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Show EBAVER COUMT TTTX t3 UTATI .ITJS3. E"AYEIL, f v- - n ' V BLOOD Cosut.Fon. Teatlfy v pmlla F iA f. zr&tJui Oirg-M- ttwwaoniiil tr:-- ; j "XTirant to writ uedi- -. !t calr. l'i.w' iis Cub for-bother- ' tie. I was vl'tl. ed with an uloer oa ik: icy right abia ben bat hie nudkiae did me no good. The ear got worse right alone eo I tried . wuaeeeooctorand L jfi i,TrV V - J.V. . 3 At once! Relief with- -' - i Pzpgs CoIdCompoyncI'' lint flosa ease your cold t Don't tuffed-uQuit blowing; and 'snuffling! A dose- of Tspes Cold Compound" taken every two boon until three doses are taken umally breaks up a severe cold tod ends all 4 grippe misery. . Belief awaits youl-rOpeii nostrils and the air passage of your bead; stop noss running; reliefs the headache, dullness, fevers Ishness, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. . Tape's Cold Compound" Is ths Quickest, sorest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. It sets without ssslstancer Taates nice. Insist on Contains aulnlne. i, Papa's lAdf. ; '.' s l pt , FcrOrr40Yesrsw. -clogged-up ,',., '! " "Female" Oeitroytra the Deadlier. " Strangely enough,, although ths American-- , destroyers carried creator fuel supplies than the' British, they were rather more dainty and graceful In their linesa fact that Inspired a famous retort which rapidly passed through the ranks of both navies. Ton know," remarked a British officer to an American, "I.llke the British destroyers better than the American. .They look so much : sturdier. Yours seem to me rather feminine in appearance." les," replied ths American, "that's so,' but yon must remember what Kipling says. The female of the spedes Is more deadly than the male.' " Admiral Sims In the World's Work. . A Feeling of Security Ton naturally feel secure when yes that tht saedlcin you art about ts taks is absolutely pars and. contain no harmful or Ubit, producing drug. , Each a median is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp. Boot, kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The san standard of purity, strength know and exeelleace ia maintained In every bottle ef Swamp-Rooempeunded It is seieatifioaUy ' ot gran vegetable kerbs. It Is sol s stimulant and Is taken in teaapoonfu! It i not monunended for everything. helper in relieving It i nature's great . f 1 ... n gwuuimng tlooncy, .uvor enu yiav m - der trouble. A sworn statement ef purity is with of Dr. KihWs fiwaaip-Eeo- t, every bottl " Adding te His Troubles. Teast I am told that small rubber-woverwheels have been invented to be clamped to the rockers of a to convert, tt Into a rolling ' ed rock-tng-ch- chair. ,.' ; . Crimsonbeak Well, that's the limit! It's bad enough for a man to go borne in the dark and knock bis shins once against the rocker without having the pesky thing chase blm all around the h iv - ; ... room I . Ee Cored CctriuJ Defsess Ccsaotcannot ' reach by local appUcatlon el ther toe dtooaeea perUo of the ear. There la cure one Catarrhal to Deafness, eclr way and that te by a constitutional remedy. HALL'S CATARRH MKD1CINB aeU Ih rough the Blooe cn the Mucoue Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness la eaueed by an inflamed condition ef the mucous lining ef the Euetacfataa Tube, Vihon tM tube la inflamed yea have a rambling; sound r Imperfect bearing, and when It la entirely cbed, Deatneee la the result. Unleee the lnflammaUo can be and thta tube reatored to tta normal eon ditto, bearing may be deetroyeS forever. Many caae ot DeafneM are eaueed by Catarrh, which la an In named condition of the Mucous Surface. ONB HUNDRED DOLLARS for any eae of Catarrhal Deafnroo that cannot be cured BALL'S CATAKiUi by e4 iiEDlClNK. . All Dmrtieta ,r. J. Cheney We. Circular free, ; A Co, Toledo, ObJo. WhouMIWitp. I see recent Invention la on the vacuum principle, a coffee-pthe lid of which Serves ss a stopper. Well, what the lady who , Gotham gets, up in the morning to get Is not fast wants for the coffee-po- t stopper but n Church n ot self-starter- ,. BOSCHEE'S SYRUP.' A cold is probably the most common of sll disorders and when neglect, ed is apt to be most dangerous. Statistics show that more than three times ss many people died from Influenza last year, as were killed In ths greatest war the world has ever known. For the last fifty-thre- e years Eoschee's Syrup baa been nsed for eouchV' broucLitlV eolJd, throat rltation and especially lung trouble. It gives the patient a good night's TfU free from couching, with easy expectoration in the morning, klade In America and used in the homes of thousands of fatullle all over the ch filled world. rold everywhere. Adv, It "Money talk." Does. , Tukr a lot of It nowadays, though, a noise." to niaWe mU'.h tf S I - far" k SSn- , i i IU8T what the airplane Is to do for clvillaaUon U still mare' or less guessworkand one man's guess is ss good ss snother's. But of at least one thing ' ' we may be sure: The blrdmatt and - 1""" .r' the airplane mean the 'speedy end ot the silent places of earth. Today some thing like s seventh of the earth' surface Is (tin unexplored. Tomorrow topographical maps st' a nominal cost will be on sale at the bookstores.' A Last season an airplane glided slowly down past El Capltan and Half Dome and alighted on ' the floor of the Tosemlte valley ; It rose and sailed away without difficulty, A daring airman swooped down into the abyss of the Grand canon of the ' V M AUSTAMJK Colorado in Arizona and then soared out over the X rim without a mishap. A whole fleet of airplanes rose into the thin sir of ths Rockies crossed the . room ATTLAfrrrC 14,000-fopeaks of the continental divide snd did ' stunts over the summits of Pikes Peak and Longs . Peak. These things were something new under the sun : it was believed they could nor be done. These feata merely emphasise the fact which la becoming increasingly apparent that there la no where that the airplane cannot go. The fact that these unexplored regions of ths earth are the most difficult, dangerous and Inac- - , cesslbl but hastens their exploration. The more . danger the greater the incentive t The greater the adventure the more enjoyable the thrill! These silent places of earth appeal to. the kdveo V turer of the skies ss the mall service fills him with loathing. A writer in the 8 Irand Magazlns observes Sage- ly that nature still provides the flying msn with an the hazards of adventure. And be proceeds to set down in detail the opportunities that await the aviator on exploration bent He argues that .' nature, in these remote regions, has defied all the . white man's sttempts to seals her heights, intrude upon her asid solitudes, escape from the lurking : dangers of her virgin forests, or feast bis sight foot upon her snowy waste. She laughed his expeditions out ef court: bnt she cannot laugh at the equipment of the winged explorer. In fact, there Is Uttls the airman cannot do. From Gib- - ." raltar be jran peep upon the tribal fanatics of southern Morocco snd dwell a while on the west ' era Atlas mountains. .' From Egypt be has a flying ground of thouThe biggest feat left for a traveler to perform in ' frozen wastes of the polar regions Is befog sr--t sands of square miles in the eastern Sahara and, Arabia, perhaps in all Asia, is to cross the Yemen, ranged, and .the airship will, no doubt be ori lines if be is fond of rolling sand, the deserts of Araon to NeJran, from there slong the Wady then will command a big radius of action and perthat be is and : bia, too. Both are within .bla reach, Dauaslr to southernmit AflaJ and Ths Mejd. large High petrol storage. ! certain of no company except what he takes with ' most created another set The of 'noted these of difficulties. for their lands, provinces tropics' blm. For a change, the coast of the Gulanas is ideal ' The were found waters and fixtures to and fabric be have still glue airplane comparative fertility, for slipping into the malarial Jungle of the seen by western eyes, snd it would now seem that ' - to be of a perishable nature, In the climate, and -tired when and Cordillera of southern Venezuela, these eyes will be those of sa airman,' whose sir-sh-ip "new substances of. greater resistance to the Inand seeking a brief rest be should find a convenwill be more than probably worshiped ss a tense beat were introduced. But today 'an air ient landing spot on ths Tumsc Bumac. Or else from blue. He the miracle will to celestial have adaptable for fny hemisphere. Is within "plane, the Sesert of Gobi from the Siberian railway, or ' Of science, and soon- - the flying explorer determine Inland the of the what becomes, range flowing : portions otths polar area that are not "the home 'should on most routes leading to the unknown of waters be to and throw Arabia, light of the bllzxardT might be worth bis attention. But on 'the mysterious Tslley region which Moslems ; beyond the regions of civilisation. '' His story will of Brazil, let him beware of the illimitable forests in the middle ages said existed on the north-centrbe sn Imperishable and thrilling ' chapter of the ' ths hurrlcsne lends of western Antarctica, the of the Great desert, snd contained d fringe history of nature In her wildest haunts. windy heights snd icy crests of the Himalayas, , , cities among whose ruins the Bedawis V , tj Asrisl exploration Coatly. without proper regard to the pitfalls that beset found coins. He should learn much about the Is ; not to. be lightly un 'But terta.1 ; exploration in these regions. the unwsry t mysterious Kabtan Araba, T and their possible ' ' dertsken. There Is the cost of airplanes, hangars, .. Its the Great Himalayas. f African origin. , .. , . landing place's snd maintenance of personnel." Ex An airman would probably fly a thousand feet '. But ft the modern Investigator South America ploration la s stationary thing at times, snd bsses above the Great Himalaya, the main range, which . still offers the largest field of., Intelligent Inquiry. must be erected. It is one thing to fly over sn from the south sppears like a gleaming wall of Regions nesr the poles and in. the arid deserts can untrodden region and quite another to explore It snow and ice. Some of the snow fields of the only lend themselves to the progress of material - .Science demands much knowledge from the modern and Hlmatayaa are .only accessible from the air,' .developmenLln . a., purely auxUUry... capacity., ot. J. 4iplorer. Possibly- - a, naUon,. ot . natlouSr-coul- d If he landed on one an engine stoppage- might provide quelnt lore of the customs yud conditions .4 ..only furnish the necessary means to provide the leave him marooned In an exposed and precarious of effete, or almost nonexistent tribes., Bpt South ., material for the serial highway and stations which ., America la teeming with virgin, riches. that ars .v are Indispensable ttt satisfactory exploration In position. of 'the .aerisl plo- It would be bard to find anyjHlentlflc task more ,. : MjywalUnt Jbe.iuaglc of miles w of certain ...7- - sV' the than 'T regions "Beer..." exploration "of Arabia which no westerner has seen havs been Interesting of Afghanistan and the study of its wild, pagan" flown over by European officers during the war. Equipped with powerful flying machines, the "" work of exploration should proceed more rapidly - Members of these mllltsry expedition have dl- -. Inhabitants, the bold Ksflr and other strange tribes. "In the northeast corner of the country " than it has ever done, and soon, the unexplored covered ' ntost Interesting ruins of environs ef the poles, patches of central Asia, a large portions of Badakshan and Kaflrstnn are cities.; - But 'this work wa done from properly entirely unknown. large Interior of Arabia, especially of (he .Sahara equrmel flepots. ' Military "bases and aerlaf post - Theaeriai wanderer, 'Ins'pired wlthVYrne" love spots" in central Africa,, large tracts of South staltous may prove tbe Jumptng-of- f points for furAmertcar espeetaHy between the great rivers, nd ther expeditions virder stnto aegK- Desert flying-woulof atfventureT' will' ddubnesl b pneaWW ItfdW lead to tbe Unking up of tbe old caravan that not all the Dark' Continent Is yet an open . certain areas of Anstrslia should be on the page of accomplished exploration. routes by tracking successive oases; and then, book. In fact It still Jealously guard some very tn the Next Decade. from the beaten paths, the wastes adjoining would , black spots.) Even In British territory how much ShIUuk be searched for historic ruins. ,7 districts of ths la known of the. inner To show the wonderful way In which the map The fact reVjHtln rnaf (he aerial ptt)ner 1ll' be Soudan; the region between the upper waters of of the world has been tiHed, It ha ebly to be the first In many virgin fioldsmf fsdanre mT histhe Blue Nile and the limits of the Ugiimlo, or the . stated that in 1800 23.024.SG0 nsquare mllea had line of the- - Senussl oSaes from Tripoli, or the tory, and will. in. his quests find ,1b.. win of been mapped from route- traverse ant) sketches, In bumper draught. . , In 1018 this area Increased te 37,350.852 where Cyrena lea. toward WadalT What European, has areas rand Magazine writer Is right.:.-Theswithin SI the 1SG0 deaert ThU no leas unhuge la much than statute trod, less miles, en, square explored region of the earth are full of fnsctna-- ; square ststute mile were entirely, unsur regions of southern Aslat There are other areas which hsve been crossed slways In hnie snd even tkn for the explorer. For example, take the bead-T- veyed snd unmapped, while In 1016 this bad bees waters of the Amnion and Orinoco In fears also regions "visited perhaps by a score , reduced to 8.3TiO,7M square statute mile out of. region of of travelers since the revival of learning, but In- - .60.000,000 square inHeVth total area of the land , mystery that has buttled every explorer from the habited by poop' ot hom we hdv learned much surface of the enh. togrthfr with the unknown' : conqulstadore down to Theodoro Itooaevelt The a alnnun. armed with wireless, quinine pills and fly less than about the polar, Eskimo. part of the Arctic' and Ant relic regions, which screen, ought to succeed In this cenlurles-olThe greatest unseen area lies In Arabia, at mom may be either bind or water. With the much ' . quest Other explorers have died of fever because a of decade menns today of is which Invexllijatlon scof occupied, all the southern half quicker no quinine or succumbevl to the rapid of bad ana rhey mapping or two should see tbe proper survey cording to native reports, by a great wilderness or got lost because they had no wireless, are the tnat surface river, of earth's or the tikeiy tn of all oia." Three parts known ss the "Dwelling or had been Infected and died from the bites ot Id- e !i5SX 4vre-esbio of his development it nttermft fringe from tbe' west south god Undoubtedly there Is much ot Importance to the Aerial science seems to be keeping pace witn east respectively, but no Euwpvan has ever enworld te be gained by thorough exploration of thin of One made be wilt upon.ltwhich demands C00.000 of tnllea. tract the square tered this Immense to frost region..' And by way of' mystery there la the legend these is the resistance of tbe engines It Is further doubtful, moreover, whether any I risk of '" of tbe White Indians, the Guaharlva of the upper the otherwise there Inactive ; but while crowed ever certain pnrt native has The Spanish explorer of 1750 mentloneJ froen enRlne and permanent stoppage rtpon- ' basins. tongue which It throw out toward tb Persian them ; sn Englishman In 1853 and a Frenchman In no doubt been prehns Tbl ocean difficulty southwest Indian of landtng. toward the gulf, snd and the Yukon, where , 1SS0 rrportetl them; and other have been told the Utter province. Some innp mark a caravan' " aented between Vancouver bout them by trader and Indians. with jin aerial post, beeo hsve of tbla experiments heart there the desert, track running through The llraxtllnn. Venexuelan and Colombian govIn is'co'mparatlvely simple' thla which to colonist region but flying but at a Dutch colony In Java, ernment have done little In exploring this vast covered In arctic ex- to b! distance Javanese to the long resorted, Arabia generally from south to tb region which la full of unknown riches. ploratlon. Already an aerial ezpedltlon Arab denied all knowledge of It h." n 1 ' " ot ; Tonk andEIooJ Bulldir.;,i t Cbehall Waah- - "I bavo ' used ' Dr. Fieroe's medicioee my family lot over 41 "J ware sod kavw always found them jurt a . repreeented. I think Dr. Pierce's PVaaaaoS ' Pail hT no equal for eoneti potion; and " the Goldea Medical Disoorory' as a tonia and Wood builder cannot ,b beat, in fact, I eaa beartUy recommoud any and ail of Dr. Pierce's temedie. daughter bad chrooid eonsUpatioa. ' '."My from babyhood and doctor eould not eur bar. Dr. Pieree'a Pleasant Pellet it tbe LtRd. :" ever helped twrrjhingthas likNMUfiK. BrV'OfFOmi30 Alfred w b - aujtra.ua -- U yea need a medicine, yon should nave the beet On ate at all drug ttore In bottle of two aiat. mediant sad Urge. Eowrrer, if yon wieh first to try this reat preparation stud ten cent to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co, Binghaatow, N. Y, for a ample bottle. Whan writing be sure and seen Hon this Baner. Adv. i eQA K do. , nemed to be getling worse so I tried Dr. tierce's med'euea. I took two and a half ' lottiea of Dr. Pierce Golden Medical Lliaoovery and oaed Dr. Pierce's Salve and tbe ulnar was all well before I bad the medicine all used, and I reoom Znond then merltcine to other uSerer.T BESXliA HAYES. V.I Ths stay " Il V lor, I went to a, year. doctor uti,i la-UV- fj OS' i. dsdDHDJErj. urniri t nLdOD,tivEn.iur.c Forgot He Old it . It was quite a common story . In the-poll- court ; a neighborly argument had become a brawl, and now the applicant wonted a summons for assault ' 7 t against her neighbor." ; . "Are asked the you married! magis- trate, . "Tea, sir," replied the applicant ""Where Is your husband V "Away, sir." A way exclaimed the magiNtratev "My good woman, what do you mean, - ' by 'awayf " "Please sir," said the woman hur- riedly "you put him sway yourself 'sst week." London Answers, -- "'. r, Waterproofing. ' ' , . make cloth waterproof dissolve-te- n ,To pounds of resin tn four gallons of", hot linseed oil. Pour Into a tub a wringer, has bees attached. Fold cloth evenly lengthwise," making--a atrip 9 inches wide, , Pass the hot oIL Xs soon ss well soaked, run through, the wringer, setting It as tight as possible, - Spread- on grass immediately and. do not fold or leave Indoors until thoroughly dry. Drying may take a week or more. This ) solution wilt treat sbout fifty yards ot doth. , . , ','.:.' this-throu- -- -- J west-centr- half-burle- c) - see half-burle- d -- -- ' -- " - -- : - e -- ' d 4MmaOAbtor.Mai.iiMUJ,t .w?lt! ,'iWfv'-i.fv(- - Children Cry for neteher's - CJistorieV ": " Independent Wife.. Plstbusb And your wife writes ; '..tfvr.-- t yon on postal cards?-..'--1 Bensonhurst Oh, yes. . "I shouldn't think you'd "sllow her to do so." , She-'- , "Oh,- - she's ,?ery independent. doesn't seem to care whs knows what ;: , she says." - to. '.':'' '. Men make money and women mske- them hand It over. The smile of sdversity rather Is Icy. , HEALTH RESTORED iW mil-- ' Fir. Knlilt W mj Cosplaliit; Feuni Con'i tie Kesseif 'KecielVf; ' "Kidney trouble put me In bad way," says Thomas A. Knight' Retired Insurance Agent 624 ii. Ninth St, East St Louis, III. "It cam on with pain across my back .and the sttscks kept getting worse .un til I had a apeii that Uld me up. Morphine-watbe only relief and. J couldn't ' move without help. The kidney secretions were scanty, painful and filled with sediment ' "I was unable te leave the house, could not rest, snd became utterly exhausted. The only wsy I could take ease was by bolstering myself up with pillows. , For three months I was In that awful condition and the doctor said I had s gravel . Doan't Pi71i KUlncy brought me back to good health and I have gained wonderfully in strength snd weight" -- -' Eicof to lefort r8, ' " A. JT. XUOMAIW, Notary PulUa. -"- -' tWi fci Aa C--t ml Slri.-SO- DOAN'SSIV rXrrtAanLBUIU4 . ' MoVMrai lt , . - Important to Bxamina carefully every bottle of CA8TO&IA, that famous old rraerr tor Infants and ehlldrejn, and see that ' , Bears tbe Signature of ( In Use for Over 80 Tears. " CO, SUFTALO, N. T. OronchlalTro'tblca Soothe riir . the IrrttstioM en4 rou 09 both uWlur mi a pnrnyUf ec!re . IK tiWtiwty cpatU4e hmmJj m ft 1 ' t 'S |