THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. 5 NORTH OF FIFTY-TH (Copyright: Little, Brown LURE OF HIDDEN GOLD CALLS "ROARING BILL" AND HAZEL INTO THE WILDERNESS. Synopsis MIms Huzel Weir, a KtennKriipher, llvlw? ut (irunvllle. Ontario, Ih placed under n cloud ly dreiiniHtiiticeii or which mIib Is entirely hlaiiiclcMH. To escupe fntm the KroundlenH kih.I) thut purHiiKH her, lie HccurcH n position nn 8chiolteu'her at I'urlhoo Meadows, In a wild part of I'.rltlsh Coluinhlu. There, ut u hoimllng Iioiimu, he first sees "UoarltiK Hill" WngNtulT, a well-known character of that country. Soon after her nrrlvul Hazel loses her way while wiilklng In the woods. She wanders until nlht when fhe reaches "Kunrlng Itlll's" camp lire In Iho woods. Ho promises to take her homo In the morning, hut (die Is compelled to Hpctid the night In the woods. After wandering In the woods till the next day, "ICoaring I Si 11" finally admits that ho Is taking Hazel to his rahln In the mountains. Hazel finds upon their arrival ut i the caliln that she cannot hope to escape from the wilderness hefory Hprlng. I'uring the long winter "Itoarlng 15111" treuts Hazel with the Kreutcst rosi t. He tells her he loves her und tries to Induce her to marry him, hut Khe refuses. In the spring he takes her to liellu Cool a,' where xhe can get a hoat to Vancouver. At Vancouver Hazel takes a train for (Jranvllle, hut on the way she realizes that she loves Wagstall and decided to return to Id in. "Itoarlng Illll" Is overjoyed und to gether they travel to 11 Hudson hay post and ure married. CHAPTER IX Continued. 9 "This Is July the twenty-fifth, Mr. Itoarlng Hill Wugstaff," she announced. "We've heen murrled exactly one month." "A whole month?" he echoed, In Block nstonlshment. "You don't suy o? Seems like It was only day before yestprday, little person." "I wonder," she snuggled up-n little closer to him. "If nny two people were ever ns hnppy ns we've been?" HI 1 1 put his urm across her shoulder end tilted her head hack so that he could smile down Into her face. "They have heen n hunch of golden days, haven't they?" he whispered. "You won't forgi't this Joy time If we fver do hit real hard going, will you, Hazel?" "The bird of 111 omen croaks again," she reproved. "Why should we come to hard going, ns ynu cidl It?" "We shouldn't," he declared, "nut most people do. And we might. One never enn tell what's ahead. I'.y and by when the novelty wears off maybe you'll get sick of seeing the same old Tilll n round and nobody else. You see, I've nlwuys been on my good behavior lth you. Io you like me n lot?" Ills urm tightened with a quick arid powerful pressure, then suddenly re laxed to let her lean bulk ami stare up at hlin tenderly. "I ought to punish you for saying Hilngs like that," she pouted. "Only I can't think of nny effective method. Sufficient unto the day Is the evil thereof und there Is no evil In our days." i "Amen," he whispered softly and fhey fell to silent contemplation of the rose nnd gold that spread In n wonderful blazon over all the western tky. "Twenty-fifth of July, eh?" he mused presentJy. "Summer's half gone al ready. I didn't realize IT. We ought to be stirring pretty soon, lady. These northern seasons are so blessed short. We ought to try nnd do n little good for ourselves make hay while the sun shine. We'll neeiln da monV "N'eedn fiddlesticks," she laughed. "What do we need money for? It costs practically nothing to live up here. Why this sudden desire to pur ine the dollar? T.esldes, how tire you joir.e to pursue It?" "On prospecting," he replied prompt ?y. "Hit the trail for n place I know where there's oodles of coarse gold, If you can get to It at low water. Ilow'd you like to go Into the rpper Nuns country this fall, trap nil winter, work the sandbars In the spring, and come out next full with n sack of gold It would take a horse to pack?" Hazel chipped her hands. "Oh, Illll. wouldn't that be fine?" she cried. "I'd love to." "It won't be all smooth sailing." he warned. "It's n long trip and u hard one, and the winter will be longer and harder than the trip. Still, there's a chance for a good big stuke, right In that one trip." "Hut why the necessity for making stake?" she Inquired thoughtfully, after n lapse of five minutes. "I thought you didn't care anything about money so long us you had enough to fct along on? And we surely have that. We've over two thousand dollars In real money and no place to spend It so we're compelled to save." Hill blew a smoke ring over his head and watched It vanish up toward the dusky roof beams before he answered. "Well, little person," said he, "that's very true, nnd we can't truthfully say that stern necessity Is treading on our lieels. The possession of money has never been n crying need with me. Hut I hadn't many wants when I was playing n lone hand, und I generally let the future take care of Itself. It was always easy to dig i:p money enough to buy books und grub or unythlng I wanted. Now that I've assumed n cer tain responsibility, It has begun to dawn on me th-it we'd enjoy life bet ter If 'we were assured of n compe tence. We won't stay here always. I'm pretty much contented Just now. So are you. Hut I know from past ex perience thut the outside will grow more alluring ns time passes. You'll jet lonesome for civilization. It's the most naturul tUng In the woeld. And when we go out to mix with our fellow liuniuns w want to meet them on terms of worldly equality. Which Is to say with good clothes ou, und a fat bank, roll In our pocket. And last, but not least, old girl, while I love to loaf, I can only loaf ubout so long In con tentment.. Sube? I've got to be doing noiiiethlng; whether It was profitable or not bus never mattered, Just 80 it was action." i "I sube, us you cull It," Huzel smiled. (Of courife I do. Only lazy people like to louf alt the time. I love this pluce, and we might stay here for yean and ) iutlsfled. But" & Co.) "Hut we'd be better satisfied to stny If we knew thut we could leave It whenever we wnnted to," he Inter rupted. "That's the psychology of the human nnlmnl, ull right. We don't like to be coerced, even by circumstances." If you made a lot of money mining, we could travel one could do lots of things," she reflected. "I don't think I'd wunt to live In a city ugaln. Hut It would be nice to go there, some times." "Yes, dear girl, It would," Hill ngreed. "With a chum to help you en Joy things. We can do things together that I couldn't do alone, nnd you couldn't do ulone. Kemalns only to get the wherewithal. And since I know how to manage that with n minimum amount of effort, I'd like to be about It before somebody else gets ahead of me. Though there's small chance of that." "We'll be partners," said she. "How will we divide the profits, Hlllum?" "We'll split even," he declared. "That Is, I'll make the money, und you'll spend It." They chuckled over this conceit, ami as the dusk closed In slowly they fell to planning the details. Hnzcl lit the lamp, and In Its yellow glow pored over maps while Illll Idly sketched their route on u sheet of paper. His objective lay east of the head of the Nans proper, where timid a wild tangle of mountains und mountain torrents three turbulent rivers, the Stlklne, the .Skeena and the Nuas, took their rise. A Ood-forsakcn region, he told her, where few white men had penetrated. The peaks flirted with the clouds, and their sides were scarred with glaciers. A lonesome, brooding land, the home of a vast und seldom-broken silence. "Hut there's nil kinds of game ami fur In there," Hill remarked thought fully. "And gold. Still, It's a fierce country for a man to take his best girl Into. I don't know whether I ought to tackle It." "We couldn't be more Isolated than we are here," Hazel argued, "If we were In the Arctic. Look at that poor woman at Pelt House. Three babies born since she snw a doctor or another woman of her own color! What's a winter by ourselves compared to thnt. And sho didn't think It so great a hardship. Iion't you worry about me, Mr. Hill. I think It will be fun. I'm a real pioneer ut heart. The wild daces look good to mt when you're ulong." She received her duo reward for that, und then, the long twilight hnv Ing brought the hour to n lateness that manifested Itself by sundry yawns on their part, they went to bed. With breakfast over. Hill put a com pass In his pocket, after having ground his ax blade to a keen edge. "Come on," said he, then ; "I'm going to transact some Important business," "What Is It?" she promptly demand ed with much curiosity. "This domicile of ours, girl," he told her, while he led the way through the surrounding timber, "Is ours only by grace, of the wilderness. It's built on unsurveyed government land land that I have no more legal claim to Li. Wi. Pored Over Maps While Bill Idly Sketched Their Route on a Sheet of Paper. than any pnsjflog trapper. Hut I'm golifc to remedy thut. I'm going to formally stake a hundred nnd sixty acres of this and apply for Its pur chase. Thon we'll have a clncb on our home. We'll always hnvo a refuge to fly