The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 September 1924 — Page 7

AFRAID SHE COULD NOT LIVE Operation Advised, But Lydia E. Pinkham* Vegetable Compound Made It Unnecessary Glasgow, Kentucky. — “I was rundown, nervous, with no appetite. My

Ii

rside had given me (trouble for five or |six years. At times |it was all I could do |to live, and the doc|tor said I couldn’t (live but a abort time (longer without an (operation. That was (two years ago. My I bis ter-in-law recommended Lydia EL Pinkham’s VegetaIble Compound. * She

had never used it berself, but she said one of her neighbors suffered just like I did, and it cured her. After I had taken four bottles the pain left my side. X bad a fine appetite to eat anything that was put before me, and I began to do all my work and my washing; something 1 hadn’t done for years. lam a draaamaker, and this last fall I began suffering with my side again, so I began taking the Vegetable Compound again. I am on my fourth bottle, which makes eight in all I have taken. I feel so much better when I take it and everybody tells me 1 look better. My appetite improves and I feel stranger in every way. lam a very nervous woman and ft seems to help my nerves so much. Mrs. Maggie Waller, Glasgow, Ky. THIS PRESCRIPTION FOR KIDNEYS No Drags—Just Roots and Herbs 6 Ounce Bottle, 75 cents Tears ago Dr. Carey said, “When backache comes get after your kidneys —and don’t waste any time.” “Kight at the start, go to your druggist and ask for Dr. Carey’s Marxhroot Prescription No. 777; take it as directed until hackache ceases and your eyes are clear and bright." For more than 40 years Dr. Carey specialized In di*-

eases of the kidney ! and bladder, and • when in the height j of his remarkably busy life he decld- *' ed to dispense his most effective kidney and bladder presc rl ption through tlie better | druggists.he helped * thousands who; could not afford to ; go to him for treatment.

DmM G. Caroy, M. D. Thousands of un observant people have kidney ailments and never know , It until too late. High colored urine. ! getting up in the night, find puffy eye* tell the story. If you even suspect—start today with ; I>r. Carey’s Marshroot Prescription No. I 777. It will drive the poison from your kidney* and your druggist knows ail about it. Ittuggists dispense lot* of tt. It come* both In liquid ami tablet form. It will help you a* tt has a host of other*. If tt should not. If you aren’t glad in one I week's time that you bought It, money gladly returned—Mod only 75c. If your local druggist hasn’t tt he can get It ' from the Carey Medical I-aboratorles at Elmira. N. Y. | Attention! Homeseekers Low round trip terra. Ovn or mor* oa j tick-L from CUkelaMtt. LonlaviUa or SL ; Loula TO TH* SOUTH. Ttcketa ooM on ftrat and third Tu«»day of **ch month. April X to f Dwrmbtr I. Inctuaiva. Katurn limit 11 day*. : Splendid oppor< unit Im for money-making ! or chart! a, dairy, truck and general fauna'ot ! low COOL Borine nnd factory altea. Long *rop Manana. Short, mild winter*. Good martlet*. ' Write: W. A. BBCKLER W. H. TAYLOR i Pm* Trwftie UaaMgee Pane. Trurtlc ManagM CtoeinwHl O. Wo*hln«tou. D. 0. •OOTHKKN RIIIWAY trtSTEM Must Produce Food Compulsory culttvation of food , rrtq»* ha* been ordered thraughtmt , several dv|iarttuente by the Peruvian | government, in view of the persistent drought in that country. The hacienda* and farms of the department of ; Inca and the provinces of Chaneay. ‘ Lima. <'alien otui Canete are required without exception to devote a mini- j mum of 5 jier'cent of their cultivated land* to the exclusive sowing of ar tide* of food. On/y Slightly Flat Speed—l» my tire flat? Fern—lt’* a little flat at the bottom, but the rent of it’s O. K. The foundation of every state to the education of Its youth.

Health k —----- -

YOUR STOMACH Th* rtotnaeh i* a cuokal-abapcd organ. ' in the left abdominal cavity. It prepare* food for abaorpticm into the blood by the ■mall intestine. It fanclton* auto- | mat k-* Uy. Diaorder* of the digeatiw «ye ten or indweretkmx in eating bring tuume takable 8. O. 8. aignaia from the •totnach. Belching go, Mtuea, dhunne** or biliouaUMS ar* tatawtiou* of stomach trouble. Many romedic* hav* been dmignedPto combat these condition*, bat one in par tKular has proven nnwmalty effective. Thia medicine (Jaqura* Capaatke) is readily obtainable at drag •tore*. It i« in caprate form and easy to take. Jaquee* Caprate* ar* inexpensive- dt» cents for a generous •apply. Y*t from the standpoint of the relief they bnng ar* worth many time* their eost. .If unobtainable from your drutfgiat. will be sent postpaid by the Jaoues Capsule 00.. Plattsburg. N. Y. lavSUNcliasKmbKdt M&WMSOV3 SYRUP * hrtaji astmtibi-r. «—>-*** . >3— M fowW* raw* my—■Hl lb IT at teatbin* f WdMl ■M time. Guatantawi sow V ’- kLHB gfj atmaieohcfaMall Wf gll aamfoSiagredb fl <**-*<«

The Lord of Thunder Gate

CHAPTER Xl—Continued. **lt is not that you are displeasing to me, but" —dissembling—"the place of a wife is within the panels of her husband’s house. I only take you because it Is the custom. Should I leave you behind, people would wonder." “I did not think that you feared what was said.” she said, looking wide-eyed st him. “Aren’t you the lord?” Wells nodded. "Hlsu said that you are master of them all . . . of us all . . . that I must anticipate your every wish." ”lt was well spoken." Wells stood up. “It is time for us jo depart. The servants are waiting. Come. O-Hana.” She must touch her kimono a moment. "Am I—do I 100k —Is my appearance satisfactory?" She ravished him. "It will do." he I saki without apparent Interest. i The household had awaited the dei parture of their master before emergj ing forth, and Wells headed the proi cession toward the village proper. I Soon the sen ants drifted off. one by | one. Ellen and Wells were alone in an ever-increasing pack of bodies. In the throng with them were artisans from neighboring villages, with their short blue kimonos marked rlVcularly on the back with the sign of their class or. If servants, the names of their employers; farmers with great, roughly woven straw hats la hand and bags of vegetables to be munched, raw, between sueb delicacies -as bampen or shredded shrimp, Ali Wandered noisily down the narrow Mreet and toward the outskirts of the vfllaga. As yet there was no moorland the night was black overhead. But there I was plenty «>f light in the street, for i many lanterns were lit and hung out- ; side, while many of the people carried ! iiyntvrns as well, long dim streamers of I fight brightened with painted flowers lor gay wordings. Townspeople Joined , the cnrnlvnlesqne throng. Girls and women threaded the way ! with brightness, punctuating the dark blue of the men with ruby-colored j robes, with warm browns or purples bound In by obis of ultramarine or carmine and gold. Some few of the better-class women, by order of their hushunda. masked themselves by ty’ng down over their cheeks the flexible brims of broad straw hats. The gay costumes were the wings of the giant 1 Moth, Killing over a turquoise sea. All I were laughing, all pleasantly excited. Wells nnd Ellen had been ou the i enter side of. the street before, but now were packed close to the walls of she ami by the newly erected toy IhmWis Ellen stopped, and smiled at a HWe cotton monkey, with blue head »nl red body, who hugged a bam- | boo rod. t « "That is O-Saru, the honorable I monkey." Wells said laughingly. "See I —under Min Is a little spring. Press it with your finger-tip ... no ... not like that . . .’’ And he must show her. hl« hand guiding hers. The honorable ran to the top of the md as the spring was pressed; the man and girl smiled at each other. "Let me try." Ellen insisted Two bends were close together as she fumbled for the minute spring, and was I rewarded when OSaru climbed bls ’ rod again. "It Is an expensive present." Wells told her gaily. “It cost three sen?" j “I urn a costly wife." the girl agreed ’ whimsically. “The mission-women said that In America many wives were j foolish, and sp«U their husbands' tnoney upon things unneedfuL" ' "I would get you all—" "All what?" questionlngly, lifting ber eyes to his. * “All of these toys you like . . . you ’ ran give them to the children after I . . See"—very quickly, covering rhe ■ nlmost-slip that he made—"there Is KobtkL the can»enter. Here." to the I shopkeeper, "give mo the weilmnde 1 sawyer from your honorable shop. * Ldoit. ’O-Hana. I push. him. See how be shoves the saw from him. instead | of pulling It to him as i» done In AmerInv** did n<H thlnk that she might tnd It strange that a casual traveler 1 such as Kayatua had been would observe such detail, nor did she wo«der Ist It "1 would like a dnll. Kn.vama-S.in." her eyes already selecting one from among the thousands displayed. She found one to her liking: no easy task. Thb* Is lovely ... It will be my baby." Ellen laughed contentedly. “1 had a Chinese doll with a rice-paste head when I was a child, but a beggar , Mote it. and. ao my ndrae said, ate the I- rice-parts- 1 cried for day* .. . Thank you for this one. Kayama-San." Laborers from the country, unaware that the village’s l-ord Kayama was In the street*, and. intoxicated by excitement so unaccustomed In their dreary days, unseeing of the Insignia upon ala kimono, brushed dose. Ellen pressed nearer to Weils, and they moved onward, with the major I current, which spewed away drippings Into the gyo-ya at Interval*. Vp the street, and over the little camelbacked bridge. Into a quarter so dark that the tree* seemed blot* of light rgnlnrt the darker sky. Well* was excited. The atlr, the Ensile, the happiness about him were Slowly warming him; all of the East era sounds awl scents and languorous, sensuous action . . . Unaware, Ellen was pressed even nearer to him. He could feel ths warmth of her arm against him. The street narrowed, moved more slowly. Once ar twice It stopped altogether, and the two must stand immovable. Ellen, less able to withstand the eager crowd behind, was pushed a balf-pace forward, turned, and was left pressed against Wefts, her foe* close to hl*. She smiled up at him. but was rewarded with nothing more than a blank look, a look utterly concealing the |An’aL^Sr h /pat urn

♦By SIDNEY HERSCHEL SMALT (Courriaht Mr Th* Bobbs-Mwrffl CoJ > The press of bodies became intense. • Wells, eyes upon the dancing girl, . heart beating painfully, head aswtrl > with the beauty of It all, passed bls arm about Ellen, the better to protect I her from the mass. Unconsciously, she j placed her hand upon his on the far t side. He felt the fingers tense and move. The dancer weaved nearer and near- ? er. a path cutting itself as If by magic i before her. In and out the danced, swinging, swaying, silk hissing upon silk, her painted face with twin circles i j of red. like lacquer, immobile, her eye* . downcast, her body only showing the : ecstasy which moved her. .j' Selected from the geisha-house as • I the most beautiful, lovely with the ■ gauzy fragility of youth, the way • opened for her as she advanced. It did not close behind, but remained a - fnnwise stretch of blackness, with the . j girt as the colored handle. She ap- . i preached Wells, and as her knees bent . | in homage against the skirt of her kir j mono he could see that they were i trembling. "Ael! eel! aei!" chanted the chorus. • She was the bud for the picking of , j their lord, Kayama. It was the springI time The buds were opening. In his i lordly arrogance and mercy he might j| honor the village by stooping to pick i the beauty of this flower which had II been created for him alone. She, most >. beautiful, would drag the hem of her i kimono for him through the streets 11 Well* knew that this was allegorir ml; be was not Intended to pluck this • ■flower—not at this festival—it was all emblematic of the devotion due him. • This Ellen could not know. The words > were so simple, the meaning behind ■ them so unmistakable, that she under • stcMMl. Her fingers curled about his * I As Wells dropped a coin upon the M grass- he saw the curve of Ellen’s i ’ cheek, and marked how flushed it was. I The geisha swooped upon the gold with a flurry of wide sleeves and ■ drat<ery, showed her teeth In a gleam ; Ing smile. The path closed behind her I j as she danced away. II Ellen drew a long audible breath. • “I . . . am glad that you did not —” > fl - jkk . iMuai m3wL.«r i -Ali! All! All!" Chanted the Chorus She Was the Bud for the Picking of Their Lord, Kayama. i ’ nnd gulped down the unspoken remain- ! j der. | “Did not whatF 11 No answer —a choked unintended sob instead He knew Knew It now! She did i love him. If she hadn't, she wouldn’t > have enred . . . Why not? Why not. Indeed? She 1 was his wife. He was the master. ■ i The lord. She understood that he was 11 the absolute ruler, that his word was • her command. That there remained nothing save willing obedience, even If ■ simulated. If she knew that be was white—he > i wouldn’t tell her. couldn’t explain • now. there was no time for that. The moon was high. The pyrfume melted i Into the air. Explanations at such s > time! Inside of him. somewhere, he reasoned that if. later, he returned to >| America with her. if all went well U when he went first for the accounting, >: she would forgive, since be had loved • I her. and «he him. Why should he watt? The biosanm* were dropping. What was It? That •as each wind departed, never to rej ’ turn, so with each nntnsted moment I r • • - And—why shouldn’t he live for htmp self? From all that had hapi>ened. II he betteved. so he argued, that the men who are happiest are the men 11 who succeed. The men who trample. » :

11 «>X*X«X<»X4>X«Z4‘X«X4>X4!X<O‘X4>X*X<O>X«>X«X>>X4>X4>X<frX*X«>X*X*X*X*X« i >' \ ’ ' Where Realization Beats Anticipation _____________

One at the moat delightful expertJencea that I know comes to me wben- , ever I leave the city and plunge for .ja time into the wilderness. It does not matter bow prosaic the trarndtion; ’ll may stumble, laden with baggage. Hto a hot and crowded train. In which . <todgy men are forever bowed over , •#*> sporting page and tired women are scolding peevish children and scattered fragments of their too generous lunches cover the floor; the train may . snort and fume it* tedious way , through leagues of suburban ugliness. I AU that does not matter. 1 can shut my eyes with the sense of a Weaned release, for 1 know that at the end ot the journey there la tranquillity, writes i William Chase Greene tn the North American Review. Long before 1 have actually reached the hUla 1 can feel I the breath of the pine forest, I can > feel the coolness of that first dip tn > the lake closing about me; already I 1 am standing at the edge of a cliff. i watching the doud shadows on the distant range.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

He had been kind and loving and grateful, what was his reward? Men . do not get what they give. It was the hard, passionate man who was rewarded, not he w|y> is tender, thoughtful, even unselfish. “Sbikataga nal," he muttered. It was written. Fated. Intended. The air was hot It seemed to hold him down; he felt a part of the throng, sharer of their impulses, their desires. Spring was in the air. The crowd felt It. Wells realized It. Ellen sensed j It —ail ecstatic. It was shadowy, unreal. His hand closed tightly over hers. Why wait? The servants were gone, the house upon the hill deserted. Wells bent his head so that htt mouth was close to her ear as be spoke. “Ellen . . . O-Hana ... let us return to the bouse! Now! Come . . . let us return to the house!” Ellen felt him trembling. Trem- ; bling Is Infectious, she began to trem- ’ ble also. , “Tes, yes, we will go to the house," she agreed in a quick whisper, not knowing why she said IL > CHAPTER XII Neither looke<| at the other. In Btlnctively Wells felt that which had whelmed him was overcoming Ellen also. One thought alone was paramount, and without companion, in Wells’ whirling brain. He was the lord. Ka-yama-San—or so she thought. The lord did not ask nor demand. He offer* a request, and thereby confer* j a supreme favor upon any one fortunate enough to be so designated. . . . j She had not argued, had not quibbled. and he saw In this acquiescence something beautifully touching. A ’ superb plea of nature appealing passionately against man’s crucifixion of purity upon the cross of sophistication ... he did not think of it tn these words ... he did not think , ... he was far beyond thought. He heard her breath come quickly, short and painfully. Thjit she already regretted her swayed decision he could not know. That she moved so silently because she knew nothing to plead that would have interested him. He was hot with the heady wine of pos- ; session. They repassed the high-pitched footbridge linking the miniature islands of ' a garden, repassed the flagged path , that half-circled a lotus-covered pond ; He did not look at Ellen, but saw her I white reflection in the water. Invol- ; untarily he took her hand, and so they walked onward, at last mounting the j finding path, shrub-bordered, that leads to the house of the Thunder date. Only one of the panels of the main room was open. They must pass close [ together through it. The hanging lamp had gone out. and ' only the tiny lotus-lamp of bronze with i its sputtering taper In the rape-seed I oil burned unsteadily before the secondary shrine There was no sound within, no patter of feet nor muffled laughter. v He could not see her conld only mark its oval. Very slowly he took her hands. He who had been so full of subtle reasonings, of arguments. of decisions, who had so yearned for action resultant In the loveliness of his companion being i drawn within the circle of his arm* ... be. the man of Impulses so foreign. I was silent and motionless as if chained. He heard the pounding of her heart . . . and thought it was his . own A great peace brooded In the j ancient house. Wells drew her hands together and. ! very slowly, as if moved by some mechanism within him. placed hl* I otlier hand upon her shoulder. e ' The moments passed. Neither spoke nor moved, except that once Ellen's head raised—perhaps an inch, mi more —so that each saw deep into the other’s eye*. Wells’ band pressed against her shoulder. They started . . . hearing the whistle of a blind woman In the streets; st long sweet call, platnilve; one sustained note first, then two short one* In another and lower key. To warn the passers to take heed for her sake, since she cannot see. Blind! Oh. more than bllndl Here, said the throbbing night, here was his Joy. his life and happiness. Take It. murmured the tree*, for the bloom Is ; soon gone from the fruit. Take It. t every heretofore subdued sense told him. for the night Is going . . . tt is the hour o* the Highest Star, the hour of love, of capture and giving . . . j and the night Is passing fart. ... < lie had no time for argument now. I He only knew that, trembling tn bi* half-embrace, was the girt that he loved, that the night wa* sweet and made for rapture. His heart whispered her name again and again like a litany. •to na coNTiMrao j

The peculiar delight of the adventure. however, is that realisation always •urpasaee anticipation That dtp in the lake Js always more deliciously cool than 1 had tmaetned; the stilb new of the mountain Vida the broken chorus of bird notes, the hushed voice of a hidden waterfall, the whiteness of the forest flowers, always overcome me with a new surprise. The very sense of remoteness, though eagerly expected, ’seems unexpected. Ancient CAmeae City An aerial survey of the land located near the present tower of I-Cbow, 60 miles southwest of Peking. Indicates ; that the site at one time contained a city of considerable importance antedating written history. tittle oa in Japan Japan gets nearly all of Its petrole am from th* United Sfatea and Europe, having flaw efi tads in its

Daddies EwmintrJSSz! Fairu 'tale MMy -GRAHAM-BOMMER eSS=3BS±===S=S=SrS3SSSs==S=S==s====S= RED BAT FAMILY “My children, the day* are over when you cling to me as I fly. “When you were Blittle babies and 1 went off hunting at night you held on to me, as I did not think you were old enough to be left at home and I had no one with whom to leave you. “Some mothers. I believe, have neighbors who come in and look after the children if they have to go out r Look After the * Bnt Mother Children. Red Bat has no neighbors she can ask to do this. All the other mother red bats are doing the same and I wouldn’t want to ask a stranger to care for my little ones. “Now you are old enough to be left alone. I will go and get some good food for you, though. “What would you like, my loves, mosquitoes, gnats or a little moth or two, or three?” “Oh, bring us some mosquitoes, please, dear Mother Ked Bat,” her three little children begged. “Mosquitoes I’ll bring, then,” said , Mother Red Bat. | She was apt to begin her marketing ; earlier than many bats did, and this was true of the whoie Red Bat family. They thought they bad a nice pick of good things to eat then. Mother Red Bat certainly could pick out delicious morsels, and how wonderfully she picked out what she wanted. She did not bother about seeing her food. She could tell by hearing and by a wonderful sense of- feeling when good things to eat were nearby. The children were very affectionate and playful and nice. Oh. a nicer liti tie family of red bats could not be found. Mother Red Bat knew that. When the children were left at home they played With each other and talked and laughed in their little Bat fashion, but they never quarreled. < Mother Red Bat knew they would I not get iato harm when she left them. They were old enough to take care of ■ themselves and they were old enough i to have a lot of good bat sense. ! They thought it was very foolish to quarrel. That would only make them unhappy, and they didn't want to be | unhappy. No{ they wanted all the Joy they ! could have. So they played and had a ! beautiful time. “Before long,” Mother Red Bat said, when she had come home from her 1 marketing and after they had bad a splendid feast, “we will have to think about our plans for the fall and winter. “We must go South. “Some may not know that bats are fashionable, just as the birds are, and that we travel and live in one place in the winter and another in the summer. “Os course It is not only because we i care about fashion. In fact, the truth is it is not that at aIL I “It is simply because we must be where it is warm. We don't like cold weather. It it gets cold here we would i simply curl up and go to sleep. “We know how to sleep, too! “But, my little loves." Mother Red Bat continued. “I heard some people saying unkind things about us this evening. /S’ X | “It hurt my bat / f ' feelings dreadfully. Didn't they , know I was destraying any num- A ber of their ene- \ 1 my insects? “They talked Z \ j about mosquitoes, I and how mosqui- Vy-— toe* bit them, and X then they said un- , kind things about Jy I bats. V X “Oh. I wished so I hatTbeen able ~| will Go and Ito speak the lan- Q e t some Food." ; guage of people for I would have said to them: “ ’People, we never do you any barm. We are not dirty, as you say we are, and we will not get into your hair, i -‘We are. though/ eating many. I many, many mosquitoes, and not only are we enjoying ourselves, but we are doing an enormous amount of good. "'Please, people, remember we are ; your friends, so please do not talk I about u* unfairly and unkindly.* “That is what 1 would* have said to ! them. But let u* all have another mosquito—one apiece—before we take a . nap. and that will cheer us up.” So the Red Bat family had jurt one more mosquito before bedtime came. Tommy Pushed Himself • While little Junior and hl* friend Tommy were playing in tbeir back yard. Tommy fell down and then ran Into the house, sobbing. Junior's mother questioned her little boy. “Junior," she asked, “did you push Tommy?" “No, ma’am.” came the ingenuous reply. “He je*’ pushed hisself.” Must Be Good Always “Charlie.” said a mother to her son. who bad been naughty, “you must be a better boy or you will never go to heaven.* I -And suppose I am real good and go there,” said Charles, “will I have to keep right on being good afterward r Night Air Teacher—Every day we breathe mtygen. WUlle, what do we breathe at night?

