Batin* too much rich food may pro duce kidney trouble in some Cora, aays a well-known authority, because the acids created excite the kidneys. Then they become overworked, get sluggish, clog np and cause all aorta of distress, particularly backache and miaery in the kidney region, rheu matic twinges, severe headaches, add stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary Irri tation. The moment your back hurts or kid neys aren’t acting right, or If Madder bothers yon, begin drinking lota of good water and also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may' then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the add of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthla, and has been used for years to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activ ity; also to neutralise the adds in the system so that they no longer Irritate, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts can not Injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent llthla water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to help keep the. kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus often avoiding serious kid ney disorders. £njm GOOD HEALTH the Spirit tfhfftaeu l cor a loveiy sKm and a sweet breathravoid auto'intoxication A SAFE, DEPENDABLE LAXATIVE sgyissQia A Perfect Food And a Gentle Yet Forceful Tonic Hu enjoyed the confidence of tba medical profession for orar 88 years. E. J. Hart & Ca., Ltd., New Orleans ECZEMA 8unburn and All 8kin Eruptions 8afely and Quickly Relieved E XMO OINTMENT S A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE! YOU Fall size: sent bjr parcel poet, pre paid, upon receipt of COe. Prepared and Sold by GEORGE W. JARCHOW, Ph. 0. Manafnetnrlns ChemUt 44S-451 Second Avenoe, Mow York City Stops Malaria, Restores Strength and Energy, eoc WHAT CAUSES BOILS. Balk and carbuncles an tbs molt of fan* proper diet or infection of the .kin. It'spome times hard to determine the exact came hot CAEBOIL will give quick relief. No expensive operation to perns ary ae on application of GARBO 1L promptly stops thepaia eedcontin oed am draws oat the core. Gat a toe box from poor druggist. Yoor money back if yoa am not sattonod. aniu-ocK-NKAL co. MSMVUt Tnto, Worth *6.«# to Get Bid of Piles? Pineto Pile Remedy is auaranteed to rellsre you or we will return your money If you are not satisfied wKh results, gent by parcel post on receipt ef five dollars. Not sold in stores. FINRTO REMEDY CO.. P. O. Box llH (Copyright bp W. a. OkHUa) RED FOX showed his teefh la a grin as he entered his borrow. He had had no adventures worthy of the name that after noon. hot he meant to hare some that evening. That afternoon he had mere ly slunk through the heather Investi gating the food supply. Now he curled himself up snngly In his earth and pre pared to sleep until nightfall. % Red Fox was a bachelor. He was a monster fox, and one of the oldest of the county. His splendid fur was known to every huntsman over a ra dius of leagues. He had pitted his wits against the hounds time and s^aln, and always won. Life was nothing without the spice of adventure. They say a fox loves the hunt as much as the men, the hounds, and the horses. Red Fox was hunted three times a week, and he knew every trick of his trade. Some day, when his strength and speed be gan to fall him, the inevitable end would come. The hounds would tear his slim body, his mask and pads and brush would be cut off to adorn some hall. But of that Red Fox knew noth ing. He thought that he was lmmor .When night came he slunk out and was soon going at full gallop across the fields. The house that he had In spected had a new chicken yard. -It was the work of a moment for Red Fox to leap from a bough to the coop and seize a fat cockerel by the neck. • As he was carrying off his prey he saw the farmer come put of his house and point a gun at him. Red Fox was Immediately In the line of fire. He did not know what a gun was, but he knew that It spelled danger. He snarled and showed his teeth, and the farmer, muttering, put the gun down and let Red Fox gallop away. For nobody dares to shoot a fox In England unless he wants to bring down upon his head the wrath of a hunt-loving countryside. Red Fox bounded away toward bis burrow. Rut at a distance of five hun dred yards some Instinct caused him to stop. He smelled something. It was a man, somewhere near him, and he knew that the man was not passive ly hostile, as all men were, but an In veterate enemy. Cautiously he skulked forward until he came within sight of hts'burrow. Then, crouching In the undergrowth, he saw the man bending over It Red Fox skulked there until the man was gone. • - - When at last, by devious ways, he reached his burrow, he found it closed. The man was the earth-stop per, and he had blocked Red Fox's home so that he should not be able to evade the hounds on the morrow. It would be a chase to the death—his death! Vaguely uneasy. Red Fox sniffed about the place, and then, warned by his same Instinct, he trotted about half a mile away. Into a gorse patch, where be lay down and devoured the cockerel. Afterward he went to sleep, with one ear drooping and the other alert for possible enemies. The sun had been up some time when Red Fox lazily stretched his limbs and prepared to stir. But as he did so he scented a peculiar and hated odor, so like his own that he showed his teeth In fury. It was not that of a rival fox, however, but of the sniff ing hounds that surrounded the gorse covert. They had scented him and were on hla trail. Behind them rode the mas ter and whipper-in, and grouped In the distance was the .crowd-that had gathered for the hunting. Suddenly, with a bay, the oldest hound dashed forward toward the spot where Bed Fox lay. And instantly Red Fox had leaped from the covert and was racing along the ditch. The huntsman blew a blast upon his horn. The hounds bayed, the hunters hurried up at the gallop. In an In stant the whole Held was on the track of the hounds, and they were pursu ing the lean, lithe shadow that raced over the fields. The huntsmen strung out^n a long line. The hounds dashed forward at full speed. They saw Bed Fox' no longer, but his scent was plainly dis cernible, and though his first burst of speed was greater than theirs, it could not last Red Fox, looking back, saw the hounds two fields away, and the horses leaping the hedges. Bed Fox had been hunted many times, and had always gone free. But no* he began to be vaguely distressed. His meal had been a hearty one, and bo knew that his earth was stopped. He came upon a brook, trotted down it to throw ofit the scent, and emerged on tbesame side, * ^ hla tracks. He halted In #*j horses were strong out over tbe fields behind him, but tbe old hound still led the remnant* cf the pack, dogged two were near trim. One carried a man In a red hunting coat, tbb other a woman. Tbe^ were gallopUig side by ride, It seemed to Red Fox that there Wat.A certain hostility between them. Red Fox could scftnt friendship and enmity in human beings, as well as animal rf—that was of the essence of. his life—and he. noticed how. In spite of their nearness to each other, the woman kept her horse’s head turned from the man’s horse. Red Fox Imagined, also, that there waa a sort of rivalry between them for his cap tore. He was frightened for almost'the first time Iq his life. He began to dodge and double. Suddenly he re 1 membered that the little stream Which he had passed earlier that morning wonnd In courses not half a mile dis tant, In some dense fir patches. If he conld make that he might throw the hounds off the scent. .They were not fifty paces away when he dashed Into the firs. Before him rolled the brook, wider here, and afforded him the supreme opportunity that he required. He sprang into the water and swam hard up stream, only his whiskered face appearing above .the surface. As‘he swam between the overhang ing branches of the leafy hazel bashes that fringed the stream he heard the baying hounds burst Into the firs. He heard the leader’s bay change Into a whine and knew that his pursuers were at fault. Red Fox showed his teeth once more, this time in another laugh. He had baffled them, as the wise old fox had done so many times before. The ground sloped sharply toward the brook. Red Fox, still swimming, saw the two horses stop on the verge. The man pulled back, his animal, but the girl’s horse, slipping on the wet bank, fell over, pinning her beneath Its body. Instantly the man leaped to the ground and holding the reins round his arm, bent over the other. “Muriel! Are you hurt? Are .you hurt, dear?” be asked In anxious tones. But the girl did not answer him. The horse had fallen upon her arm and shoulder, bruising then) badly. She had fainted from the pain. The man knelt at her side. He sprang to his feet again,; filled his hat at the stream, and, returning, began sprinkling water Into her face. She sighed, and at length opened her eyes. “Muriel I Muriel, dear! I have been a beast!” exclaimed the man. “Can you ever forgive me? I loved you all the while.” Her Ups were quivering, but more from mental than from physical pnln. "You told me I was a hard, cruel woman, Arthur!” she sobbed. “I was mad. You are an angel, Mu riel. Forgive me! Say that you will forgive me!” - “Do you love me, Arthur? Do you really love me, after all?” Her voice was piteous. “Arthur, I couldn’t live unless you loved me.” He had extricated her from under the animal, which now scrambled to Its feet and stood looking down upon them. He raised the girl and drew her into his arms. “I love yon forever and ever, dear," he- said. She leaned her head upon his shoul der. Their Ups met The man took something from his.pocket and slipped it back into its accustomed place. It encircled the girl’s finger, and the dia mond solitaire sparkled brightly. Suddenly the girl pointed into the brush. .“Look! Look, Arthur!” she ex claimed. "The little rascal! I haven't the heart to call the hounds,” answered the man. . And Bed Fox, still untaken, loped homeward at an easy gait Once more he had saved that splendid fur and brush, and with his pads he delicately wiped the water from the mask which was not yet hanging In some hunts man’s hall. A WOMAN’S LOGIC / ■ 1hi Jones cast an entirely new tight—end, It may be, n wholly rea sonable one—on the problem of wom an’s dress the other night. She Aid Mr. Jones were awaiting callers, and Mr. Jones surveyed her new gown rather critically. “Isn’t It a little ex treme r he suggested. "A Uttle abort and low cat?** -‘T. “Well, 1 don’t know,” said Mrs. Jones, “they are coming to see me, aren't they—not the dreaslH—Argo naut Sense of Superiority “Why don’t you go Into politics?" “I am In politics,” answered Mias Cayenne. “I cast a rote every time I have the opportunity.” “Why don’t you run for office?” “I ding to the idea of feminine su periority. I prefer having a man requesting me to vote for him to be ing In a position where 1 would have to request him to vote for me."— Washington Star. PREVENTIVE MEASURE She—Why do men always try to hold girls’ hands? He (a trifle cynical)—Probably to, keep the girls from patting their hands In our pockets. Something Muting He tried to cross the railroad track Before a rushing train; They put the pieces In a sack. But couldn’t find the brain. The Wife Leama to Drivev— "I asked a policeman, like yon told me.” “Welir "He said I was on the wrong side of the street, so I left the car there and walked over.” Uara All “So you went fishing with Brown yesterday. What did you catch?” "Ask Brown. I've forgotten the number we agreed on.” THE CALF HAS HIS DAY 0*1 The Bull—I bear the prodigal’s re turned. Ain’t you scared? The Fatted Calf—Not me. The host turned me loose and I butted tb« prodigal off the premises. Die of Joy "If ignorance la bliss," said Black To White, "well, then, my boy, Tou’d better get your life Insured: Tou're apt to die el Joy I” The Truth of the Matter "I wouldn’t marry him If he were the last man In the world.” “If he were the last, you’d be killed in the rush, dear.* i . $4,000 1.055 PRIZES IN Ml M PRIZES ‘C itor the intt Liquid Vonoor Con teet. 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Canada Grows Tobacco Tobacco is being grown for market In a valley In British Columbia whlqh corresponds In latitude to the north ern part of Nwfoundland, says the Dearborn Independent -—r—*-Sp Doubt Indulged becomes doubt real ised. Tanlac Guards Her Health that .1 pMrijj^died rtomwh trouble. chronic headaohe, backache and run