to, no matter where wo go." She nodded appreciation cf this. The cabin In the clearing stood for somo of those moments thnt always loom largo nnd unforgettable In every wom an's experience. Sho hud come there once In hot, shamed anger, and she had come again ns a bride. It was the handiwork of a mnn she loved with a passion thnt sometimes startled her by Its Intensity. Just the mere pos sibility of that plnce being given over to others roused In her a rang of re By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR sentment. It wus theirs, hers und Hill's, and, being a woman, she viewed Its possession Jealously. So she wutched with keen Interest whut he did. Which, In truth, was simple enough. He worked his way to a point southeast of the clearing till they gained a little rise whence through the treetops they could look back und seo the cabin roof. There Hill cut off on eight-Inch Jack pine, leaving the stump approximately four feet high. This he hewed square, the four fiut sides of the' post fuclng re spectively the cardinal points of tho I compass. On one smoothed surface mil net io worn wnn rns pocKeiKiuie. Hazel sat down and wutched while he busied himself ut this. And when he hnd finished she reud, In deep-curved letters : W. WAOSTAFF'S S. E. COUXHR. Then he penned on n sheet of let ter paper a brief notice to the effect that he, William Wiigstnff, Intended to upply for the purchnse of tho Innd em braced In no urea a hnlf mile squnre, of which the post wus tho southeast corner mark. This notice he fustened to the stump with u few tacks, und snt down to rest from his labors. "How long do you suppose thnt will stay there, und who Is there to reud It If It docs?" Hazel observed. "Senrch me. The moose nnd the deer nnd the timber wolves, I guess," mil grinned. "The chnnces are the paper won't Inst long, with winds nnd rains. Hut It doesn't matter. It's sim ply a form prescribed by the land act of I'rltlsh Columbia, and, so long ns I go through the legal motions, thnt lets me out. Matter of form, you know." "Then what else do you have to do?" "Nothing but furnish the money when the land department gets nround to accept my application," he said. "I can get nn agent to nttend to ull the details. Well, let's take n look ut our estate from nnother corner." This, roughly ascertained by sight ing a line with the compass and step ping off 8S0 ynrds, brought them up on u knoll that commanded the small basin of which the clearing was prac tically In the center. "Aha!" Hill exclaimed. "Look nt our ranch, would you; our widespread acres basking In the sun. A qunrter section is quite a chunk. Io you know I never thought much about It before, but there's a piece of the finest hind that lies outdoors. If this coun try should get a railroad and settle up, thnt quarter section might produce nil the Income we'd need. Just out of hny und potatoes. Ilow'd you like to bo n farmer's wife, huh?" "Fine." she smiled. "Look nt the view It Isn't gorgeous. It's It's sim ply peaceful nnd quiet nnd soothing. I hute to leave It." "Ilett' r be sorry to lenve n place than glnd to get nwny." he nnswered lightly. "Come on, let's pike home nnd get things In order for the long trull, woman o' mine. I'll tench you how to bo u woodland vagabond." CHAPTER X. En Route. Long since Hazel hnd become nwnrc that whatsoever her husband set about doing he did swiftly nnd with Inflex ible purpose. There was no malinger ing or doubtful hesitation. Once his mind wus made up, he ncted. Thus, upon the third day from the land stak ing, they bore nwny eastward from tho clearing, ncross a trackless area, trav eling by the sun and Hill's knowledge of tho country. "Some day there'll be trails blnzed through here by a paternal govern ment," he laughed over his shoulder, for tho benefit of the public. Hut we don't need 'em, thnnk goodness." The buckskin pony Hazel had bought for the trip In with Limping George umbled sedately under a pack containing bedding, clothes and n light shelter tent. The black horse, Nigger, ho of the cocked eur and the rolling eye, carried In u pair of kyaks six weeks' supply of food. Hill led the way, seconded by Hazel on eusy-gnltod Silk. Heblnd her toailed the pack horses like dogs well broken to heel, patient under their heavy burdens. Off In the east the sun wns barely clear of tho towering Hockles, nnd the woods were still cool nnd shadowy, full of uromutlc odors from plant and tree. There wns no monotony In the pnss- Ing days. Rivers barred their way. These they forded or swam, or ferried a makeshift rift