THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McOONNELLSBUHCl, A a-aagsWstaWsaWaaMsWisssssssaMa'Js '"'MIM'",1-'asssssssMgsssssse , i . -, . i- - " " " " is I " rtr-i&Ei ) i bps ew m I ""f I DEVELOPMENT .af ev ..- ... sv. i 1 1 i v.c - ,.. . n -vwimtui truis 't v. mt i m ws mww mm m bt n gam ra arm wm ww arm v wm arm arm mrmt arm wa amm. mmt m .mat (Special Information Service, United States Department of Agriculture.) FARM HOMES NEED GOOD WATER SYSTEMS. Many of our American women were un able to take up the duties of nursing at the front, but they should know how to take care of their own at home, and for thii purpose no better book wai ever printed than the Medical Adviser a book 'containing 1,008 papes, und bound In cloth, with chapters on Flint Aid, Bandaging and care of Fractures, Taking care of the Kick, Physiology, Hygiene, Bex Problem, Mother and llibe, which can be had at most drug stun, or send 60 cents to the publishers, 603 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. The women at home, who are worn out, who suffer from pain at regular or irregular intervals, who are nervous or dizzy at times, should take that reliable, temperance, herbal tonic which a doctor in active practice prescribed many years ago. Now sold by druggixts, in tablets and liq uid, as Ir. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial package. Wllmltifton, Del. "When I wis s girl st horn, m.r mother always railed on Dr. Hsrea'a rsTortte Prescription. It ne'er failed to hulld ber up and make ber strong, when Id a run dows state, "I was Id s mlarrable, ran down condition. I wae weak and nerrous and Buffered from ar-hee and pains all oeer. Knowing turn Favorite Pre scription bad helped mj molber 1 derided to taka It, and found It eirellent. It built me up la better health than 1 bail been for a Ions time. "I ahall always recommend the Trssorlptloa' to womro wb are slllnj." Mr. Alexandat Morton. 887 Klrkwood St. 1 9 ' To Water Hanging Plant I'litce u small funnel In the center of (lie basket, leaving the cup port above the soil, but hidden by the fol iage. Fill this with wuter dully. The water will sonk Into the soli gradually end will not run through onto the floor below, spoiling carpets or waxed floors. How's This ? We offer $100.00 (or any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is tak en Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. . Sold by druggists for over forty years. Price 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Religious. Two shipwrecked sailors were feel ing very miserable on a desert Island, pinched with hunger and cold. The one more wretched than the other said to his companion : "Can you pray, Bill?" "No." "Can you sing?" "No." "Well." snld the first, "let's have something religious let's have a col lection." No Worms In a Healthy Child Am children troubled with worms ha?e sa en Mild r color, which Indicates poor blood, and sa a rule, th-ra la more or lees atmxiun ataturbanoa. OHOV rg TAHTBLHH8 chm TON1U siren revularlr (or two or three weeks will enrich tbe blood, Im prove the digestion, and act as m General Strength nlnsTonlo to tbe whole aratem. Nature will then throw off ordlspel the worma. and the Child will be la perfect health. Pleaaul to take. SQc per bonis. Crushed. Artist Just a little daub of mine, you see, madam. Lady You are entirely too modest I call that quite a big daub. Anoint the eyelids with Roman Tr Bel wain at nlsht, and In the moraine observe the refreshed and strengthened sensation la your eyes. Adv. Ad act of heroism Is temporary while an net of charity Is everlasting. AH yellow flume on the gus range Is prastlenlly wasted. L - - - - - Look out for Span ish Influenza. At the first sign of a cold take' CASCARA M QUININE Standard cold remedy for 30 years to tablet form aafe, sure, no opiates breaka up a cold In 34 hours relieves trip in 3 days. Money back if it fella. The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. Hill's picture. At Ail Dnuj Stores. AIRPLANES Won the War STf,1?::. saeohanlo. Learn how to bnlld alrplanea. Manufao Carers and (Jovernnient Deed trained men. Let m teach Tim bow to build your own airplane. Out soars In practical airplane onnsiracilon quail net Cu. We bare taught nundreda of others, ao eat aehyoo. No bookntudr al our school i praetlca. work onlr. Write fur Illustrated booklet "C. U.' V. 8. AERO SCUOOL, Do rark Bow, t.ew Tork HIS ADYICE TO SUFFERERS Mr. B T. gtright, of JM Arabella St., Knoxtllle Pittsburgh, Pa , suffered tor a) rears with stomach lifer, bladder, kidney trouble and asthma. Uurlni his sutrerlnin, he tried ererrthing adrlfted to him which cost him a fortune. Bit bottles of the Hon Prof. Mr. Jo. Herman's Hpeolnl lllood Porl Bar proved to him lu merlu. This Master Hemed) ean bo received lir parcel post, prepaid, three botllei Hi), forspeclal advice and testimonials, give thor ough dlaitnoals of yonr case. t. FHKlTHOfc" MR Manufacturing Cbemlst, Carrlck, I'ltuburgh, fa CulicuraSoap Ideal for the Complexion Q. M nte.4WiT M enrl Kft Ttlnrm tB H-strplfi ecn ir or 'mnnn, inp. mowtmu- PARKER'S . ..HAIR BALSAM . A MM preparation of mtrrtt, RIW to radioavt dandruff. For RtMtorinc Color and BMtitytoGrr or Faded Hmlr. Aon, and ti.oot Prnrriitfc Compltte History of World". War iVuT of stirring photograpblo battle aoenes, maps, etc. HI eonnulmon. AnenU'outfltfree. Bend loo lor postage, t. U. Tkewpue C., raltarlae SMg. ,11. Leels, Tirglnla Farms for Sale gains to be had: smay payments! ooma and see ns Irsti tl years In tbe business; nice land W to liiJ per aore. Our lists aent free on supllcatlnn. U. 0. UOUGAitD CO., Korfolk, Irglulav Colds Grow Bettor orprlalfiRly .toon, throat Inflammation dlsnp- tfcar3, irntaiioa is reucvea ana inruai w . ...i u .... .-i:-ki. iM...w.fl 1i. ' ' rw TIMORE, NO. 62-1918.' Villiam Harper s' Ms' , M 'f 1 "fr ay-' . f aWJ lafcsaae dSfcttiaaV Reclamation of Mutilated Soldier One of Miracles Born of War 0 m i o naming man wuu h' I It" and then "goes west" Is IIP fi.-t.t i Ilnata mm misseu ny nis trenenniute, the one who gets a nice, clean wound Is envied, but the ninn who Is struck by flying steel and leaves the lines to emerge from the hospital a legless, armless or sight less by-product of war Is pitied from the depths of his comrades' hearts. Artillerymen pray that when they are hit they will not be mutilated for life; so do Infantrymen. For they sicken at the thought of passing the remainder of their days a burden to themselves and others, objects of pity and charity. Death Is the least toll of war. But now comes the miracle, Just an other which has been born of the most colossal war: The reclamation of the mutilated man, the refitting of him to return to civil life the worker of bis own destiny, without aid of charity or pity or pension. The armless will return to their trades and professions, the blind will work alongside the sighted by grace of a superdevoloped seventh sense, the legless may take up their work where they left It to Join the colors, or else equip them selves for a new object In life and ask no special concessions from their whole-limbed competitors nor from any man. More Than Makeshift Mechanical Ingenuity . has devised the artificial arm and leg which 14 something more than a makeshift for partially concealing the loss of a limb. With sufficient training In its use a man equipped with such an arm can ehave himself with an open razor, a feat which many a man with both arms Intact will not attempt fie can grasp a whetstone and sharpen a scythe or hold a delltate tool at a lathe for work demanding the finest precision. From his new training the blinded man emerges capable of efficient work at tbe same lathe or making furniture in open competition with employees with un impaired sight It all rests with the individual whether he applies him self with new hope and enthuslusm to t,ho task of reQttIng himself for a pro ductive, useful career. France furnishes well nigh In numerable examples of the new sur gery and the new training of men who t,o all Intents and purposes have been hnndlcnpped for life. Throughout tbe republic re-educatlonal schools for mutllus have been established and are graduating men and returning them to the channels of peace time occupa tions at a marvelous rate. A mutlle who hits lost his tight arm Is set to work performing simple ex ercises with his left, such as cutting out squares and ovals from sheets of thin copper. After five or six weeka of this elemehtary training In any American Red Cross or French re-ed-ucutlonul Bchooi, his left hand begins to develop some of the skill looked for from a man's right arm. Soon he Is able to write with his left, and eventually he forgets the loss of the other member. . Time tni Patience Needed. ' Then comes the attachment of the Ingenious mechanical arm to the stub of his right. It takes time and pa tience to lenrn io operate Its springs and levers and clamps, for every opera tion must be managed from the shoul der and remaining section of the arm. To the "wrist" of this artificial mem- First Flyer Aviation waj born lq ancient Greece, observes Canrb Kelly Field Eagle. Dig ging' down Into the depths of bookery they have found that Icarus was the original boy aviator, and though he leU to his dW in hts first solo flight, there waft iwi flying field named after him simply because In the golden days of Greek tn'ythology the nations had not gone In seriously for aviation. However, sfnee there were no fields to Eight-Hour Law Too often a girl who has natural beauty in her youth squanders it prodi gally, keeping late hours, over-exert-fng ond eating irregularly food (hat Is rich, but not particularly nour ishing!. Health and strength are the props on which beauty depends for success, and when Inroads are con stantly made on these It quickly fades. To continue la the possession of health and strength no new laws are Deaiv - "EACH WOfiKOPfftrMJ rCAJ. AIM O?JL0 her the muille learns to attach a score of hooks and clasps, each designed to perform a particular function. With these nttaohmei'H he can hold a pen and write, hold a book for reading, whittle with n knife, sweep with a broom, use his knife at the table for cutting his food. An artificial thumb, wonderfully constructed to repluce the lost natural member, enables him to grasp objects between thumb and forefinger. Farm work Is notoriously hard work, calling for skill as well as for a strong, active body behind It. France is returning her wounded soldiers to the soli at a rate little short of miracu lous. A Pollu, leaving the hospital after amputations, enters one of the Red Cross or French re-educational schools. Let us say he has lost both legs and that he was originally a worker In vineyards In the south of France. Naturally he wants to go back to his home section when he has been dis charged, and the great hope In his heart is that he will In some way be able to re-enter the old life. "But I hove lost both legs," he tells the official who Is making a preliminary study of his case. "These new ones are excellent, monsieur, but I cannot prune vines again." "Quite so, but you can be taught to do useful work sitting down," "But, monsieur, one cannot prune vines that way." "Exactly. But I have something else in mind. Your grape harvest is gathered In baskets, is it not? How would you like to learn basket-weaving) There is noed for such work In your home section." Desires Are Consulted. It goes that way. No mutlle Is set to work at a new task without having his natural desires consulted. If he wants work In agriculture, there la something which he can bs taught to do. If It Is a factory he longs for, his artificial hand will be trained for the factory. I have seen French mutlles from the farming sections of France, who before the war plowed behind a pair of oxen, being taught the Intricacies of the mechanical tractor. And I have seen these same men going out to plow once more not as peasants be hind oxen, but as skilled tractor opera tors, whose false arms or legs equipped thorn to compete successfully with highly trained men who have lost neither. And I hnv seen a mutlle who had lost both arms In battle climb nimbly to his seat on a farm cart and drive oil!. Illustrations might be multiplied, but would be superfluous. The re-edu-cationnl system in operation abroad nnd In America holds a deeper signifi cance and Interest than Its application of advanced surgery nnd mechanics In re-equlpping men ' for the tusks of peace. The significant feature of it lu France, for Instance, is that those men emerge from the weltor of holl, minus arms and legs, somotlmes blind, to returu to civil life better equipped then in prewar days. The education of the French peas ant In the past has been largely a mat ter of utilizing ancient methods. Man have plowed with oxen because thejr grandfathers did ; neither hod the ad vantage of training in advanced agri culture. But the peasant who leaves a re-educational school and returns to the soil Is no longer content to farm In the old way. The Great Awakening, He has learned the economy of trac tor plowing and of seed drills And of manure spreaders. He has lea mod the principles aod practical side of be named, tbey christened the sea Into which he fell the Jcartan sea. A heard ct Investigation appointed to Investigate the cause of the accident made findings that Ike's wings had come off probably "dua to the intense heat of the rfun melting the wax which held them firmly to his body." Insects Hsva Short, Life, As Hearn truly sold, the incidents of tha Insect world are mostly ox a nightmare character wltnsts the nup tial flight oil the bee sd the devour- needed, bnt the old rule of plenty of sleep holds good. Sufficient sleep is more conducive to good looks than any artificial means yet discovered by the beauty doctors. If you wish to keep your eyes bright and your face unllned, obey the eight-hour rule for sleep. Female of the Speolea, Only the. female spiders spin webs. They own all the real estate, and the males have to live a vagabond Ufa un: tier stones and in other obscure hiding places. If thay come about tha house t. 'uJr'v--rv". ) , r"t.; .i . 1 ill ik Ai Kiaiiaa?nrT'-r AMMCM L(jWJOT1UTM modern dairying and orcharding. Ho will not be satisfied to use his new arm or leg as he used the old. It hns been the great nwnkenlng for hliu and his kind, it nd unconsciously or pur posely he will spread the contagion of the new order of things lit the midst of the old. Industry throughout the world must not close Its eyes to the Inevitable fact that following the war re-equlpped men who have sacrificed sight and limbs for their country will come back to take their places alongside . the wbolo. They will come back efficient men, asking no sympathy, asking no special concessions from employers or those with whom they work shoul der to shoulder. The world is not go ing to be flooded with Idle, saddened objects of pity and charity. That, too, belongs to tbe old order of things. In the readjustment of every na tion's economic and Industrial life fol-1 lowing the demobilization of the arm ies the men reclaimed from mutilation will demand and receive their full share of tbe task. i This Is one of tbe war's most sub lime achievements, second only to the everlasting defeat of military au tocracy. Idealism We cannot get away from Idealism any more than we can from charac ter, nor from an Idealism based on knowledge. The problem will be as it always has been, one of making It helpful and fruitful, and enlisting it in the service of man. It cannot serve man except through other men, nnd as applied by them. The greatest Ideal ever revealed to the world was the Ideal of service. There could have been none greater. Christian people certulnly will not deny this, for It la one of the basic truths of their re ligion. Idealism, service and obedi ence, therefore, all go together, nnd are all necessary elements of a sym metrical character. They will not loae their Importance or value. We cannot think of men living together In a civil ized society without them. For, lack ing them, men would not be men, nnd society would not be civilized. Bos ton Globe. Belgium's Independence. More thun 75 years ago Belgium de clared her Independence of Holland, to which she had been united by the settlement of 1815. Long-standing dis satisfaction first broke Into open re bellion on the night of August 25, when the performance of the opera "La Muctte de Portlcl," with its passionate appeal for emancipation, Inflamed the audience to such a degree that the peo ple left the opera house and flew to arms. Europe regarded the outbreak, as merely a local riot until a month later, when the Dutch army sent to rt establish order In Brussels was led In to a trap from which It extricated It self only after four days' heavy fight ing and tho loss of 1,500 men. Im mediately on the withdrawal of the de feated troops a provisional govern ment was assembled and on October 4 Belgium was proclaimed an Indepen dent state. Ing by the female spider of her bride groom. Whether they have wings or stings or both or none, theirs Is tho life of the preyer or the preyed tiponj and they can defend themselves feebly only by protective coloring, or perhaps an unpleasant taste which makes then) Inedible to birds that would otherwise, eat them. Whether hey oreep on thd ground or appear to nutter joyously among the flowers, their struggle for existence Is fierce and Incessant. Thfls does stark science brush away the fuz zy fancies of a sentimental older era. so often as to bora the ruling sex they are mercilessly killed and eaten. The spider's skin is (U unyielding as the shells of lobsters and crabs', and la shed from tlma to time In the same way,, to accommodate the animal's growth. ' If yon poke over the rubbish In a female spider's back yard, among her cast-off corsets you will find tbe Jackets of the males, who have paid for their sociality with their lives trophies of her barbarism as truly as scalps show tha savage nature of the red maa. . Illustrating Common but Unsafe Location of the Farm Well and Spring. Pos sible Source of Pure Water Also Is Indicated. A, Unsafe Well; B, Unsafe Spring; C, Privy; D, Garden; E, Chicken Yard; F, Hog Yard; Q, Cultl vated Field; H, Pasture; J, Woodlot Fenced Off and Kept Clean; Here, Beyond the Probable Channels of Impure Drainage, May Ba Pure Water. FOUR UTILITIES HEEDED OH FARM Good Water Is One of Prime Essentials for Safe and Comfortable Living. LIGHTING ALSO NECESSARY Surface and Underground Drainage Should Be Considered In Locating . Wells to Avoid Contamination Wood Lot Desirable. A good water supply, a complete aewage-dlsposal plant, and effective beatlne and lighting systems consti tute the four Drlme utilities of the farm home, the foundations of safe, comfortable living. To secure these ends in greatest measure, thought and planning are necessary. If the proce dure Is haphazard, If the parts are not correlated, there Is neither economy In the construction nor satisfaction In the operation of the plant. When locating the well, the direc tion of surface and underground drain ago should be considered, to the end that the water supply may not be con taminated by the aink drain, cesspool, or other sources of filth. Tbe unused water from a spring or flowing well may be made valuable If brought to a watering trough, cooling tank, fish pond, or swimming pool, or harvested as ice. A saving may be effected by laying two lines of pipe In one trench. The engine which drives tbe pump may operate other useful appliances, such as a dynamo, saw, washing ma chine, cream separator, or cliurn. . A notable example of home-planned utilities Is found upon a farm In north ern Utah. By personal planning and hard work, the owner of this farm gradually has equipped his house with a pressure water system, a laundry containing a power washing machine, wringer, mangle, and drying machine, a heating plant, electric lights, electric range, electric heaters for emergency use In chumbers, and a vacuum clean ing system. Sanitary Farm Water Supply. Observation Indicates that on the averago three out of four farm wells are located within 75 feet of the back door of the house and In the direction of the barn. That convenience and first cost not safety hove been the deciding factors In thousands of such locatlous is a fact made evident by the proximity of barnyards, pig pens, pas tures, fertilized fields, sink drains, privies, cesspools and house yards ren dered Insanitary by chickens, slops, garbage, and other filth. Too fre quently the leach from these or other sources of filth, after Joining the ground water, moves with greater or less directness to wells and springs, seriously Impairing the water supply by organic Impurity or grossly poison ing it with human sewage. Among other ways by which surface waters nnd open or poorly covered wells nnd springs are contaminated or receive noxious substances are: Sur face wash from roads, ranges, or the other sources of filth above mentioned J bodily entry of stock and poultry or their droppings; filth from the shoes of careless farm hands and children; drippings from the dipper or bucket handled by carriers of disease; dust nnd leaves from the air ; and entry of I worms, bugs, spiders, toads, frogs, ' mice, snakes, cats, or other animal life, which through death and decom position may Impart to the water dis agreeable odor and taste and perhaps more serious characteristics. Deterioration of water may be due to still other causes that make It un wholesome but not, so far as known, destructive of health. Among such are unusual dissolving of mineral salts from the earth, washings from clay that produce a milky appearance, dis coloration from mineral or vegetable matter, admixture of mineral or vege table oils, absorption of offensive The soy bean may be satisfactorily grown in combination with other farm crops. By using the tractor the farmer is ennbled to take advantage of the more seasonable times for particular operations, gases, low forms of animal life, min ute plant growths often productive of bright-colored, fibrous masses and scums, and especially when water la of peaty or swampy origin, Impregna tion with Iron. In short, Investigations Indicate that only a small minority of furm water supplies can be clussed aa unqualifiedly safe and desirable. Diseases From Poor Water. Among the ailments caused or ini Hut-need by contaminated water ar typhoid fever, tuberculosis, hookworm' disease, cholera, dysentery and diar rhea, and certain obscure maladies that may be traced eventually to the poisonous effects of drainage from hu man wastes. Figure 2 shows in a striking manner how Increased use of pure water in Massachusetts has been followed by decline In the typhoid fever death rate. Frequently a home or village supplied with water from a mountain spring or canyon is a center, of goiter, although tbe possible rela tionship of such water to this disease has not been proved conclusively. Among ailments of live stock, hog cholera, anthrax, and foot-and-mouth disease are spread by moving water. Hence sick animals should not have access to streams, and dead animals should not be left exposed in fields or burled where drainage may carry In fection to streams and water supplies. One's duty to himself and neighbors' should obligate him to confine all sick animals and burn the carcasses of dead ones or bury them deeply In spots remote from streams, wells and springs, and urge his neighbor to do tbe same. Tbe vital things to remember tiro that ground water Is not stagnant but moves usually, though not always, with tbe "lay" or slope of the land; that Its character determines largely the character of wells and springs; that it Is not an inexhaustible reser voir, bnt that ft given well yields only aa It receives; and that continued pumping will not Improve the water IS a well If the sources from which it la fed are permanently at fault. In short, ground water la natural drain age variously modified in its move ment and character by subterranean conditions. Safe Location of Walla. Wells cannot be located In all cases so that there may not be some pollu tion, bnt the great safeguards are clean ground and as wide separation as possible from the probable chan nels of any Impure drainage. It is not enough that a well or spring Is 00, 100, or 150 feet from a source of filth or that it is merely upon higher ground, although even moderate re moteness and elevation of (he source of supply are of service. Given porous or gravelly ground, seamy ledge, or long-continued pollution of one plot of land, the zone of contamination is like ly to extend long distances, particu larly In downhill directions and at such times ns water supplies are low ered by drought or heavy pumping. Only when the surface of the water In a well or spring is actually at a high er leved at all times than any nearby source of filth is there positive assur ance of safety. Upon any farm a wood lot, grove, or windbreak Is highly desirable, not only to supply fuel end small timber, but for Its beauty and the protection It affords. WATER CHARACTERISTICS Water for domestic use should be clear, lustrous, odorless, colorless, wholesome, soft, neith er strongly acid nor alkaline, and its temperature for general farm purposes should be about 00 degrees F. These character istics, however, must never be deemed nroof of purity, for a class of water may possess them all and yet contain millions of disease-producing germs. Any susdIcIous water should bo re jected until both the water and the surroundings where it is ob tained are passed upon by corn Detent sanitation authority, gen- 2 erally the state board of health. As yet the soy bean is troubled by few serious enemies. A full smokehouse Is one of the best evidences of thrift. Haul all implements Into the ma chine shed as soon as work with them Is over. Management of barnyard manure on farms differs greatly In the same lo cality and tho best yields are usually found where It Is given the best care. After the War a Period of Pros perity! It is evident that the Government of the Dominion In Its programme of re construction and development Is un dertaking a work of tremendous lm, portance. There will be available the labor for work that has been silent since 1014, and the rehabilitation of this labor will entail the thought nnj energy of most capable heads. The transition period from war to pence will be rapid and thorough, and, In. stead of Canada sinking into a state of lethargy, there will be a continued period of wakefulness that will give employment to the unemployed, nnd render to the capitalist and producer ample return for his money, effort and enterprise. Tilie agricultural potentialities of the great Canadian West possess Illim itable acres of the best of soil, cnViMe of producing millions of bushcis of the best of grain. The cost of grow ing this Is lower than any place on the continent. There will be a greater demand than ever for these Innds, the consequent production will be heavier nnd the profits attractive. Cut tin Industry will be one of the chief de velopments, and the encouragement of It will lie in the continued high prices thnt beef products will bring. Euro pean countries have been depleted of cnttle, and the demand for beef, cattle and dairy products will tax the effoiU of the producer for yenrs to conio. Western Canada offers unequnlecl 'opportunities for development In this .line. In the Canadian West plans are be ing laid for the development of elec trical power which can be produced cheaply. There Is an abundance of coal and water power that could bo used in developing this useful energy. What cheap power produced In this way will mean to the farmer and de velopment of industrial enterprises cannot be estimated In figures. More extensive development of the water power at Niagara, on the St. Lawrence and at waterfalls all over the country, is ready to be launched. Peace will see new mine fields opened tip, and It Is equally certain that shipbuilding, railway equipment, steel production, and many of the in dustries will go forward with a bound. ' Canadian industries win be required In the reconstruction of Europe, and already the Canadian Government has sent across the seas a commission for the purpose of securing orders. Can ada took an early and prominent part In -the war, nnd In the days of peace will be found equally active. She feels that by the valor and loyalty of her people- she has earned a large share of the business and prosperity that will follow the war period,, and she proposes to get It. Advertisement. No Charmer, This! Furthermore, why do they call an Mir-splltting whistle a "siren?" Our anderstandlng of a siren is that peo ple don't try to get away from her. Galveston News. MONEY TROUBLE NOT EASILY RECOGHIZED Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected An examining physician for one ef the prominent life insurance companies, in an . interview of tbe subject, made the aa tonitihing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are re jected is because kidney trouble is so com mon to the American people, and tbe large majority of those whose applications are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease. ,, Judging from reports from druggists who are constantly in direct touch with tbe public, there is one preparation that has been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing inttuence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root ii soon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. We find that Swamp-Root is strictly an herbal compound and we would ad vise our readers who feel in need of such a remedy to give it a trial. It is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this crent preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kil mer St, Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle When writing be sure and mention this ' paper. Adv. The Name Gutta Percha. Gutta perclia derives Its nntiio from the Mnlayan words gueta, a gum, and percha, a cloth. It was Introduced to the civilized world In 1842 by Doctor Montgomery, a Scottish surgeon. Cutlcura for Sore Hands. Sonk hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cutlcura Soap, dry ond rub In Cu tlcura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with soft tissue paper. For free samples address, "Cutlcura, Dept. X, Boston." At druggists and by mall. Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50. Adv. Conditional. Milliner "I know that hat would nlense your husband." Customer "Not unless you took $20 off the price." Vhen Bohy Is Teethlnii ' VBUVBD JSAHI uunau bbiuuii'h win v." ' '- ths Btomarh and Bowel troubles. I'erfeotlx barm- BW .II..HW- vu w ...... The Right Place. 'Top, why do they have cages for prisoners?" "To put tho blrdmen In, my son." Mince pies can be made without ment nnd with plainer crust it yo" wish to economize. A Wholesome, Cleanslni, V afkIllGelresnlni and tUallnf I UUI Lolltn Murine for Red it. ness, Soreness, Granula- IF WafQ tion.ItchingandBurning B-J VOc the Eyes r Eyelids "2 Drips" After the Movies. Motoring or Go I will win Tour coimaCTcwi.--- -.j fr Murine when your yea N4 C narws sis.-, . ..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers