what is it ? Dirt, of course. What a lady will take into her mouth with delight she will repudiate from her hands or dress with aversion and disgust. That's it. You see the point. " Dirt" said Lord Palmerston, " is simply matter out of its place." All the food we take, which is not necessary to build up or warm the body, immediately becomes filth, refuse, dirt. Yes, and not only dirt, but some of it poisonous dirt. Even in the healthiest persons this is so. Therefore Nature proceeds to get rid of it at once by means of the bowels, kidneys and skin. That is, she tries to do it, and if all these organs work well, and 1 the load of dirt is not too great, she succeeds; but if they work badly and the load is more than they can manage, there is trouble right away. That means some of the surplus stuff remains in the stomach, where it ferments, producing indigestion, sour stomach, bad taste in the mouth, rising of foul gas or fluid into the throat, headache, loss of appetite, etc. Some of it, more or less digested, and some not digested at all, stays in the bowels or intestines, where it is a nuisance and a source of danger. The poisonous principles of it are absorbed and get into the blood, which carries them all over the Body-House from roof to foundation. Many ailments, including fevers, come in this way. Then the liver, the biggest if not the hardest worker in the body, is often weakened and clogged, especially in the Spring after a winter of hearty and careless eating and drinking on our part. So it leaves bile in the blood instead of removing it, and we may have in consequence what we call a " bilious attack." For bile in the blood is dirtpoisonous at that. A heap of rotting compost in your parlor would not be so dangerous. . Thus we see how desirable t is to keep the interior of Eegularity of the bowels follows Seigsl's Pills,