of logs, ns seemed most fit. Haps und mishaps till ko they uccepted with nn equable spirit nnd tho true philosophy of the trull to take things us they come. When ruin deluged them, there wus always shel ter to be found and fire to wnrin them. If the flies nssulled too fiercely, a smiiilgo brought easement of that 111. Kncli day was something more, than a mere toll of so many tulles traversed. The unexpected, for which both wcro eager-eyed, lurked nn the shoulder of each mountain, In the hollow of every cool canyon, or met them boldly In the open, naked lUid unafraid. Hearing up to where the Nnchnco debouches from Frnser lake, with n Hudson's hay fur pout and an Indian mission on Its eastern fringe, they came upon a biased line In tho scrub timber. Roaring Bill pulled up, and squinted away down the narrow lane fresh with rix marks. "Well," said he, "I wonder whnt's coming off now? Thnt looks like a survey line of some sort It Isn't a trail too wide. Let's follow it a while. "I'll bet a nickel," he arserted next, "that's a railroad survey." Half an hour of easy Jogging set the soul of truth on his assertion. . They came upon a mun squinting through a hrnaa Instrument ftrit nn ftireA leirn. directing, with alternate wavlngs of j his outspreud bunds, certain uctlvl ties of other men aheud of him. "Well, I'll bo" he bit off the sen tence, and stured a moment In frank astonishment at Hazel. Then he took off his hat and bowed. "Good morn Ing," he greeted politely. "Sure," HIU grinned. "We have mornings like this around here all the time. Whut all are you fellows doing In the wilderness, nnywuy? Rullrond?" "Cross-section work for the 0. T, P.," the surveyor replied. "Huh," Hill grunted. "Is It a dead cinch, or Is It something that may pos slbly como to puss In the misty fu ture?" "As near a cinch ns anything ever Is," tho surveyor answered. "Construc tion bus begun nt both ends. I thought tho few white folks In this country kept tub on unythlng as Im portant us a new railroad." "We've heard n lot, but none of 'em hns transpired yet; not In my time, anyway," Hill replied dryly. "How ever, the world keeps on moving. I've heard more or less talk of this, but I didn't know It hud got past the talking stage. What's their Pacific termlnul?" "Prince Rupert new town on n pe ninsula north of tho mouth of tho Skeenu," suld the surveyor. "It's a The Surveyor Lifted His Hat With a Swift Glance of Unconcealed Ad miration at Hazel. rush Job nil the woy through, I believe. Three years to spike up the last rail. And that's going some for n transcon tinental road. Hoth the Iomlnlon and H. C. governments have guaranteed the company's bonds uwuy up Into mil lions." "He n grent thing for this country sny, where does It cross tho Rockies? whnt's the general route?" Hill usked abruptly. "Goes over the rnnge through Tel- lowhead poss. From here It follows the Nachaco to Fort George, then up tho Fruser by Tote Juan Cache, through the pass, then down the Ath abasca till It switches over to strike Edmonton." ni-lih." Hill nodded. "One of the (Modern labors of Hercules. Well, we've got to peg. So long." "Our camp's ubout five miles nhead. Rotter stop In und noon," the surveyor Invited, "If It's on your road." "Thanks. Maybe we will," Rill re turned. The surveyor lifted his hnt, with a swift glance of admiration ut Hazel, nnd they passed with u mutual "so long." What do you think of that, old girl?" Hill observed presently. "A real, honest-to-goodness railroad going by within n hundred miles of our shack. Three years. It'll be there be fore we know It. We'll huvo neigh bors to burn." "A hundred miles I" Hazel laughed. "Is that your Idea of u neighborly dis tance?" "What's a hundred tulles?" ho do- fended. "Two days' ride, that's nil. And the kind of people Unit come to settle in a country like this don't stick In sight of the curs: They're like me need lots or elbow room, 'lucre u bo hardy souls looking for a location up where we ure before very long. You'll see." They passed other crews of men, surveyors with transits, chulnmen, stuke drivers, nx gangs wldvnlng the path through the timber. Most of them looked nt Hazel In frnnk sur prise, nnd stared long nfter she passed by. And when nn open bottom beside u noisy little creek showed the scat tered tents of the survey camp, Hazel suld : "Let's not stop, Hill." He looked back over his shoulder with a comprehending smile. "Getting shy? Make you uncom fortable to hnve nil these boys look nt you, little person?" he bnntervd. "AH right, we won't stop. Rut nil theso fellows probably haven't seen a white woman for months. You enn't blame them for admiring. Y'ou do look good to other men besides me, "you know." So they rode through the camp wdth but n nod to the nproned cook, who thrust out his head, uml a gruy-hulred man with glasses, who humped over n drafting board under uu owning. Their noon lire they built ut a spring five miles beyond. At length they fared Into ITtMwlton, which Is the hub of a vast area over whbh men pursno gold ond furs. Some hundred odd souls were gath ered there, where the stern-wheel steamers thnt ply the turgid Skeenn reach tho head of navigation. A land- recording office nnd n mining recorder Hnzelton boasted ns proof of Its civic '.mportniice. The mining recorder, who combined In himself many capaci ties besides his governmental function, undertook to put through Bill's land denl. He know Illll Wngstaff. "Wise mnn," he nodded, over the de scription. "If some more uh these boys that have blazed trails through this REE J country would do the sumo thing, they'd be better off. A chunk of land anywhere In this country Is a good bet now. We'll hnve rulls here from the const In a year. Better freeze onto a couple uh lots here In Hazel ton, while they're low. He plumb to the skies In ten years. Nuturul plnce for a city, BUI. It's ostonishln' how the settlers Is comln'." There wns ocular evidence of this Inst, for they hnd followed In a road well rutted from louded wagons. Rut Hill Invested In no reul cstute, not withstanding the positive assurance thut Huzelton wus on the ragged edge of a boom. , "Maybe, maybe," he admitted. "Rut I've got other fish to fry. Thnt one piece up by Pine river will do mo for a while." Here where folk talked only of golj nnd pelts nnd rnllrouds und settlement nnd the coming boom thnt would mnko them ull rich, Hill Wugstuff added two more ponies to tils pack train. These he louded down with food, staples only, flour, sugur, benns, suit, ten nnd ceC fee, and a sack of dried fruit. Also he bestowed upon Nigger a further burden of six dozen steel trnps. And In the cool of a midsummer morning, before Huzelton hnd rubbed tho sleep out of Its collective eyes nnd tuken up the duy's work of discussing Its future grentness, Ronrlng Rill nnd his wife draped the mosquito nets over their heads and turned their faces north. They bore out upon a wagon road. For a brief distance only did this en dure, then dwindled to a pnth. A turn In this hid sight of tho clustered log houses and tents, nnd tho two steam ers that lay up against the bank. Tho river Itself wns soon lost In the far stretches of forest. Once more they rode ulone In the wilderness. For tho first time Hazel felt n quick shrinking from the North, nn awe of its hugo, silent spaces, which could so easily engulf thousands such ns they und still remain a land untamed. Hazel gets a terrifying glimpse of the ruthless way of the wil derness. She learns that the great wide spaces of the north are merciless to those who make mistakes. How she learns the lesson is told in the next Install ment. (TO Mi CONTINUED.) LONG ISLAND. AND NEW YORK Stretch of Breeze-Swept Sand Has Been Made to Meet the De mands of Every Class. Long Island Is the safety valve nnd salvation of New Y'ork. It Is hard to seo how tho big city could get through a summer without this hundred miles of breeze-swept sand, which It enn reach In n few minutes by bridge or tube or ferry, writes Nlksah. It Is n mutter of endless admiration how Long Island has been mado to meet the needs of New Yorkers of every taste nnd Income. It bus cheap beaches, where anyone may get a swim for a quarter, nnd exclusive benches where $10,000 n yenr Is regarded ns poverty. It has sport beaches full of enfes and music, nnd quiet benches, where old ladles knit on shady porches. It has millionaire suburbs from which tho ninny nre Ingeniously excluded; nnd middle-class suburbs with their neut little cottages, looking like nd vertlseineiits out of pulnt catalogs stuck primly In the middle of correct llttlo lawns; mid suburbs' for thoso who have Just enough money to get out of town In the summer. Most of these latter are situated In the lagoon district between Rockuwuy beach and the Island proper. They stand on stilts In the shallow water, In the midst of wide green salt inendows. They nre unpadded, for the most part, but liinned Into soft grays and purples by the sen ulr. They are nllve with chil dren nnd stout fishermen with long poles decorate nil the wharves, while tho narrow channels between tho houses nre full of rowboats nnd little launches. There Is more picture nnd color In this bit of Long Island than In ull the rest of It put together. Made 10,000 Shark Hooks. The government Is going In for shnrk fishing, but not ns n sport, however. It is going after this aquatic monster that the skins of the sharks may ho tanned und used us u substitute for leather. The experiment Is now under way, nnd the man who bus given Uncle Sam n leg over the fence, ns It were, Is J. W. Fonlham, u New London, Conn., nrtlsan, whoso blacksmith shop Is In tho vicinity of picturesque Shaw's Cove, for In that little snilthery 10,000 shark hooks were iniuh' In three sizes for the United States government. Mr. Fordliani signed the contrnct nnd wns allowed thirty days In which to complete tho order. 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Get a box today. liosis oniy a ceni ill IS HUMANITY'S GREATEST FOE It l alwayt terror to old people and a menace at tome time or another to evert human being, young or old. It ia the forerunner of more UU and aufienng than almoit any of NATURE'S DANCER SIGNALS and ahould never be allowed to go unheeded. At the very first indication of conitipation get D'V WITS LIVER PILLS which for 72 yeare hai been eueceeefully used for thi moat prevalent of all disorder. For aale by druggists and; dealers everywhere. Br. Tiiii's Vienna Sausage J 63t & Libby, Chicago Tho lll-teliiiii'i'i'tl mail Is tho nicotlu In tho pi of life. If your y"B amart or fet araliM, mnn F Dalaam applied upon Rolng to U( im juii wiv inula u iqiict liidiii. iQV. I'rohahly tiothliiK strikes u tuna iwr forcllily than tho imllccinuii who ers lil in In. Indefinite. "Is the now patient IlKht-honileiir "Do you mean If she Is delirious ot a blonde?" Ta Re Stronflr anrl Healthv Ton mnt hare I'nm W.J. liHOVH'S I ATm.tii chill TUNIU I'unrjKa and Hnrtchtx th li: 4ui Hulldi up the Whol Nrntem. It onntaln th t.. known tonlo properties of Iron and Vnni.i. T,i can finl Ita good ptTtict oo the UluuU attor lae fln WW auBUb rnconuu. Taking No Chances. Itrnker Would you like to I mile a: the mine before Investing?" Jones "Hardly ; I want to Im-ot,' Natural Exclamation. "What do you suppose tin; hali.v W rules said when he saw two hup-M. tiles ailvani'liiK towards his cni'll.r "I suppose he rrled out : '(Jrra: snakes !' " Pen Extractor. A pen extractor Installed In an nfl'' will save all members of the fopv UV inky operation of removing an old p-: from the holder with the fingers. Tl.. device consists of a metal loop can he pressed down upon the nn llniily that the pen Is removed lij i pull on I he holder. REMEDY YOUR KIDNEYS hnve been a standard household rem"!;, They are the pure, original imtioitcd l!ur Icm Oil your great-grandmother u-e l, an! are perfectly harmless. The healiiu, mutt ing oil soaks into the cells ami liiiinif of the kidneys and through the bladder, ilni' ing out the poisonous germs. New Mil fresh strength nnd health will come myt continue tho treatment. When complex ly restored to your usual vigor, runtime taking a capsule or two each (lay; they wJ keep you in condition and prevent a r turn of the disease. iht not delay a minute. Delays nre (f pecinlly dangerous in kidnev nnd hlelJit trouble. All druggists sell liOLI) MKDAL Haarlem Oil t'lipsulcs. They will rW'inl the money if not as represented. (iULD MKDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules nic i ported direct from the laboratories in IM land. They are prepared in correct qiu tity and convenient form, nre easy to tiki and nre positively gunrnntecd to gin prompt relief. In three sizes, scaled pict nges. Ak for the original importd GOLD) MKDAL. Accept no Bubstitutei-Adv. HORSE SALE DISTEMPER You know that when ynu sell or buy through the mM you tinve nhoiit one ctinnce In llfly to escape KAI.K STAIN 8 DISTIOMI'Klt. "Sl'OHN'S" Is your true protection, yon' only safeguard, for us aure as you treat all your nor with It, you will soon be rid of the ill "ease. It acts as; sure preventive, no matter how they are "exoil DO cents nnd 11 a bottle; $5 and $10 doxen bottles, at ill Rood (IriiRKlsts, horae goods houses, or delivered by tbl nmni) fiicturem. Sl'OIlN MU1HCA.L COm Manufacturers, Goshen, rod., V.i t Trouble A Wonderful Testimonial Endorsing EATONIC Gentlemen: 1 have umx) EATONIC tablet In my famity and And It a moat excellent ivmeof fordyipoitala and all forma of indigeatlon. Voure roapectfully, W. V. SULLIVAN. ATONIC J FOR YOUR STOMACH'S SAKORL At All Urugtfiil. or iwu u uuy w iw. liror Pills J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers