THE BEK: OMAHA. MUUAY, JANUARY IS, 1922. limer of Vj X A Society Mi Emery Known Here. The name of Mi.s Juh tmrry of Narrate, K. V.. wh drain ha Un announced in rerent cliapatchc, a laimhar on in tpm-opal honiM ol Omaha. Mi Emery a rcrrury of the woman' auxiliary ol the t-ticoft church tor 4U vrr. Her Jir.lqu3ri.rt were in New York. He visited (Jf.aha at one time on ilnifth buinrJ, IKr iktrr, Mr. Twang, wat Itundrr o( lite auxil iary, i ml iit' i.irr ttrr, Mary, tiad Oiarge o( th, mpply or to work fur many ye j Honoring M Manchester. Mim ilrt.it Caldwell will he hot e tt br nt luncheon Saturday at tier home, lonormg Mi Katharine ManrhrttrJ I). II.. T fl,- oihcr gu will be the M.ie ! Koxanna Jlrttgcr. Marion Kainaltrr, Koena I I dry. Kit Holland, Kutli Morey, Ilicn Weed. I'or hltt Bohllng. uk Wchtter entertained In. formally Mr. 11. who ret Thursday af'.ernoon (or iry llohling of St. Louis, rin to hrr home Friday. Mr. ami Mr. lioM.nii plan to co ne to Oma'i f r a hort visit at t lie time ol the Junior league thow in May. I - - -J iT" f V. r.. u. Luncrern. . Cli.jptrr M of the I'. K. O. will meet I Saturday, January 14, at 1 n'cl Vik luncheon at the home of Mrs. OU. Mahery, who will be assisted l. M. nr. . ti:il l at.'...... ....I t 'M . K. llaurnan. Vice Consul X. A. 1 r it ...ii .....I, f 1411 nut For Mr. Kitchen. Mr. William Talm of Council IWUIIS rnicrmiica ai umiicr iasi evening complimentary to Mr. Rob erta Kddy Kitchen. Mr. Kitchen will also be honor guest at a tea Friday afternoon givcu by Mrs. Harry Id alio. Bridge Tea. Mr. F. J. Farringtou and Mrs. J. V. Van Camp will entertain at a I ridge tea at the home of the former, "Villa Acres," on January 20. There will be nine tables of guests. Scott'sh Rite Club. , The Scottish Rite Woman's club will meet Friday at 2 p. m. at Scot tish Rite cathedral. New officers will be installed. Hostess at Bridge. Mrs. Howard Daldrige was host ess informally at luncheon and bridge Thursday. Personals Mrs. John Gamble is in Chicago this week. George Radcliffe leaves this eve ning for New York on a two weeks tr'P- ' Morton Wakclcy, who left Omaha this fall to enter business in Chi cago, is spending this week here. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Barker and Mrs. Charles Kountze are in Chicago . this week. They will return Satur day. Amos Field left Tuesday for New Orleans and other southern points, ,whcrt; he, will remain unlit spring. - J ' . 1 1 ' '' . ' Miss Barbara Burns, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Burns, returned Monday evening to school at Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Mrs. Edward Cornish has returned to New York City, after spending a few weeks here with Mrs. Anna Cor nish Metcalfe. Mrs. Mary , E. Van Giesen will leave Saturday to spend the rest of the winter in California. She will visit various points up and down the coast. Maj. Roland Walsh, who has been stationed at Fort Crook for the past several months, has been ordered to Washington, and plans to leave in the near future. Mrs. Samuel C. Johnson of Clay, ton, N. M., with her 6-year-old daughter, June, is visiting her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Matt Greevy. They will' be here for about two weeks. : - , Mrs. Thomas L. Wood and son, Thomas Wood, jr., have returned from Indianapolis and a visit to Daytbn, O., where they were witn Mrs. Wrood's daughter, Mrs. F. A. Blair. They also visited Mrs. Wood s old home at Louisville, Ky. Mrs. John Iten and her daugh ter, Miss Helen Iten of Los An geles, will arrive about January 23, to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. O. Barmettler and daughter, Miss Irene Barmettler, en route to v.. Vrtrt Mrs Iten and daushter and Miss Barmettler will sail Febru ary 11 on the Larmema ior a inrec months' cruise of the Mediterranean. Mrs. G. W. Manchester of Dallas, Tex., is the guest of Mrs. R.' L. Car- ter mis -o-.i Katharine Manchester, is guest of , iAAVne f r owrl tr Inn n ner Rranuyai cms, . R. Manchester, who celebrated their golden wedding last month. Before returning- to Dallas at the end of the month Mrs. Mancnesicr aim .i.. daughter wilt visit for a week itt Kansas Uty. TV A: R. Notes. in conneciiun mm Ization work which the Daughters of the American Revolution are spon soring, Omaha chapter is making plans for a social evening to be given Thursday of each week at the Farnam scnooi. jurs. rnu Kennedy and Miss Cornelia iscan J-ii ... 1 1 kntcce Mrs. Ralph Doud, head resident of the Omaha Social aeuiemeni, &pokc & : utnrtr n mrt- t f tmoa aViantfr Tnpsdav after lug ui . noon iu um5VM-. according to Mrs. Doud, who-says that trained workers for the Amer icanization classes are greatly needed. Omaha and Major Isaac Sadler chapters of the Daughters of the American Revolution are sponsoring an Americanization class for trained workers, which on January 25, 4 a m, in room, jiu, . t c Ant Kart charo-e of the meeting Tuesday. A song group was given by Mrs. James Hanley, ac- companiea Dy and piano aolos by Richard Bender irt-t Miner' txort liLJiM Mk flnwin Glial ITr'T -uimit Music Leader i iftS' ; Mrs. Ray J. Abbott waa elected Uader of the music department, Omaha Woman's club, Wednesday, to take the place of Mrs. W. E Shafrr, resigned. Mrs. Abbott has had five years of experience as as sistant leader in the department and i at present chairman of music for the second district of the Nebraska Federation of Women's Clubs; she is also music chairman for the Dun dee Woman's club. Mrs. Abbott i instructor in piano, having a resi dence studio in Dundee. She is pipe organist at St. Andrews Episcopal church. Mrs. Abbott will follow the out line of work for the year which fea tures especially the ladies' chorus under direction of Henry Cox. ' Omaha Girl Who Weds in California Is Feted There. In honor of Miss Elizabeth Rob ertson of Omaha, whose marriage to J. L. lhurmonu of St. Louis will take place February 7, many affairs are being given in the next few weeks in Hollywood, where Miss Robertson is spending the winter with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Rob ertson. Yesterday Mrs. Ford, form erly Miss Harriet Shaw, was hostess at a showcr. Next week Miss Rob ertson's cousin, Mrs. Dixon, will give a shower, and tomorrow Miss Ruth Hamilton of Omaha, a member ot the bridal party, will entertain at a miscellaneous shower for Miss Rob ertson, at which several Omahans will be present, including Mrs. Edwin Maccamment and Mrs. v, t. War ren. Mr. Robertson, who spent Christ mas in Omaha, returned last week to join his family, and at the same time Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Maenner and their little daughter went on to Hol lywood for the wedding festivities. Mr. Ihurmond will leave for the coast the end of the month. The young couple will make their home in Omaha. Camp Fire Girls in Japa nese Pantomime. The Weloca Campfire group, Miss Lucy Garvin, guardian, will present a play, "Cat Fear," a Japanese pan tonine, Friday evening, 8:15 o'clock, at the First Central Congregational church for the benefit of the Camp fire organization. The cast will include Ruth Wil- lard, Caroline Levi, Rita.. Mantel, Wilma Baker, Pauline Croyell, Grace Larsen, Frances Morrison and Doris Haverstock. Readings will be given by Frances Simon and piano solos by Elizabeth jattenratli. . r f (nf .l.i. a in ..on i ti A elinui iui tut, uuuw wivi anu ouwn great reluctance in leaving home. ADVERTISEMENT. KEEP URIC ACID OUT OF JOINTS Tells Rheumatism Sufferers to Eat Less Meat and Take ; Salts. Rheumatism is easier to avoid than to cure, states a well-known author ity. We are advised to dress warm ly; keep the feet dry; avoid exposure; eat less meat, but drink plenty of good water. ' Rheumatism is a direct result of eating too much meat and other rich foods that produce uric acid wmcn is absorbed into the blood. It is the function of the kidneys to filter this acid from the blood and cask it out in the urine; the pores of the skin are also a means of freeing the blood of this impurity. In damp and chilly cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do double work, they become weak and sluggish and fail to eliminate the uric acid, which keeps accumulat ing and circulating through the sys tem, eventually settling in the joints and muscles, causing stiffness, sore ness and pain called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a table spoonful in a glass of water and drink before: breakfast each morning for a week. This is said to eliminate uric acid by stimulating the kidneys to normal action, thus ridding the blood of these impurities. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with li:!ua and is used with excellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism. Here you have a pleasant. effervescent lithia-water drink which helps overcome uric acid and is beneficial to your kidneys as well. - ADVERTISEMENT. 666 is a prescription for Colds, Fever and LaGrippe. It's the most speedy remedy we know. Can You1 Be Sure of Love? By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "What is the Anal test of Jove?" kls George A. "How can ! be sure ibat I really care far the tirl of whom I'm thinking seriotitly. She at. trans inc. We're continual. I ad mire her thsHcter and hrr person ality. She stirs me and appeals to tue. j et 1 in not sine tint this I love. And I don't want to make a mUuke, since that would mean micry (or v both, lin't there some one thins which would give me definite proot that I care and care enough to have the right to try to make her care?" "A proof of love?'' ... In fairy. t..le days knights were scut on ttrange tietts and far journeys tj prove their devotion. They rode atilt at other knights in iuusts and tourneys. Xliey went abroad seek ing some taluman to convince their lady of their love. But always they reined, somehow, sure of them selves. I wonder if their certainty wasn't to quote the words of my friend Maude because they took their love- like religion, a little on trust." "Our deepest and most abiding taith is because of what we feel in our souls, not because of what we have seen with our eyes. If we could not trust some part of our belief to our iiutiucts, we should stagger blindly through a world unitlumincd by the beauty of faith. So most oi our deepest and most beautiful feelings exist because of something that is beyond evidence and without actual proof from our everyday senses. Love has to take itself a little on faith. It has to trust something to the beauty and passion of life itself. It must have the simple confidence which makes childhood respose such implicit confidence in its leaders and guides. Lasting love must be of mind and spirit as well as of body. Now, no one can be assured that a beauty which is alluring one day will not be marred and disfigured the next. And a love which is of the flesh only can be repelled as easily as attracted. But age and suffering and experi ence make the spirit grow. The mind comes into its heritage of poise and charm and depth through the turmoil and struggle of exist ence. So a love which is based on men tal congeniality has ever more to draw on as age comes to disfigure the outer shell perhaps, but to re fine the mind dwelling within. And the spirit grows through the vicissitudes and trials and the triumphs of the mind. So again love which has .a foundation in the spirit will grow with the passing of time and the enduring of pain. Does this sound as if I'd forgotten to answer George's question? I am answering it by suggesting that you cannot be sure of lovel You can only be sure that your feelings will grow as your heart and ADVERTISEMENT. Back hurt you? Can't straighten up without feeling sudden pains, sharp aches and twinges? Now listen I That's lumbago, sciatica or maybe from a strain, and you'll get blessed relief the moment you rub your back with soothing, penetrat ing "St. Jacobs Oil." Nothing else takes out soreness, lameness and stiffness so quickly. You simply rub it on and out comes the pain. It is Rob BaciWtf Away On Special Sale Friday and' Saturday Flannelette Wrapper Flannelette Gowns Crib Blankets Silk and Wool Hose Wool Knitted Toques Knitted Bands Creepers Buntings Children's Knit Union Suits, ages 2 to 6 years Children's Bath Robes, ages 2 to 6 years Children's Dr. Denton Sleeping Garments - At Our antira stock of Children's Coats, ages 2 to, 6 years, and all Children's Furs at H pries. ' Eldf edge-Reynolds Company PRUTIM Established ISM or wninwrj easn, i aaya spent ner witn me. r oancer or laying P in a hospital Call or writ for particulars. Dr. Frank H- Wray. N. 807 North SSth St, Omaha. Neb. Directions: Take a 13th or ISth street car going north and gt off at SSth and Cumins; Sta. Third residence sooth. mind grow. Your admirsiion and rctpect far (he heart and mini) tf another will grow too If she is wnrihy. So if you find in your love noth ing but hot headed youthful detire, you can be sure oi nothing but that flowers sirkrn and die. Hut if you find that you have a background of admiration and row geniality, if yon