i t THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. FRUIT LAXATIVE OR SICK CHILD "California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver and bowels. Every mother realizes, after giving her children "California Syrup of Flgi" that thla U their ideal laxative, because thef love Its pleasant tasie and It thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels with out griping. When cross, Irritable, feverish, or breath Is bad, stomach sour, look at ,u - - a mntharl If nnjttpri. fftVA S . 1 1 1 0 IVIlgUD, BMW..... . C - - teaspoonful of this harmless "fruit laxative," and In a few hours an tne foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bow els, and yoa have a well, playful child again. When Its little system Is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach ache, diarrhoea. Indigestion, colic remem ber, good "Inside cleaning" should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep "California Syrup of Figs" handy; they know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask at the store for a BO cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," wtilch has directions for babies, children of all ages and grownups printed on the bottle. Adv. Perfect Models. A sendy-looklng man walked slowly up to Uie farmhouse. "Madam," he said to the farmer's wife, "may I chop some wood for you? I'll do It for nothing." "The lady looked at him suspicious ly. "I)o yon be needln' exercise?" she Inquired. "Not exactly, madam. The only thing I require Is that you lot nie Bit by the woodplto and pnint for a few hours. 1 am an artist of the old school, and I have been commissioned to do a fan tastic impression of an aeroplane. I wlxh to csn the woodpile as a model.'' Philadelphia Evoning Ledger. IF HAIR IS TURNING GRAY, USE SAGE TEA Don't Look Oldl Try Grandmother's Recipe to Darken and Beautify Gray, Faded, Lifeless Hair. CrandmothiT kept her hair beauti ful! darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appear ance, Ibis simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. By asking at tny drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipo, ready to ase, for about 50 cents. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and Is splendid for dan druff, dry, Itchy scalp and falling hair. A well known druggist says every body uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell It has been applied it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampea a comb or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after an other application or two, It Is re stored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and abundant. Adv. Art Is Art. The Victim You have a sign on your place which announces that you are a "tonsorlal artist." Tho Ilarber Yes, sir. The Victim (viewing his gashed face In the glass) Have It changed to Impressionist. Philadelphia Public Ledger. When Your Eyes Need Care t'w Murine F.y Mrdictnn. Nofimnrting-FrHi Fin Aotti yiilrkly. Try it for Kril, Wrak, Kre Kjrm unci (lrnnulntr.1 RyttlMit, Muring la roinnonnilrd by our GriillM not a "I'atrot Jlrilioloe ' but umhI In aiu-c-FRKful Phyl'lun' Prm-iio Utr many yrnr. Now dcdlcaird to the Public una mild by DtokkI"! at 6nt per H.ntle. Murine Eye Kalre In Axrptle Tuhea, Co and Boe. Write for Hook of the Kye Tree. Murine Eye Remedy Company, Chicago. Ady One of the hardest things iu the world to use is discrimination, so few people have it Deseret News. Don't Give Up! Nowadays deathi due to weak kidneys ire 7i. Mora common than 90 jean ago, according to thu oeotui. Overwork and worry are tbi eauies. The iriaeyt can't Veen np, and a slight kidney weaknea U ntORll netfTeolod. If yon hare backaohs or urinary dis order, dou'l mistake the caus. Flitht the danger. More care as to dirt, habits, etc., and the una ot Doan' Kldaey Pills ought to bring- quiok relief. A Pennsylvania Que Mr. B. Da usher. II Buahnell frit., Bradford, Pa,,, eaya: "My kidney a were disordered ana caused Intena batk achea. My fret and limb ewelled and my whole- body Anally b e e a m e bloated. Tha kidney aeorettons were pro fua and I loat flesh. Finally I had to tnke to my bed and the doctor gave m tip Doan'a Kidney Pilla hfOned me aa n 1 uad thm and I continued to Improve until 1 vu etrong and well, Doaa'a at Any Slot. S0 a Bos DOAN'SWiV POSTElUtlLBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. V. T -, M. BOTTLE rREE. ; ' end mrntloa thla penr. AddreM . CMBYLtt AGO- BALTLMOUB. Mlk W. N, u Baltimore; noT 0i Si Ml I How to Help Backsliders By REV. HOWARD W. POPE aaftaiidal ef Mi. Mod Bibh ImOtH TEXT-I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely. Hoaea 14:4. Tlacksllders three classes. may be divided into 1. Those who have 'never been converted, but who have once considered them selves Christians. The churches are full of people who at some time re ceived a religious impulse, and who perhaps expressed their purpose to lead a Christian life, but who nev er really received Christ Such people must be shown In a kind ana loving way that they have been mistaken or they will never be willing to make another trial. It Is well to point out some of the evidences of the new birth, and let them see that they have never experienced it. Romans 8:1 shows that the Chris tian Is delivered from the guilt of sin. Ask them if they have ever been whol ly free from a sense of guilt, and for what reason. I John 3:14 proves that wo have passed from death unto life because we love the brethren. I John 3:21, 23 shows that an obedient Chris tian will have answors to prayer. I John :13 insures the fellowship of the Holy Spirit. Test a person with such passages and he will soon rec ognize bis true position. At the close of a service I was In troduced to a young man who said to mo, "I have tried this thing two or three times, and it did not seem to work, and I do not care to try It again." lie spoke of conversion as It It wero something like vaccination which did not "take" in his case. "Were you ever really converted?" "I do not know." "Did you ever get a new heart?" "I doubt if I did." "You have been trying to live the Christian II fo without any Christ to help you, haven't you?" "That just describes it." "It Is no wonder you have had a hard time. It is like trying to run a watch without a mainspring. You might shako It and the wheels would run a minute or two, but it would soon stop. Neither Is It possible to lead a Christian life without the help ot Christ who is the mainspring of It all. "If you had In your heart to help you, the very Christ who gave the commandments, would you not bo able to keep them?" "I think I would." "Listen then," I said, and I quoted Ezeklcl 36:26, "A new heart will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk In my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments and do them." "This Is God's offer to you a new heart. Will you accept It?" In a mo ment or two he was on bis knees ask ing God for a new heart. II. The second class consists of thoso who have drifted away from God by disobedience, and are not an lous to return. They are like the prodi gal before his money was spent They are llvli.g a worldly life, and so long as health and prosperity continue, they get along fairly well without God, though they have many rebukes ot conscience, and frequent longings for the good old days of fellowship with God. witn such people Jeremiah 2:5 Is a good verse. Ask them what fault they could find with God that they have wandered from him. Jeremiah 2:13 Is also good. Ask them It it is not true that their presont life Is evil and bit tor as compared with the fellowship and joy which God provides for those w ho obey him. Show them the ingrat itude and sin of such a course. Quote Jeremiah 2:19 and show them the folly of turning from a fountain of pure water to a broken cistern or a muddy pool. Then ask them If the self life is not a broken cistern as compared with that well of water which Christ opens in every heart that receives hlra. III. Backsliders who are tired of sin and are anxious to return to God. They are like the prodigal after his money Is spent, and after months ot hunger and loneliness In the far coun try. For such Hosea 14:1-4 Is a good passage. "O Israel, return unto the Lord thy God; for thou hast fallen by thlno iniquity. I will heal their back sliding, I will love- them freely; for mine anger Is turned away from him." The most effective passage, how ever, Is Luke 15:11-24. This not only plcturos tho wretched condition ot the backslider, but it shows the steps by which he must return, and the royal reception which awaits him. No one needs pity more than the backslider, lie is despised by the world, he Is a reproach to the church, he Is alienated from God, and he condemns h'mself Religion should be the rule of life, not a casual Incident of it. Disraeli. Try to Be More Thankful. Thankfulness Is an unfailing spring of happiness. A thankful person is never habitually grumpy. Only un grateful people are incorrigibly sullen, fclren in a somber mood one can dis sipate gloom by thinking of his mer cies. If you think you can say- "I thank you" with a very wry face, try It. The act of pronouncing those words pulls the face into a smile. Many ot us could Increase the measure of our happiness by deepening our capacity for t Mmoional SUfflSdlOOL Lessor .By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of : Sunday School Course Moody Bible In- atltute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 7 RUTH CH008E8 THE TRUE GOD. LKBBON TEXT Ruth 1:(-1L (Read en tire book.) GOLDEN TEXT Thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God. Ruth ':t The book of Ruth is a great love story, full ot deep spiritual sugges- ' tlveness. Amid the talcs of war, de I celt, success and failure, this story ! most beautifully illustrates another ' . . .a. a . ..... . .... m 1 iae or me me 01 ine Israelites, mo author of the book is supposed to have been the same as the writer ot Judges, perhaps Samuel. I. "There Wss a Famine In the Land." This famine drove Ellmelech, his wife Naomi and their two sons, Mahlon and Chllion, Into the land of Moab, even as Abrara before them "went down" Into Egypt. The lmml- I grant sons married In that land, one of them becoming the husband of Ruth. Through this Israolltish al liance Ruth learned of the true God and the record of this book reveals i God to all who turn to him in sincer ity and truth. This suggests the es sential missionary character of the Old Testament After the death of her husband .and sons Naomi, hear Ing of returning prosperity In the homeland (1:16). elected to return to her own people II. "Entreat Ms Not to Leave Thee" This story puis to silence all of the mother-in-law Jokes. When Naomi thought they had gone far enough she sought to dismiss the younger women and expressed to them the tender affection which ex isted between them. A woman in an eastern land can find rest only In the house ot her husband and these young widows stood but poor chance of se curing husbands among those who hated their race. Moreover we must remember that they were penniless. There seemed to be nothing for them to gain If they proceeded any farthei (v. 12). Orpah reluctantly and tear fully turned back but Ruth clave to Nooml (v. 14). This Illustrates our experience when we have to decide whether to leave friends, home and everything that we may follow ChrlBt or, on the other hand, have to choose the things which are good and refuse to follow the best. (Matt. 10:37; Luke 14:33). III. "Whither Thou Goest I Will Go." Naomi gave Ruth another op portunity to go back to her people and this time bases her apoeal upon the love of Ruth for Orpah (v. 15) The word Ruth means "friendship, and one of the strongest motives foi a loving nature to forsake the Lord Is the love for those that are of the world Many young men and young women have had such loves but they usually result In making shipwreck of faith. Read II Cor. 5:14. 15; Rom 10:37 This test caused Ruth to count fully the cost (Luke 14:25-33). No more beautiful nor immortal wordr enn be found In all literature than Ruth's reply (vv. 18. 17). Ruth's words are still sung as best expressing oui song of life devotion. They have fur nlshed Inspiration for countless lives sermons and stories, and for some ol the earth's greatest musicians as well Thev most wonderfully Illustrate out attitude towards him "whom not hav ing seen ye love" (I Peter 1:8). IV. The 8equeJ. At Bethlehem Ruth. had no other thought than to cling to her mother-in-law, even In poverty and a life of lowly service She did her menial duties falthrully and displayed more of the real hero Ism of faith than that shown in the daring exploits recorded In the othei history (Judges) of her day. The truest hero is not the reckless partlcl pant in Europe's battlefields, nor Is h found in the mad struggle for commer clal supremacy, but more often in th Belf-sacriflclng acts of tender women and In the common round of life's duties. Ruth In a humble hut with Naomi was better off and better satis fled than to have lived in the fines! palace In Moab (Phil. 1:23). Through all of this love and devotion Ruth was being fitted for a larger sphere ol Influence in which she was enabled tc give to Naomi the happiest life possl. ble to her. Not once is Ruth's beauty suggested but she had the more at tractive attributes of goodness, kind ness and courtesy She may have had personal beauty but her character fai outshone the physical This lesson Is a suggestive one foi Decision day in our Sunday schools Give all an opportunity to choose and to follow even as Ruth did. For the little folks tell the story simply "as to a little child." Emphasize the beauty and value ol lovingly serving our elders. Naomi is no less a heroine. Hei name means "pleasant winsome. True she suggested a new name Mara, "bitterness," but her sorrow was not for herself but for others. 'It grleveth me much for your sakes" (1:13) Naomi made the religion and worship of Jehovah so attractive as to win a most notable convert It is our trlvllege to make religion attrac tive This gift cannot be bought noi commanded, but by the power of th hoiv spirit und through the fellowship nt Christ mnv he th Twrinnce of all Rocks. Stone is largely limestone, sand stone or granite. Limestone is the deposit of seashell life, sandstone Is. merely hardened sand, while granite is the result of heat fusing the other kinds of rock. Ideal Mind. A weak mind sinks under prosperity 41 well as under adversity. A strong and deep mind has two highest tides when the moon is at full, and when there is no mooo. Julius Hare. zirr .'Conducted by the Natlonnl Woman's Christian Temperance Union.) PEOPLE TO BE TRU8TED. The reason why governments have not done and are not doing their duty toward the suppression of alcohol is, In the last analysis, says Congressman MobBon, "based on the absenco of pub lic opinion on the part of the masses as to the true nature ot alcohol and the appalling results that come from Its use." And Dr. T. D. Crothers, the noted expert on alcoholism, declares that "If the actual effects of alcohol were known by the people, prohibiting Its use would follow as a natural and reasonable demand." To bring to the people knowledge concerning the na ture of alcohol and its effects upon the Individual, the family, the state, Is the purpose of the organized campaign of education now being carried on throughout the land from remote coun trysldo to halls of congress. Given tho facts, the Intelligent people of this nation will soon settle the liquor question and settle It right. Bring the truth to the masses! BOTH ARE BENEFITED. Another big corporation to testify to the advantages of prohibition ns an sfllclcncy measure Is the Colorado Fuel and Iron company. In a pub lished statement regarding the coal mining strike the company said: "The production at this company's mines In the southern district of Colo rado for the first IS days of April iveraged 5.85 tons per day for each miner at work. That was before the federal troops closed the saloons. For the first 18 days of June (with all su loons closed) each man produced 6.52 tons, which mennt an average Increase In wages of over eleven per cent per man. "This has confirmed the view lnna held by ns, that If saloons and drink ing could bo eliminated from the coal districts, not only the miners but the companies would be greatly bono- fitcd." JAILS ARE EMPTY. Tho Telegram (Wheeling, W. Va.), speaking enthusiastically of the changed conditions In Wheeling, tells us that "On the 8th of July the prls oners were so thoroughly cleaned out of tho workhouse that when the Jail I ofllctnls sent for some men to clean the Jail there were not enough men In prison to do It, and the Jail officials had to do the work themselves." One Instance Is related of a former leader of the wets who Is In the gro cery business. A man who had owed him a grocery bill for four years came in tho first pay day after the saloons were closed and gave him $10 on his account. He explained that now that he could not spend his money for booze, he would have It to pay his honest bills. Similar Incidents are re lated by the hundreds from all over the state. "INFERNAL REVENUE." "We are told that we must have the liquor traffic for the revenae It yields, for the vast sum that flows annually into the coffers of the na tion through Infernal-Internal rev enue," said Michael Fanning, In a mas terly address In Salt Lake City. "Who pays this revenue? Not the liquor dealer. The average liquor dealer In the United States last year took in J8.700 and paid out an average of $320, the difference being Ihe liquor dealer's toll. This, in the last analysis, is paid by starving wives, besotted husbands, helpless orphans, betrayed maiden hood, blasted careers, wreck, ruin, de spair and death." WHAT DOES HE GET? A New York business man puts it this way: "Suppose two worklngmen, quitting on Saturday, each with, say, $12 In his pay envelope. One goes to the corner saloon and spends $4 for drink going home to his family drunk, and with $8 In his pocket, while the other goes to the corner and delib erately throws $4 out of his pay en velope Into the sewer going home so ber, and with $8 In his pocket Which is the better husband and father? What did the first man purchase with his money?" ENORMOUS WASTE. The man of this world Is no longr Indifferent to the mountainous wast represented by the saloon and its at tendant vices. The statesman more than the preacher, the ballot box more than the pulpit. Is called upon to con front this awful waste of human en ergy, 1 this dissipation of earth's re sources, misdirection of man's toil. It Is by Jecree of the economist, of the good statesman, the boasted prac tical man of business, the manager of railroads and the directors of banks, that the saloon has got to go. Rev. Jenkln Lloyd Jones. NO JUVENILE CASES. Recently a superintendent of the de partment of Juvetlle courts of the Kansas W. C. T. U. wrote to the Juve nile court Judges of the different coun ties of the state in an ondeavor to learn the status of the work in each com munity. One Judge reported, "We have no probation officers because we have needed none. During the past three year? we have had no Juvenile cases." Another Judge wrote, "No children have ever been sent to in stitutions from this county." GOOD BUSINESS. Tho London Dally Chronicle, record Ing tho fact that a large employer ot labor has decided to pay the total ab stainers among bis men 10 per cent higher wages than the drinkers, states (hat be does this as a purely business proposition and in the Interests ot effi ciency; he has no npeclal ambition ar a guardian of morality. UNINVITING PATIENT8. That confirmed beer drinkers are especially unpromising patients, all practical surgoons agree. Dr. J. W, Woods. BROTHERS IN MISERY COMRADESHIP OF WOUNDED ON THE BATTLEFIELD. Letter Written to His Fiancee by Dying French Officer Reveals Triumph of the Finer Feel ings of Humanity. A lotter, which Is amqng the most moving documents written since the beginning ot the war, has been re celvad by a young American woman in Paris. It was written by her fiance, a French cavalry officer, as he lay dying In Flanders, and with the letter she received the news of his death. After narrating how he was wound ed in the cheBt during a cavalry chargo and temporarily lost conscious ness, the writer goes on: "There are two other men lying near me and I do not think thare is much hope for them, either. One is an officer of a Scottish regiment and tho other a private In the uhlans. "They were struck down after me and when I came to myself I found them bending over mo, rendering first aid. The Britisher was pouring water down my throat from his flask, while the German was endeavoring to stanch my wound with an antiseptic preparation served out by their med ical corps. "The Highlander had one of his legs shattered and the German had several pieces of shrapnel burled In his side. In spite -of their own sufferings they were trying to help me, and when I was fully conscious again the German gave me a morphia Injection and took one himself. Ills medical corps bud also provided him with the Injection and the needle, together with printed Instructions for its use. "After the injection, feeling wonder fully at esse, we spoke of the lives we hnd lived beforo the war. We all spoke English, and we talked of the women wo had left at home. Both the German and the Ilrltlsher had only been married a year. "I wondered, and I suppose the oth ers did, why we had fought each other at all. I looked at the Highlander, who was falling to sleep exhausted. and in spite of his drawn face and mud stained uniform, he looked the embodiment of freedom. Then I thought of the tricolor of France and all that France had dono for liberty. "Then I watched the Gorman, who had ceased to speak. He had taken a prayer book from his knapsack and was trying to read a Bcrvice for boI diers wounded in battle." The letter ends with a reference to the falling light and the roar of guns It was found at the dead officer's side by a Red Cross file and forwarded to his fiancee. Germany's Dead Letter Mail. The German post office Is to spare tliq feelings, so far as possiblo, of the families of soldiers who have fallen In bnttle, when mail matter, nondellv erablo for that reason, is returned to the sender. Hitherto it was the cus tom to stamp on the letter or package merely the word "fallen," or "dead and send It back home to shock tho relatives with this harsh brevity. Now the military authorities have been dl rected to use the words "fallen for the fatherland," or "fallen on the field of honor." In still another way the authorities are trying to soften the blow of death notices from the front. Hitherto this was attempted only In country dis tricts, where the returned mail of the fallen soldiers was handed over to the local authorities or the clergyman who then undertook to break the fatal news gently to the family. Something like this Is now to be done also in the towns and cities. Tho local authori ties will now be asked to select Borne person suitable for bearing the mes sage of death. Defined as "Burglary." The supreme court of Washington In State vs. Corcoran holds that a clerk In a store who enters with a ke;' furnished by his employer and takes away goods is guilty of burglary and larceny, since his act of entering un der such circumstances constitutes a "breaking." The court said: "If the appellant had the right to enter the store by the use of his key at any time in the day or night, that Is, had an unrestricted and unlimited right of entrance, he could not be guilty of 'the crime of burglary, even though he carried away the goods from the store. In such event the crime would be larceny, and not burglary. But if his right to enter was limited to the usual hours of em ployment, and after hours of employ ment he used the key for the purpose of entering the store with Intent un lawfully to, take articles therefrom, be was clearly guilty of burglary." In the Day of Temptation. Some day, in the great years to come, you will be wrestling with the great temptation, or trembling under the great sorrow of your life. But the real struggle is here, now, in these quiet weeks. Now It Is being decided whether, in the day ot your Bupreme sorrow or temptation you shall miserably fail or gloriously con quer. Character cannot be made ex cept by steady, long-continued process. Phillips Brooks. China's Cattle Industry. Contrary to general belief, China not only raises cattle In large num bers, but exports frozen beef In quan tities which have now assumed a commercial magnitude of such stxe that world-wide possibilities may be ex pected In time to come. Upward of 200,000 cowhides are annuallr export ed from Shantung. She Doesn't Save Them. 'Voung Mr. Twobble is very digni fied. Do bis letters to you burn, Pa tricia?" "Yes eventually." Humane Turkish Laws. It Is unlawful in Turkey to seise a man's residence for debt, and suffi cient land to support him Is also ex empt from seizure. QUIT MEAT IF KIDNEYS BOTHER AND USE SALTS Taks a Glass of 8alts Before Break fast If Your Back Is Hurting or Bladder Is Irritated. t If yon must have your meat every day, eat It, but flush your kidneys with salts occr.slonally, says a noted author ity who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kid neys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggUh and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains In the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and Irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste got four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy here; take a tablespoonful In a glass ot water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acids ot grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithla, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids In urine, so it no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Suits Is inexpensive; cannot in jure, and makes a delightful efferves cent lithla-water drink. Adv. The levees of the Mississippi river Bre being made "flood proof" by a cov ering of concrete. Reliable evidence Is abundant that women are constantly being restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vegetable Compound The many testimonial letters tnat we are continually pub lishing in the newspapers hundreds of them are all genu ine, true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude for the freedom from suffering that has come to these women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain such recommendations; you may depend upon it that any testimonial we publish is honest and true if you have any doubt of. this write to the women whose true names and addresses arc always given, and learn for yourself. Read this one from Mrs. Waters: Cahtoe, N.J. "I wa sick for two years with nervous ereUs, and my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all tha time and used a galvanic battery, but nothing did mo any good. I was not able to go to. bed, but spent my time on a couch or in a sleeping-chair, and soon became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went awav for hi health, and my husband heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and got mo some. In two months I got relief and now I tm like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend your medicine to every one and so does my kusband." Mrs. Tmu Wateus, 630 Mechanic Street, Camden, N.J. From Hanover, Penn. ITANOVEn, Fa. "I was a very weak woman and Buffered from rearing down pains and backache. I had been married over four years and had no children. Lydia K linkham's Vegetable Compound proved an excellent remedy for it made me a well woman. After taking a few bottles my pains disappeared, and we now have one of the iinest boy babies you ever saw." Mrs. C. A. Kickkode, 1LF.D Ho. 6, Hanover, l'u. Now answer this question if you can. Why should a woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that ' it has saved many others why should it fail in your case? Tor 30 yeans Lydla E. Plnfcham's Vegetable Compound has been tho standard remedy lor fe male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments does justice to herself if she doos not try this fa mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it has res tored Romany suffering women to health. P?-WHtetoLTDIA E.PIXKIIAX MEMCIXE CO. fci4f (CONFIDENTIAL-) LYNN, JW ASS., for advice. Your letter will lo opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. "Why Does Papa Walk Tho Floor?" At nifrhtf Bah? is restltus and will not sleep. Too many father and mothers have aleeiileaa nights because of baby's little nerves, Ho muni be soothed give your boy or girl baby a dose of DR. FAHRNEY'S TEETHING SYRUP The greatest infant remedy in the world. Prevents Cholera Infantum, cures Constipation and all bowel troubles, as cents at all dratf?uLa Trial bottle free if you mention this paper. , . Made only by Utti. U lAHKNEY ft SON, HActasrowa, Ma, Some Smoke. Bacon I see King Albert of llel- plum ban bought a million cigars for his soldiers. Egbert That looks as if It was go- Ing to take some time for the smoke of buttle to clear away. A woman doen't object to a man's past as much as she does to his pres ent to dome other female. Carolina Corn Country The Gulf Stream Land of Mild Winters Thousands of Acres Rich, Black, Sandy Loam. Eastern state level Coast Lands or rolling Up-lands of Middle State. New virgin farms or lands already under tillage. Corn, Cotton, Tobacco, Peanuts, Trucking, Hay and Live Stock Ample monthly rainfall. Sunshine every day in the year. Twelve hours from New York. Low priced lands. Special excursion rates twice a month. Write for free colored maps and descriptive booklet Address B. E. RICE. General Iaduatrlal Atfent, Dept. 6 NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD r.OHFOLK. VIRGINIA CRIPPLED WITH RHEUMATISM CURED BY BOMB TESTIMONY MMy w1feniorripp!"t with Rheu nmtmiatU'itiihacuuMliitnllTwaUc. After trying evt-ryttilntr vIm without KHttinir any ivlii-f I wan i..Tuud-l to trj S 0(reiV Liiiltii-nt. Tho flrnt txittleei'tM like chnrm and sff jrlil ImniwliatB rellnf and sftiT vug 8 bottlwt she win enHrelf well, 8ml doing her Work With perfect euro nnt comfort. " Not ImiuHiai'eHhehadsnotlKTattark l i i . l , ........ Bin in-, mm u i1 n-r, itiicw uiure i u " Liniment with the mmerenult. V'h are rjiv-r without a lttln In the House. I roCMjuuii-iid It moat highly." THOMAS MOOItE, Profflt, V YAGERS' LINIMENT 13 THE GREAT PAIN ALLEVIATOR Only emnoe In I arte Ue. Ilottles at ail (luulcnt, rrepurwl by GILBERT BROS. L CO., INC BALTIMORE, MO. Grounds for Complaint. Mrs. lleavyswell I hear that Gcr mnn butler you liked so much has left. Mrs. Eppycure Yes; he complained that the cook was not observing strict neutrality when she served Irish stew, Judge. Ooldon thoughts are readily turned into glittering remarks. Deseret News. 12!