THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBUEO, FA. Backache The excruciating pain which comet frdln a lame back is quickly alleviated by a prompt application of Yager's Liniment Sufferers from rheumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, sprains, etc. should always keep a bot tle of "Yager's" handy as its penetrative qualities quickly bring relief from pain. At all dealers. Pries 35 cents. The largs bottle of Ysgers Unt itled! contain twirs much U the usual 60c bottle of liniment. GILBERT BROS. & CO. BALTIMORE, MD. Every Woman Wants FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dueolvad la water for douche stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and infUn nation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for tea years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, ore throat and sore area. Economical. Hat lll.i.ia.Ml dnHii maA mm lelilj mwtf. lSiifliFr . 36c al druesiea, or omttmt by Make Money Right At Home We want a live agent in your locality to sell our steel corn cribs, grain bins and agricultural implements. We will pay lib eral commissions to the right person. No stock need be carried. We have the goods to deliver when sold, and advertise freely to stimulate sales. Take up this useful and profitable proposition today. Writs at once for full particulars. THE FARM EQUIPMENT CO. DO 2 Eeysar Bids'. Baltimore, Hd. PARKER'S .. HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparatloa of mtrtt Heine to eredloate dandruff. For Reetoraef Color ami BaotytoGrar or Faded Hair. tog and ti.oo .t Pnirriif. S.no PFR AORE-1 SOU arms Mlnneaota land. Itmasa, sae aufiiue til. Batuies, aiea. W. N. U BALTIMORE, NO. 44-1918. aaSBBWssaaasBBBBSaSBBBSBWraSB ARMOR FOILS BANK ROBBERS Patented Cage for Cashiers, Operated by Official's Foot, Is a Late Invention. The up-to-date bnnk robber will have to hi piil a march on the military geni uses of the age If he has uny hope of accomplishing his designs. For Wal ter Wnt son Arnold of Puwson, Tf. M., has Invented and patented nn armor plnte cage for hank tellers, according to I'opuliir Science Monthly. "Hands up!" says the gentlemanly rnhlier, anil Is obeyed with the ex pected alacrity. Hut the bnnk offi cial's foot surreptitiously releases a spring thut causes sliding doors of nr-iiior-plnte to move Into place and en cr.se him. Adjustable plates fixed over the openings In n teller's cage nre con nected by a system of cables and pul leys with some stationary member nt tuched beneath the desk. When not In use, a trigger engages sectional weights applied to the pulleys. The trigger Is connected with the arm of a bell rrnnk lever, the other iinn of which is connected with a rod or ca ble that Is ngain attached to the foot lever. INDIGESTION, GAS, UPSET STOMACH HURRYI JUST EAT ONE TABLET OF PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN FOR INSTANT RELIEF. No waiting I When meals don't fit and you belch gas, acids and undigest ed food. When you feel Indigestion pain, lumps of distress In stomach, heartburn or heuduche. Here is Instant relief. Just as soon as you eat a tablet of Tape's Dlnpepsln nil the dyspepsia, In digestion and stomach distress ends. These pleasant, harmless tablets of Tape's Dlnpepsln always make sick, up set stomachs feel fine at once and they Cost so little at drug stores. Adv. Food and a Meal. ( "Do you serve meals here?" "We serve things to eat here, but mister we ain't served a regular meal alnce the war began." ( Survives 2,000-Foot Fall. Herbert T. Newcomer of Iowa in July fell 2,000 feet In his plane In France. He survives. t- When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy , Bo Smarting Juet Hre Comfort. SO mule a bmni or wall. Write fur r Bra Book, m m r mmw Avr. mmw. aw mmw ar- ATHLETIC SPORTS ARE "PEP" INTO THE American Competitors In Games Played Behind Firing Line In France Klrktey, Champion 100-Yard Sprinter, In Center. (By E. A. BATCHELOR)- Whot Is putting the "pep" into the push toward lierlln which the Yanks are giving Kaiser Bill's bad Bodies? Athletics certainly are helping. How? By raising the morale and the muscle of the American fighters. In one unit and in one week, 0,835 soldiers partici pated In athletic sports. They hud 30, 275 spectators, meaning that for every six soldier spectators there was one soldier participant. Better record than baseball or football has in the U. S. AM ne e'est pas? Rank of Popular Sports. How did the sports rank In popu larity among the soldiers? Volley ball came first. Baseball was second. Box ing was on the limb. Track and field sports were Just out of the money. Basket ball was fifth. Indoor base ball, soccor, rugby, tennis, etc., were in the ruck. Athletics surely are putting muscle and "pep" into the young men who must handle the rifles, artillery, gren ades, spudes and other implements of warfare. Besides this, there is the high morale generated by tingling high spirits and good health- which blesses tho well-exercised body. Contrast the figures above with a world's series baseball game, where 43,000 spectators watch 18 men con test, or a Yale-Harvard football game, where the Yale "bowl" held 70,000 fans while 22 men struggled to uphold the supremacy of Old Ell and John Har vard. Contrast it with a boxing cham pionship match where a "gate" of up ward of $100,000 witnessed a bout between two men. Consider the great er advantage, the wider-spread bene fit of sports Involving one contestant to every six spectators. Everyone In Game. The flgures are furnished by the Y. M. C. A., one of the organizations which assumed the responsibility of spreading mass athletics among as many of our soldiers as would respond to the opportunity. The Y. M. C. A. was the pioneer to make "everyone get Into the game. When the K. of C. WAITE HOYT FINALLY LANDS Brooklyn Schoolboy Wonder, After Re peated Attempts to Enlist, Is in Training Camp. Walte Hoyt, the Brooklyn schoolboy wonder, -who Joined the Giants as a Waite Hoyt pitcher nt the age of fifteen, Is now at Mlddlebury college, Mlddlohury, VU as a member of the reserve ofilecrs' training corps. Hoyt tried repeatedly to enlist In the tanks and in the navy but was 'rejected because of ills youth. WHO ARE THEY7 One of tho best Jokes Is the story from Clnclnnntl thnt major league players "over the draft age" plan a tour of Cuba the coming winter. If the mun who sent out the story will enume rate the major league players who have passed their forty sixth year we'd like to see It, Just for curiosity. ARMY JOB FOR KANSAS COACH Homer Woodson Harglss Selected to Head Athletic Department of Oregon College. Another Kansas conference footbnll roach has gone to the big league. Homer Woodson Harglss, athletic di rector and coach at tho Kansas State Normal school, has been selected from n dozen or more candidates to head the athletic department and conch nil major sports at the Oregon Agricul tural college, Corvallls, Ore. HELPING TO PUT PUSH TOWARD BERLIN went into overseas work, one of its first acts wns to purchase and ship tons of athletic equipment. Up to the present the "Y" has provided hun dreds of athletic directors recruited from the foremost athletes of earlier generations and tons of sporting para phernalia. The K. of C, starting a little luter, is developing a similar program. Directors uso every art to get the backward, the shy, the non othletlc soldier Into the games for the good of Ids body und his morale, a tremendous old to the winning of the war. The "Y" and K. of C. men seek to enlist the greatest number of men in sports rather than to develop a small team of crack athletes. Tfee flgures, based on the activities of one unit, show the result They were taken In a comparatively small region and were selected at random. Baseball engaged the attention of 1,423 men of this region In a week. The games were witnessed by 12,000 men, which would be considered a very good weekly attendance for a minor league club, and as many spectators as a big league team in the second di vision often draws In seven days. Here the proportion of players to spectators is one to ten, while in league baseball it would be 1 to 400, figuring 30 pluy ers as the average number uppearlug weekly on the diamond. Volley Ball First. Volley ball, probably the most popu lar game for . soldiers, engaged 1,005 players with a large gnllery. Boxing ranked third in popularity, with 1,027 men participating, while 0,000 soldiers looked on. Compare that one to nine average with a big fist fight crowd viewing the efforts of two men. Ten nis exercised 227 men, while 805 par ticipated in track and field sports. Bas ket bull engaged 703 soldiers, while in door baseball, soccor and rugby foot bull worked the muscles and minds of hundreds. Just as Wuterloo win won on England's cricket and football fields, so this war may be decided by the athletic contests of the clean-living, hurd-hlttlng American boys. FREE AGENTS IN 19207 If there is no baseball In 1019 a majority of the players will become free agents. This will mean that In 1920, or whenever the game Is resumed, they can sign with anyone they please. Of course the magnates may agree among themselves not to tamper with each other's play ers. But this will not neces sarily mean protection for them. The players may band together, too. These are grave times In the history of the national game, as well as the history of the nation. Only time cun tell what destiny has decreed for Its future. 1rCiirCrCrCtirCrlrtt(rCrlr(rlr(iti BAN ON RACING IN ENGLAND Bonar Law Will Not Hear of Resump tion of Sport No Useful Purpose Would Be Served. Bonnr Law recently declined to re ceive a deputation from the League of the Man in the' Street to hear objec tions to the renewed restrictions on racing In England. He stated thnt as tho question of racing had been settled, no useful pur pose would be served, adding that the league was In error In thinking that cranks hud access to the members of the war cabinet, the only outside body consulted by the cabinet being the Jockey club. WALTER MAYER JOINS ARMY Red Sox Player Loses No Time In Re turning Home, Arranging Affairs, ' and Departing. Walter Mayer of the champion Red Sox lost little time returning to his home In Cincinnati, arranging his af fairs and answering tho call of his draft board for army service. He ar rived home on one train and within tn hour was "on the way to Berlin," meaning thnt he had been bundled off to camp. In that hour he Invested his share of the world's series receipts, after making several donations to war welfare work. Grid Player War Victim. Lieut. Hnrry C. Horton, former tackle on the University of South Car olina team, was killed In nctlon In France, September 13, his parents were notified by the war department. Pete Herman to Sea. Bantamweight Champion Pete? Her man, his manager, Walsh, lied Dolun and three other boxers have been or dured La sea by the navy. LARGE SCORES MADE IN EARLY BASEBALL Annals of Game Are Full of No table Achievements. Greatest Number of Tallies In One In. nlng Were Made by Chicago In Game Against Detroit Dele, hanty Was Slugger. In the early days of baseball no club was considered to have a safe lead over the opposing team with anything less than a margin of 20 runs to the good. With the beginning of professional baseball In tho early seventies, and the hiunching of tho National league, these conditions changed, und big scores became the exception and not .tho rule. Thirty-six years ago wus played, at Chicago, the league game In which the record number of runs wns made. Chicago and Cleveland were the opposing tennis on that historic July 24, In 1882, and the former tri umphs! by a score of 35 to 4. Muny other league-swatting records have stood almost as long. The great est number of home runs In a major league game was scored In a contest between Detroit and St. Louis In 1880, when seven circuit hits were made. This record has been several times ex ceeded in minor circuits, and at Corsl cuna, Tex., In 1902 no less than 19 home runs were smashed out. The world's record for tho greatest num ber of runs In ono Inning of a league game has stood since 1833, when Chi cago scored 18 runs two for each mun in the "lucky seventh" of n game against Detroit, Burns and Weldman being the twlrlers whose delivery fared so badly. As lato ns 1008, nt Cleve land, ten runs were scored In one In ning, nine hits were made, and each batter who made a hit got a run. The Individual batting records for a single game are headed by the won derful performance of Beaumont of the Iirates, who In 1899 got six tilts in as many times at the bat. Even more sensational was the feat of Dele hanty of Philadelphia, In 1890, when In n game against Chicago he went to bat five times and got four home runs and a single. CASEY STENGEL IN CANTEEN Former National League Outfielder Likes New Job With Exception of Early Rising. Casey Stengel, former National league outfielder, now In the navy, Is In charge of the canteen at the Brook- B&MMHtfka4' Casey Stengel. lyn navy yard. He says he likes the work, all except the getting up at six o'clock In the morning to open "the store." In addition to running the can teen, Casey is captain of a ball team of navy men, among his players being Jimmy Hlckmnn, formerly of the Dod gers, and Hnrry Heltmun, a pitcher who "belongs" to Brooklyn. HOW SPORTS HELP SOLDIERS Americans Trained to Do Their Work In Quickest Manner Possible With Their Guns. According to a returned American soldier, the Yankee sport trnlnlng Is helping them over there, In thnt United Slntes soldiers do their work, whlA la to kill as many nuns as possible, In the quickest and most nntural way. An English Tommy will chase a Hun 1-olf a mile, he soys, to get a chance to stick him with a bayonet, when one shot from his rifle would do the trick nt once. French soldiers have a ten dency to wait until they can grenade their foes, but the Yanks get a bead on the other fellows and drop 'era quick with their rifles. Soccer In California. California football league (soccer) will be made up of eight elevens. Flanner Takes Up Farming. Joe Flanner, veteran assistant sec retary of the Natltonnl commission, af ter years of service with baseball's high court, has closed his desk and gone to South Dakota, where he has a farm. He has been In bnd health and if ho finds thnt the outdoor life Is a benefit to hlin probably will not re turn to office baseball. Abandon Sheepshead Bay Races. . Harry S. Harkness, owner of the Sheepshead Buy Speedway, has an nounced that the annual Harkness Gold Trophy race will not be run this year, and also there will he no more automobile races at the Speedway for the duration of the war. Womcjkto Help Soccer. Bridgeport (Conn.) soccer officials will Invite women principals of the schools of that city to becomo mem bers of the board's executive council In order to help the kicking stylo of footbnll. Plenty of Soccer. California footbnll lenguo (soccer) vv ill be mnde up of eight eleven. Temperanoe (Conducted by the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union,) SUBSTITUTE MILK FOR BOOZE Milk contains all the elements need ed to build up and sustain the body. That is why workers feel satisfied af ter drinking It. The shipbuilders of Seattle are using 10,000 pint bottles of milk every lunch hour, and the only reason they do not use 20,000 Is that there Is a limit to the supply. And as for Ice cream cones, great plies of thorn go like hot cukes every noon. The heaviest consumers of milk and Ice cream In Seattle shipyards are said to be the steel construction men riveters, plute hungers and the forge men. This work exacts a heavy toll on physical strength and these workers find milk an element that puts "pep" and vigor Into them. "The change from beer to milk has been a mighty good thing for every body concerned," suld W. It. Builey, who has worked In the shipyard pat tern shops off and on nearly thirty years. "In the old days a foreman could never tell bow many men be would have on the Job the next day after pay day. It was the rule for the men to break for the nearest saloon as soon as they received their checks and most of them anchored there un til they were turned out broke. Tve known fellows In those days that couldn't buy a pair of socks because they never bad anything left after the first visit to the saloon. When some of the men did come back to work they were sodden and dull and In capable of doing a good day's work. "Things are different now. These men who are drinking milk Instead of beer have clear skins, clear vision and clear minds. They are able to do a fair day's work every day and can ' make extra effort when It's necessary.' 8AVINQ MAN POWER. New Hampshire, like other com monwealths made dry by state enact ment, has proved that prohibition re sults In marked conservation of man power and money power. Here Is the record of "drunks" of eight cities for the first month after the law went Into effect contrasted with the correspond ing month under license: 1918. 1917. Berlin 3 79 Concord 6 54 Dover 6 87 Franklin 2 89 Manchester 43 845 Nashua 24 81 Portsmouth 11 05 Somers worth 8 22 Totals 103 752 This represents 649 "drunks" saved f iu uuo ujuiuu iu uicbu t;iiib lines, a Is safe to assume thnt an equal num ber of real "drunks," sot arrested, were unable to work after pay day and ' nut of a Job beqause drunk. Allowing a conservative estimate of only five I days' loss of time for each drunk (many were 30 days) we have 6,490 J days' work saved to New Hampshire by eight cities alone tn one month of prohibition. At ?3 a day this is near ly $20,000 in money. I BIBLE CLASS DISCONTINUED BE CAUSE OF PROHIBITION. In a four-mile trip through the South and the far West, Miss Anna A. Gor don, president of the National W. O. T. U., found the people In dry terri tory well satisfied with prohibition, and In the large cities like Portland, Ore and Seattle, Wash., no Industrial dis turbance had followed Its adoption. "The only criticism, I heard," she said, "was In Portland, where they said It bad put out of business the largest Bible class In the country. Of course I was shocked to hear that, but when the president of the local Woman's Christian Temperance union told me that she had been for a number of years teaching that Bible class every Sunday morning In the county Jail, and that prohibition had takin her class away for her, I went on my way re joicing." ABSTINENCE AND EFFICIENCY. As regards straight shooting It Is everyone's experience that abstinence Is necessary for efficiency. By care ful and prolonged tests, the shooting efficiency of, the men was proved to be 80 per cent worso after the rum ration than before. What Is true of the soldier is true of the man who makes the supplies for the soldiers and sailors. Neither civilian nor sol dier can be at his best for work In the trenches or In the factory when he uses Intoxicating liquor. It takes three or four men at home to support one soldier In the trenches. If the civilians at home destroy their effi ciency through drink they destroy the rupport of the army Just as effective ly as If the evil result came In direct contact with the army Itself. Admiral Jelllcoe. A SOLDIER'S PLEA In the department, "Letters from the People," of tho Chicago Herald and Examiner we find this: Sir As the son of a father brutal ized through drink, I urge you to do everything in your power to help the prohibition measure. I am leaving for camp realizing the agonies that my mother is suffering without the aid of her three boys, all of whom have gone to the front. THE VICTIM OF A DRUNKEN FATHER. (Name withheld) A LA MELBA. Interviewed on her arrival at Syd ney, South Australia, Madam Mclba said: "America is practically dry, now. A great many Btates have pro hibited tho sale of liquor, and the re sult has been excellent. The people nre better In every way for doing With out It. Of course even before the wqr the Americans, taken as a whole, were not really a drinking nation. Ice wa ter is their great drink, and I am a thorough believer In water drinking myself. I practically live on 1L" LOSE DUKHOBORS Peculiar Sect in Canada Going Back to Russia. ' Their Departure a Few Years Ago Would Have Been Hailed witn Delight, but Sentiment Has Undergone a Change. The announcement thnt Fetor Vert gin, the lender of the 10,000 to 11,000 Russian Dukhobors, or Dukhohortsy, has declured his Intention of returning to Russia with his followers has caused t mild sensutlon in Canada. Fifteen years ago a similar announcement would have been received by the peo ple of western Cnnndif with impres sions of devout gratitude. The il literate peasant "spirit-wrestlers," ns their name Implies, were disliked as religious funatlcs, who herded to gether In community houses, and though peaceable and Industrious peasants, refused to conform to CanU' dlon laws and regulations or to nc cept nationality. But now everywhere In western Canada they are recognized as remarkable colonists, even if bnd citizens, while Peter Verlgln Is ac knowledged to be a genuine leader of men. The Dukhobor has never been a wan derer of his own free will. He has moved from place to place In Europe as the result of consistent persecution. Church and state went for him "ham mer and tongs," the one telling him that all religious sects must be brought !i:to conformity with established Greek Catholicism, the other that he must become a soldier under tho conscrip tion act of 1887; At first he compiled with the military law and went off to buttle, but with the distinct under standing between him and the ciders that If he were compelled to discharge his rifle he would fire It In the air. For he has always been a consistent nonreslstant, and so consistent an op ponent of war of nil kinds that, In exile lr the Caucasus, the community threw r.way the weapons that had been con sidered necessary to protect Its mem bers from wild animals. In the first year of their settlement In Cannda, the men scattered In order to earn wages on farms, on railways, and sawmills. Meanwhile, the women built the future residences and, lack ing horses, plowed the' land by har tesslng themselves, 12 pair's of wom en to a plow with one plowman to drive theml Brilliant, In British Columbia, Is one of the great Dukhobor centers and the socialist's Utopia. Here the commu nity Is wholly self-contained and has realized something of that equality of Its component citizens for which there Is so much striving In the world to day. In contrast to the modern city, there are no anxieties concerning the source of the next day's needs. There are evidently no divisions between "mine" and "thine" no Jealousies or en vies over the possessions of another, for co man Is richer thun his fellow. No money Is In circulation. One member of the executive does all the outside selling and buying, and all moneys received nro turned over to the treasury. Money, In fact, has no purchasing value within the commu nity. All the necessaries of life are doled out without it by the various departments in charge. Everybody has the wherewithal, which Is not of silver and gold, and there Is no theft, any more than there Is visible machin ery of government. The govern ment Is the people. Once a week they crowd Into the large assembly hall and discuss the affairs of the commu nity, and the managers of the sev eral departments are given their In structions according to popular sen timent. The Dukhobors possess the system of Initiative, referendum and recall In an admirably simplified form; their officials and tempo ral representatives hold office as long as they do their work well. What Is the explanation of these peculiar people who live so simply on a form or ranch which may stretch for miles along the road and stately Columbia river? And can Canada afford to lose the "sisters" and "brothers" of a community who have bullded better than they knew, who have created a unique state in the midst of the wild? Christian Science Monitor. Find Glass Substitute. Announcement is mnde by the war department thut, following experi ments with lenses for air pilots' glasses, the medical research board of the division of military aeronautics an nounces thnt It has been ablo to effect the casting of certain substances In thin sheets which, while not glass, can be used ns such, and may afford a practical substitute for It In goggles. This substance hns been on the market for some time, but the company which makes It has not, up to the present, been able to cast it In the right strength and thickness suitable for goggles. Under the direction of the medical research board, thin sheets of the ma terial have been produced, which not only are of the proper texture and thickness, but can be ground and pol ished. The substance is bard and non inflammable and Insures practically a nonshatterable lens for the protection of the pilot's eyes. Last of Kin of Great Novelist Dies. William Dickens, the last kin ot the great novelist, Charles Dickens, died recently at his home In Hamilton, Ont. Mr. Dickens was born In Brnun stone, England, where his father, George Adams Dickens, kept the Ad miral Nelson, an old public house. William Dickens came to this country about ten years ago, accompanied by his wife, Emily Stennes, and his young est daughter. Mr. Dickens wns seventy-five years of age, and possessed a most interesting character, resembling In some ways his great cousin. When Charles Dickens was passing through the little town of Braunstone he stopped at his cousin's inn, and, no ticing tho little bright-eyed boy, putted him on the back and quaintly told him to grow up to be a better man than his father. Mr. Dickens treasured that In cident among tho fondest memories of his life. LOOK AT CHILD'S TONGUE IF SICK CROSS, FEVER mmaaammmm HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVs J SONS FROM LITTLE STOMArJ - BVVVLLS, GIVE CALIFORNIA 6YRUP0rJ rta VHWR ir Dl L.IUU9 OR CON8TIPATED. Look at the tongue, niothwi coated, It is a sure sign Unit Jm tie one's stomach, liver ami k needs a gentle, thorough cleanslm once. When peevish, cross, llstlosi J doesn't sleep, doesn't cat or art ,.1 rally, or Is feverish, stomach . Dream oau; nas stoninch-aiiie throat, diarrhoea, full of cold ri teaspoonful of "Cullfnrnla Syrm m i , ' , . . ' c igu, uuu m a iew noiirs nil the constipated waste, unillmtoil and sour bile gently moves out of little bowels without griping, B nave a well, playful child nala, You needn't coax sick children take this harmless "fruit luutli they love Its delicious taste, mi always makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a bottle "California Syrup of Figs," which directions for babies, ehlMivQ 0f ages and for grown-ups plainly n bottle. . Beware of counterfeits I - m t . uere. xo ue sure you gei me genu: ask to see that It Is made by the Til fornla Fig Syrup Company." RefJ any other kind with contempt.-A All He Wants Said of Him. "I don't want any praise for w! I'm derlng in this wur." "No?" "Not at all. All I ask Is that write me down as one wb IMn't advantage of a schoolboy und bay fifty-dollar bond from him nhg have been ashamed to take leu tU two thousand dollars' worth tm grown man." No Wormi In a Heallhv Chill Bealtiir aulur, watch Indicate pour IiIumI. iriul rule, thnre ll more or li'M tnoiBcb dlitortui UKOVB'S TAHTHLHHS chill ToNK: iTmnit fur two or torn weeks will enrlrh limb: a tintve the dlueitloo. and act ai a G'ni-ml ftiwi All Mtllriran tmnhlMl with aortnt h.i. n n enlng Tonlo to the whole iriiu-o. Nntnraen jd thma fiff r dlinel the wormi. and llit'Chiid!. I in perfasl health, rieaaaot to lake. twet'M Especially If It's Coal. The man who wnnts but little i: lets It be known thut he tint hai poor cjiance of getting even that. Constipation centrally Indlcat.i dinr-H Stomach, liver and bowels. Wrlcht MA Vegetable Pills restores refiiKrltr fitui griping. Adv. The 45,000 women doing work li Washington come from every city ll the United Stutes. Tho Vatican contnlns l.ono liallur. rooms and covers 14 acres of pnuid- WAR WORE wYlffl'l fill".,".". 1 nurses are instaHfl eight miles in u rear of the fikhtin. lines "over there. itlglll acre av many won" DIIUUll. si- - lift IA t-v , 4 V, a a ! p If OT. I V U V Daw '-, BIUL'IK' nvii U YOU wuuii'"' 7 j . i. i nfli naros. douiici in cioiu. cuuu"" . on Hirst Aia, iianaaginn, Yh.ii 200 prescriptions lor acuie bhu .--. diseasea: orofusc v illustrated vj 7" cuts ana coioroa pmu. - i i i ia A..L- vntir uiuft gist or send 60c. to fuuusdcr, uw Btroot, Buffalo, N. X. . r-. spells, suffers from awful pains v lar or irregular intervals she to a tonio maue up oi nwi out alcohol, which makes weak BblVUfS " ax,e w... Q,,nri IT" I'mrna iwinain. m. 1 .. iw - . . Than fnr rhn iwnr and dowi" " . i . i. nnMiiui .r. BrL m Dr. Pierce's rieasant I i. k.. L. m nleuura to rei"""""" fierce remedial lor ins paat 37 years and I have oarer known them to fail living doaired reauita. . .t..:n with a complication of troublea. t V. .1 n.in. ll n... m V body and my br seemed weaa. t nau been doctoring lor Mnnlli, with ni i r heflk doctors and bad ob tained do reliel. I was diioouraged and aTOe Dr. Fierea's Inraiiae Hotel for advioe. I Marked taking! ' F a o r 1 1 ePro- sonptii snt-.l'elleU.' 1 Improved 'r?m""L :. in P"1 eventually waa ourea 01 my "",,"".r, v ranli health. Mrt.Lydt J.Xmg, 1VM ' fana.. AHl-i InM 111" " MALARIA, CHILIS, FEVER AND U CBW . - D...ial ej-nnla !) l 1 Will curs that tired feeling. v- " unln limbs and head. )onlli .redl"'1 arsenic or hblt-rormlnsl--- ""-- ----- .i. In ". Your Best Asset A Skin Cleared By Oiticuraboap . Talrtirn p I Sample eth free of "Ovlleire, - Doep-Seated Ooj develop ""r"',r-:.-lritd renwdr hMVivSnsstlstonfor mors than fltiyr"1 aw IN USB FO 8 YB" PDSO'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers