WOMEN CAN HARDLY BELIEVE How Mes. Hurley Was Re stored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ; Compound. Eldon, Mo. — “1 was troubled with displacement, inflammation and female weakness. For two years I could not stand on my feet long at a time and I could not walk two blocks without en- 4 during cutting and drawing pains down my right side which increased every month. Ihave been at that time purple in the face and would walk the floor. I could not lie down or sit still sometimes for a day and a night at a time. [ was nervous, and had very little appetite, no ambition, melancholy, and often felt as though I had not a friend in the world. After I had tried most every female remedy without sue- cess, my mother-in-law advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I did so and gained in strength every day. I have now no trou- ble in any way and highly praise your medicine. It advertises itself.’ Mra. S. T. HurrLey, Eldon, Missouri. Remember, the remedy which did this was Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For sale everywhere, It has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displace- ments, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means have failed. Why don’t you try it? Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, Lynn, Mass, wi Ts Youthful Fe of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable ~-act surely and gently on the ver. Cure Biliousness, Head- ache, Dizzi- Genuine must bear Signature To keep the hands white, the head free from dandruff and the com. plexion clear, Beautifies An Praggints,) Contains 30% Pure Sulphur. NIP Hate & Wicker Dye, Black or Brews, 50% A GOOD TONIO AND APPETIZER DAISY FLY KILLER sced anywhere, at. nets and kills oll fies. Neat, alean, or nareental, convenient cheap. Lasts all sesaon, Madeol metal, enn'tepill or gy over; will not soll o injure anything Ousranteed effective All dealers orien) paid for $1.00 nan Susully 8 or Shs oRoPsY ar soon removes swell iE REET ——————— W. NU, BALTIMORE, NO. 27-1915. HIS NAME HONORED Nathan Hale a Synonym for the Highest Patriotism. How Youthful Martyr to the Cause of Liberty Met Death With Fortitude That Can Never Be For. gotten, When the farmers of Lexington fired the shots that brought on the war of American Inde pendence that April day in 1775, a pale, slim boy, not yet twenty years old, destined to become a martyr to our freedom, laid down his badge of office as a schoolteacher at New London, Conn., and took up the sword. That boy was Nathan Hale. His heroic sac- rifice to his country’s cause is one of the treasured pages in American his tory. New London went wild with excite | ment when the news of the battle of Lexington reached there. patriots paraded the streets. were fired and speeches made, Guns ‘| Every then the young schoolteacher was called to the platform, What words he said that day have been lost to pos- terity, but we do know they must have been the most stirring of the occasion, for inrmediately after he left the plat form men began marching forward to enlist. One sentence of Nathan Hale's that day has been preserved and it is worthy to rank with the greatest say ings of our nation “Let us march immediately and nev. er lay down our arms until we have obtained independence,” he sald. That all the remembers that it was more than a year later before independence was talked of in the continental con- in of Independence the regiment of Col. Charles His studious habits stood him stead, and soon he was one of the regiment. He in good | discovery and oapture § in such a gitu ation. 1 wish to be useful, and every kind of service for the public good becomes honorable by being neces- sary.” In such manner did Captain Hale turn spy. That night he left the camp at Harlem Heights dressed in the hrown garments and broad brimmed hat of a schoolteacher, He was ac- companied a short distance by Ser geant Hempstead and his faithful serv- ant, Ansel Wright, who arranged to have a boat ready for Captain Hale for his return, September 20, Nathan Hale had no trouble in pene trating the British lines. He went to New York and over to Brooklyn, care fully collecting information about the number of British soldiers, their can- non, ammunition other supplies and fortifications, in Latin, and concealed it in a hollowed out place in one of his boot heels. September 19 he began his return. He spent the night at a farm house near the place where the boat was to wait for him. The next moming he went to breakfast at a little wayside inn, “The Cedars,” kept by a widow named Chichester, man entered and stared at him. Cap- tain Hale paid little attention, as he thought he was safe by now, As soon as the meal was finished he hurried off to the rendezvous. Glad almost beyond belief to be rid of to meet it. Too late instead of Sergeant Hempstead and Ansel Wright the boat was filled with British marines, He turned to run. but the marines caught him, “What are you doing out so early? a marine demanded. “Isn't it proper for a schoolteacher to get a breath of fresh alr?™ asked in reply “Why did you run?” “1 thought you were rebels The marines would not believe Hale's assertions of Innocence and be. gan to search him. They looked ev. off his boots and reached inside ing suspicious had been found and the marines reluctantly were prepar- ing to turn him loose when one threw the boot he That tore the papers fell out, Captain Hal taken & frigate in the harbor and later to New York, where General Howe ques There but admit that he was a spy tree strip that covered secret and the e¢ was then General Teco Late, He Realized That . . . the * went with his company to Doston and during the siege of that city by the army under General Washington the yearold boy was promoted to be a captain for bravery and effi When the British evacuated Bos ton and sailed for New York a greater part of the American army went down that way. Captain Hale and his regi. ment were among them. They took part in all the hardships of that cam- paign. Late in the summer of 1776, when the British had driven the American army from Long Island, General Washington was particularly anxious to establish some sort of secret in- formation line into New York. He tried many plans without success Finally he summoned his officers to a council and told them to be on the lookout for some bright, courageous man who would undertake the dan gerous task. He spoke, among others, to Colonel Knowlton of Knowlton's Rangers, the regiment to which Cap tain Hale was attached Colonel Knowlton conferred with his officers. When he put the propo gition to them every cheek paled. If the messenger should be caught they all knew he would be hanged as a spy. The word spy ig a horrible one to an honorable man. No one volun. teered to risk a death of shame. For a few moments there was a hush in the room. Then Captain Hale walked in and eaid: “1 will undertake it, sir.” Captain Hale had been sick in bed for some time, and his fellow officers crowded about him seeking to dis suade him from his purpose. Among them Capt. Willlam Hull, a classmate of Hale's at Yale, spoke the longest But the youthful captain could not be shaken from his purpose. “Oentlemen,” he sald, “I owe my country the accomplishment of an ob ject so Important and so much desired by the commander of our armies. 1 know of no mode of obtaining the In. formation but by assuming a disguise and passing into the enemy's camp. 1 am fully aware of the consequences of Boat Was Filled With British Marines. Howe immediately ordered that the young patriot be hanged the following named Cunningham, the shal. That night Hale was kept in soli tary confinement. He begged to be allowed to write letters to his mother and Alice Adams, his sweethéart, in New London. Cunningham furnished him with paper and ink and then de stroyed the letters in front of Hale, saying: “The rebels should never know they had a man who could die with such firmness.” Hale asked that a minister or a Bl ble be sent to him. Both were refused The only favor he received was being allowed to rest in the tent of a young British officer while on his way to his death. Early on the morning of September 22, 1776, it was Sunday, Hale was con. ducted to the scaffold. Cunningham cuffed him brutally and said: “Make your dying speech” Hale had been praying He con tinued and when he had finished rose to his feet and faced the crowd of British soldiers and towhspeople. In a loud, clear voice he said: “I regret that 1 have but one life to give to my country.” “Swing the rebel off!” Canningham shouted, and thus died one of the most heroic figures in onr history. provost mar Real Lession of the Day. The Fourth of July properly symbo- lizea the liberty for which the patriots stood ready to sacrifice their lives in order to launch the United States as a national eraft which should be an. chored by no weight of foreign des potism, Most Enduring Tribute. After all, it should be remembered that the finest and most enduring trib we we can pay to “Old Glory” Is to #0 live our lives as individuals that the nation may be truly great in the character of its citizenship and the ideals for which the flag stande. rem | THE wars si NEW No. 2 red, YORK. Wheat 124%e¢, and No. 2 hard elif New York export, Northern Duluth, 124%, Northern Manitoba, 121% « Spot firm, No. prompt shipment Spot casy; standard, 56; 54% fancy spot any 271 & billed 327 1 and No. 1 i f Buffalo Corn < yellow, £6% ec, Ons white, £5 Ye ar 57 Butter-—-Crea RIL @28%0; Ing), 28%, @ 29%; firsie, 2TQ@o8%; sed onds, 25% @ 26%. Exggs—-Fresh ga 23¢; extra firste, 2004 @ 21; firsts, 20, 17% 18%; nery whites, fine nearby hennery Cheese nd do, averags Live No - clipped (83 score), LOOT mery extras creamery (higher thered exirag, 229 196i 14 nearby seconds, her to fancy, 59% milk 14 Gi ed 2 Veo" fresh 14%¢ browns State, whole twins fancy Poultry Wests fowls, 156 11. Dressed poultry quiet. prices changed specials 13% afcken: turkevs 1062 ‘HIA Whea! export elevator, $1201.26; No. 2 red WN nominal, $1.7 5@1. 20: No. 1 North Duluth, $1.32¢1.7 Corn—Car lots, for al No ’ yellow, 83@%3 Ye; 4 steamer, No. 2 white, 55Q 06 %e No PHIL fots, in nominal ADELA NO {rade, as to BEA E8440; No vu 785 Kiic, Oats stand. 4G 54%; 3 white, solid ag 30iie: packed, exira firsts, “19 avar 25Q s HRIES Western fresh, ancy, special, extra firsts, 27% @28c; seconds, 26¢; ladle-packed nearby prints, fancy, 32«¢ extra, 20@ ile, garlicky, 24@ 26¢c; jobbing of fancy prints, 36@G 3%¢ Eggs—Nearby, ext: A pe . $6.16 per standa receipts $5.85 Butter creamery, fz Te. fair to good, doz rats rd case. nearby cenrrent ne ner Ca ‘> Brats $6.1 5 per CRs candied and fresu tern extra per Roe $5.5 per do do, first, case: Southern fancy selec ted eggs, job per doz Poultry Fowls, 1! 11¢812¢; broiling chi not legho weighing 1 24@ 28¢e; de aphk on Live ckens ms } do, #I ning do, weizghin horns, welg 3c: do ducks, Indian run: pair, & Cheese fancy Hew id 14%; fal pew, 13131 @12¢ Qe do do part BALTIMORE. Wh 111%; June, Western sg No. 2 red Com Contra =tananys {ats white, 52% Rye-—No 23 bid Hay--No. 1 timothy No. 3, do, $190 $21; No. 1. do, $17.506019 nominal, Ja pe" 50; No , $16 15.50, Biraw- No. 1 straight No 2. do. 810506 i; No 2. do, 30@8.506;: No : No. 2. do, $7.50G850; No No. 2, do, $8@02.50 Creamery, fancy, 206 20%; 2T@ 28; ereamery, prints, 28@30; , 80, clover $20 0G 21 clover, No. 1. do, 3190500 @1%; No. 3, do, $13 Heh choice Butter creamery. choice, creamery, 29¢ 31 creargery, blocks, ladies, 22 23; Maryland and Pennsylvania, rolls, Ohio, rolls, 216G21%; West 21921%:; dairy prints, Marviand, 218021% Penneylvania Western firsts, 18; Eggs-—Maryland, nearby firsts, 19¢; West Virginia firsts, firets, 18 Live Poultry-—Chickens Old 4 The and over, 9 14%¢; do, old hens, small to medium, 14@14%;: do, roosters, 9%; do, spring, 14 G2 @26; do, 1 @1% Ibs, 23@ 24; do do, under 1% Iba as to size, 20822. Ducks ~Muscovy., 3 Ibe and over, 12¢: de, Pekina, 13; do, puddie, 12; do, smaller, 11; do, young, 2 Ibs and over, Pigeons Young, 20e; do, Guinea fowl, each, 25@30¢. old, Live Stock CHICAGO. «« Hogs Bulk, $68.75@0.25; springs, $6.25@0.75. Cattle-—~Native beel steers, 8.50; Western steers, Rs and heifers, $2.25@9:. calves, 10.25. Sheep-—Sheep, $65.500640: lambs, 7.70; heavy, $6.00@7.60; rough, $6.90 7.60; light, $7.40@7.75; mixed, $7.15@ @7.06; pine, $6@ 7.35. KANSAS CITY. —Hoge--Bulk, $7.35 @150; heavy, $7.30@7.40; packers and butchers’, $7.30@ 7.52%: light, $7.30 @7.56; pigs, $6,500 7.26. Cattle—Prime fed steers, $8.7089; dressed beef steers, $7.00@8.40; South orn steers, $7068.50; cows, 34.6087; heifers, $6@8.70: stockers and feed pre, $7T@8.80; calves, $5@10. Sheop--Lambs, $7.25@050; year linge, $7258: wothers, $666.75; ewes, $4.70@5.25. PITTSBURGH. — Cattle — Cholos, $9.35@9.26; prime, 38.8509. 7.309 $6800 cows 1.29 Spanich Olives Pickles Chicken Loaf Luncheon Mests . Ham Loaf Veal Loaf Jellies Apple Butter Pork and Beans Ready to Serve pour grocers Wrong Diagnosis the promient clut ntract for the decoration One of of honor of the visit heir building in of the fleet, and the decorator oon t the word wel flags would HEE # nN td the idea tha come” spelied out appropri } for the BIRLA and beaut the | desigr entrance tions, ite front wall, ove: | He asked a naval officer following the | officer for dire« code wrote out for him ng re the surprise of the army officer, happening by you know Judge of wher obtained contractor Rs al Do asked what Wh we decorator YOu nave written J é I leome glammered the a long ot!” sald the arm: You hat il there ’ “Not by i officer i : tite al'ny Sad Part of the Allegation. Every darn fool in this town thinks { he could run & wspaper better than i can’ prim bi Forpidvil Hearths HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Compiled by a Substitute While the Regular Man Was Away From His Desk \ Rood Way lo save mr Hght bills theater your « to spend and resiav for ney or and electric sen at the manager ng Wilere ent pays Hights husband's hair shows signs out, try pulling hig ears in- ney very loose IT your of falling fead Th Installment collector: and ir seldom come cther un- made to keep of ripe oma a gerirable callers can be aA the isiance by tors served at A society ms that she than she ere a that ith each portion of g Mears long range itron, whe on de entertain a great deal as bird vinea hen they we posit manos really afford OTe Can by perving a few think aintance husband home unex At last she nd and flirted next man ihe house. After rouble — New A Real Dilemma : fix. ieciared OYE She wants me to Wirt Cescribx New