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} j 1 I V PAGE TWO BAKNWXLL SENTINEL, BAENWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA \ E^t-Gunner and Chief Petty Officer, U.S. Nsvy Member of the Foreign Legion of France e oreign Legion of France Captain Gun Turret, French BattleshlpGassard Winner of the Croix de Guerre __ Copyright,,' 1918, by Reilly unit Britton Co., Through Special Arrangement With the-fieorge Matthew Adams Service OEPEW GOES “OVER THE TOP” AND GETS HIS FIRSJ^ GERMAN1N BAYONET FIGHT. — Synopsis.—Albert N. Itepeu',.author of the story, tells of his ,s» rvlco in the Fnltcd- St.iies mixy, during which tie attained tile rank of. ebhvf petty officer, first-class., gunner. Tie* world wi.ir starts soon after tie receives Ids hononilth* discharge from the' navy, and he leaves for France with a determination 1" enlist. He joins the Foreign Legion and is assigned to the (trend naught ('assard, where his marksijianshjp Wins him high honors. Later lie Is transferred to (lie hind forces and 'sent tq, the Flanders front. Ife gets Ids first t'xpericnce in a front line trench at Dixmude. Legh nalics vow vengeance when Hermans hide behind Bel- glan woynen and children. .. . . of the Legion charged vtvlth rifle- and , bayonet like their rnen. ' ' .. Then—Boom! Slam! Bang!—and the mines wpnt off.*, • ^ “Allez!” and then tht 1 parapet wag filled with bayonets and men scram bling and crawling and falling and pet ting nyr rrgnin. "Ttie stiioke drifted back -on us, and then our'own. machine guns I began niieatf of us. J . ■ / i f’p toward tlie front tht* T«»mbel's' were fishing in their bag# and throw ing, just like boys after a .rat along “tin* •doekf'h The black smoke from th£ "Jack Johnsons" rolled over Us and probably there was gas, too, hut you could not teH. The front lines had taken their trenches and gone on' and you could • see them, when you stood on a para- LOOK AT CM'S TONGUE IF SICK, CROSS, FEVERISH / Kp ■' CITY MANAGERS. MAKE GOOD HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVE POI« SONS FROM LITTLE STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS. i ' V ./\ Newspaper Points Out Many Instances Where,New System Has Proved of Great Value. - ,f ® • -e -f «»W ’«•'** St. Augustine, Fla., the oldest city n tin; I'idfed States, is-noxv .operating antier one of the most? modern of char- l„. .•!(.,I.l«n, KttH wuuntlt-'l. !>t. rnnutmi alidut lit,, hound* through *?> " <- ' mr , ,t ‘ r ?'“« ■rfif thi'hunch that .-Ifewo.l . tbS'.%2f i-omiminK-ntlon' m-nches, : '™' lkl " leil *" « #mrals »> MM,r * we tried to keep up his jokes ami say tin* same things and so forth. Rut they •lid not go .very well after tie was dead, lie'got hi# in the same charge ip which tin He Was ob‘c r of -befoh* tin* order, was'given, .when the ehaphiin got it, and was .running- pretty neatxrno until we got to the Bociie wire:- I lin'd to sii»p to get through, though must of it wafi cut up by nrtih lerv lire, I rut ho must have jumped it, for when I fooked 'up he was twenty, j bays, w ith bayonets or thirty paces 'ahead of~i?rev GIVrOALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGG AT ONCE IF BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED. bpmblng ,o\it dugouts, disarming pris oners— very searydookfng in their mifskS, and goggles. The wounded were coming btfck slowly. Then we got busy y ith our work in the dugouts apd •communication trenches and fire and bombs, CHAPTER VI—Continued. —5— Tlie lieutenant <iinie back wifi* you (hat are the yellow strepk. their prisoner, you ileus . Maybe you turn As .sxuni .as 1lu w 1 r|,, Tt , ( p—it* snirruled like th'iil \\ fltui «'drm*r of (lie lire bax with through a cominUidcntion him: stretcher hearers and he asked one of ♦ hem, so tin 1 hoy could not heal’ him, if file . |io> would live* Tie* stret,-her In :ir,'i’ said : “I doYi'T think -o <hi>' through his Ahest and i ight. I, g hrok' u.” Tile hoy had kept „qulet for a-While, hut all of a sudden lie veiled, ‘‘(live nie a cigarette'" I handed him a. ciga rette butt that ! Ibid found in tip ■'rfi] out. „\Ve were, till out of cigar So tlTev lit it for him find Xe >t «1 i 11 c t around -th him and trench to a field hospital. r l He jjj,*u- tenniit and I walked a little way with him and lie began to thank us, arid lie told the lieutenant*,. "• >ld man, .'oil have been a .father and a mother to me." And tlie lieutenant said to “You have done, well, ol»i hoy, have done more than* yotiir share". When* thev started into theifommu- nlention trench the boy began to screnm again. And the lieutenant acted like a wild man.- He took out ids cigarette case, hut there were no cigarettes'. In It, and then \ySswore and fait it hack again.. Fail in a few min utes lie had tlie or*c-dut again and was swearing ^yroise Juan ever and talking to hliriself. “Tlie Iun isn't dying like a gf'TTTtW- mati," he said. "Wkv Coiildn’t-lie keep •pipd. ’ I do not think lie meant it. He was all nervous-* and excited and kept taking out his cigarette cast* and putting it hack again. The other officer had gone on to-jn-i sped tin* sentries when" 1 the boy rolled into tin* trench and it poilu came up to tell us that tin* officer had been hit. YV? walked hack to where I had been and tliore was the officer. If IMind ho«»n there I would have got It too, I ifucss. He was an awful mess. Tlie vejns were sticking out of ills neck and one side of him was blown off. Also, ills foot was wounded. That I s what shrapnel does jo you. As I crawled past him I happened to touch ids foot and. fie cursed me all oycy-the place. Rut when I tried to say I was sorry I could not. for then he apolo gized and died a moment later. There was a silver cigarette enso sticking out of the rags where his side laid betsn_ blown, a wav amk 4h‘e , ! I used to think all the Hermans wen big.iind fat idol strong, luui. of course, the some of the grenadier regiments>ttfe, lint lots of the Roches I. SifeMr were little and weak’ like this fefhjw I ‘‘got" in my first. ( iiarge. • .Jt was a good jupce of work to take the prisoners \\yA a novelty forme to look tlieiu tile face- the fellows I had heeiWijhting. r.caime, wlien y*o+ look/h linn in the fsiee, you can see liven if can tell heard pigs being got to them. When they Veiled to lieiit they the attacked, hand. I we us j guess limy thought- they could scare up. Rut Tmi onnnot scare machine / , gliiis nor 1 he foreign legiup either. So ! U lieu | were I w i I time gum <ea yin* us ^hey Fritz man’ to man. •Iiarge that out* cliap- tliey Could, not up against iLlind had to fight. a'hnit. jJroU|gh, ttint the first Fritz eafiie over and began .yell- e-AV-hpfo-cfefmsii aritry was after me, at that, and Kaiser Rill IdjeVi11g the drum. And how they hate a liayonet ! They would much rather sit in a dftrhi and pot you.' I admit 1 aiu not crazy about liayo* m p tight ing niysiTf. nsh general' prop- osiflon, hut I will say tlpit there have beep times when I was Serving a gun | behind (he front lines v^heii I wMied Mfof a rille and a bayonet in my hands j ahd.a elianeC at It was in this : l>iu -was put out of (’oinniission. -As ! we .were lined up, waiting^ to 'climb on to the fire step and then over/the par- ! apet, tliis <’liY> pi a i li chine down the j line speaking to each man as he went. He would not say inuchTdiut jdst a ; few words, and Alien .make tlie sign of i the cross, lie whs jn a black eiissogk. lie was Ju^t on<* man froftt me as we got the word and stood up on Hu* lit** ift'ep. He was not armed with as much as a-tdu, IrtU lie jumped up on the step and stuck his bond over tbe I*«rapet and got it square, landing' right beside me. I thought he was killed, hut when tve got hack we found lie wus only wounded, The men who saw It were over the parapet before the order was given and then the whole bunch after them, because they, • • s too, thought he was killed and figured lie rigver would know how they came out about their vows. AJI the men in tlie company were jglnd when they Ufutenant crossed himself n n< Lionel op 1 found lie was only wounded, hi atid took nut -tlie ease. Rut when While -half. i»t US were on the firing he pried ->pcn the ease he fotind .Uiat.t throughout 1 he day or niglit tie It hail been bent and cracked and all other half .would he in the dugouts or We got to th.t* Hermans about that Jtime and I was pretty busy for a while; Rut s'omi I saw Jiim again. He was pulling his bayonet out of a Bociie when all ot fier made a jab at him and stuck Jilin H\ tin* arm. Then the Roche made a sw ing at’ hitn ^vitli his rifle, hut. the Sw-Cs*.dropped oh om* knee and .dodged, it. lie kept defending himself With? his rille, hut there was another Her man on him by thi-s time'ami lie could ii< *i get up. 'I he corporal .of our squad- '“oanw up just about that time, hut lie \\: i s u i, i hit**, heea’il'-e' one of the Roches got- to the Swiss with his bay onet; He dir! not have time to with draw. it before our corporal stuck him. ' Tin* oilier Herman made a pass at tfie corporal, but In*, was too j'ate. Tin corporal heal him Po it and, felled him j with a .terrific blow from his-rifietbutt. i The Huns were pretty thick around there Just as .another fellow and my- eelf-came up. A Roche swung hi#Jille at tin* corporal and when he dodged it the Roi ly almost gof die. The swing Took him off his feet and then the cor poral did as pretty a hit of work‘.as i ever saw. lie jumped for the Boche, who had fallen, landed on fils face with both feet, and gave it to the next one with his bayonet all at the same Hg was the quickest main I ever' personally, to solicit-ytites. Once elect ed, a. commissioner is forbidden to dictate any upfiolntment by the .city ma mi gur.^xAl ready the now plan has nieaid^u ^Considerable saving of public rn^fmy in St. Augustine. In Niagara Falls, where, Wing to ^allure of the New York- legislature ’to ging-the Roches out and sendlngxtlifcm , , . , .. .. .. - . .. pass adequate legislation, the city manager -administration is still ham- pereil by. partisan elections,' the tax levy has been reduced to 5*7 cents per $1,000 valuat-ToHv* In Sherman, Tex., the city mana ger Installed a complaint system, hv Which each complaint Is recorded, re ferred to the department concerned and followed up if^ necessary 'until cared for. The jiutnher .of complaints In six months ^dropped fiO per cent. I'uhlle works improvement bonds amounting to $lf»0,000* were voted by tho people.. , / So obvious n step toward etfieieiit government ns west.” And every once inaWhile Fritz on one sixh* would^sfep. out and yell "Kaniornd,” whjb<'like’as not, on .theotlifU* side, hispal would pot you witli a revolver when you sfart-ed to 'pick hinrnp; thinking lie was wounded. Thpflwe stood aside, at tlh* entrance' t<v^a dugout and #ome Bat-lies cume iiiut in single file, shouting “Kam.eriid** well-known Tiext" company and Fritz's rue. Look at the tongue, mother! If routed, It is a sure sign that yhur lit tle tine’s stoniacp, liver and bowels •i. needs a gentle,'“tliorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, doesh't eat or act natu rally, pr Is feverish, stomach sour, breath had; has stomach-ache, -sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a . teaspitoiwul of- “<’aliferiiia Syrup of Figs," and ij\ a few Imyrs all the fpul, deposit-lng city funds Constipated >waste, undigested' food in a responsible hauk*. wjRfng to pay ajj^l sour hUe getitlj* moves out of the '•Test on doily averages, w ill save Httl^. bowel's without .griping, and you Xt-n Jose, Cal.. S3vd**0 n year under y jo city ,m:magiJ plan.—Omaha News. DEAD TREE MADE ATTRACTIVE turn sa-w. There were a\ouple pf saviite men', in tm I saw one of them get under guard with-his foot and. believe There was some force in that kick. He mush have, driven tlie Herman's chin clear through the back of his heck/ # - y/ ■ We Thought it was pretty tough luck j The Bombers Were Fishing in Their to lose both the chaplain and the \il- j 1 -"' Bag and Throwing, lags* wit in the same charge, along i „ , with hair of our ntlieers, and then have I f,,r 11,1 tl ““* v ' V, ‘ IV worth ‘ ° U P of the ^ the trench. Fvi-a- „,„n i>> I * »« 1 f!1 *T "IT*. Y*it to give up the tn* tho bunch was sore got buck. i ty man in i as a' boil when w* the eigare'tes were stalked with,blood, lie swore worse thim ever, then, and .brew hisTyvvn east* awity, putting the -other offieprse ease in his pocket. At this ikointNour own ariilhry be gan xfii*l!tiig and-we received, tlie order to slatel to with li\eibbayo'ni*t< When w\e gi t the o.'ih r to aitvan.ee* some' the n,g] were altaadv (avf tlie pai'a- sltting Aronhd in the bottom of—(h trench, filayim: little games, or h>*ihI CHAPTER VII. Stopping the Huns at Diwmude. I was "standing in a communication trench that connected one of our front- ■ line trenches with a crater caused by tin* explosion of' a mine. All around me men of tin* third line were coming tip, climbing around, digging, hammer ing*, shifting plunks,-moving sandbags tip and down, bringing up new 'timbers, reels of barbed wire, ladders, cases of Ammunition, machine guns, trench mortars—all the things that make an army look like a gNieral store on legs. The nplse of the guns was just deaf ening. Our own shells passed not far above our heads, so close were the enemy trendies, ami -tin* explosions^ wefe so .pear ard so, violent, tlmt when you rested your nth* butt on something solid, lU-ie a rock, you could feel" TT *-hake ami hum every time a shell, landed. , " < »ur first line was just on the skirts of the town, in trendies that had liven won and lo>t by both #hles many-tiim s. iinr sp'-oml line was in tin* streets and tin* third line was almost at the south end of the-"town.; L'he Huns wore liar>^at it, shewing fo‘r all they were worth had his imisk an<r face blown he w *s trying to talk, w ith' the tears rolling down over the raw flesh. He died five minutes later. ' OnV night, while I was lying hack In the trench trying not to think ofi any thing and go to sice]i the bombs began to get pretty thick around there, and when I could not stand it any longer 1 rushed out into the hay of tlie fire trench and right up against the para pet. where It was safer. Hundreds of stirr shells were being sent up by hot li sides and the field and the trenches were ns bright ns day. All up and down the trenches our men were dodging about, keeping out of the way of the bombs that x*vre being thrown In our fares. It did not seem as if there was any place where It Most of the time I was picking dirt out of my eyes that explosions had driven inti- theQa. Tf you went, into n dugout th rt men irh-T-ady in there would shout. “Don’t -stlck-in a bunch—spread out !*’ . While vod W.-re in a dugout you kept expect- out-j ing to. he buried alive and w hetij you have unwell, .playful child again, , You needn’t coax sick ohildren to take this harmless “fruit “laxative they love its delicious taste., and It always .makes thejm feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a- bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which lias directions for babies, children of all ■ ages and for gfown-ups plainly on the hoftle. Beware of.roimterfeits sold hyre. To be .sure you g+4 tire genu 1 ne,<- ask to see that It is made by the “Cali fornia Fig Syrup Company.” Refuse any other kind with Contempt.—Adv. CAN'T ALL BE COLLEGE MEN Foliage has been added to tlie rather care trunk of this fine Pepper tree by placing a fern box in its crotch.—Pop ular Mechanics Magazin?. GET.AFTER NEGLECTED LAND Every Citizen Should Recognize a Duty in Seeing That It Is Kept Cle-aned Up. \ ie battered reiimiti^of I'ixipinle, ami to the right: st teller hearers \vt*i;i\ u (1 r k 1 r 1 - | ■< -.11 ( hoc til at they looked ■ 11U»* f'vrr V iitad* passing each ot her. But the In iirers from the Corn- rrot , returned ssing station from and I fell on ton ot a imyopet w .M n was a itIhu to wus as U hen after my first' r-lnp’ge I eouhl hot sh*(*p for a long- titlin' a ft i rxva.nl, for remeitt- hcri'ig what tliiit fellow looked ilk** and how m\ hrtxon. t slippei into him and how h** Sereattiell when -he fell. He had Ids legs and his' neck t\vlst< under him after b> got it. 1 thought about it gi lot and it got 19-'be almost a fmhit that wheiiexer T was gtiing to sleeji l \> <ctj|<l think about liim^ unii •■lLe*irtrH’-liope.-of sleeping was gone. ~ Cur eompany took a Herman tn m h tl.fl time tind along w-llpj.-another eotipany four hundred prisoners We had •to retire because the jnen on* dm* sides <lid not get through .and we went being flanked. Bur we-lost a lot or nien doing it. When we returned to our ireitches ovr outfit "was siuipfy all in and xve Stuck His Head Over the Parapet and Got It Square. - (’Jot lie s or .sleeping^, i.r .cooking or !'puny, near rne had tin* ««aergency dn H-ie w. vTinlcd. w etc '♦.piling up, ..waiting for'them. A company of the 2me Legion Efrtin- gere h:n! just eoine up to take thyir, stations in the efater, under the para pet of sandbags. A shell lamled anibng them just liefore they entered the cra ter and sent almost a whole sqtlad -f.yest, besides wounding several others^ Almost hefofa* tiny occupied the prater tlm xwjf*>t-xrpre lahTlfnd reached luvek to us. and the order chine for us to remain where xve were until further orders. 'Then w-e got the complete orders. AYe were to nyake no noise but were all to he ready iiKten minutes. \Ve fmt on goggles and Respirators, In ten minutes the bombers .were to leave tine trenches. Three mines xvere to ex^ pldde ttnd then we were to take and Look tinp .eiily to ymtr own hack yard, ibut take a proprietary lnt'vrwst in any vacant . yards or neglected -patches.of hind that are in your neigh borhood. You really ought to have hthf them cleaned up last autumn, fmt If you didn’t then. In the cause of food xvas possible to get\cover. conservation and xvlth the. hope of art. Increased crop from the home gardens 1hls summer, have these patches cleared up. The‘department of agriculture sent. a plea to the people of the land to clean up all plots that were used as xvar gardens last year in order that tho inserts that had been harbored in a dormant state In the underbrush -amL rubl>i-h mjght he ext'unninaluiLgud 11 ot- permitted' to-multijily and Increase. Ideally, cnt<iinoh>gists tell us^as soon as the crop has ‘Been“Harvested, tho. remnants slioul-d'he jinuajitla; cleared away atid burned wrth tire insects* which they Imrhor. ; * ' ^ Mii't'jx f ~*~~jters l apparently believe that the action or winter snows tind xvinds \xvdulif be sullicietir to dest-rdv • insect life, dmt stieh is n'ot-4h*t*(*ash'j; Pithy Remark Credited by Andrew Carnegie to Seff-Made Man With Limited Education. i ' Andrew Carnegie, complimented one day at his Scottish cji^tle «>n his gifts to the-cause nf edtlcatlon, snld to ft young lady: .“There’s nothing so jiathet-lc :is tho pelfhnade man xxlfo is ciihsclous of his lack of hdiicatlon.. These poor lelloxvs seem.to think that ex( r>body Is edu cated hut themselves. - “Onee, In a smart* New York res taurant, I heard a nuTn with a diamond, horseshoe pin say hoarsely to ft waiter: “ ‘.Shove over that... there elmnde- IUt.’ \ v -_. “ ‘It Isn’t a chandelier, siy.’ sajd the xvnltpr. ns lie obeyed, ‘it's a cruet.’ The man xvlth the diamonds blushed brick red. . • “‘Well, never mind wlmt she Is; show her over,’ he said. AW ain't all to college,”’ *- Lemo / 1 n Ji r* jice p If ► 1 -nr hrprk pq Gi rim I Make beauty lotion at home for a few cent». Try itl -; '* V —*— 9 went outside you thought the Bo»*hes were aiming at you direct-^ind there xxais 'no place at all where you felt sn fe. FTut the lire hay looked belter than the otnvr places tome. I had not been there ninrvKHmn a few; minutes when a big one dropped in and that bay was just_ 01K; n.< 'S. < mt ( .f t!.. '21 m,-n._in_. the hay only .eight bscaped. YVhe-n the stretcher/(•aj^rs got there, tlve.v duKnof have tnuch t'oNld in the eue- v It was more jiajlliear- mg doing ji thufisnid ’tmd-H*u*. things. The.j. j lo w a certain portion of Vbe enemy wire always in good humor at-, tjenrlres pot far off. We xvere ail ready to start Tip the ladders xxTien men such times 'and it seemed 1 to. me even I Mil *<r when the enemy tire was •they moved Nip's section over to our- and he sneaked up to me- and xvhis Doc; make it fifty-fifts* 1 and ginfme *n chance.” ■ . 1 did nol have anv nmre- so. heavy. 1( a man was slightly wounded down pered behind Ids hand, “Be ji sport, would come tlie rifles to order antis, ;iml suiut* '|>o|lu xvas sure to ^mt. "Bight .th, - v.ay; One.franc.” It xvas ^-'ying around in ”.the. front lhifl, a staiiilmg.->rp-*» and they always <fid It. j meant and he had to get back to his ■ ir ” a -jiuch of old rags in a narrow Tbo poflti WltcHlH it most was a Swiss squad. Then tlu*.bombers fame jip to ulle.v. None of us showed any. signs and ht*-*w;is alw-*a\ s pluj ing a joke on the ladders k masketl und with’loaded ot life »xeept a working j+arty. tl^tt snniehodx or Imitating some one oj sacks on their left tirms. “One mln- was.diggirg with picis and shovels at us or making fa.< ; 4*>. , r smnr bomr<That had been frozen into / \\Y were all sorry wheh this Swlss- tlu mud of the ■♦mich. _ * * t “went xv.-t ” a- th. ' - ' ' -H ’ \ • * way of re er’s xvorl A stretcher bearer xvas . picking up' one (if tlmJmys, wl.oi a grenade land ed- alongside of him aXd you could not find a fragni**itt ^of cither of them.-,. That made two that handed xvlthin twelve feet of'me; yet I was not even scratched. 1— ' When I got so that :I could move I xvent over, to xvhere the captain-.Was standing, looking*^through a periscope over the parapet. I xvas very nervous and excited and xvas afraid to speak to him, but somehow I thought 11 ought to ask for orders. But I could nof say a word. Finally a shell whizzed oyer our heads—just missed us, it seemed .like, and I broke out: "What did you see? What’s all of the news?” and so’oh. I guess I chattered like a monkey. Then he yelled: “You’re the gunner officer. You’re just in time—-I’ve lo cated their mortar batteries.” ■y '• ■ Elbert Hubbard’s Work Goes On. A reminder of Elbert Hubbard, vic tim of tin* Lusita'hia. is contained in tli isAm rn graph in a' New York paper: “At E.isf Aumra tlie Roycrdftecs .con tinue to dMfurish. Tlitfir annual con vention il 1 as uStmlv - But no invitation is necessary to atumd it. Anyone who goes there is xvelcbmen and the sjieak- « rs include ymi If you xvapt to speak. That’s the Ro.vcroft idea. The-notsihles are sehmluled, hut in the grove the 'open-air theater, is an open forum. Any subject goes, work phase of the Roycrofters Is the big thing iioxv. Which ns we recall It was 1 Hubbard’s hope. A place v.tiers everything that Was made war first useful and then beautiful. lie jmed o say, Tf It’s useful it Is beautiful, but many useful things *can hi: mada more benntifu!. That’s what we want to do.”’ * — Squeeze the juice of Two lemons TntO k bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake xx'ell, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion,-and complex ion xvhitener, tit very, very small -cos£ Your grttcer has tin: lemons and any drug store 01: Toilet counter will supply thr<** 4 ounces of orchard xvhlta for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the. face, neck, ~ anils and hands and see how freckles, sunburn and tan disappear and hoxv clear, soft and xvlrito the skin becomes. Yes 1 It Is harmless.—Adv. . ’ Missed the Kaiser. A 'negro from Louisiana supposed when he reached th * training camp that he Was already “tit tlu* front."' "Soy. boss'll ho asked ap olllcer, “where’s dat feller day errIJs the’ lcal- ser? 1’se been here six r,e,-ks tin’ I ain’ seen him.’^—Exchangv' Fiery Red Pimples. A hot bath with Cutleura Soap followed We hear that the nn application of CutiVura Oint ment to distressing eczemas, etc., proves their wonderful properties. For free samples address "Cutleura. Dept. X, Boston.” At druggists andTiy-mall. Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv. v Depew has an exciting experi ence in a Zeppelin raid, as told in next installment. - (TO BE CONTINUED.) Get Wise. on their n*tt arms. ■< me min- Vanderlioof Herald—If you feel that ute now," said the officers, gvtTrng on the whole world rs against you. get in their o'Vn ladders ;f6d drawing'jheir line; the world may Le nboi" IJnieys say, ami revolvers-r-thoUgh Tnost of the officers I —Boston Transcript- *»-, » ' . " ’ * -’ ■ \ 1 ■ Leave Nature's Work Alona, The most costly work In hindsenpes Is moving earth; therefore do ns lit tle of It sis possible, for seldom, does It really aid in gaining pleasing re sults. ■ . ■ - „ .... _± Its Fau^t.. "Is your new automobile jitl right?” "It’s pretty fair. but~rf xxill shy at horses.” . ' Fitting the Theory. “I have an idea that rooms reflect the personality of their occupants." ."Then the lady who uses this tool* must be of ft very w^rylng disposi tion, to judge by the fret work in It” Yes, Luke, xve knoxv that every mar* rled man lias a grievance—and so has Ills wife until she becomes a \Vhlow. ■ mm Granulated tycttds, I Eyei inflamed by expo sure to San, Dasf and Wind quickly relieved by Marine Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eyt Gomfort. 'At Vour Druggists or by mail 60c per Bottle. For Beak al Ihe Eya free write’ ■ t-n Murine Eye Remedy Co., Cbicege.