rnrni NH. this :s Excite e Kidneys, Drink Water ! T a li« Salt* at Pirat Sign •ladder Irritation or Backache af The American men and women must guard constantly against kidney trouble because we often eat too much rich food. Our blood la tilled with aclila which the kldneja atrlva to filter out; they weaken from over­ work. become sluggish, the elimina­ tive tissues clog and the result la kid­ ney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline In health. When yoor kidneya feel like lumps o f lead ; your back hurts or the urine Is cloudy, full o f sediment, or you are obliged to seek relie f two or three times during the night; I f you suffer with sick headache, or dixiy. nervous spells, arid stomach, or I f you have rheumatism when the weather la had. begin drinking lots o f good water and get from your pharmacist about four ounces o f Jad Salta. T ak e a tablespoonful In a glasa o f w ater he- fo r « breakfast fo r a few days and your kidneya may then act fine. This famous salts Is made from tha a d d o f grapes and lemon Juice, com­ bined with llthia, and ha* been used fo r years to help flush and stimulate dogged kidneys, to neutralité ths acids in the system so they no longer are a source of Irritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is Inexpensive, cannot In­ jure. makes a delightful effervescent llthla-water drink and belongs In every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time. SUFFERING ELIMINATED 15 -ycars success In treating Rectal and Colon troubles by the Or. C J. Daaa NON-SUKCICAL sMtboS en- « M o u t to S s WRITTEN AS- Si.RA.NCE o f PILES ELIMk NATED or PEE REEL'SDED- Scnd t o d » for FREE KX-oMS . buck itr >n »m m unnand prop­ ter trert-nmt of welt eflroniB, IV COLON CLINIC _ IL DIZZY? r Haadachy. bilious, constipated? J f Taka M — A A T U I I I REMEDY — F tonight. This mild. aafa. rageta* hare you feeling f fina by morning. Y o u 'll an joy F fraa, thorough bowel action with- [ out tha «lig h te s t sign c f griping r diacomfort. J bla remedy will mild. gwra^WaSoWe- ai druuistn— only 25c FKKL U X S A M n J J OX TATW \n TO-NICHT *W % TOM ORROW A L P IC H T One Mesas, Anywsy "P a ." said the kid, “ what do they mean by f a ir means?*" “ Peroxide, son." replied bis dad. Cou ^ X- in9 STOPS Boschee’s Syrup soothes instantly, ends irritation quickly! G U A R A N T E E D . N e v e r be w ith o u t Bose to t’s! For young Boschee’s druggists S y r u p W ood’ s Many Uses The greatest use o f wood In thla country Is as fuel. The next In Im­ portance Is lumber, then come fencing, railroad ties, pulpwood wood and mine timbers. * M akes Life S w eeter T oo much to eat— too rich a diet­ er too much smoking. Lots o f things cause sour stomach, but one thing can correct It quickly. Phillips Milk of Magnesia w ill alkallotze the acid. Take a spoonful o f this pleasant preparation, and the system Is soon sweetened. Phillips Is always ready to relieve distress from over-eating; to check all acidity; or neutralize nicotine. Re­ member thla fo r your own com fort; fo r the sake o f those around you. Endorsed by physicians, but they al­ ways say PM IH pt. Don’t buy som » thing else and expect the same re Suits I The Crippled Lady of Peribonka • • By James Oliver Curu'ood WXT (fi. itti. iwhiouUbr IKtran A (V . In«.) STO R Y FROM TH E STAR T Introducing iom « of th« pro* pi« of th« pretty llttU Froncli* Canadian villago of Taribonkn. particularly tha Crippled Lady, idol of tha «im p;« inhabitant». CHAPTER II—Continued —2— From the Hour Paul opened his eyes !o the light of life ne had In him the raul of an Indian. A fte r a hundred tnd thirty live year» the blood of the ovely Molly Brant nad come Into Its >wn. One would not have guessed It from the boy s physical appearance, 'or be waa light rattier chai> dark, with blue eyes and blond hair. But the modern Molly, who llv_*d In a yalace, with a Croesus for a husband, taw what was happening aa the years passed by. tier boy grew lean of face tnd figure. His check bones were a Ittle high. Ills love for the outdoors vecame a passion. She made It poe- tlhle for him to spend bis vacations n tha woods, and each time he re- ’ umed she knew that something had t o n taken away from him and a little more o f the other thing put