BROUGHT HOME FROM MEXICO ON STRETCHER

But Mrs. Herman Is Now in Good Health, Thanks to Tanlac. A few years ago Mrs, M. E. Herman, 215 Hitchings St., San Antonio, Texas, “returned to the states from Monterey, Mexico,” sbe says, “in such a low state of health that she fiad to be carried to her home on a stretcher.” As time went on and she still lingered in the throes of “Nerve exhaustion, stomach disorders and bodily weakness,” she determined, “on the advice of her druggist.” to try Tanlac, which she declares “brought back my health and strength after I had almost despaired of ever getting well.” The results of Tanlac In the case of Mrs. Herman, while indeed remarkable, are by no means unusual for

Useless Logic A ruse Is a blind, a blind is a shade, a shade is a shadow, a shadow’s a ghost, a ghost is a shade, a shade is a color, a color is paint and paint Is rouge. Therefore, by Euclid, axiom one. rouge must be a ruse. And, curiously enough, it is true, —Yale Record. Doa’t chuckle if ye* pat •▼era svbftitvta I whe* u Uvertued prefect it called far. Maybe year easterner will never cense back • *«■ Warm and Cold-Blooded Cold-blooded animals are those (mostly of the vertebrates of classes , below birds) whose body temperatures vary with that of the water or air in i which they live. Warm-blooded animals are those, such as birds and mammals, which have a relatively high and constant body temperature, usually considerably above that of the surrounding medium. Cuticura Soap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Chticura Soap daily and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum, and you have the Cuticura Toilet Trio. —Advertisement. There are men with whom you have to break the ice every time you meet; pretty good men, too.

„ Tfeast Foam If your children do not possess a keen appetite try home-made bread: they love iti flavor and need its nourishment. IlgwZffNiSwl '-i\ wF a Send for free booklet • 1 **T he Art of Baking Bread** <>*** Northwestern Yeast Co.

The Purist at Large We direct the attention of our grammar sharps to the flat statement by the editor of the London Saturday Review that “there are no such words in English as ’reliable’ and ’laughable,' and no scrupulous writer would use them or any similar compounds of 'able' with intransitive verbs." The above dictum was brought out by a letter from a corresopndent who said that the late provost of Trinity college, Dublin, did not like the word “reliable,” and one day at lunch ob served that since you cannot rely a thing, the adjective should be “reiy-on-ahle." “That," replied a friend present, “to a very laugh-at-able remark."— Borton Transcript. No work is bard If you like IL

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Tanlac, as many hundreds of people everywhere have testified to having taken the famous medicine with no less wonderful results. “I returned from Mexico,” said Mrs. • Herman, “so thin and weak that I feared my life was going to be cut short I could neither eat or sleep in a natural way and it seemed at times that heart palpitation and nerve exhaustion would take me away. “The makers of Tanlac will always have my heartfelt thanks, for It is to Tanlac that I attribute my recovery and present good health. Tanlac 1* like a blessing from heaven to me, that is the way I think about it” Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 Million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills, for constipation, made and recommended by the manufacturers of TANLAC.

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