Oh, It's There! Ouch, How It Paing! or Over the Kidneys! MATISM, GOUT, OR FAULTY KIDNEY ELIMINA- TION. distress. The kid- neys have too much work to per- form. Uric acid accumulates in the system in form of urate salts, Obtain at your nearest drug store that splendid discovery of Doctor Anurie is more potent than lithia and dis- polves uric acid as hot coffee does sugar. N.Y. for a trial package. a very miserable state with stiff and aching back. I lost a great deal of sleep. Was so bad that I could not mornings. [was ing desperate, when I read an advertisment of Anuric in the news and decided to try it. Of all the things ever done or taken, "Anuric” is the best. done me more good than any medicine I ever took. Three bottles of Anuric rid me of all kidney and bladder trouble and made mo feel like a different man. It is a pleasure to recom- mend Dr. Pierce's Anuric Tablets and 1 never lose an opportunity.” W, W.Owexs, BR. F.D. 1, have The woman bowlers of Kansas City have formed a league and will tournaments, If your druggist does not have Dr “Dead Shot” for Worms and Tapeworm, send 25 cents to 372 Pearl street, New York, and you will get It by return mail. Adv. a man is figuring out how they should be done, Don't Forget Cuticura Talcum i } i i { i i Love's Security nL By BERTHA R. McDONALD PAA NAAN LANL A by McClure Mewspaper Syndicate.) to be her father!” exploded Jane Portsmouth, “But, Aunt Jane, father and mother were ideally happy.” “Happy enough-=—yes—but the differ- ence In their ages made him shelter all sense of re- sponsibility, until now, when he's gone, the two of you are left with next door nothing and wpeither of you any more fitted to earn a living than a but- terfly I” “Please don't say that. 1 know mother Isn't strong, but 1 am and I'm going to find some way to keep the wolf from the door, too” “Don’t worry about the wolf. You can sell your house and come and live right here with me. I'll tell you, the young doctor that just bought your father's office?" “Don’t ever mention such a thing to me again, auntie! I'm not marry anybody, and besides, If 1 set my cap for Doctor Danforth he saw fit to he he'd taking me out of sheer pity m sure” I didn't wonld going to and caught I “There, little girl, be hard, but 1 you nicely settled, man certainly Neither of is charming.” them heard who now approach visitor appeared and their attention, Doctor Dan Portsmouth -l congratulating Niece ‘Beth bid 7 hich her fa will “Oh, forth” good morning greeted Miss ther's business has fallen. “No, thank you, Miss Portsmouth” An exquisitely scented fate, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume, ren dering other perfumes superfluous. You may rely on it because one of the Cuticura Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum). 25¢ each everywhere. —Ady. A small becomes a large “hole. rent in a reputation soon $100 Reward, $100 Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ. enced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treat. ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Biood on the Mucous Surfaces of the PE tem. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICIKRE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature In doing its work. $100.00 for any case of Catarrh that HALLS CATARPH MEDXINE falls to cure. Prugsists 7c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohjo, Of salary COUrse you earn an enormons but do vou get it? A postal card to Garfleld Tea Co. Brooklyn, N. Y., asking for a sample will repay you.—Adv. Only the rich can practice economy with success Keep Yourself Fit 9? with # of high prices. Some occupations brin kines troubles; almost any wor makes weak kidneys worse, If you feel tired all the time, and suffer with lame back, sharp pains, di spells, head- aches and disordered kidney action, use Doan’s Kidney Pills. It may save an attack of rheumatism, dropsy, or Bright's disease. Doan’s have helped thousands back to health. A Virginia Case Connie I. Cook, 22 Oak Bt., Covington, Va.. says: “When I was about fourteen, I suf- fered from a bad case of diphtheria and after recovering. found that my kidneys were weak. I first noticed It by backache, which kept growing worse. Then the kidney secretions became unnatural, pass. ed too frequently, were painful and : sediment. ' ing Doan's Kidney Pills and they cured me.” Get Doan’s at Aus Sears. 0s 4 Hou v ’ D DOAN’S %i3Ne FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. Y. You can’t afford to be laid sore, aching kidneys in these fave you RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? Take RF : remove thacanse Ry HN ACIDE Jarwuone tua Promotes Hair Health Bein XA Tie Son Camas Rr Eh a 3 Ie sas. W..N, U, BALTIMORE, NO. 2.1919 » Beth: “I've called to ask street's office safe.’ “What you wish to know “Your father's safe sent to your home?” “The safe was Included in chase of the office. only a nbout » moment. i Doctor Long Is it do you wi and 1 went through the contents bid you good She before 1 turned it mornin: morning over. | salled past down the flower-bordered the and Dweetor to speak gate, nhout when a frightened or turn. just Beth senseless heap beside The path, ittered » path. down ns into =» young doctor and } his strong, young arms. bore her ten derly the t quickly revived her tion and the discovery that was really broken into another faint, until her Aunt Jane had made her comfort in the little the parlor. When sciousness this ti the lifting figure into house Cool water out sent her which lasted able chamber Ruest oft she regained con was sitting beside her with one of her Hands in his. “Home-—1 must go er!” she moaned, “You must lie right here for a few days. Your foot turned home moth fo on one ankle has been broken. Miss Ports mouth has telephoned your mother and I am going to bring her over this evening in my runabout.” “It will not be necessary to trouble you. Mother eon come over with Joe Mead when he goes to the station for the mail" “Plesize don’t be unkind, Miss Long street. It really doesn't seem like you, and my hegrtiest wish i= to be of some service to you and your mother.” “Il dido’t mean to seem ungrate ful, or rude, but J" In another moment she was sobbing among the pillows, and, while the man longed to stay and comfort her. the physician knew It was best te leave her alone just now, so he slipped qui- etly through the door to the porch, Just as Aunt Jane caine in to take his place. While he was drawing on his gloves he heard her cry out hysteri- cally: “He'll think 1 did ibis purposely he'll—he’ll think I'm setting my eanp for him, like all the rest of the silly girls in town.” The man od the poreh smiled and Beth's ankle kept het at her sunt's time she was under Doctor Dan. Sforth’s constant eare and attention, Gradually, day by day, be managed to penetrate the reserve behind which she had Intrénched herself, and then one day when he was taking her for a little spin into the country, he asked her to marry him. “But, doctor-—Ned-—1 con't marry anybody. Mother and I haven't a cent, If dear old dad hadn't lost what he had put by to protect mother and me, things might have been different, for 1 do like you, Ned.” “What did your father lose, and how?’ “Oh, some papers—stocks—securi ties—bonds and things, I guess. What. ever they were he had the papers out on his desk one day when he received an urgent call, and while he waz out the colored man who took care of the place ‘straightened up. When daddy came back the papers were gone. We questioned Jackson, but he swore he put everything back Into the safe, a there you are. Jackson was too after n friitless search we decided they must have blown out the win- dow.” “You nre sure you have examined the safe thoroughly? “Absolutely. There's another thing of dad's I haven't heen able to find—a copy of the first edition of “The Vicar of Wakefield," of which he was very fond." “But-—you aren't going to make this final, are you, Beth?” “Please, Ned, don't ask me again until I've found some way to take cure of mother.” That night Doctor - Danforth leth, His mind wandered her story of Doctor Longstreet's ments and he began to wonder if pos- {to ner of the safe which had not been explored, ly to plle the contents on the and began to put the things feeling he and, thes needed soon of rubber would not stamps, be ER, UENTRE HALL, PA. \ J BALTIMORE. Wheat lots of Bouthern at £2.30 per bushel, as to quality; a No. 1 red 13,071 bushels $2.28%;, Cob Corn fo: on spot Oats | white, 79%. Rye No bushel, Hales of bag winter, garlicky, No. 1 red winter, Quoted carloads at ai 7.60 per bar rel nearby yellow prime Standard white, Koc: Weed i per bag lots | us to quality, $1.50601.60 pi Hay—XNo. 1 tin § ard timothy, $28.506p29; $27@28;: No. 3 igi clover, nix thy, 325.50: No. 2 timothy, No, 1 No, 2 No, 1 timothy, $28@26: $2764¢028; $25@ 8; No et i ht clover, mixed, mixed, 327 @24; No { clover Clove: | mixed, $2 | a clover, | G21. sible, In doing so his hand scratched by a plece of the zine lining of the and his to see how badly It was torn, he dis wis snfe, using behind It. He pulled it out and The leth's day was io the for aoe run him next return Ned was nhout, one set home, and her In the f walting for hier the front steps and she looked =o spite of what you said, to be my wif Before youn answer this time look She took the book wonderingly and “It's dad's ‘Vieasr of Wake “And opened It. field !'" she cried, Ned?” see, den what are all {hese papers, “Don’t you r? tt They're the she § ught were all I ust have placed them of this book and dged In behind a torn Now ienves the book got place in the lining of the safs you ALL KNOW SIGN LANGUAGE Peculiarity of Inhabitants and Visit ors to Deautiful island Town of Massachusetts, iry, % the hos! itifal tals s pitiful islane earth.” Deaf and duo old sland charge of no deaf mute clergyma fish and lobster industries, the truck and operated by the dairy dent Indeed, there 18 no family ch the sign understoml farms are snd dumb of #1) inhabitants in iu wh not It all Thirty or f{« ahout years came ry in this way: HED from deaf mute ancestry In a cones entire families up of deaf mutes, as thers and. mothers before over half a century thus “Summer people” fa their them Wore Supplies of the deaf mutes Plenty of unusual experiences are to be had there. One family of visit ors recently was In need of potatoes They carried a potato to a farm to show what they wanted. The farm telescope and signaled to another farm- house on a far-off hillside, that neighbor appeared Very soon every home there ix a telescope and al80 a retired sea captain. Church Made From a Single Tree. There is a church in Ranta Hosa which enjoys the distinction of being constructed entirely from a tree, single This tree from which the tim pleted, It has a spire of 70 feet. an vestibule, ings in the world in which all the tim bers, incinding its finishings, been obtained from ao single From “Fifteen “Thonsand Miles Stage,” Carrie Adbl Strahorn. From the Front was talking about his trip to the front. “1 witnessed a mild quarrel at fhe chaplains of different denominations. the quarrel, “Let us bury the hatchet, m, brother he sald. ‘After all, we are both doing the Lord's work, sre we not? “We cortainly are,’ sald the Junior chaplain, quite disarmed, “Let us, therefore,’ sald the senior suavely, ‘do It to the best of Bur abil. ity, you Is your way, aud 1 in his." ike, N receipls, extras, 71068; a: packed. exira frets 1%, 44: State, Pennsyi Wostern henner X2@85; State {res by fan nearby he THE RO Aner in prime vania and nearby hen ao ‘ Bie; do i tthered Live Ctock Live Pigs ize, as to size and con ; dition, apiece $1.50453;: ah an to site $4028 Lambs and Sovmi ey tea seins § BCH TH Pino SheeopChoice, fal : T6i8¢c; fair tH 3 i sheen, por pound, 66075: inferior. ro head, $250@4; old buck per pound. as to quality end condition CEPT: eprin: lambs, choles, ia | pound, 14015; poor to fair, ouvad, 12913. i CHICAGO ~Hoae Bulk of PRITASGITEL: Buichers, $1760@ 18; { lah, $16 f0@ 1780: packing, $10.84 17.65; throwouts, $15,704 15.80: good to thoice, $14506015.50. Cattle~Cholee steers and beol on! fle. god. choles anl pripme, $60 10.95: ev ooon and wodium, $8.75@15 i Butelier (ook, cows and Reliera, $50 | 14.50... Cannes and enttors, $7.2508 Storkery and feadors, good, choloe and inner, MOSHI; daferior. com: ron and nu divm, $7.560G10.50, Veal eclves, good nnd choice, 815.506 16.25. rasan, per 2 a ' by ¥ Lo, per A LS, New York~It is time to change a Wome are leaping from uniforms into There are significant changes work- There in the this department weeks ago dnd women exploit it. Half a dozen new ways of cutting the neckline have leaped into existence and a dozen new collars claim the blue ribbon of ex- cellence, No matter whether we dress differently about the hips and feet, we are dressing decidedly differently about the neck and even the wrists, It is in these significant changes that the great mass of women are in- terested who do not feel that they can afford entirely new gowns for the mid- season, The artist who sald that all changes in fashions for women in the placement of the bulge, or the ab- sence of it, should have added that the consisted in importance, Cut to the bone, there i8 no doubt that he was right, thing., It is where a in or out that determines ion. Few women there brave enough to go against the contour of the hour, even though it may not suggest the best there is in their figures. New Decolietage. The change in the neckline is per- haps the most important to the aver. age woman, She has belief in herself when it comes to cutting a new kind of neckline, She feels that a pair of scissors may be the medium of sn garment goes its fash- are who are good gown by the simple process of turn- ing an oblong neck Into a round one, #& squa*»~ one, or a U-shaped one. summary of historical changes in the decolletage, it Is easy to see that we have done nothing new: but here is what we are golng to do at the imme- diate moment; Revive the delta of the Elizabethan times, the deep square of Queen Anne, with its tight, high line at the side of the neck, and the U-shaped decolletage of the end of the eighteenth century, with its mod esty piece of lace, Return of Lace Collars. We have gone through a season of medieval severity in the neckline. Women have alded nature which made them ugly or cheated nature which made them beautiful by going about without any softening effect at the neck, by wearing coat collars of heavy homespun unrelieved by white, and by the use of V-shaped lines of heavy vel- veteen and crepe which fashion kept unadorned, True to history this was, but not true to art, There were few women € covmy who looked thelr best in such sever- tity. Today collars return slowly. There are still those who tell you they are not smart, but at the exclusive there is a tendency to put precious lace on the new neck- | It is a V-s it Is 8 deep UU which «¢ ening and arrangement of lace or tull bust, The Queen Anne decolletage which hugs the of runs down into a narrow L-shaped opening is extremely smart, and it is banded fur and then filled In with fine folds of slik net, It is felt by those their hands on the pulse of fashion that the ince is is worn house line, not aped neckline; 8 soft- soft 088 the g outline an side the neck and with who have lens isse no longer smart, although it by some well-dressed Double Neckline, There is a disposition on the part of some designers to make 8 double and this they do by a subtle women. neckline, high in front. This idea is worked out in many types of gowns, even those and gold. This neckline originated All history is filled with rapid changes in the neckline, and so far we have not had anything new. We have rung the bells of history all over again. That is all When Edward II was king of gette. which wrinkled about the neck and spread outward over the chin and the back of the head. This was intro. through a dancer and her clever de- It is still worn by women who blue crepe or veiling, rather than of When Richard II was king his over the bone. When Elizabeth was queen of Eng- land the delta decolletage was invent. ed, and it ran along with another neck- line that expoend all the chest nad half the shoulders, and then, as if by a sudden spasm of prudery, hid the neck and ears by an immense ruff. When James I came to the throne of England his queen intro wired lace at the back, and when Henriette of lead the fashions for his court, there was the low, round neckline that dipped well downward finished with a in the Elizabethan days. arrangement of thin fabrics. A cer tain designer has turned out a re- markably brilliant gown of raspberry chiffon having a deep Ushaped decolletage outlined with chinchilla which swings the chiffon with the movement of the figure, as though it were a necklace. Beneath it, and hug- ging the bust in the eighteenth cen- tury manner, is a bodice with a round- ed decolletage, There will be an oblong Renaissance neckline that reaches from shoulder to shoulder, cut on a tight satin bodice, and over that will be swung a looser bodice of colored chiffon or tulle which is high at the back and has a long, rounded line In front that drops to the waist, Black and seal brown velvet after noon gowns have the Queen Anne dees olletage, which follows the exact line where the neck Is placed on the body, until it gets to the collar bone, where it dips Into a straight, open &pace half way to the waist. This is outlined with fur. Again, it may be outlined with Venetian point. The delta decolletage is considered the most becoming of all for evening wear, Get out any picture of Eliza- bethan times and you will see what is meant. In that gorgeous era the women wore a jeweled piece of opén net over the shoulder to the base of the neck at cach side, and then the decolletage spread downward and outs