OF INTEREST T Ella s Article The Real Duty of Motherhood, Says Writer, is the recognition that children are like plants in a garden and each must be treated according to its needs. Copyright. 1915, Star Company. A fond mother took her son of about twelve out on some quest tor his interest. Passing by the house of a friend she dropped in to see her. The hopeful never ceased to fuss and whine. "There's nothing for me to do here," he said. "I must be get ting away." The mother got up at once and left, her visit not even commenced. Meet ing her friend some time later she eaid: "I suppose you think I was rude to go. But 1 can't deny my boy any thing. He did not ask to come into the world, and I feel it my duty to amuse and entertain him every min ute." Another had a daughter who insisted upon going to camp. The father felt he could not afford the expense, but the daughter made such a scene he managed to let her go. The mother eaid: "He owes it to his daughter to provide everything she wants!" Still another was highly Incensed be cause the authorities interfered with boys' firearms for the Fourth. "I'd like to 'see any one' stop my son be coming 'manly and brave,'" she said. And she took him out to a shop and had him choose his gun. All these are actual, true facts that I know. Is it any wonder that good citizenship is undermined and by so many mothers? P. E. T. An observing woman who has large opportunities of meeting many people wrote the above words In a private let ter to a friend. These words give one food for thought. There are so many mothers of this type in the land that it Is not to be wondered at when men question wo man's ability to successfully manage the affairs of State. Women ought first of all to demon strate the qualities which make for success in the positions to which na ture has assigned them—of daughters, The Key to Your Home Separated from home by county or continent —standing on Broadway or 'longside a water-tank—close at your hand is the key to your home. WESTERN UNION keys start your Day Letters and Night Letters on their way. Your "All's Well" message reaches home before the mail train gets up steam. Low rates for many words. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. •SW.V.V.V.V.-.VAS*.VAV.SS-.W.V.W,%SSW.V.S*.W. , ASS» i Slim Steve allays says my memory ;! i is as short as my name. Maybe it is, \ty f J but I don't hold a grouch like he does. -nT I? j What's the use? \ /Qv / !| Slim says lie thinks that joak on April % Ist was just a trick of Susie Smart's to keep '■ ( him from making ez many pennies buying ! SAVE-A-CEXT ez she did. Susie Smart \ just turned her nose up in the air and sed, \ 7 i [ "The very idea, to think I'd play a trick / L ! like that," when Slim told her how mean he J ! though it WUZ. IVhal'M the iiae of "! 1 c t. T >.1,1 , • , holding; a grouch. S i Somehow or other, I can t help but think % ' thet it was Susie, and ef it wuz her I'll play a good trick on her, just ■' t you see. JJ ij But you won't ketch me 'cusing her of doing it, cause that aint r the way to make her own up to it. 1 told her to-day that I thought i J that wuz the bes joak I ever heered of. She sez, "I don' believe in S % April Fool jouks," but I think she wuz giggling under her breath all the S ;■ time. S 11 Well, we'll wait and see. The feller that keeps pulling Ills bait out £ J" of the water ilon't keteh no fish. • Ji Monday Yours trooly, SAM SHORT. § SAVE-A-CENT \ i Scouring Compound ;! }1 (,oes everything any scouring powder M *• fT/ does ' does jt more easi 'y and lasts as S to* l!*S h// long as any three 10c cans, because 5 JY/ it does not waste. Yet it costs only 4e, ? \/5c and 10c. 2 All Good Grocers !; 'AWUWM Wrt\VAW.VAVW\i ** ave a Complete i Record of National 'I Optical Co. Glasses 5 These are on file at our office. When you break '! ,• your glasses or need new lenses, call at our office. GOHL OPTICAL CO. 5 J Where Glasses Arc Made Right 34 North Third Street Try Telegraph Want Ads MONDAY EVENING, wives and mothers —before asking for a larger field of usefulness. Not one woman in one thousand is a success in these three domains. But since women have failed so ut terly to develop themselves under the conditions which men have imposed upon them, it seems advisable to let them try the experiment of making new conditions for themselves. Since they cannot be much poorer mothers than they are to-day, after thousands of years of the rule of man, they might possibly become better mothers under united rule of man and woman. Mothers' clubs are being formed all over the country, and women are thinking more seriously than ever in their lives before on the subject or good motherhood. They are beginning to understand that the mere bearing of children or the toiling and working and saving for their children does uot constitute true motherhood. Here and there a mother may be found who has come into the realiza tion of the fact that children are like plants in a garden and that each one must be studied separately and treated according to its needs. This under standing necessitates a vast amount of patience and labor in the rearing ©f children, and there are few mothers ready to make the necessary sacrifice. A young woman who had spent the Summer at one of the fashionable re sorts expressed great sorrow for the little children of fashionable mothers who were left to the care of gover nesses and maids. These children were allowed every liberty and luxury in the way of expensive costumes and elaborate entertainments. In consequence, they were purse proud, conceited, selfish and jealous in their attitude toward one another. Listening the greater part of the day to the language of their hired attend ants was not conducive to the best dic tion or manners. Yet, without ques tion: their mothers consider themselves "good mothers" and would be Indig nant at any one who questioned their right to the title. But they are not good mothers. ALL 'ROUND SUIT FOR LITTLE BOY Nothing Girlish About This With Its Severe Lines and Masculine Cut By MAY MANTON 9001 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Little Boy's Dress, 1, 2 and 4 year 6. Even in the age of dresses the boy'i costume must give a masculine effect. Here is a smart little frock designed especially to meet that need. Ihe box plaits and the round collar give a severe effect and the sleeves may be made short or extended to the wrists. In the picture, checked gingham is trimmed with plain color. For the more dressy frock, it would be made of all white or of white with trimming of color. While especially a boy's dress the model also is available for girls, for there are a great many mothers who like simple severe frocks for the girls as well as for the boys. For tlie 2 year size will be needed, 3 yards of material 27 inches wide. 2 yards 36 or 44 with £g yard 36 inches wide for the trimming. The pattern 9001 is cut in aizes for boys of 1, 2 and <1 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Depart me&Uof this paper, on receipt-of«ten cents. DIXIE GOES AHEAD By Frederic J. Haskin [Continued From Kilitorial Page] in Tarpon Springs. They form nearly half of the population, and have just about a fair share of the business. Although the Greeks dwell in their own quarter of the town, and preserve their national customs, they live in perfect amity with the Americans. There are very prosperous firms in the sponge business which are con ducted by Greeks and Americans working in partnership. The Greek likes American busi ness methods, American money, Amer ican movies, and many other Ameri can things; but when it comes to cheese, wine and candy, he insists on having his own. Hence there are in Tarpon Springs many picturesque lit tle shops dealing in these things, and in other strictly Greek dainties which are beyond the appreciation of an Am erican palate. There are also Greek coffee houses, where you may see the divers in from the gulf, sipping the drink from little cups and smoking water pipes. ! As sponges become scarcer, the j fleets have to go farther out into tho j Gulf to get a good harvest. They now j usually remain for two or three i months at a time, returning all to gether at certain times of the year, when the great sales are held. Early j fall, Christmas and Easter are the I times Qf tho most important sales, and J upon these occasions Tarpon Springs ! becomes one of the liveliest little towns j I upon the globe. The Greek diver is I a daring, happy-go-lucky chap, who ; makes big wages and does not believe | in saving them. When he hits town i he usually collects several hundred I dollars, and proceeds zealously to spend it all before going to sea again. ; He is a liberal and boisterous patron i of wineshops and coffee houses and : movies. He decks himself in the ' gaudiest and most expensive clothes that money can buy. He rather over runs the town; but seldom docs any harm either to himself or anyone else. Easter is the most important occa sion of all. being a great Greek holi day. There is much feasting, and I candle light processions through the : I streets at night. At the time of the j "Christmas sale, the Greek Cross Day! lis celebrated. The whole colony i [gathers at the bayou behind the town, j I The young men, all expert swimmers, | | line up on the bank, clad only in ! trunks. The priest throws a wooden I i cross into the water, and there is u I race for it, tl"» boy who wins receiv- ! ing & prize. When the sponges are brought up 'by the divers, they bear 110 resem blance whatever to what you buy in a drug store; for the commercial sponge is merely the skeleton of an .animal. In the natural state it is covered with a thick mucus. This! is pounded and washed out, the roots j I are cut off with deep shears, the ( 1 sponges are sorted according to variety j j and strung In bunches of from ten to ' thirty each. There are a number of varieties. The wool sponges are the most, valuable, others being grass, yellow and wire sponges. Sponges of all kinds are becoming scarce and the prices they bring are surprising. Wool sponges bring from ! $2 to $4 a pound. A little ragged i heap of sponges that you would cart (away in a wheel-barrow often sells for several hundred dollars. The sponges grow in banks upon the bot tom of the gulf, and the great ob ject of the flsher is to discover a new bank, for a large one is a ver itable bonanza. Try Telegraph Want Ads HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH GEORGE AONE^MMBERLAW MrEHE CEJVJVj3Y CO. SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne Is sent away from Ked Hill, hia home, by o» I uncle, J. Y., as a moral failure. Cleiu runs after him In a tangle of short ! skirls to bid him good-by. ~ ! CHAPTER 11—Captain Wayne tells j Alan of the tailing of the Waynes. Clem drinks Alan's health on his birthday. ! CHAPTER lll—Judge Healey buys a pleturo for Allx Lansing. The judKC defends Alan In his business with his employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Allx meet at sea, homeward bound, and start a flirtation, which becomes serious. CHAPTER V—At home, Nance Ster ling asks Alan to go away from Allx. Alix is taken to task by Gerry, her husband, for her conduct with Alan and defies him. ~ . CHAPTER Vl—Gerry, as he thinks, sees Allx and Alan eloping, drops everything, and goes to Pernambuco. CHAPTER Vll— Alix leaves Alan on the train and goes home to nnu that Gerry has disappeared. CHAPTER Vlll—Gerry leaves Per nambuco and goes to Piranhas, y a canoe trip he meets a native girl- CHAPTER IX—The judge tails W trace Gerry. A baby is born to Alix. CHAPTER X—The native girl takes Gerry to her home and shows nun the ruined plantation she Is mistress of. Gurry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple house Collingeford tells how he met Alan— "Ten Per Cent Wayne"— building a bridge in Africa. CHAPTER Xll—Collingeford meets Alix and her baby and he gives her encouragement about Gerry. CHAPTER XHl—Alan comes back to town but dees not go home. He aiakes several calls In the city. CHAPTER XlV—Gerry begins to Improve Margarita's plantation and builds an irrigating ditch. CHAPTER XV —In Africa Alan reads Clem's letters and dreams of i home. ! CHAPTER XVI —Gerry pastures fLleber's cattle during the drought. A baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. CHAPTER XVII Collingford i meets Allx In the city and finds her 'i changed. CHAPTER XVIII—AIan meets Allx. J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful womanhood, in the city and realizes that he has sold his birthright for a mess of pottage. CHAPTER XIX —Kemp and Gerry become friends. CHAPTER XX—Kemp and Gerry visit Lleber and the three exiles are drawn to gether by a con.mon tie. CHAPTER XXl—Lieber tells his story. ! "Home is the anchor of a man's soul. I want to go home." CHAPTER XXII—In South America Alan gets fever and his foreman prepares to send him to the coast. CHAPTER XXIII—AIan Is carried' to Libber's fazenda. almost dead, and Gerry sees him. CHAPTER XXIV—Alan tells Gerry the truth about Alix and Gerry tells him of Margarita and the baby. Alan wonders and is disgusted. CHAPTER XXV—A flood carries away Margarita and her baby, despite Gerry's attempt at rescue. I CHAPTER XXVl—Fever follows Ger ry's exposure. He send a note to Allx I by Alan when Alan and Kemp go home. He tells Lie'oer he can't go home. CHAPTER XXVII—AIan gets baek to the city and sends Gerry's note to Red Hill. Alix calls on Alan, but. he refuses to tell her Garry's story. Alan goes home to Red Hill. i^ XVITI—As A,an retur ns to health he builds a barrier between him self and Clem, who does not understand. »wI IAPT i K ' 1 XXIX—Alan and Clem play hide and seek" with the children. CHAPTER XXX—Alan meets Kemp In the city and takes him to Red Hill. Kemp tel's Alix that Gerry will "hog-tle hlsself" and come home. CHAPTER XXXI—Alan meditate* leav ing because he Is not fit to love Clem. He goes for a ride. Clem nodded. "How much time do you want?" Alan hesitated. "A year," he said. "I'll make a year do it." "You can have six months." replied Clem and added with a smile, "That's ten per cent under office estimates." Then forgetful of hours and meals and the little things in life that do not count when human souls mount to the banquet of the gods, they sat side by side and hand in band on a big rock and stared with unseeing eyes at. the gray world. "With you beside me," said Alan, "all skies are blue and filled with the light of rt single, steady star." Clem did not answer, but in her eyes content and knowledge, tenderness and strength, pleasure and paiu played with each other like the lights and dappled shadows under a swaying *>ough. When Clem and Alan reached home long after the lunch hour they found the Hill athrill with news. Alix had received a cable and had left at once for town. She had gone alone. That could mean but one thing—Gerry was at last coming back. It was from Barbados that Gerry had cabled. Ever since be had written his short note to Alls, through long doubting weeks at Piranhas and longer days of questioning and hesitation on board the slow freighter that was bearing him home, tierry had been fighting himself. Only Lleber's sudden death and his burial, to which Gerry had ridden post-uaste, had come in be tween as a solemn truce. On the freighter he had had time enough and to spare to think. He had spent hours going over the same ground time and time again. For days he sat in his chair on the short bridge deck, staring out to sea, making over and over the circle of his life from the tinw he had left home. He remem bered sitting thus on the way out HJB remembered the turmoil his mind had been in and the apathy that had fol lowed, the long rest at Pernambuco, the trip down the coast and up the river, the glorious, misty morning at Piranhas, Margarita. catastrophe, awakening. What did that awakening stand for? Again he thought, if ho could choose—would he wish to be back as he was before—as he was on the way out? A voice within him said "No." In those days wh»n once more his thoughts demanded to be seen in their relation to Alls, that steady voice within him was his only comfort. The flood at Fazenda Flores bad swept away all that his bands had done, but the things that Fazenda Flores had done, for him could not be swept away by any material force. They stood and feared nothing— except Alix. Wherever his mind turned, it came back to Alix and found in her an im passe. Alix assumed more and more the portentous attributes of one unat tached, sitting in Judgment over his acts. His memory of her frailty, of her flowerlike detachment from the bones—the skeleton—of life, her arti ficiality, made her seem ludicrously in congruous in the role of judge. He could not picture her, much less esti mate the sentence she would pass. His thoughts led him daily up to that im passe and left him. Then came the doubt and the question—why should he lead himself bodily to the impasse at all? He was still fighting this point when he reached Barbados but there an inci dent befell which brought a new light to his mind and then a new peace to his soul. He had gone ashore at Bridgetown simply because his whole body, per fectly attuned by three years of long ours of toil, was crying out for more exercise than the narrow decks of the freighter could afford. When the little group of passengers reached shore, with the exception of Gerry and an old returning Barbadian, they all turned in the same direction as if by a common impulse. The Barbadian glanced at Gerry and Jerked his head at the disappearing group. "Men of the world in the big sense." he said. "What do you mean?" asked Gerry. "Son," said the old Barbadian, who was very tanned and whose kindly eyes blinked through thick glasses, "when a chap tells you he's a man of the world you ask bim if he ever had a drink at the Ice house. Ycu don't have to say 'in Bridgetown.' 'Ever have a drink at the Ice house?' Just like that; and if he says, 'Xo,' you know he meant he was a town rounder when he said he was a man of the world." Gerry smiled and fell naturally In step with the Barbadian as he moved slowly on. "Yes," said the old man. "It's a sure test. The man that hasn't crooked his elbow at the big. round deal table in that old. ramshackle drink-house can't say he's really traveled. Long-lost brothers and friends have met there, and when men that roam the high seas want news of some pal that's disap peared down the highway of the world they drop in at the old Ice house and ask what road he took. It's halfway house to all the seven seas." "Have you lost anyone?" asked Gerry. "Xo, I'm not thirsty for a drink just now," said the Barbadian with a smile. "And you?" "Xor I," said Gerry, laughing. "I'm out to stretch my legs." "You can't do that here," replied the oid man. "You don't know our sun. Coine with nie." He hailed a ram shackle victoria. Gerry hesitated. "You must have a home you want to go to and friends to see. Dou't worry about me. I'll be careful about the sun." "Boy." said the Barbadian. "I've got a home and I'm going to see It, but there's no reason why you shouldn't come along. As for friends—the ones I left here won't get up to meet anyone till the last trump sounds. Come along. You are the only company rfnd I'm the only host in our party." They climbed into the rickety cab and the Barbadian gave directions to the driver. The driver answered in the soft guttural of the West Indian black. Slowly they crawled through the crooked streets of the town. Gerry leaned back and gazed at the freak ish buildings. They were all of frame work. Some swelled at the top, and Gerry wondered why they did not topple over; some swelled at the bot ton* and he wondered why these did not cave in. The Barbadian watched his face. "Funny town, eh?" Gerry nodded. Presently the found themselves on a country road. It was so smooth that the weighted, carriage pushed the old horses along at an unwonted pace. Little bouses—hundreds of them—that looked like big hencoops lined the road. Suddenly the carriage came to a halt. One of the little houses was trying to straddle the road. From around it came screams and cries. "Now, then, yo' Gladys, when ah say heft, yo' heft" (To Be Continued.) Try Telegraph Want Ads APRIL 10. 1916. Thankful For Remedy Brought Her Says Fruitola and Traxo Pos sesses All the Merit That Is Claimed For It. _ After completing the necessary [[ fly WHEK treatment, Mrs. S. S. Cole, Lampasas, 7 Texas, was so well pleased with the /j n ( 'X results that she wrote the Plnus lab- |HH 4k. v I j oratories as follows: "Fruitola and Traxo are all you claim. It removed iili lil lllfl- : ll I 111 a quantity of gall-stones and I feel sure It saved my life. I am well j l||||| Ml'Ji|(l|l[ now and thankful to you for the great ' |,; good your medicine has done me. ' JW■ y Fruitola is a powerful lubricant for ■ f ' the Intestinal organs and one dose Is E VV; *** usually sufficient to clearly demon- * '< '■ - arrangements have been made to supply them through representative S^' 8 ' In Harrisburg they can be obtained at Gorgas, the Druggist, 16 Isorth Third street, P. B. R. Station. f FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1918, by Alfred W. McCann ) J) CHAPTER IS No quantity of medicines or other substances added to a diet of sugary ami starchy foods will maintain life, notwithstanding the fact that sugar and starch arc rated as the principal high calorie foods, mid therefore look ed upon by mistaken scientists as the most important of all foods. It Is not the phosphorus loss in the milling of wheat, the polishing of rice, the pearling of barley, or the degerminating ot corn which explains the inadequacy of such refined and denatured food when consumed by man or animal. Commenting on the phosphorus con tent of unpolished rice as an index of its fitness for food, Chamberlain states: "The determination of any other element which is chiefly contained in the pericarp, such as potassium, iron, calcium, etc.. would bo an equally good index of the safety of the rice." In other words, the food factory cannot remove any one element from the cereals prepared by it without also removing all of the other elements. They are so intimately bound up with each other that when one goes they all go. Therefore it is not phospho rus in Itself that must be considered, or iron, or calcium, or any one of the other food minerals and vitamines. but all of them together with such othor bodies of unknown nature which natural foods contain, in order to de termine the fitness of such foods for human consumption. To over-emphasize the importance of ferments or vitamines or any one of the mineral fats is to cloud the whole issue of metabolism in mystery and darkness. One might as well over emphasize iodine and Ignore the vita mines as to over-emphasize the vita mines and ignore iodine. We have already seen something of the thyroid gland and have learned that in health its iodine content is much higher than in disease. It lias been established, as we have been, that the thyroid gland of animals fed on food natural to them contains, at different seasons of the year, a vary ing content of iodine. It has also been established that the presence of iodine compounds in the thyroid is largely responsible for the normal functioning of that gland. The manner in which iodine, so completely removed from bread, bis cuits, cakes, crackers, cookies, break fast foods, cornmeal, pearled barley, rye flour, polished rice, pancakes, glucose, table syrup, sugar, candy, etc., influences the metabolism of othor indispensable bodies Is vaguely hinted at through the experiments of A. I. Ushenko. Ushenko found that "following thyriodentomy (which means the re moval of the thyroid gland) the per centage relation of phosphorus to nitrogen in the urine Is first increased but then again is stately diminished before death. "The amido acids and purin bodies are increased while creatanin is dimin ished. The metabolism of the tissues containing phosphorus and nitrogen is acutely disturbed, the synthetic processes being mostly affected." Here we behold the removal of an iodine-secreting gland affecting dis astrously the interrelations of other parts of the body and modifying at once the nature and proportion of ele ments secreted and excreted by those other glands. lodine in itself will not support life. lis combination with other elements is essential. Chamberlain declares that Schau mann's assumption that it is a phos phorus compound which prevents polyneuritis is not correct. "A large number of substances." he says, "have been shown to be of no value in the prevention of polyneu ritis. Among these may be mentioned potassium chloride, phosphoric acid, cither singly or combined, potassium The Importance of Skin Care In the Springtime Infections skin diseases are irritat ing, unpleasant, unsightly and' dan gerous. There never was a greater mistake made than trying to cure such disorders with pastes, lotions, or creams, rubbed on the outside. You can't cure skin diseases that way, be cause they are the direct result of in fected blood, and yon can't rub or soak poisons out of the blood. The annoyances of skin troubles are worse in spring than any other time. The perspiration that starts with the first warm days intensifies the smart ing, burning sensation, and makes the trouble almost unbearable. There ts only one way to relieve them, and that is through the blood, which must be thoroughly cleansed and purified. There is only one remedy that you can rely upon to do this, and that is f \ The Telegraph Bindery | Will Rebind Your Bible Satisfactorily — / phosphate, either acetate or carbon ate, magnesium phosphate, liquids of the lectlthln group, nitrogen com pounds, such as hlstidin, aspharagin, and various amino acids (eleborated in the digestion of meat, eggs, cheese, etc.), potassium iodine, thyroid ex tracts. Roman's salt mixture, cot ton oil, egg albumen or any com bination of these substances." The failure of vi tannines, when con sumed without the assistance of the other food elements necessary to nor mal nutrition, to perform the miracle of sustaining normal life and health requires little demonstration. These vitamines, some of which, as Isolated by Casimir Funk, are com plicated chemical compounds occur ring as colorless needle-shaped crys tals with a melting- point of 451 de grees Fahrenheit, when added to a diet of sugary and starchy foods, will not maintain life, although sugar and starch are rated among the very high est of the "high calorie" foods, and therefore are looked upon by mistaken scientists as the most important of all foods. In fact, however high the calories, or however abundant the vitamines, unless the other food elements, so wantonly destroyed by food refine ment, are present the body cannot make proper use of them. The experiments of Voegtlin, and Towels with foods of "high caloric" value deprived of their mineral con tent demonstrate the inadequacy of the calorie theory. These investigators found that "an aqueous extract of autolyzed spinal cord from which the coagulable pro tein has been removed contains vita mines or anti-neuritic substances which cure symptoms of polyneuritis In birds fed on polished rice when ad ministered in daily doses correspond ing to four grams of dried cord. "These vitamines or anti-neuritis substances, when added to a diet of polished rice seem capable of remov ing some of the nervous symptoms of disease, but. fail absolutely to es tablish normal metabolism and the affected birds do not recover." This is known. The simplest of natural foods contain all the mys terious physiologically active prin ciples required to maintain normal health. Still we find scientists blindly rummaging through fields of experi mental darkness seeking complicated and high-sounding explanations for phenmonia so humble on the surface and so majestic at the core that they have defied, so far, all the cross-ex aminations, all the problings, all the analyses, and all the theories of man. The grain of wheat simply asks to be left alone. The other cereals cry out to humanity, "We are sufficient in ourselves; do not change our na ture, do not undervalue our functions, do not manipulate our attributes, do not destroy those potent forces which we have brought forth from the bowels of the earth for the food of man." In vain shal wo seek for peace while we are at war with the laws ot God. Scientific phrases are not sub stitutes for the laws of life, howso ever they may contribute to the vain glory of the eminent members of that august inner circle of established reputations whose mighty wisdom, ignoring the simplest laws of life, Clashes with the all-sufficient but hid den purposes of the Creator. The shadow cannot ignore the sub stance; the dream cannot ignore the reality; the reflection cannot Ignore the flame. The lore of the libraries cannot ignore the miracle found In a droii of milk or a grain of wheat. Heal science, in all the humility of true greatness, suggests in what it is doing for the welfare of the world an imago of the divine, but the semi scientific confusion which has com plicated the dietary of nations is but a modern Babel. How true these statements are we are about to see, S. S. S., the surest and best blood cleanser known. S. S S. acts with sure effect directly upon the blood—taken internally, it Soes right into the blood vessels, rives out every bit of poison of what ever nature, kills the germs that Starve and impoverish the blood, re stores the skin to its proper condition and rives yon healthy bone and tissue building blood. Even the worst eases, sucn as scrofuls and Mood poison, yield promptly to this efficient vege table remedy. It doesn't matter how long you have had skin trouble, or if it has developed into chronic sores that you had given un all hope of cur- 4 ing. Take S.S. S. wnen all else fails. It brings relief. Write otrr Medical Department, Room 4, Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga.