Not a Bite of Breakfast Until You Drink Water Says a glass of hot water and phosphate prevents iliness and keeps us fit. | Just as coal, when it burns, Joaves behind a certain amount of incom: bustible material in the form of ashes, 80 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 bowels. From this mass of 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 take inside baths. Before eating breakfast each morning drink a glass of real hot wa- ter with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash out of the thirty feet 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 stiff- ness, or have a sour, gassy stomach after meals, are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from any druggist or storekeeper, and be- gin practicing internal sanitation. This will cost very little, but is suffi- cient to make anyone an enthusiast on the subject. Remember inside bathing is more important than outside bathing, be- cause the skin por do not absorb impurities into the blood, causing poor health, while the bowel pores do. Just as soap and hot water cleanses, sweetens and freshens the skin, so Bot water and lime phosphate act on the stomach, liver kidneys and bowels. —Adv, os stone cause he has the “rocks” a marble heart. WHEN KIDNEYS ACT BAD may Eat Less Meat If Kidneys Hurt or You Have Backache or Bladder Misery ~—Meat Forms Uric Acid. ing the kidneys occasionally, well-known authority. Meat forms #0 they sluggishly filter or strain only the blood, then you get sick, Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trou ble, nervousness, constipation, dizzi ness, come from sluggish kidneys. the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or at about four ounces of Jad any reliable pharmacy and tablespoonful in a glass of water be kidneys will then act fine. This fa- mous salts is mace from the acid 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 it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and ecanno! injure; makes a delightful efferves cent lithia-water drink which all reg ular meat eaters should take now gnd then to keep the kidneys clean anu the blood pure, thereby avoiding se rious kidney complieationa.—Adv. 80 Too many men pray for things they are too lazy to work for. “GASGARETS" FOR SLUGGISH BOWELS No sick headache, sour stomach, biliousness or constipation by morning. Get a 10.cent box now, Turn the rascals out—the headache, biliousness, indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases—turn them out to-night and keep them out with Cascarets, Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never know the misery caused by a lazy ltver, clogged bowels or an upset stom- ach. Don’t put in another day of distress. Let Casearets cleanse your stomach; remove the sour, fermenting food; take the excess bile from your liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels. Then you will feel great. A Cascaret to-night straightens you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10cent box from any drug store means a clear head. sweet stomach and clean, healthy liver and bowel action for months. Chil dren love Cascarets because they never gripe or sicken. Adv. on RS A Too many glasses may make a tum bler of a man. FIRST REAL STEP The Permanent Meets at Berne. TWO WEEKS’ TRUCE SOUGHT Pacifists Believe If They Can Bring This About, Fighting Will Not Be Resumed — Leaders Are Encouraged. Switzerland, — The first definite move ond the world war was made hero when the permanent committee to established lasting peace met to formulate proposals for an armistice. Peace advocates tral countries meeting. The committee hopes to obtain the consent of the belligerents to an armistice of at least two weeks hefore the spring campaigns bring fresh slaughter in Europe. They believe if the guns can be silenced for two weeks the fighting will never be renewed Several peace leaders said they were encouraged by the German Chan cellor’'s recent Reichstag speech to be lieve that will benev- olent consideration to any plans for an armistice. If tl fail in their pl for a truce, they hope at least to sug he belligerents doe of the more One sug Berne, to several neu- for the from wera in Derne Germany give ay signed to eliminate horrible features of the war gestion Is that the belligerents mors battle HOI« themselves Lo ralds upon cities the front. Prince von Beulow Prince Kraft have arrive was reported they are ont he: » German enlohe von d at Lu touch with the German Peace Offer Deniad. London made peaca moven rmany had Belgian teports that Ge peace overt nent were offi y denied by legation. TI i d by y Urean was sane h Gover statement hat rumor which have been circu Government any to the Bel devoid of foun IN MINE EXPLOSION, 37 CAUGHT Score Entombed. killed, Pa One mi eriously ymnbed by a gas exp 2 of the Jefferson Company at E Indiana, il Was were injured ente losion In No 1 Coal and Iror from he The explo just off the main than 100 men were but ged exception of 37, who *k and debris partie at once organ ized and 13 number brought to the surface several after the nun seriously hurt " nd (Mea Mine anc Clear rnest, in an entry of the mine work at to escape, R100 OCCurTes at the time, with the apped by falling Rescue were hours ber exXpiosio were 182,622 BOY SCOUTS IN U. 8. Membership Last Year Grew 46 Per Cent, Washingt men An increase of 416 in bershi an- nounced at annual meeting of the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America. The increase to 182,822 boys and made the the most prosperous in the six years’ his tory of the movement Among the significant chief scout executive's that in almost every church in the country, and that the scotutmasters included clergymen, physicians, lawyers, teachers and other professional men, MINISTER, AGED 70, ELOPES. on per cent p last year was the scoulmasters YOAar items of the eport scout Marries 21-Year.Old Girt Against Her Parents’ Wishes, Huntington, W. Va.—Details have reached here of the elopement from the Beaver Creek section of the Rev. William Moore, Methodist minister, 70 years old, who has been doing mission. ary work in that section for nearly a year, and Miss Jennie Alley, 21 years old, a school teacher. The aged minis. ter has been courting the girl for some time against the wishes of her par ents, and the couple eloped to Preston- burg, making moat of the distance over the rough mountain country_on foot. WOULD BUY LOWER CALIFORNIA, Representative Randall Offers Resolu. tion In House. Washington.-~A resolution to au thorizé President Wilson to negotiate with Mexico for the purchase of Lower California was presented to the House by Representative Randall, of Califor. nia. Such a purchase, the resolution recites, would protect irrigation work in the Imperial Valley. The resolu tion was referred to the Foreign Af fairs Committee. Verioua proposals for the rale of Lower California always vn» heen repudiated by General Car * wn EUTONS WAR FOREIGN SHIPPING | Will Treat Armed Merchant Vessels as Warships. ‘A TIME LIMIT TO MARCH 1 German Government Gives Out List Of Armed British Merchant Ves. | That sels Fired Upon Submarines. ! Austria | United 1, com will con and ad the tes that, beginning March IArinas Sia manders Lipa of the rehips and will fructions command berty to sink with med vena! I S# 114 or freight carrying notification to Secretary Lansing { von Bernstorfl, the dor, and Baron Erich {charge of the Au | bassy hers ments The ona; | circles here to memorandum rming of merchant arm wr | retary Lanzing r were presents « by Count German ambassa Zweidinsk, ngarian Em govern. ro-Hu Notes from thei: are to fol intention of low the Teutonic Allies | official and diplomatic ! development of proposing the dis ships, v fr v $s acently sont 10 dered in be a the Sec the the which | Entente Power High officials of State Department ses ider enough funda med di i oo io broad the stions involved in the Are with the ted States. This with Ger that warning all LWO governments can. not legally claim the right to sink un. That principle inite has vigorousl; inte since the begin ning of the wotlations over the con duct ubmarine warfare At Their Own Risk, of this siluat citizens, it tated bs ity, now be warned that they | will take passage aboard armed mer ! chant at r own risk and be { entitled to no more protection from {the United than if they had { embarked upon a belligerent warship Officials seemed not to be able to con celve that any lasue could arize in the future from a submarine warfare oon- ducted under thease rules, It was said in Teutonic diplomatic | circles that the effective date of the instructions was posiponed solely for {the reason that the Central Powers desired to give enemy merchant ships an opportunity to disarm and so that the Entente Allies might have the i chance to make their views conform | te the suggestions put forward by the ' United States in {ts memorandum. BELVIDERE BROOKS DEAD. | cons the development to warrant the cla qui subn im that rental of ottled i8 of Lhe conduct iarine wari have been ont Ac ordans £4 Uni belief that Austria without in entior wed on the and notice will giving sink tho t armed ships, armed vessels is the | for which the States _O nded American high in view fon anthor may hips thei States Was Vice-President Of Western Union Telegraph Co. Naw York. Belvidere Brooks, vice. president of the Weatern Union Tele graph Company, died at his home here of heart trouble. He had been in poor | health for several months, His death | | was sudden. Mr. Brooks had been in | the service of the Western Union for 40 years, starting as a telegraph opera. tor in Texas. He was elected general manager of the Western Union in 1910 and vice-president two years ago. POSTOFFICE FLOATS AWAY, Flood Dumps Postmistres and Carries Bullding Off, Memphis, Ten —White River, Ark, a small town near the mouth of White river, is minus a postoflice on account of the high waters. “My postoffice ls now floating down the river and unless it lodgos against some trees it will be a total loss,” sald an appeal from the office of the railway mall service. Re received at the local INVOLVED IN THE MUNITICN PLOT German and Turkish Officials Indicted in San Francisco. Plot To Blow Up Railway Tunnels In Canada Among Accusations—Turk. ish Consul-Ceneral Accused Of Helping Supply Warships. a Federal ralnst BI against pi ider the boldest ViceLConsul nd Maurice Hall, the General of Tark! (yma TARY, sh Consul Consuls Not Immune officers do immu y which inters and attaches iven but subject the pintry in Consular diplomatic the ambassa ire g Dot enoy dor £, in law, of ident mations! urinal the, y tion are re be other may the law The indictment 5 ¥, however, first wnt has atiemp! any foreign are Governm the . ‘ederal to represen taken to mean Administration wherever pr his fart was hereafter the tends to prosecute tion will Ble, American that Ofeey ofien ov a mat 33 net any er again neutrality von Schack licity in the plot are ch reed h was whi : ago with arrest of C. ( an the the be a proGerm io cripple munitic 10 hel alt Aili head of a accomplish conspira this end with in munitions and nents by blowing two tunnels on Canadian roads, The Indictment of the Turkish Con sulGGeneral was voled in with the of ateamer Sacra mento to supply German ships of war in the South ended in the internment by the Chilean Government many months ago. According to officials here, the Sacramento case is one of the clearest that has come to their notice of the use of an American port as a base of supplies for belligerent warships and of false clearance papers to get the supply ship past the customs authori tien, trade ing railway prevent up connection use the Pacific which of that vessel T.R'S PORTRAIT GIVEN FRANCE Painting By Cousin To Hang In Luxemburg Gallery, Paris~A portrait of Theodore Roosevelt, painted by Samuel Mont: gomery Roosevelt, his cousin, has been accepted by Albert Dalimior, Under Secretary of State for Fine Arts, and will be placed in the Luxemburg Art Gallery. The portrait shows Colones! | Roosevelt in hunting costume. It was offered to the French Government as a token of the artist's friendship for France. ——————————— SB HT os ob SAVED NINE PERSONS. WwW. 0. Allen, Of Des Moines, Gets Hero Medal and $1,000. Des Moines, Ia.--W, O. Allen, a Dee Moines Weat High School teacher, re celved a Carnegie hero medal and $1,000 in cash for bravery in saving nine persons from drowning at Athens, O., in 1907. Allen was a student at Ohlo University at Athens when the Hocking River overflowed and carried everything before it. Allen and a com panion, using a small skiff, rescued nine persons. NEW YORRK.—Wheat No. 1 Durum, $1.45; No. 1 Northern Duluth, $1.52, and No. 1 Norther: Manitoba, $1.53% to b New York Caorn—8pot, easy; No. 2 yellow, B8%ec c | f New York Butter—Creameory, extras (92 score) 31@il%e; creamery (higher scoring), 2@a2 firsts, 2T@30%¢c; seconds, 526%. Eggs—Fresh gathered, extra @iic; extra firsts, 31@31%ec; 29% @30%e; seconds, 27% @29; near by oie sry whites, fine to fancy, 294 40c; nearby hennery browns, 26@36¢ Dressed Poultry—Killed Western chickens, 16% @27c; fowls, M4@G19%e¢; turkeys, 270p25¢ Spot weak; $ oe une, os firsts, ~ Wheat — $1.29@1.40; No. 2 PHILADELPHIA red, Western, No. 2 red Bouthern red, $1.32% 1.26; No. 2 red, $1.32%@ 1.34%: do do, do Bred $132 @1.34%; rejected A, $1.36 @L1L33; do do, re jected B, $1.253%@ 1.31%, Corn steamer, far lots nas 0 low, sleamor, , for local trade, old Western, No. 2 ye old, Western, do do, n« locations, BL @86c; do do, Bie, yellow, low, Western, Hindi ye! T9@80%e; do do, Oats - Na, white, L7%@0% Nao. 5 whit 105 ied pLic; N i whi =e; sam ple, Bl@562%c: pur Gals, graded pie, po I $s bu [ROK exira 174 EowRe CC : plpeons, @1ic 3 VOHDe tint Go, il + BALTIMORE spol. and Pebr No 2 West Corn-—-8pet naked ; 4 do quality ng is Ys v $164 @18.5 2: Ne. 2 do, light clover choice . " ee Phas, tangled rye, 1 wheat, £10 rve Na. . yn will Ve $10; No. 1.00@8 0, $869.5 re; 2 do 1 oat, £ 1.50: No $7 2 a Batter C $3232%ec; prints, ye 8, 21@32¢c; alnery., 231; good, G29, s1@33; blocks, J30@32; ls land and Pennsylvania rolls, 20Q Ohio reils, 19@20c;: West Vir rolls, 19@20; storepacked, Maryiand, Virgir ind Pennayl- dairy prinis, 20@21c; process 426. Maryland and Pennsylvania 