2
SURE SiGN. Trouble wlLa the kidney wcrxioiA Is a certaia"sJgn that your kidn-rs are j B deranged and that yo-j should use Do&ns Kidney Pills. They cme al! ir- regularities and annoyances, remove | backache and side pains and restore | tb«; kidneys to hetltb. ; Charles Cole. 204 X. Buckeye St.. loin. " Kans., "«ys: "Tbe kidney secrctions were I r r e g u l a r , scanty and painful and contained se*ii- 1 xnent. My back was stiff and lame and my limbs swelled. 1 grew weak and discouraged. Doen's Kidney Pilta re- moved these troubles entirely. I have been well lor two yenrs." [M® ROBERT , U (, AHBS )• bewet ULltiTRKr/mW Mr' MITOU corrtuc+r /»e* wr A.C fffCLuMC * Co. SVNOPS18. The atcry o^eas with tb; ablpwr?elt of I the M e a n o n whlrh Mia* j (>-•11.- ma Amertemn liHrm. I w i Wln- tlirot»e. an Er:)(li«n«njnn. *nd Tom HI»W»- bruaxiue Americ an, were pa**» ns«-r*. Remember tbe n.m*-Doan«. Soid | by all dealers. 50 cenis a box. ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. A LONG WAY BACK. Fos- George—There's Miss Passay. '7?*r- iiV*, W'J4 She Harry—Why, I've kisseO ner myseir. years ago. She means not since sb) can remember. ITCHED FOR TWELVE YEARS. Eczema Mads Hsnds snd Feet Swell, Peel and Get Raw—Arm* Affected, Too—Gave Up All Hope of Cur*. I drowned. B!iike recovered trr.ro a diunl"- , ci; uti.p<»r H ukt. »ltur.i>u on the boa*. I because oi hla I us#bii»ss bf t w * l.«-rr> . 1 a* prmmr of the helplr-a pair. Tbe i Ei.(!l«'.min waa suing tor the hand of j ! MI m Blake started 'o swim back : ] l a the -hip to rwovtr wba. «i^ '"-ft. : RUkt returned safety- WInthrope waated I i l.ta last match on a «i*arette for «1 Ich !ft**ci acred l»\ Iliake. Their fli»t m'al *i. a dead fish The trio started a ten I mile hike (or Msrher land. Thi"t at- | lacked them Bi-i" waa coioi^-ed to | tarry Mlaa Leslie on account of weari- « tieaa. He t*unt«4 WInthrope They en- | ! tered the Juii*!e. That -iijlit *•» P*a»«l I ! roosting high In a tree. Tr.e nrft man- . they dr«cer»ded to the open ***'"• I ree constructed liala to shield them- selves Itotn the iuk. They trien t*astwfl on roroauuta. tbe only nro« irable food. M.»» ;>e»!le allowed a llklnr for bit deteet«-d !.ta rouahneae l«ed by Blake thev established a T.rrne In aopne cliffs. Blake found a freeli water aprinx Mlaa r^ali* fa. «-d an unpleaaant aituatlou. They planned their c*ri.pal*n. Btaka re- eorered hU nun»yor i macnifyina thu» Inetirinc flre He Rj»rte«: a JOaK" #•- t. »Hri •.nn*«si kml «mr Pi* erlna aeveral ifliU. In the |*<<pard a <ax- em they bulU a nimll home, rhey Rained the t liff» hy burning the. bottom of tree until It fell aaalnat the heiiihw. The trio a*< ured » xk « from the «Itffe. • UK th AlT thf Qukkiy Cured by Cuticura. "I suffered from enema on my bano.' arms and feet for about twelve years, my bands and feet would swell, sweat and Itch, then would become callous and get very dry, then pe«l off and get raw. 1 tri^d most every kind of salve and olnt uest without CHAPTER XI.—Ccntinued. Miss I^eslle slKhed. Why did you speak of tbem? 1 am still liungry enough to «-at n ore eggs--a doxeu®- that Is. If we had a little salt and bat- ter."* "And a ellver cup and napkhvs! Silded BluUe. "About salt, though, we'll have to get some before long, and some kiod cf vegetable food It won't do to kVep up this who' - meat menu." "It only those Utile bamboo re.-outs were as good as they look—like a kind success. I tried several doctors, but of asparagua!" murmured MIm l^slie at last gave up thinking there was a care for ecxema. A friend of mine insisted on my trying tho Cuticura Remedies, but I did not give them a trial until I got ao bad that I had to do something. 1 Becurt-d a set and by the time they were used 1 cculd Bee a vast improvement and my bands and feet were healed up ln no time. I havo had mo trouble alnce. Charles T. Pa., Mar. 11. 1908." Cbem. Corp.. Soia Prop*, Bo*aa bad J O troub] RauAr. Volant, l>ouer«l>n!f a Cbc A City Clerk's Garden. "I've heard that the Chinese eat them.' said WInthrope. "Th«y oat r«*ts, too. - ' commented Blake. "We mlgfc*. at leas' try tbem." per stated Miss I^eslie. 'How? Raw?" "1 havs heard jwpa tell of roasting corn when he was a boy." "'That's so: and roasting-tars are better than boiled. Win. 1 guess we ll have a sample of bamboo asparagus a la Les-lee!" WInthrope took tbe penknife and fetched a handful of young ssprouts from the bamboo thicket. They were Deatea over iii-. umid w, "" grffx> Ikrsnrha* » raw. "Say." mumbled B'ake. as he rum- inated on the last shoot, "we're getting on some for this smell bole of a coast house, and chicken >anch and vege- " i V % / £ He at Once Began Experimenta in the Art of Pottery. thai locked like brown liema of expatiating on his garden to hla oifH. who. however, were never i taken home to see it. but^ were \ .under the impression It was of ensr "moua size. Five of them resolved to have a look at It. dlacovered his ad- dress. and called one Saturday after- noon to ace the hundreds of roses all a-growlng and a-blooming. On being taken to the rear of tbe house, judge tables in our front yard. V\f ve got of their surprise on seeing a back ; old Bobbie Crusoe beat, hands down, yard about 12 feet by ten feet. One I on the start-off. and he with his shipful bold spirit ventured tl«*i It w-as not very big. "Big!" replied the proud owner. pointing to the sky. "Why. man. alive. look at tbe height of it!"—Chicago Dally Socialist. just because we've failed to stick out ! streak a slfcr.a! that'd catch the eye twice ; tlte." as far off as any o^ber color Than scar- let. Do you suppose 1 worked my way • up from axman to engineer, and did not learn anything about flags?" "But it is ail really too absurd'. I do not know the first thing al»out »ew- Init. and I have neither thread nor needle." \ "It's up to you. though, ir you trant ' "..^V My t'.Zi-?r nslvhtv soon half ! a"tf, iuc>' )<U1 uvu to COiit i time you learned— There, now; I did not mean to hurt your feelings. You've CHAPTER Xil. 9urvivtl of the Fittest. '.IE neyt four days slipped oy almost tmheeded. Blake turna knotting them up Into some I sort of a rope-ladder. I'm getting | mighty weiry of hoofing It all around ( the point every time I trot to the rl* j er. After this I'll go down the cliff j at that end of the gully " WInthrope. who had become •very j irritable and depressed during the last | two days, turned on his tee!, with the j j look of a fretful child. To cover thla undiplomatic rude- ness, Miss Leslie spoke somewhat hur- I rledly. "But why should you return j again to the river. Mr. Blake? I'm sure f you are risking the fever; and there | must be savage beasts ln the Jungle.' I "Thau my business," grovled Blake. He paused a moment, and added, rath- er less ungraciously: "Well, I* you care. It's this wsy—I'm going to ke?p j on looking for ore. Give me a little iron ore. snd we'll mighty socs have j a lot of steel knives and arrow-heads that'll amount to something. How're j we going to bag anything worth while j with bamboo tips on our arrows? j Those boar tusks are a fizzle." "So you will continue to risk your j lire for «j«" I think that is very brave i •w. nuw„' -* "How's thxt?" demsnded Blake, not a little puzzled. He was fully con- scious of the risk; but this was tbe first intimation he had received or conceived that his motive** were oth- er than selfish—"I'm m! So that's the ticket. Getting generous, eh?" "Not getting—you are generous! When I think of all you have done for us! Had it not been for you. I atn sure we should have died that first day ashore." "Well, don't blame me. I couldn't have let a dog die that *ay; and then, a fellow needs a M - . !-Ylda> f« r this sort of thing. As for you. 1 haven't always had the luck to be favored wi;h ladles' company." "Thank you. Mr. Biake. 1 quite ap- preciate the compliment. But now. must put on supper." Blake followed her graceful move- m*-nta with an lntentneas which, in turn, drew Winthrope's attention to himself. The Englishman smiled In a ] disagreeaMe manner, and resumed his work on th-^ bows, with the look of one mentally preoccupied. After sup- per he found occauion to ppeud some j little time among tbe bamboos. When at sunset M!»s I^eslie with- drew Into the baobab. WInthrope somewhat officiously Insisted upon j h?r S"? •«• iwii tr. the i entrance. As he di»l «>, he took the ] opportunity to hand her a bamboo ALCOHOL""3 PER CENT A\vf< tabic Preparation for As - SHIM W I ting the Food and Re £UTA hagtoStoaads and Bowels of IxkAN 1j'CHILDKL V fz Promotes Dtgestion,Cheerful- urssaodRes! Contain* neither Opwm.Morphine nor Mineral NOT X A B C O T T C r * o u orSAwamartM Mm Jani •• \ -fmJt, - J J~U GAST0R1A For Infanta and Cbl^Jreiu Ths Kind You Hara Always Bouj Bears tha Signature of fj , • I - I* r r*d » fmw Apertrtt Remedy forCooshps^ lion Sour Stomach.Dtarrheej S C Worms,Convulsions Fever i sh- ^5, ness and Loss OF Sleep Fat SiwV of The Ccntaur Compakv. NEW YORK R For Over Thirty ranteed soder Ihe Food Copy of Wrappsr. IniOTIIDII l U H O I U I I I R J L'.. DETROIT, NO. 32- Two OH, MY! r kllla _ »la a«-«*«ew ••tlx peculiar He way She—What's that He—She won't tear ter, even after ehe'B wrote it. « on. an up a lovo let forgotten who only himself but fcis companions bad work to occupy every hour of day- light. When not engageo In cooking made a fair stagger at cooking, ami j f-^ej gathering. Miss Lrnlie was The Force of Habit. One of the campers had done some- thing peculiarly Idiotic, and the dean aaid: "Dick reminds me of Thomas' colt." "What about Thomas' colt?" asked Dick, cheerfully. "Why." the dean responded, readily, "where I lived In Maine when 1 was a boy an old man named Thomas raised horses. He once put out to pasture a colt, which haJ been fed Irom its birth in a box stall and wa- tered at the trough in tbe yard. 1 UV ** river, and in the middle of the dfty the eolt swam the stream to go up to the barn-yard for a drink of water."— Youth's Companion. Wonderful. "This is a remarkable world!" ex- claimed O'Brien. "1 was walking down tbe street this morning and I met a man I hadn't seen for about twelve years." "Yes." rejoined Murphy, "it Is a re- markable world. I lost had an experi- ence much like that myself. 1 waa walking down tbe street not ten min- utes ago and 1 met two men—two. mln"! you- that I'd never met before." I of stuff for handicap!" "Then you believe that the situation 1 looks more hopeful. Mr. Blake?" "Well, we've at least got aa exten- | slon on our uote for a week or two. But I'm not going to coddle you with a lot of lies. Miss Jenny. There's the fever coming, sure as fate. I may stave it off a while; you and Win, ten to one. win be down in a few days— and not a smell of quinine in our commissary. Then theie'll be dysen- tery and snakes and wild beasts— No; we're not out of the woods yet, uot by a—considerable." tbrope, "1 must say. you're not very encouraging." "By Jove. Blake." muttered Win- al! about rour "Didn't say I was trying to be." What else? "But. Mr. Blake. I aui sure papa will I "X—I see what you meant. niter a lwrro reward when the steam- I that nothing of what I learned er is reported as lest. There will be [ be of service now." ships searching for us—" J "Boarding-school rot, eh? And We re not iu the British ihanneli. t Wlnthiope?" and I'll bet what few boats do coast : .- lf you would Wn4l iy name along there don't no*.- about much , wha( you havt , , n m j n d." among these coral reefs." I bet you win out on the dressmaking. For needle you can use one of these long, slim thorns—poke a hole, and then sllp*lhe thread through, like a shoemaker." "Ah. yes: but the thread?" put In WInthrope. "The cocoanut fiber would hardly do." said Miss Leslie, forgetting to dry her eyes. "No. We could get fairly good fi- bers out of the palm leaves; but cct- gut will l»e a whole lot better. I'll silt up a lot for you. fine enough to rew with. And now, let's get down to tacks. No offense—but did either of you ever learn to do atA-thlng useful in an your blessed It'tle tt-esr* "Why, Mr. Blake, of course I—" "Of course what?" demanded Blake, as Miss Leslie hesitated. "We know- cooking and sewing. learning .by painfui experience the ru- diments of dressmaking. At the start she had all but ruined the beautiful skin of the mother leopard before Blake chanced to »ee her and took over the task of cutting it into shape for a skirt. But when It came to making a waist of the cub fur. he said that she would have to puzzle out the pattern from her othex one. Between cooking three meals a Jay over an open fire, gathering sev- j eral armfuls of wood, and making a j dress with penknife, thorn, and cat- ; gut. the girl bad little time to think ! of other matters than her work. WInthrope had been gazetted a s j hunter iu oidinaiy. Ills task .vas to keep Miss Leslie supplied with fresh j eggs and each day to kill as many of . several double-pointed bamboo Btakes which he had hiddea under the litter. "What III i t ? " s h e asked, troubled by bis furtive glance back at Blake. "Merely precaution, you know." he whispered. "The ground In there is quite solt. It wii! be no trouble. I fancy, to put up the stakes, with their points inclined toward the entrance." "But why—" "Not so loud. Miss Genevieve! It struck me that If any one should seek to enter in t'#e night, he would find these stakes deucedly unpleasant. Be careful how you handle them. As you see. the sharper points, which are to be set uppermost, run off into a razor edge. Put them np now. before it grows too dark. You know how nine- pins are set—that shape. Good-night! You see. with these to guard the en- trance. you need not b«* afraid to pn to sleep at once." 'Thank you." she whispered, and But Net Evelyn—I saw you in bathing this morning. George. It » funny you didn't see me. George—T didn't expect to. Kvelyn- i was sure you a«w iu« al one time. 1 was standing close by you on the beach. oeorge—v»u, >e» » j " " "* j uu ' bathing suit. TOILET ANTISEPTIC NOTHING LIRE IT F O * THE TEETH Good Evidence. -When she hit him with the golf ball, did It knock him senseless?" "1 guess so. I understand they are soon to marry."—Central Methodist Advocate. A feeling of aecurity and freedom from anxietv pervade* the home in which Hamlin* Wizard Oil ia kept i-nnatantly on hand. Mother* know it can always be depended upon in time oi need. The good we do is an excellent anti- dote for the ill we think. removing taitar rroai inc teutn. all (crau at docay and daaaaa wluca •ootn p n f n r i t i o n cannot do. I M L MOUIH and throat, punfia the breath, and lulU Aej wiach collect ia the mouth, o n n a g « * • bad teeth, bad breath, gnppc. aad mach l THE EYES •ctacved and rtreafdkcncd by Pa 41 I fear would you, over ihe boobies and cormorants as he began to thrust the stakes into the could skin and split for drying. Blake j ground as he had directed, had changed his mind about taking I He had not been mistaken. The him when he went for cocoanuts. In- ; vague doubts and Tears which she al- stead. he had gone alone on several ready entertained would have kept her DODDS KIDNEY j PILLS Js CATARRH gammatioa aad -op ihe discharge. Et m a wmm n a i d y l o t w U n n a c a t a r r h . Paxtise ia a harmlea* yet powerful c<3ant a».*i d t u d o u a . ta bathaag it doOoyt odou aad leave* the body antueptkally clean. rem SALE AT DRUQ STCRCS.OOc. OR POSTPAID BV MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! TMC PAXTOet TOtLST CO.. BOSTOSC Nothing Like • H«a n t f hit! c..!s. then a Tittle salt from the sea- j thanks to the seuae oi security af- sbore. dlrtv but very welcome, and j forded by the sword-bayonets of her last of all a great Jump of clay. | silent little sentries, the girl was wrapped in palm fronds. Every package of Post Tcasties Contains a littj^ book— "Tid-Bits made with Foasties." A couple of dozen recipes I mare- Of fascinating dishes, A help in entertaining Home folks or company. u b Pkgs. 10c and X 5c— At grocers. "I fancy it would do no harm to i erect a signal." aald Winthrope. "Only thing that would make a ; •how is Miss Leslie's skirt," replied Blake "There ta the big leopard skin." per- sisted WInthrope. To his surprise the engineer took the suggestion under serious consideration. "Well, ! don't know." he said. "If we bad a water background, now. But against the rocks and trees—no; what we want is white. I'll tell you—when Miss Jenny sets to and makes herself a dress or that skin, i ii ny her iklii to the zephyrs." "Mr. Blake! I really think that Is eruel of you!" "Oh. come now; that's not fair! I wouldn't have nald a word, but you j said you wanted to help." "! hes your pardon Mr. I V U 1— I did not quite unuin aland ,^u I really do want to help—to do my J Dot only it clothe vay on n Look at i loo. Ins Miss "In ou're talking! Ye a question of tbe i. We've got to ceding new ones I ny pants and vest, de a month we'l In hiding. Tha 1 tie meantlmi meantime we're I or two ot beiag We've signal, but figure any ,-efore long. J somel , and Win's j mean : all be it there i*'s a Joke, stews J son ' f—'" beean vouri "Um!" grunted Blake. "Well. It's J first of all a question of a practical- practical. mind you,—knowledge of metallurgy, ceramics, and bow to stick an arrow through a beef roast." -I—ah—1 believe I Intimated that I j have some knowledge of archery. But | I doubt—" "Cut It out! You'll have enough else : to do. Get busy over those bows and | arrows, and dpn't quit till you've got them In shape. Leave my bow good and stiff. 1 can pull like a mule can [ kick. Well. Miss Jenny; what Is it?*' ••la not—has not ceramics some- thing to do with burning china?" "Suee!—ch»ca. pottery, and a't tha.. ! Know anything about it?" "Why. I have a friend who amuses herself by painting china, and I know It has to be burned." • And that« all!" grunted Blake. -Well, let me tell you. When 1 was a little kid I used to work in a pot- tery. All I ran remember is that they'd tak-: clay, shape it into dry it. and bake the thing Ii. a kiln. With this clay he at once bogan ex perimcnts in the art of pottery. Hav- ing mixed and beaten a small quan- tity. he molded it into little cups and bowls, and tried burning them over nlgbt in the w atch fire. A few came out without o-aek or flaw. Vastly elated by this mccess, he fashioned larger vey.iela from his clay, and wi'.fa- in tf-e week wiuld brag of two pots suitable for • -o>>cg e'en e r and four large nondeseripl pieces which be called plates. What was more, all had a fairly good sand slaze. for he had been quick to observe a glaze on tbe bottoms of tbe first pots and bad soon able to calm herself, and was fast asleep long before Blake wakened WInthrope. Immediately after breakfast. Blake —who had spent his watch in grind- | ing the edges from a stone and ex- | perimenting with split and bent : twigs—put Winthrope's keys in the fire, and began an attempt to shape ! tbem into a knife-blade. To heat tbe steel to tbe required tem»jerature. he used a bamboo blowpipe, with his lungs for bellows. Winthrope turned away with an In- ' I different bearing: but Miss Leslie j I found herself compelled to stop and I admire his dexterous viae of bis rude : Guar* 1 * them in the vvorlcL C A S C A R E T S &e biggest seller—why? Because ifsthe^rrf medicine foe the livet and bowefc. what they will do ior you—DO* we say they will do—that CASCARETS famous- MiKons mm CASCARETS and it » ail the] that they ever need to take. CASCARXT* ioe a boa foe a wrtll treatment, all dra|gtua. >n tbe world. M-iTHoe b SICK HEADACHE I CARTERS ilTTLE P o s i t i v e l y c u r e d by these Little Pills. Tbey alao rellera Dia- treaafr-xa Dj»pevela. la- dlffeat Kin and Too If* art y Sating. A perfect rem- edy tor D:«lneae, Kan- •ea. Drowaineaa, Bad Taate io tbe Moutb. Coat- ed Tunjrr>e. Pa.a ia tbe Side. Tt)»PlX> UVW. More Thar Two Million Users NO STROPPING NO HONING KNOWN THE WOttLDOVZX DAISY FLY KILLER Tbey regtilate tbe Boweia. Purely \egetabie. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. to work the same game ow. Ihis kind of eating will dysentery in short order. So K going to be a bean-pot for our or Tom Blakell know the rea- *hy. Nurse up tha' ankle of Win. We'll trek It to morrow— reasoned out that it was due to ihe ' tools, sand which bad adhered while they I stood drying In the sun. He next turned his sttentlon to met- allurgy. The first move was to search tbe river %ank for the brown bog iron «ir wum.u i*> he bad seen fron" the farther side. After a dangerour and exhausting day's work I d the mlr»r and Jungle, be came back with nothing more to show for bis | to pains than an armful of creepers. IJtte in the afternoon, be had located the .TO RK eON-TINt'KD haw: strej to < poee . onty to thin that enough id It for lying in a -ouid not hope practical pur Always I Iflht In the Sky. "The sky." says the Scientific Atuer- | ican, "Is never dark. This, however U .lot due to the sun but to the -stars. I The Milky Wsy Is sbove the borizofi ! in summer in our latitude, snd It xl*e* I a great deal of light by nlgbt, enough | make tbe nlgbt aky of that tune J brighter than when It is not a part of oar night sky, as Is the case in winter. The*, too. tbe stars which i cannot be seen by the unaided eye [ give us much light. The staia which are not visible to (be eye glre more light than those which are visible." [CARTERS W IVER |1% S - Genuine Mutt Bear Fac-S<mile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. DRJ.D.KELL ASTHMA REM >KK THS lilt It AT Alaska- Yukon-Pacific Exposition Coa*iuitF I'.IT: yon ii like n- Seattle, the "Gem of tbe Coast" VerrKine 'er • I .©3. P*»4 l ive In Seattle aod he Hapfnr. 41? Safer.. BMc . Scania. Wa*. Lack a®* WI2 roa THE. , em wei Mtutr OF 'asthma a may fever *ouk omjcasr * ASn-IHRIfiATXIt-tAW , water .-l#l»t. Sae waupr^^da. t • ut ei fai: ked Th« riv be fa- from t.#ok it I i of the n," he added, after telling of ure. "Pass over those keys of Win. (rood' Now untangle creepers. To-night we'll take Rice Crop Is Large. Korea a av?rage annual rice placed at 2£t0.f'<M.006 p o n d s . ,u lilMM Ul»l tUe» crop ta J «-r.^ w ^ : > T h o m p t o n ' s i y e W i t e r VXIVF.WSITV •tfMMdl tU K>I « • I t !

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SURE SiGN.

Trouble wlLa the kidney w c r x i o i A Is a certaia"sJgn t h a t your k i d n - r s a r e j

B deranged and that yo-j should use Do&ns Kidney Pills. They c m e al! ir-regular i t ies and annoyances , remove | backache and side pains and res tore |

tb«; k idneys to he t l tb . ; Charles Cole. 204 X. Buckeye St.. loin. " Kans., "«ys: "Tbe k i d n e y secrct ions were I r r e g u l a r , scanty and painful and contained se*ii- 1

xnent. My back was stiff and lame and

my limbs swelled. 1 grew weak and discouraged. Doen's Kidney Pilta re-moved these t roubles ent irely. I have been well lo r two yenrs."

[ M ® ROBERT , U (,

AHBS )• bewet

ULltiTRKr/m W Mr' MITOU corrtuc+r /»e* wr A.C fffCLuMC * Co.

SVNOPS18.

The atcry o^eas with tb; ablpwr?elt of I the M e a n o n whlrh Mia* j (>-•11.- ma Amertemn liHrm. Iwi Wln-tlirot»e. an Er:)(li«n«njnn. *nd Tom HI»W»-• bruaxiue Americ an, were pa**» ns«-r*.

Remember tbe n . m * - D o a n « . Soid | by all dealers . 50 cen i s a box. ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.

A LONG WAY BACK.

Fos-

George—There 's Miss Passay. '7?*r- i iV*, W'J4

She

Harry—Why, I 've kisseO ner myseir. years ago. She means not since s b ) can remember .

ITCHED FOR TWELVE YEARS.

E c z e m a M a d s H s n d s s n d F e e t S w e l l , P e e l a n d G e t R a w — A r m * A f f e c t e d , T o o — G a v e U p A l l H o p e of C u r * .

I drowned. B!iike recovered trr.ro a diunl"-, ci; uti.p<»r H ukt. »ltur.i>u on the boa*. I because oi hla I us#bii»ss bf t w * l.«-rr> . 1 a* p r m m r of the helplr-a pair. Tbe i

Ei.(!l«'.min waa suing tor the hand of j ! MIm Blake started 'o swim back :

] l a t he - h i p t o r w o v t r w b a . « i ^ '"-ft. : RUkt returned safety- WInthrope waated I i l.ta last match on a «i*arette for «1 Ich ! ft* * c i a c r e d l»\ Iliake. Their fli»t m'al

* i . a dead fish The trio started a ten I mile hike (or Msrher land. Th i" t at- |

lacked them B i - i " waa coioi^-ed to | tarry Mlaa Leslie on account of weari-

« tieaa. He t*unt«4 WInthrope They en- | ! tered the Juii*!e. That -iijlit *•» P*a»«l I ! roosting high In a tree. Tr.e n r f t m a n - .

they dr«cer»ded to the open ***'"• I ree constructed liala to shield them-

selves Itotn the iuk. They trien t*astwfl on roroauuta. tbe only nro« irable food. M.»» ;>e»!le allowed a llklnr for bit deteet«-d !.ta rouahneae l«ed by Blake thev established a T.rrne In aopne cliffs. Blake found a freeli water aprinx Mlaa r ^a l i* f a . «-d a n unpleaaant aituatlou. T h e y p lanned the ir c*ri.pal*n. Btaka re-eorered hU n u n » y o r i m a c n i f y i n a thu» Inetirinc flre He Rj»rte«: a JOaK" #•- t. »Hri •.nn*«si kml «mr Pi* erlna aeveral i f l iU . In the |*<<pard a <ax-e m t h e y bulU a n i m l l home, rhey Rained the t l i f f » hy burn ing the. bottom of • tree unt i l It f e l l a a a l n a t the hei i ihw. T h e trio a*< ured » xk« from the «Itffe.

• UK th AlT thf

Qukkiy Cured by Cuticura.

"I suffered f rom e n e m a on my bano. ' a rms and fee t for about twelve years, my bands and fee t would swell, sweat and Itch, then would become callous and get very dry, then pe«l off and get raw. 1 tri^d most every kind of salve and olnt u e s t without

CHAPTER XI.—Ccntinued. Miss I^eslle slKhed. Why did you

speak of t b e m ? 1 am still liungry enough to «-at n o re eggs--a doxeu®-that Is. If we had a little salt and bat-ter."*

"And a ellver cup and napkhvs! Silded BluUe. "About salt, though, we'll have to get some before long, and some kiod cf vegetable food It won't do to kVep up this who' - meat menu."

"It only those Utile bamboo re.-outs were as good as they look—like a kind

success. I tr ied several doctors, but of a spa ragua ! " murmured MIm l ^ s l i e a t last gave up th ink ing there was a c a r e for ecxema. A fr iend of mine insisted on my t rying tho Cuticura Remedies, but I did not give them a tr ial until I got ao bad that I had to do something. 1 Becurt-d a set and by t h e t ime they were used 1 cculd Bee a vas t improvement and my bands and fee t were healed up ln no time. I havo had mo t rouble alnce. Charles T.

Pa., Mar. 11. 1908." Cbem. Corp.. Soia Prop*, Bo*aa

bad J O troub] RauAr. Volant, l>ouer«l>n!f a Cbc

A C i t y C l e r k ' s G a r d e n .

"I've heard t h a t the Chinese eat them.' said WInthrope.

"Th«y oat r«*ts, too.-' commented Blake.

"We mlgfc*. at l eas ' try tbem." per stated Miss I^eslie.

' H o w ? R a w ? " "1 havs heard jwpa tell of roasting

corn when he was a boy." "'That's so : and roasting-tars are

bet ter than boiled. Win. 1 guess we ll have a sample of bamboo asparagus a la Les-lee!"

WInthrope took tbe penknife and fetched a handfu l of young ssprouts from the bamboo thicket. They were Deatea over iii-. umid w , — "" grffx> I k r s n r h a * » raw.

"Say." mumbled B'ake. as he rum-inated on the last shoot, "we're get t ing on some for th is smell bole of a coast house, and chicken >anch and vege-

" i

V %

/

£ He at Once Began Experimenta in the Art of Pottery.

thai locked like brown liema

of expat ia t ing on his garden to hla oifH. who. however , were never i

taken home to see it . but^ were \ . unde r the impression It was of ens r "moua size. Five of them resolved t o have a look a t It. dlacovered his ad-dress . and called one Saturday after-noon to ace the hundreds of roses all a-growlng and a-blooming. On being taken to the rea r of tbe house, judge tables in our front yard. V\f ve got of their surpr i se on seeing a back ; old Bobbie Crusoe beat, hands down, yard about 12 feet by ten feet. One I on the start-off. and he with his shipful bold spir i t ventured tl«*i It w-as not very big.

"Big!" replied the proud owner. pointing to the sky. "Why. man. alive. look a t tbe height of i t!"—Chicago Dally Socialist.

just because we've failed to stick out ! s t reak a slfcr.a! that 'd catch the eye twice ; tlte." as f a r off as any o^ber color Than scar-let. Do you suppose 1 worked my way • up f rom axman to engineer , and did not learn anything about f lags?"

"But it is ail really too absurd'. I do not know the first th ing al»out »ew-Init. and I have neither thread nor needle ." \

" I t ' s up to you. though, ir you trant ' "..^V My t'.Zi-?r nslvhtv soon half ! a " t f , iuc>' )<U1 uvu to COiit

i t ime you learned— There , now; I did not m e a n to hurt your feelings. You've

CHAPTER Xil.

9urv iv t l of the Fit test .

' . I E neyt four days slipped oy almost tmheeded. Blake

turna knotting them up Into some I sort of a rope-ladder. I 'm getting |

mighty weiry of hoofing It all around (

the point every t ime I t ro t to the rl* j er. After this I'll go down t h e cliff j a t that end of the gully "

WInthrope. who had become •very j i rr i table and depressed du r ing the last | two days, turned on his t e e ! , with the j

j look of a f re t ful child. To cover thla undiplomat ic rude-

ness, Miss Leslie spoke somewha t hur-I rledly. "But why should you return j again to the river. Mr. Blake? I 'm sure f you are risking the f eve r ; and there | mus t be savage beasts ln t h e Jungle. ' I " T h a u my business," g r o v l e d Blake.

He paused a moment, and added, rath-er less ungraciously: "Wel l , I* you care. It's this wsy—I'm going to ke?p j on looking for ore. Give me a little iron ore. snd we'll mighty s o c s have j a lot of steel knives and arrow-heads that ' l l amount to something . How're j we going to bag anyth ing worth while j with bamboo t ips on our arrows? j Those boar tusks are a fizzle."

"So you will cont inue to risk your j lire for «j«" I think that is very brave i

•w. n u w „ ' -* "How's thxt?" demsnded Blake, not

a little puzzled. He w a s fully con-scious of the risk; but t h i s was tbe first intimation he had received or conceived that his motive** were oth-er than selfish—"I'm m ! So tha t ' s the ticket. Getting generous, eh?"

"Not getting—you a r e generous! When I think of all you have done for us! Had it not been for you. I atn sure we should have died that first day ashore."

"Well, don't blame me. I couldn't have let a dog die t h a t * a y ; and then, a fellow needs a M - . !-Ylda> f« r th is sort of thing. As fo r you. 1 haven' t always had the luck to be favored wi;h ladles' company ."

"Thank you. Mr. Biake. 1 quite ap-preciate the compliment. But now. must put on supper."

Blake followed her g race fu l move-m*-nta with an ln ten tneas which, in turn, drew Winthrope 's at tention to himself. The Engl ishman smiled In a

] disagreeaMe manner, and resumed his work on th-^ bows, with t h e look of one mentally preoccupied. After sup-per he found occauion to ppeud some

j little time among tbe bamboos. When at sunset M!»s I^eslie with-

drew Into the baobab. WInthrope somewhat officiously Insisted upon j

• h?r S"? •«• iwii tr. the i entrance. As he di»l «>, he took the

] opportunity to hand h e r a bamboo

ALCOHOL""3 PER CENT A\vf< tabic Preparation for As -SHIMWI ting the Food and Re£UTA hag to Stoaads and Bowels of

IxkAN 1 j ' C H I L D K L V

fz Promotes Dtgestion,Cheerful-urssaodRes! Contain* neither Opwm.Morphine nor Mineral N O T X A B C O T T C

r * o u o r S A w a m a r t M

Mm J a n i •• \ -fmJt, - J

J~U

GAST0R1A F o r I n f a n t a a n d Cbl^Jre iu

Ths Kind You Hara Always Bouj

Bears tha Signature

of

fj , • I - I* rr*d

» fmw Apertrtt Remedy forCooshps^

lion Sour Stomach.Dtarrheej S C Worms,Convulsions Fever i sh-^5, ness and L o s s OF S l e e p

Fat SiwV of

The Ccntaur Compakv. N E W Y O R K

R

For Over Thirty

r a n t e e d s o d e r I h e F o o d

C o p y o f W r a p p s r .

I n i O T I I D I I l U H O I U I I I R

J

L'.. DETROIT, NO. 32-

T w o OH, MY!

r kllla • _ » l a

• a«-«*«ew • • • t l x

peculiar He way

She—What ' s that He—She won't t ea r

ter , even a f t e r ehe'B wrote it.

« on. an

up a lovo let forgotten who

only himself but fcis companions bad work to occupy every hour of day-light. When not engageo In cooking

m a d e a fair stagger a t cooking, ami j f-^ej gather ing. Miss Lrnlie was

T h e F o r c e o f H a b i t . One of the campers had done some-

thing peculiarly Idiotic, and the dean aaid: "Dick reminds me of Thomas ' col t ."

"Wha t about Thomas ' colt?" asked Dick, cheerful ly .

"Why." the dean responded, readily, "where I lived In Maine when 1 was a boy an old man named Thomas raised horses. H e once put out to pas ture a colt, which haJ been fed Irom i ts birth in a box s ta l l and wa-tered a t the t rough in tbe yard.

1 UV ** river, and in the middle of the dfty the eolt swam the s t r eam to go up to the barn-yard for a dr ink of water."— Youth 's Companion.

Wonderfu l . "This is a r emarkab le world!" ex-

claimed O'Brien. "1 was walking down t b e s t ree t th is morning and I met a man I h a d n ' t seen for about twelve years ."

"Yes." rejoined Murphy, "it Is a re-markab le world. I los t had an experi-ence much like tha t myself. 1 waa walking down tbe s t ree t not ten min-utes ago and 1 me t two men—two. mln"! y o u - tha t I'd never met before."

I of stuff for hand icap!" "Then you believe that the situation

1 looks more hopeful . Mr. Blake?" "Well, we've a t least got aa exten-

| slon on our uote for a week or two. But I'm not going to coddle you with a lot of lies. Miss Jenny. There 's the fever coming, s u r e as fate. I may stave it off a while; you and Win, ten to one. win be down in a few days— and not a smell of quinine in our commissary. Then theie'll be dysen-tery and snakes and wild beasts— No; we're not ou t of the woods yet, uot by a—considerable." tbrope, "1 must say. you're not very encouraging."

"By Jove. Blake." muttered Win- a l ! about rou r "Didn't say I was trying to be." W h a t else? "But. Mr. Blake. I aui sure papa will I "X—I see what you meant .

niter a lwrro reward when the steam- I tha t nothing of what I learned er is reported as lest. There will be [ be of service now." ships searching for us—" J "Boarding-school rot, e h ? And

We re not iu the British ihanneli. t Wln th iope?" and I'll bet what few boats do coast : . - l f y o u w o u l d W n 4 l i y name along there don't no*.- about much , w h a ( y o u h a v t , , n m j n d . " among these coral reefs."

I bet you win out on the dressmaking. For needle you can use one of these long, slim thorns—poke a hole, and then s l lp* lhe thread through, like a shoemaker . "

"Ah. yes : but the t h read?" put In WInthrope.

"The cocoanut fiber would hardly do." said Miss Leslie, forge t t ing to dry he r eyes.

"No. We could get fair ly good fi-ber s out of the palm leaves ; but cct-gu t will l»e a whole lot bet ter . I'll s i l t up a lot for you. fine enough to r e w with. And now, let 's get down to tacks . No offense—but did ei ther of you ever learn to do atA-thlng useful in a n your blessed It ' t le t t - e s r *

" W h y , Mr. Blake, of course I—" "Of course what?" demanded Blake,

a s Miss Leslie hesi ta ted. "We know-cooking and sewing.

learning .by painfui experience the ru-diments of dressmaking.

At the s ta r t she had all but ruined the beautiful skin of the mothe r leopard before Blake chanced to »ee her and took over the task of cut t ing it into shape for a skirt. But when It came to making a waist of the cub fur . he said that she would have to puzzle out the pattern from her othex one. Between cooking three meals a Jay over an open fire, ga ther ing sev- j eral a rmfuls of wood, and making a j dress with penknife , thorn, and cat- ; gut. the girl bad little t ime to think ! of other ma t t e r s than her work.

WInthrope had been gazetted a s j hunter iu o id ina iy . Ills task .vas to keep Miss Leslie supplied with f resh j eggs and each day to kill a s many of .

several double-pointed bamboo Btakes which he had hiddea under the litter.

"What III i t?" she asked, troubled by bis furtive glance back a t Blake.

"Merely precaution, you know." he whispered. "The ground In there is quite solt. It wii! be no trouble. I fancy, to put up the s t akes , with their points inclined toward t h e entrance."

"But why—" "Not so loud. Miss Genevieve! It

struck me that If any one should seek to enter in t'#e night, he would find these stakes deucedly unpleasant . Be careful how you handle them. As you see. the sharper points, which are to be set uppermost, run off into a razor edge. Put them np now. before it grows too dark. You know how nine-pins are set—that shape . Good-night! You see. with these to guard the en-trance. you need not b«* a f ra id to pn to sleep at once."

' T h a n k you." she whispered, and

But Net Evelyn—I saw you in bathing this

morning. George. It » funny you didn' t see me.

George—T didn ' t expect to. Kvelyn- i was sure you a«w iu« al

one t ime. 1 was standing close by you on the beach.

oeorge—v»u, >e» » j " " "* j u u ' bathing suit .

TOILET ANTISEPTIC N O T H I N G L I R E I T F O *

THE TEETH

Good Evidence. - W h e n she hi t him with the golf

ball, did It knock him senseless?" "1 guess so. I unders tand they a re

soon to marry."—Central Methodist Advocate.

A feeling of aecurity and freedom from anxietv pervade* the home in which Hamlin* Wizard Oil ia kept i-nnatantly on hand. Mother* know it can always be depended upon in time oi need.

The good we do is an excellent anti-dote for the ill we think.

removing taitar rroai inc teutn. all ( c r a u at docay and daaaaa wluca •ootn pnfnrition cannot do.

I M L M O U I H and throat, p u n f i a the breath, and lulU A e j wiach collect ia the mouth, o n nag « * • bad teeth, bad breath, gnppc. aad mach l

THE EYES •ctacved and rtreafdkcncd by Pa 41

I fear would

you,

over

ihe boobies and cormorants as he began to thrus t the s t a k e s into the could skin and split for drying. Blake j ground as he had directed, had changed his mind about tak ing I He had not been mis taken . The him when he went for cocoanuts. In- ; vague doubts and Tears which she al-stead. he had gone alone on several ready entertained would have kept her

DODDS K I D N E Y j

PILLS Js

CATARRH gammatioa aad - o p ihe discharge. Et m a wmm n a i d y l o t w U n n a c a t a r r h .

Paxtise ia a harmlea* yet powerful c<3ant a».*i d t u d o u a .

ta bathaag it doOoyt odou aad leave* the body antueptkally clean.

rem SALE AT DRUQ STCRCS.OOc. OR POSTPAID BV MAIL.

LARGE SAMPLE FREE! TMC PAXTOet TOtLST CO.. BOSTOSC

Nothing Like

• H«a n t f hit! c..!s. then a Tittle salt from the sea- j thanks to the seuae oi securi ty af-sbore. dlrtv but very welcome, and j forded by the sword-bayonets of her last of all a great Jump of clay. | silent little sentr ies , the girl was wrapped in palm fronds.

Every package of

Post Tcast ies

Contains a littj^ book—

"Tid-Bi ts made with

Foasties."

A couple of dozen recipes I mare-

Of fascinating dishes,

A help in entertaining

H o m e folks or company. ub

Pkgs . 10c and X 5c—

A t grocers.

"I fancy it would do no harm to i erect a signal." aald Winthrope.

"Only thing tha t would make a ; •how is Miss Leslie's skirt," replied Blake

"There ta the big leopard skin." per-sisted WInthrope. To his surprise the engineer took the suggestion under serious consideration.

"Well, ! don't know." he said. "If we bad a water background, now. But against the rocks and trees—no; what we want is white. I'll tell you—when Miss Jenny se t s to and makes herself a dress or tha t skin, i ii ny her i k l i i to the zephyrs."

"Mr. Blake! I really think that Is eruel of you!"

"Oh. come now; that 's not fa i r ! I wouldn't have nald a word, but you

j said you wanted to help." " ! h e s your pardon Mr. I V U 1—

I did not qui te unuin aland , ^u I really do want to help—to do my J

Dot only i t clothe v a y on n Look at i loo. Ins

Miss "In

ou're talking! Ye a question of tbe i. We've got to ceding new ones I ny pan t s and vest, d e a month we'l

In hiding. Tha

1 t i e meantlmi

meant ime we're I or two ot beiag

We 've signal, but figure any ,-efore long. J somel , and Win 's j mean : all be i t t he re i*'s a Joke, s tews

J son ' f—'" beean vour i

" U m ! " grunted Blake. "Well. I t 's J first of all a question of a p r a c t i c a l -pract ical . mind you,—knowledge of metal lurgy, ceramics, and bow to stick an ar row through a beef roast ."

- I—ah—1 believe I Int imated that I j have some knowledge of archery. But | I doubt—"

"Cut It out! You'll have enough else : t o do. Get busy over those bows and | a r rows , and dpn't quit till you've got t hem In shape. Leave my bow good and stiff. 1 can pull l ike a mule can [ kick. Well. Miss J e n n y ; what Is it?*'

••la not—has not ceramics some-th ing to do with burning ch ina?"

"Suee!—ch»ca. pottery, and a ' t tha . . ! Know anything about i t ? "

"Why. I have a f r iend who amuses herself by painting china, and I know It has to be burned."

• And t h a t « al l!" grunted Blake. -Wel l , let me tell you. When 1 was a l i t t le kid I used to work in a pot-te ry . All I ran r emember is that they 'd tak-: clay, shape it into • dry it . and bake the th ing Ii. a kiln.

With this clay he at once bogan ex per imcnts in the ar t of pottery. Hav-ing mixed and beaten a small quan-tity. he molded it into little cups and bowls, and tried burning them over nlgbt in the w atch fire. A few came out without o-aek or flaw. Vastly elated by this mccess , he fashioned larger vey.iela f rom his clay, and wi'.fa-in tf-e week wiuld brag of two pots suitable for • -o>>cg e 'en er and four large nondeseripl pieces which be called plates. What was more, all had a fairly good sand slaze. for he had been quick to observe a glaze on tbe bottoms of tbe first pots and bad

soon able to calm herse l f , and was fast asleep long before Blake wakened WInthrope.

Immediately a f t e r b reakfas t . Blake —who had spent his watch in grind- | ing the edges f rom a s tone and ex- | perimenting with spli t and bent : twigs—put Winthrope 's keys in the fire, and began an a t t e m p t to shape ! tbem into a knife-blade. To heat tbe steel to tbe required tem»jerature. he used a bamboo blowpipe, with his lungs for bellows.

Winthrope turned away with an In- ' I different bearing: b u t Miss Leslie j I found herself compelled to stop and I

admire his dexterous viae of bis rude :

G u a r * 1 *

them in the vvorlcL CASCARETS & e biggest seller—why? Because ifsthe^rrf medicine foe the livet and bowefc. * » what they will do ior you—DO* we say they will do—that CASCARETS famous- MiKons mm CASCARETS and it » ail the] that they ever need to take.

CASCARXT* ioe a boa foe a w r t l l treatment, all dra|gtua. >n tbe world. M-iTHoe b

SICK HEADACHE I CARTERS

ilTTLE

P o s i t i v e l y c u r e d b y t h e s e L i t t l e P i l l s .

Tbey alao rellera Dia-treaafr-xa Dj»pevela. la-dlffeat Kin and Too If* art y Sating. A perfect rem-edy tor D:«lneae, Kan-•ea. Drowaineaa, Bad Taate io tbe Moutb. Coat-ed Tunjrr>e. Pa.a ia tbe Side. Tt)»PlX> UVW.

More Thar Two Million Users NO STROPPING NO HONING

KNOWN T H E WOttLDOVZX

DAISY FLY KILLER

Tbey regtilate tbe Boweia. Purely \egetabie.

SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.

to work t h e same game ow. I h i s kind of ea t ing will dysentery in short order. So

K going to be a bean-pot for our or Tom Blake l l know the rea-

*hy. Nurse up t h a ' ankle of Win. We'll t rek It to morrow—

reasoned out that it was due to ihe ' tools, sand which bad adhered while they I stood drying In the sun.

He next turned his s t tent lon to met-allurgy. The first move was to search tbe river %ank for the brown bog iron «ir wum.u i*> he bad seen fron" the far ther side. Af te r a dangerour and exhausting day 's work Id the mlr»r and Jungle, be came back with nothing more to show for b is | t o

pains than an armful of creepers . IJ t te in the af ternoon, be had located the

.TO RK eON-TINt'KD

haw: s t r e j to < poee

. onty to thin that

enough

id It

for

lying in a -ouid not hope practical pur

Always I Iflht In the Sky. "The sky." says the Scientific Atuer- |

ican, "Is never dark. This, however U .lot due to the sun but to the -stars. I The Milky Wsy Is sbove the borizofi ! in summer in our la t i tude, snd It xl*e* I a great deal of light by nlgbt, enough |

make tbe nlgbt aky of that tune J brighter than when It is not a part of oar night sky, a s Is the case in winter. The*, too. tbe s ta rs which i cannot be seen by t h e unaided eye [ give us much light. T h e s ta ia which are not visible to (be eye g l re more light than those which a re visible."

[CARTERS

W IVER | 1 % S -

Genuine Mutt Bear Fac-S<mile Signature

REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.

DRJ.D.KELL ASTHMA REM

>KK THS lilt It AT Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition

Coa*iuitF I'.IT: yon ii like n-

Seattle, the "Gem of tbe Coast" VerrKine 'er • I .©3. P*»4

l ive In Seat t le aod he Hapfnr . 41? S a f e r . . BMc . Scania. W a * . Lack a®* WI2

r o a T H E . , em wei M t u t r OF 'asthma a may fever

*ouk omjcasr *

A S n - I H R I f i A T X I t - t A W , water .-l#l»t. Sae waupr^^da. t •

ut ei fai:

ked Th« riv

be fa-from

t.#ok i t I i

of the

n," he added, af ter telling of ure. "Pas s over those keys of Win. (rood' Now untangle

creepers. To-night we'll take

Rice Crop Is Large. Korea a av?rage annual rice

placed at 2£t0.f'<M.006 p o n d s .

,u l i lMM Ul»l tUe» crop ta J « - r . ^ w ^ : > T h o m p t o n ' s i y e W i t e r

VXIVF.WSITV • t f M M d l

tU K>I

« • I t !

i

•v.

F R O I M O U R N E I G H B O R S

ENGI_13HVIU_E. W o o d Is be t ter

Mr . a n d 7 . I W - ViZmSBS ~>t

w r f t i i g . M r s . E

M o n d a v .

t h i s ' I V t r o i t s p e n t s e v e r a l

r is i ted V ml ley Ci ty

• T h e D o i n g s of t h e W e e k b r i e (I y To ld by t h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r ' s S ta f f j of News G a t h e r e r s In T o w n s S u r r o u n d i n g S p a r t a . •

>rfie!d is n u r s i n g a

KENT C I T Y -Mrs . C h a r l e s M u r r a y h a s moved to

G r a n d l l a p i d s . W O. Holmi'« w a s a G r a n d l l a p i d s

v i s i t o r M o n d a y .

Miss C o r a o ' c o o n o r v is i ted b» N e w a y g o F r i d a y .

tUmer F o n d e r w a s a v i s i l o r in G r a n d R a p i d s M o n d a y .

M i s t M u r n a M u r r a y Is e . i t n r t a i n i o g a l a d y f r i end t h i s week.

Mr«. M a r y Do*tghty vis i ted f r i e n d s i« G r a n d l l a p i d s T u e s d a y .

Mrs . W a l t e r B r o m a n was a G r a n d R a p i d s v i s i t o r l a s t T h u r s d a y .

Fred B a c o n of G r a n d R a p i d s vis i t -ed f r i e n d s ia town o v e r S u n d a y .

M r s . R u d o l p h B r o r o a o is e n t e r t a i n -ing h e r cous in f r o m L f t P o r t e , I n d .

Mr . a a d Mrs . W . W . Kenton were G r a n d l i p o i d s v i s i t o r s lo s t week.

M i s s A d a 'Murray of B a i l e y w a s t h e gues t of C o r a O ' C o n n o r T h u r s d a y .

Mr . a n d Mrs . 1 !ben P r e s s e y vis i ted in t ' a s n o v i a o n e e v e n i n g l a s t week.

Miss Mable R h a m y of S p a r t a vis i t -ed I r e n e C h u r c h S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g .

Miss M u r n a M u r r a y h a s r e t u r n e d f r o m I ' a r i s , where she h a s been work-ing .

M M iMKaruui iVMHi «»i G i d u t i «imp-i d s v is i ted h e r p a r e n t s h e r e o v e r S a n -d a y .

Mrs . G e o r g e W a r n r r of C a s n o v i a vis i ted W . W . P u t n e y a n d wife t h i s week.

Mrs . H a r o l d M o x o m of B e r l i n visi-ted r e l a t ives a n d f r i e n d s h e r e l a s t week.

J a y L l n t e y of G r a n d R a p i d s v is i ted h i s p a r e n t s , Mr . a n d Mrs . B. J . L i n -sey, o v e r S u n d a y .

Mrs . C h a r l e s M u r r a y h a s so ld h e r h o u s e , on the n o r t h s ide, t o Mrs . C h a r l e s A f t o n , S r .

Mrs . R o l a n d W f K c t a c d d a u g h t e r , of G r a n d R a p i d s v is i ted h e r p a r e n t s . Mr . and Mrs . C a r l s o n , o v e r S u n d a y .

GRADUATES.

Fit Yourselves for Business— Rich Rewards.

T h e d e m a n d : of th i s bus ines s age fo r skil led he lp o f fe r r i ch opport uni-t ies t o o u r y o u n g men a n d women who nave jus t l e f t school . Compe-t e n t a s s i s t ance ia well paid f o r ; t h e busy world h a s n o u se f o r u n t r a i n e d and inefficient neon le . Th.^ hesr cours*. for any of our school gradu-a t e s to pureue is t o t a k e up a cour se In a bus iness co l lege . H e r " they will uc«|uue a. ixiiuwieu&t; u i ( justness prac-t i ce which will he wor th i f o r tune to t l icm. T h e Musk<.-:on Bus iness College, a first-class commerc ia l school, located a t t h e co rne r af Web-s t e r and Je£Brr?on a v e n u e s . Muskegon. Michigan, i s espec ia l ly adap ted fo r i t s work of Impar t ing a t ho rough knowl-edge of bus iness a c c o u n t i n g and gen-e j a l pract ice , s h o r t h a n d , typewr i t ing , banking and FtegHsh. Mr. E. C. Bis-son. the well k n o w n bus ines s edu-cator . is p r e s iden t a n d m a n a g e r , and t o his un t i r ing e f fo r t s i s due the larga pa t ronage of t h e coi lcge. which has i nc rea sed to so l a r g e a n u m b e r t h a t 1t necess i t a ted t h e e rec t ion cf a new building for t h e a c o a r a m o d a t l o r of it<5 pupils. T h e n e w bui ld ing is a large, h a n d s o m e s t r u c t u r e with all t h o ve ry l a t e s t mode rn I m p r o v e m e n t s , and Is except iona l ly well l ighted. Ano the r eotn mend able f e a t u r e of t h e col lege Id t h e m a i n t e n a n c e of a l a rge dining hs! l . which s c a t s 230 z t u J i £L£. MvaL a r e served at a n o m i n a l p r i ce and a t a g r ea t s a v i n g t o o u t of t e w n stu-den t s .

A knowledge of b u s i n e s s p r a c t i t e Is of great help to a n y man o r woman . Good pos i t ions a w a i t t h o s e who ac-quire t h e knowledge which tho Mus-kegon Bus ines s Col lege will Impar t .

i his mi ca ra a a d r e s s e d to Air. K. C. Rlsson will b r i ng va luab l e informa-tion and full d e t a i l s of t h o n*.-« work of t h i s bus iness - t each ing insti-tut ion. T o t h o s e who r a n s p a r e the t ime for a visit, a h e a r t y weleome and a mos t i n t e r e s t i n g e x p e r i e n c e a r e assured .

M r s . J e s s e M e r r o a n d c h i l d r e n ox F . - n t w a w r a r e v i s i t i n g h i r b u s . sno t h i s week.

D r . S h o r t s a n d f a m i l y a r r i v e d T u e s d a y l a s t a a d a r e now loca t ed in t h e i r houie here .

M i s s I j i l m a ''arisen of G r a n d R a p -i d s is v i s i t i ng h e r s i s t e r . M r s . Ru-d o l p h B r o m a n .

M r c . D a v i d M a g * * a a d L o r a i n e a r e v i s i t i n g her p a r e n t s . M r . s n d Mrs . C u r l y , of S t . L o u i s , M o .

M r . a n d Mrs. O s c a r J o h n s o n aud Mr . a n d Mrs . A l f r ed O l s o n were G r a n d R a p i d s v i s i t o r s l a s t W e d n e s -d a y .

F r a n k H o a t i i n a n d f a m i l y of G r a n d R a p i d s a r e v i s i t i n g h i s b r o t h e r , d i a r i e s Hoa t i in . a n d o t h e r r e l a t i v e s t h i s week.

M r s . Klizaoeti) R u s c o e h a s l e f t f o r M i u n e s o t a f o r an ex t ended v i s i t with h e r d a u g h t e r , Mrs . P e g g , a n d hus-b a n d .

M r s . Bdga r A ld r i ch , w h o b a s been v i s i t i n g C . I ' un i t i ng a n d .r ife, re-t u r n e d to he r h o m e la G r a n d R a . d d s M o n d a y .

M i s s M a u r i n e H o l m e s r e t u r n e d to he r h o m e in G r a n d R a p i d s T h u r s d a y , a f t e r v i s i t i n g nor c o u s i n , A d a Holmes , s e v e r a l weeks.

Mr . a n d Mrs . O s c a r B e n s o n re-t u r n e d t o t t feir h o m e in G r a n d R a p -ids M o n d a y , a f t e r s p e n d i n g a few weeks with r e l a t i v e s .

M r s . E l l i s C u l v e r r e t u r n e d to he r h o m e in H u n t i n g t o n , l a d . , M o n d a y , a f t e r s p e n d i n g some t ime with re la -t i v e s a u d f r i e n d s here .

M i s s Emma P e t e r s o n le f t S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g to r e s u m e h e r w o r k a t Klk-h a r t , Sod., a f t e r s p e n d i n g a few weeks ' v a c a t i o n a t h e r h o m e he re .

M r s . S a r a h O r e u t t a n d h e r b r o t h e r , J o s e p h Bro t t . a r e v i s i t i n g r e l a t i v e s in W a s h i n g t o n a n d o t h e r w e s t e r n s t a t e s un t i l N o v e m b e r . T h e y wi l l a l s o at-tend t h e A ' . a s k a - Y u k o n - P a e i f i c Ex-p o s i t i o n . -

M i s s Emma P e t e r s e n w a s very p l e a s a a t l y s u r p r i s e d a t h e r home, s o u t h a n d west of t own , F r i d a y even-ing , by a n u m b e r of h e r f r i e n d s . A very de l igh t fu l t ime w a s s p e n t by al l w o o were p re sen t .

A m i s c e l l a n e o u s s h o w e r w a s g iven F r i d a y e v e n i n g i n h o n o r of Miss Ne l l i e Merr i t t . whose m a r r i a g e to W i l l B r u b a k e r of M o l i c e , 111., will t a k e p l a c e A u g u s t I*. T h e e v e n i n g w a s ve ry p l e a s a n t l y s p e n t a n d Ne l l i e was t h e r ec ip i en t of m a n y n i ce pres-en t s f r o m her f r i e n d s .

Mrs . O. H . B b a d a r m .

Mrs . W i n n i e E r h a r t was io V a l l e y c i t y M o o d a y .

M r s . A . S m i t h is e o t e r t a i o i o g com-p a n y f r o m L o w e l l .

N i c k V i n t o n a n d wife a t t e n d e d c h u r c h h e r e S u n d a y .

Mrs . M a r y C a s l e r spent s few d a y s l a s t week wi th h e r s o n .

Deli a n d H e r m a n R o o t t ook in t b e b a l l g a m e a t M i l l C reek .

R e m e m b e r t h e c l u b meets with Mrs . E t t ie Bu t l e r t o d a y ( F r i d a y ) .

H . C. C o l l i n s e x p e c t * to m o v e s o o n o n t o Mrs . j e s s i e M e a d ' s f a r m .

Mrs . K i t t i e C a r r o l l of C h i c a g o is t h e g u e s t of M r s . I . M a r k h a m .

.V!rs. A . M o r l e y w a s the g u e s t of • C a r r i e A n d r u s M o n d a y a f t e r n o o n .

M r s . M a r y B u c h a n a n and D o r * 1 m a d e a t r i p t o G r a n d d a r .

d a y s s a u d M r s . W a s . Dow I i n g .

M i s s e s M a b i e a n d Helen Br-^i ^ o f P l a i n f i e l d v i s i t ed wi th t h e i r aunt , M r s . R . B a u m h o f f . T u e s d a y .

M r s . F . A l b e r t s c u t h e r h a n d very b a d l y whi le c a n n i n g f r u i t by p o u r i n g h o t w a t e r in a can , which b r o k e it.

Mr- ' t o D e t r o i t f o r a th ree weeks v i s i t .

M r s . A . L . L i n d s e y lef t W e d n e s d a y f o r a w e e k ' s t r i p 1 t o j o i n M r . L i n d s e y

on t h e l a k e s .

M r s . B a i i e y a n d d a n g h t e r , E the l , a r e m a k i n g a two weeks ' v i s i t a m o n g r e l a t i v « a n d f r i e n d s .

T h e f a m i l y of A l b e r t G . D i c k i n s o n j T h e M i s s e s M a y and E v a P a a s and of G r a n d R a p i d s a r e a t J . B . F i e l d ' s i

gen t l emen f r i e n d s , of G r a n d R a p i d s ; f o r t h e m o n t h of A u g u s t .

t k e i r p * * * " * « . S. r . i i l « > »„d f t m i l , t ^ o k ,

T h * l a d i e s of the S . B. - o r . e t y met | D a r e u n i o n &i the h o m e of C h a r l e s with Mrs . F. T h o r n T h u r s d a y a a d P a r k s , of AI g o m a , l a s t M o o d a y . T h e '

N e x t wil! I * the o c c a s i o n w a s Mrs . P a r k ' s b i r t h d a y . I T h e M i s s e s Vern ie K.jers, L i o a

sewed c a r p e t r a g s a n n u a * picnic .

A f t b u r O l s o n a*»d C h t r l i e D o r a d r o v e u p f r o m G r a n d R a p i d s l a s t S u n d a y a n d t o o k d i n n e r with Mr. %cd M r s . F r e d S e b i n d l e - .

T h e r a i n S u n d a y was v e r y w e l o o a e a r o u n d h e r e a*"! d id l o ; of g o o d . S o m e o a t s a r e c u t a o d f a r m e r s a r e e e U i n g o n t ineiv « i th t h e i r work .

M r . a n d M r s . B u r k h a r t of Cale-d o h i a c a m e u p in t h e i r a u t o m o b i l e a n d v i s i ted wi th Mr . a n d M r s . G .

R a p i d s Moo- S t e f f e n s S u n d a y , and o n a c c o u n t of ! t h e r a i n s t a y e d t i l l M o n d a y .

S t e v e n s o n a n d C a r r i e P a r k h u r s ; g u e s t s of Miss E the lya P e a s e of S p a r t a I a n F r i d a y .

F o r i n d i g e s t i o n and al l a t o a i a c h t r o c h i e t a k e F o l e y ' s Or inn L a x a t i v e a * i t s t i m u l a t e s th»- stoni-ich a n d l i v e r j a n d r e g u l a t e s t h e bowels a n d will [ p o s i t i v e l y e w e h a b i t u a l c o n s t i p a t i o n . A . B . W a v .

C u r r e n t P r " - * « C n n » c t « d N o o n .

S e r v e d a s cof fee , the new cof fee s u b s t i t u t e known t o g r o c e r s eve ry -where a s Dr . S h o o p ' s H e a l t h Coffee , will t r i ck even a c o f f e e e x p e r t . No t a g r ^ i n of rea l cof fee in it e i t h e r . P u r e h e a l t h f u l toas ted g r a i n s , m a l t , nuts , e tc . h a v e been s o c l e v e r l y b l e n d e d as t o g i v e a w o n d e r f u l l y s a t i s f y i n g cof-fee t a s t e and flavor. A n d i t i s " m a d e in a m i n u t e , t o o . N o t e d i o u s 20 to 30 m i n u t e s b o i l i n g . S o l d by A l l Gro-c e r s .

E A S T E N G L I S H V I L L E . A . M. C h u r c h a n d f a m i l y a r e en-

t e r t a i n i n g f r i ends f r o m V a l l e y Ci ty .

M r . C . Hi l l of C o m s t o c k P a r k p r e a « h e d in the Goff s c h o o l b o u s e S u n d a y .

D a v i d Crowley a n d fa ru i ly d a y e d with t h e i r d a u g h t e r , L a w r e n c e L o v e l l .

C h a r l e s M c M o t t ' s wa rn , h i t ched to a h o r s e r a k e , r a n a n d h u r t h im b a d l y .

G e o r e e Mattes. B e r t M a n e s . S i P r i c h a r d and J . J e w e l l s t a r t e d l a s t M o n d a y fo r W h i t e C l o u d o n a fishing W-ip.

C o r a l E n g l i s h wa#- the g u e s t o f , Ess ie C a s l e r S a t u r d a y n i g h t a n d S u n d a y .

L u e l l a a n u W i l d i a S t u a r t of Me-c o s t a c o u n t y v i s i t e d t h e i r p e o p ' e h e r e las* week.

Ess ie C a s l e r a n d Edi th B a b c o c k s t a r t e d f o r T r a v e r s e Cit.\ T u e s d a y fo r • a v is i t with f r i e n d s .

M r s . W . M. A n d e r s o n spen t M o n - , d a y a f t e r n o o n wi th h e r p a r e n t s , M r . j a n d M r s . E. E n g l i s h .

F r e d Mi l l e r h a s g o n e to S o l o n to j bu i ld a h o u s e f o r h i s mo the r , where she will m o v e t h i s f a l l .

M r s . M a r y M e a d is s t a y i n g a t t b e h o m e of M r s . W e s t , e s s i s t i r x Mrs . M a r k h a m wi th t h e w o r k .

Mrs . R a c h e l C a d y a n d d a u g h t e r of G r a n d R a p i d s w a s t h* gues t of M r s . E. S t u a r t o v e r S u n d a y .

Mrs . Ne l l i e B u c b a a a n a n d J e n n i e h a v e g o n e n o r t h t o v is i t Mrs . Bu-c h a n a n ' s s o n , K . Y o u n g b l o o d .

If the c r o w d k e e p s ge t t ing l a r g e r o o S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g s a l A. S w a n s o n ' a ice c r e a m p a r l o r he will h a v e t o bu i ld o n .

T h e gen t l e r a i n t h a t c a m e S u n d a y was e n j o y e d b y a l l , e spec i a l l y by t h o s e who wen t t o N o r t h P a r k f o r the picnic a n d b a l l g a m e .

T h e y o u n g p e o p l e g a v e Mr . a n d ' • u s . J . VV. M c C r e a d y a r ecep t i on l a s t T u e s d a y e v e n i n g a t tbe»r h o m e . R e f r e s h m e n t s w e r e se rveu and a j o J ' y e v e n i n g was s p e n t .

A u g u s t t i m e t e l l s on the ne rves . B u t «^at s p i r i t l e s s , n o amb i t i on feel-i ng c a n be e a s i l y a o d qu ick ly a l t e r e d

s know to

T n k r A l l p e r s o n s a r e r ecommended t o

t a k e F o l e y ' s K i d n e y P i l l s f o r back-ache , r h e u m a t i s m , a n d k idney and b l a d d e r t r o u b l e , a s they a r e hea l i ng a n d a n t i s e p t i c a a d c o r r e c t u r i n a r y i r r e g u l a r i t i e s which , if neg lec ted , may J e v e l o p i n t o s e r i o u s 111 r e s t o r e h e a l t h a n d s t r e n g t h .

neg l ec t s i g n s of k i d n e y o r b l a d d e r t r o u b l e s n d r i sk B r i g h t ' s d i s e a s e o r diat*>tes. A . B. W a y .

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W h i t e W h e a t . rtO-lh l e s t . . . Red W h e a t . fiO-lb tes t R y e B u c k w h e a t TO H a y O* Oo t o 9 9 00 S t r a w *.> 00 Oa>». i o C o r n , sbe i l ed 75 P o r k , d r e s s e d 10 Beef , d r e s s e d 6 t o H C h i c k e n s , l ive 12 I

They j C h i c k e n s , d r e s s e d l i - i Do n o t Vea l 101

B u t t e r 20 E g g s 20 P o t a t o e s 00 B e a n s , h a n d nicks*] t 2 . 1 5

Business Liners.

Ii* >R S A L E b icyc le ,

A l m o s t new h i g h g r a d e with t o o l s c o m p l e t e .

C a l l a t t h i s Office. '11-tf

FO R MALE - A p a i r o ' mule*, w e i g h t 1290 e a c h . I n q u i r e of L . K.

M o o r e , wes t of S p a r t a . 3 1 - P

N O R T H C H E S T E R . Did you t h a n k G o d f o r t h e g l o r i o u s

r a i n o n S u n d a y .

D a m e f a s h i o n Is e c o n o m i c a l , she d o e s n ' t a . iow much wa i s t .

T o m Fee r i ck and f a m i l y a r e visi t-i n g wi th b i s m o t h e r t h i s week.

T h e r e a r e two k i n d s of c o u r t io t b i s c o u n t r y , p r o b a t e and r e p r o b a t e .

T h e C o u n t y W . C . T . U . c o n v e n t i o n . _ _ v . , _ , . Vsvrt*. c k 0 , . B 1 . , k i 1 p o i \ , l l T . , i •>-, S A L E ' »ne ch i ld s lied, o n e a t N o r t h C h e s t e r c h u r c h A u g u s t 2., b » b j , . a h M V t > r a l , . h a i r < >

a n d 2»'». l a n d o n e s m a l l h e a t e r . C a l l a t h o u s e . M i s s D o r a Feer ick is v i s i t i ng h e r t p N - > e r - s P » r t a

s i s t e r , M r s . W i l l B r a i l , a t Greenv i l l e t h i s week.

F>R S A L E New milch c o w . q u i r e of J . A . F a s t , S p a r t a .

I n -30-2

The Big Store of

A. H. Saur 5c Co. &

Mid-Summer Clearance Sale of Hot Weather Goods

cons i s t ing of D i a i i i i c s , Lawns , L i n e n s , Or-gandies , p la in , bar red and figured goods. Al l latest and most des i rable pa t t e rns , 65 d i f f e r e d de-s igns , all pi led on o u r bargain table , will g c at t he fol lowing reduced prices.

All 10 c e n t g o o d s a t *c i E j U v d " 1 2 &c " 15 " " . 3 " « M " " I4e ; E " 2i» " " " 16c " » " " • 2Or

()n our opening day. Saturday, the 17th, we will offer our entire stock of Men's. Women's .Vlitwes. Boys* and Children.H* Oxfords at T H K E E - K H ' K T ^ the regu-lar price.

This will he for the one day only—Sale on all other good* will continue until further notice.

S p e c i a l S a l e on Grocer ies < b o x e s b e s t ful l c o u n t m a t c h e s 1 . 1 25c t p o u u d s bulk s t a r c h 2sic 4 p o u n d s g o o d p r u n e s . . . ,23c e p o u u d s r i ce .25c 1<> b a r s C a l u m e t s o a p 2-JC o b a r s N a p t h a s o a p a n d o n e bc.x w a s h i n g p o w d e r , 2.V 6 b o x e s oiltfd o r m u s t a r d s a r d i n e s 3&c 0 c a n s po t t ed b a m 26c

A. H. Saur 6c Co. Kent City Mich.

A n d r e w S t a u f f e r a n d f a m i l y at-t ended tbe S t a u f f e r r e u n i o n a l Cale-d o n i a l a s t week.

A m i l l i o n d o l l a r s is t o o b i g a p r i ce f o r a P o r t u g u e s e h u s b a n d . D o n ' t y o u t h i n k so , g i r l s ?

Mr . P a t t e n o> t h e C h i c a g o h o a r d of t r a d e i s no t c a l l i n g fo r m o r e b a n d s to I r e a p b i s h a r v e s t , b e a r s a n d bu l l s will d o i t U r h im.

R e v . a n d M r s . L a s i e t t e h a d a v e r y ! c o r d i a l r e c e p t i o n a t C a s c o v i a l a s t I

oy t aK ing w n a t i s n o w 10 u r u g g i s t s | w e e k w h i l e a U e n d i o g t h e q u a r t e r l y ] a s Dr . S h o o p s R e s t o r a t i v e . Yv i th in j n e e t i n g , j u d g i n g f r o m t h e many in-4S h o u r s a f t e r b e g i n n i n g H> use t h e j v i l a t i o n 8 ^ l h e d i f f e r en t h o m e s . Kes tors . t tve , i m p r o v e m e n t will oe n o - i t iced . Of c o u r s e , f u l l hea l th will n o t

F>R R E N T — Nice f u r n i s h e d r o o m A p p l y to M r s . W m . H i sey .

I j H »R R E N T A .Vroom c o t t a g e a t C a m p lake , f u r n i s h e d , ST.00 p e r

week. B . I I . P u t m a n . 30-1

L X ) I I R E N T - Tlie C h r i s t y m e a t m a r -ket . F i n e l o c a t i o n " a n d g o o d

b u s i n e s s . ? o r t e rms i n q u i r e of W m . C h r i s t y a t t h e m a r k e t . 29-2

Now is t h e t ime to buy y o u r

Lumber, Lath, S h i n g l e s of which I have a good l iue.

I also hand le t he well-known Wolve r ine Roof ing .

D. VanWiltenburg. jj Potato C r a t e s l « k e e l s e a c h .

c v n i i D C i n u o L A u u n o i u n o

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i m m e d i a t e l y r e t u r u . T h e g a i n , how-ever , will s u r e l y f o l l o w . A n d b e s t of a l l , you wil l r e a l i z e and feel y o u r s t r e n g t h a n d a m b i t i o n a s i t i s r e t u r n -ing. O u t s i d e i n f l u e n c e s d e p r e s s first t h e " i n s i d e n e r v e s " then the S t b m a c h , H e a r t a n d K i d n e y s will u s u a l l y f a i l . S t r e n g t h e n t h e s e f a i l i n g n e r v e s with D r . S h o o p ' s R e s t o r a t i v e and see h o w qu ick ly h e a l t h wil l be y o u r s a g a i n . S o l d by a l l D e a l e r s .

Sun-Mrs . I

while away

Subscr ibe for t he Sent ine l -Leader $1.00 per yea r .

A L P I N F C .

Qui te a n u m b e r f r o m here a t t ended the c i r c u s in t b e c i t y .

Mr . a n d M r s . R i c h m y e r e n t e r t a i n e d r e l a t i v e s f r o m P l a i n l i e l d .

Mr . a n d M r s . J . Voge l a t ended c h u r c h in G r a n d R a p i d s S u n d a y .

Miss J e n n i e H i l l s of the Va l l ey "City spen t l a s t week wi th he r b r o t h e r a n d f a m i l y .

M r s . J . A n t o r e n t e r t a i n e d a n iece a n d nephew f r o m O h i o a few d a y s l a s t Week.

MLss C . I ' i t t n e r of Oh io is v i s i t i n g h e r c o u s i n s , t h e Misses J u l i a a n d i L a u r a S t e f f e n s .

R . B a u m h o f f wen t t o G r a n d R a p i d s j M o n d a y e v e n i n g a n d a t tended t h e K. O . T . M. M . rev iew.

W h e n t h e d a i l y p r e s s is moved to l e c t u r e the p r o f e s s o r s of the C h i c a g o I U n i v e r s i t y f o r the i r a t t a c k s on t h e j B i b l e it i s t ime f o r t b e t ru s t ee s t o t a k e no t i ce .

T h e peop le were deep ly in te res ted in t b e s e r m o n a t the c h u r c h l a s t S u n d a y j m o r n i n g on " M o s e s , " a n d h i s d i sap-p o i n t m e n t s , u l t i m a t e t r i u m p h anu i g l o r i o u s v i c t o r y . T h i s J u l y - A u g u s t j S u n d a y m o r n i n g se r i e s o n " M e s s a g e s f r o m the Men of Y e s t e r d a y to tbe Men of T o d a y , ' ' a r e p r o v i n g very p r o f i t a b l e t o t h e peop le .

PERE MARQUETTE

O N

SUNDAY, A I I A I I O Y H U U U O I

O O

N o m a t t e r h o w l o n g y o u h a v e suf-f e red , F o l e y ' s K i d n e y P i l l s will he lp y o u . M r s . S . L . Bowen of W a y n e , W . V s . , wr i t e s : " I w a s a su f fe re r f r o m k idney d i s e a s e , s o t h a t a t t imes I c o u l d n o t ge t o u t of bed , a n d when I d i d I c o u l d n o t s t a n d s t r a i g h t . I t o o k F o l e y ' s K idney P i l l s . O n e do l -l a r b o t t l e a n d p a r t of the second c a r e d me e n t i r e l y . " T h e y will c u r e y o u . A . B . W a y .

B A L L A R O S . B o r n S u n d a y , A u g u s t 1, t o Mr .

a n d M r s . M a r t A n d e r s o n , a g i r l .

M r s . S . B. Haw ley h a s been enter-t a i n i n g h e r s i s t e r f r o m G r a n d R a p i d s t h i s week.

' T O

H ? S 9 < r v t T~ 1 i O 1 1 I V

n I \ I V W

Contractor and Builder

S P A R T A

Dea le r in

Majestic* Furnaces , Port land Cement ,

Prepared Plaster , and P las ter Board.

Bell Phone No. 62. M I C H ,

Grand Rapids

T r a i n will leave S p a r t a at 10:35 a. m. R e t u r n i n g , wil l j leave G r a n d Rap ids at 7 :00 ; p. 111.

R o u n d t r ip lares : T o G r a n d I Rap ids , 35 cen t s

Met yiMir auetiou bills a t th is ofl ire.

Did You Ever Stop to Think how much worry and t rouble you can save b y h a v i n g us do you r l a u n d r y work. W e have all t h e neces sa ry e q u i p m e n t s a n d too, we know how to do good work .

POST & KEECH, Proprietors!

The mold holds one pint. WQlnot rust or tar-n*sh Should .last 3 life time. Worth 50 cents.

JCU.TC0N is a i d e ia 7 flavors. lh*y * r« all Millions of koasekeepcr* as* JEUYCON. u should ye.

PRICE, lOc. P E R PACKAGE Sav« the Diamond tr«4e-aaik* lor Mkcr oilers ia packs*o

Given FREE w.r.I,"L, Silver Aluminum Jelly Molds

W i t h e v e r y p u r c h a s e o f t h r e e p a c k a g e s o f

E L L Y C O N T H E PERFECT JELLY DESSERT

Your grocer wi l show you the molds* Order JELLYC0N • n'On anu secure one oi these beauiiiui invito U-iwc i«c> are all gone. If your grocer does not sell Jeflywn, leave

your order with him for three packages with a moid free, he will get it for you. We make this extraordinary offer to in-

duce you to try Jellycon, We want you to know how good Jellycon is, how much better it is than the Imitation Brands.

Just notice the rich, delicious flavors. It excels in every way.

W NOTICE TO RET AIL GR0CERS-H you have noi « . e « u y urdwed • Mock of JELLYCON MOLD CASES, place your order at once. All the Wholesale Grocers ia the State have them Everyone of your customers will be sure to call for three packages oJ Jellycon with i Bold fre*. £ i S - gURNHtM C8., Mlrt., 63-61 l l l l l l l W l » < « Tofk

The Right Start You can get tha t sack of Crescent flour and know t h a t

t h e resu l t s will be good r igh t f rom t h e s tar t .

T h e un i form qua l i t y , t he flavor and l i g h t n e s s of y o u r bread and pas t ry will m a k e you a firm f r ieud of C r e s c e n t flour.

T h e assurauce of r e s u l t s a m o u n t s to a posi t ive g u a r a n -tee of sat isfaction with eacu iv puikuaMid.

You can ' t s tar t u s i n g Crescen t a n y sooner . Yon shou ldn ' t s tar t a n y l a t e r .

( C R E S C E N T p L O U R

"The Kin<l Everybody Likes."

VOItiMT MILLING CO.. . . . . GRAND RAPIDS, M I C H .

CMKSCXNT FLOuir