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The Huron Expositor, 1916-06-09, Page 6n*lexion --- ow to Insure It- The regular use. of Lifebuoy Soapi insures. a healthy, clean glow- ing skin. And because it is.bealt';hy, Our con- plexion will a clear and velvet Iii The mild carbolic odor van- ishes after use, leaving a aenseof utter ciiiness. lb • it It1111111111111111111111111ttleil ■ si IIS 'a Believer id Medicines Oat s Mein and nerve Alma Ara All Right. Mrs. ° Wm. Mcllilwa in,' £enaperance ale, Nit, wu l "I am not much of a !fives . is medicines, but I must say ms's Heart and Nerve Pills are all Some years ago ,I was troubled stnothering Vella In the night I waken up with my breath all gone think I never would get it ,back, I s Whig a friend of my trouble,, and he 'advised me to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve ids. He gave axe a box, and I hod onlytake naa fewof themes when I could ep ail night without any trouble. I alt not finish, the bei lentil some years Wier when I felt my trouble coming apo I took the rest of them and they u td meat ms's Heart and NecveTPills awe been on the znarket for the` past -five years. The testimony of Viers shwutid be enough . to eon - you that what we cienn for them true. It and N.elsare 50cper box, g for -41.25; at aft druggists or mailed direct on receipt of by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Ont.. e> Fariner Tour land is valuable. Our country needs every ounce of produce it can grow. It means money to you, and proaperaty to Canada. Doubtless the : seeding will be tate this year and the only way to rush the growth is to apply large ceiantities of Buffalo Brand� Fertilizer esh cart toad. just .arrived and our prices are right Ideal Wheat and Corry at $30 per ton Buffalo Garbage "[Tankage at $leg per ton ioraist of October settlement or five per cent off for cash. • We also handle all kinds of logs and lumber, Lehigh Valley Coal, Can - lade Cement, dressed lumber and -ahinles, Canada Fibre Board, Metal Fuiloxng Materials, tile, cedar posts, etc.. Telephones: Deerfield office on 174;- Brucefield office 11 on 14,5 Jahn B: ustard CREAM WANTED - We have our Creamery now in ful operation, and we want your psetron- age.: Wa'are prepared to . pay you the highest prices for your cream, pay you every two weeks, weigh, sample and test each can of cream carefully and give you statement of the satne. We also supply can free of charge, and give you an honest business .deal. Call in and see us or drop us a card for particulars. The Seaforth Creamery eeeaforth Qnt Nis Flee Was Covered With Pimples. Pimples are not a serious trouble, but ey are very unsightly. Pimples' are caused wholly by bad food,and to get rid of them it is nee - nary to purify the blood of all its iaritie s. Burdock Blood Bitters has made any kable cures; the pimplershave an sappeared, and a bright, dem, =n- on left behind. Mr. Lennox D. Cooke, Indy Path, .S., writes: "I am writing you a few to tell you what Burdock Blood ttess has done for rue. Last winter my was covered with pimples. I trieti rent kinds of medicine, and all red to fair. I was one day to a d's house, and there they advised me B.B.B., so I purchased two bot` land before I had them taken I found I Nies getting better. I got two more, and when they were finished I wee compktely crud. I find it is a le. LEGEND OF T4E VA Queerer, Beliefs That Clin' about T Old Willa pert akin. The vampire,II aec©1idilig -to the bell of eastern Burdpe, is the'hysic -1 b of a dead pers n, male o fale, th maintains Meld emin a fort r ;half life the grave by return' { g o its ,norm r haunts and nouris . a tselt ;en a e blood of living persoie bis stpet tion is characteristic 1Iy : lavonie. The Vampire titio4 is stronge t- on ' Wl ite Ru. sia nd he Ukrain , though it also pervad s the ppp11ar b lie= lei Poland and 1 o- among t o Czechs of Bohemia a d t e Slovaks t Hungary and is to b tra ed as far s' . Albania and =Greece. Co t6 paratibe p- d a comm I eons legend ti 'being wllo appesran 'e , w 1 eh If *Dun; rsnit in the Lem,. ce i. injuries n ft returned y Iology provesit to have h origin with the equa ly h of the were wolf, a um could at will assure th and ferocity of a wo ed in its nocturnal pu or limbs could apt elle escape detectio wt its human four The v pine is to de his vi,to the hau is o extreme ps1or,II his en and Voluted canine eth breathe- Tya Tam* a shadow either upon loaikingglass and is , ev -or da try Sbw he le: ves b1 grave,, is aa: and y d cavae no one is : ever had the conrageand the beliefis that 1 elated windows are n mit3.-don lues up dr :k•1 bar, ected durin mai: by-, tura*. to �. nd hie fed 'y ` meows u nett r011 e se no. re -)elite: POO,' eed to 'hay; tcf. , bu, doo an to; his rov =, • Trial oil a :D Charles de Bourbo of France, died: in c which his Ieadetless way, sacked. For necessary to find a Slily 26, 1521, intiie Francis L. old his s silted by the peers o assembled chambers, first lusher of the de Bourbon three Urn the parliament, at and at the marble porter that the said not appeared. The sen up, then solemnly Me de France, dead, his goods returned to the door of his palactlt was painted yellow.' ",, art. h i co bl nqu ring : om oldiers stl+aigh crime it w aPegeat, 00 "o resence of Kin_ t of justice, France and th Jean de 'So- called Char' at the bar o e marble tabl d then Bourbon - ce was dra 'The ' nneta was condemn= the crown;, an bi the Iry 1-,: JAPANESE PE. A Strong fdaa'yl a to an A and the Rest litaroama Okyo w the .foul er of the naturalistic 11 1 ' of Japanese Wading. He tree ..,;, in 1135 alad. died in 1795. • :' a :iateraationa1 8tniio Mr. Hared Jire tells this story about Okyo: Taulkaze Kajimosuke was a ewtm- la -'w'restter. One day he called . on Miarnyaia Okyo and proposed a tam. arstrength, each a :., ' .' ._ to hit' owls line of pursuit He ould show the greatest feat be was pable of by bis physicist std, 1 Ol yo wonld abow his /boor hie as e i• to Paint _Okyo agreed. he., 1 -' t in I , i 1 ' hewas awakened by i .' sound 'of something fadliug' • oatadde ► • 000 i. of bis /souse: He opened the, , 1, r 1 , . found Tani - kale standing by a, large enough, to tear the a F o a dozen ordi- nary mea. He htt4 bro 1 t, without resting, all the Way item omit Kut rana, rnany n distant Now it was o's turf. He= gave lessons to his pupils as y a 1 al, but spent every available min a e. in 'his private atelier, working ve far into the night. Tamikaze call . fouror five ties, but wart told tha M the paint ung was not yet ready. At last, after four ;ninths had pass- ed, the wrestlerio 1 e Painter, "If you cannot ow me- our work today I It, is: only fair 1, consider asmyself the r 'of d e contest. I came here to=day prepared •' take the rock back be the mountain.." 'I have finished the `work, ' answer- ed Okyte with a smile .. id he pre- sented to maze a roll of . • lk Tani- kaze slowly tmrol -d it -ft -a seven feet long -and -1 t 1 - ed at it ' e amaze- ment • "Buts taken .- 1,• o, tour months{yto paint - ` lie as -: �;. • ' rli "kis the wregreatestst•. yo 11 ' • •.e- e Ris misprint tit = not alto er un- justified, for the ; artist 1 • 1 aiu ted nothingCp {except a _ • , ged b . • • fn, its A actual 1 ' A Okyo 11 y ea- pIafned tate matter; as folio "This is a plc 1 of the bo ceived from the mperor had the honor of wrestling ace _ . 131 ° The greatest ment In it is the i wing of To draw a straig1 lisle ov long without 1 g for - a by no means an, e e . taste you brought the . - from Mk without resat' . , so I ha this line with a angle stro _ brush. Many atone in my a the line faltered or the ink befere the line was finished. experienced with a brusn a eh as you encounered with on your way .•16 KKnraml and see the proof." So saying he le'+ atelier and emptied papers and rolls Tanikaz a large b t silk tha spoled in his endeavor to single sweep of th brash a line over six feet length, . was thoroughly cooly nced the drawing to his brow in gratitude and left- Okyo, p that he would treasure it an down to bis posterity and p artist for his perseverance fastness of ;purpose.,: . 1 • i : on re- n you epal. Pe - cord. feet de tae star mopes. rawn. of the empts e out have hardship the rock Come o . his 1full of. be had in a ht The Roman Forum. The Forum wits prigkelay a place and only by delees eeetter of Roman civic and po About B. tl. 470 it becante the assembly of petite in and was gradually- adorned pies and other great public e Braman f Acro liens alone exeepted-is ;most the ink earth to such as know and tea bangs _ of history. purifier, end I rend ft to aft. °' I T Burdock Blood Bitters has been on the rnarkei for the past forty years, and in reeaufactured ovly by The T. hillisurn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont, th& forum came governed , tli more huh sl E HURON O t` the : alis of laws then kliown -world hoasand years. Vol Contirary 'the at , press ons- ondc brake hoes r The start. teieas; the agettis the 1 - car car o _train le using. pf th air th =ugh t whist i g no ' Pbs were pwo and ogle 140 point Undaon low Fert ' Vent the hag the r chain w 450 `#�iresse ed He bad' Your; faith • asked: "Not ye Sid your{ him ev ing the Ai- Brakes the general impres, iota, are used is the air b ake ars is applied to hold the way from the car zvh le. that the air preasur s brake shoes are fa ced Car wheeid, bringing the to a stop.i It is the re - air or the passage of the lie valves tbat causes the ee beard ubder the cars, `flee Greet ' Chain. at eh.ain," the; links of w ich and oue-haln inches sq are of long, each link weig - + g s, as stretched -across the ve at West Point, just be - ton. May 1, 1778, to e- ri h, warships from aacnit- er, The total; weight. of the 1:1 tons, and its len ar, _. Parts 'of it are ; till at "est Poli± mg fir ©ntly. been ac' pted. ow I writ poetry?" ar," she replied. ` °'ve boot • your drinking 's nd debts, but I couldn't - 11 lit. once.' Yr, a Know ti m. - oid f ow, I w 1 it to tell on - th whole. 0/1 - lou : ht you ,ha • already • Id m``Baty hidt o: me." "By Jlov afny .harm s to I did. Wall, it won't do go all ove it again.' cif Rec tion, make yo wife cry her Ina ee tickets onal actre s /who eo s for their virtues as d or th vices. -Fuller. . Cruet. tl d A.uu ` ( n her deathbed) -I j uiaJ g y will, my dear H lie . • I w, alas, too well that y $rel net rel,igiaeusly dispoSed and ha oxo esir to p mote the cause of- Nephew - f Nephew• ' tiny) --Beg your pard a i; qulte:th: contrary. - A t Heav _ be praised! Then y be .gusted hear that I have lE all 1/ prop to the church! Regasiate Kidevoys AND Relieve Gonstip °Eton Gin* Pills are acknowledged • t have the largest sale of laity proprietary nt icine in Canada ---an achlevement solely di a to their remarkable virtue as a 8iduey an Bladder remedy. . But fusers of Gini Pills have disco ere that this invaluable remedy also- ac s a mild• cathartic. The evidence of hundr of letters we have received estfibliahes the v ry logical fact that in ,compounding a Medici a to Leal £wd tun up the Kidneys and Blad er certain - of the 1 gredientsave a stimula ing effect upon th other organs, especially t e bowels. itis important to' know, in the se of con- stipated, patients, that Gin Pills d not act harshly on the bowels; there is n griping, but a gr dual and gentle restoraou of_ the function. Try Gin Pills for constip tion, in thus reli ving the bowels, you safe d your- self agai st possible Kidney trouble. Cin ills are 80c. a box, or 6 boxes for $2.510 at your ealeras. a trial treatment will be sent upo request, to 18 National Drug�cit Chenliaal Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. immammummumanoffismsessimisman trinf triferke Lt °' The bulletin concludes with; "Over- feeding contributes. more to disease and premature deaths than under` feedlag." Confucius on Kingoraftt - "What is ?' demanded a ditsciaiat replied, "Wood enough, , faaope enough and a trusting people." "Few there no help for it which ceepi1d M iseet spared of the thlaeeT' - ` " - said t1bp Triter: 'pian were theme no help for It be better spared of the odd the mater "From of dtee tit without trust a ,° Ai ale itnd Flesh Kitting. t the eating of • as at wif Ify la 0(1 an I ewl u to dn he sie and the hu were no were pla lie was t cress to he t fight. Bessie was o uit 'without giving ore courage to suffer th ilea has taught hes s hia heads in his pock to teat out and not to his ck Ids 'lips when eats, Mtn discouraging to h rho that Ma wife mid° him. only rope the Of a ten sour Th lux mate diffe Euro was ed • ; : • 17 I in Holliind. is alentiful and In used' histead of he clean, requirin in tile morning en ite-tondon Tel 11-0 I 1,411 r - th Wire an 4 - anish o of rs we ture. co g f ents ear y as oples ors. e rest of Ee him barbarian. e in the raids early as th try was th all Europe. , sciences, ad all round advancement the rett of dent Greece that surround - It M says Una 111 WI waist suit a troub Or 00 and other unia with size let PI et duced tight" oe ex leaVY k WAIST. ting, nderexeroising Potir Health. rty in waist line," o is ve feet eight rty in es about the or later los.ve to con - tones and lintiney, likely for Bright's bent the waist is, all audition and sh ws as an appetite of an. t hie energy is re - His appetite is ei- too Ing or he 'sits casing. Most likely he ef meats, pastries and e; hi meaes overworked II one, and only one, de of this classai ess of breath are r thele cause 'over - 1. ee I II 111-4 14 1. • and is to d forty. and nut Is The The !Turn* is supposed to be a native ttala • „ Europe., It has been culti- vated fci.t centuries. The wild Bast Ittean turnip b Mod to be remoteir kin to the edible tarnip. It is the site a A walnut and first tasted Is Sweet? lah, but 0, moment tate taster's tango* feefs, as theugh tt were pricked by, it hundred hot needles, and he feels exPettoratina for -hours atter. is the country favorite medluin for a joke. on the Wait bete - London Tatter. • The Mouths of Leavitt The botanist, tae reel Inves4gator who has get dowri, to making real ex- ploraflons, for blmtlelf, talk Ito you abottt the thousaedse of minute sto- mates on. the surfeed of a leaf. These lavisible. stomatek are the moutbs through *itch the leav take In carbon* acid. They are most abun- dant int- the „upper surfaCe of eaves.. Haab. its art oval opening guarded by a pale a lipit which, Open and close ae- from less than 1,090 to more thin 20, - to' the &pare lach of leaf e. he twe women encouptered each oth at dance. 'They had not raet for several, years. ow thip. you have grown!" air- ed one. "„kow fat you've got to bar the eta - ex oiled, and they steed gazin.g a eaeh other in some diemaji'• "Before you conieto blows," ed a mutuel friend wao stood by, take a vote as to Which is wo get too fat or. to get too thlw oda, take thie message bet Will Yon?" "Sure, boss," oald the meseeng "Yust imagine yon are da 'heae-on the villain's 0 01 Evening Up. on myt bad traits? She -To preeerve a' proper equilibrium. You yourself are ta keep me reminded ot *we good ones you possess. et., 1 4 - Sp iteful. "I thought you. told me EU arid SePhY were on good terms." "Well, aren't they! "I heard Sophy ask befo the whole sociable to stretch a new p of , gloves for her." - TIRELESS INSECTS. Boat For the Strenuous Life, Thea Are Never Weary. In tifraects, Their Life HiUto.: Habits," Harold Bastin, the en gist,, says that, contrary to papule bitte spiders ere not insects. have six legs. neither more nor less, and another peculiarity of the insect is that it has wings, sometectes two, more often four. iders have eight legs and no wings; therefore spiders are xwt insects. Insects have no backbones aud no' skeletons, says Mr. Bastin, but skive; with a hard, durable surface called nibleh.makes..mo a light Bildt of armor that forms h outside of the body; to the inside of which the mus- cles are ate -Idled. insects do not breathe tbrotigh their mouths. but through holes in their bodies. called spiracles. Inseets have neither veins nor arteries. The blood pumped directly from the chambered eart into the body cavity, Where it ts .have wonderful and enviable di- estive organs and feed upon, and Ili- on almost any substance from which ourishtaent may be extracted; Because of the way they are built in- aects are pa,rticrilarly fitted for the trenuous life, and a tired insect Ls a g unknown. They are always busy , buzzing, biting or seeking ixte work to do. A "Primitive" Painter. Henri Rousseau, a man who used to old a minor government poaition in ce; was for a quarter of a century e joke of artists and art students in aria For years in the independent e most distant kinship with art. allion he showed daubs which had not a Jungle," a "Nigger In a jungle." Lady on a Sofa In a Jungle." a "lager ome of his "famous" pictures were a e affected jungles:- which consisted of umerable parallel green lines to rep- esent grass; the figer was a painted ooden toy; the lady/looked as if she d come out of Noah's ark. , The un- oitunate Rousseau went on exhibiting e same. sort of work every year, and e painful thing was that he gradual- ts told him he had genius, and he thok himself quite seriously. "I am a a al primitive," he would say. Some tactical jokers even went the' length. buying his picture& She is Always to Blame. Of what use is it discussing whether or women will do the sillier things maintain a pose? We all in:tow-or ght to, perhaps -that when the wo- buys a twelve dollar pair of white boots that are unsuitable to wear anything else that she Call afford see is herself to blame; and whea a Man mortgages his farm to bursa ate mobile that he cannot afford to run i is the women of the faraily who are t blame; and there you arel-"as She Marriage In France. In France a man under twenty-fiae ni;arry with.out the consent Of their Wenn ts if they are alive or of the sur - *or if one is dead. If both are dead e grandparents must be consulted If g. Even the would be bridegroom twenty-five and the bride over enty-one must ask the parental bane - n. Over thirty and twenty-five 4 y must give their parents or their reatentstives a month's clear notice o their intention to marry. Everlasting Brioke. gnee made a brick is practically indte structible. Nearly'every brick that has eller been made by man from the be- g of time is still in existetice earth. The men. who made and them and who directed these %ter- ns have long since been. gathered in dust Some of"them here doubt- leais contributed in their bodies to the making of.mere bricks. But the etead- and enduring square of baked.els.y ts and will until the heavens and are shriveled like a scroLL-Ex- e. Portuguese Burial Custom. They have an unusual mode of burisl In kortugaL Instead of the headstone* 4;4 monuments of the graveyards of countries the cemetery of LiSbeit ws rows and rows of they chapeas in long avenues bordered by trees. The Portuguese are ctant to bury their dead out of t, and these ch.apels serve as mor - les for the coffins, which are placed on the shelves within. Through the iron grills the eye discerns small al- lare and flowers gleaming through the subdued light of ,the interiors. • "I have aimed at health. and happl- nese._ When co routed with a for- midable obstacle, said Sir Georg,e Reid on seventlet birthday, "I have al - first tried tb knock it over. Fel- lug thi s , 1 try to get around it; failing tha to get over t or -ander it. If I did aot then succeed I have been content to e down in its grateful shade, prais- ing the obstacle as a blessing in dis- Unfair Suggestion. Wife -Do you t k Tommy disturbs our neighbor wi his drum? Husband -r afraid so. The maix next door hint a pzeisent of a nice new e today and auggested that Tom- my! should .cut open the drum and ffpe.0.d. the money that is inside: IWOuld they con d sell us experience, thorigh at diamonn. prices! But. then, no One would use the article second - Millinery Suggestion. "Thijse sectional bookcases are fine Xon can Start in a small way, to them as you. can afford itat idea. Why doesn't somebody fiord it wale Meat Chauffeur -BM got fined $500 for tilting his boss' car without Per- nthedisati Second Obaufferm-But hove 'did the boeal know he took it? FLrst Musical Hash. Neer Boarder -What is the landlady's tighter playing? Old Boarder - mixture of airs front a lot of old operas tart of mu_sical know. - 140 EX001P0 Whatever. Neva yes* Man -Are you going to bei licene_ this evenkg? New York GM INE 1916 "I went down te an east side neigh- borhood. house the other evening to pre- side at a debate or the children," said the teacher as she faced her compan- ions at the boarding house table. "The subject waS capital punishment, arid the disputation closed with a hat rangue by a youth of twelve, who twill: disagree with capital poniehment. Any one that comniifts murder ain't in a sanitary condition.' " His ReOular Cue. "What made you start clapping your hands when that ;woman stepped an "I was dozing," enswered Mr. Culla roe- "I thought mother and the girls were having a mitalcal at home and one of them was signoling that it vas Husband -Why aon't you put your mind on it and get ;a 000d coOk? :Wife don't seem to have any facultY in ne- lecting people to liVe with. An Indlication. °Is your daughter getting on well with her music?" ! "I guess so. The iteigb.bars are get- ting so they speak to me civilly again." Big Exeeption. "I never knew a Man yet who want- ed to listen to othee people's troublea" "Then I guess yOn've never known any lawyers." Wise Girl. Maud -Would yo object to a hus- band who smoked in the house? Marie - Most decidedly. But I shall keep quiet about it nail I get one. .Gravity is the ballast of the sou *Welt keeps the miad steady. -Fuller. Hie Class. *My doctor told the he compietely restored. that matiziee actorat diges- tion, Which 1,1/00 all ituaagination, by a little sweetened water." tiThen the patient ie a sugax cured -it's so hard to 'buy for a marts "Yes. I've noticed when you women are doing it you lock as tnouga n Entertaining Himself, In Clayton Hamilton's "On the Trail of Stevensou" is this quaint passage lietween, the boy and ble nurse, Alison tpunninghain: i"Wb.en little Louis was about five Years old he did. something naughty, tied 'Gummy' stood him up in a corner and told hini he wouid have to stay taere for ten minutes; then she left the rOom. At the end of the tillotted period sae returned mid said. 'Time's up, Mas- t r Lou; you may come outflow.' But on irons NEAN YOU• Are you one of the many whe re suffering -with eczema, obstinate res, ulcers or any other skis (table? If se, lose no time in t ing Zatia-Suk, and you will be 4 at its curative pewers. The healing power of any °Int- ent is In proportion to its niedi- r' al ingredients. Ordinary oint- • eats being composed chiefly of almal fats, with only a small per- entage of medicinal ingredients, ave not sufficient healing power to overcome a bad ease of skin trouble. Zam-Buk, on the contrary, le -purely herbal, and is an media case, which. explains its sueeriority eVer other ointments, and its many marvellous cures. , Besides being best for eczema, ulcers, and skin diseases of all hands, it is equally good for blood - poisoning, piles, burns, cuts, heat sect bites and sunburn. 60c, box lashes, sore. and blistered feet, In -i all druggists, or Zara-Bult Ce.,, Taronto, Send 1c. stamp for pest,5 sLe free tria/ box. tnet Intro-Fa/1y stead rotOonlesg pennential corner. :That's enerieta the shad ra,..a3ed his haud„ and„ with a strange light in Ids eye* 'Iliteha he saidt 'I'm telling myself Stored " eat- -tiee that ter-- -etre is com- "ie doubt about it. They just told me; it' was naree-quarters of 011 hour beyial time," Oh, life! An age to the miserable, a moinent to the liapnyc—Batont They Mostly oo. Sae (recalling eollege daysi-What bee Me of oue natin of might? , rried the woman of mustn't -- t A -Revenge Never Enjoyed. - A er a stormy attack on Lord Grana rill' ien one occasion Lord Raudoiphi the Ohamiel and was nearly dead tidtlti th see me now!" he gasped.-Lene donl Standard. sta ital. on their' bridal trip in a vette "Ils that ene of the new rnekesr iiiness consists in setivi lit aublie would rernernbet that conet:ipatem era of the first caus- pent: Orderlies" la the best for griee, women. or chtldren, 1 25e, eialueiveiy at' . Mario tint Gale alOic, the -first Of the harbatrak itingsli -who entered and aftked the Etersol City and the first enetatt who had iniipetteed before its Walls shiee the Mae; Hannibal, Mid to hand re- ceived as the price of hilt departure trona the eltr (during the drat siege, in A. la 11108) 5,000 pounds -weight of gold, 3,000, poutids weight of sitver, 3,000 robes, 8,00a pieces-- of 'starlet Both: and 4,000 pounds of pepper. In etder to furnish. a portion. of .t.he ran - tont ,clemanded by the invader it :ibe- tantel tiecessary to melt down .s-ome of the steams of the ancient gods. Paid For the Advice. Old Mnairs (meeting a physician at the club) --Doc, what ought a man to do when ixe has an all overish feeling as it he were going to have an attack of the grip? Crusty M. D. -He ought te conslit a good physician abottt it. Old Hunka-Well, that advice ought to be wattli , a dollar anyhow. Here it is. go1 and hunt aim up. "On what grounds do you desire to withdraw the plea of_'not guilty?" "Oa the simple ground that we are gunty;aliowever, we must call the at, tentio* of your bailor to the regretta- ble filet that the statute of limitations lets usPout. Too bad we were not aski ed about this matter earlier." All but the Coven "Did:aou hear about Scribbles? The police taught him walking out of -a hot tel writing room with about $10 worth of the hotel stationery under his coat," "What dici. he have to say for hine, "Said , he was gathering material. for In No Hurry. Henrietta -How long was Emma marrielt to Archie? Pauline -Only about a year. "Do - you taink she will remarry "Not seoolL She kid nie she dahat know litan well enough to marry him a second time,a. 4471 The pe‘toftlee department tells us that over $00,000,000 lost in ite" UMfted States through "wildcat" scheraetiiprornuiga.ted through the mails alone. lied this is only one ehannol , fraud., elle Crowell in Aza0eat, Tied Many women disfigured complexions never seem to think ta t they need an occasional eleansin instde as well as ou zde. Yet neglect of this Lamm bathing shows itself in spotty, artd ttallow complexions -as well as in dreadful hea ches andbilioneness. It's became the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter accumulatee which Natere cannot remove without asstance. The best remedy is Chamberlain's Stomach a d Liver Tableta, which stimulate theliver to healthy activity remove fermentation, - 4gently cle2.nse the stomach and bowels and totie the whole digestive systera. Sure, safe and tellable. Take 0.ee at night and you feel bright and SU y in the morning. Get Chamberlain's today 'druggists 26ci, or by mail from CL-zimb-lni'o 'Medicine Coin any, Toro:ete IS