in Its placw The servants thought he wss lueer, tnd loved his quiet tnd stoical kindness, which was many years ilder than bis a g e Most hoys would have lived up to the princely grandeur >f lia environment. T o Paul !t meant ess tha* a tree with birds singing in its branct.ee In his thirteenth year came three events o f vital Importance In the shaping o f bis fu tu re First bla moth­ er died. No one would ever know the te rrib le unhealing wound It rut In l*aul’s heart. It was lames Klrke. the hardened and power-seeking Jugger­ naut o f flesh and blood who went to pieces when he discovered that death had been fearless enough to cross his path, tils agony was like a storm, tragic for a time, and quickly over. He settled hack Into the fierce strife of bis money getting by the time Paul began to g rie v e But the shadow and the fact o f death changed him a little. Ue saw himself alone. except for his son. And this son. after years of passing Interest on his p art became the kernel o f his plans and ambitions He was now king. Some day bis boy would be king. And ft was his desire and bla decision that be should he a greater king than himself. Pride Bred his resolution. But here the geographical genius o f Fate again step;>ed In with humors of Its own. In another Fifth avenue home a baby girl was Imrn to the w ife >f K lrke's most Implacable financial enemy, Henry Durand. A few months later, three thousand miles or more iw ay, an immlgran* ship left for America On board this ship was a clear-eyed, hopeful woodcutter from the mountain country o f central Eu rope. With him were his wife and baby. They were an unimportant three. The sea might have swallowed them and do one would have cared very much, for their adventure was only one o f millions ef a similar kind The Immigrant baby's fortune began and ended with the ft w little clothes she wore. The other baby was worth millions one second after she came Into the world. Paul continued to grow up. and with equal steadiness bis father continued to amass fortune and Influence. It was bis passion to smash and break down, then devour and build up— until some one called him the Anaconda, a name which fitted him so well that the newspapers would have used It had they dared. Klrke was always within the legal boundaries o f his country's taws. He absorbed shipping com- parties, railroads, coal mines and tint berlands, and sent out hla engineers to corner vast w alerqiow er rights. From an Industrial point of view he was constructlvely an asset, for wher­ ever be broke down or consumed small activities he built up larger ones But morally and ethically his brain waa inspired by a covetous and avid desire 'O rule. He was Intoleient o f rivalry, ami this brought him each year In closer and more deadly contact with 'he equally far-reschlng Interests of Henry Durand The titanic at niggle between these two Goliaths of flnnn -Ini and industrial activities Is a purr >f Wall street history The more In tvrvetlng atory o f Paul and the two babies Is known only io a few. chiefly about l.ac St. Jean. Ths* hla father married again soon after Molly K lrke’s death and tia>l another »on did not hurt Paul, except that It made him grieve more deeply for hla mother and added to his lonetl nesa He got along only fairly well In college, because he could never completely shackle hie mind to duties that were confined within e to o i and brick w alls It too» him an extra year to finish an engineering course, and after that he waa never happy except when to the open speces In a business way he w «e Interested only in Ms father’s tlmherlands and such water-power projects aa were situ ated Is the wilderness As s whole he was a disappointment to his p sreut. One restless night the greatest ol all hla Ideas came to James K irk s The next day he went boldly and In friendly spirit to (he office ot Henry Durund. and for hours the tw o colossi talked over K lrke’a suggestion that their Interests he combined Into one giant force o f countteas m illions They parted frien ds In a little while they were aeen at the duhs together. Later the all-powerful Klrke-Du rand c o r poratlon became s reality. The flinty old warriors worked band In hand, their assets multiplied. T lielr palatini homes were scenes of mutual Intercourse Their wives were Inti­ m ate Their children becutna ac­ quainted. In his thirty-second year Paul mar­ ried (T alre Durand. In hla thirty-eighth year, the son ot one ot the richest men In New York, he was officially In charge o f the t c iin k h . o h k h o n WHY WE BEHAVE LIKE HUMAN BEINGS Design That Will Appeal to the More Conservative Home Builders HEALTHY COMPLEXIONS Th« Secret of the Thyroid HE endocrine gland host under­ stood la the thyroid (shleldllke) astride our Adam’* apple. It varies Individually and with age. It Is rela­ tively largest tn fetal life. At birth Ita weight lit pr»|Hirtlott to the entire body Is as l to 3UU, by the third week 1 to l.Utt, and tn the adult ns 1 to 1.*»»Y It !■ generally larger In women than In men. Why this Is so la not yet roma IVam healthy systems, known. free the body af polaona with The thyroid usually consists o f two rijually developed lobes two Inches F c c n -a -m la l. Effective la long, an Inch and a quarter broad smaller doeea. All dragglsla sell They vary g re a tly ; one lobe may he thla safe, acleallflc laxative. much larger than the other, or mny he quite absent. Generally Ihe two l o t o are connected hy an Isthmus; thla also varies tn position or may be absent. There may he accessory thyroids down There Is nothing striking or novel about this home, hut It should appeal the trachea as far as the heart to ntauy of the more conservative home builders aa one which will maintain llllFOR C O N S T IP A T IO N Only In higher fishes does the thy­ Its appearance through many yeura Itecuuse of lla lack of passing faddish roid become a ductless gland, tuke on Influence. new functions, and »tart a new ca­ older New Euglnnd house». Tilla sil- By W. A. R AD FO RD reer. In man. a duct Is «oiuetlmes Mr. William A Radford will snswsr ver tone la th» rvault of actlou of tli* found in the Isthmus— vestige o f a questions and a lv » advtca F1HCN OF condition found In lowest fishes, echo COST on all subjects pertaining to añil lodine-luden alr front tho ucean Tilla house I* feet wlde and o f millions o f years ago. It I» prone practical horns building, for ihs rssd- feo! drop and coutnlua elx rotuna. It I era i f this paper. On acrnunl of his to trouble. wide experience as editor, author and wlll he noled from the (loor pinna, Children with deficient thyroid», manufacturer, he ‘ a, without doubt, the whlch ara al»o reprodtirad, that the through removal, atrophy, or Injury, highest e tth o rlt) on all these sub- become heavy.featured gibbering. - tecta Address all Inquiries to William Idiotic dwarfs known as cretins; they | A. Radford, No. <0? South Dearborn Street. Chicago, OL. and only Inclose do not metamorphose Into normal two-cent slsntp for reply. A W est tM tm rtm tn m ior Ih m l adults. M foaN RIM U v a a f a c l , F e u l l r y , W hile there In nothing striking or These appalling results In both chil­ O o f o , C a l » , o r o v m B a b y C h ic k » dren and adulta have becu corrected oovel about this house. It should ap­ K K Oi-an t>«m ' d iboultH«Hom * bern • » Deulmi peal to many o f the more conservative by feeding thyroid extract. Y a r.lw llh a lid ili U l k l f l M l « « » . K N O 1« m ««i« of » . im IH •• n Enlargement o f the thyroid front | home builders. T h e picture shows RWBdtd b r U • . D * » « o f A f l ' . - K u e whatsoever cause la called gutter, or bow attractive th* exferlor of a house th * C on nabl« 1‘ f i n f w h i c h ltt«u r «« n«aslmum T w o r a m k illtd P i n i l •« A fk a n M I Derbyshire reek. But an over-devel­ j may be made hy the use o f awnings, • ( « ( • F a r m . H u n d radi o f o f M r »••H m vn U l«. oped or over-active thyroid produces flower boxes, and flowers and shrubs K I 4 os» | M o n ey -B o o k Oasorwotoo. a definite disease known ns toxic or - around Ihe foundation walla. This la I.IBM upon K R O. t h « origluat »«ivillt M i l » m in «t«r . A ll p o u lirr au pplr. « * » «» . 1 »w d exophthalmic goiter, or Gravea’ tils 1 not an expensive house lo build, und i l o r M - I V L a rg e «1 *« (•*’«*» l im e « « a mwah) I I R ease. This Is characterized hy In­ has all Ilia features o f a modern up- D ifr t i If d fa lflf c a n n «l « u p p if ¥•*» K M U C « , tp rli»gfU l4 , O. creased metabolism and blood pros 1 to-date home Including a aim room sure, rapid pulse, lax and moist skin, and a balcony above. Second Floor Plan. In construction thla home reminds nervousness, and protruding eyeball« —hence the name, "exophthalmic." one o f a New England deRlgn, as the living room Is 33 fro! wide nud IS _ _ K IL L S *R A TS ‘ ONLV __ The remedy la still In thwehaiuls ol lower port has .‘ he wide shake shin­ fret drop. The sun room which ad gle, and the upper part the clapboard the surgeon. Joins It at (he rigid It U feet d tnche» It Is helleved that the activating tiding, which have been popular for drop by 13 feet wide. An o|>eti lira principle o f the thyroid hormone la place al the other end of the living thyroxin. Isolated by Kendall In la id room Is a feature which wlll make thla Thyroxin la a crystalline compound room attractive and cheery In winter. o f three molecules o f Iodine fixed In An uounual feature o f this house la a protein d erivative: trl-lodo-tri-hydra the location o f the slulra which »ra 1 oxylndole propionic acid, or 03 per between the 111 Ing room nud Ihe din­ cent o f Iodine. ing room, and the atnir hall la the j F e e l » Much Stronger A f t e r Duly the thyroid teoretes thyroxin, connection between these two rooms Taking Lydia £. Pinkham’a and apparently It Is the Iodine in thy­ The dining room 1« on a corner and ; Vegetable Compound roxin that (ella the story. Iodine la is ii few b j U N a t T b « M tetea is found tn many seaweeds; Is three about U frol square and adjoining It Lankin. North Dakota —“ For nearly times more abundant In codfish than Is a breakfast room with a pullutuu four yean I waa not in health M y In human beings; Is found In traces In wurk ie cleaning dinette rot. The atalra lead to a cen milk and In drinking w ater; and gets house and I work tral hall on Ihe second floor. At the Its name from Its violet (lodes) colorí outside too and head of the Muirs Is the bathroom. | •oinrUinea I could Possibly no life exists without Io­ and on the Other three corner* are ! not do It. I read dine. Certainly normal human life Is bedrooms. One Is designated as a in the newspaper* First Floor Plan. Impossible without one one-hundredth play room In Ihe plan, but It Is large about I.ydia E. o f a grain o f thyroxin a day. Three i ’ink ham s Vege­ enough for a bedroom. The shnke and a half grain* o f thyroxin are all rentarles In New England table Compound This home I* one o f those designat­ that stands between Intelligence and shingle are a grout deal thicker mid ami I have taken ed for a rather large lot. ns the house considerably wider tliun the ordinary Imbecility. three bottles of over all Is 3 l ’ j feel wide. Trees and roof shingle, and when treated hy a I hie medicine. I The adrenal*, or suprarenal», get ahralia are needed to give this home •pedal process can lie made to have am feeling a lot their name trom their position Just an artistic aettlng. the silver grayish tint that murks the b e t t s r and 1 above the kidneys. Normally they are u may use this letter o f the size and shape o f a large bean. aa a testimonial.” — TtU Ja TaKNDA, But they v a ry : one—or. In rare cases, Ing flrepr >of w here cement plaster la IL F. 1). f i , I-enkin, North Dakota. both— may be absent: there n.ay be ac­ Average Wooden House used Is hy mentis of expanded metal | cessory adrenals varying In size from Rots in a Few Years lathing In which Is Incorporated, every ; This Medicina la Sold in Both a pin head to a large pea. Itemoval of few Inches, a steel rib tn act as a Although the average American Liquid and Tablet Form both glands Is fatal, often within a stiffener. Such a wall requires but j wooden house Is attack ed hy. decay few hours. When death does not fo l­ few stiel U| rights to with Ii metal within a few year» and l* usually rut low their removal It la because ac­ fabric Is tlxed. -o It Is exceedingly - ted to worthlessness w ith tw o genera cessory adrenals are present and can economical lo uro on walla slid roof. tlons, there Is no reusoii why II could function. In building such a garage, it la ouiy i not be preserved for tw o, th ree or Adrenlo Is a powerful drag and a necessary (o provide a concrete floor more centurlea, says I rnf. Kmnnnel PISO’S powerful cardlo-vascular stimulant gives quick. Fritz, wood technologist o f the l.’ nl on cinders directly on the ground, Normally our blood contains abobt effective relief. sldcwnlk fashion Al pro; er Interiala eight milligrams o f It, which means verslty o f i ’nllfornla. steel angle uprights are set Into the j Pleasant, sooth- Carelesane*». and not the perishable that the proportion o f ádrenlo to ar­ l o g and h e a lin g . E x c e lle n t f o r floor, and the ribbed notai fabric Is terial blood Is one part to a billion. quality o f wood Itself, la to blame for children — conuins no fastened lo these. Cement plaster the costly decay o f the average frame op iates. Su ccessfu lly It Influences some tissues when di­ Is afterwards couted Inside and out. used for i i yean. J Jc luted to one part In 100,01)0,000. It de­ dwelling, asserts the exneri, writing RELIEF and 60c size*. In Good Housekeeping Magazine. De­ presses tiie Intestinal canal when dl — - ■ . ----------= cay la evidence that the wood Is hold­ luted to one part In 33O.O0M.0OU! Large Woodwork Should Be Canadian Fwresta ing a moisture content o f more than doses are fatal. The forest area o f Canada la eatl- 30 per cent. Prepared for Painting Adrentn ls a drag, one o f the moat mnted at 1,131.434 square miles. O f Cheap, careless construction prove* potent our body concoct*. Yet adrenal All outside woodwork should have thla area, M13.RS0 square miles ara p r o more expensive In time than the care | feeding leads to no known or proved at lenat three coats o f pnint. Inside ductlva and accessible. and added cx|>enae necessary to make result*. The administration o f the drag woodwork mny bave three or more, a house waterproof, he points out adrenalin does lend to profound re­ depending upon what fluisti Is desired. Doa'I It* I M a lia M . The factors which usually bring nlmui sults. Our body blood rontnlns this New wood fur painting should b« Kaap r-ol.'a i'arhollaalva In tha house. decay and which cun easily lie d im drug. Whether It Is made by or ex denned and freed from stain* that It »tops pain from burn or rut quickly and heals without scars At all good creted hy the adrenals Is still an open Inated a re : Poorly lilted Joints shin may afterward show through the lruratata, Snr and 40c. or J. W, Cola Co., gles, and door and window sills which question, hut that adrenln has specific pulnt. All the knot holes should he Rockford, III.—Advartlasmanl. action oa Ihe vascular system, the permit water to enter and remain In seuled tip with shellne so that the the cracks; failure to Insulnte all nervous system, the blood, the all pitch will not afterwnrd exude through Joy fo r Racklaaa Drivers paria o f the house from the moisture mentary canal, and on augnr mobilize the paint. It should he sandpapered A million new telephone poles ara o f the ground with a masonry foundii tlon. there I» no doubt. N or I* there down and made perfectly smooth and *et up each year. This assures raw any doubt that when administered as tlon o f at least six Inches; failure to dean. A lan e all. It must he dry. ninterlal for the most popular s|airt ventilate the space I k -1 wren ground a drag It Increases the action o f local among young tuolorista— Washington anesthetics hy constricting the blood and floors where heat and moisture Post. vessels, thus preventing local los* of quickly develop the decaying fungi Imitation Hardware and failure to see that no mound* ot the anesthetic. And as this reduces Hu** Ball Blue gros farther, m ake« Fails to Stand Up the amount o f anesthetic required. It earth or rubbish are left under the Don’t buy the plated finishes for clothes whiter than liquid Blue. I .a r f « also reduces the amount o f toxin dnn house to convey moisture to the parts hardware that will he used to nny ex- package at G racers.— Adv. ger from the anesthetic. It checks o f the building which they touch. lent In your home. These Imitations hemorrhages. It allays the spasms of C ol Short End of E aU are applied to steel and cannot he acute bronchial asthma. It also stimu­ Cement Plaster Makes "You quit your hoarding house and expected to have the durability o f lates weak hearts and fortifies the Garage Walls Fireproof wrought bronze or liras*. Cast bronze now eat at restaurants, I see.’’ hearts o f the old and Infirm agnlnst "Y en h i My arma were not long or brass Is the best you can huy. You Ideal garages are, o f course, tire the shock o f operation. will not And It so very nint h more enough fo r a hoarding house.” In short, adrenalin exerts an Influ­ proof. Many useful methods o f build T Healthy completion* Fee nani int 34 3*1 Kill Rats W ithout Poison K "R "0 COULD NOT DO HERCLEANING Psribonka. huge engineering work on the Mlstas slnl river In the wilderness north of Lac St. Jean and had been three years on the Job. During these three years be bad Known Carta Haldan. He was thinking ot Carla as he looked from a window o f bis bunga low office on the hill down over the vast and naked workings o f an etigl neertng achievement which was cost ing fifty million dollars He felt no exultation or thrill o f pride, and In hla eyes was a far back, somber gloom What he saw was to him an unending and nauseous pit Into which a steady and monotonous drizzle of rain was falling. There were fifteen hundred men on the Job below him working In three eight-hour sh ifts and neither darkness nor storm Id stop them He could see »hem moving and crawl ing about like anta at their labor. In hU mind they added nothing to the scene, unless it was tr give grimmer reality to a hell that was smoking and boiling over. Everywhere a rumble and din. everywhere the fierce and heartbreaking labor of men. every­ where the ugliness and madness o f a man-made place of torm ent Paul waa thinking this even with Carla HMdan Ip hla mind. Ue could M-e the gray white sluices and dykes with their cement and steel w alls and the monster sections o f the almost completed dam. which was to harness northern waters to the production ol light and power for twenty million people. Three years of human effort and millions In cnpllffd lay under his e ye s Yet about It all waa only one excusable and beautiful thing for him That was the rim o f wilderness the green and black and purple boun daries of the forest which clung like a frame about the workings His contemplation of the scene In the valley waa Interrupted by a voice at hla office door, and he turned to greet the most Intimate of his friends In the field, Colin Derwent, who waa the company s medical man. Evt-o on rainy d ays and with Lla boots clogged with mud. Derwent was a cheerful soul. With his Frenchy little mus tache. his smooth cheeks, bis lived ness o f movement, and his apprecla tlon of all phases of life he con tinned to b<-ar the appearance o f a boy. though he had tilled an Important chair in medicine In Johns Hopkins (TO BE CONTINUED» PISOS for COIOIIS 1 Ing garage» al moderate cost have been developed. Cement plnster Is an e x c e lle d material for am-h use One o f the best si items tor build expensive. In any case, he sure to get good piece* for places that will tat milch used; have them finished unt­ il rally. Common Brick Field Liberated by Wealth As It was the wealth o f the Ren Enlarged hy Skintling aissance that led to Ita freedom. It* Hklntled brickwork stands unque* license, and its art, so It is the wealth tlonahly as the neat radical develop o f our clay and place, far more than incut In masonry construction In Ihe any literary revolt, that has substL last MJ0 years. tuted for the rigid moral code o f the N exl to It was th face brick, pro I'llgritn* the gay laxity o f emancl duced by varlou* tri-aliuenl* o f 11» pated souls. Our changed Sabbath, a i surface, giving It an ullraciltciies* day now not o f "eat and worship but which no other brick had |ro**e**od o f wanderings and pagan Joys line-in Then comes the recognition o f the flned. Is a visible sign o f our altered clinker brick, that bins unnoticed ( I n morals and our liberated lives.— Will derails of the fefuae pile wlilrh Is now Durant in "Mansions o f Philosophy.' the favored pet o f the architects. No other maaonry departures have Matal Shield Bara Awls affected brick u„e so decisively as T o pieien t termites, the destructive have these three. Insects that devour wood, from enter Up to the time some Ingenious brick Ing homes. University o f tliillfornls maker cleverly ’ Inkera-d the face engineers have devised a metal shield brick to make It s thing of ew and to he placed cn fop o f the eoneret# unusual appeal the common brick Imd foundation Immedlalel? under th« had the exterior >rlck wall Held all wooden Kill that rests iqion IL— Popu to Itaelf. But the American love of 'ar Mechanic* Magazine. change, o f something new. speedily shifted popular fax >r to the .iew nm Triumph Over Nature terial. Modern perfumes made from *yn Now aklntled brickwork, which I* thetlc chemical Ingredients hove mpre simply an Irc-gular laving id the col lusting qualities than many o f the orful common bricks to produce a nerfnmes mode from flower oils. mass textural wull effect of slngulat allure and charm, la winning hack the errant American favor to the com mon brick. Aided greatly. It must he admitted hy the cllnket hrh k. whose popularity develnpei. a I loom ove,night, I us been one of Hie notable triumphs of 1st« year building muterlal history, The cllnkei hrb k Is that brick whirl». In Ihe kilns, form the arcliet and sldis o’ flu passage through which pass the flume* ami excessive heat Hint convert lie raw mini reclnn gles Into the flnlslied brick This excessive ie- I fuses the clny It runs In Irregulnr Invnllke furrow« or assumes s Isequerllke smoothm-s« like the old ’ ’lilnese porcelain* tnklny on at the same time all sorts o f odd shapes. These bricks c le ierly Intermingled In Ihe aklnlled lin k wull. add to th« textural bounty u compelling appeal. ence upon all smooth muscle ener­ vated hy filers o f the autonomic nerv­ ous system. That mnkes Ita respon­ sibility enormous. Its Influence on hu­ man destiny second to none. QUICK I® by Ooor»» A. Dorter.» Elephant H erd “Bound” by Black M an’s M agic? Major Court-Treattt of the ( ’ ape- I’airo motor expedition was the first white man who hunted and killed elephants on loot with a spear. "W h ile I was on this spear-hunting safari.” he »aid. “ we followed several herds Into waterless country in the Bahr el- lihoral district of thè Sudan, where the elephants usually trek to water •nty every third or fourth night. When they do. nothing will atop them. We followed this particular herd all day. and at night I was ready to give up I made camp and stopped Bahai >a. a young hard hltten Mandala hunt ■r. who was said to he something o f a ough lan then came to me and said ■e thought he could *blnd the herd >i(b bis magic rope These magic -pea are not uncommon in Africa, hey are usually about a yard long nd made of I torn palm fiber. Bulinila at down with the rope In hla hands, nd went through the motions of tying is arms. legs, ankles and neck mut- erlng Incantations as he did so. His muscle* became taut, and he relapsed Into a seinl trance. He sat so for a few minutes, and then suddenly re­ laxed. grunted T h at Is good, and rose to his feeL Next morning we ran Into the elephants only half a mile from camp, and killed one I They were al­ most stationary. By all reckonings they should have been tidies away." Shocked At an Cpllfters club luncheon some one happened to remark that polo bad come to us from France and not from England via India. The Informant de dared that mention o f It had been made by several noted French writer* Evidently In the hope of verifying het statement she turned to a young Indy who at that moment Joined the party and asked; "A r e you fam iliar with Victor H u g i.r “ I arn never fam iliar with any man,” replied the newcomer with dignity.— Los Angeles Times. A fter W inter’« Colds Don’t Neglect Your Kidney». F~?OLDS and chills ara hard on ths v J kidneys. A constant backache, with kidney irrecularitiee. and an achy, worn-out feeling all too often warn of d i s o r d e r . Don't taka chsncaal Help your kidneys with D o a n '» P i l l t . Indorsed tha world over. Sold by dealer» everywhere. 50,000 Users Endorse Doan’s: E. J, Bush, T1S Gravo SlrMt, Char- lottajvliu. Va., aavai "A told M m U to affaci mv hidnv, a and my back salt an wank 1 that coatld hardly turn In bad. Mr .... . arara aura and las; -nd tha kidnoy aalio* brr« i i lar. I fait bot or imowidiataty al tar aliai Uaaa'l Pilla an 1 «roa anno wail.” Laundry Chute T.nundiy chutes Hull are glas* lined moke snnltiiry. durable. c> uiioinlcal und dlsHhciivs tn.-tulliiients. D O A N ’S PILLS A Stjmuljn! DiurçtB tothe Kidneys