ES ———— rer— Glass of Hot Water Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit Open sluices of the system each morning and wash away the poisonous, stagnant matter, i Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise: ach, lame back, can, instead, both took and feel as fresh as a daisy always by washing the poisons and toxins from. the body with phosphated water each morning We should drink, before breakfast. a glass of real hot water with a tea epoouftl of limestone phosphate ft to flush from the stomach, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indigestible waste bile and poisonous toxins: soul thus cleans | tire alimentary canal before more food Into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphat: is wonderfully invigorating. It out all the sour fermentation 3, waste and acidity and gives aglendid appetite for breakfast 8 said to be hut a little while the roses begin to appear in cheoks. A ter pound of #gone phosphate will cost very lit i your druggist or fro: , but is suflicient to make anyone who is tothered with bil #éon, stomach trouble & real enth 5st ternal sanit assured that you w feel better in every Adv, qu store, b lousness, raeumatism the subject of in ‘ry it and you are I1 look better and way shortly. — constipa- or on ation. 1 Sooner or later the pay up or come dow TENDER SKINNED BABIES With Rashes and Irritations Comfort in Cuticura. Trial in. Free. Baby's tender skin requires aoothing properties such as are found ARMY OFFICERS BELIEVE WAR- FARE IN MEXICO WILL BE LONG DRAWN OUT, DICKMAN'S CHASE OF GARZA Captures Most of Band, but Leader Es capes—Diplomacy to Cost Uncle Sam More Money—Indian Via- itors at Capital, By GEORGE CLINTON. Washington.—¥§rom past experi- ences trailing and fighting bandits, army officers bere and ou the border realize that the present warfare is likely to be long drawn out. They un- questionably would prefer a pitched battle and to have the thing over with past along the border in Mexico makes it seem probable to army men that there will be a splitting up of the the captures or killings must be made in detail, It is there may be one f the ourse the ree also possible, of ¢ ight i ¢ renegade 1o before sep aration of into thal the en- | sive and that | given for | units. be gagement will 1 thus an opportunity scattering it may t be deci wiil be the In the year 1891 a band of Me led a man who the of Villa fiyl and gave | that they | to effect cea ‘ae 4 by named Garza had of characteristics apiit Into the United State wanted to do in There is on record one specific | is typical of many may prove to be the coun individual man hunts which must be undertaken before | Villa's scattered followers are tured, band after band, aud the round- 12 fragments 3 forces all order cap case which and which rpart Of tix Ver cleansing and Cuticura especially baby’s skin is irritated rashy. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Ady. Ointment so and War Makes Geographers. ‘The war has made geographs ua all. It s« creased the Yondon. Londoners, born and dwellers in Lon don, were offered their hospital the Gelected | ston court Soctive, and one bad seen it before. saying In Lon for really sees fs at all ov the statement, A Ce rs has also Lon knowledge Six wounded officers, all mts an mercia of hig don, a Londoner lifelong residor n the Blu a Hue from } adres Cood.-By Birch. the school uptodate? they use an slectric HANDY HUSBAND Knew How to Get Part of the Break. fast. “I know one dish I can prepare for breakfast as well as any cook on earth,’ sald my husband one morning when the cook was ill and he had vol unteered to help get breakfast. He eppoared with his dish and 1 discov ered it was Crape-Nuts which, of course, was easy to prepare for it was parfectly cooked at the factory, but it was a pood illustration of the conven fenco of having Grape-Nuts about. “We took up Grape-Nuts immedi ately aftor returning from a five years’ sojourn in a hot country. Our stom echs were in bad condition and we were in poor health generally, “In a day or two we liked Grape Nuts better than any other kind of food on the table. We both gained etoadily in health and strength, and this was caused by Grape-Nuts and Postum. “A friend of ours had a similar ex perience. She was seriously 11 with Indigestion and could fia nothing to ent that would not give her heartburn aud palpiiation; especially at night, “She found that a small dish of Graps-Nuts with cream made her a aatisfactory supper and gave her a comfortable night's rest. In a short time she gained peveral pounds in weight.” “Thero’s a Reason.” Name given by Pootum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich, Hyver rend the above letter? A mew ne sppoars from time to time, They a. Eehuine, true, and full of human rest. it. now During the} was a first avalry, sta How Dickman Did Joseph T. Dickman is of the Second cavalry he of the Third tioned on the border. The of the Mexican chieftain had split up into bands and alternately were hiding | and malding. Lieutenant Dickman wa | with orders to trail through | saction of the He | Ti followers | on a scout a certain country possibilities in the case, and when he had gone some distance from the head: ing and went by the left flank al place where the out toward the clear country It Is not probable that ans tody but | day just how he | » make morning alter there had ar unsuccessful bunting for the s members of the guerrilla band Dick led his straight AWaAy al ¢ order su know, thou business was were explicit and s A volley concealed in the l front. It was a waste t got quick, ling tha 1d months of practically | man detachment ing gait. He hat made his small Eave an men saw nothing, | 3 3 i that at The or ¥ v } thing mean troops’ but opened harp Leader Never Wa Two zales ’ aught at th they thought they were round whole s Caught. re (ea pels, Penave andit ct and | had | where The | and in al captive de i band of hem. | members of | Cateri- vd rv has been heard of from that with any followers, @ very place safest swung them the outfit day Dickman m in a sharp fight anothe: the outlaws, capturing seve While virtually all held The n feated oxt ral of he no E. Garza, the leader, escaped ar Is Villa also to escape at expense of the capture of his fol High Cost of Foreign Service. Diplomacy {as to cost Uncle Sam money than ever before. The is at fault. The diplomatic and consular appropriation bills for 1017, a8 reported in the house, earry about $1,500.00 more than the same bills 1916 It may be that congress on the plea of economy will refuse to grant the Increase asked, but if it shall go re fuse it seoms likely that a good many diplomatic and consular officers will follow the example set by a few of their brethren and resign from the service, Senators and representa tives take 20 cents a mile for thelr travel from their homes to Washing. ton and back again, but they have al lowed in times past only five cents a mile to diplomatic and consular offi cers who are at best pald only small salaries, The state department has taken cog nizance of the condition of affairs as they relate to the diplomatic and con- sular service. The price of living has gone up all over the world and In many cases the cost of transportation likewise has risen. A memorandum prepared at the department for con. gress reads like this; “A careful computation based upon the number of actual transfers and promotions of officers shows that the existing allowance, five cents a mile, falls to reimburse the actual expenses of traveling of an unmarried consular officer by from two mills to ten cents a mile; and where an officer is mar ried the allowances has failed to reim- burse the actual expense by from 6 mills to $1.02 a mile, according to the number of members of the oficer's family and the quantity of household effects ‘ransferred to the new post, I'he average loss of each officer is estimated to have been 18 motion or transfer.” Transfers Not Popular, Officials of the state department and consular officers themselves that a man in the service look forward with any great amount of pleasure to a transfer from one post does | | | | | | last held consuls a little better than the The consular agents and of the United States government get small salaries and so when a man has to give up two or three hundred dol lars every year or two because Uncle Sam seen fit to him from place to place, he thinks that he ought to be given travel pay. one has move Once on a time diplomatic and con of the little for the t to attend to the needs who happened to countries or the wore ac mean that gular officers Government did comparatively home gov roment AlInarid get into t itios to axcep of All Clitiz rouble which th IT It CONngr als credited. some 3 a bers of Ha think the States that it foreign duct 40 years state from ti business Ameri is cor Was the gets on Ha they thors rosigus i conditions e888 they are uniess is travel and 1508 they can coditinua to without running up fy cannot see their way The state department has told something about the conditions words “The cost of living has increased In and m other countries and the lower salaries inadequate ntadn themselves Aa0 BOE made for lv- not ir places which th pay. COugress fn clear to in these Europe Any officers of lasses finding their able them to mai ir nner, suls having private g upon their own funds to sup their as @ fow prop incomes are in ! salaries. inasmuch 158 will not decreasa, and as there is good reason for the be. will continue Ww inc: they the case, utmost importance that pro. to supplement salaries « consular found necessary.” the regular offi shall be upon government is trying to ind of young men service of the govern ourse, in the lower are small they are of high ICH 10 antler consular ment, to begin, o where the salaries yfi¢ that men ials say getling the becauss abilit meagerness of the al some & man either have his own or els in live in other words, the be ap ity to office and always to the who m AY Dosta in i a he cannd wants to able to bi abil be forced rich LO to give men ay od ability Red Me Washington, Woll, came to day or some Prairie f 0 who West a fix commiss 13 two ago tribal m the foner slled at the offices of chief of staff of to pay his spoke no Eng eral Scott under g of the language of his the latter preferred to carry on the conversation In the sign language For fully fifteen minutes the chief of staff and the chief of the Blackfeet talked together Then the general turned to some visitors who were in the offi and explained what ths plainsiman had said. Curiously enough, Buffalo Bill dropped into the office at the time that Prairie Bear was present The scout and the chief talked in the sign language and the first thing that the red man sald in sign words after Buffalo Bill had removed his hat was that the scout did not have as much hair as In the days when he waa fol lowing the western trails, Indians are coming to Washington constantly, and as most of the visitors are old men who eling to the old dress and the old customs they arrive ar rayed in all the feathers and other finery of days that aro. gone. They make a picturesque showing on the broad avenues and in the parks, whore they attract instant and general atten. tion There is a boarding house in Washington exclusively for Indian vis itors, and there the red men are made more comfortable, perhaps, than they are in their frontier homes, but it is possible, of course, that the white man's idea of comfort does not agree with that of his fellow of another color Always Look Up General Miles. Gen, Nelson A. Miles lives tn Wash ington The general ia getting on toward the fourscore milestone, seemingly he is as active physically as ever, Miles fought nearly every kind States army, © nett caller, p i on days produced, and the old men among the visitors when they are hore always try to see the general. He understood the sign language well, and although, of course, his conversation with the reds ordinarily Ia earried on in their own language or in English, it cocoa plonally happens that the plainsmon and the soldier talk together with thelr hands. WILSON REPUBLICANS Question of How Penrose, Despite Brumbaugh Can Get An “Un. instructed” Delegation. Harrisburg, March. — Men aiming for a big vote for Governor Brum- baugh in the primary election, as a! candidate for President, and to elect! as national dele persons pledged to support the “popular choice” of the prin arc finding | here and there, “Wilson Republi who are not enlisting for the Qover: or the Penrose CAMPS, er, of cratic gatas ary, cans,” either forces +} ao I.. Morganthal County Der that, in friends or's in Chairman PF. the Dauphin Committees, ays of himself and signatures the n to Pre on have met publicans tion {if so, and re