THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. -"It "THE SHOE THAT HOLD3 ITS SHAPE " . U so 54 $4.50 $5 S6 $7 & $8 aJSVo'n m.. by Wearing W. L. Douglas 1?"!,a!e by over 9O0O shoe dealers. Known Shoes in the World. i nJ the retail price is (tamped on the bot .ImckiI g1 hiSh VncJT mfcnr h0el-. Ihe P1 ,l. Mme everywhere. They cost no more in San "o in N2 York. They .re always worth the ItovofW. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more iJawari experience in making fine shoes. The smart the leaJco in the Fashion Centres of America. I . . .. .11 ,,,,W f.irtotv at Brockton. Mass.. Lhri paid, Ule1 hmafcef under the direction and of experienced men, all working with an honest ion to mane me wi r"- -J S, . ..i,!,.r fnr W. T.. Dong-las shoes. Ifheenn V", ? w Oh th p kind you want, take no other firIN 7 "orctlmt booklet nptoWn. b. to ,,,,, hiclit tuiird of quality lor the price, SkFOR W. L Douglas UAf rresldnnt W.L. I)oucUe Shoe Co., loo spars: (., Hrotaton, masa. le ana mo ,cw f iped on the bottom. Boys' Shoe Best l.i the World $3.00 $2.50 & $Z00 1 The Purchase of a Saxon Insures Riding Satisfaction Saxon cars ere today generally recognized as the best cars in their price classes. Their greater value has been definitely and decisively established by their performance records in the hands of thousands of owners in ell parts of the country. The Saxon Motor Car Corporation has earned one of the biggest successes in the automobile industry. It owes its success to the policy of building good cars and building them in quan tities. Its cars have won the respect of the motor buying public. Such absolute satisfaction as is represented in the following testimonial is the big reason back of Saxon success : "I want to say that Saxon 'Six' is an automo bile that will do all the Saxon Motor Car Cor poration claims it will do and more. "We have driven our car many thousand miles and can honestly say it ia the easiest riding car we ever rode in." JOHN A. DIXON, Seneca, S. D. Saxon Motor Car Corporation Detroit, Michigan There is still some good territory open for Saxon dealers. For information you should apply to Mar-Del Mobile Company Baltimore, Md. 'M'WTfwwmiiHamilj Carter's Little Liver Pills I For Constipation f2C,abi!e r.crdyLthat ."'ways gives prompt relief In constJ. t S U Wes.tha tred feeling altogether and puts you t M fn.l.Rht,J8l,,niu.,?,es the Liver gently, but quickly restor- 1 5 a.n ,,ca.Ithy ac,ion! a lhe stomach and bowels l- uieir natural functions. Mtln v.u ,,.. i:: t Sm.ltPiii .6'"v u.uiiituiB. Mniiill I . Smill Price Genuine bears signature - T CHEEKS ?ol"LTHY COLOR Indicates Iron In the Blood. Pale or " 'wmbeVurhh.u.VU'.: LAK I h.K'.S I Ml 1IM Mil I i U - aMtftm M SmW em AUUkl St:,;,:':'11? wm m,i,,it t,,nt nil. s'" lms ""lwlth hor ... , Weapon. i i :!ir,'ingf"r'"""-ors." '"", sue uses a beau ECKLES ;T',Vo.,.R", :hire L"k,lecke, tn ' "n ounoi hornly spots. ,"' "ur Sn, othlne-double ' "'rtt .nd ,'. ,nd "l" V """PP? .S,?l,0?ut '"Okies L'h ilcln n,led to com. talon. ,Kln nd sain t beautiful ?i2,'l.'.0oriath'rtaoub, "nith t" ' "'l.atoUn,d ' i w- iecHiea- h Reason Why. L '. sp,! Pnsslnir Is n . jlliatr praising spcclnllft." fefs Need Care- Caught "Last night Hooked through the key hole Into tho parlor whero Bister was with her beau." "What did you find out?" "The gas." To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard' GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula it printed on every label, showing it la Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds op the system, jo cents. Natural Elation. Why the ecstatic framo of mind?" asked the man he met as he stepped off tho car. "You Keem supremely hnppy. Has the beauty of spring got Into your blood; has a rich uncle died and left you a million ; have you a new baby In the family, or has the boss raised your salary?" "None of those things," answered tho man who had the grin, "but some thing almost as nice. The conductor didn't take up my fare." FpeaUIng of economy, the only thing you will lose by using "Dead Shot" Dr. Peery'a Vermifuge, will be Worms or Tapeworm. One single dose an Melon t, without castor oil In addition. Adv." Too Fast. Young Lawyer I've won that case 1 Wife How careless of you I We needed the appeal money I Town Topics. Memorial Day brings to mind many of the gentler sex who enlisted either by stealth or openly on both sides and fought bravely shoulder to shoulder with men during the Civil Wi N TI1K wiir now being fought !vef In Knnipe women get Into men's uni forms ami Unlit buttles. For lUNtiini'e, there Is one girl Uy the mum; of Tom iiszelT who made a wonder ful record in the Itiis.sinn army; and ninny n wotimn like hor has won similar fume. Yet there has hern no war In which girls and women have not won this kind of celebrity. The Civil war was certainly no exception. There were many n'rls who fought through the war on b'.Ui the Union and Confederate sides. For example. Or. Mary K. Walker received n com mission as assistant surgeon, and went through the war with it, but there were many women who enlisted and went through hard service without making Doctor Wulker's reputation. For example, there was Frances I look, a fourteen-year-old girl, who enlisted with her brother at Chicago. The two enlisted In the Sixty-fifth Illinois and were mustered out after three months. Frances Hook, wearing male clothes, enlisted In the Nineteenth. Her broth er was killed at Shlloh. hut the girl, Ktlll wearing the clothes of a man, fought through the war until Chkku manga, when she was captured and shot through the leg In an attempt to escape. While she wus prisoner In Atlanta, Jefferson Davis Is said to huve offered her a lieutenancy If she would Join the Confederate forces. Frances, it Is said, replied to Presi dent Davis' offer that she would let herself be hanged before she would take up arms against the Union. She had enllstod under the name of Frank Miller. In one of the regiments from Ohio a girl enlisted. She was the sister of a member of the regiment. While at Camp Jackson and Camp Dennlson she handled lumber, performed sentry duty, and did other work of that sort. It was two weeks before she learned that there were two Camp Dennlson, and that her brother was nt the other one. Straightway she made application for a transfer and failed. She wanted to go to the Pennsylvania Camp Den lUson, and she wanted to go badly. Tho colonel of the regiment, a good sort of fellow named Morrow, talked to the girl for some time and made her confess that she was flying under false colors. Without much ceremony she was dismissed and sent home. Just after the battle of Chlcka- inaugn, Colonel Rurke of the Tenth Ohio exchanged n large number of prisoners with tho Confederates. He noticed a particularly clever and able young man among the prisoners he re ceived a boy who gave the name of Frank Henderson. The colonel became Interested enough to Imiulre who Frank was, and found out that he was n girl. He, or rather she, had enlisted with her brother at the outbreak of the waj. They were orphans, and were devoted to each oilier, and she could not bear the thought of being sep arated from him. He had been her only companion from babyhood. At the expiration of her enlistment for three months In the regiment she was mustered out, anil next enlisted In another regiment from southern Illi nois, where her sex was not discov ered. She was wounded two or three limes, discharged and sent home, and enlisted again In the Nineteenth Illi nois. She was finally captured, and n bullet wound in her leg led to the discovery of her sex. Thero Is no braver story In all the annals of war than that of Mary Owens. She came from a place called Danville, In rennsylvanla. Her hus band decided to enlist. Mary went with li I in ; she and he went to the front together; she had eloped with him, and now she was ready to carry her decision to the limit. Man and wife, they fought together until a bill et put the man out of the running; and even then the woman fought on. A Southern bullet struck her in the best ami she went to the hosplial, mt on tho record were written the words, "A more faithful soldier never shouldered a musket." In Brooklyn, N. Y a girl enlisted and fought to the finish through the war until she was mortally wounded n Hooker's advance on Lookout moun-iiln. Fanny Wilson enlisted In the Twen ty-fourth New Jersey In order to fob Warned. "Henry," said Mrs. N'aggles, Impres sively, "I've decided to take up Lec turing." "Nonsense I" said her husband. "I mean It, Henry. I have talents that require a wider scope than that afforded by the domestic circle. My mind is quite made up." Well, my dear. If you will, you will," ho said resignedly. "Rut I'll tell you one thing. You'll never get the public to sit up till one and two o'clock to listen" to you, the way I do." American Woman j&ffiT, fomM as Soldiers i I"W her sweetheart, who was a mein I'cr of (he same regiment, Into the held, lie knew nothing of her action, hut she f;aw him every day and came near belr.g assigned t,i the same lues tent with lilm. At Vlcksburg Miss Wil son was shot. So was the young man; and Miss Wilson, who nursed him, did not revei.l her Identity to him until Just as the boy was dying. She stayed ly him, closed his eyes, nnd then went to Cairo and got an engagement as a chorus girl. A little while biter she enlisted again, still In male clothes, us a member of the Third Illinois. She was taken to the headquarters of the commanding olllcer, It being suspected that she might be n Confed erate spy, but she made it clear that she was a good, loyal Federal soldier. In ope t the Pennsylvania regi ments a hi u'lit little girl of twelve years enlistee i s a drummer boy. She gave the nanit f Charles Martin, ami she appeared t. n clever little fel low and made I. .self useful to the officers of the regln.' nt In the capacity of a clerk. She wn? in five battles, hut always escaped whout a bullet wound. Her superior ollleers never suspected her sex for a moment. It was not until she was taken to a hos pital in Philadelphia suffering from typhoid fever that her sex was discov ered. An officer of the Seventeenth Illi nois, by the name of Reynolds, had Ids wife made a major. Reynolds him self was a lieutenant. She was a scout and spy and made no effort to conceal her sex. A girl named Annie Llllybrldge of Detroit became bet rot licit to a lieuten ant In the Twenty-first .Michigan ami decided to put on soldier's clothes and serve with him until the end of the war. She enlisted In the same regi ment without his knowledge and care fully hid her ldemily. She even went so far as to enlist In a different com- puny from his. One of her comrades, after several mouths, became aware of the secret of her sex, and when he was killed in battle the girl found his body In the field. She was finally dis abled by a shot In lhe arm and, her sex being discovered, she was sent home. Major Pauline Cusliman was one of the cleverest servants Ihe I'nlon army had thi'iiic'hoiit the war. She was an actress who lived in Cleveland and was employed as an olllcer of the I'nlon army. As scout, spy, and sol dier, the girl major made a reputation second to imne in the Northern army. Pauline Cuxhiuan has left a reputa tion only second to that of Relle Lloyd, to whom Sioiiewall Jackson wrote that she had saved his army. Mary Siczglc, the wife of n soldier In Hie Forty-fourth New York, en listed wlih him and fought in the hat tie of (iettysburg. She served for ll while as n nurse, but afterward put on male clothes ami did her share In actual lighting. One little heroine of the war had the honor of being complimented In general orders. She was a fifteen-year-old girl named Schwartz, living in a farmhouse about twelve miles from Jefferson City, .Mo. On the night of August 0, ISM. a party of bush whackers who had heard that It was a rendezvous of Union men attacked It. There were four men in the house, one being the child's father; they all lied and left her alone to confront the guerrillas. The little girl Intrepid ly opened the do r with a revolver In her hand which tlx! men had aban doned In their (light and said, "Come on, If you want to. Some of you will fall or 1 will." The bushwhackers tidd her that If she did not leave the door way they would kill her. "The first one who takes a step toward this iloor dies," was the girl's response, and the marauders left. New York Times. i V -irr.Aar- - Marvelous Tale of the Sea hur- Fooling Himself. "I nsod to devour my lunch rledly." 'I presume you were threatened with dyspepsia and the doctor ordered you to eat slowly?" "Oh, no. When the price of n l."- cent lunch went up to 75 cents I as sumed a table d'hote manner to keep from feeling that I was being cheated." to She Hsd Met Jack. "There Is something that draws me Jack. I wonder what It Is 1" "I know; It's his arm." Monkey and Squirrel, Chums on Steam ship, Commit Suicide, Passen gers Declare. Rored ship news reporters who have listened Indifferently for months to tales of Cuban revolutions, who have scoffed ut German sea raiders because of their frequency, and have got up to walk when submarine captures were mentioned, the other day sat up with an appreciative Jerk when passengers on board the steamship Santa Maria of the United Fruit line, from West Indian ports, beguu to tal:, the New York Herald says. The story wound about the fact that the Santa Maria carried n large collec tion of animals which Henry Ruff was bringing from the tropics to the New York Zoological park In the Rroux. Among the animals was a squirrel and In the cage nearest was a monkey. Pas sengers noticed that conversation between the two was especially confi dential, hut thought nothing of It un til one day when the animals were being aired on (leek. Suddenly the Deserved Rebuke. "I put my good money In your scheme," bellowed the smnll Invest-, "and now I can't get u cent out of It!" "Calm yourself," answered the wily promoter. "Other people put twice as much money in it as you did, and theirs was just u's good as yours." No Trouble Here. "Have you any trouble naming the hnby?" "Not at all. We've only one rich relative of her sex." First Aid. "When 1 bought this car the sales man harped a great deal on Its beau tiful lines." "Yes?" "Rut he failed fo mention that vjint I would need most would be u towing line." The Difference. "1 do not approve of this oscillatory amusement." "No more do I. Instend of all this new-fangled stuff, give me the good old kissing games." squirrel either fell overboard or Jumped overboard. Without a mo ment's hesitation the monkey sprang after. Neither was rescued. A question bothered the passengers who related the remarkable occur rence. Did the monkey, out of nffec Hon for the squirrel, attempt n rescue, or did the two, fearing n separation when they reached (he Rronx, form a suicide pact? Grafting Wax. The followiia,- makes n good graft ing wax: Take four ounces of pitch, four ounces of resin, two ounces of lard and two ounces of beeswax. Mix these together and 'dissolve over a slow lire. Another recipe Is as follows: Melt one pound of resin over n slow lire, add one ouii'-e of beef tallow and stir wllh a dry 'v'ck or wire. When somewhat cooled ."M one tablespoon fill of spirits of tui;entlnn and lastly live ounces of f5 per cent alcohol, In small quantities. If the clcohol causes It to lump, warm again uctll It melts. Not to Be Thought Of. "Son, you are wasting your time reading such trasfly books." "Can't help It, pa," remarked fhe gilded youlh. "If I ever got hold of n book I couldn't lay down, I might miss n dancing date." A Real Autocrat. "Here's the photograph of a famous maltre d'hote!. He has a stern and haughty look." "Hasn't he, though? I dare say that fellow wouldn't unbend for anything less than a hundred-dollar bill." Compelled to Tarry. "Wluit is the mi me of this rond honse?" "It's called 'Ride n Wee.' " "Ah ! A pretty name." "And appropriate, too. As there nre several roadhouses between this one and the city, by the time n blbuloui motorist gets hero he. Is often In such a condition that he can go no further nnd Is compelled to bide a wee. Competent. Rarber Do you shave yourself? Victim Yes. I also talk to myself, PREPARE MORE LAND GROW MORE FOOD "Seed and Feed" the Slogan of the Year. The papers ore filled with the appeal for soldiers, sailors nnd farmers, and nil nre timely, all nre necessary. Tho sailor is needed to man the ships that protect the shores, police the seas and clear tho ocean of tormenting nnd meddlesome masked buccaneers, to give help to the utiles, to make more cfllclent the present fighting units that nre keeping free the sea lanes nnd ocean routes. The soldier is required to keep nllve and Intact the unity ot the nation and the freedom of the world, to protect the lives of its citi zens from Incursions without nnd raids within, to guard tho honor and pre serve the dignity of the great United States, to rcuder not only sentimental but practical assistance to those who for two and a half yeurs on the bat tlefields of Flanders and the steppes of the East have been fighting for the freedom of the world against a domi nant autocratic and militarist Prus slanlsm, which, were It to become suc cessful, would mcun autoerotism, mil itarism and Prusslanlsin, nnd a "get-off-the-sldewalklsm" over tho entire world. The allies nre proud to wel come these new accessions to the fight ing forces, which mean on earlier ter mination of the war nnd the dawn of an era that will, be historic, ono that we will all be proud that we lived in. Throughout all Cunadn, Great Rrltaln. France, and all the allied coun tries, when the news was received that the United Stutes had entered the war, a thrill went up and down the nation's sides, and the pulses throbbed with n new life, keenly appreciative of the practical sentiment thut had brought to their sides an ally of the strength and virility of the United States. Rut the soldier and the sailor need to be fed, nnd therefore the cry for agricultural enlistment. The strength of the fighting man must be main tained. In his absence from the field there comes the necessity for provision to take his place. The appeal for farm help Is well timed, opportune and im portant. There are vacant lands a plenty In the United States that, given a fair opportunity under competent ad visement and reasonable help, will pro duce abundantly. Western Cnnndn also provides an excellent field for the prosecution of work in growing wheat and other grains, and while It Is not tho desire of the Canadian Government to draw from the resources of the United Stntcs, believing that It Is the duty of every patriotic citizen to do all he possibly can to build up tho stores of depleted foods and making use of every energy at home, the wish is to lay before the public the fact that Canada has millions of acres of excellent land capable of producing wonderful crops. If for any reason the render, having patriotism and a love of his country In his heart, nnd a desire to forward the cause of the al lies, cannot avail himself of the oppor tunities afforded In the United States, Western Canada will be glad to ren der him any assistance it can In locat ing him on Its vacant areas, where largo crops can be grown nt minimum of cost. Let us grow the grain, raise the cattle, produce the food to feed our soldiers, our sailors and provide food for our allies, no matter whether it is done to the North or to the South of the boundary line that In the object In view should not be known as a boun dary. Let us keep up the spirit of pa triotism, whether It be growing grain In the United States or In Cnnnda, but Conndo, fully alive to the necessity, Joins In the appeal of Its allies the United Stntes for more food anymore food. Advertisement AN OPERATION AVERTED IIIIIIINIIIIIllllillllllllllll Philadelphia, Pa. "One year ago I was very sick and I Buffered with paint in my side and back until I nearly went crazy. I went U difTerentdoctors and they all said I had female trouble and would not got any relief until I would be operated on. I had suffered for four years before thia time, but I kept get ting worse the mora medicine I took. Every month since 1 was a young gjrl I had suffered with cramps in my rides at periods and was never regular. I saw your advertise ment in the newspaper and the picture of a woman who had been saved from an operation and thia picture was im pressed on my mind. The doctor had given me only two more daya to make op my mind so I aent my husband to the drug store at once for a bottle of Lydi E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound, and believe me, I soon noticed a change and when I had finished the third bottle I was cured and never felt better. I grant you the privilege to publish my letter and am only too glad to let other worries) know of my cure." Mrs.THOS.McGow IOAI 8432 Hartville Street, Phila., Ta. KIDNEY . oPve disease IWllCI -thousands have It TROUBLE nd don,t know " a ivv v uswiw you want f 00d you can make no mistake by ualna- Dr. Kilmer's Hwamp-Root, the great kldner medlclna. At drua-Rlats In fifty cent ana dollar gltte. Cample alia bottle by Parcal Post, also pamphlet telling you about IC Address Dr. Kilmer A Co.. Blnshamtoa, N. Y., and encloae ten cents, also men tion this paper. STOCK LICK IT-STOCK LIKE IT For Horses, Cattle, She and Hogs. Contsins Cop peras (or Worms, Sulphur for the Blood, Saltpeter for the Kidneys, Nus Vom lea, a Ton ic, snd Pure Dairy Salt. I'sed by Vet erinarians 12 years. N Dosing. Drop Brick ia feed-box. Ask yourdcaW for Blackman'a or write BLACKMAN STOCK REMEDY COMPANY CHATTANOOGA. TENNESSEE pp ft&r? HAm BALSAM A tolll (nnnlloi ot urii LWfcH J BtlpatttanuUoftUdudrsS. -f For Rotia Color ad R,Wrr; Bo.utTloGr.7orKiilUk BSSLyg W". a tl 0 t l'rufrl.U. DAISY FLY KILLER 55sl?"Tft!ft all flies. uU Ul I H.0 at MULaaa'tva f Uf .M 1 Will iMHl rlnjenuytalaf 9mm utmUmln. SMhj SMten, f S Mat r a pnm fnptl4 tm $Lat Hiurout aoatsaa, ise h mue avt. aaoow.ru, a. . PATENTS Wataoa . Colamaa, D O. AdTlcasnd books Yr Pliant I iTr,WMbiiiffUa. aaiasnaaoaakla. Blsbastrafaraaon. HattMrrlaaa W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 20-1917. i - - - . i Lawyers Got It After All. The inseparable Slmpklnson broth ers of Los Angeles decided that they would save the expenses of lawyers' fees In case of the death of one of them by making out checks to each other. One of them died recently and the other took tho check for the amount of his estate to the bank. The bank refused payment because the au thor of the check had died, nnd the lawyers got the money after nil. Mean Consolation. "Duhbs has been stealing all my best Ideas. Now what would you call thatr "I'etty larceny." If your yrs smart or fcl araldad, Ro man Eya Balsam applied upon going to b4 Is Just tha thins to relieve them. A dr. Woman taxi drivers are the lutest In England. FIIX IR RABBIT. A OOOB TONIO Ad Drlrea Malaria Oat of the System HVAii.tlUkAkl mtm llltam.!.. T I It to numerous people In my pariah who were ... .. v . ... t...h lu.i.B. ui.i.ii. irrrr. j rao ommend It to those who are sufTerera and le need of a good tonlo." Rer. 8. 8trmDowtkL Bt. Stephen's Church, Perth Amhoy, N. I. Kllxlr Rabek, 60 cents, all drugglste or ky Parcel Poat, prepaid, from Klocsewskt A Cow Washington, D. O. . He Knew. She I wonder what those two wom en on tho corner are talking about? lie About another woman, I guess. A new building for the department of the Interior at Washington will cost $2,000,000. Met Contents 15Pluid Praohm ifXm 4 ALCOHOL-3 TEH CENT. Mil VS3SSS!t MWrn 9 simnaunsuKiwiu j .-- mm mm I tinfjtJieStomatBSoria grj nioMliofii Cheerfulness andRcstCoiilaaBl ncimcr unmm, pioi -j run ami. - - o"" AOettJaA 1 ..r..lLVmvfoP Constipation and Diarrhoci . . 'r. irt.n0 ana una itwi" .. rM$imileSinwi01 mU4 For Infants and Children. "aaaB Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears tho Signature of NEW tuk- V.V t'IM tlftv In . f 1 Use For Over Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper, twt atirraua aoaaaar, new voaa err. .