f HE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. Wh&Well Dress IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL emperdnce A PERIL i i i: i Lesson By VICTOR ROUSSEAU t'By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director o the Sunday School Course of the Mood Bible Institute, Chicago.) (Copyright, Hit, WesUrn Newspspsr Union.) (Conducted by the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union.) THE PATH OF PATRIOTISM (Copyright by W. C Chapman) SllWfSffll THE DEEP SE CHAPTER VIII Continued. ( 10 ' "Now, my plan is this: We must leave the airlock one by one, with father a light weight of metal on our Sleet, calculated to enuble us to walk, jand yet not to keep us down. We shall then simply climb the slopes of Fair Island under the water." I "I think It Is the only feasible plan, Sir," said Da vies briskly. "How do you feel about it, Ida?" asked Donald in a low tone. 1 Ida put her hand Into his. "I ana ready to do anything you wish, Don ald, dear," she answered. Til answer for the lady with my wn life, sir," said Clouts heartily. "Then we're decided," said Douuld. Now, follow me In slnglo file, hands ton the shoulders of the one in front of you. All ready?" lie led the way through the dark ness, down tho ladder at the base of the conning tower toward tho storage room In which the diving apparatus was kept. Then he lit a candlo. ! The Slebert apparatus possesses the Writ of simplicity. Donald, as he adjusted it on each with the aid of Davles, did not think it necessary to explain the mechanism. It consisted, first, of a waterproof uniform, then of a glass mask and copper cylinder, the Jitter covering the upper part of the body and fastening about the shoul ders. It contained a supply of com ircssed oxygen for several hours. The carbonic acid exhaled passed into a receptacle containing caustic soda, which purified It, thus liberating the oxygen, whllo the nitrogen could be inhuled over and over again. There was also a slnglo sleeve at tached by wires to a little storage bat tery worn on the neck, in which, when the apparatus had been properly ad justed, a small electric light could be made to burn by the pressure of a button. They waited a moment while Ida put on the waterproof uniform; then 'all followed suit. Donald and Davles Pressed themselves after Clouts, and Attached the weights about the feet of each and to their own. Finally, when all were in readiness, Donald snuffed the candle and lit his electric v5amp, w hich was Inclosed In a specially devised glass, calculated to resist a great pressure. Each of the party was now sealed irora all sound. They saw each other's jfaces very dimly through the glass Wsks. : Donald Indicated to Davles that he jwas to bring up the rear, his hands (upon the shoulders of Sam Clouts in jfront of him. lie placed Ida in front fef Clouts, and, raising her hands, put 'them upon his own shoulders, himself leading the procession. He made his way Into the conning tower again. lie opened the Inner chamber of the airlock, admitting Ida 'and himself, and closed It again. lie jknew that Clouts and Davles could take care of themselves. I The nlrlock, built to be used for escape In just such an emergency, was Want for one temporary tenant alone. But two could Just manage to squeeze In, and Ida could not huve undertaken ,the plunge alone. I They were breathing the stored oxy jen within the copper cylinders. They were safe for the present. The transit jwas not especially perilous In Itself, Stmt there were dangers to face the possibility of being too heavily weight ed and sinking Into the ooze; that of being too light and losing balance. These had to be met i Through the glass mask Donnld saw Ida's face. She was composed, and, in Isplte of the distorting medium, he was sure that he saw a look of trustful love in her eyes. i lie started the compressed-air appa ratus to keep the sea water out of the llock, and opened tho outer door. They 'looked Into the nothingness of the cean bottom. The wall of inky water was hardly llluinluod by the faint light that shono from their sleeve-lamps. ! Donald pressed Ida's hand. He felt Iter fingers flutter in his. She under stood what she was to do. She placed her head and shoulders wlthffl the aperture. . Donald raised her feet and pushed er into the sea. lie saw the night of water swallow her. And, choking down his fears, he plunged in after her. CHAPTER IX. ; On tne Sea Floor. ' He struggled for balance as the sea .depths enveloped him. lie groped )n the water as In a fog. The swirl of bubbling air from the oxygen appara tus In the lock carried him some dis tance from the submarine, and then he felt himself sinking. He sank very slowly, and as he sank lie groped for Ida. lie could not find her. The submarine bad disappeared completely. He waded to and fro clumsily. He was like a dead man who wakes In an uninhabited purgatory of desolation. There was nothing anywhere noth ing. Only the yielding water, at which his fingers clutched fruitlessly. He began to walk for six paces in very direction, calculating that in this way he could bound a parallelogram and return to his starting point. Out he saw nothing, and he did not know that he had returned to the place from fwhlch he bad set out LHe started wildly backward, beltev g that the submarine lay behind him. a he walked, dragging his Weight like convict's chain and ball, "suddenly ,th outlines of the F6S appeared be fore him. I He reullzed that she was lying with ,her bow higher than her stern. At once be grasped the situation. She had sunk with her bow toward land, and from this end, therefore, he must start on the ascent of Fair Island's subterranean base. And this discovery renewed his cour age. Of course, the others were en deavoring to make the ascent, while he had gono floundering in the wrong direction, downward toward the heart of the crater. He made his way parallel with the submarine's bow, keeping well within sight of the elusive craft, which would dlsuppenr inomtrL,y before his eytj and suddenly appear again, nlmot within arm's reach. Suddenly be stopped. He stnred at the oozy floor, Ills light had cast his shadow In front of him. Rut that was Impossible. It was no shadow. It was a flat tened man, a dwarfish figure, ridicu lously mlsproportloned, resembling an imago seen In a curved mirror. It ap proached slowly and uncertainly. For a moment Donald felt his heart stand still with fear. It was a nightmare figure, terror Incarnate. A little glow flashed from its arm. They drew to gether. They stood looking at each other, peering through their thick masks. But in that vague medium recognition was impossible. Donald saw only the blurred fea tures behind the thick glass that cov ered the face, distorted and twisted by the refraction. Ho surmised that it was not Davles. Davles could have made himself known by any of a num ber of symbols of the seaman's free masonry. But then, it could not be Clouts either. He caught at the figure's hand and raised it to his sleeve-light It was a woman's hand It was Ida's. They knew each other. Donald took her Angers In his, and together they started on the ascent. To his horror, Donald perceived that the water was becoming opaque. It presaged the appearance of the sea monsters. They were In this lair, and this substanco was no food, no plankton that those - devils pushed forth before tbem like a veil, but a material designed to shield them from the filtering sunlight. Donald grasped Ida's hand and fought his way through the clinging mass. As he swung his free arm, upraised, It struck against a rocky barrier overhead. The ooze underfoot had yielded to solid rock. He thrust out bis arms on either side, and still found rock. He realized He Struggled for Balance as the Sea Depths Enveloped Him. that they were no longer ascending the mountain, but had struck a cave. Donald stood still, reflecting. Did Ida understand? There was no way In which to tell her. He was about to retrace his steps when he perceived, a long distance In front of him, a tluy glimmer of light. At first he hoped that It was daylight But that was impossible. Ida raised her hand and pointed. She, too, had seen it and had placed the same interpretation upon it At every step the light grew clearer. It was not stationary, but swung-to and fro slowly from side to side, ris ing and falling, yet seeming to retreat slowly as they advanced. Donald strained his eyes through the mask, expecting every moment to see the form of one of his comrades. The light stood still immediately In front of them, upon a level with Don ald's eyes. lie leaned forward, put out his hnnd toward it Suddenly Ida leaped backward, dragging hlra violently with her. There was a sense of sound, or vibration, rather, like the closing of a trap's Jaws. They seemed to snap together hardly a foot from Donald's head. And he saw suddenly, as If it had at that moment only become risible, the shadowy form of some vast monster lurking within the recesses of the cave. It was one of the. giant forms of deep-sea life, perhaps holding the same relationship toward the sea beasts as tigers do toward men. It might have followed the swarm when they as sembled in the submarine crater, pre paratory to tbelr emigration south ward. It was not one of the monsters that bad attacked the boat for Donald could discern a fishlike body and a huge head with gleaming eyes, and a pair of hinged Jaws that gaped wide as If to search for the prey that bad eluded them. The light was a phosphorescent lure used by the creature to draw its vic tims within the cavern In which It lurked. The sluggish monster re mained quiescent, and again the lure appeared, dangling between the Jaws from the snout above them. Donald pushed Ida before him and fled out of the cave until be trod upon the ocean ooze again. And they con tlnued to crawl at the bottom of . the sen, two helpless human creatures, un bellcvably helpless, while around them the fierce, predatory swarms sought their diurnal food. Donald had found the slope of the Island when tho water began to grow thick again. Presently a piiowphorescent patch appeared In the distance. It became less hazy, It seemed to concentrate. The ocean suddenly became like trans parent Jelly. And, facing him, Donald saw the outline of one of the sea monsters, visible now and horribly magnified. The eyes opened upon his own. They were not currantlike in that medium, but expanded to the full, great orbs like sunflowers that glowered on their prospective prey, larger than the eyes of any beast created since leviathan and behemoth. However, tho creature made no move toward hlra aj Donald, almost para lyzed, remained confronting It. no saw the gorilla form, with its short, budding limbs, the trunk of gorilla's thickness, the narrow flippers, and the triangular head. He felt as some primeval man might have done when he looked into the face of the mastodon. The creature did not pursue him, but stood, swaying gently, dreadfully human. Donald snatched at Ida and tried to run. He tripped and fell. He dragged himself to his feet again. He became aware of a barrier between the monster and himself, which had, perhaps, saved them. He had stumbled upon a spiny substance, a cornllold growth that proved to be the outpost of a submarine forest It was a field of crlnolds, the yellow lilies of the sea. Beautiful plants with branching arms, they bent and swayed before Donald's eyes as they drew in the mi nute forms of life on which they sub sisted. They were vegetable octopods, carnivorous Scavengers of the deep, which feasted on the small fish that they entangled in their waving branches, and drew by the ciliary movements of the lining of their ten tacles toward the central stomach. Donald saw one of the waving arms sweep down toward him. He tore at it with his fingers. To his surprise, the brittle branch broke loose and settled slowly In the ooze, there to be come the embryo of a plant From every quarter the tentacles, ns If ap prized of their presence, came swoop ing slowly toward them. Donald saw Ida grasped In their clinging clutch. Madly he tore at the graceful, shrinking forms, until he had cloven a wide swath before him, and the arms, balked and baffled of their prey, withdrew. (TO BE CONTINUED.) NIAGARA KEEPS ARMIES WELL Chlorine, Used In Water, Kills the Germs of Disease, Yet Leaves the Drinker Untouched. In the trenches of Europe there must be pure water, lest epidemic dis ease sweep over them, destroying more than the shells, shrapnel and machine guns of the enemy ; and Niagara comes forward with chlorine, or an allied product, which kills tho germs of dls- easo, yet leaves the drinker un touched. In the simplest forms, the process of breaking up salt and gutting command of the qualities of the two elements In it consists of dissolving about one part of common salt In eight parts of water and passing a given current of elec tricity through it The resultant fluid Is a great bleacher and disinfectant. A gallon of It will kill all the germs in a day's drinking water of a city like Washington, A thousand American cities sterilize their water with these products . of Niagara, which have done more than any other agency in the hands of the sanitarians to wipe out water-borne epidemics. In the hospitals of France and England they form the active part of mixtures used to sterilize the wounds of the soldiers. National Geographic Magazine. Argentine's Wheat Crop. Reports from tho Argentine state that weather conditions are ideal for the growth of wheat The official pre-. Umlnary estimate Is for a crop of 240, 000,000 bushels. The large crop of 1015-10 was 173,000,000 bushels, and tho average for the five preceding years was 140,000,000 bushels. Domes tic requirements are about 70,000,000 bushels. The large crop now growing will be available some time after Janu ary 1 if transportation is furnished. The Argentine oats crops Is estimat ed at 88,000,000 bushels, or 12,000,000 bushels more than the crop of 1015, of which 67,000,000 bushels were exported. No Time for Debate. "Jlbbes is the kind of fellow who never makes a move without first ask ing hlmsqlf whether or not It will be good for bis health." "I saw blm Jump six feet In the air yesterday to dodgt an automobile. Inatlnct probably told him what was good for his health, without bis stopping to debate the mat ter." To Keep Pipes of Furnace Clean. In order to recover small articles dropped through the floor register grating of a hot-air hentlng system without the necessity of removing a section of the pipe, mesh gratings may be fitted Into place. No. 6 gauge wire mesh may be used In pieces Just large enough to fit into the metal box be low the register. Women' Wm , : . Evening Frocks Obey War Orders We ore under orders as to evening gowns; the edict Is that they must be simple. This is dlctutcd by good taste in deference to the mood of the public. Designers are not expected to sit down In dull apathy and do nothing as long as war lasts, and on the other hand, they must not seem to forget the grim business that occupies so much of tho world. The evening gown ap pears not to have suffered from this restraint In bclug gay. Designers hnve exercised so much cleverness with tho means at hand that there is room for thoughtfulncss. Velvet Is greatly favored for one- piece frocks that do duty for eve ning and extend their usefulness to daytime wenr by the addition of a gulmpo of lace or embroidered net, or en underbodlce with long sleeves of satin. This type of dress meets with the readiest approval. ' The evening gown, pure and simple, Is developed in the usual materials, of crepe georgette, crepe-de-chine, net lace, light-colored satin and mettallc tissues. Chlffun velvet, In more or less liberal quantities. Is used with all these, In combinations that add dignity to the evening frock. It Is surprising bow little of it can be made to go o far, like tho little- touches of fur Adaptable and The aptitude for wearing clothes In the right way has more to do with successful dressing than the style of the clothes themselves. American women hnve earned a reputation for a fine sense of Btyle and fitness that Is a "sense of clothes." Tcrhnps this Is the reason they have taken so kind ly to the capes and flat scarfs of fur that hnve proved, by a long way, the most popular furs of the season. These flnt neck pieces are adaptable and cusy to adjust Furs that may be worn either to muffle up the throat and shoulders, over warm coats out of doors, or to be thrown about the shoulders indoors, rould not fall to please. Whether any Inquisitive draft of air finds Its way to thinly clad shoulders cr not, the fur piece Is a most becoming guard against It. At concerts nnd club meetings, dances and restaurant dinners, coats are discarded but the fur neck piece lees Its duty and does It nobly. It Hands by the bodice or blouse of crepe, makes the uncovered throat plausible nnd tones up whatever cos Vne It happens to be worn with. At the center of the group of fur pieces shown in the picture, the shape most popular In capes appears. This Plaid Wool Supersedes Gingham. Plaid wool frocks are replacing the plaid ginghams which were so popular Inst summer. The plaid wool costume has the same pleasing goyety and in formality, but is, of couse, moro suit able for a winter temperature. These plaid frocks are made with exceeding ilmpllclty; n surplice bodice finished with a long roll collar of white pique or wash satin nnd narrow, turned-bnek cuffs to match, and a skirt hanging Mrnlght at buck and front, with sad dJcbag side drapery over tho hips. that spell luxury in all sorts of gar ments. It is their power of sugges tion that give velvet and fur their valuo In toning up fabrics. . In the pretty frock pictured an un derbodlce of net with sleeves of net top lace and corsage of silver tissue, Is veiled with crepe georgette. The skirt of the georgette Is worn over an underskirt of satin. Any of the fash ionable light colors will look well In this design and silver tissue Is made In changeable effect with all of them, so that the metallic corsage bears out the color scheme. It will be noticed that the skirt Is longer than Is usual ; this and the peculiar sleeves, small at the top and flaring widely to the wrists, give the .design novelty and dash. To brighten up the dark colored frocks for evening and for wear with other dark frocks, strands of bright colored beads have a special value.' They are' selected to emphasize touches of'color that appear elsewhere In the costume, or to redeem one-color dark frocks from soraberness. Chi nese beads are proving the tnost In teresting, but strands mnde to order for special frocks draw their inspira tion from many sources. ."HI i Popular Furs stylo is made up In all the soft flat furs as mole, ermine, seal, kolinsky, squirrel nnd mink. In He picture it Is developed In chinchilla. The cape Is lined with soft gray messallne satin and ties are mJe of the satin fin ished with a ball end band of fur at the ends. It has a straight band of fur, without the white stripe that ap pears In the cape, for a collar. Very often two kinds of r appear in these capes. The enpe at the right is of Hudson seal with shawl collar of ermine with out tho black points ar tall tip that are shown in the muff. This cape Is full enough to ripple a little and Is longer at the front and back than over the arms. It is lined with soft dark brown satin. All kinds of fur are used for the flat scarfs that are wide enough to form capes for the shoulders. They are usunlly about a yard and a half long and are sometimes discovered to have pockets Inconspicuously placed In each end. Just what they are there for Is to be solved by each woman for herself. Sometimes the skirt Is plaited, with wide box plait panels aj front and back, narrow sash of the plnld stuff, faced with bright-colored silk that echoes the dominant color in the plaid, adds an attractive touch to such a frock. A Spring Forecast ainghniu silk frocks are to be quite the rage the coming spring. They are to hnve full gathered skirts and snug, well-fitting bodices coming well down below the aormal walstUae, LESSON FOR JANUARY 13 JESU3 BEGINS HIS WORK. LESSON TEXT Mark 1:12-22. GOLDEN TEXT-Repent ye, and benevl In the Gospel. , ADDITIONAL MATERIAL KOI FEACHERS Matt. 4:1-11; 8:18-22; Luke 1-13 : 9:67-62; Heb. 4:14-16; Acts :l-; Johl I.M-38. PRIMARY TOPIC-Jesus chooses foul helpers. MEMORY VERSE-Come ye after me. Mark 1:17. INTERMEDIATE TOPIC - Overcome Umptntlon. MEMORY VERSE-I Cor. 16:13. SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC-IIow Jo sjs faced his task. I. Introduction (vv. 12,13). Mark do votes little or no attention to thecnrlj Incidents of the life of Jesus, nnd onlj Buggests the events Immediately fol lowing his baptism. Indeed, for tin record of the Temptation and the Ser mon on the Mount, we have to look tc the other Gospel writers. In tench Ing the lesson we must not, however overlook making some reference U these two outstanding events In thi life of our Lord. II. John the Baptlzer (vv. 14, 15) This section not only disposes of Joht ns having been put Into prison, bul Immediately plunges Jesus Into hit public ministry. Jesus' entry lnt Galileo was a part of his connection with John, Inasmuch as he withdrew himself to that pluce (See John 4:1-3) and made Capernaum his headquar ters (Matt. 4 :13). The message hen recorded as proclaimed by Jesus wai the Identical summons which John tlx Baptlzer had uttered. Jesus speuki of this new kingdom ns being nlrcadj come, referring, of course, to his owt person nnd ministry, but In Its actual establishment It was not really "al hand" until he shed his blood upon tin cross nnd the Holy Spirit descended on the day of Pentecost, when there wai opened the fountain for sin and un- cleanliness for the world at large. III. His Helpers Called, (vv. 10-20), In this record, we hnve the call oi four of his helpers: Simon, Andrefl his brother, Jumcs and John hll brother, the latter being the sons oi Zebcdcc. Luke tells us (5:3) thai Jesus was teaching. Those called were certainly nt work nnd God al ways issues his call to those wbosi time and effort ore being occupied even though perhaps for selfish pup poses. There Is no pluce for an Idle) In the spiritual kingdom. This call wns to "come ye nfter me" (v. 17), the purpose being that they might be come "fishers of men." Notice he be. gnn upon the common, familiar groun of fishing, something mutually nnfl thoroughly understood, und led then from that to a spiritual truth. In thll we see a good pedngoglcnl hint and t wise suggestion to the preacher nn teacher, viz., that we must begin t tench our lessons through the medium of past experience nnd of present In terests. Simon (Luke 5 :o) appears U have been a doubter when Jesurf railed him. Nevertheless, he was wllV Ing to try Christ at least once, nnd si nt his word, he let down the net Th( evidence of obedience Is found In versi 10, nnd Matthew (4:S) also Luke (Ql 11) tells us that when they left thcli nets, "they left nil." IV. His Helpers Trained (vv. 21 On 'Tim moult nf tltla nnll trno tatxt M. Ut V if Ul W US, . II 1 11 UU J V, '. 21) that as they went Into the clt) they entered Into the synagogue, where Jesus tnught them. The In fen once, of course, is plain. Whenevel God calls n man Into his kingdom, li begins at once to tench him the du ties nnd responsibilities of the king doni. Notice that In becoming flshert of men, then began close at home Brother sought brother. This was no) the first time that Jesus had called these brothers. (See John 1:40, 41), In the call, as nccorded by St. John, we are led to believe that John (th4 nnmentloncd disciple) first sought an Interview with Christ. The question of harmonizing the various calls whlcb Jesus gave to his disciples Is an In. foresting one and one which has given rise to a good deal of discussion. The one recorded In tho first chapter oi John occurred In Judca; this one oc curred In Galilee. As to whether thlf Is the one recorded In the fifth chap ter of Luke, there seems to be a gon oral opinion that It Is not the same, though wo can with profit compnr the two callings In teaching this les son. The probabilities are that ther were three calls: First, tho one re corded In John 1:35:42; second, thai one recorded In Matthew 4:18:22; nnd tho third nnd last wns that which oc curred Just before their appointment to become apostles, the one recorded In Luke five. Conclusion. When Jesus faced his grent task, he did not face It alone. II had first of nil the npproval of God the Father. He also had the annolnt- Ing of God the Holy Spirit nnd he called In the co-operntlon nnd help oi huninn agents. Jesus met his tempta tion and his tnsks not In his own strength, but In the strength of the Spirit of God. At the same time be ing God, he called to his side those who In turn were to become fishers ol men, leaders of others. His call to these disciples was three-fold; (a), to dlsclpleship, namely, they were to become learners; (b), to fellowship, for they wer to enter Into end hvo a part of his toll, tasks, temptations and sorrows (Phil. 3:10) ; and (c), to serv ice. They were to go out as his am bassadors and representatives. Th world always demnnds the busy man. The fact that these men had hired servants indicates their position in life. Jesus called to be his dlsclplci men who were busy with the common Onlly tasks, but who with prompt obe dience left those tnsks to learn of him and who then went out to turn the world upside down. It Is the Path of Prohibition (Excerpt From Address of Miss Anna Gordon, President National W. C. T. U, Be fore the Forty-fourth Annual Con vention of That Organization Held In Washington, D. C, December 2-7, 1917). j We praise Ood for the prohibition victories rising Phoenlxllke from wnr'a awful gloom and overwhelming anxi ety. Listen to the patriotic prohibit tlon roll of 1017: Prohibition for the District of Co lumbia ; prohibition for Indluna ; prohi bition for Utah;. prohibition for New Hampshire; prohibition for Now Mex ico ; prohibition for Alaska ; prohibition for Porto Itlco. A decade ago four white prohibition states glenmed on our map of the Unit ed States ; today there are 27, and tho District of Columbia, Alaska and Porto Rico. At the 1018 general election we expect Minnesota, Missouri, Florida, Wyoming, Kentucky, Cullfornla, Texas and Nevada to bring us within one of the 30 whose legislatures should be safely counted upon to ratify tho pro hibition amendment to the national Constitution. "Thestockarguments of the liquor trade have no value today. Great titles have adopted prohibition with no Jlsturbance to bunks, groceries, real estate or hotels, except on the right side of the ledger. Unprecedented prosperity has silenced the liquor men's prophecy of "miles of empty stores and decreased bank deposits." Increased population and additional throngs of summer tourists have for ever quieted the liquor men's groan lhat "summer travelers and prospec tive home seekers ovoid prohibition :entcrs." Even the circus performers prefer dry to liquor localities on the plain proposition of larger profits. Tho nation today needs the able-bodied men who make nnd sell liquor. Use ful and constructive Jobs ere awaiting those who by the coming of prohibition ivould be "thrown out of employment." Hundreds of avenues of urgent work oeckon the seller of distilled liquors and the men engaged in the brewing and vinous trades. ' To the liquor dealers the defeat of suffrage always means a victory for their interests. The trado expends thousands of dollurs each year In pro moting publicity ngnlnst votes for women. "Woman suffrage In New York state," predicted one widely dis tributed circular of the liquor trade, ''would kill the malted Industry of the United States." Woman suffrage In the Umpire state has arrived I The malted Industry must go I The pathway of prohibition for many years bus run parallel with the path way of woman suffrage. Today brave women who have blazed the way for suffrage or prohibition are Jubilant as together they press forward on tho orond highway of Christian citizenship and exalted patriotism. Total abstinence and prohibition can ooth be recommended to the American people as articles not "made In Ger many." It Is true that In the years agone the kaiser, desiring to maintain autocracy nnd conquer tho world, ad vised his nnval cadets to abstain from alcohol. But the chapter of horrors fumlllar to readers of war news proves that German officers nnd men demor alized by drink have committed un speaknble crimes against womanhood and childhood the blackest page In the world's history of Inhumanity. The kaiser ought to have long and serious thoughts concerning his prophecy thtif "the. nation which takes the smallest quantity of alcohol will win tho battles Df the future." Autocracy nnd alcohol rtill both be overthrown. Democracy and sobriety will win. The liquor men are establishing n new battle line of defense In the "beer and wine to be substituted for brandy and whisky." Let us keep the lssuo clear. "Camouflage" Is well understood by the W. C. T. U. For years the liquor men obscured the Issue and deceived the very elect Today, how ever, the American people have no illu sions nbout alcohol. The light of sci entific truth Is shining. Alcohol Is a poison, beer Is an alcoholic drink. Its manufacture destroys valuublo grain. Patriotism the safeguarding of this and other nations demands prohibi tion of the manufacture and sale of beer, The man who Indulges In whisky has a "rye" face, and all his actions turn awry. t During the war prohibition agitation In congress working men of the coun try were grossly misrepresented by the nntlprohlbltlon petition signed by, 2,000,000 men presented to President Wilson. In many prohibition states federations of labor declare they never wish to return to the saloon system. An analysis of the signatures to tho petition would - doubtless show tho names of brewers, distillers, saloon men and their down-and-out victims largely In evidence. Such men do not properly represent the labor Interests of the United States. 8ING A SONG OF DOLLARS. Sing a song of dollars Spent In buying booze, Children home a starving Mother has no shoes. Sing a song of dollars Spent In manly way, Everybody happy All the livelong day. i' . -Good Government WOUNDS DO NOT HEAL. I dread the task of operating, on a drinker. Sir William Paget, M. D. -Sr Wll