f HE FUTiTOfl COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO. PA. Not a Bite of Breakfast Until You Drink Water 8ays a glass of hot water and , phosphate prevents illness and keeps us fit. Just as coal, when It burns, leaves behind a certain amount of Incom bustible material In the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken day after day leaves In the alimentary canal a certain amount of indigestible mate rial, which If not completely eliminat ed from the system each day, becomes food for the millions of bacteria which Infest the bowc'.s. From this mass oi left-over waste, toxins and ptomaine like poisons are formed and sucked Into the blood. Men and women who can't get feel ing right must begin to tako Inside baths. Eefore eating breakfast each morning drink a glass of real hot wa ter with a tenspoonful of limestone phosphate In it to wash out of the thirty foot of bowels the previous day's accumulation of poisons and toxins and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean, pure and fresh. Those who are subject to sick head ache, colds, biliousness, constipation, others who wake up with bad taste, foul breath, backache, rheumatic stilt ness. or have a sour, gassy stomarh after meals, are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from any druggist or storekeeper, and bo gln practicing Internal sanitation. This rill cost very little, but is suffi cient to make anyone an entliub!a3t on the subject. Remember Inside bathing is more Important than outside bathing, bo causa the skin pores do not absorb Impurities into tlie blood, causing poor health, while tlio bowel pores do. Just as soap and hot wr.t ?r cleanses, sweetens and freshens the skin, so hot water and lin:o;tor.o phosphate act on tlio stomach, liver kidneys and bowels. Adv. The Sort. "What kind of ships do they have dog watches on?" "Why, barks, of courses.' WHEN KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE GLASS OF SALTS Eat Less Meat If Kidneys Hurt or You Have Backache cr Bladder Misery Meat Ferms Uric Acid. No man cr woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flush ing the kidneys occasionally, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly tutor or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly ail rheumatism, headaches, liver trou ble, nervousness, constipation, dizzi ness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache In the kidneys or your back hurts, or If the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, Irregular of passat'' or at tended by a sensation of scalding, get bout four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablcspoonful In a glass of water be fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then art fine. This fa mous salts Is made from the arid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithia and has been used for genera tions to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neu tralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending b'adder disorders. Jad Salts la Inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful efferves cent lithia-water drnk which all reg ular meat eaters should take now flid then to keep the kidneys clean anu the blood purs, thereby avoiding se rious kidney complications. Adv. Taste in Reading. "Oliver's taste for books seems to be improving." "I'm very giad to hear that. Hut are you quite sure about it?" "Perfi-etly sure. I.n.-U we-k I caught him perjoing a fp'o-cent hair raiser, and this week he is reading nothing but dime novels. That's a hundred per cent Improvement:" UninniPTTftii 3 SLUGG1SHBGWELS No tick headache, sour stomach, biliousness or constipation by morning. Get a lO-ccnt box now. Turn the rascals out the headache, biliousness, indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases turn thorn cut to-night end keep them out with 0 Caseareta. Millions of i-.en and women take a Cascaret now and then and never know the mleery crrised by a lazy liver, clogged bowels or an upset stom ach. Don't put In another day of distress. ,, iLct Cascarcts cleanse your stomach; remove the sour, fermenting food; lake the excess bilo from your liver and carrv out all the constipated waste matter and poison In the bowels. Then you will feel great A Cascaret to night stralghteM yon out by morning. They worlt while you sleep. A 10-cent box from ny drug store means a clear head weet stomach and clean, healthy liver and bowel action fcr mnnths. Chil dren love Cascarcts because they never gripe cr sicken. Adv. Denied. "That young muu is the salt of the earth." "Oh, no, he isn't; he's too fresh." The Only One. "Can you propose any remedy for this deadlock?" "Yes: why not use a akeleton key?" MIMIQI $ (jTORGE RANDOLPH QOIL LILLIAN CHESTER COW?' Turitrooooti COtPOItKTlOH ILLU$TRXITPC.D.PHODE$ CHAPTER XXII Continued. 16 "Good evenlnc." he said formally. "Good evening," she replied, and be went out of the door. When be had gone, she flew up to her rooms, ber first coherent thought being that she had accomplished It! She bud seen Allison, and had given him her definite answer, and lied got ten him out of the house while the others were back In the billiard room. She had held up splendidly, but she was weak now, and qulverinj In every limb, and she sank on her divan, sup ported on one outstretched arm; and In this uncomfortable position she took up the eternal question of Gall. The angry tears of mortification sprang Into her eyes! The library was quite steadily de voted to Veddor court tonight. A high ly Important change had come Into the fortunes of Market Square church. It was as if a stone had been thrown in to a group of cardboard houses. All the years of planning had gone thP way of the wind, and the card houses had all to be built over again. The cathedral had receded by a good five years, unless the force and fire of Rev Smith Iloyd should be sufficient to coax capital out of the pockets of hin millionaire congregation; and. In fact that quite normal plan was already under advisement. The five of this impromptu counsel were deep In tho matter of ways and means, when a slender arparitlon. In clinging gray, came down the stairs It wa3 Gail, who, for some reason un known, even to her. had decided that she was selfish; and Rev. Smith Royri' heart a tied as be saw the pallor on her delicately tinted cheeks and the dark tracing about her brown eyes. She slipped quietly in among them, her brown hair loosely waved, so that unexpected threads of gold shone In It when she passed under the chandelier, and she greeted the callers pleasantly, and sat down In the corner, very silent. She was glad that she had come. It was restful In this little circle of friends. A noise filled the hall. End even the lights of the library seemed to bright en, as Luclle and Ted, Arly and tier aid. and Dick Rodley, came tumbling in, laughing and chattering, and carry ing hilarity in front of them like a wave. Gall shoved her tangle of thoughts still farther back In her bead, and the sparkle returned Into her eyes "We re bringing you a personal Invi tation to Arly and Geralds yacht party." Jabbered Lucile, kissing every body In rcaih except Rev. Smith Iloyd. "You might let Arly extend the Invi tation herself," objected Ted. "I've given the pleasure to Gerald," laughed Arly, with a vivacious glance at that (uniting gentleman. "He does It so much better. Now listen." "It's a little informal week-end party. on the Wbltecap," Gerald Informed . them, with a new something in him ' which quite satisfactorily took the I place of cordiality. "Sort of a farewell i affair. Arly and I are about to take a stilish two months' cruise, all by our j selves," and he glanced fondly at the j handsome black haired young woman i under discussion. "We should be . pleased to have you Join us.'' and he t included Mrs Hoyd and the young rec tor with a nod. "Of course we'll come," agreed Gail. "Doc tor Iloyd, can't you arrange for a week end party once In your life?" "L'ufortuniitely custom has decreed that week i lid parties shall cover Sun days." he regretted, but there was a calculating look In his eye which sent Lucile over to him. 'Tluy hooky Just once," she begged. "This is only a family crowd, the llab bilts end Marion Kenneth, and we who are here." Rev. Smith Boyd looked at his mother, and that lady b-ightened visibly. "When Is It to be?" he asked. "Saturday," Arly Informed him, Join ing Lucile, who had tat on the arm ot Mrs. Loyd's chair. Arly sat on the nothing else but that was trivial; sm other one. and Gerald Kosland. with an I bltion. power, wealth, fame, the cum entirely new appreciation of beauty Ihour.ht he had never seen a prettier picture than the sweet-faced old lady with the fresh and charming young women on either side of her. Rev. Smith Boyd glanced, for Just in insttint, at Gail, who was now sitting on the leather coiu-h leaning confidingly against her Aunt Grace He had been at some pains to avoid this young lady recently, for It is natural to spare one's self distress, but there was a lock of loneliness sbout her Beauty and Brains. A pretty girl need not necessarllv