nello Dadi& - dont forget my Slip a package fat your pocftet vmcn yon to home to* ni$M. OiitAt yoin^ftm Ihi* wHoJesom^Ionfr baling sweet - for ptewareflrifecnjiil. Wre rt yoarsdf aftw ?rofcin$ cr when Work dru$s. ffiia g gpeatltttte fiwkmr/ Charming Thought It was after dinner and the talk had turned to psychology. This disturbing question had just been put : "When does old age really begin?" To establish a formula was proving rather diliicult, when one lady, who did not look her years, found the fol lowing : "To me. old aire is always 15 years older than I am." jl Knowleiltre is power, except that good spelling d"esn't win fortunes. Baking Powder the next time you treat the family to waffles. They taste better made with Snow King. It is the highest quality and? is OUNCES-^-*/-- 25 CENTS Permanent roads art a good investment Why ? not an experts* America Must Have More Paved Highways Almost every section of the United States is con fronted by a traffic prob lem. Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious. Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads. Down town city streets are jammed with traffic. Think, too, how narrow mapy of our road* are, and bow com paratively few paved highways there are in proportion to the steadily increasing number at can. If the motor vehicle la to con tinue giving the economic service of which it is capable, we muse have more Concrete highways and widen thoee near Urge cen ters of population. Every citizen should discuss highway needs of his community with his local authorities. Your highway officials will do their part if given your support Why postpone meeting this pressing need? An early start means early relief. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington street CHICAGO o4 Natiomal Organization to Improve mmd Exund the \Jm of Concrete Office* In 29 Cities SAMPSON WIND MILLS and Towers Sara time and labor. Keep* the houiehoU aud lire Mock' ?applied with water. Write today for detail* and prkn*. Sydaor Prop ami Wall Co, fttcfcaKM<Va. Pomp*. Engine*. Saw Miila. Wind Mill*. Radloiaa, Etc. THE IMPROVED WELL FIXTURE SIMPLEST. BESI ?MOST CONVENIENT SELF- FILLING WELL BUCKETS CANT MUDDY THE WATER BRIGGS-SHAFFNER CQ WINSTON -SALEM. N.C. SOLD BT HARDWARE STORES W. N. u., CHARLOTTE, NO. 7-1I2& PART FOUR > ?15? Broken Harmony I Miss Da vies, Mrs. Stockley's only remaining sister. placed a marker lii her book; then laid it down upon a small table. Her face assumed the complacent expression of one about to perform a pleasant duty In accordance with her conscience. "I think." she observed decisively, "Hugh should be warned." Mrs. Stockley glanced up from the stole she was embroidering. "Abou* what?'* she asked. "Barbara." Hei sister made a gesture of annoy ance. which caused her to prick her finger; this increased her irritation. "I wish you would for once be ex plicit. Mary! You have thrown out dark, hints about Barbara ever since we heard of her rescue. Why should | Hugh be warned?" "Are you so stupidly dense as you appear, Alice? Or are you wilfully blinding yourself?" "I am no more stupid than the rest of my futility, I hope!" snapped Mrs. StoS/kley, with much meaning. "Well, then," continued her sister, ignoring this Improbability, "you must realize that Barbara will most likely return ? very changed. Indeed, from her one letter there seems no doubt about it. That was queer? very queer !" Mrs. Stockley Impatiently hunted among bundles of colored silks. "Of course she will be changed. She is two years older and has suffered ghast ly experiences. She was very ill at Singapore : you couldn't expect long chatty letters!" She spoke with unusual asperity. Two years of her sister's undiluted companionship had increased an In herent instinct toward contradiction, while developing a self-defensive alert-, ness. Both were necessary In the radius of two sharp eyes ever quizzing through their lorgnette, two ears which seemingly reached all over the house, and a caustic tongue ready to reduce other people's foibles or few Ideas to shreds. Such gifts used at the expense of common acquaintances are a dif ferent matter, of course. . . . "Ah !" Miss Davles returned to the promptings of conscience with renewed relish. "You are as blind as Hugh. Alice.1 I saw him this afternoon, quite | excited over meeting her tomorrow. He wants to have the wedding after Christmas/. . . of course It was not my business to say anything!" Whether this self-discipline coifld have been maintained had not other people been present, is open to ques tion. . . . "You don't understand Bab as well as Hugh and I do, you see," returned her sister complacently. v" "No," she agreed, "but I understand Man!" He* lips closed with a snap, to give effect to the world of meaning in her words. "Don't you realize, Alice, that Barbara was attractive? And she has been flung, unchaperoned, for two years, into the socletj* of a man who ? well? had extremely loose Ideas, and Bohemian ways ? a man whose influ ence would be most questionable for any young girl." Mrs. Stockley flushed. "Are you in sinuating that Bab would be weak enougH to allow him to Influence her? After her careful upbringing, too? Why ? looseness of any sort would be ab horrent to her! Her surroundings have always been strictly moral." "I don't Insinuate anything; but 1 wouldn't trust that man far. in such circumstances! We have yet to learn \ how he behaved. "She did not allude to him In her lettei1." "No. But ? she did her utmost to f/ti taken back to search for his body! Surely her chief desire should have been to hurry home to Hugh?"/ Mrs. Stpckley smiled Impatiently. "You are maklpg mountains from molehills. Mary! She did that purely from humanitarian motives; it was only righr and natural. Hugh though* so. He liked Captain Croft." "Hugh is too trustful: that's why I am sorry for him. Frankly, Alice. I do not believe a man and woman could live in such isolation without coming to grief. I have seen too much of human nature ? " "My dear Mary! what do you mean? You don't ? " Her sister held up a dignified hand to stop all Interruption. "You must face it, Alice! Everybody is talking and wondering. Of course, It depends entirely upon the man. I don't imply that all men are beasts ? as some wom en would who had 9een as much of the world as I have. If he had a strong spiritual nature ? a clergyman, per haps. Hut that man !" She pursed her lips. . , Mrs. Stockley gazed *at her. her own face paling, her finger twitching the forgotten stole. "'Coming to grief!'" she repeated, horrified. "Do you dare suggest my daughter would so disgrace her name and family as to allow ? My dear Mary' it Is preposterous! I would dis own such a child. But Barbara! Why, I would trust her alone with any man, for forty years! She wouldn't dream of such -things. Besides, Caj? taln Croft was Mrs. Field's cousin, of good family himself ? " Martha, the old servant, hustled In at tliis moment with bedroom candles. She plumped .hem down upon the table, and .<<? r old "face beamed at an excuse ' jr garrulity over Barbara's re turn. When, snubbed, she departed, Mrs. Stockley faced her sister, candle in hand, with an air of outraged dig nity. "Mary" she said, "your conversation knight has shocked me inexpressibly ! I Insist on your never breathing a word of your suspicions ? either to Hugh or Barbara. If she has any painful memories? she will confide in me. Of course, I did not know Cap tain Croft well, nor like ltim; but ? poor child! Her sufferings mny have been worse than I ever imagined. Good night!" With unusuf.l decision she opened T By CL1VE ARDEN | Copyright by The Bobbs-Morrill Co. the drawing room door, and went to bed. But she lay long awake thinking over her sister's remarks. One alone stood out clearly, gathering force with every minute: "Everybody Is talking and wondering." ] Everybody eagerly devoured -all scraps of news; but the supply was scanty. After being brought to Singa pore, the heroine remained there, 111, unable to be moved for a time. . . . A certain reticence surrounded this Ill ness, prostration being given as the natural cause. No trace of a white man's body was found by the expedi tion sent, post-haste, to search the Island. Only the charred remains of a hut, and a few dead natives, were dis covered In the north. In the south, a small tribe of furious, armed savages offered a* wildly hostile reception, mak i Ing approach difficult, refusing any In , formation other than a poisoned ar row. . . . Babooma had presura ! ably recovered and wreaked tys ven geance upon the body of his late an tagonist. . . . When well enough, the girl had Im plored frantically, as one distraught, for facilities to return, herself, to search. This awakened a new Interest, adding piquancy to the situation. But such quixotic madness could not be Indulged by level-headed authorities. What could a girl accomplish where hosts of men had failed? No! The Island had been thoroughly explored, i The hostl)e faction of the natives was | In possession ; her return would be | mere suicide, or worse. She was sent" | to England as soon as practicable, i But the De Boreeau brothers, ever thirsting for adventure, understanding perhaps more of her sufferings and the J true facts than they chose to publish. ; carried t)ut to the enl their oath to J Croft. Only on the boat did they bid , her farewell? then they returned to i their chnrts and their seaplane. j In their exuberant French f j should deter them from learnln? I news of the man whose personality had won their generous admira tion. . . . The key to more Intimate, romantic drama was not forthcoming. Specula tion flourished. What would be likely to happen In such circumstances? Would propinquity bring love In Its train? Ajid, If so ? This entailed end less discussion, heated arguments Ing save death, so they vowed Impatience Was a Novelty. What would he right, and what wrong? Which would need most courage: to J resist or ? Thfcre were women who 1 thought the reverse. The fact of the girl being already engaged shed a further glamor of the dramatic over the adventure, making the uncertainty all the greater. Per- j haps iio problem had arisen after l all. . . . But if It had? Did the two i themselves have clear convictions on I either side; and, above all, courage to be true to them? 1 This was the vital point all longed to know. The pair became Invested with romance. . . . Women laid their heads together an0 wondered. . . . Dark surmises were murmured concerning that illness at Singapore. . . . Sentimental girls forgot their matinee or cinema Idols and cut Croft's photograph out of newspapers, half wishing . they themselves had been wrecked with him. . . . Meanwhile, through the darkness of winter nights and drabness of monot onous days, the shty plowed her way to England which bore one from the closed gates of an "earthly paradise," with agonized eyes still dazzled by the lights she had l^ft there, to trim the little lamps of her Darbury home. II The boat train was late. Little: groups of people, wrnpped In heavy coats and furs, stood about the platform at Charing Cross chatting to gether; or promenaded slowly, eying their fellows with furtive interest, or absorbed In their own reflections. Hugh became convinced that both the station clock and his wrist-watch had stopped; yet the watch appeared to be ticking when, every few moments, he exclaimed It. He sighed, turned on his heel, and for the twentieth time started to wnlk the length of the plat form and back. Impatience was a novelty, also the state of excitement in which he found himself; he hardly knew how to cope with such sensa tions. . . . Two years In his usual comfortable groove had changed Hugh very little. He managed his father's property, hunted, shot, played games, as of yore. If the tragic loss of Barbara had taken the keen edge from his enjoyment of life, making him a little older and graver, It had not destroyed hfa Inter ests In' the! wholesome occupations which earner his way. After the first shock had abated, he found himself a forlorn hero among his many friends, who took him to their hearts and filled his days so that brooding became Im possible. Perhaps more than mere sympathy lurked within the minds of mothers with marriageable daughters; but that suspicion never penetrated his brain. The girl who was part of his. very life had gone; to none other did he give a moment's thought. And now this Twentieth century miracle hajl happened! After what, deemed a dull dream he awoke Jusr where he was, when, so to speak,. he fell asleep. His feelings were abso lutely unchanged, except, perhaps, that -they were Intensified by loss.. The pos sibility of any alteration In their re lationship never even occurred to him. As has been mentioned before, he was not blessed? or cursed ? with imagina tion. . . . When he had nearly reached the bar rier, a sudden tension became apparent everywhere : conversations ceased, heads all turned one way, a flutter of expectancy passed over the scattered groups. ... * Hugn turned quickly. The huge en gine, approaching, gilded slowly along side the platform, followed by the train which brought far travelers home again from distant lands. . . . Within a few minutes all was bustle I and hurry. The " platform swauned 1 with excited passengers, harassed por ters, barrows, luggage. . . . He searched hither and thither for the figure he sought, anxiety slowly rising within him. As the crowd thinned, he took up his position Just Inside the barrier, 'where she was bound to come. Peering through the murky light, he hastily scanned each face that passed, without success. When at last but a few stragglers re mained, he made his way further down the platform a dull feeling of disap-l pointment adding to his anxiety. Casually his glance traveled over a thin figure In a dark coat and hat, seated upon a bench, a kindly, gray haired porter standing near, suit-case In han<y ... As he passed by, a J voice he had once thought never to henr ngnln caused him to turn sharply, with a leap of the heart. "I shall be better In a minute. . . . j Thank you, porter. . . ." "Bab !" With probably the quickest movement of his life, Hugh reached the seat and seized the girl's tremb bllng hands In his own. . . . Then all other words of greeting faded upon his lips : he was conscious of a sense of shock, a nameless apprehension. The general features of the face quick ly raised were those he knew ; but that was all. This woman with the heavy, haunted-looking eyes, t<ie strained set lips, the curious rigidity expression, bore no resemblance to the sweet faced, Impulsive girl who had clung round his neck at parting, In the cabin of the airplane He felt checked, curi ously embarrassed, as If -with a stran ger. Still clasping her hfrtids. he gazed at her silently, noting with alarm the ashen hue spreading even to her lips. Several times she^essayed to speak, and failed. The porter, scenting ro-' mance, discreetly moved a few steps away. ... At last Hugh heard his name uttered, again and again. In a voice so charged with misery that his I apprehensions deepened, and a sudden mistiness enveloped the surrounding scene. For she was clinging to his hands like one In deep torment who. for the first time amid a storm of Of fering. finds the anchor of an old friend. * . . And yet he received the Impression of fear in her manner; she seemed loath to meet his gaze, nn&hl? to talk to him. . . . He was frankly | puzzled ; but an Englishman, with his horror of scenes, can be trusted to bridge over any threatening chasm*. ' Sending the porter ror a taxi, he sat down by her side, still holding her hands, and took refuge In the prosaic. "Come and have some tea? or brandy -or something. Bab." he suggested. "There s Just time." She shook her head. 'But? you? you? dash It all! You don't look fit to travel. What Is It dear ? " ? ??l~ u8h?n be 0,1 riKht" 8he breathed. We had a bad crossing. I? camriit cold. That's all, Hugh." He watched her with puckered brow. "Whut made you leave the boat at Marseilles and come overland?" -??.?fVAVAVAVAVA'.'AVAViyi9I? Good Stories Told of Famous French Writer Mm O'Rell, the famous French sat irist, Joked to the end. When he wu? lying on bis deathbed, and after tlw doctors had Informed him thai there was no hot>e, he wrote: "I fear thai I nm doomed. The doctors give me a few months, but I believed shall la?t longer. At any rate I sfiall try; for I'd rather wear a hat than a halo." Max O'ltell, like all professional men, was occasionally Imposed on with regard to hospitality, hostesses Inrtt .Ing him to an "at home" as a guest and then expecting him to perform, In other words to "tell a few stories." Once when this happened, be left the drawing room hurriedly and went - V _'A i - ?!??? .h *?* down to the hall, whence he returned to a few minutes In a state of great excitement, and approaching his hostJ ess whispered agitatedly Into her ear: "Madam, what Hind of people havs you here? The check you placed In my overcoat pocket? my fee for to- 1 night? has been stolen I"? San Fran cisco Argonaut. The Specialist "So you're a specialist?" "Yes. I've discovered that Is the way to get fancy prices for doing what the family doctor Is supposed to do us a port of the day's work." aI hated it!" she cried huskily, tv> \ng her hands. "It was all-unbea*., able? day after day? the monotony, the people ? oh ! I bated it all I Her eyes roved wildly over a?e platform, then she abruptly turned toward lilm. ?I want Mrs. Field. Is she In London, or at Darbury?" "Neither. She's In Russia." The girl's hands twined convulsively together, arid she said no more.^It was a relief to both when the porter ap peared to lead them to the waiting taxi. By this sudden act of traveling overland, she had successfully thwart publicity. Nd curiosity was evinced ih her arrival. She sank back In a cor ner, with throbbing head, bewildered by the noise around. It all seemed part of the nightmare which had t**11 going on for so long, In which Various parts of her anatomy moved, .spoke, ate and slept, while she herself was numbed or dead. The movements around appeared as unreal and de tached as the life of a gay city to one lying, blind and pain-stricken, In a darkened room. Hugh turned to put his arms about her, as they drove away? but iagain something Intangible checked him; in stead, he took her h*nd once more, al most shyly, and leaned toward her. "Bab," he asked diffidently, "woq't you ? aren't yota going to kiss me? After all this time?" She drew away quickly, sharply. For a moment she laid her handj upon the door, with the mad instinct to es cape which some trapped animal flight feel on Its way to the zoo, its jheart ever away In the wilds with its lost mate. ... Then, drawing a long quivering breath, she leaned bacjc and looked up at lilm. In the light | from passing vehicles, she saw the hurt wonder on his face. . . . All at once the cold rigidity encom passing her heart relaxed. With trem bling lips, and eyes swimming In sud den tears, she laid her free hand on his. "Hughle !" she muttered b^okenpy, "you must bear with me. So much lias happened. I ?tar? f? tell you. . I. i 1 ? I'm* not? I don't?" The words quav ered tfway Into silence. ,'Hew was It possible, at this first moment of meet ing, to blurt out the bald statements which would shatter his pathetic hap piness and trust? She could not bear, yet, to allude to what had become a sacred memory full of poignant, ex quisite pain. "I can't tell you every thing ? here," she continued. "Oh I I can't speak of it all? yet, Hugh I Don't ask me. It ? it is so ? unbearable ? " Again her voice died away. Hugh pressed the hands In his, and laid them against his cheek. "Darling old girl I Has it been as bad as all that?" He had, she knew, entirely misun derstood; but she made no comment.. Explanations were Impossible, Just then. This meeting, fraught with such Irony and tragedy, had bewildered her. Hugh's presence, with Its present strangeness and odd sense of famil iarity, brought with It a sense of shock, reducing her preconceived Ideas of it to chaos. When they reached Waterloo,! nerved herself to put the questloi scarcely dared to frame ? that i was her only interest in life at pr< "Has any news reached England ? yet? from De Borceau?" Hugh looked grave and shook] his bead. "Of ? Croft, you mean? "Sp. Poor fellow. ... I suppose? I say Bab?" / ' "Yes?" v "I suppose ? rve sometimes won dered?was Croft quite ? decent you, all the time?" -> S A harsh caricature of a laugh Jarred on his ears. "Yes. Oh ! Quite ? decent !" Hugh knitted his brow .at her tone "You are sure? He ? looked after you, I mean, and did all he could?*1, "Oh, yes, yes! He ? did all he pos sibly could." "It was a beastly position for you bo(h. Especially as you didn't like him?" "Here's the station!" she exclaimed, with a quick breath of relief. The tail drew up at the pavement, and a porter opened the door. . . . - ' The train was rather full ; but 'the presence of others In their carriage was a boon to Barbara. Hugh had*) sunk so far Into the background that, In her recent anguish, the considera tion of their position had held no place. Robbed with such cruel suddenness of both Alan and her future motherhood, there had been no room, In the bitter* ness of her heart, for thoughts of the empty years ahead. Every throb of the engines bringing her away in creased the passionate craving to re turn? to search every nook and corner of the island for remains of the man who meant more than life to her; then to lie down beside them and die, hjer self. (TO BE CONTINUED.) The Wonderful Baby "Now. then, ladles and gents," shout ed the rosy-faced showman, "walk dp an' see the most wonderful baby bn earth ! The charge for admission Is only sixpence. Walk up! Walk up!" A good many people responded to the Invitation, and when the place was full the showman brought fop ward a very ordinary baby Indeed Ifl all respects. "What is there wonderful about Itf* asked one of the disgusted audience of the showman. "I've seen thousands of babies like It." "Well," said the showman, getting near on aperture In the booth, "all i can say Is that Its mother says It's the most wonderful baby on earth, an' If she doesn't know who does? You'll have to take the lady's word for It 1" he yelled as he dodged an empty bofc tie and disappeared from view.? Lon don Tit-Bits. - - ; Freak Indian Ocean I eland Midway between Africa and Austra lia and about 1?500 miles north of the Antarctic circle, Kerguelen Island or Desolation land, as It la called, presents one of the most per plexing mysteries of the Indian occan. It is covered with strange vegetation unlike that found In any other part of the world. There are also million* of cubbages which bear large heads of leaves 18 to 20 Inches across,? I'opulai M?rh?nlr? Mntrnrlno. SICK WOMEN SHOULD BE ENCOURAGED Letters Like This Pi We the Reli ability of Lydia E. Pinkbam'j Vegetable Compound Turtle Lake, Wisconsin. ? "I took Lydia E. fink ham 'a Vegetable Com ? ? pound for weakness, backache and ner vousness. I had these troubles .for years and had taken other medicines for them, but I have found no medicine so good as the Vegeta Die Compound and I ! recommend it to my friends who have troubles similar to mine. I saw it ad vertised and thought I would try it and it has helped me in all mv troubles. ? I have had six children and I have taken the Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Com pound before each one was born, for weakness, vomiting, poor appetite and backache, and again after childbirth be cause of dizzy headaches. It is a good medicine for it always helps me. I have also taken- Lydia E. Pinkham 's Liver Pills for the last eight years for con stipation. " ? Mrs. Mabel La Point, R. F. D. No. 1, Turtle Lake, Wisconsin. In a recent canvass, 98 out of every 100 women/ say they were benefited by taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Dress burns, brniaea, woonda lad - cots, rubd and aorea with aoocb io| "Vsscline" Petroleum Jelly. ^ It keep* out dirt sad air and haa ?ena healinf. For coajibs or sore i take a tcaipoonful several ?- ???trleaa. odorlc? ten* thro*** ielrhw "3GH I Ha?*or* o.a RESINOL 5oothinq And He&linq Aids Poor Complexions Cabbage Plants "Frostproof." All leading varieties- 1,00# to 4,000 at $1.26 per 1,009; 5,000 and over at $1.00 per 1,000. Par postage or expresa charges on arrival. Prices postpaid: 250, 60c; 600, 91.10. Nice high-grade planta. Prompt ahlpment. Safe arrival guaranteed. "How to Care for Plants" sent with order. Ajrents wanted. BEINBARDT PLANT COMPANY. Box W. ABpUSN. ^GEORGIA. 1IAY? TIMOTHY, CLOVER OB MIXED, also Alfalfa. Satisfaction guaranteed. Deliv ered prices. Harry D. Gates Co. . Jackson. Mlc?. BABY CHICKS? Single-comb White Leg horns. f 16 hundred; R. I. Reds and Barred Rocks. $17 hundred; 100% live delivery guar anteed. LESTER'S HATCHERY. Rome. Oa. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Bnaaly to Gray and Faded Hair OOeand ?1^0 at Druggists. SHB ? PstSoam.W.T HINDERCORNS Removes Coma. Cal louses, etc.. stops all pain, ensures comfort to the feet, makes walking easy. 14c by mail or at Drug giita. Hlsoox Chemical Works, Patcbogne, N. T. 1I/ /I M T F n Y#"H MM 'o LMn. II AN I L 11 the BARBER TRADE Beat college la the Sooth. Jobs awaiting our graduate*. Charlotte Barter Colltft, Charlotte, N. C. Memorial to Peace The Portal of Peace Is a massive concrete structure In the form of a gateway. It is located at Blaine, Wash., and was dedicated September 5, 1921, In honor of the peace between the United States and Canada, which had lasted for more than 100 years without a break. The memorial, which cost $40,000, stands 100 yards from the International boundary where the forty-ninth parallel meets Boundary i bay. No Car Trades Dealers In England will not trade In a used car, an owner being compelled to. dispose of It himself If he wants to change to a new one. "CASCARETS" ^ constipated. If Dllzy, H^lcr . Sour' ci?? cj Tr> ~U _ -J fr^ *_ -?L - &r J r, ~lt 4 V = ^ i -> r : ^ =^.-7^ 0(1^ t ~ Soijf distress Knno |,V mmJ* atlve and catliar;], ,,n u'ps and children i<Jflnk ?tores. bfljJ Wony K,nc/ In North a i.. ; a thousand i,. large number , 'have-bevn \vii|. American Nat;; Habits." Of .. ever, only ah<>:' classified as in !?'r, ?? i. Child's Best Uwt* "California Fig $, Hurry Mother! Kven ? fj*?d lah child lov es Hit' (ilt-; "California Fig Synif." falls to open t he howHs. \ ? ful today may, prevent a >.;| tomorrow. Ask your druggist for fornla Pip: Syrup" whi<; tions for habies and <: ; <>! ages printed on bottle. M must- Ray "California" ?r \ J an Imitation fig syrup. How Snakes Tra id I The organs of locnmntii ? are Its ribs, a muscular ? :? bringing these together oe*;i| side and (hen the ?<t her Thus | the reptile a forward iihve. Roman Eye Balssrr. I? an ar,i:yn| ment. Hence the m^dlratt >n h?jtf tratlng the Inflamed ey ?urf?C*f i January Their Hot Mo January is the height of < time in Australia and the j^;e flock to. shore and mountain of cool spots. Motherhood! Roanoke, Va. ? "Several had been born to us before i of Dr. i Favorite s c r i pti:t have, tr.e had the ence o: ^ thru fi/3 with, and I out, the u| 'Favoritt scriptioa I been ?>;] anything have made the difference i enced I would never have bel: While taking the 'Favorite tion' I was able to attend t| housework, rest at night, nil appetite was good all the timer had comparatively no suffer Mrs. I^illian Duke, 920 Shesa^ Ave. All medicine dealers. Money back If HUNT'S 8AUKW treatment of ITOii ? ringworm, Trrru* Itching akin TOc at dru|?irl<rt?i. or 4^ LLIkMi WWi*'? Beat Withes "Hello, Mabel. Haven't ? for a long time." "I'm married now. Gertie. "Is zat ay? Well. I l'?Pe u1 band is a good cook. You d1 happy home life, girlie."? Courier- Jou rna I . 1 SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved -iIk by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 ye 'ears ton ?gsp\rv<v Colds Pain Toothache Neuritis Headache Neural^ Lumbago Rheumatic Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven direction Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets? Alto bottles of 24 and 100? AoWb to tte t nOm auk of Bu? lUnteetan of MwMMdctti?Mtcr of Si; cJ . a. . - ?

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