L
THE EAGLE, BURNSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
Indigestion May Be
Due to Constipation
Neglect of Important Func
tion May Seriously Im
pair the Health.
Tliere are masy people who believe
they suffer from Indigestion when their
discomfort really is due to a constipat
ed condition.
Bloat, with its attendant mental de
pression, slck-headache, the belching
of sour stomach gases, etc., are fre
quently due to inaction of the bowels.
Relieve the congestion and the trouble
usually disappears. The use of cathar
tics and purgatives should be avoided,
however; these shock the system un
necessarily and, at best, their effect is
but temporary. A mild laxative Is far
preferable.
The compound of simple laxative
herbs known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin and sold In drug stores for fifty
cents a bottle, is highly recommended.
Mr. BenJ. Bassln, 360 Madison St..
Gary, Ind., thinks Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pepsin a wonderful medicine; for four
years he had a severe case of indiges
tion and constipation before trying Dr.
Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which he is
glad to recommend to all who suffer
BENJ. BASSIN.
with stomach and bowel trouble.
A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep
sin should be In every home for use
when occasion arises. A trial bottle,
free of charge, can be obtained by writ
ing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 203 Wash
ington St., Monticello, Ill.
Lacks Initiative. It Is a hopeless case when a girl be-
. your boy doing well in busi- gins to eat onions three times a day.
"I'm afraid not,” answered Mr. Cob
bles.
"I understand you gave him a good
start.”
“So I did, but he expects me to stay
behind him all the time and keep push
ing.”
STOP SCRATCHING!
RESINOL RELIEVES
ITCHING INSTANTLY
That itching, burning skin-trouble
which keeps you scratching and dig
ging, Is a source of disgust to others,
as well as of torment to you. Why
don’t you get rid of it by using Resl-
nol Ointment? Physicians have pre
scribed it for over 20 years. In most
cases, it stops itching Instantly and
heals eruptions promptly. It is very
easy and economical to use. Sold by
all druggists.—^Adv.
The Change.
“Was the fugitive bank officer the
cashier?”
"He was, but now he’s a runner.”
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties ot QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
r
in School.
“What arc the principal fruits of
history?”
‘I kn^^teacher; they’re dates.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the
original little liver pills put up 40 years
ago. They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv.
Quite Apparent.
“Did he marry his wife for hei
money?”
“Well, you don’t suppose ho took
her at her face value, do you?"
RKMARKABLU LKTrSB FROM A WELK
KNOWN WASHINGTON DRUGGIST.
:ferencetoSItxlr nabektbe^rvatram*^
lOTehilli
“Within the last Qre months I have sold S.eOC
tottlesof EUxirBabek,for Malaria,ChlUsaod
customers speak very well of It,
HenryEvan8,9SSPSt.,N.W-,WaBh
Kilxir Babek 50 cents all druggists, c
Parcels Post, prepaid, from Kioczewski A
Washington, D. C.
No Need of Outside Aid.
“Come with the boys tonight and
we’ll give you a'bowling time.”
“Thanks, old chap, but our new baby
attends to that.”
RHEUMACIDE FOR RHEUMATISM.
A few people still imagine that
Rheumatism can be cured by outward
applications, but the best medical
science today recognizes the necessity
of internal treatment to eliminate ex
cess uric acid and Rheumaclde doei
this. Your druggist keeps It.—Adv.
Certainty.
"Belle says she’s twenty-five. Do
you believe that?”
“Of course 1 do. She was at least
that much ten years ago.”
Plan Aerial Mail Service for Isolated Points
W ASHINGTON.—Aerial mall service to Isolated points in Alaska and
Massachusetts Is contemplated by the post office department. Bids were
asked for service on eight routes, seven of them In Alaka. October I is
named as the date for their starting.
The routes will be established,
the department announced, as much
to stimulate development of aviation
because of its relation to military pre
paredness as to improve tie mall
. service. The detartment believes
y. that efforts already begw to finance
-- aerial patrol of the Atlantic *
flAIL MAN,
Indicate ready capital will be found
for the mail service undertakings.
If the service Is successful, it is
announced, a gradual expansion will
follow the other routes where transportation is slow and inai'jequate.
The Massachusetts route Is from New Bedford to Nantucket, 56 miles
and return, partly by land and partly by water. Trips would be made 13
times a week during the summer months and six times in the. winter. An
aeroplane would have to be able to carry a weight limit of 3,000 mounds. The
present cost of the service Is $23,000 a year. X
The Alaska route forms a connecting link from Seward to^'ome, thence
to Fairbanks and back to Valdez. Most of them call for a savlce twice a
week throughout the year. On some of the routes the cost ^ as high as
$100,000 a year, and in winter six weeks is required to make the trip. The
aeroplane contracts allow two days for most of the trips. The longest route.
Valdez to Fairbanks, Is 358 miles. The extreme time limit of 'S'lx weeks on
some of the routes is required because mall sometimes has to oe routed via
Seattle.
Postmaster General Burleson has been assured, it was said, that capital
already is considering bids and that estimates are being made.
Is Washington a City of Snobs and Snubs?
T his is essentially the city of the soda! practitioner, of the climber, of
snobs and of snubs. Everybody is trying, by hook or crook, to better his
social position, which is as praiseworthy as an effort to better himself finan
cial' or physically. And yet the
climber is always a joke.
A woman whose husband has a
subcabinet job in the present admin
istration and who takes herself very
seriously In consequence, called up an
old resident the other day with a
“Good morning, -drs. Jones. How can
I get people like the Danvers to come
to my parties?"
The resident lady grinned a huge
grin into the telephone.
“Why, I’m sure I don t know. If
you aren’t acquainted with Mrs. Danvers and she doesn’t make
rn coik'to
that RtCE?™« 1
even if I
piDIt-TSET
AH INVITE —
by cum )
iETEA
Bears the
Signatnre of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
A doctor’s pills may cure some ills—
but not ill humor.
Sold Under
a Binding
Guarantee
Don’t stay Gray! Here’s
Old-time Recipe that Any
body Can Apply.
For Meat or Boiut
HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
I A LINIMENT^
For Cuts, Btuns,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, StiH Neck,
Chilblains, Lame Back,
Old Sores, Open Wounds,
and all Eternal Injuries.
:k,
Back,
Vounds,
Price 25c, 50c and $1.00
OR WRITE
■_ I UH wmrE
Ail Dealers
The use of Sage and Sulphur for re
storing faded, gray hair to Its natural
color dates back to grandmother’s
time. She used it to keep her hair
beautifully dark, glossy and attractive.
Whenever her hair took on that dull,
faded or streaked appearance, this
simple mixture was applied with won
derful effect.
But brewing at home Is mussy and
out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at
any drug store for a 50 cent bottle of
“Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Com
pound,” you will get this famous old
preparation, improved by the addition
of other ingredients, which can be d-?-
pended upon to restore natural color
and beauty to the hair.
A well-known downtown druggist
says it darkens the hair so naturally
and evenly that nobody can tell It has
been applied. You simply dampen a
sponge or soft brush with it and draw
this through your hair, taking one
strand at a time. By morning the gray
1 hair disappears, and after another ap-
j plication or two, it becomes beautifully
' dark and glossy.
1 Wyeth’s Sago and Sulphur Com-
I pound Is a delightful toilet requisite
i for those who desire a more youthful
! appearance. It is not Intended for the
: cure, mitigation or prevention of dis
ease.—Adv.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief— Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never
fail. Purely vegeta
ble — act surdy
but gently on
the liver
Stop after
dinner dis
tress-cure
indigestion.
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes-
?MAI.L PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Limited Education.
I.anlgan—Can yez wroite?
Flanigan—Yis, but Oi haven't
learned to read my wroiting yit.
Eczema Seven Years—Cured by Tet-
I had Eczema on my chest for seven
.rs and the torture was almost unbear-
of your salesmen offered
pay for the Tetterine if it did
me. I used less than tliree bo.xes anu am
entirely well.” Clem Klnard, Ruflln, S. C.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Itching Piles,
Dandruff, Ring Worm and every form of
Scalp and Skin Disease, Tetterine 60c.
Tetterine Soap 2oc. Your druggist, or by
mall from the manufacturer. The Shup-
trlne Co.. Savannah. Ga.
With every mail order for Tetterine we
give a box of Shuptrlne's 10c Liver Pills
free. Adv.
Sure Thing.
“Money doesn’t bring happiness.”
‘‘Maybe not. But it will help ycu
greatly in going after ft.”
Sudden Death
Caused bjr Disease of the Kidneys
The close connection between the
heart and the kidneys is well known
nowadays. When kidneys are diseased,
arterial tension is increased and the
' heart functions are attacked. When
the kidneys no longer pour forth waste,
uremic poisoning occurs and the per
son dies, and the cause is often given
as heart disease, or disease of brain
or lungs.
It id a good insurance against such
a risk to send 10 cents for a large
trial package of “Anuric”—the latest
discovery of Dr. Pierce. When you
suffer from backache, frequent or
scanty urine, rheumatic pains here or
there, or that constant tired, worn-out
feeling, get “Anuric” at the druggist.
It's 87 times more potent than lithia,
dissolves uric acid as hot water does
lugar.
After Grip Then—
Spring Fever ?
This Is the time of year to loofi
out for trouble! We feel weak—oui
blood seems hot—no appetite.—It’s
time to clean house! This is when
the blood is clogged and we suffei
from what Is commonly called a cold
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery purifies the blood and entirely
eradicates the poisons that breed and
feed disease. Pure blood is essential
to good health. The weak, run-down,
debilitated condition which so many
people experience is commonly the ef
fect of impure blood. “Medical Discov
ery” not only cleanses the blood of Im
purities, but Increases the activity of
he blood-making glands, and enriches
the body with pure, rich blood.
to you. I don’t believe It would be possible to get her to come ti
The near cabinet woman uttered an exclamation of disgui
know what's the good of the position we’ve acquired in W
can’t work it to get In with the kind of people I want.
A newly rich woman In town with a whole fleet of mott r cars and no
need of a nerve tonic breaks into many of the smartest homi s by
entirely her own.
She finds out when a motoriess friend, of assured social portion, however,
is invited to a swagger reception or ball, to which she herself
card.
She coos softly over the telephone; “My dear Mrs. Jenk^is, If you
any overtures
your parties.”
'I’d like to
ishington if I
t system
received no
going to the British embassy tonight won't you give
going with me in my car? I'll call for you at ten.”
The motorless matron fmneralli[ falls into the trap,
1 pleasure of
vicious that
she is making herself sociaTiy responsible for an arcs's|
entree.
Strange people of the least distinction who come
amazed to find themselves besieged with invitations and ati
pie of whom they have never heard. Tuft hunters stand no'
of . their Inviting. Most of them prefer a nod from a higher
a lower down.
The woman who is fighting her way into society suf
serenity and visits them In turn upon those less high in tl
self.
“You are giving a tea next Wednesday," a social
observes to another woman already securely “In.” "My invi'
astray in the malls, so I’m coming anyhow.” she sweetly insin
“Mother, why must I go to parties?" objected a young
with no tangoistic tastes.
"In order that you may be invited to other parties, my
cryptic reply, which was the keynote of the social situation.
STOP CALOMEL! TAKE
OODSON’S LIVER TONE
New Discovery! Takes Place of Dangerous Calomel—It Puts Your Liver To
Work Without Making You Sick—Eat Anything—It Can Not
Salivate—Don’t Lose a Day's Work! «
1 discovered a vegetable compound that does
the work of dangerous, sickening calomel and I
want every reader of this paper to try a bottle
and if it doesn’t straighten you up better and
quicker tlian salivating calomel just go back to
the store and get your money.
I guarantee" that one spoonful of Dodson’s
Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work
and clean your thirty feet of bowels of the sour
bile and constipation poison which is clogging
your system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that one spoonful of this harmless
liquid liver medicine will relieve the headache, bil
iousness, coated tongue, ague, malaria, sour stom
ach or any other distress caused by a torpid liver
as quickly as a dose of vile, nauseating calomel,
besides it will not make you sick or keep you from
a day’s work. I want to see a bottle of this won
derful liver medicine in every home here.
Calomel is poison—it's mercury—it attacks the
bones, often causing rheumatism. Calomel is dan
gerous. It sickens—while my Dodson’s Liver
Tone is safe, pleasant and harmless. Eat any
thing afterwards, because it can not salivate. Give
it to the children because it doesn’t upset the stom
ach or shock the liver. Take a spoonful tonight
and wake up feeling fine and ready for a full
day’s work.
Get a bottle! Try it! If it doesn’t do exactly
what I say, tell your dealer to hand your money
back. Every druggist and store keeper here knows
me and knows of my wonderful discovery of a
vegetable medicine that takes the place of dangex^
OU3 calomel
Salt From Hawaii.
One of the minor products of the
Hawaiian islands is salt, the output
for 1915 having been 2.400 tons, val
ued at $8 a ton. Most of the,salt pro
duced in the islands is the output of
the Honolulu. Salt company, whose
product Is confined to coarse salt and
manufactured entirely by natural evap
oration, no vacuum pans, kettles or
grainers being used.
RECEIPT FOR DARKENING
GRAY HAIR WITHOUT DYES.
Apply like a shampoo to your hair
and scalp Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer.
Do this every day for A week then
three times a week. In a short time
all your gray, faded, prematurely gray
or gray streaked hair turns an even
beautiful dark shade with not even a
trace of gray showing. Q-Ban makes
sqalp and hair healthy, leaving all your
hair fluffy, soft, thick and beautifully
dark and lustrous. Q-Ban is not a
dye, is harmless, and is sold on a
money back guarantee by drug stores;
big bottle 50c or sent prepaid by
Q-Ban, EYont St., Memphis, Tenn.—Adv
Si.i* fias no
Amenities of War,
The following is vouched fpr by M,
Excuses and Honeyed Words Fall on
H ereafter it win be a case of "Show Me” when society
the fashion centers of Europe with trunks packed with
latest creations and jewels and laces and other things, and
the customs house
.ngton are
ffes from peo-
;'>n the order
a gift from
ibooter often
Ion has gone
,;af Ears
return from
sorts of the
m they face
rs ill New
xcuses, hon-
ar' of allay-
s’ doubts as
cies subject
’'m deaf ears
York and other po“t;
eyed words and other
Ing the customs appi
to true valuations ol
to import duties, will
after this.
It is the intention" of the treas
ury department authorities to scru
tinize closely every trunk and parcel,
no matter how high—in the social
scale their owners may be, In order
to prevent smuggling and undervalua
tions. Every means will be used to put a stop for all time to practices par
ticularly Indulged in by wealthy society people to smuggle, or at least to
bring in articles on a much lower than their true valuation.
The treasury department officials here and in New York have arrived at
this decision as a result of the case of Mrs. Whitney Warreji of New York,
the wife of one of America’s most noted architects, who is fharged by cus
toms officials with bringing in dutiable articles under “gro^s undervalua
tions,” and whose case is being investigated by the New York federal grand
jury.
Whether an indictment against Mrs. Warren will be found or not, Federal
Attorney H. Snowden Marshal of New York has been requested by the Wash
ington authorities to institute civil suit against Mrs. Warren for the for
feiture of the alleged undervalued goods and for the collection from her ot
all penalties demanded by law. The department of justice and the treas
ury department are pushing the case vigorously and it is expected that the
investigation will be completed in a short time.
-Millerand, former French minister of
war. A French scout came suddenly
one day upon a German scout. The
German was standing by his dying
horse. “Why do you not shoot it?”
inquired the Frenchman. “I have no
pistol,” replied the other. The French
man drew his and was about to shoot
the horse, when be said: “But you
v/ould sooner shoot your own horse,”
and handed the weapon to the Ger
man. who gravely bowed, shot his
horse, and returned the pistol, and
then gave himself up as prisoner.—
London Daily News.
Henry James on Franco.
She has gardened where the soil of
humanity has been most grateful, and
the aspect, so to call it, most toward
the sun, and there, at the high and yet
mild and fortunate center, she has
grown the precious, intimate, nourish
ing, finishing things that she has inex
haustibly scattered abroad. And if
have all taken them from her, so ex
pected them from her as our right, to
the point that she would have seemed
positively to fall of a passed pledge to
help us to happiness if she had disap
pointed us, this has been because of
her treating us to the impression of
genius as no other nation since the
Greeks has treated the watching
world, and because of our feeling that
genius at that intensity is infallible.
Henry James, in “The Book
France” .Macmillan.
WISE HOSTESS
Won Her Guests to Postum.
Catch Question Baffles the License Dispenser
T he office of Col. William A. Kroll, marriage license clerk, is a favorite
hunting ground for "copy” and. for this reason, there geh«.rally is a news-
hound nosing around. This was the case the other day wthen a couple
approached the counter and asked for
two licenses, naming a different min
ister in each license to perform the
c- emony. With the .departure of the
bride and brldegroom-to-be, the ra-
porter walked over to take a look
at the book. It Is a common occur
rence for persons desiring to be mar
ried to have two ceremonies per
formed. but the newspaper man deter
mined to have some fun with the colo
nel.
"Hey, colonel, you’ve made a mis-
lake,” he said. “Here are two licenses, calling for two marriage cerfemonies.
Cor the same couule in each case you have the license issuen to the same
persons.”
“What's the matter with that?”
It was explained that, no matter which ceremony was performed first,
when the second ceremony was to be performed, the persons married would
have been married once already, and that, therefore, the record of the I’cense
issued for the second ceremony was Incorrect, in that it stated that both of
the contracting parties had never been married before and that they were
Miss and Mr. , where 'as the record should have read Mr. and
Mrs. .
The colonel is still wondering whether or not he made a mistake. Others
at the city hall have taken up the question, and as they are hopelessly
divided over th» facts In the case it is possible Chief Justice Covington may
he asked, in one of his few spare moo:''nt8, to settle the argument.
“Three great coffee drinkers were
my old school friend and her two
daughters.
“They were always complaining and
taking medicine. I determined to give
them Postum instead of coffee when
they visited me. so without saying
anything to them about It, I made a
big pot of Postum the first mornlng.
“Before the .meal was half over,
each one passed up her cup to be re
filled, remarking how fine the ‘coffee’
was. The mother asked for a third
cup and inquired as to the brand of
coffee I used. I didn't answer her
question just then, for I heard her say
a while before that she didn't like Pos
tum unless it was more than half
coffee.
"After breakfast I told her that the
’coffee’ she liked so well at breakfast
was pure Postum, and the reason she
liked it was because it was properly
Careless of Her.
Oh, say, who was here to see you
last night?”
“Only Myrtle, father.”
“Well, tell Myrtle that she left her
pipe on the piano.”
RELIEF HAS
BEEN PERMANENT
Sbji Cardui Built Up Sjstem When
Other Medicines Failed. Believes
It Saved Her Life.
Hendersonville, N. C.—Mrs. M. A.
Redmon, of R. F. D. 1, this place,
writes: “I wish to state that before
having taken Cardui, my condition of
health was all run-down, and had been
that way ever since my marriage two
years ago last May. I only weighed
107 pounds. My average weight is
135 pounds. 1 had such awful pains
at times I could hardly go... I had
severe pains in my bai l and abdomen,
and could scarcely^f 'my work,
could not lift an:
New York city’s net revenue from
saloon licenses amounts to more than
$12,000,000 a year.
“In November,^^VTl'began taking
Cardui. I thoughtWwould give it a
trial though my famw doctor,
had set the date for’an examination
of me... I saw my improvement after
taking the first bottle... I am getting
fat and well, and in March this year
I weighed 128 pounds... Your Cardui
tonic built up my system when all
other medicines failed. I feel and look
like a different person... I am still...
praising It to my friends,... for I can
'truly say I believe it saved my life.
My relief from all pain has been per
manent.”
It you are run-down in health and
need a tonic, take Cardui, the woman’s
tonic. It will help you.
For sale by all druggists.
A widow usually marries again just
to satisfy herself that No. 2 will prove
as unsatisfactory as No. 1 did.
Stop That Ache!
Don’t worry about a bad back.
Get rid of It. Probably your kid*
neys are out of order. Resume sen*
sible habits and help the kidneys.
Then, kidney backache will go;
also the dizzy spells, lameness, stiff*
ness, tired feelings, nervousness,
rheumatic pains and bladder trot^
btes. Use Doans Kidney Pills.
Thousands recommend them.
A South Carolina Case
Mrs. L. F. Tay
lor, Ford St., Mul*
Una, 8. C., aaya:
“My back ached
and pained rlgrht
across my kidneys.
The s e c r e 11 0 Ds
from my kidneys
paaaed irregularly
and contained aedi*
ment. I had attacka
of kidney colic and
suffered a w f u lly.
[Frlenda r e c o m-
'mended D o a n ■’
Kidney Pills and I used some. They re
lieved all symptoms of kidney trouble
and I am glad to recommend them.”
Oat Dsao'a at Any Store. SOc
DOAN’S
POSTCR-MILBURN CO,. BUFFALO. N. T.
Relievers'
Neuralgia
Nothing givu such quick reliri from
-riatica or rheumati»m _
Yager’s Liniment. It stops pain and
allays the inflan ” - •
YAGER'S
LINIMENT
lailon.D.'
At all dealers —An eight
ounce bottle ior 25c.
Prepared by
GILBERT BROS. & CO., Ine.
Baltimore. Md.
Ozark Mothers Used To Be
Afraid To Go To Bed At Night
Now Sleep Soundly Since They Have
Found a Sure Preventive
For Croup.
Many mothers, besides those of
Ozark, Mo., have been afraid to sleep
at night for fear of being awakened
by that dread croupy cough. Mrs. H.
H, Givan and Mrs. J. J. Cave, both of
Ozark, have found, in common with
many other Missouri mothers, that a
jar of Vap-O-Rub in the house in
sures a good night’s sleep.
Vap-O-Rub is the external treatment
for all forms of croup or cold troubles,
introduced here from the South last
winter. It Is in salve form and you
just rub it over the throat and chest,
covering with a warm flannel cloth.
The body warmth releases antiseptic
vapors that are inhaled with each
breath,!, loosening the phlegm, and, In
addition, Vick’s is absorbed through
and stimulates the akin, relieving the
tightness and soreness. Croup is usu
ally relieved in fifteen minutes, and a
good application at night will, in aV
most every case, prevent a night at
tack.
But let Mrs. Olvan speak for hqrselt.
She writes—“I have used Vick'# Vap-
O-Rub on my little girl for uroup.
I rubbed It on her chest and throat
and it is just splendid, and I wasn’t
afraid to go to bed at night.”
Mrs. Cave says—"I find Vap-O-Rub
the best thing I have ever usad for
colds, sore throat, croup and all kinda
of skin troubles for children. I could
not do without it now, as It savea
calling a doctor.”
The penetrative quality of Vick’a
makes it excellent also for Inflamfiiar
tlons ot the skin, such as bums,
bruises, itchings, piles and muscular
soreness. In these cases, particularly
in cases of burns, it seems to draw
out the inflammation and has a de
lightfully cooling effect. Three sizes.
25c. SOc or $1.00. The Vick Chemical
Company, Greensboro, N. C.
Gsnuln
“I have been brought up from a
nervous, wretched invalid, to a fine
condition of physical health by leav
ing off coffee and using Postum.
“I am doing all I can to help the
world from coffee slavery to Postum
freedom, and have earned the grati
tude of many, many friends." Name
given by Postum Co., Battle Creek,
Mich.
Postum comes in two forms;
Postum Cereal—the original form—
must be well boiled. 15e and 25c
pkgs.
Instant Postum—a soluble powder-
dissolves quickly in a cup of hot wa
ter, and. with cream and sugar, makes
a delicious beverage instantly. SOc
and 50c tins.
Both forms are equally delicious and
cost about the same per cup.
‘There’s a Reason” for Postum.
—sold by Grocers.
He Threw Calomel Away
Wm. S. Prinesof Binninsiism, Al*., writes—"I w
and kidney trouble. I tried calomel and the doctors, for about a month. Finally 1 triad
Dr. Thacher’s Liver and Blood Syrup
and the first bottle relieved me very much. lam sound and well.caneat anythins.” Tbosa-
andsof others sufferina from liver, kidney, stomach and bowel trouble have been quickly le-
llevedby this wonderful remedy which builds up the entire system. Sold at all druirsrists, 60e
and $1 per bottle. Madeby THACKER MEDICINE COMPANY. Chattanoo«a. Tenn.
TRY THE OLD RELIABLE
^iHTERSMlTH’s
i1 Chill TONIC
Wanted! Yon take no risk when buyinf
STEWART’S WASHING CRYSTAL
For MALARIA
A FINE GENERAL STRENGTHENING TONIC
Bast by setuai test. Discards washboards, saves
t me and money. Dou&awivas happy, simply amazed
at results Chief ineiedlent used guarenteed under
niirefood and drufact, no acidit. positively harm-
clothes. Absolutely supreme. Oizantiesue-
KODAKS & SUPPLIES,
y S. Galesld Oftical Ce., IUchae»J,Va.
W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE, NO. 15-191$,
it