discover that ten drrnets and tmdrritanding and men tl joy are part of your lerlmh, you're on the right track. Real love can only be hidden by a seltih fear of the price for yield inr. Krai love mut be unselfish, self sacrificing, gentle, loyal and tender. And it is hard to be ill thne things in a self-seeking and individualiotic world. Therefore wc fear love and. its demands. But i we're witling to give ourselves free'y and generously then indeed ve know true love. Women Voters Elect Mrs. Neal President Mcsdames Charles Neal, Howard Kennedy, If. J. Bailey, Draper Smith and J. If. Dumont and Mits Gladys Shatnp were elected to office by pre- rational representation in the eague of Women Voters Thursday tfternooii at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Neal, who received the highest num. brr of votes, was declared president. Offices of vice pretident, secretary, treasurer, membership chairman and program chairman will be decided upon at a meeting of the officials next Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Neal. As all officers chosen have indicat ed intentions of resigning, it may be necessary to appoint a new executive toard to 611 the vacancies, Dwight Torter, principal, of Com merce High school, spoke on "Citi zenship as Developed in Secondary Schools," and Harry Fleharty told of the purpose of the Woodrow Wilson toundation. Man Accused of Burning House Gets Thirty Days The home that Mrs. Dora Cleve land and her husband had worked for many years to build near Tenth and Grant streets, was burned to the ground Wednesday night Charles Glaston, now in jail, is al leged to have attacked her and set fire to the house. lie was intoxi cated, police said. Glaston was sent to jail for 30 days on a charge of assault and battery, and is also held for the district court for arson. Mrs. Elizabeth Gunnell Dies. Mrs. Elizabeth Gunnell, 88, a resi dent of Omaha for Si) years, died yes terday at her home, 3005 Pacific street. She is survived by three daughters, Grace Gunnell and Mrs. F. W. Hoagland of Omaha, and Mrs. E. E. Post of Falfurrias, Tex., and a son, Arthur Gunnell of Berke ley, Cal. Funral services will be held Saturflay afternoon at 3:30 at N. P. Swanson's Chapel, Seventeenth and Cuming streets. Interment in Forest Lawn cemetery. ADVERTISEMENT. perfectly harmless and doesn't burn or discolor the skin. Limber up I Don't suffer I Get a small trial bottle form any drug store, and after using it just once, you'll forget that you ever had a backache, lumbago or sciatica, be cause your back will never hurt or cause any more misery. It never dis appoints and has been recommended for 60 years. FOR THE TINY TOTS 30 I Discount Price I have a .sneeeuful trutmtnt for Rupture without rstortinf to painful and uncertain Burgteat operation. Sly treatment hae more than twenty-five years of succeas behind it. aixl I claim it to - be the beet. I do not injert &2-aTfine wax. aa it ia danrnut. Tim. vMinIrrf My Marriage Problems ' aUtoM Uarnaxa rTuua t "REVELATIONS Of A WIFE" The Drams Picky Std in the Kosd. As the nous of the bunting tirs came to my car I made Uut in mtetive gesture ui the motorist, the utirttdic4 hand, as a signal that I was slgwinf up. Thru I drove 'o the side of the road and stopped, giving the blasts upon the motor horn upon which Dicky and 1 had agreed. There was no need of the horn, however, lie mutt have been close behind us, tor the next second he had driven past me and had draw.i up the car he was driving a (ew parr in iront of ours. "What the dickens did you do to her?" he demanded angrily. My cholcr roe at his absurd un reasonableness, but 1 kept my voice coL "Junior Could-" "I threw a torpedo into the roa l and then ran over it," I said airily. There was a giggle behind me, suddenly smothered. I guessed that Lillian' hand had promptly covered Marion's mouth, and I regretted my own attempt at gibing. Dicky's por tentous frown indicated that this was no time for jesting. "Can the comedy," he command ed curtly, "and then all of you will have to pile out and get into the other car. Look at that shoe! Now, what the devil's to be done?" lie stood with his hands in his Women's Shoes The last week of 1921 beat all records of this department for sales and we believe it might represent a record for this citv. This sale covered our Entire Stock of Winter Shoes. The remainder of this stock will, on . . Friday, January 13th (Get It Friday, the Thirteenth) .be placed on sale at One Uniform Price. The goods offered are of our usual quality and character not sale goods bought for the purpose. Patent Pumps Brown Kid Straps Silver Cloth Pumps White Satin Pumps $ 5 Our January is now at its best and affords real savings housewife. ' $1.00 10-yard bolt cheese cloth 75 $1.75 10-yard bolt bleached cotton flan nel, excellent for diapers, at $1.35 $1.50 81x90 bleached seamless sheets $1 $4.50 crocheted bed spreads, scalloped and cut corners, ; $2.75 $9.00 Satin bed spreads, scalloped and cut corners, $6.95 $7.50 auto robes, $3.50 $6.50 20 wool blankets , $4.95 Main Toweling 20c striped tea toweling, per yard 25c checked tea toweling, per yard 10c twilled tea toweling, per yard 15a twilled heavy tea toweling, yard 20o Barasley, per yard, 25c absorbent, per yard Mercerized Damask $1.00 damask, mercerized, per yard $1.25 damask, mercerized ner varrl $1.50' damask, mercerized, per $1.75 damask, mercerized, per $2.50 damask, mercerized, per poikrti looking gloomily at the it at tenrd shoe, A suddm suspicion (lathed into my mind, and as l.illuu Willi Junior and Manuit went toward the other car, 1 voiced iti "Dicky 1 You don't mean that you didn't have that innrr tube fixed on that spare?" "Ye. I mean exactly that," hi napped. "I need an extra spare l.r that car, anyway, and was going t get one at Kingston. How on rtri!i you mansard to get that blowout on a road like a billiard talle I can'' tell for the life of inc. Hut that's the way of a woman driving!" "You re mistaken," I said spirit edly. "It's the way of a man never taking the proper precautions against accidents." "Oh, keep quiet I" Then he took refuge in a man's prerogative, apos trophising the scenery picturesquely for several seconds taking care, however, to keep hi voice discreetly lowered so that Lillian and the chil dren should not hear him. The contrast between his low, con trolled tones and his mule-skinner's vocabulary smote my scute of the ludicrous, and I laughed outright. Uut I lost my sense of humor imme diately afterward, for there leaped into Dicky's ryes a look 1 knew only two well, a look which generally presaged one of his rage. "Forgive me, Dicky," I pleaded. "I know it's horrible to laugh, but if Tan Calf 2-Strap 2-Tone Tan Street Oxfords Black Calf Oxfords Brown Kid Oxfords HIGH SHOES High shoes in calf or kid in both brown and black. Walking heels or French heels. As previously stated, the prices were $10.00, $12.00 and $15.00. The sale will continue through Satur day. Beginning Friday morning at 9 o'clock, and while they last, the price will be $5.00 the pair. Specials on "The Floor $7.50 cotton at $4.00 50 wool batts $2.50 81x99 Utica sheets $2.50 81x99 -Pequot sheet 60c 9-4 bleached sheeting' 30c Lonsdale cambric 221c Snowball muslin, 20c Daisy muslin 22c Lockwood unbleached muslin 15 19c fancy outing flannel 15 Floor Linen Section Mercerized Napkins 15 190 $1.50 18-inch napkins, a dozen $2.00 20-inch napkins, a dozen -$2.50 20-inch napkins, a dozen $5.00 20-inch Union napkins, a dozen $3.00 22-inch, extra cotton, a dozen Mercerized Cloth 75c 36-incb breakfast'cloths, each $2.00 45-incb breakfast cloths, each $2.50 64-incb breakfast cloths, eact1 $1.75 64-inch lunch cloths, each $2.50 64x72 table cloths, each $2.50 72x72 table cloths, each 69 85 yard yard yar Very Special 1.15 S1.25 $1.95 Every day table' cloths in turkey red, red and green, Japanese blue print; machine embroidered and lace trimmed. Choice at, each 4 u only knew how funnv that hiird cussing sounded X won't laugh any more. "You'd belief not if you want a whole bone in your head," he re tHrd, and 1 knew that I had averted a storm lor the moment. "It's a wonder you wouldn't bend your alleged brain to thinking out something to do," he went cu, and 1 readied with a smile I bad to smother that thi was in reality an appeal fr the aid he scorned, mascu line fashion, to ask for outright. "Isn't there an inner tube, a good one, under the scat?" I inquired. "Yes, but what the devil good dors that do ui?" he snapped, "I can change a spare all right, and I sup pose 1 could put in the inner tube, but I'd-ru n a perfectly goad suit of clothe doing it." "I didn't men you to do it," I said. "Well, may a poor worm of thu dust imiiiirc whether you