THE EAGLE, BURNSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
ri
1
opes Women Will j
Adopt This Habit |
As Weil As Men I
Glass of hot water each morn
ing helps us took and feel
clean, sweet, fresh.
Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and
vivacious—a good clear skin; a nat
ural, rosy complexion and freedom
from illness are assured only by clean,
healthy blood. It only every woman
and likewise every man could realize
the wonders of drinking phosphated
hot water each morning, what a grat
ifying change would take place.
Instead of the thousands of sickly,
anaemic-looking men, women and
girls with pasty or muddy complex-
tuns; Instead of the multitudes of
“nerve wrecks,” "rundowns,” "brain
fags” and pessimists we should see a
virile, optimistic throng of rosy-
aheeked people everywhere.
An inside bath is bad by drinking,
each momlhg before breakfast, a glass
of real hot water with a teaspoonfui
of limestone phosphate in It to wash
firom the stomach, liver, kidneys and
ten yards of bowels the previous day's
indigestible waste, sour fermentations
and poisons, thus cleansing, sweeten
ing and freshening the entire alimen-
iary canal before putting more food
Into the stomach.
Those subject to sick headache, bil-
lousiiess, nasty breath, rheumatism,
^ colds; and particularly those who
have a pallid, sallow complexion and
who are constipated very often, are
irged to obtain a quarter pound of
limestone phosphate from any drug
gist or at the store which will cost
but a trifle but is sufRcient to demon
strate the quick and remarkable
change in both health and appearance
awaiting those who practice Internal
sanitation. We must remember that
inside cleanliness is more Important
than outside, because the skin does
not absorb impurities to contaminate
the blood, while the pores in the thir
ty feet of bowels do.—Adv.
Nothing so effectually cures a man
of the flattery habit as marriage.
Druggist Gives lUghest Praise
to Kidney Medicine
For the past fifteen years I have been
selling Dr. Kiliaer’s Swamp-Root and
tny cuatomera are always satisfied with
the results obtained from its use and they
•peak in the highest terms regarding
Bwamp-Root. I have used it in ray ewn
family and the results were the most fav
orable. I believe it is a fine medicine for
kidney, liver and bladder diseases and I
I always recommend it for such troubles.
—^—' TSrrTTO
. CHAS. BRUTON, Druggist,
Jan. 6th, 1918. Dover, Ten
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer Co.
Binghamton.N.Y.
Prove What Swamp-Rout Will Do For Yon
Send ten cents to Dr, Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton. N. Y., for a sample size bot
tle. It will convince anyone. You will
also receive a booklet of valuable infor
mation) telling about the kidneys and blad
der. When writing, be sure and mention
this paper, Regular fifty-eent and one-
dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
•tores.—Adv.
White lies require whitewashing to
keep them from turning black.
CLEAR RED PIMPLY FACES
•ed Hands, Red Scalp With Cuticura
Soap and Ointment, Trial Free,
The soap to cleanse and purify, the
Ointment to soothe and heal. Nothing
better, quicker, safer, surer at any
price for skin troubles of young or
old that itch, burn, crust, scale, tor
ture or disfigure. Besides, they meet
every want in toilet preparations.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. Ls
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Golden
Heart
By WALTER DELANEY
(Copyright, 191*. by W. G. Chapman.)
"It must be done!” spoke Gregory
Thearle.
"I am sorry to be the medium of
your message, ^^r. Thearle,” spoke
William Ashe. "I am your attorney.
You can command me, but speaking
In a strictly professional sense you
are taking the wrong course in this
matter.”
"1 differ with you and I have made
an unalterable decision.” spoke
Thearle stubbornly.
“Very well, Mr. Thearle, I tvill do
the best I can,” said the lawyer.
The attorney went home thoughtful
and a trifle disturbed. His old-time
client had set him a hard task, for
he was a sensitive and sympathetic
man at heart. He unbosomed to his
wife.
"A disagreeable mission,” he told
her. "It seems that Mr. Thearle has
learned that his son Rodney is in
love with a young lady at Dayton—a
Miss Evelyn Boice. He knows noth
ing about her, but assumes that she
has in view the fact that young Rod
ney is a rich man's son. Not only
that, but Mr. Thearle Is In sore trou
ble concerning Lis business. I have
begged him to tell Rodney, who is a
tine fellow, as you know, all about it,
but bis father hopes to escape the
threatened embarrassment in his
business and refuses. Looking at the
dark side of affairs further, be says
“I Differ \ J
Cupid never attends the funeral 1
ELDERLY WOMEN
SAFEGUARDED
Tdl Others How They Were
Carried Safely Through
Change of Life.
Dnrand, Wis.—“ I am the mother of
fourteen children and I owe my life to
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound. When I was
45 and had the
Change of Life,
a friend recom
mended it and it I
gave me such relief \
from my bad feel
ings that I took
several bottles. I
am now well and
healthy and recom
mend your Compound to other ladies.
—Mrs. Mary Ridgway, Durand, Wis.
A Massachusetts'WomanWritesj
Blackstone, Mass.-—“My troubles-
were from my age, and I felt awfully i
sick for three years. I had hot flashes j
often and frequently suffered from .
pains. I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s '
Vegetable Compound and now am well. ’ ’ j
—Mrs. Pierre Cournoyer, Box 289, ;
Blackstone, Mass. [
Such warning symptoms as sense of
.■mffocation.hot flashes, headaches, back
aches,dread of impending evil, timidity,
sounds in the ears, palpitation of the
heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu
larities, constipation, variable appetite,
weakness and dizziness, should be heeded
6y middle-aged women. Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has carried
many women safely through this crisis.
It would be a terrible thing for Rodney
to marry and find himself penniless.
“And what are you to do, dear?”
submitted Mrs. Ashe.
"Brutally speaking, I am to tell the
young lady that tha Thearle family
object to the match. If, as Mr.
Thearle puts It, she la indeed a for
tune hunter. I am to show her certain
documents proving that Mr. Thearle
may be a beggar in a month.”
Mr. Ashe reached Dayton the next
morning. He had the address of Miss
Evelyn Boice. He found that she was
a boarder In a very respectable fam
ily, had come from another city some
months previous and was taking
course at an art school.
Refinement, even luxury, were In
evidence In the handsome drawing
room where he sat awaiting the
fiancee of bis client's son. Ashe de
cided that she could not be very poor
to afford so expensive a home, nor
an adventuress it she was seeking edu
cation in a line where the practical
worker makes a good living.
He had sent up his card by the serv
ant. In a tew minutes Miss Boice
came into the apartment. The lawyer
directed one searching analytical look
at that charming face and wished he
was home, anywhere, but in the pres
ence of such Ingenuousness, Innocence
and beauty.
"We are strangers,” he observed,
arising with all the courtesy and re
spectfulness he could command, “I
wish we had remained so, Miss Boice,"
he added almost sorrowfully.
Her face was a void of amazement.
Surely, never had she known so
strange a gathering!
“That is a hard thing to say, la It
not, Miss Boice?” he continued, try
ing to force a whimsical smile, "and
I must explain. I am a lawyer. I
have been sent on a mission most dis
tasteful to me. Be indulgent, dear
lady. I came from Mr. Gregory
Thearle.”
"The father of Rodney!" mur
mured the girl and a slight pallor
came over her face.
"He objects to the attention of his
son to you, Miss Boice,” pursued Ashe
steadily. "There are reasons, accord
ing to his detached point of view—
they are not mine, believe me. Mr.
Thearle is in trouble. There may be
occasion for Rodney to stand by his
father and the family—I—I—"
The lawyer felt wretched. The
sweet girl before him had held him
spellbound with the winsome inno
cence of her lovely eyes. Now they
filled with tears.
"Mr. Ashe," she said brokenly. "Oh,
indeed, no attitude of mine shall dis
tress him. 1 would help the poor old
. He does not understand bow
dearly I love Rodney.”
The last barrier of suspicions was
broken down with the steadfast .law
yer, but he had his duty to perform.
am ordered,” and he spoke with
a meaning and a commiseration that
even this artless experienced girl fully
understood, “I am ordered to furnish
you proof of the possibility of all his
means being swept from him,” and
William Ashe produced a package of
business documents. "These evidence
the fact that If Mr. Thearle does not
raise nearly fifty thousand dollars by
the fifteenth of the month his credi
tors will take all he has.”
'Oh dear! how sorrowful,” fluttered
Evelyn Boice. “No, no,” she de
murred, touching the documents as the
lawyer was about to replace them in
pocket. "I am interested. Let
me know all, please. I can—perhaps I
m help.”
The lawyer marveled at the sudden
change in the girl, the expression of
strength that came into her fair face,
at her enigmatical manner as she
handed back the papers with tha sim
ple words.
I thank you. Please tell Mr.
Thearle that I sympathize with him
and that I really will not be any added
burden to his troubles.”
William Ashe returned home to an
nounce to his client that the young
lady was reconciled to his stem flat.
Then he partially forgot the lovely
girl amid a hard, but a vain effort to
secure an extension from his credi
tors. They had tied up one hundred
thousand dollars in collateral that, un
der a forced sale, would ruin the old
merchant.
"No arrangement can be made,” re
ported the lawyer one morning. "The
collateral was closed out yesterday
and purchased by some outsider.”
"Then the creditors will be paid?”
asked his client
"Dollar for dollar, but the bolder of
the collateral now holds you at his
mercy.”
Ashe left the broken merchant mak
ing his arrangements to close up his
business and begin life all over again.
Two hours later Ashe came rushing
into the office of gloom, madly ex
cited.
"Look!" he cried, flinging down a
big envelope before his client.
"The note canceled! the collateral
released!” gasped Gregory Thearle.
“What marvel la this?”
Then his eye fell upon the name up
on the note, that of the person to
whom tha bank had transferred It.
“Evelyn Boice!" he fairly shouted,
and then before the lawyer could
make an explanation the old man col
lapsed under the shock completely.
But the full explanation came later
and a happy chain of circumstances it
Involved, indeed. William Ashe sur
mised what had transpired as soon as
he saw that name. The "fortune hunt
er," the sweet girl at Dayton,
turned thgjtern treatment ol
i^od Rabbit Trap Which Explains Itself.
(By D. CROOKING.)
Rabbits are particular as to
what they eat, an®eed only on vege
table matter. T,^» prefer the more
succulent kluds.^^h as vegetables,
clover, alfalfa and fallen fruit. When
none of these foods are available, they
often eat the bark of trees, especially
when snow covers Mher food.
It is very easy X prevent rabbits
from injuring tre^ and all cases ol
damage are due to neglect rather than
to a lack of eflici^t remedies. Tour
premises should not afford hiding
places for rabbits Mch as brush piles.
This Is not meanv to Include green
cover crop In tl^ orchard. An or
chard with a covtf crop abdve the
snow Is seldom If, ever Injured.
Traps are very elective in catching
rabbits. The mon^raps you have the
better. This is nl- bo economical a
method as polsogng for protecting
the trees, but It Ivnlshes amusement
for the children J ~id also provides
meat for the tabi||L^
There are two general ways of poi
soning rabbits. (1) By placing poi
soned water in their runs, especially
during dry weather. (2) By placing
poisoned fucd where they can get it.
The followiQg,h«hl^h was originally
recommended baB, Ohio station, baa
given satlsfactloV. One part sulphate
of strychnine,
one part white _
Shake well and
with a brush
tribute the poison-
trees.
There have beenit number of washes
and paints of vaJlous kinds recom
mended as being e;l!ective against rab
bits. The disadvantage of these
■hlrd part borax,
J ten parts water.
By to tender twigs
' dipping and dis-
( twigs around the
washes Is that heavy rains wash them
oft and make It necessary to repeat
the application. It Is not difficult to
find or devise preparations which will
keep rabbits away. Rabbits are very
particular about their food, and any
taint on the tree will keep them from
injuring It. The following has been
recommended by the Oklahoma sta
tion and found very satisfactory:
"Water, one gallon; one pound of soap;
two to four ounces of carbolic acid.”
Some prefer to add enough vermilion
red to give the mixture a good pink
color and the consistency of cream.
This Is painted on the trunk of the
trees with a brush or swab of rags
tied to a stick.
Another wash, which has given sat
isfaction, is made by slacking one
peck of fresh stone lime with soap
suds. Thin to the consistency of
whitewash, add one-half gallon of
crude carbolic acid, four pounds sul
phur and one gallon of soft soap.
The United States department of ag
riculture recommends the time-sluphur
wash as giving satisfactory results.
This wash consists of: Unslaked lime,
20 pounds; flowers of sulphur, 15
pounds; water, 50 gallons. The lime,
sulphur and one-third of the water are
boiled together for one hour, and then
the rest of the water Is added. By add
ing salt the wash will stick better.
The Arkansas experiment station
has found that painting the trunks of
the trees with white lead and linseed
oil gave very satisfactory results.
Mixed paints should not be substituted
as they may contain oils which would
injure the trees. One advantage of
this mixture Is that one application is
sufficient for the entire season.
flOME
Tow
HELPS
BOOST
Boost your city, boost your friend.
Boost the lodge that you attend,
Boost the street on which you're flweillnf.
Boost the goods that you are selling.
Boost the people round about you;
They can get along without you.
But success will quicker find them
If they know that you're behind them.
Boost for every forward movement.
Boost for every new Improvement,
Boost the man for whom you labor.
Boost the stranger and the neighbor.
Cease to be a chronic knocker.
Cease to be a progress blocker,
If you’d make your city better
Boost it to the final letter.
—Detroit Free Press.
COLOR SCHEMES IN GARDENS
Matter in Which America Might Profit
by the Example Set by English
Landscape Artists.
Little attention Is paid to garden
color schemes, less in California than
elsewhere, for the reason that every
thing bloc>ms so riotously here that
we deem attempts at control quite un
necessary, says the Loa Angeles
Times. The English are the great
color artists of the garden and they
have garden books upon this subject
alone. Sometimes colors are used for
effects not necessarily allied to har
mony, as when yellow Is used on
points thrust forward to shorten the
apparent distance and blue is used to
deepen the recesses and make them
appear farther In the distance.
Many of the good-sized local gardens
have long borders where color schemes
could be wrought with annuals or
perennials, or with both. Remember
two points which may be called funda
mentals: White is the one great neu
tralizer or harmonizer in flowers and
gray performs a similar office In foli
age. Borders in which white flowers
and gray foliage heavily predominate
may have any and all colors In har
mony so long as they do not mix, but
have between them a mere touch of
white. Such a peace-maker is often
more necessary between shades closely
allied than in marked contrasts. Thus
with two shades of pink the lighter ap
pears washed and faded in close com
parison with a deeper and therefore
stronger hue. Even great masses of
white relieved by an occasional touch
of any color never appear monotonous.
beggary.
“You never, told me that you were
rich, that you were an heiress,” Rod
ney said to her a day later.
"Why should I have done so?” chal
lenged Evelyn modestly. “It
delightful to be loved Just for my poor
little humble self."
Crip Still O
liangingQnf
Back aches? Stomach sen*
aitive? A little cough? No
strength? Tire easily? All
after effects of this dread mal
ady. Yes, they are catarrhal.
Grip is a catarrhal disease.
You can never be well as long
as catarrh remains in your sys
tem, weakening your whole
body with stagnant blood and
unhealthy secretions.
You Need
PERUNA
It’s the one tonic for the after
effects of grip, because it is a
catarrhal treatment of proved
excellence. Take it to clear
away all the effects of grip, to
tone the digestion, clear up the
inflammed membranes, regulate the
bowels, and set you'on the highway
to complete recovery.
Perhaps one or more of your
friends have found it v^uable.
Ibousands of people in every state
have, and have told us of IL Many
thousands more have been helped
at critical times by this reliable
family medicine;
frtfrW iW h faU«t twT far nw rwTwIim,
Tli»F*ntamC*BpaBr, ColBah«a,OU»
To Be Exact.
“Do you mean to tell me that you
know all the latest dance steps?”
‘T wouldn’t say ‘all.’ Of course, I
don’t know what new steps have
been invented since I've been stand
ing here chatting with you."
STOP EATING MEAT IF
KIDNEYS OR BACK HURT
Take a Glass of Salta to Clean Kid-
neya If Bladder Bothers You
Meat Forma Urio Acid.
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble In some form
or other, says a well-known authority,
because the uric acid In meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked;
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
sorts of distress, particularly backache
and misery in the kidney region; rheu
matic twinges, severe headaches, acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and unlnary ir
ritation.
The moment your back hurts or kid
neys aren’t acting right, or If bladder
bothers you, 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 will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon Juice, com
bined with lltUa, and has been t
Jim
m
n .uaed
HER DREAM NOT FULFILLED
Cave Woman’s Desires Were Good,
But Humanity Seems Not Yet
Ready to Adopt Them.
Serviceable Tester for Seed Corrr.
A shallow box flied with sand makes
a serviceable testpr for corn. Near the
upper edge wirss or threads are
At night the cave woman lay awake
while her mate slept, watched the fire
light playing on the walls, listened to
the howling of the wolves.
"When all the wolves are dead,”
she used to think, "how good life will
become! My man and I will walk
where we will In the forest, and we
will be great friends, and very tender
and wise with each other. And what
children we shall rear, when I know
all the magic herbs that cure their
sickness and they need never die of
famine!”
With such dreams she smiled and
slept.
Well, all the wolves are dead. But
women do not yet walk freely with
men in the forest- Most men bid them
not gad about looking for wisdom and
tenderness, but stay by the campfire
twining scarlet berries In their hair;
and most women obey. And children
still die from famine and sickness, for
the world seeks more busily for more
scarlet berries than for food and heal
ing herbs.
But. bitterest of all to the dead cave
woman, though the world has concen
trated so extravagantly upon the
adornments she invented, it has for
gotten the meaning that set her whole
body glowing as her fingers twined
them In her hair. Those berries were
the badge of courage of the heart and
of the body; they were an invitation
to love and motherhood. These things
have had ao deadlier foe than ele
gance.—Rebecca West In the New Re
public.
Goethe a Product of His Time.
It would be as impossible now for a
man to be a great poet and a great
man of science, like Goethe, as for a
man to be familiar with the whole sum
of contemporary knowledge, as Dante
was. Devotion to science, in this
century, is necessarily followed by
some such experience as that which
Darwin uiidefhA’ent; the meticulous ob
servation of facts blunts all finer sen
sitiveness to poetry and music. Sci
ence means specialization, and dwells
on the multiplicity of phenomena;
Goethe wished a universal outlook,
and was preoccupied with that unity
which binds all to all. — Atlantic
Monthly.
stretched in both
a number of squat
with moist sand
these wires or t
sand the seed gra
ered to keep fro i drying out. It is
covered with
and tacked, o
din. drawn tightly
;h two-inch squares,
A plain, moist
directions, forming
The box Is filled
up to the level of
reads, and on this
laid, and cov-
each one numbei 1, are marked with
over the kernels, and a sack made for
the purpose and partially filled with
sawdust, about two inches thick, Is
placed on top of the doth and pressed
down firmly.
The tester should be placed where
It will he held at ordinary room tem
perature, or wanner, for five or six
days.
The ears frtHn which the four sam
ples—four, five and six grains—have
been taken should be arranged in sec
tions of tens to correspond with sec
tions of tester, and where they will be
led cloth is placed undisturbed after test is finished.
TENT CATERPILLAR
DOES MUCH DAMAGE
Insect Was in Great Evidence
Last Year, and Promises More
Destruction This Summer.
The apple tred caterpillar which was
in great evidence last year is promis
ing more destruction during the com
ing season. Prof. M. A. Cobb of the
agricultural department of the Cen
tral Michigan Normal school finds that
there are millions of egg masses fas
tened on the limbs of the fruit and
forest trees. These masses can be
gathered and destroyed at this season
of the year, and it will do much to
reduce the number of the pests that
come out next season.
Last year many orchards were near
ly defoliated by the tent caterpillar
and large apifle trees were found
which contained from two to fifteen
PARKER’S ~
HAIR BALSAM
Where Alexander Was Born,
British travelers at Saloniki may
easily make the excursion of a few
miles to the birthplace of Alexander
the Great— and whistle "The British
Grenadiers” while doing so if they
choose. But they will not find much
there, observes the London Chronicle,
The name of Pella still lingers in the
district, but the great Macedonian city
ui' Pella, where Alexander was born
111 a night of storm and portents In
•ttober iJ.'iii B, (',, lias vanished, ac
cording to the testimony of Mr, U. G,
Hogarth, who visited Its site In 1867,
"as though it had never been. The
plateau above the marsh, on which it
stood, is now plow land, where a few
fragments of marble and moldings and
many coins have been turned up from
time to time.”
Professional Acumen.
"I wonder why Nero fiddled when
Rome was burning."
“1 suppose It was because i;s thought
the critics would have other ‘hinga on
tents. Tha growers often burned them
out with torches before they had
: dliage on the tree, but
)rk in thickly infested
where the egg masses
•ed, that is the surest
way of reduclag the number of the
troublesome p
sumed all the
the difficult w
orchards and
can be destro;
Get
Don’t purcl i
seed. In nin!!,
highest-priced
cheapest. The
after all.
on plants, onc^
is Important,
good seed.
DIVERSITY DN FARM
IS MOST PROFITABLE
Opportunity Given for Crop Rota
tion and for Maintenance of
Fertility of the Soil.
(By ALVA BENTON, University Farm,
St. Paul, Minn.)
Farm records show, and good farm
ers agree in general, that diversified
farming is mo'st profitable- Diversified
farming means raising live stock and
various kinds of crops. Diversified
farming gives opportunity for crop' ro
tation, lor distribution of man and
horse labor, and for the maintenance
of soli fertility. All of these aPe es
sential to good farming. Crop rotation
aids in maintaining crop yields and
soil fertility: the distribution of labor
reduces the cost of operation; the
maintenance of soil fertility is tha ba
sis of all successful agriculture.
Diversified farming is of great im
portance because it gives the farmer
opportunity to carry out ail the best
farm practices.
Is your farming properly diversified?
about eighteen inches square, la made
entirely erf copper and fitted with a
small door on one side. It is support
ed on c. substantial brick pier, approxi
mately four feet in height, which
tapers slightly toward the top. Inso
much as the residence is a brick bunga
low, this type of mail receiver is most
appropriate. — Popular Mechanics
Magazine.
Good Seed.
iEse the lowest-priced
cases out of ten the
seed is by far the
seed doesn't cost much,
ir^portlon to the labor put
they start. A full crop
and possible only with
Least Frofitable Machi
In farm woi k the machine
the longest, 1 i years. Is generally the
least profltab e. This Is because it is
the number o t acres covered
rather than j ears in life, wh:
mines tbe pi otitableness of :
ment.
Provide
If the beddfli
the cows g(
loads of sa
forms, this
from being
Bedding for Cows.
:ng is used up, do no
without, but draw a
dust. With clean
oiaterial will keep I
died.
Cost of Farm Tractor.
In considering the cost of the trac
tor on the farm it is necessary to con
sider the items of operation, efficiency,
upkeep cost and possible length of
service.
Arrangement of Street Lamps.
A recent investigation of the rela
tive merits of parallel and staggered
arrangement of street lamps is most
interesting, since it discloses that from
an ornamental viewpoint the former is
preferable, while, from a utilitarian
viewpoint, the latter is preferable un
der certain conditions. By parallel ar
rangement is meant the placing of
lamps so that they come opposite each
other, while staggered arrangement
means that the lamps on one side of
a street are placed so as to come half
way between those on the opposite
side. In general, the staggered ar
rangement furnishes more uniform il
lumination. However, where the
street width is not much greater than
the distance between lamp standards,
the parallel arrangement is preferable.
In instances where the street width is
considerably greater than the spacing
of the lamps, the staggered arrange
ment will give the best results.—Sci
entific American.
Just to Help Out.
"Well! Well!” exclaimed Mr. Dub-
son to a flustered acquaintance who
rushed into a railroad station cann
ing two large suitcases. “Going away
on the choo-choo?”
"Oh. no,” answered the acquaint
ance, in a sarcastic tone. "My sole
ic’ea in buying a railway ticket and
lijtstening hither with all the baggage
I ct.uld stagger under was merely to
Increase the stir and bustle of this
great city.”
Indolence.
Hewitt—Gruet is a terribly lazy fel
low.
neys and stimulate them to
activity; also to neutralize the acids in
the urine so it no longer irritates, thus
ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts cannot injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent lithla-
water drink which millions of men and
women take now and then to keep the
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus
avoiding serious kidney disease.—Adv.
It has been estimated that It would
take ten years to write a detailed ac
count of the war up to the present
time.
SKINNERS
Macaroni or
Spaghetti
The Quality Food—the
tastiest, most healthful
and most economical
food that can grace your
table.
At All Good
Grocers’
the signature of
Paul F. Skinner
on each package and obtain a
set of Oneida Community
Par Plate Silverware free.
Write us for full particulars—
no obligation — and we will
send you also a beautiful 36-
page book of recipes—all free.
Write today.
SKINNER MFC. CO.
OMAHA, NEB.
The Largest Maeamnl Factory In America
EGGS
We are the lar^^ofA
hantllere of ECUS In
the South. What have
you to ship? The tU{h-
^rketprlceguj—
I an teed with quick returns Oive us a trial
Befereoee iBt National Back. Rlcbmopd Va.
WOOOSON'CRAIG CO., Commission Merchants
Dapt. B, Rlchiriondi
STANDARD of excellence
SOUTHE-RN . ,
OHATTANOOiGA BAK£RY
:c H atYa n oo g b ri n .
Agents Attention!