28¢: Western 28; West Southern firsts, 26. Live Poultry--Chickens, old hens, 4 ibe and over, 17T@18¢c; do, old hens, emall medium, 16% @17; do, oid roosters, 10@11; do, winter, 2 lbs and 20@ 21; do, young, large smoot, fat, 19@20; do, do, poor, rough and staggy, 14@15; ducks, young Pekings, 3 lbs and over, 18; do, do, puddle, do, do, 17@18; do, do, muscovy, do, do, 16 @17; do, do, smaller, do, do, 15@186; geese, nearby, 1516; do, Western and Southern, 13@14; do, Kent Island, 16 @17; turkeys, hens, 24@25; do, young gobblers, 22624; do, old toms, 20@21; do, poor and crooked breasts, 1617; pigeons, young, per pair, 26@36; do, old, do, 26@ 20; guinea fowl, young, 1% ibs and over, do, 60; do, do, do, smaller, 4050. Dressed hoe, « ginia 1 Eggs rats, Virginia firsts, 27; irate ATRLS, to Poultry --Turkeys—Choiee, 24@25¢;: fair to good, 22023; rough and poor, 16@17. Chickens—Choloe young, 19@20¢c; old and mixed, 16317; old roosters, 10@11. Ducks, 17@18ec. Geese—Nearby, 16@17¢; Western and Southern, 14@15. Capons-—Soven Ihs and over, 24@26c; medium, 28635; amall slips, 17@19. Live Stock ST. LOUIS. Hogs, pigs and lights, $607.85; mixed and butchers’, $7.66 @ 7.90; good, heavy, $7.90G 8.02%. Cattle-<Native beef steers, $7.506 9.500; yearling steers and heifers, $8.60 @9.30; stockers and feeders, $6Q 7.25; cows, $6507: Texas and Indiag steers, $5.25@R8.00; cows and heifers, $4606.50; native calves, $6011.50. Sheep--Yearling wethers, $809.50; 5 CHILD CROSS, FEVERIGH, SICK Look, Mother! If ie is coated, give “California Syrup of Figs.” Children love this “fruit fazative™ and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels 80 nicely, A child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result ts they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, #lomach sours, then your little one becom as cross, half-eick, feverish, don't eat, systema full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of “California and in a few hours all waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the sys and you have a well child again. Millions of mothers give “California Syrup of Figs” because it is perfectly harmless; children love it, and it nev- er falis to act on the stomach, liver and bowels, Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs” which has full directions for babies, children of all ages find for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Adv. His Prescription, “Doctor, | have a frightful cold in my head, What shall | take for ft “A handkerchief, madam.’ RECIPE FOR GRAY HaAIR. To half pint of water add | oz. fay Rom, a small box of Barbe Compound, and § oz of glycerine. Apply 10 the hair twice a wesk until it pesomes the desired shade. Any drug. FOU oan mix BH of It will gradusiy grey mir and re Heat for fuilbng Land gi way 8 not sticky or Ady ntibhle iim against PREPAREDNESS! Fo Fortify The Svstem Agesinst Grip LAXATIVE MO taken, a3 thin combinstion mg recientes destroy and Lazative and thus oensditor to withotag® There wily one E W GROVES sig HE Infoeusa ng master is always tak- raise money. eps to NOTHING BRO FFIRECTIVE AS BABEK For Malaria, Chills & Fever, Chief of Polion, J. WW. Reynolds Newront Iti a plessrre (0 recommend Fever. Have used it when LIER Adiis and Eilxir Babek 3 conta re padd ». Washington, D.C ik Rd wer rm. all drag from Kloceew A Good Move When a man swallows his pride it | OWE MY HEALTH etable Compound. Washington Park, IR — “I am the mother of four children and have suf- a fered with female 4 trouble, backachg, f| nervous spe ells and gl the blues. My chil i dren's loud talking | and romping would i make me 50 nervous HI could just tear { everything to pieces and I would ache all over and feel so sick that I would n want anyone to to me at times. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills so- stored me to health and I want to thank you for the good they have done me, ¥ have had quite a bit of trouble and worry but it does not affect my youth- ful looks. My friends say ‘* Why do yon look so young and well?’ Iowe it all te the Lydia E Pinkham remedies.” ~Mrs. Roper. Stormin, Moore Avenuas, Washington Park, Illinois. We wish every woman who suffers from female troubles, nervousness, backache or the blues could see the let- ters written by women made well by Ly- dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. 1f you have any symptom about which Jon wou Hie to know write to the ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lyuny Mass, for helpful advice given "tree charge, RHEUMATISM A CURE Wo have on file In Miia fri o wn Treatment po ra Jum B® Son wndl iL to we, uh Jom hit mow, A Wo patrull aki BALTIMORE MEDICINE C0. 33% Ti6e Building Baltimore, Md. OUT THIS OUT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers