THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. North of Fifty-Three BY BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR I (Copyright: Little, Brown & Co.) . - - I HAZEL ATONES FOR HER THOUGHTLESSNESS BY MAK ING A LUCKY "STRIKE." Synopsia Miss Hazel Weir, 11 stenographer, living nt Oranvlllo. Ontario, Is placed under n cloud by circumstances fur which who In entirely blameless. To escape from the groundless gossip that pursues her, she secures n position as schoolteacher nt Cariboo Meadows, In a wild part of Hrltish Colmnlda. There, at a hoarding house, she first sees "Itoarlng Iiill" WagstafT, a well-known character of the country. Soon after her arrival Hazel loses her way while walking In the woods. She wanders until night when she reaches "Roaring Rill's" camp fire In the woods. He promises to take her home In the morning, hut she Is compelled to spend the night In the words. After wandering In the woods all the next day, "Roaring 15111" finally admits that he Is taking Hazel to his cabin In the mountains. Hazel finds upon their arrival nt the cabin that she cannot hope to escape from the wilderness before spring. Iniring the long winter "Roaring Rill" treats Hazel with the tfreulest respect. He tells her he loves her and tries to Induce her to marry him, but she refuses. In (lie spring he takes her to Rella Coola, where she can get a boat to Vancouver, At Vancouver Hazel takes a train for Granville, but on the way she reidizes that she loves Wagstaff and decided to return to him. "Roaring 15111" Is overjoyed and to gether they travel to a Hudson bay post and nre married. After several mouths they decide to go farther Into the mountains to a spot where Rill Is confident there Is gold. Arrived at their destination, Rill builds a cabin and cuts sufficient liny to feed the horses till spring. Hazel allows sparks fi;om the chimney to set fire to the stable, which Is burned with idl the liny. To keep the animals from death by starva tion, Rill Is compelled to shoot them. CHAPTER XII. 11 I Jack Frost Withdraws. i All through the month of January each evening, as dusk folded Its som ber mantle about the niendow, the wolves gathered to feast on the dead horses, till Hazel's nerves were trulned to the snapping point. Some times, when Rill was gone, and all bout the cabin was utterly still, one, bolder or hungrier than his fellows, would trot across the meadow, drawn liy the scent of the meat. Two' or three of these II:v.el shot with her own rifie. Rut when February marked another span mi the calendar the wolves came no more. The hones were clean. ' There was no impending misfortune 4r dr.nger thnt she could point to or forecast with certitude. Nevertheless, rniggle against It as she might, know ing it for pure psychological phenom ena arising out of her harsh environ motit. Hazel suffered continual vague forebodings. The bald, white peaks eeined to surround her like a prison from which thpre could he no release. From day to day she was harassed by dismal thoughts. She would wake In the night clutching at her husband. Such days as he went out nlone she passed In restless anxiety. Something would happen. What It would be she ifld not know, but to her It seemed that the bleak stage was set for un toward dranin, and they two the pup pets that must play. When Rill drew her up close In his arms, the intangible menace of the wilderness and nil the dreary monot ony of the days faded Into the back tronnd. Rut they, no more than oth ers who have tried and failed for lnck of understanding, could not live their lives with their heads in an emotlonnl cloud. For every action there must be a corresponding reaction. They'1 .who have the capacity to reach the heights must likewise, upon occasion, plumb the depths. Life, she begnn to realize, resolved Itself into an unend ing succession of little, trivial things, with here and there some freat event looming out above all the rest for its bestowal of happiness or pain. February and March stormed a path furiously across the calendar. Higher and higher the drifts idled about the cabin, till nt length It was bunked to the eaves with snow save vt'here 15111 shoveled It away to let light to the windows. Tny after day they kept Indoors, stoking up the fire, listening to the triumphant whoop of the winds. "Snow, snow!" Hazel hurst out one day. "Frost that cuts you like a knife. I wish we were home again or some place." "So do I, little person," Rill said gently. "Rut spring's almost at the uoor. iiang on a ill tie longer. We ve made a fair stake, anyway, If we don't wash an ounce of gold." ', "How are we going to get It nil out?" .She voiced a troublesome thought. "Shoulder pack to the Skeenn," he answered laconically. "Rulld a dugout There, and float downstream. Portage 'the rapids as they come." "Oh, Rill!" She came and leaned fcer head against him contritely. "Our poor ponies ! And it was all my care lessness." "Never mind, hon," ho comforted. "They blinked out without suffering. And we'll make It like a charm. He ,Sume It'll soon be spring." ! Ry April the twentieth the abdica tion of Jack Frost was complete. A kindlier despot ruled the land, and Rill Wagstaff began to talk of gold. ' . . . thnt precious yellow metal sought by men In regions desolate. Pursued In patient hope or furious toll; Breeder of discord, wars, and murder ous hute; The victor's spoil. So Hazel quoted, leaning over her husband's shoulder. In the bottom of his pan, shining among a film of black Band, lay half n dozen bright specks, varying from pin-point size to the big ness of a grain of wheat. "That's the tuft" Rill murmured "It looks as If we'd struck It pretty fair. R's time, too the June rise will hit lis like a whirlwind one of these duys." "About whnt Is the value of those little pieces?" Hazel asked. "Oh, lift v or sixty cents," he an swered. "Not much by Itself. Rut It seems to be uniform over the bar and I cau wash n good many pans In day's work." "I should think so," she remarked. "It didn't take you ten minutes to do that one." "White y Lewis and I took out over two hundred dollars a duy on thnt other creek last spring no, a year last spring, It wns," he observed remlnls cently. "This Isn't ns good, but It's not to be sneezed nt, cither. I think I'll make me a rocker." "I enn help, can't I?" she said en Rerly. "Sure," he smf-1. "You help a lot, little person, Just sitting around and keeping me company." "Rut I want to work," she declared. "I've sat around .now till I'm getting (he fidgets." "All right; I'll give you a job," he returned good-naturedly. "Meantime, let's eat that lunch you packed up here." In a branch of (ho creek which flowed down through the basin, Rill had found plentiful colors as soon as the first big run-off of water had fallen. He had followed upstream painstak ingly, panning colors always, and now and then a few grains of coarse gold to encourage him In the quest. The loss of their horses precluded ranglnir far afield to that other glacial stream which he had worked with Whitey Lewis when he was a free lance In the North. He wns close to his bnse of supplies, and he had made wages with always the prospector's lure of rich strike on the next bar. "In the morning," said he, when lunch wns over, "I'll bring nlong the nx and some nulls and a shovel, and get busy." That night they trudged down to the cabin In high spirits. Rill had washed out enough during the nfternoon to make a respectnble showing on Hazel's outspread handkerchief. And Hazel was in a gleeful mood over the fact that she had unearthed a big nugget by herself. Beginner's luck, Rill said teaslngly, but that did not diminish her elation. As the days passed there seemed no question of their complete success. Rill fabricated his rocker, a primitive, boxlike device with a blanket screen and transverse sluts below. It wns faster than the pan, even rude us It was. and It caught all but the finer particles of gold. A queer twist of luck put the cap shenf on their undertaking. Hazel run n splinter of wood Into her hand, thus putting a stop to her activities with shovel and pnll. Until the wound lost Its soreness she was forced to be Idle. So she rambled along the creek one afternoon, armed with hook and line on n pliant willow lu search of sport. The trout were hungry, and struck fiercely at the bait. She soon had plenty for supper and breakfast. In the Bottom of His Pan Lay Half a Dozen Bright Specks. Wherefore she abandoned that diver sion and took to prying tentatively In the lee of certain boulders on edge of the creek prospecting on her own Initiative, ns It were. She had no pan, and only one hand to work with, but she knew gold when she saw 14 and, aftw all, It wns but nn l(lo method cf killing time. In this search the cninc upon a large, rusty pefelle, snuggled on the downstream etde of nn overhanging rock right at the water's edge. It at tracted her first by its symmetrical form, n perfect oval; then, when she lifted It, by Its astonishing weight. She continued her search for the plnk-Ish-red stones, carrying the rusty pebble nlong. I'resently she worked her way back to where Roaring Rill labored prodigiously. "Look at these pretty stones I found," she said. "What are they, BUI?" "Those?;" He looked nt her out stretched palm. "Garnets." "Gurnets? They must be vuluable then," she observed. "Yes, If you can find any of nny size. What's the other rock?" he In quired casually. "You making a col lection of specimens?" "That's Just a funny stone I found," she returned. "It must be Iron or something. It's terribly heavy for Its size." "Kh? Let me see It," he snld. She hu tided It over. He weighed' It In his palm, scruti nized It closely, turning It over and over. Then he took out his knife and scratched the rusty surface vigorously for a few minutes. "Huh!" he grunted. "Look nt your funny stone." lie held It out for her Inspection. The blade of the knife had left a dull yellow scar. "Oh!" she gasped. "Why It's goid !" "It Is, womnn," he declnlmed, with mock solemnity. "Gold glittering gold! "Say. where did you find this?" he asked when Hazel stnred nt the nug get, dumb lu the fnce of this unex pected stroke of fortune. "Just nround the second bend," she cried. "Oh, Bill, do you suppose there's any' more there?" "Lead me to It with my trusty pnn and shovel, and we'll see," Bill smiled Forthwith they set out. Tho over hanging boulder wns n sennt ten min utes' wnlk up the creek. m Ithln five minutes his fingers brought to light a second lump, double the size of her find. Close upon that he winnowed a third. Hazel leaned over him, breathless. At last he reached bottom. The boulder thrust out below In n natural shelf. From this Bill carefully scraped the accumu lation of black sand and gravel, glean Ing ns a result of his labor a baker's dozen of assorted chunks one giant that must have weighed three pounds. He sat back on his haunches, und looked nt his wife, speechless. "Is thnt truly all gold, Rill?" she whispered Incredulously. "It certainly Is ns good gold ns ever went Into the mint," he nssured. "All laid In n nice little nest on this shelf of rock. That's a real, honest pocket, And a well-lined one, If you ask me." "My goodness!" she murmured 'There might bo wagonlonds of It In this creek." "There might, but It Isn't likely." Bill shook his head. "This Is a simon pure pocket, and It would keep n grnd uate mineralogist guessing to say how It got here, because It's n different proposition from the wash gold In the creek bed. It's rich placer ground, nt thaf but this pocket's nlmost un believable. Must be forty pounds of gold tb -re. And you found It. You're the original mascot, little person." He bestowed a bearlike hug upon ner. "Now whnt?" she asked. "It hnrdly seems real to pick up several thou snnd dollars In half an hour or so like this. Whnt will we do?" "Do? Why, bless your denr soul," he laughed. "We'll Just consider our selves extra lucky, and keep right on with the game till the high water makes us quit." Which wns a contingency nearer nt hnnd than even Bill, with a first-hand knowledge of the North's vagaries In the way cf flood, quite anticipated. Three days nfter the finding of tho pocket the whole floor of the creek was awash. His rocker went down stream overnight. When BUI saw that he rolled himself a cigarette, and, putting one long nrm across his wife's shoulders, said whimsically: "What d'you say we start home?" CHAPTER XIII. The Stress of the Trail. Roaring Bill dumped his second nnck on the summit of the KInppnn, nnd looked nwny to where the valley that opened out of the basin showed Its blurred hollow in the distance. But ho uttered no useless regrets. With horses they could have ridden south through a rolling country, where everv stretch of timber gave on a grass- grown level. Instend they were forced back over the rugged route by which they had crossed the range the sum mer before. Grub, beddiue. furs nnd gold totaled two hundred nounds. On his sturdy shoulders Bill could pack naif that weight. For his wife the thing was a physical Impossibility, even had he permitted her to try. Hence every mile ndvanced meant that he doubled the distance, relaying from one camp to the next. Thev cut their bedding to a blanket apiece, nnd that was Hazel's load all he would allow her to envy. "You're no pack mule, little person," he would say. "It don't hurt me. I've done this for years." .But even with nbnormnl strength nnd endurance, it wns killing wofk to buck those rngged slopes with a heavy load. Only by terrible, unremitting ef fort could he advance any appreciable distance. They were footsore, nnd their bodies ached with weariness that verged on pain when they rained tho pass that cut the summit of tho Klap pan run 4c. "Well, we're over the hump," Bill re marked thankfully. "It's a downhill shoot to the Skeeua. I don't think it's more tjian fifty or sixty miles to whure we can take to the water." They innde better time on the west ern slope, but the Journey became a matter of sheer endurance. Food wns scanty Hour nnd salt nnd tea; with uieut and fish got by the way. And the black files and mosquitoes swarmed ubout them maddeningly duy und night. So they came at lust to the Skeena, nnd Hazel's heart misgave her when she took note of Its swirling reaches, the sinuous eddies a deep, swift, treacherous stream. But LIU rested overnight, and In the morning sought und felled u sizable cedar, and begun to hew. Slowly the thick trunk shaped Itself to the form of a bout under the steady swing of his ax. Iu a week It wus finished. They loaded the suck of gold, the bundle of furs, their mcuger camp outfit umld ships, und swung off Into tho stream. The Skeena drops fifteen hundred feet In a hundred miles. Wherefore there are rapids, bulling stretches of white water In which many a good canoe has come to grief. Some of these they run at Imminent peril. Over the worst they lined the cunoe from the bunk. And In the second week of July they brought up at tho head of Klsplox Cuuon. Hnzcltou lay a few miles below. But the Klsplox stayed them, a sluice box cut through old stone, iu which the waters ruged with a deafening roar. No man ventured Into that wild gorge. They abandoned the dugout. BUI slung the suck of gold nnd the bale of furs on his buck. "It's the last lap, Hazel," said he. "We'll leave the rest of It for the first Siwash that happens along." So they set out bravely to trudge the remaining distance. And ns the fortunes of tho trull sometimes be full, they raised an Indian camp on r (J "Oh Bill," Hazel Called from the Bow. "Look!" the bank of the river nt the mouth of the canon. A ten-dollar bill made them possessors of another ennoe, and an hour later the roofs of Hazelton cropped up above tho bank. "Oh, Rill," Hazel called from the bow. "Look I There's the same old steamer tied to the same old bank. We've been gone n year, nnd yet tho world hasn't changed a mite. I won der If Hazelton has taken a Rip van Winkle sleep all this time?" "No fear," he smiled. "I can see some new houses quite n few, In fact. And look by Jlininy! They're work ing on the grade. That railroad, re member?" He drove the canoe alongside a flont. A few loungers viewed them with frank curiosity. Bill et out the treas ure sack and the hule of furs, and tied the cunoe. "A new hotel, by Jove!" he.ro mnrked, when upon gaining the level of the town n new' two-story building bluzoned with n huge sign Its func tion us a hostelry. "Getting quite metropolitan In this neck of the woods. Say, little person, do you think you can relish a square meal? liuuked steak nnd lobster salad huh? I won der If they could ruktle a sulud In this mnn's town? Suy, do you know I'm Just beginning to find out how hungry I urn for the flesh-pots. Aren't you, hon?" She was; frankly so. For long, monotonous months she hud been struggling ugaiust Just such cravings, Impossible of realization, und there fore all the more tautullzlng. She had been a year In the wilderness, nnd tho wilderness had not only lost Its glamor, but had become a thing to flee from. She bestowed n glad pres sure on her husband's arm as they walked up the street, Bill carrying the sack of gold perched carelessly on one shoulder. "Sny, (heir enterprise hns gone the length of establishing u brunch bank here, I see." He called her nttentloti to n square footed edifice, Its new-boarded walls ns yet guiltless of paint, except where n row of black letters set forth that It was the Bank of British North America. "That's a good plnce to stow this bullion," he remarked. "I want to get It off my hands." So to the bnnk they bent their steps. A solemn, horse-faced Englishman weighed the gold, nnd Issued Bill n re ceipt, expressing a polite regret thut luck of facility to determine its fine ness prevented him from converting it Into cash. "That means a trip to Vancouver," Bill remarked outside. "Well, we cun stand that." From the bnnk they went to the hotel, registered, nnd were shown to a room. For the first time since the summit of the Klnppan Range, where her tiny hand glass had suffered dis aster, Hazel was permitted a clear view of herself In-a mirror. "I'm a perfect fright !" she mourned. "Huh!" Bill grunted. "You're all right. Look nt me." The trnll had dealt hnrdly with both, In the matter of their persoiid appear ance. Tanned to nn abiding brown, they were, und Hazel's one-time smooth fnce was spotted with fly bltun and marked with certain scratches suffered In the brush ns they skirted the Klsplox. Her hair hnd lost Its sleek, glossy smoothness of arrange ment. Her hands were reddened and rough. iUit chiefly she was concerned with the and state of her apparel. She had ctine a mutter of foiiy hundred miles lnhe clothes on her back acd they bore unequlvocul evidence of the Journey. "I'm n perfect fright," she repeated pettishly. "One's manners, morals, clothing, and complexion nil' suffer from too dose contuct with your be loved North. BUI." "Thnnks!" he returned shortly. "I suppose I'm a perfect fright, too. Ltjug hair, whiskers, grimy, calloused bunds, and all the retf of It. A shave aud n hair cut, a bt.lh and a new suit of clothes will remedy that. But I'll be quality thut I wus when I sweated over the Klnppr.n with a hundred! pounds on my buck." I "I hope so," she retorted. "I don't require the shove, thank goodness, but I certululy need a bath and clothes I wish I had the gray suit that's prob ably getting all moldy and moth-eaten at the I'lne River cV'In. I wonder if I cun get anything fit to wear here?"' "Women live here," Bill returned quietly, "and I suppose the stores sup ply 'em with duds. Unllmber that bank roll of yours, and do some shop ping." She sat on the edge of the bed, re garding her reflection In the mirror with extreme disfavor. BUI fingered his thick stubble of a beard for a thoughtful minute. Then he sat down beside her. "What's a mollah, hon?" he wheed led. "Whnt makes you such a crosser patch all at once?" "Oh, I don't know," she answered dolefully. "I'm tired and hungry, and I look a fright and oh, Just every thing." ' "Tut, tut!" he remonstrated good nuturedJy. "That's Just mood again. We're out of the woods, literally and figuratively. If you're hungry, let's go and sec what we can make this hotel produce In the way of grub, before wo do anything else." "I wouldn't go Into their dining- room looking like this for the world," she snld decisively. "All right; you go shopping, then," ho proposed, "while I tnke these furs up to old Hack's place and turn them Into money. Then we'll dress, nnd make this hotel feed us the best they've got. Cheer up. Maybe It wus tough on you to slice a yenr out of your life and lcavo It In a country where there's nothing but woods nnd eternal silence but we've got nround twenty thousand dollars to show for It, Ilnzel. And one enn't get some thing for nothing. There's a price mnrk on It somewhere, always. Be my good little pnl nnd see If you enn't mnkc one of these stores dig up a white wnlst nnd a blnck skirt, like you had on the first time I snw you." He kissed her, and went quickly out. And after a long time of sober stnrlng nt her image in the glass Hazel shook herself Impatiently. "I'm a silly, selfish, Incompetent lit tle beast," she whispered. "Bill ought to thump me, Instead of being kind. I enn't do anything, and I don't know much, and I'm u scarecrow for looks right now. And I started out to be a real partner." The occasional use of Roman T.y Balsam at lilnht will pi event anil relieve tirad eyes, watery eyes, and eyu strain. Adv. Aerial Post. "How did you send your fugitive poetry?" "Naturally, In the flying mall." Whenever You Need a General Strengthening; Tonic Tata the Old Standard UllOVK'S TASTKMSH chill TONIC. It contain the well known tonic proporiloa of QIININH and (HON and Is Very Valuable an a General Strengthening Tonic. Yon can feel the good Hoot on the Ulood af tortbe tint few dune. Wo. True. "Pa, what Is success?" "Something that every have If he'll go nfter It." man can 8oothe Itching Skins With Cutlcura. Buthe with Cutlcura Sonp and hot water, dry nnd apply the Ointment. This usually nffords relief and points to speedy henlment. For free samples nddress, "Cutlcurn, Dept. X, Boston." At druggists and by mull. Soup 25, Ointment 25 and 00. Adv. Natural Difficulty. "I want lids boy flogged, sir. He Is a bud egg." "In that case, It Is no use trying to whip him." Bill suddenly realizes that Hazel Is tired of the wilderness and he decides on a move that is to have a big effect on their later lives. A hint of what is to come is given in the next installment. FRECKLES Now It the Tim to Cct Rid of Theia Ugly Spoil There'a nn longer the attchtmt neecj nf feellnu anhmneil nf your frecklm, a Othlne loulla alrength 1 guaranteed to feature then homely p"t. Hlmplr net an ounce of Othlne ilnnhle strength from your rirnititlat, and apply a little of It nlitlit ami morning etui you aliouM toon nee Unit even the wont freckle Iiuyc begun to dla appear, whllo tho lighter one hare Tanlnhed en tirely. It la seldom that more than one ounca la neile1 to completely clear the akin and gain a teaiitlful clcitr complexion. fie mire to ak for the ilnuhle atrength Cttilae, aa llila la anM under gimrantea nf uiooey back U It lain to rcmovu frecklee. Adr, Its Sort. "Have you been following the news from Iimllco tills week?" "Yes; It makes racy reading." OLD PRESCRIPTION ' FOR WEAK KIDNEYS Have you ever stopped to reason i It is that o many products that . ' tenaively advertised, all at once drnn . Bigui, auu aiD DUUU lorgoiten' Tl reason is plain the article did not f,ic! the promises of the manufacturer, tl applies more Darticularlv tn a lit . A medicinal preparation that hai CJ2i curative value almost sells itself, u J? an enrlleaa chain avarem ft, ' . ' recommended by those who have b, benefited, to those who are in need nt A prominent druggist says, "TaU it npnnnFiitinn T liau. 1 ,1 . I-- i""-k,u" ua.w aum iui many ytaFl and never hesitate to recommend, for ? almost every case it shows excellent ! suits, as many of my customers teti(t No other kidney remedy that I knowii has so large a sale," According to sworn statements verified testimony of thousands who h used the preparation, the succesn of n." Kilmers' Swanip-Koot is due to the that, so many people cluim, it fultii, ? most every wish in overcoming klfn liver and bladder ailments, corroetj UJ luuiy wiHum-a mm neutralize!! the acid which causes rheumatism. lou' may receive a sample bottlp i Swamp-Root by Parcel Boat. AiitZ Dri Kilmer & Co., Uingltamton, N. y, ,( tnnuBc ice ti-ULn, ai&u llll'llimil HUH k , nil 4 a my uii UlUg BIUIKB. nUY Assent;. No Savoir Faire Defining "savoir faire," man liosa said In Madison : M 4 ...I.. 1 . v i-criiiiii jiietlj snow IIIHI ng savoir faire. A wealthy Madison lir ker took her to n liroailway cafe m evening after the show, ami i1H, their cocktails were set before t!ii.a mo broker lifted his glass ami hm " 'I should like to propose u llttfo toast. "The show girl shrugged her bea til ill white shoulders. "'Xothln' doing, dear boy,' she suH i want a square ineul. What is Castorla C ASTORIA la a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing: Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is . its guv nntee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverish, ness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 80years, has borne the signature of Chua. II. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-Good" are bet Experiments that imiu wiw ami enuunger me neuun 01 iniants ana y Children Experience against Experiment. rSFJ j "f Genuine Castorla always bears the signature of LduZiy fJUJt EES2S (TO UK CONTINCED.) ANIMALS ARE GOOD SWIMMERS Polar Bear, Who Passes His Time In Icy Waters, Is Regarded Best, Though Not Swiftest. Nearly all animals are better swim mers than man and take to the water naturally. The rhinoceros nnd hippo potamus nre wonderful swimmers und divers, while the Indian elephant crosses great rivers with heavy loads, London TIt-Itlts states. Tho elk and the reindeer nre first class swimmers. The elk keeps his bend above water and crosses directly from hank to bank to avoid turning. The reindeer, on the other hand, turns ns often as he likes, keeping his head only n little above the surface. But of all swimmers of all climes the best, though not the swiftest. Is the polar bear, who passes half his time In the wnter swimming aud diving. His swimming power is nothing short of miraculous If It be remembered that the water In the regions he frequents Is Invariably cold and that cold Is nor mally prohibitive to good swimming. There tire bears that can swim from twenty-five to thirty miles without great effort. One of the swiftest swimming ani mals Is the squirrel. A sportsman on one occasion, having at hand a squir rel born In captivity, which had never seen water, wanted to see if it could swim and took it with him in a row boat to the center of the lake. Tho squirrel turned toward the bank, head and paws above the water, back and tall underneath It, and began to swim so rapidly that It was with the great est dllllculty that the man recovered It when It reached the shallow water near the land. W'l'JI-ra-ggglffia j. wi'i a...... vrtinvifa BanBBBaartMaaaMaBBBaBBBRaS bi,a mar n )(F0R YOUR STOMACH'S SAKD Most Startling Endorsement t m Ever Published Mr. A. W. Cramer. Reirlatered Pharmacist anil pniKiriit of Piano, Uliooia, write under data of Llaceinber 12, VMi y Eutnn!e Remedy Co- Chicago, 111. Cenflamen-'-ThefoIlowlnirfneiaentwIiteh hap pened in my place of uuainca I know will be of great intcroat to you, and, I hope, of great benetit wnumauiir, morally ana nnysical v. jp quantity Of A TONIC piled on my As I recentlv minaed aho. mil Lnnwind neither myself nor clerk had sold It. I could not show case. Comes Back and Pays For It It's the Acid Test of Man and Eatonic They Both Win! It takes a bis man to stand up and aay "1 am wrong and willing to do right" and it ia needless to aay that thin poor lufferer will not want (or EATONIC as long as he livea. r To stomach aufTvrers and those not getting full strength out of their food. Buffering from iudi sreation, dyspepaia, sour stomach, bloaty, gatiy feeling after enUng, stomach diitreaa of any kind, we say. Go. get a box of EATON IC to day, uae it according to the direc tion! and you will know what real etomach comfort rme&na. TenB of thnufliimta all over tho land are tialng t ATONIC and testify to Ita powers to heal. If vera auSer another day it la your own faulty EATONIC eiwta llttla-a cent or two a day. UuycAlUNlCframyourdruuiist. Sox) for lha "B.lp" Book, AddroM Estonls Roiaadr Co., 1018-24 So. Wiosib An.. Cbkaia tw-aiytav'jjiwiii IQaarffiflaTr-' Bccuuuworiia Disappearance, leatcrday morning man walked into my store and said: "Mr. Cramer, I owe you fifty c enta for a bos of EATONIC which I atole from your show case. I am bothered with stomach trouble and, not hay ing the money to spare to get a box, I took it. EATONIC has done me ao much good my consci ence bothered ma until I had to come back and poyforit., This is the most wonderful testimonial state ment to all my experience in the interest of anypreparation. It ia positive proof.to my mind, that EATON It! Is all that is claimed for it If it bad not helped this man hla consciencewould bave -kft him unmolested. Very truly yours. A. W. Cramer." Evolution of the Lamp. Ir. Walter Clark of I'hlladelphlu has recently made some Interesting In vestigations to find out how the old time lighting conditions In his city compare with those of today, says the I'opulur Science Monthly. Ho hns dis covered that until ns late ns 1835, only dickering sperm oil and cundles were In use. Not until the following decade did the "highly Improved" kerosene lamp appear. Cias did not come out until the period between 1805 nnd 1875. And then only the wealthy could use It. It sold nt $2.00 per thousand cubic feet I The elllclent Welslmcli mantle came out ten years later, revolutioniz ing artificial Illumination. The pres ent era began In 1S95, when gas nnd electricity came Into general use gna selling nt $1 per thousand cubic feet and electricity nt 10 cents per kilo watt hour. Since that time the gas mantle nnd the electric filament have seen vast Improvements, so that today tho overage family Is obtaining nboiit eighteen times ns much light ns the people of half a century ago. "Doctoring" Heliotrope. The delicate helV.tropc Is Scarce and unprofitable to the perfumer. Ho de tects In Its odor, however, the p.roma of vnulla combined with tho sharper scent of bitter almonds. Therefore, ho adds to n tincture of vnulla a small quantity of the otto of hitter almonds nnd rose nnd orange flower essence, and thus easily makes extract of hello-trope. It meane a miserable condition of ill health that leads to all sorts of special ailments such as headache, backache, dyspepsia, dizziness, indigestion, pains ol arious kinds, piles and numerous other disorders CONSTIPATION is a crime against nature, and no human being can bo well for any length of time while constipated. DR. TUTT'S LIVER PILLS i. the remedy and has been used uccessfully all over this country for 72 years. Get a box and see how it feels to have your liver and bowels resume their health-giving natural function. For sale at all druggists and dealera everywhere. Dr-'TutTs Lhrer fills Cheerful Greeting. The other day I went to n bakery shop In the West Knd. While I was waiting for my war bread In came n man In khaki ' who had just returned from the front. "Why, Lieutenant ," snld the bnk eress, "are you bnckT I've been look ing nnxiously for you every day In the casualty list." St. Louis Star. Everything comes to him who wuf but the chap who hustles usually geU It first. rnr speedy snd effective action Dr. Vttff Tead rihot" has no equal. One doao "" will clean out Worms or Tapeworm. In most cases n man seems to thin that his wrongs begin almost Hi"" dlntely nfter his wedding rites. WEAK KIDNEYS MEAN A WEAK BODY h(n you're fifty, your body begins to creak a little at the hinges. Motion is more slow nfid deliberate. "Not so young as I used to be" is a frequent nnd unwel come thought. Certain bodily functions upon which good health nnd good spirits so much depend, are impaired. The weak spot is generally the bladder. Unpleasant symptoms show themselves. Painful and annoying complications in other organs arise. This is particularly true with el derly people. If you only know how, this trouble can be obviated. For over 200 years COLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has been relieving the in convenience and pain due to advancing years. It is a standard, old-time home remedy, and needs no introduction. It is now put up in odorless, tasteless capsules. These are easier and more pleasant to tuke than the oil in bottles. . Each capsule contains about one otae of five drops. Take them just like you would nny pill, with a small swallow nf water. Care of Flutes. Flutes sometimes suffer from nny abrupt change la the weather, and T'iev pk int0. the "'tcm and throw off should therefore be kept la chamois VLV"Z """tK m "liZv:i: Um game newonality. In every essential leather, I those stiffened joints, that backache, rhetf matiam, lumbago, sciatica, gall stones, gravel, "brick dust," etc. They are J effective remedy for all diseases of "j bladder, kidney, liver, stomach and a"ica organs. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Carm,!f cleanse the kidneys and purifv the blot They frequently ward off attacks of tl dangerous and fatal diseases of the k,aj neys. They have a benelicial effect. J often completely euro the diseases "f i". bodily organs, allied with the bladJc J4 kidneys. , If you are troubled with soreness RCfJ tho loins nr with "simple" aches and Psl in the back tnke warning, it may ,(i preliminary indications of pome lre"J"j malady which can be warded off or cu if taken ia time. Go to vonr druggist today and get J" of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Cap Money refunded if thev do not help 1" Three sizes. GOLD MEDAL are the pu original imported Haarlem Oil CPSU" Accept No Substitutes. Adv, i