remedy for Constipa- i W lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, I a|ii Worms .Convulsions. Feveris- I nessand Loss OF Sleep 1 Facsimile Signature of hV ’ The Centaur Company. NEW YORK. fjjBBBSB ( ranteed under the Foodanti) I Exact Copy of Wrapper. Jftlddies4jpi r g From 40 to 50 Woman's Critical Period. i- Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hot flashes, severe headaches, melancholia, dread of impending evil, palpitation of the heart, irregularity, constipation and r dizziness are promptly treated by intelligent women who s are approaching the period of life. ' L t This is the most critical period of woman’s life and she s who neglects the care of her health at this time invites in e curable disease and pain. Why not be guided by the ex a perience of others and take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Z Compound ? It is an indisputable fact that this grand old o remedy has helped thousands of women to pass through * e this trying period with comfort and safety. Thousands of d genuine and honest testimonials support this fact. > Prom Mrs. HENRY HEAVILIN, Cadiz, Ohio. v Fort Worth, Texas.—“l have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta -3 ble Compound and derived great benefit from its use. It carried me 0 safely through the Change of Life when I was in bad health. I had ,f that all gone feeling most of the time, and headache constantly, I was r very nervous and the hot flashes were very bad. I had tried other y remedies and doctors, but did not improve until I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It has now been sometime since I took the Compound and I have had no return of my old complaints. R I always praise your remedies to weak women.”—Mrs. Henrx Heavilin, R. F. D. No. 6, Cadiz, Ohio. Prom Mrs. EDWARD B. HILBERT, Fleetwood, Pa. a Fleetwood, Pa—“ During the Change of life I was hardly able to t be around at all. I always had a headache and I was so dizzy and a nervous that I had no rest at night. The flashes of heat were so bad h sometimes that I did not know what to do. 1 “ One day a friend advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege r table Compound and it made me a strong, well woman. lam very y thankful that I followed my friend’s advice, and I shall recommend it s as long as I live. Before 1 took the Compound I was always sickly y and now I have not had medicine from a doctor for years. You may i publish my letter.” —Mrs. Edward B. Hilbert, Fleetwood, Pa. 5 From Mrs. F. P. MULLENDORE, Munford, Ala. 9 Munford, Ala.—“ I was so weak and nervous while passing through the Change of Life that I could hardly live. My husband had to nail 7 rubber on all the gates for I could not stand to nave a gate slam. ? “I also had backache and a fullness in my stomach. I noticed that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was ad -1 vertised for such cases and I sent and got a bottle. r It did me so much good that I kept on taking it and wf MP 7 found it to be all you claim. I recommend it to S I -Jv&k \ J all women afflicted as I was.” —Mrs. F. P. Mullen- IJ 2/ I core, Munford, Ala. \1 ¥ If | to LYDIA E.PISKHAM MEDICINE CO. U\ P? (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS.,foradvice. J Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. avSßtESiiHXif^ “Is If a *Boy or Girl?** 1 afll A baby’s sickness is looked upon as s matter of course; most infant ] sfi troubles can be prevented if you administer Dr. FAHRNEY’S TEETHING SYRUP W* It soothes and strengthens the baby's system. Can be griven to babieo ’ y)t vfi one day old. Prevents Cholera Infantum, makes Teething simple and rfSJif easy, relieves bowel complaints, as cents at druggists. Trial bottle frea i itfil; . f if you mention this paper. ’ '•.*** / Made only by DRS. D. FAHRNEY & SON, Hagsmtowk. Hlfc 1 I DO UOLAS igLns.' 1 FOR MEN AMD WOMEN! mj*'' MX BEST BOYSSHOES In the WORLD I jTOMEk fS j Ask; irour dealer to show you 'far I I hA m W. L. Pouglas 83.C0, M.OO and vqreirße 1 men's NtV #4.60 shoe*. Just a* good in style, Gotham at and wear as other makes costing; *5.00 to 57.00 CSr K* wowtiit the only difference is the price. Shoes in all ftilk leathers, styles and shapes to salt everybody. /SEsWrai E If you could visit W. I- Douglas large facto ries at Brockton, Mass., and see for yourself ‘ how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, i tmixSfAa yon would then understand why they are warranted AI to flt better, look better, hold their shape and **ar^3wvXi|rW' iv'i longer than any other make for the price. E* V. If W. L. Dougins shoes are not for sale in yonr vicinity, order l/sflf WOMEN it B > r ect from the factory and save the middleman's profit. Leas* ,"jfOUTl*l Shoes *ir every memherof the family, at all prices, by JsF-!' :Sa numsi cNKsT :\T Parcel Post, postage free. Write fur Illustrated .cdfca ~ jdfr uXwi. Catalog. It will show you bow to order by mall, . KTIJSS TAKE NO ww and why you can save money on your footwear. mulM nil miiTil SUBSTITUTE W. I. BOCM.AS - - Breetfaie, Ma.a on the bottom! WHY' INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE t How Long Will Women Stand ’Em? i “I am a mean man,” confessed the Erratic Thinker. ‘‘My father bore the same unenviable reputation, and I had an uncle who served a term in the penitentiary and was twice mentioned for the legislature. So no one need be surprised when I remark that perusal of the dry goods advertise ments causes me to wonder how soon corsets will become so long that their wearers will obliged to roll them up around the ankles to keep from treading on them?”—Kansas City Star. For SiniMER HEADACHES Hicks’ CAPUDINE is the best remedy no matter what causes them—whether from the heat, sitting' in draughts, fever ish condition, etc. 10c., 25c and 50c per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. Quite Apparent. “Do theatrical angels have wings?” “Certainly. That is how their mon ey flies.” . mm For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought a M Bears the A, Signature / fi.V - ‘W, Am w \ 1 V 1 a Jjv In ; hS' Use I |B . c \j For Over j F Thirty Years \ CfISTOBIA I fMi OINTAUR tOM*NV, NPVY VOPK CITY. Write for book saving young chicks. Send us names of 7 friends that use Incubators and get book free. Raisall Remedy Co., BlackweU,Oklfe The Kind. “I wonder If people in Mars bar* dogs?” “If they do, they must bo moon dogs.” The only people who havo no re gret for anything they ever said aro those w ho have never said anything of importance. FOLEY KIDNEY PIIXS Are Richest in Curative Qualities FOR BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS AND BLADDER —lwwmJ PARKER’S ' HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. and 9 LOO at Druggists. LEARN to be an auto ex- / youev eryt hi ngandL< employ you while —— learning. Free model to Home Study Students. Small ' cost. Kasypayuienls.Writeforspeclaloffer.planC-2L AutMubile Eaglueerlaf College of Waih’a, lae. f Watti'a, B. CL TWO-FOOT FLIER In knock-down form with planes, motor power, propeller and instructions for building. II postpaid. YALEMFG. COg / Dept. 40, Newark, New Jersey. DO YOU WANT TO REPRESENT US? BS* you handsome income. Write us for details of at tractive legitimate business. Our agents all over the country are making good money, calling on trades people. PREMIER WATCH Hewitt Place (Bronx), New York City. WHY SUFFER FROM PILES? quickly the drugless way. Inexpensive, home treat ment. Free from drug* and foolishness. Sent for 60s prepaid. K. A. StVUETLAM), Press Bldg., BlaghamUm, S. T. f i *Ssa <eye WATER wind. Booklet free JOHN L.TUOMFSON SONS & CO. f Troy,N.¥. SnRHDQY TRBATKD. Give quick re lief, usually remove swel ling and short breath in a few days and entire relief in 16-46 days, trial treatment FREE. DB.fIBEKHiSSONS, HoxA.AtUßla.ee, 250 MAGIC TRICKS. 10c. With cards, coins, handkerchief, egg ring, glass, etc So simple a child can perforin them. All for 10c. C. T. Walter, 1105 Prop ped Place, Brooklyn. N. Y. 10 BEAUTIFUL POSTCARDS postpaid for one dime. C. S. CARD CO., Box 331, Minneapolis, Minn. Salesmen wanted for the llelp-a-phone; al most every telephone user buys one to three. Sells for $3. Earn SIOB a week. Send for complete set of instructions in salesmanship free. Bankerd Specialty Co.. Westmlnster.Md. Agents—sso weeklj- handling our wonderful needle cases with our trust plan envelope*. They are self sellers. No talking necessary. Proposition no one can beat. 35c sample 10c. Cortland Co.. 446 F. Spruce St., Clearfield, Pa, Agents—New proposition just out does away with extra tire on automobiles. Write quick. Free details. Cambridge Supply Co., 301 f West Cambridge St., Philadelphia. Pa. Agents—The money is yours if you grab this winner. Send for particulars. 100% profit. Crater Supply Co., 203 X. Uth, St. Louis, Mo. Refrigerators—Double Wall Hardwood White Lined Refrigerator at Manufacturer’s price, Sutherland Suer. Co.. Box 34. Scranton. Pa. W, N. U-, BALTIMORE, NO. 17-1913.