be brainless, but somehow the comUlna tion persists. Did you young fellows ever stop to analyze any of your conversations with that wide eyed little blonde wh' always wears pink silk blouses? No of course you didn't you hardly knew what you were saying yourself Trouble with you Is thai you haven Imagination enough to conceive ol a pretty girl who could bring up a nmre interesting talk topic than ber own sweet self. You sort of concede that a peach o: a girl Is three-quarters tnush. wltb a beart of stone. Of course there Is such a thing ax the pretty girl with brains, but she either married or else In love with some cuss that doeBn't appreciate her Judge. Our First Naval Hero. Tha first naval hero of the United States now almost forgotten was Jeremiah O'llrlen. a Main man. whose racial descent Is clearly Indl ( nil hy his name. He commanded III which sent his heart out to ber in quick sympathy. "I think I'll play hooky,'' be an nounced, with a twinkle In the eyes which he now cast upon bis mother. "That's being a good sport." ap proved Ted. "Slay away a Sunday or two, and Market Square church will appreciate you bettor." "Let's bavo some music," demanded Luclle. "Gall and Doctor Poyd must sing for you," announced Aunt Grace. In whom there was a trace of wilfulness "They do slug so beautifully to gether!" "I'm afraid I can't tonight," refused Gall hastily, and Indeed she had good reason why her voice should not have Its firm and true quality Just now. "I will accompany Doctor Hoyd, though, with pleasure," and she started toward the niucic room. Rev. Smith Iloyd was cut off from the ordinary lies about not being In good voice, and suffering from a slight cold, and such things. He hesi tated a moment, and then he followed. The Dedouln Love Song, the Garden of Sleep, and others of the solo reper toire which Gall had selected for him, came pulsing out of the music room, first hesitantly, and then with more strength, as the friendly nearness be tween himself and the accompanist became better established. Presently, the listeners In tho library noticed an unusual pause between the songs, a low-voiced discussion, and then, the two perfectly blended voices rose In a harmony no perfect that there was moisture In the eyes of two of the ladles present CHAPTER XXIII. Gail First! Allison, springing forwari with a Jerk as he left Jim Sargent's house, headed bis long, low runabout up the avenue. He raced into the park, and glanced up at the lookout house as he sped on past; but It was only a fleeting look. H needed no reminder of Gail. As he passed' Roseleaf Inn, he slowed dewn. The roadhouse may have given him, and probably did, an other reminder of Gull, In such a man ner as to concrete him Into logical thought; for he slowed down the ter rifle speed which had been the accom paniment of his unreasoning emotion. The driving required too much con centration lor specific thought. With this turning of his mental atti tude, even the slow running of the car seemed to disturb him. and, about half a mile past Reseleaf Inn, he came slowly to a stop, sitting at the wheel, with bis head bent slightly forward, and staring at the spot where the road way had ceased to roil beneath his machine. Presently he became aware of the cold, and running bis car to the side of the road, he stepped out, and. buttoning his coat around him, crossed a fence and walked through the nar row strip of trees to the river bank, where he stood for a moment looking out upon the misty Hudson, sparkling under tho moonlight. Ho began to wulk up and down the bank presently, tho turf sinking spongily under his ft,ct, and It was noticeable that bl pace grew more and more rapid, until he v.as striding at a furious rate of speed. The man was in a torment of pas sion. He bad spent a lifetime In tne deliberate acquisition of everything upon which he hud set his will; and It was one of the things upon which he had built his success, that, once he I had fixed his desire deliberately upon ! nm-tMntr ha tiurl hold ii n uq vprln pi v tn that object, employing all the forces ot which strong men are capable; patient waiting, dogged persistence, or vicious grappling, whichever was best adapted to gain his ends. Gall! If there had been tender thouchts of her, they were gone now It was so that he had centered his mind upcm her, and himself and bis will, until, tn all creation, there was niand of empires and of men, were nothing, except as they might lead to her! So It was that he had come (his far, and the roadway to his present height was marked by the cripples be hud left behind him. without compunction, without mercy, without ccmpassiou. Tankrupts strewed his way, broken men of purpose higher than his own. jseful factors In the progress of Hu man life, builders and creators who had advanced the Interest of the i-om- an American vessel In the Itrsl naval buttle ol the revolution which was fought near Machiaa Me., June lit. T75 Some little time before an Kng lish schooner, the Margrunello wan al Mm Inns and a number ot the peo pie ol ihe town, led by lerenitnn O Hrlen and Hi-n'amln Koster eon spired io rapiure tier The attempl was successful, and with O Hrlen in command, the Mamraneiio made vnvuge to ihe I'ay of Kundy An Eng lish schooner and lendi-i 1 re sent out to look tor the Mai grxneito. and when 0 linen relumed n Macmas tie tinind them awnitlng mm The tlrsi naval oxide nl the I'nlled States was toiiKht then and there and O linen Bnd his men added ihe schooner and lender to their prlr.es Peaches In England A long lime ago someone said that an Englishman eats a peach aa If h were performing a religion ceremony. No wonder' In ine London market a sale of a dnxen peaches ranks a 1 wholesale transaction And the price! The London Telegraph lecently print ad an article on "Cheap r'run," IB mon wealth, but who had been more brilliant In construction than they had been In reaptnK the rewards of their building. It was for Allison to do this It had been his specialty; the reaping of rewards. It bid been his faculty to permit others to build, to encourage them In It, and then, when the build ing waa done, to wrest It away from the builders. That marked him aa the greatest commercial genius of his time; and be bad much applause for 1L Women. Yes, there bad been wom en, creatures of a common mold with whom be bad amused himself, had taken them in their freshness, and broken them, and thrown them away; this In bla earlier years. But In bis maturity, he bad bent all bis strength to a greater passion; the acquirement of all those other things which men had wanted and held most dear, among them acquisition, and power, and suc cess. Perhaps It bad been bad for him, this concentration, for now it left him at the height of his maturity, with mis taken fancies, with long pent fires, with disproportionate desires. Bring ing to these, he had the tremendously abnormal moral effect of never hav ing been thwarted in a thing upon which ho had set his mind, and of be lieving, by past accomplishment, Ihnt anything upon which he had set his wish must be his, or else every victory he bad ever gained would be swept aside and made of no value. He must accomplish, or die! Ho was without God, this man; be had nothing within him which con ceded, for a moment, a greater power than his own. In all bis mental Im agery, which was rich enough In ma terial things, there was no conception of a deity, or of a need for one To what should he pray, and for what, when he had himself to rely upon? Worship was an idealistic diversion, a poetic Illusion, the refuge of the weak who excused their lack of strength by' ascribing It to a mysterious something beyond the control of any man. He tolerated the .popular notion that there must be a Gcd, as he tolerated codes of social ethics; the conventions which laid down, for instance, what a gentlo man might or might not do, externally and still remain a gentleman. In the meantime. If a man-made law came be tween him and the accomplishment of his ends, he broke li; without a trace of thought that he might be wrong Laws were the mutual safeguard of the weak, to protect themselves against the encroachment of the strong; and It was In the equally nat ural province of the strong to break down those safeguards. In the same way he disregarded moral laws. Thpy. too, were for the upholding of tho weak, and the mere fact that they ex isted was proof enough that they were an acknowledgment of tha right of the strong to break them. There Is a mistake here. It lies In the statement that Allison recognized no God. He did. Allison. Not Allison, ' TP A Flame Raged Through His Veins Which Fairly Shook Him. the man, but the unconquerable will of Allison, a will which wus a divinity in Itself. He believed In It, centered ,j It all his faith, poured out to It all ihe fervidnesa of his heart, of his mind, of his spirit, of bis body. He worshiped It! So It was that he came to the con sideration of the one thing which had attempted to deny Itself to him Gail! A flame raged through bis veins which fairly shook him with Its vlo lence. It was not only the reflex of his determination to have her. but It was the terrific need of her which had grown up In him. Have her?' Of course he would have ber! If she would not come to blm willingly, he would take her! She was not to be considered in It any more titan he had considered any other adverse factor In the attainment ot anything he had de sired. He was possessed of. a rag' now, which centered Itself upon one object, and one alone. Gall! She was his new summit, his new peak, the which the statement occurs that ftmnll anmniea were wnrtn un nr three shillings a dozen but that the best fruit could be btught at 12 shil lings a dozen Think or paying a quar ler for a Blng'i peach! But there were some Bhups that cut the pntje, and that woulc sell you a peach lor three pence six cents. Youth's L'onipan ion. Be Generous In Praise. There are occasions w hen speech Is golden rather thuu silence, and woeu an encouraging word would be of more value than the richeBt material gill. Some persons are lui loo much afraid of the effec of a lit lie generous and well-timed praise I Ley would keep all then lloweis in an icehouM Let ting a little sunshine upon tbetn at times would uol be amiss. Dr. A. I bomson. Daily Thought Physical courage, which despises all danger, will make a man brave in one way; and moral courage, which defies all opinion, will make a man brave la mother. Culton. Anal one where he bad planned to rest; but now bis angry thought was to attain It' and spurn It, broken and crumbled, as had been all the other barriers to bis will, and press ruthlius ly onward Into higher skies, he knew not where. It was no time now, to think on that. Gail first! CHAPTER XXIV. The Flutter ef a Sheet of Musle. Gall, in a pretty little rose-colored morning robe, with soft frills of lace around her white throat and at her white elbows, sat on the floor of the muslo room amid a chaos of sheet mu sic. She was humming a gay little song suggested by one of the titles through which she had leafed, and was gradually sorting her music for the yacht party; Instrumental pieces here, popular things there, another little pile of old-fashioned glees which the as sembled crowd might sing, just here a little stack of her own solos, nearby the rector's favorites, between the two their duets. It was her part In ono of the latter she was humming now, missing, as she sang, the strong ac companiment of Rev. Smith Boyd's mellow voice. She was more peace ful this morning than she bad been for many days. The butler came through the hall, and Gall leaked up with a suppressed giggle as she saw him pass the door She always had an absurd Idea that his hinges should be oiled. "Miss Gall Is not at home, sir," she heard the butler say, and Gall paused with a sheet of music suspended in her hand, the whole expression of her face changing. She had only giveu instructions that one person should re ceive that invariable message. "1 beg your pardon, sir!" was Ihe next observation Gall heard, in a tone of as near startled remonstrance as was possible to the butler's wooden voice. There was a sound almost as of a scuffle, and then Allison, with his top coat on his arm and his hat In h'e hand, strode to the doorway of the music room, followed Immediately by the butler, who looked as if his hair had been peeled a little bit at the edges. Allison had apparently brushed roughly pnst him. and had disturbed his equanimity for the balance of bis lire. Gall was on her feet almost Instan taneously with the apparition In the doorway, and she still held the sheet of music which she had been about to deposit on ono of the piles. Allison's eyes had a queer effect of being sunken, and there was a strange nerv ous tension in him. Gail dismissed the butler with a nod. "You were Informed that I am not at home," she said. "I meant to see you." he replied with a certain determined Insolence In his tone which she could not escape. There was a triumph In It. too, as If his having swept the butler aside were only a part of his Imperious in tention. "I have some things to say to you to which you must listen." "You had better say them all, then, because this Is your last opportunity. ' she told him, pale with anger, and with a quaver In her voice which hhn would have given much to suppress He cast a look on her which blazed He bad not slept since be had seen her last He smiled, and the smile was a snarl, displaying his teeth Something more than anger crept Into Gail's pallor. "I have come to ask you again to marry me, Gail. The matter Is too vital to be let pass without the most serious effort of which I am capable I cannot do without you. 1 have a need for you which Is greater than anything of which you could conceive. I come to you humbly, Gail, to ask you to marry me." 'For just a moment hla eyes bad sortened, and Gall felt a alight trace of pity for him; but In the pity Itself there was revulsion. "I cannot," she told him. "You must!" he Immediately re joined. "As I would build up an em plre to win you, I would destroy one to win you. You spoke last night of what you called the cruelty and trick ery of the building up of my big trans portation monopoly. If It Is that which stands between us, It shall not do so for a moment longer. Marry me. and I will stop it just where It Is. Why, I only built this for you, and if you don't like It, I shall have nothing to do with It." In that he lied, and con sciously. He knew that the moment he had made sure of her his ambition to conquer would come uppermost again, and that he would pursue bis dream ofvonquest with even more ar dor than before, because be had been refreshed. "That would mckeno difference, Mr Allison." she replied. "I told you last night that I would not marry you be cause 1 do not. and could not, love you There does not need to be any other reason." There was In her an Inexpli cable tension, a reflex of his own, but. though her face was still pale, she stood very calmly berore blm. The savngeness which was In him. held too long In leash, sprang into bis face, IiIb eyes, his lips, the set of bis jaws. He advanced a step towards , her. His hands contracted. Try This. If you will lake a pavement that is clear, and walk brlsxly In the center, you will find that before you have gone 6U yards you have unconsciously veered very much to one side. To make this test accurate you must not use any effort to keep In the center If you think or something else and endeavor to walk naturally, you win find that you are not able to keep going In a straight line. In tbe same way a person lost In a wide expai.se or level country will describe a com plete circle as be keeps walking oo and on. Tbe explanation of this lies In the propensity of one foot to walk faster than the other, or to take a longer stride than the other, causing you to veer to one side or tbe other. Air for the Human House. Your body Is a human bouse, the place In which you live. Food alone cannot make this bouse a healthy place. Tbe lungs, tbe ventilators of the bouse, must be tilled and refilled many times each ilnute with pure, fresh air. Tbe air breathed deep Into the Unjr "I shall not again ask you to love me." be harshly stated; "but you must marry me. I have made up my mind to that." , "Impossible!"' Angry now and con temptuous. "I'll make you! There is no re source I will not use. I'll bankrupt your family. I'll wipe It off tbe earth." Gall's nails were pressing in her palms. She felt that ber lips were cold. Her eyes were widening, as the horror of blm began to grow on ber. He was glaring at her now, and there was no attempt to conceal tbe savage cruelty on bla face. "I'll compromise you," he went on. "I'll connect your name with mine In such a way that marriage with me will be your only resource. I'll be an In fluence you can't escape. There will not be a step you can take In which you will not feel that I am the mas ter of It. Marry yout I'll have you If it takes ten years! I'll have no other end in life. I'll put Into that one purpose all the strength and all the will that I have put Into the accom plishment of everything which I have done, end the longer you delay me the sooner I'll break you when I do get you." Out of her very weakness had come strength; out of ber overwhelming hu miliation had come pride, and though the blocd had left her face waxen and cold, something within her discovered a will which was as strong in resist ance as hla was In attack. She knew It, and trembled In the knowledge or it "You can't make me marry you," she said, with infinite scorn and contempt. He clenched his fists and gritted bis teeth. Into his eyes there sprang a blaze which she bnd never before seen, but dimly. In the eyes of any man; but she needed no experience to tell her Its despicable meaning. His lips, which had been snarling, suddenly took a downward twitch, and were half parted. His nostrils were distended, and his blood, flooding Into his face, empurpled It. "Then 111 have you anyhow!" he hoarsely told her, and, his arms tensed and his head slightly towered forward, he made as If to advance toward her. He saw in her frightened eyes that she would scream, but he did not know that at that moment she could not. Her heart seemed to have lost Its ac tion, and she stood, trembling, faint, In the midst of her strewn music, with the sensation that the room was turn ing dark. The bouse was very quiet. Mrs. Sar gent and Mrs. Davles were upstairs. The servants were all In the rear of the house, or below, or In the upper rooms, at their morning work. He turned swiftly and closed the door of the music room, then he whirled again towards ber, with ferocity in his eyes, lie came slowly, every movement of him alive with ponderous strength. He was a maniac. He was Insane. He was frenzied by one mad thought which had swept out of bis universe every other consideration, and the glut t kill was no more fearful than tbe purpose which possessed him now. Gall, standing slight, fragile, her brown eyes staring, ber brown hair disheveled about her white brow, lelt every atom of strength leaving her, de voured in tbe overwhelming might of this monstrous creature. The sheet of music, which she had been holding all this time, dropped from, ber nerve less fingers and fluttered to the floor! That noise, slight as It was, served to arrest the progress of the man for just an Instant. He was in no frame to reason, but some Instinct urged him to speed. He crouched slightly, as a wild beast might. But the flutter of that sheet of music bad done more for Gall than It had' for him. It had loosed the paralysis which had held her. had broken the fascination of hor ror with which she had been spell bound. Just behind her was a low French window which led to a small side balcony. With one bound she burst this open, she did not know bow. and leaped over tbe light balcony rail, and ran across the lawn to the rectory gate, up the steps aud Into the side door, and Into tbe study, whero Rev. Smith Boyd But toiling over a sermon. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Painting Walls. Before paint or calcimine is applied to walls every crevice should be tilled with plaster or cement. To the calci mine put one-quarter pound white glue In cold water overnight and bout grad ually In the morning until dissolved Mix eight pounds' of whiting with hot water; add the dissolved glue and stir together, adding warm water until the consistency or thick cream. Use a calcimine brush and finish as you go along.' If skim milk be used Instead ot water the glue may be omitted. That Cught to Cure Her. A man out West, who married a widow, has invented a device to cure her of eternally praising her former husband. Whenever she begins to descant on bis noble qualities, this In genious No. 'i merely says: "Poor, dear man! How I do wish be bad not did" cells of tbe lungs, meets and purities the blood w hich bus been sent there by the heart, the great pump in your nu man house. This pump is kept busy every moment. It must gather tbe waBteladen blood from every part ot tbe body and Bend It to the lungs, then it must take the purified blood back to tbe farthest point of the human house. Sometimes Invisible enemies, tbe microbes, creep Into the human bouse aud try to steal our health away. Noth ing can do more In the way of driving these little enemies out ihan our ven lllators, the lungs, when tbey are al lowed an abundance of fresh air. To Drill Earthenware. To drill earthon ware, use a steel drill, ground at the cutting end Into a triangular-based pyramid. Turn the tool rapidly, and aid the action by tbe application of a solution of camphor In turpentine. If no such drill can be obtained make one out of an old three-cornered file by soften I tie. it, fil ing up until the edges are sharp, and then tempering. The extreme tip mar advantagecusly be made with a great er angle A IS GILD F Look, Mother! If tongue it coated, give "California Syrup of Figs." Children love this "fruit laxative," and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not atop playing to empty the bowels, .and the result la tbey become tightly clogged wltb waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach aours, then your little one bocomea croes, half-sick, feverish, don't eat, sleep or act naturally, breath Is bad, system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! See if tongue Is coated, then give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," nnd In a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the sys tem, and you have a well child again. Millions of mothers give "California Byrup of Figs" because it Is perfoctly harmless; children love it, and It nev er fails to act on tho stomach, liver and bowels. Ask at the store for a CO-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on tbe bottle. Adv. He Knew Father. The philosopher Is born, and not tnado. Even In tender youth the precious gift Is rftcn observed, re marks tho Manchester Gunrdian. One juvenile philosopher wa-i discovered the other day, when the nowo arrived at a certain bouse that the head of the family, lighting with hi regiment In France, had been wounded. Tears were the order of the day, until the small boy thought to inquire: "Whore abouts is dud woundod?" He was told, "In the hand." "That's Just like father," he re sponded, going on methodically wltb his breakfast; "bo's been trying , to catch the bullet!" Don't Neglect Kidneys SwamrRoot,Dr. Kilmer's Prescrip tion, Overcomes Kidney Trouble It is now conceded by physicians that the kidneys should have more attention as they control the other organs to a re markable degree and do a tremendous amount of work in removing the poisons and waste mnttcr from the system by filtering the blood. The kidneys should receive some as islance when needed. We take less ex ercise, drink less water and often eat more rich, heavy food, thereby forcing the kid neys to do more work than nature in tended. Evidence of kidney trouble, such as lame back, annoying bladder troubles, marling or burning, brickdust or sedi ment, sallow complexion, rheumatism, maybe weak or irregular heart action, warns you that your kidneys require nelp immediately to avoid more serious trou ble. ' - An ideal herbnl compound .that has had most remarkable success as a kidney and bladder remedy is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root. Thero is nothing else like it. It is Dr. Kilmer's prescription used in pri vate practice nnd it U sure to benefit you. Get a bottle from your druggist. However, if you wish Brut to test this great preparation, rend ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Hinghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. Keenly Disappointed. Some time since an ambitious young actor went on a barnstorming trip and cn his icturn he recounted bis experi ence to a frletid.v "One night," he said, "I played the part of Hamlet, and at the end of Ihe show the audience ruse and loudly shouted, 'Fine! Fine! 7 " "I suppose," smilingly Interrupted the friend, "that It made you feel rather good." "Yes," answered the young actor, with a deep drawn sigh; "or, rnthor, It would have made me fuel gocd if a large voice hadn't vcclfcrciily added, 'Make It fine and imprisonment'" "Philadelphia Telegraph. RECIPE FOR .CRAY HAIR. To bait pint of water add I ns. Bar Rum, jmull Ih of llai bo C',,m,(iun-1, and X us. ot glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a week until It becomes the desired shade. Any drug gist can put this up or you can mix It at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, fnded gray hair and re moves dandruff. It li emwllent for fulling hal'and will make harsh hair soft and glowy. ll will nut oi. lor the tcalp, Is not sticky or greasy, aud Cues not rub oil. Adv. ' Then She Said "Yes." She Before I give you my answer I must know more about you, Aru you aiming at anything worth while? He You seem to havo a very poor opinion of yourself. PREPAREDNESS I To Fortify The System Against Orip when Grip It preralant LAXA T1VB BROMO QUININB should be taken, Ihie combination )f Quinine with other inirealents. deitrora trms acts aa a "Tonic and Lstaiive and thus keepa the srstem in condltioc t.) withstand Co'ds. Grip and Influetua. Tliare Is only one ' BROMO OUININB." E. W GROVE'S' air uture no box. ato A New Broom, Uillet How ruany people work In your ofllco? Perry Only cno. He came today. The others have been v. lib us some time. Life. y NontiNO so Fri-WTivR as nixin KM1KK Tor Materia, t'HIle F-vrr. Chief of Police, J. W. Reynold. Newport New, Va.,BAya: It la a pleuHiirc to reeomtnend Hubrk furCnlllaanil Fever. H ire ubwIK when necenttary fur SO yeftrn antUmve found no remedy a effective." K'lll llnhek &Oceii',nlirtruir trlt, or br Parcel Pohi, prepaid, from Kiociew akl A ik., WaHhlnpton, f). 0. A (lood Move liubek Liver P:il. CO pill .... to cent Best Test "How was the show?" "Great." You know It was a failure in Now York." Dr. Pierce's Pelleta are best for liver, bowels and atomach. One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic. Adv. With the exception of a discolored eye, anything band painted is fash ionable. ' Joy is tbe greatest intoxicant known. EVERISH SIC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers