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Show WAV VDU DO? HIAT DUD fnfnfPCiifr EX"""' Ovriupp!y a wife. I hear you advertised for Any replies!" "Yes. Hundreds." "Good! What did they sayT can have "Oh, they all said: Tou mine,'" I if " TV. Put On to enrich needed flesh L - he blood take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi-,c- al By Discovery. ' x...tnn'nrr tli normal ar- tatui tion of the stomach and other deranged organs and functions, it builds the flesh up to a safe .and healthy standard 1 promptly, pleasantly and The weak, emaciated, thin, pale and SAME PRESCRIPTION naturally. mi marl trouble and would be terriMy distressed. There with-o- ut were only Just certain foods I could eat was having one of these bad spells. I weak and never felt good. But Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery relieved me, I can Mrs. eat almost anything without distress. Utah. Mary Dalton, 3115 Reeves Ave., Ogden, Send 10c for trial pkg. to Dr. Pierce! Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N, Y. rJ4lr BH?r:'' .mI'-- ; .syjf. ,M :w kirn Sfe, &mtotJ MlfW siA4t&. wllSlfMs V'v -- i To Suit the Customer Builder This is the house In the Tudor style, sir. Prospective Buyer 1 don't care for the Tudor style. Builder Soon alter that, sir. Bill, Just bring a pail of water and wash out these oak, beams. Quart of Water v';X . TTTI Health ill T MiSaoFflllSimore By ELWO SCOTT WATSON. rIIKN Ilerbort JIov(r of California tnkos the onth of ofllce na President of the United States on MassMarch 4, Calvin CoolUlgt' achusetts will become a member of one of the exclusive organizations In the world. At no time In Its history has Ir hml more than five members and tluit occurred Since then only once, In there have never been more than two members In Litis club at any one time and since Wilson's death on February 3, 10J4, It has had only one, William Howard Taft. For this organization, a very Important one, even though It Is smull In membership. Is the unofficial "Ex I'resldcnti of the United States club." Just what Calvin Coolldge will do when he Joins ttio "Kx Presidents' club" was unknown at the time this article was written, although it inu be announced by the time It HprenT In print. When that question came up some time ago. he Is said to have remarked that he wns '"Just going to whittle," which may have been the New Eng land way of saying that he was going to spend a leisurely vacation Wore taking up any other occupation. There has been talk of his resuming Ms law practice In Northampton.' Muss. ; talk of Ms Joining a New York law firm and ft.so talk of his becoming an luiuortnnt olllclnl In various business Arms. If eventually lie turns in politics there will be plenty of precedent. Three occnploil Important federal positions after they left the While. House John Qulncy Adams was elected to the I'nlicd Ptntes Andrew Johnson wns lionse of representatives. William elected to the I'nlted States senate Howard Tuft became and Is now chief Justice In the Supreme Court of the United Stutes. Despite his historic "I do not choose." If Is even possible that he may decide sometime to put the tradition against the third term to a test and again rim for President, fn this he arnln will have precedent irom Ms predecessors. Martin Van liu.en was the first ex President P.efore the New Yorker to attempt a corre-hack- . all the American Presidents hnd served their two terms save the two Adamses. Van Piiren slipped miserably In his two attempts, fulling desplt strenuous efforts to get the nomination of 1814. and. In 134S with the nomination fulling to gather a single electoral vote. After him Fillmore tried with scarcely better success. Oeneral Grant was the first man to attempt to fill a third lenn. running well for th nomination on the first W ballots but finally glv Ing way to James . Ourfleld That wits In 1R80 to regain Cleveland was the only the crown. Several before him tried to turn the trick ;' Roosevelt exactly twenty yenra Inter attempted the same thing. All failed where Cleve land succeeded ror defeated 111 ISSN by penj.i mln Harrison. Cleveland waged a campaign that found him on March 4. 1.S!:i. riding to the Capitol IMevetiind was the only man to make this ride more than tbtee limes. In HH, be rode with the outgoing President Arthur ; In IWfli. he gave over the reins to the Incoming President Harrison; In IS'II'!. lie took Coin back from the siime man: In IS' 1". tie rde the trail lor the lust time currying with him the 111 filial William Of careers of the other x Presidents Wll-lliA. MHl.ti. writing In the Washington Star, offers this "nm-Nsummary: d te John Tyfleir. :J.Q; Addnm seemed about to break with France, the old ally of the United States, and spivnt some time th army, whirl) he had led o well In the strinuous years of the nation's birth. A cold contracted while rid Ins uliout his broad acres caused his death, following a brief Illness, on Deyears old. cember 14, 173. He was sixty-seveJohn Adams, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and veteran of the Continental congress, retired from the Presidency on March 4, ISO J He died July 4. ISi'O, at his native Qulncy, Mass.. at the ripe old age of ninety years, havtng-liveto see his eldest son become the sixth President ct the United States. Thomas JefferRon surrendered the Presidency March 4, 1S09, and, curiously enough, died on the same day as his predecennor la ofllce, both of them passing away on the birthday of Calvin Coolldge. July 4. He retired to private life at his residence,. Montloelto, In Virginia. In 1819 ne took a leading part In the founding of the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, and was rector of that Institution until his death In 1826. at tlie age of eighty-thre- e years. James Madison left the Chief Executlveshlp on March 4, 1817. He retired to his estate at Orange county, Va.. to enjoy private life. He was a delegate to the Virginia Constitutional convention of 1829. and was rector of the University of Virginia He died June it. 18.16. age elghty-thr- e James Monroe laid down the duties of the Presidency on March 4. 1S25. and died July 4. 1831. at years He retired to his the age of seventy-thre- e farm at Loudoun county. Virginia, and In the Virginia Constitutional convention of IIU, In which Madison likewise served, he was chosen president of that group. He moved to New York city In IS J I and died there. John Quincy Adams left the White House In that Coolidge, anuther 4. 1 823. a coincideroe man from Massachusetts,, stepped crtit of the Presl-dencIn 1929 Adams was defeated as candidate for governor of Massachusetts In 1834. but th Bay state elected him to the house of representatives ns a Whig to the Twenty. second and the eight succeeding congresses, serving from March 4.S3.1831 until ISIS, of his dealh at the Cnpiml on Kel.ruary a paralytic stroke, at the age of elgh'v veara Andrew Jackson closed yet another chapter In his colorful career when he left the Presidency on March 4, 1837 Then he retired to the Hi milage, his home near Nashville. Tenn., and died thre June 3. 1815. of tuberculosis, at the age of seventy-eigh- t years. Martin Van Buren bade farewell te the White House officially on March 4. 1841. Defeated for reelection as the Democratic candidate In 1849. eight years later he was the antlslavery candidateN. for T.. President. He died in his native Klnderhook, e July i4. 1862k during the Civil war. aged seventy-ninyeaia. John Tyler surrendered the reins of office on peace conMarch 4 I84S. He was delegate to tt-vention In 1861, which tried to avert the Civil war, and seived as Its pies'dent. He had lived quietly on his estate'up to that time. With the approach of the conflict he plunged Into politics again and after the proposal of the peace convention had failc.t, he threw In hie lot with his native Virto ginia swd voted for secession He was elected the Confederate congress, out died before It assem. bled in Richmond. Va expiring January 18. 8t In th Old Dominion capital, at the age of seventy, one years. James Knox Polk lived but a short while after he was freed from the duties of the Presidency on March 4. 84. Death came to him on June M. e IMS. In Nashville. Tenn, at the age of n . Mont-pelle- r. M.-r-ch y flftv-thre- Veara. Millard Fillmore laid down the onerous duties c the Presidential ofTI" on March 4. 1853. after having been defeated for renomlnstlon, as the Whig candidate by Gen Wlnfleld Scott. He resumed his law practice In Buffalo, N V.. and was chosen as the National American canrtiilnte for the Presidency In IS.'ii He was president of the BulT.ilo Historical a society, and during the Civil war he commanded 1874. at . corps of home gtinida He died Mr Buffalo si the eve of tn nl four years franklin Pierce turned over the aftali of stsre to h' successor tn the Presidency on March 4. I8.S7 ll spent the tatter year of his life In traveling extcnslvelv 8. at Concord. In Europe and died N Ik.. s the age of sixty four years on March Mouse White la.ne Buchanan left thr 4. set. tod died June 1. 8UH. at the age of seventy, In Wheat sevet years He nail retired lo his Isnd. near Lancaster, Pa Andrew Johnson, who wat cearl ousted by the aenate, left the White House with the expiration of bis term oo March 4, 1868 By an ironWal turn ltl. 1 VVukhlnrton retired to th quiet of his liIOvr) Mount lrnrin ifter he surrendered the res4efco ot Murrh 4. 1797. but lived orty id rent. Tru. eo'ipl it (ar to fnjnjr hi well-ea- r IUd to Vhlladelrtils lo 1711, wha war b Oeors ' . 1 of fate, he was elected to the very body that would have turned him out of the Presidential office with one vote more. He first retired to his home In Tennessee and was defeated as a candidate for the sonate before the legislature In 1870. He was defeated aa an independent candidate for the Forty-thir- d congress, but having been. a senator before to his election to the Presidency, he was the senflte and served from March 4, 1875, until his death, July SI, 1875, at the home of his daughter In Carters Station, Carter county, Tenn., at the agb of sixty-si- x years. Ulysses Simpson Grant, Intrepid soldier, laid down the task of the Presidency on March 4. 1877. With his wife and youngest son he made a tour of the world, returning in 1879. ' He was boomed for a third term in 1880, but popular sentiment against this course proved too strong. In New York city, to which he moved, he became president of the Mexican Southern railway and a speria! partner of the firm of Grant & Ward, but In 1884 this firm failed, the former general suffering an acute financial loss. In 1885 congress restored him to the rank of general, giving him full pay on the retired list. To recoup his fortunes he began to write his memoirs, but a cancerous growth In the throat placed a painful handicap upon him and he died July 23. 1885, at the age of sixty-thre- e year, mis- Writs occasion- well-know- at Mount McC.regor, N. Y. Rutherford BIrchard Hayes, who also had been a general in the Civil war. stepped out of the Presidential office on March 4. 1881. Until his death on January 17, 1 833. his days were given over to education and philanthropy. At the end he was seventy years old. Chester Alan Arthur left the White House on March 4, 1885, and retired to New Tnrk, where death overtook htm on November IS. 1886, a little more than a year after he hart left the Chief at the ige of fifty-si- x years. Orover Cleveland stfpped down from his high office as leader of the nation for the second time n March 4, !8!7. He had first served from March 4. 1885, to March 4. 1889. but during the Intervening four years this lone American, who Is the only one In sll history who was able to come back to the White House after he had left It, retired lo New York to engage In the practice or law. He was called away from his briefs, however, by to the Presidency in 1832 Accordingly, he serve! the second tlm- - for four vears. beginning March 4. 1808. When his second term had been completed. Cleveland settled down In Princeton. N. J. At Princeton university he delivered an annual course of lectures on public affairs and wrote numerous articles. He died June ti. 90S. at th age of seventy-on- e years, t Benjamin Harrison hade an official farewell to 1600 Pennsylvania avenue on March 4, 83. This grandson of President William Henry Harrison then returned to the practice of law and dellvere.1 a course of lectures at Iceland Stanford university on constitutional law. He served as counsel tor Venciuela In the Boundary Arbl He represented the United tratlon commission. State In 1899 na a member of the Peace conference and became one of the International Board of Arbitration In 1857 he had written "This Country of Ours" He died Msrch 1J. 1901, at Indianapolis Ird , at the age of sixty-seve- n years. Theodore Roosevelt left the White House on March 4, 1909. to plunge Into another phase of hi spectacular career. Following the outdoor life of which he was atnh an ardent advocate, he hunted and explored over a wide stretch of territory In Africa and South America. Disagreeing with his successor. Taft, he lost his fight to he chosen as srer In 19IX and formed the Republican stsndard-hi fame us Bull Moose party, making a strenuous campaign and bHng rewarded for It by the voters in running ahead of the regular Republican candl-dfct- a His offer o raise a division to a'd America . In the World wat was but he was active In Its eauee with the pen He died of heart trouble at Oyster Bay. N V.. on January t, 1919. at the years. age of sixty-on- e WlPism Howard Tsft surrendered his Presidential toga on Msrch 4. and Is now the only He tnucht l,v former President living at Vale until 1921, the year llard.ng appointed him Chief Justice cf the Supreme court, the post hi now holds Woodrow Wilson, the World wat President. like his Democratic predecessor Cleveland! had lectured at Princeton but later became It prrsl. dent, cnied a strnnnous and momentous eight yeara In the While House on M.ucb 4. I'iJt a broken man He entered a law partnership with bis old friend Balntiridge Colby and maintained an ofOre In Washington IJjsth summoned him on Februaiy S, 1934, at the g of sixty-seve- n yea.. -- Illinois, Pepsin," for fres Civlrcg FfI JO. aim ' Gram A Helplbss Bob Smith kissed me. " Mother Why, Betty, what did he do that for? Betty Well I'm not sure but f think I hnve the stronger will. American Lesion Monthly. Bobhy Chatter sl(-- psrf5822A CALIFORNIA . "Including" Is the Word "Reggie has nothing to talk except himself." "Why the exception?" i "Fee about EES" MotW and Daughter Praise Vegetable Compound Johnson City, N. Y. "My daughter was only 20 years old, but for two years cne worKea In misery. She was nervall ous, had aches and pains and no apprun-dow- etite. I was taking Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable with ' Betty "Syrup All Yi titer Long Eating I . Marvelous Climnto Good Hotels Tourist Camps Splendid Roads Gorgeous Mounula Views. The wonderful dinar t mortofthm (Tot n authority. says a too much rich food creates acids, which excite the kidneys. They become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood. Then we get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders often come from sjuggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache In the kidneys, or your back hurts, or If the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, begin drinking a quart of water each day, also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys may act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to fluh and stimulate the kidneys; also to help neutralize the acids in the system, so they no longer cause Irritation, thus often relieving bladder weakness, Jad Salts Is inexpensive makes a lithla-wate- r effervescent delightful drink which everyone should take now and then to help keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby often avoiding serious kidney complications. ally, write trial bottle. Troubling You No man or woman can make a or Dept. BB, Monticello, Taka a Little Salts If Your Back Hurts, or Bladder la take by flushing the kidneys . ' C.U 1, started to practice, wiieu ur. uuuweu medicine, back ia 1875, the needs for laxative were not as great as today People lived normal lives, ate plain wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh air. But even that early there ert drastic physics and purges for the relief of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did not believe were good for human beinm The prescription for constipation that he used early in his practice, and which he put in drug stores in 1892 under th name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid vegetable remedy, intended for women, children and elderly and they need just such a nuut saf' bowel stimulant. , This prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling liquid laxative. It has won the confidence of people who needed it to get relief from headaches, biliousness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your druggist, Cleans Kidneys I HE WROTE IN 1892 ctmflCf. also plump, 'round, rosy and robust, pimples and blotches are driven away. All druggists, liquid and tablets. Read Uii comment: "I hid fivaric stomach d good results so she decided to try it Before ehe had takes two bottles her was better, n mnra pflPftrflll and Was &bl8 tO work. I cannot praise your medicine too highly. It 13 wonderful for mothers and for daughters. It's surely 1 friend In need'." Maa. L. E. Hau, "23 Floral Avenue. Johnson CitTi N. Y. bTia Tularemia, popularly know as rabbit fever, killed 20 people In the United States lust year and Infected 43) persons. 1 Anglo-Venezuel- h mmi!iui j mi ii'iiwsri"w,-iy- l you ever have rheumatism, IFlumbago or other pains that 'i s f - g, v, , ' 4 - M .99 .4, reh-cted- rtfSk penetrate to the very bones and joints, Bayer Aspirin offers quick relief, and such complete comfort that it's folly to suffer. Keep these tablets handy in the house; and carry them in your pocket. Then you need never suffer long from any attack of neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism, or even from a bad headache. Bayer Aspirin is a marvelous ant:.dote for all pain and has no ;ffect on the for every in uses valuable many dox ot genuine uayer Aspm"-Al- l druggists. . j - Aavlrla to tl trad - mft ot Br Usaafaetac t MoaasciUeaddMtar oC UcUe"1 |