THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO. PA. ' V ,-,. . . The Heart of ByVinaie E-Ro Night A STORY OF i 8YN0PSIS. 8IIM1 of Daily's lumber rnmn rtlnrt nlrnrer In the camp. Wnlli-r Sundry Introdurvi hinisi If to John l'.illy. fcre btitii. "ititf Lilllnwm til I.uinImt or moHi of ll." Me nmltji n -cjij.i tut nn-o rlth. th ?ntnp ami tlie work lie h i rnmo from the lust to mpi unu-nj and nittl.e uccnanful. CHAPTER III Continued. ' Out of the near gloom, which was lightening a hit with dawn, the los trail roso, at) OKgresslvo Kiiuki''llf trojRh climbing uncompromisingly at n anRle of 3G degrees. Its center a tralqht r'ne In? sunk to Its surface, which wr.s polished IIUo Ivory, Its lightly curving sides the same. How many tapering trunks had gone Into Its two miles would be hard to tay. tor in some places they had sunk and been covered In the dip. say. over the ridge where the real mountain began, at the turn where It wound around the Elioulder. before ten mlnute9 S.ir.dry was brent hlng lieavl'y. though he said nothing and kept close nt Daily's heels. The logger strode forward and upward with an cary, cli:nl)ing lift lhat rippled pvery muscle In Lis loose body, while the man from the cities trained and heaved In painful labor, flipping on the wet earth. flr'in:lerlng In the rotten bark and brush that lined tho way. Th"y climbed beside the trail, not In It. Ahead of them tho Cnrtg of men had long since disap peared from sight and hearing. The forenoon that followed was the opening page In a new chapter of his life, and Sandry bent all his faculties to a grasp of outlines. He stood silently watching the work go forward. They had reached the cutting. Here, In a wide dip hi?h Bhove the world. It seemed to the Fasternnr was a huce circle of activ ity. Cloe beside the built trail a sec ond donkey engine fussed and screamed, reaching out uncannily on II s:dis for the preat logs, to haul them In with scree -h of fcpool ami strain of cable and turn them over to the mysterious steel rope that came Constantly crawling hack on Its trav eling lino This was railed the "yard Ing enelne" tli" on? at the fnot of the trail beside the rollway and the track being known as the "reader " The monotonous sorg of the cross cut saws had been where the buck ers were converting several hundred endfirtv-frnt trunks Into handling sections. A little hi'lnw, t'.vo foot-wide p'anks none live or six feet lor ': Irid been set into a Riant yellow pine about ck-ht f"t from the ground, one c.n either side, and on th"se two men were stand ing, their I'annel shirts open nt the Ihroat, their sleeves rolled up fren arms of steel and leather, tin ir Lead tare. Satidry watrh"d the hendirg of their backs, every murcle outline! under the clinging shirts, the play of their knees, the whole easy rippling f their entire bodies with the rg'i'ar five and take of the long saw. 1 te boards, known lis springboards, rose end dipped with the even motion. These men were fallers. and pres ently they would lay the towering monarch of the great wools to the fraction of on Ini h in a given place ready for the buekers, the hool; tender and the cable. In tho meantime the logs already down were swiftly stripped of their I. tubs, cut Into thirty and forty foot lengths. ro!i"d into the trail with peavcy and cant hook and s-ntupan l ever t'ne rid-e to the accompaniment Of thrill toi ls from the whistle-hobs restles-. cord, tlie straining of ne.'ir.g and the gqi.-ca of fib'T on puli-in d fher. The built trail ended here in the Shallow hollow between the first rid.'io and the great mountain beyond though up the face of the latter it was (Tolor.ged by a cleared path sharply iefined among the dense growth of the timber. He v. us impressed by the magnitude Cf tho country. Un every hand the lifting hills were clothed In trees, closo packed and of su. h girth and height as to seem a'most grotesquely Impos sible, iluniui.lty was dwarfed to In Blgtdflcanee, 1 1 K "5 an ant crawling oil a cathedral nolu.nn. Sundry looke'J around. Up to this distance the wiods were dotted with cuttings where the great stumps glowed white amid the vivid green and the debris or slarhings and trim mings which combined with tho fern and hazel brush and other under-grow-h to make a ported tangle, Iltit b'V(i",l. iv.ee the p"'i-rut trail, was ADD TO BEAUTY OF EARTH Writer's Tribute to the Tree l( Worthy Of Retnemo.ance Throu(jhOut the Agej. Oh! Don Peplno. old trees In their living btate are tlie only tilings mat money tunuot command Kivers leave their beds, run Into fines and iruvetn mountains lot it. obelisk and amies palaces and temples, umpliillieuleis aud pyramids rise up like exiiuuuons at Its bidding; eveu Hit? tree Bpirit 01 nan. the oniy iwug greul on man erouciu-s and cowers in Us pres.-me-It passes away and vainslies uelore enrat)le trees. . . . How uiuny lonU and Low oiutiy lively thougnts nuve bruu uuituieJ under this nee be many kind Hearts tiuve neat en uere lis bratitUtnt are not so tiuuierous as tne couples ibey have uiviieU to sit beside It not us blossoms mid leaves togetnei as tbe expressions ot tenderness it bas wituesseu. What appeu.s lu Hie 'jre. alisewug heavens: wnut sunn ttudes to tne everiual i'X aioiiiiiaius Wtiut proit'Slsllor.s ol eleinui HuiD ml constancy itrtim those wtio are m.mmmw.mm Wind THE GREAT NORTHWEST OtiyiicUl uy ifuUd. AtMi -uJ 'yjmuy nature, dense and untouched, waiting , for the hand of pygmy man to come ( and tako her lavish treasures. j By nine o'clock tho sun was shining i above tho peaks and the fog had van Ished from the valleys nnd although It was late fall there was no feeling of the death of the year On tho con trary, there was a sense of bustle and hurry and work beginning with tlie advent of the rains. The tidewater slough was batik full and mud brown with thick grass and water growths along Its edges. The Btranger uneon sciously drew great breaths of the sweet air of tho high hills r.nd began lo feel dimly something of their charm. John Dally was everywhere, looking at this, lending a hand at that, shout Ing some good-natured Instruction hero and there, overseeing with an eagle eye each nilnuto detail of the work. One of the new owner's first Impres slons was that In this man he had an object of great value. He was Just thinking this when there came one long blast from tho donkey over the ridge and the men dropped their tools In their tracks, the two on Ihe spring boards Jumped down leaving the saw Just where the call had caught it. fat out on one side, and the foreman came up to him. "Dinner time, Mr. Sandry." he said smiling, "I 'sped you're pretty bun gr.v." "What?" cried Sandry, "why. I hadn't thought of It' Is It posjlblo we've been here five noursT" "Sure. Time goes fast In the hills." They began to climb tho trail the men strnpg'ii.g oft ahead and behind the youngest forging forward In the caeerness of youth and healthy appe tites. the older characters, all of them hardened woodsmen, taking It more leisurely. I'efore they were half way up. how ever. Sandry was hrealhing heavily "Might 1 ask," said Daily "some, thing abput the change In the com patiy?" "Certainly. There has simply ben an outright sale of the Interests, all of m 1 Kmm II,,' A1 He Stood Silently Watching the Work Co Forward. which, or nearly all, I bought from Dillingv.orth U Krazer. A hfth. I be lieve, is still owned by a Mr. Kakeham. who is somewhere in South America I have tome out to take absolute i Large and P-ern the timber business" "I m e. And you've bad no epeiv erire?" "None." said Sandry a little shortly. "Maryanna Humphrey! but my feet is t' lider!" complained a voice behind Sandry glanced quickly back. Three lumberjacks were plodding up the slope, their searnd and weathered faces set Intently on dinner. On one, a red headed chap of some thirty-six or eight, powerful and rugged, he set his rharp eyes. "But I'm acquiring It," he finished "rapidly. Dlsdiaige that man." Daily did not turn. "I can't," ho said, "he's Just quit." CHAPTER IV. Old Reins In New Hands. The East and tho West had met. It was apparent In every essential that had to do with Sandry and his men In common. It showed when he sat among them at the h.d of thu long tabio. in the now earth; they and their snrouds and their Collins 'Ihe cuper ami tig tree have split their monumenis ami boys have broken the hael nut wun tlie Iragmeuls. iub.etus ol pus! live and future hopes, severed names whn n holiest rites united, broken letters o: brief happiness, bestrew the road and sperk to the passerby In vain. Wai ter savage l.andor. Growing Industry. This country pioduc es more talc nnd soapstone than all the rest ol the world combined The domestic output bas nearly doubled in the last deiade and Hie comparatively umlurni devel opment ol the Industry indicates in stability and gives promise lor con tlnued increasing demand Hair tit it is from New York, the balance cbietlv from Vermont and Virginia Soapstone linos extensive use in commerce us slabs lot tieartiiKlniies muiilels. sinks etc.. and when powdered as a pigment in paper making, as a lubricuior (oi dressing si. ins and leather, etc The tine granular or crypto crystalline va rieties are used for marking purposes under tbe name of French ibaik. Ol lllustrations by Ray Walters J i way he used his hands, his knife nnd his food. It glared when he spoke. (I paraded In his clothes, and most of all It stood forth pitilessly wncn ne sai by himself at night In tho plain little room under the dripping caves. They were nearly always dripping the pane behind the spotless curtains was al ways fclack and glittering, there wo nearly always the shut-In silence that rain Imposes that dense silence, lis tenlng nnd lonesome. Sometimes, to be nuro, It was only a littlo Oregon mlf.t that saddened tho night outside, but It had tho sumo died on tho young man from the midst of life In New fork. He was Mast and he knew It. Also, the men had known It from that first speech In the doorway of the cook shack. They spoke of hlra among them selves as "Dlllingworth," accompany ing the word with grins, taotlnj its flavor u delicately as any bespec tacled professor of tho East dallying with a new derivative. Nowhere In the world Is discern meni brought to a finer point than In the lumber camps and mills of the Northwest, amcng that floating gentry of the pike and peavcy, the kneo-Iared boot and the "turkey." who pass here nnd there with the seasons, picking critically nt the speech and doings of many places. Also, nowhere is there a stronger prejudice against any manifestation ot personal superiority, any exploitation of what may lie cast of tho Cascades. To them the man and the place are one East nnd Easterner. They felt for him that contempt which only tlie seasoned feel for the Inexperienced. And with the quick tiers which was his characteristic, the new owner sensed the feeling miong them It only added to that Jumble of sensations and Impressions which had crowded thick upon him from the first am! which he had had no time to assort and get under control. He had simply laid them away for future at tention. In the meantime ho went quickly at tho work of settling himself In the new environment. A load of lumber was brought up tho slough on the punt from the mill at Toledo and four men were put to building a small of fice. It was set at the edge of the slough, a bit below the cook sbac'.c where it commanded from Its two east ern windows and door tho track, tho reading donkey, the leg trail and the rollway and from the southern one the winding slough, the rest of tho track and the lower rollway, where tii donkey engine left tho logs. Its duty done. Alter that they rolled down with much sp'ashing to the nar row ribbon of water which, with ev ery food tide Lacked in from the bay. lifted them high nnd trundled them grinding and groaning, slowly down, perhaps to the mill at Toledo, perhaps to be laced together with mammoth chains, built Into a great raft and towed out to tho ocean to voyage a'ong the coast, down to southern Cal ifornia or up to Portland. A tiny, wheezy tug fussed about the backwa ter for the express purpose of starting the monster rafts out on the ebb. Inside tho new olllco were Installed a roll-top desk, a case of books, a map or two nnd several chairs, beside a small stove. He.-o, with the four pine walls around him, Walter Sandry at last looked around and called himself ut Lome. Tho drawers of the new desk were full of documents and mem oranda, the history, with statistics and records down to the minutest detail of the Dilllngworth Lumber company. These he sit himself to master as his (irst step toward the vast golden goal of the dream that had brought him west. Very shrcw-lly he decided to take nothing out of the capable hands of Lis foreman. Thero had been n sort of tense pause In the camp pending this development. When It became appar ent thnt things were to go on as usual the work went forward as If a line had been loosened. Pig John Dflly had gone about dur ing tho few days of uncertainty with the unruffled calm of his quiet nature, though there was a small, a very small ache somewhere Inside him. Ever since he could remember, his Ilfo had been cast In Daily's lumber camp when his father, old John Dally, had logged with oxen on tho eastern slopes of the Coast range and there was no Jerkwater railroad In to Yaqulna hny. When n 200-foot fir had tottered out of line and sent tho old man forever Into silence In the roaring thunder of Its fall, the boy John, nt seventeen, imrt nirlfpd on the relnn nf envernment WORTHY OF STUDY DY ALL Lessons Taught in the Booh of Ruth Should Find Comprehension in fcvery Mind. T'ic Ponit nf K nt n li the greatest pastoral Idyl In literal ura. It la louuu.-d on Hiving KlllilnebS tne l" ing Kindness ol Ibe Moauitess re vealed to tier luimly. and ihe lovmn kindness ol lloa. the weultliv Israel ite. to Kutb. his kinswoman ll also contains the germ ol tliai gieat hesrt eduess wincD is I lie center ut lUe go pel ol Christian lovu It is a nook that opens with tears snd luninie and ends with the sonuo ol wedi. ing bells The story turns upon Ihe siruigliltorwaiilnesr ut wiio showed kindness and aiunnness to Hum a member l a naiieii mat was Israel s foe. and in thai Kindness founded a new linusu. tne nouse ol Jesse and David the nival Hub thai begut a greniei iiihii liavid , ll was Ursi the mingon nl the blood ol the .lew and Uentiie svuimu ic ol ihe cosmopolitan wulin oi me Christian religion. U was u aicu In the camp and carried on the work, j abetted and aided by that cfllclent general, his mother. With Ihe years of his young manhood he had worked, following Ihe wlltlorness as progress pushed It backward to tho bay, seeing little of the outside world Bave per haps for a trip, once lit throe years, to Portland or down to San Francisco, and always during the past it bad boon the Dllllngwortb Lumber company Into whose vast holdings the camp bad cut Its way. Always thore had been no hand of power In the bills save his own. no supervision excepting the annual visits of some member of the firm who went over things, nodded, estimated, took figures and went away. He had car ried on his camp hlmsolf fought since be could remember with the Yellow Pines company, whoso holdings were j vast as those of the Dlllingworth. and had not thought of change. When Walter Sandry settled quietly down with no voice In tho doings of the camp. Dally drew a good breath and went ohend once more. As for the new timber magnate, he sat down nt the new deBk on the first day of his occupancy of the little office on the slough's edge and wrutd Lis first letter. It was on a printed letterhead: Dlllingworth t.umhcr Compiny. Toledo, C)ro;en. Denr Part: F!cellnr! I fancy I'm on top of the wnrl.t! lU'ish you rnuld step In here for un hours cluit. Tlie rounirv would nneiT.e you as ll hns me wllh Us ndirl'ty blgiiess. You f,el IIU n ntom crawling on the sed's ll'ior too smnll In count. The hills are like our beloved Cumuli, onlv ilu-y are their wild cousins from the n-llilerness. unkempt and sivnve . , There Is wealth here. IVid. untold wealth nnd I Intend to get a handful r.f It. The tltnhi r Is unsounded. It rem hi s nwnv to the Slleti reservation on tl. north nnd on bevoncl. Thene Indlers come Into ramp once In awhile w'lh hiiskets. n timid sort of people. (lhers. not ficliters. The stumptva U nnnn'fl eent. We nre the i-nnip:in, though we hnve a rival, a formidable ot.s. thr Yel'ow Pines, which operates to the smith of us I have met none of their people ns yet. but my foreman tells me there Is. and always hns been, had blond between us. Well, rtt-ar old chnp. I must not wenrv you. Wrlle me all the hnipenln(?i that loncern you there. Tell llU-slns If he neitlrc's one thin nhnut you I will skin him sllve when I come home for a flylt.3 trip. I hop. sir. you nre feeling comfortnhle and will go 'nto the wlno-r In Rood shape When the rprinc comes on I hellevo we can brln you out tiere wllh comfort the Pullman service Is smooth as gi iss acres ront nent. And I know the trip would tienellt you. As he wrote these words tho young mane bright blue eyes softened like a woman's nnd a grim line settled about his lips'. He knew, on the word of the greatest specialist of two conti nents, that the dignified old gentleman to whom they were addressed, a white haired gentleman with the finest hear ing nnd the gentlest heart, tied ir-evo-rably to an invalid chair, had at the most but a scant year to live. Yet he wrote of hope and travel and return ing health, wrote determinedly with a force that must communicate some thing of its light to the lonely wreck left by the tide of life stranded at the edge of that mighty, flowing stream, the metropolis. Ho finished the letter with a com mendation so tender, r,o indicative of a great affection, that It did not Bound like a man's, a son's to a father rather like a daughter's to an ailing mother, signed, sealed anil damped It. nnd sat for many minutes holding it In his hand staring hard with drawn brows nt the yellow pine of tho new walls. Again tho faint rhadow of sad ness, of regret, flickered from the past across his features. Then ho sighed, roso with his graceful quickness and straightened his shoulders. As he closed the desk and stepped from the office he felt that he had gathered up the reins of the new life. CHAPTER V. Wild Blood and Horseflesh. The fall drew on apaco. Sometimes tho austere gloom of the mighty coun try thrilled Sandry with a strange compelling; oftener It hold him at a dripping window with a load of lead on his heart. He had no companions John Dally, easy, simple, suggesting tried force, was his only comfort. In him he found something vnguoly fine, as the plain littlo stone at t'.ie bottom of clear waters takes on a certain simple beauty. They spent an occa sional evening together In the little office, talking of the work, nnd the new owner asked and learned many things. Into the amplo heart of white-haired Ma Daily Sandry had stepped that first night, wholly without intent. "He speaks like a man." she opined decisively, "an' you mark my words he'll prove hlmsolf so, if his hands are white." Of the girl Slleti he had scarcely taken a moment's notice. He did not even know that when she served him silently at the oilcloth covered table the two long braids were tied togeth er nt the nape of her neck so that by no chance could they fall against his hand. . Neither did he know that the dog Coosnah watched him always with pale eyes. Of these two ho knew less than of any other3 In camp with whom he had as much to do. As for tne girl hTsclf. she Kept awav from hlH vleln- thai that religion was not to be fount ed upon weaitti, or upon social casta, but upon ihj large, wholesome irwe of the human heart lloaz is immor tal emong I utile heroes lor his Kind riess. his plain, evervday generosity, nis sense of protection and care tor the lonely, unprotected MoabuisU girt, his dead kinsman a wire who tn ner poverty gleaned in his hartesi Held after the reu.iers lloai gave order to his reapers thai Ihev should allow her to glean even among the sheaves ot barley and bv ins tuif, hearted ness gained a wile. and. more than that made a place fur himseit r Hia' immortal company v.'h.i are renowiiei fot naught nut lor being Kind. Can lion Herald Kauer Man of Many Titles. The fca.ser is a man with many titles being an emperor, a King, eighteen limes a duke, Iwice a grand duke ten times a cnuni tiTle'en tune a seigneur three times a niargrave--these add up to hity. and he m oin or two other things count prime H nrj an met n. making nU tlllea at least ut- I ly-lour uy. Ortener they two. too gin unci Ihe dog silent witb a common consent like wild things of tbe woods, sought the wind swept top of tbe great stump on tho western ridge. Here Slleti looked down on the drooping slope and wondered of the cities and Ihe sea. He bad come from them both. She bad never seen a man like blm. His clothes were different. I lis speech was unlike. So were bis bands, white and fine grained. Also thero was another of bis pos sessions that she knew In every line and turn, Black Bolt, tbo splendid horse that stamped and whinnied with Impatience In the lean-to behind the filing shed. She could no more let him alone than she could refrain from lying down to drink from a mountain rill He called to her blood with Irrenlst- i,le force. Day after day she crept shyly to tho lean-to and dreamed, watching tbe slope and the log trail. "Ob, you beauty!" she whispered with a soft hnnd on the arching neck. "Oh. you beauty of the world! God made you strong to sorve and bcautl ful to bo loved!" And at that moment, on that par ticular day. Walter Sandry stepped Into tho duerway of the ntati-lo. At his foot on the sill the girl whirled upon him. her dark eyes wide with fright nnd confusion. "11 " she Btammercd llko a child. Sandry looked at her for tho first time keenly. "You are fond of the horse?" he asked. But her tongue clove suddenly to tho roof of her mouth and one of the Inherent silences that sometimes fall upon her shut her lips. She dropped her eyes, twisted her fingers In Illr.ck Colt's mano, and then Looked Around and Celled Himself at Home. with a gliding motion, soft-footed and swift, went past him, running toward the cook-shaci;. The Incident was nothing In lUelf. but it set tho man thinking of her Mo had seen adoration In tho eyes she bed on tho splendid animal, heard it in tlie words islilted and incongruous. "Queer youngster," said Sundry to himsolf. That night after supper he enme out, contrary to his curtom, from the little south room with its patchwork qull(i, .its crocheted mat and its antique lilble, into the big eating room. He found Ma Daily rocking In the little chair, her tired old hands lying comfortably on tho Portland Weekly spread out on Iit slanting lap. Tbe wall lamps In their tin reflectors sli vered her white hair exquisitely nnd brought out softly the Miousand kindly creases on her rudd" face. On the end of the Pnch drawn up to the stand Sildz was sitting, weav ing a mat of long grasses, and ber lingers were deft as an Indian's. Behind her on tho bench lay Coos nah, head on paws, eyes blinking sleepily. "Corao In, Mr. Sandry," said tho old lady In her rich volco. "Draw up a chair. We're restln'." He sat down and bent a smllo as brilliant as his bluo eyes on this hardy old mother of the wilderness. From the first he had felt her personality, though he had no time to pay uioro than a passing attention to It. "I should think you'd need It." ho said. "How do you nianago to keep up tho stroke ?' "Law bless you!" she laughed eas ily, "I ben trained to It. I've cooked In camp, young man, for forty-two year straight ahead." "Then you've seen the growth of the country the coming of railroads, the making of towns." "Right from the bottom up. Seen 'em grow from three cabins an' a cov ered wagon." "You've witnessed the Inroads cf the world on this fine timber, too." "Yes, an' It hain't toched yet. I've seen it cut up over the Range an' down this side, an' thoy'a double stumpage for every acre that's ben cut, between here'n the coast." fTO DK CONTlNUK.D.t Nourish Your herve. People ol c nervous disposition need a nourisuiiig. nerve bunding diet fc-ggs serveu in various ways, milk, ce reais. etc, should be a standard part ot I lie diet, lie care.ut ol a lavish use of tomatoes or red beets, tiuppi) vout table Willi guatitities ol run and tresli vegetables and serve bran bteud or biscuit liequelitly. Should you uavn a teiiueiiiy to obesity be carerm to avoid an excess ol starch and sweets, luusiili youi iliysician about any eS pecial tenueucy that you know your laiuiiy ot any member ol it lo .Misses aud. guided by bis advice, eliminate suen loods as mlslil ue liaiuilul In laumiea wuete them is no special in deposition or tieiediiary tendency to be coiMiuered let common sense guide you, te.J up ou dietetics ami aerp voul uu.e tree Itotu unlieuiluiul cone bum tons aud indlgestiule loods Vou win liuu tins study au imeiuaiiug one, out beware oi lads A diet must ue vailed tu oe wlio.eaouie. and n is bel let to use spices and couuiuienu 10 uiouetation loan U' lei youi tame lack bavoi I rum overneai ill leaving out eveiyitiiiiK tbal Ut not pi-eui,ueuUJf wlioitutcuie. I Jiaxdi&t r ;-' Now in Good Health Through Use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Say it is Household Necessity. Doctor Called it a Miracle. All vomen ought to know the wonderful effects of talcing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound even on those who seem hopelessly ill. Here are three actual cases: Hardly Ablo to Move. Albert Lea, Minn. Tor about a year I had sharp pains across my back and hips and was hardly ablo to novo around tlie house, lly head would ncho and I wa3 dizzy and had no appetite. After taking Lydia E. Hnkhaa'a Yecptablo Compound nnd Liver Tills, I era feeling stronger than for years. I have a littlo bey eight months old and am doing my work all nlono. I would not bo without your remedies in tho houso as thero aro ncna liko then." Mrs. F. EL Yost, Oil Water St, Albert Lea, ilba. Three Doctors Gavo Her Up. Tittsburg, Tenn. tt Tour medicho lias helped mo wonderfully. When I M-as a girl 13 years old I was always sickly and delicate and suflercd from irregularities.- Three doctors gave mo up and said I would go into consumption. I took Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound and with tho third bottlo began to feel lietter. I soon lecamo regular nnd I trot stroncr and shortly after Knw I have two nice Rtout healthy children and am ablo to work hard every day." Mrs. Clementina Di;i:nniNo,4 Gardner fct.,TroyIIil!, Tittsburg, Penn. All women aro Invited to write to the LydlnE. Pinkliam Medl Clo Co., Lynn, Mass., tor pnecial advie It r1!l hn fnnMrtptitiul. About every len years an old Joke Is given a new lease of life. Throw Off (-'otdi and Prevent Crip. WTirn run toil a cild cumins un, tnkft I.AlA TIV HltOMo QUIMNH. Jt rfninTus raufl uf lo ,l kii.l drip dnlfOKS RIIOMO VtlMlMU M W OUOVK d tlsnumre uo box 1m. Tlio rouii ir, success la shy or rapid transit facilities. KIDNEYS CLOG UP FROM EATING TOO MUCH MEAT Take TablcsFOor.ful of Salts If Eack Hurts or Gladder Eothcra Meat Forms Uric Acid. We aro a nation of meat enters onil jur blood Is tiled with uric acid, Bays I woll-known authority, who warns us .o bo constantly on gu.rd against kid icy trouble Tho kidneys do their utmoBt to frco .ho blood of this irritating acid, but Dccomo weak from tho overwork; .hey get sluggish; tho c'.imlnatlve tls- ues clog and thus tho waste Is re tained In the blood to poison the ca .Iro system. When your kidneys echo and fool like lumps of lead, and you have sting jig, pains In the back or the urine Is cloudy, full of sediment, or tho blad dor Is Irritable, obliging you to seek relief during tho night; when you have icvere headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; tako a tablespoonful In a glass of water beforo breakfast each morning and In a few days your kid noys will act flno. This famous salts Is made from tho acid of grapes and lemon Julco, combined with lithla, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to nou tralize tho acids in urine so it Is. no longer a source of irritation, thus end ing urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful elTerves cent llthla-water drink, and nobody can make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean and active. Adv. Way of the Law. Prison Visitor What terrible crime has this man committed? Jailer He has done nothing. He I leroly happened to be passing, when Tough Jim tried to kill a man, and be Is being he'd as a witness. VlBltor Where Is Tough Jlra? Jailer He Is out on ball. The downhearted man should rheer up: the chances are his wire Ian t a mind reader. The Prince ot Wales Is president ot the naval nnd military war pensions committee. To Build Up After Grippe, Colds Bad Blood Take a blood cleanser and alterative that starts tho liver and stomach Into virorous action, called Dr. Pierce's Go'.dcn Medical Discovery because of ono of Its principal Ingredients the Golden Ecal plant.. It -assists tho body to manufacture rich red blood which feeds tho heart nerves brain aud orgtns of tho body. Tho organs work I smoothly liko machinery running In oil. You feel clean, strong and stren uous. Duy "Medical Discovery" to day and in a few days you will know that tho bad blood is passing out, and nnw, rich, puro blood Is filling your vpitiB and orterlea, Ilarrlsburg, Tcnn. " TVhcn I waa singlo I suf. fercd a creat deal from female weakness because my vork compelled mc to stand a)l day. I took Lydia E. I'inkham'a Vegetable Compound for that and v,'a3 made stronger by its use. After I was married I took tbo Compound again for a femalo trouble and after three montbs I passed Tkbat tho doctor called a growt'j. lie Baid ft was a miracle that it camo away n3 one generally goes under the knifo to have them removed. I never want to bo vithout your Compound in tho house." Mra. Frank Kjjobl, 1C2 Fulton St., Uarriaburg, Perm. 1 ikiSfrtfR k'' .1 I was married. 1 Its Meaning. "Is there anything in Uiat cipher?" "Well, it probably was not devised nien-ly for naught." T If cross, feverish, constipated, give "California Syrup of Fips." A laxative today saves a sick child tomorrow. Children simply will not take the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach dour. Look at the tongue, mother! If coat ed, or your child Is listless, cross, fev erish, breath bad, restless, doesn t eat heartily, full of cold or has sore ihroat or any other children's ailment, given tcaspoonful of "California Syrup ot Figs," then don't worry, because it Is perfectly haunless, and In a few hours all this constipation poison, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, piayful chfld again. A thor ough "insldo cleansing" is ofttimes all that Is necessary. It should be the first treatment given in any sickness. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs". which has full directions for babies, children ot all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bcttlo. Adv. In Local 'hipping Circles. Parker What is your friend Omar doing? ilelny Oncratlng a line of schoon ers. Parker Between what points? Heiny The bur and his mouth. I'eoplo who always say what they think have but few friends I.NVtSTOKM uppuriunlly lu lnv,l HO t 1 1 .now in Kiting, cum. i vutivt niij.tciMi vitr Imrntlon. RonU dlvldi-nrta unlimited Jnnnitl Lhiil-rri. N.irth v.. Wlwniilw. vl. CK9 A Cold Proposition B When you are wheezing and sneez ing, coughing and hawking, you re facing a cold proposition. Handle it right Hclei Honey of Horchoimd and Tar quickly relieves bad case All druggists, 25cta. a bottle. Try Fika'i TootWh Drop BACKACHE, LUMBAGO Uric acid causes backache, p&inf here and thero, rhoumatism, gout, crave!, neuralgia and sciatica. It wai Dr. Tlerco who discovered a now agent, called "Anuric," which will throw out nnd completely eradicate this uric acid from tho system. "An uric" Is 37 times more potent than lithla, and consequently you need no I longer fear muscu'nr or articular rbc jmatlsm or gout, vt many other di cases which nre dependont on uno acid within tho body. If you feel that tired, worr-out feeling, backache, neuralgia or if your sleep Is disturbed by too frequent uri nation, go to your best drug store and ask for Doctor Pierce's Anuric Tab lets, full treatment DOo, or send cents for a trial package of "Anuric Tablets to Cr. riorce, Invalids' Hott Buffalo, N. Y. 9 1 U III r w nil !1H LOOK AT '5 lit