mean to have Lillian, yourself, Marion or Junior do the job?" "A Truck Is Coming." "Junior could if lie were a lit tie older," I said with teeming indigna tion, but real shrewdness, (or I knew there was nothing so calculated to put Dicky in good humor as a refer ence, however absurd, to his small son's precocity. "Hut 1 really thinlt it would be too hard for him this morning. Hut have you noticed how many trucks of vegetables and different things there are on the road this morning? Don't you think one of those drivers would be glad to put in the tube if you paid him well? "No doubt," Dicky replied with heavy sarcasm, "your clairvoyant mind knows just when another of the gentry will appear on the scene, D Sale to the thrifty Below" comforters, sateen cover, . $5.95 f3.45 1.95 $1.95 39tf 25 17 f 15 S1.00 fl.65 $1.95 S2.95 $2.95 59 81.25 $1.45 81.25 81.95 $1.95 $25 slab!isnedtiii970 I nil whether or nn he will be tll litir to hob if he dure r by," Our ran nc tumlm t the foot l lone Krrp lH, ui Di ky Ue lug nit ha 'I his hck to it, while I had an unintmupttd vtrw of the whule iwrrp, I coul4 have cherred madly when, over the crr.t ol ihu hill, there pjcarcI one ol the lunu bcring truck which tie anathema to the pleasure ear inutQrit. "I don't know, fl coititr, what arrangrmem you ran nuke with the driver," 1 jh1 wertly, "hut a truck it coming down the lull behind you.' City Concert Club. The City Gwmt club will meet lor luncheon TurstUv at U:l$ o'clock at the I luniiicr ol Com merce. A (nil aiirn.Utue i requeu ed, a imiHiriant htininrta will be di cutird. An inviuiion i rilrndrd to anyone interested in public niunc. Alitt.HTIKtfk.T. THE MODERN MOTHER face problem far beyond thoie of hrr foi hear. She hcrn-K limit be a much more competent pmoit, com bining in one individual the dutivs of nurte, cook, teacher ami moral instructor. It U no wonder that many conscientious women break under the itrain, and that othrri drag out a miserable existence; al way tired, and yet tumble to take a , day of vacation. Such women will find thcuisclvc benefited and their burilcna made easier by t c use of I.ydia K. I'inkham'a Vegetable Compound? which wa made for suffering women, and dor not fail to relieve them. Teach Children To Use Cuticura Soap Because It 1 best for their Under aklns. Help it now and then with touches of Cuticura Ointment applied to firt algne of redness or rough ness. Cuticura Talcum Is lo excel lent for children, - SaavklMkfmbTlUII AMraa: 'MknU mumliailir, MI4 tl,MM." BoMinn hitlhutc. Odttawnt XudUK. TaloaaSK B0m Catkan Sm ! wttJkoat bib. AUYERTIHEMKNT. A MESSAGE TO TIRED, SICK FOLKS Don't Drag Through Life Half Sick and Half Well. Take This Advice. . Go to your druggist and ask him for Gude's Pepto-Mangan and take it with your meals for a few weeks and see how your health improves. If you are pale, tired, lack ambi tion and vigor, you know ' yourself that if you had plenty of red blood that you would not feel tired and half sick all the time. The only sure foundation of permanent, health is good blood. Gude's' Pepto-Mangan builds up your blood with a form of iron that gets into your system quickly. It is wonderful. You will like it and it will make you feel so well and strong. Life will be worth living again. Try it and you will . thank us for telling you' about it. Druggists sell Gude's Pepto-Mangan in both liquid and tablet form. XkX0 RELIABLE REMI for Colds BEGINS itlinf wltkta Urn moult. ttlmttU mtm ttftttUt ItmO, iujr (r Cat Hwdukti and La Grlpaa. Du't natrlattitt Inatet apon HWa CaKUS) Bmatiat Quia tea, WarMa aUatfari uM nmxr tar tva laaeralkiM. Da! raf ku htarfaf Nr. HSTa portrait aa4 afcaatara. (m) AlAHDnatUt MCrnH W. K. MU COMPANY, DRROfT ADVERTISEMENT , S6(8 will break a Cold, Fever and Grippe quicker than anything w know, preventing pnaumoaia. ADVERTISEMENT. as a result of pale, thin, watery blood Nuxated Iron will help make you strong and well again; it has been used and hiKhly endorsed by former United States Senators, Judges of the TJ. S. Courts, many physicians and prominent men. Even the Pope at Rome has written espe cially of the merits of Nuxat d Iron in a communication to the Fnar- made Normale. Over 4,000,000 peo ple are using it annually to help build red blood, strength and en durance. At all druggists. ErHKhwtrtBlood-SrnhrtliNTa ia QKifft I I fo nrt WHY BE M AND NERVOUS