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H You Need mgm KM There are times in even L?needs a tonic to help her M When that time comes to y to take?Cardui, the woman' wfim posed of purely vegetable gently, yet surely, on the we and helps build them back IHHKI ti i ? - - mom " ndS oenetited thousands ailing women in its past hi Mfl success, and it will do the ! You can't make a mista | CAR W The Woma Ka Miss Amelia Wilson, R. r-^1 says: "1 think Cardul is the gi for women. Before 1 bega Qa so weak and nervous, and spells and a poor appetite. as strong as I ever did. and Begin taking Cardul today. 1 wSj Has Helped I KjCEDDEj ) CAESAR TO TAKE XMAS F GIFTS TO AKHENI VNS Norfolk. Va., Dec. 6.?Announcement was made today at the navy ci yard that the United States collier ta Caesar had been named by the Navy m Department a sthe American Christ- tb mas ship to take provisions and nied- vj ical supplies to destitute Armenian fi) Christians to be landed at Beirut. H The Caesar Is now taking on sup- tii plies aud will sail for New York to- la morrow or Friday, in command of Captain Shurtleflf. Lieutenant Com- cc mander Enochs, U. S. N., will be the at aval representative on board during of the voyage. ps Sf Boms Loosen, " Lifl Right Off " Sothing But "GETS-IT" Will Do Tl This to Corns and Calluses. ?r If you've ever had corns, you've tried lots of things to get rid or them ha ?salves that eat your toe and leave the corn remaining, cotton rings that nc ssake your corns bulge out like pop- ^ ( You Can't Hide Corn Miirry. Stop Pooling ' Around! Uso "GETS-IT" Tonight end See the Corns Vanish. eyes, scissors and knives that make corns bleed and sore, harnesses and v_ bandages that till up your shoe, press on tho corn and make your foot feel w? like a pavinf. block. What's the use? Why not do what millions are doing, th take 3 seconds off and apply "ORTS- , IT.** It dries, you put your stocking on right away, and wear vour regu- sv lar eh oes. Vour corn loosens from the toe. It lifts right off. It's pain- ex less. It's the common-sense way, the , simplest, easiest, most effective way u la the world. It's the national corn- t_r cure. Never fails "OBTS-TT" is sold and rec6mmend#4 by druggists everywhere. 25c & n, bottle, or sent on receipt of price, by >" i Lawrence & Co., Chicago. III. 'hi Sold In Lancaster and reoom- d< mended aa the world's beet com | remedy by Lancaster Pharmacy and f J. F. Mackey Co. ! I" S?????? ! *' I I? Circulars d tr Have you something you jo: want to tell the people |B( about? Tell it to them 0 IN A CIRCULAR. Let ?< ua FIX IT UP for yon. jli ===== s Well Guarantee n ?????????? ft] ii Immediate ; Results * i L a 81 Ifea OaMna <Tfeat Daaa IM Aitaet Tfce Haas' o > Ircnutf of Its tonic an<1 Tkxatlve effect. LAXA- 1 i. f TIVI' nROMOQtTININICU better than ordinary j11 0? inine iirwl doe* not cause nervousness r r | J rln<-ir ?{ In hen.t Reniemn^r the fulV name >?... ' 1... * ! ,r i'if m I l>. uxon, .j. A ft' f mm yfm mm* 11111.^, a Tonic Hi r woman's life when she over the hard places. I' ou, you know what tonic a tonic. Cardui is com- j ingredients, which act UCfi akened womanly organs, to strength and health. and thousands of weak. B8^ ilf century of wonderful r _j same for you. R&T ke in taking 1 n's Tonic F. D. No. 4, Alma, Ark., lfij? 'eatest medicine on earth, n to take Cardui, I was had snch awful dizzy Now I feel as well and ri I can eat most anything " Sold by all dealers. Thousands. ? jgOEnua IVE THINGS EVERY FARM HOME SHOULD HAVE With more money for our staple ops than we have ever before oblined, the question of how best to ake use of our prosperity, thel lings for which we may to best ad-' intage expend some of our surplus! inds, is one well worth considering, ere we wish to offer five suggesons, in addition to those mentioned st week. 1. Paint the Farm Building. Paint >sts comparatively little, but it Ids immeasurably to the appearance ' the place. Not only this, but tinting is true economy; money >ent for paint means insurance| jainst loss from decay, no less an does money spent for fire insurlee means insurance against fire sses. '2. Plant Grass, Flowers and ees. In a land where we may have een lawns the year round, we have o often been content with hard- i ked, barren yards instead of car'ts of green; in a land of flowers, ; have used these all too little to , d to the beauty of our farm homes; th a wealth of beautiful trees to i aw upon, the cool, tree-bordered ne or the avenue of pecans or oaks iding to the farm home is all too i re. 1 3. Put in Waterworks. As ail ver of labor, tired backs and worry,', nning water is one of the greatest ! all hoons. As ? (> atinwnH In nn.r rent Waterworks Special, systems < ny be installed at a cost ranging am $!8 up, and whatever the cost.' thin reason, the investment is a ] od one. Why not talk the water- ] >rks question over with Mother to- ( iy? We know she'll not object. 4. Install a Rood Lighting Sysm. For our part, because of con ' nience, cleanliness and simplicity, ' ? would prefer electric lights for ' e farm home, though the first cost generally higher than for other j stems. Acetylene lights, too. are!. :eellent, and cost of installing is i nsiderably less than for the elee- h ic lights. If neither electricity nor etylene can be used, there are im oved kerosene lamps that may bel id for a few dollars and that can Dspended upon to make good lights. 5. Provide Good Reading Matter ?r the Whole Family. Truly we ilght have placed this first of all, >r books and papers and magazines re the windows through which we ok out upon the world and its proress. Five dollars a year for books nd five dollars for papers and maganes for each horse we plow, or ten ollars for the one-horse farmer, venty dollars for the two-horse farler, and so on, is a safe rule and ne by which we may well guide ourslves. Let's never forget that the hlld brought up wTth a love for; ood reading matter Is most likely i develop into the educated, thinkig, successful man or woman. LOAN'S LINIMENT EASES PAIN.j Sloan's Liniment is first thought of lothers for bumps, bruises and prains that are continually happenlg to children. It quickly penetrates nd soothoa without rubbing. Cleanr and more effective than mussv tasters or ointments. For rheumat aches, neuralgia pain and that rippy soreness after colds, Slona's liniment, gives prompt relief. Have bottle handy for bruises, strains, prains and all external pain. For tie thousands whose work calls them utdoors, the pains and aches followig exposure are relieved by Sloan's .lniment. At all druggists, 25c.? idv. fHE LANCASTER NEWS HERO-WORSHIP. On one occasion we remember a bunch of college boys, who gathered at a railway station to shake hands with a president of the United States. After it was all over and they had separated from the seething crush of humanity and returned to the dormitory one of the boys remarked that the president had actually said something to M ? , one of their number. "What did he say?" of course was the natural question. "He said 'Look out sonny you'll get hurt,' was the surprising disclosure. We remember a similar incident related by a Civil War veteran. A certain soldier in one of Stonewall Jackson's divisions had as one of his greatest ambitions the desire to exnh;inco snniA wnrila urIfV* iKo nmnoeoi In the i*tiy of conversation. So one clay as Jackson came riding down by the lines of soldiers this man stepped out with the query: "Where do we camp tonight general?" "Right over there"?^nd Jackson indicated the spot. The questioner returned to the ranks of the other soldiers commenting on the satisfaction he felt at the attainment of his great ambition. As we think of this incident we sometimes wonder if the feeling thai Lee and Jackson excited in the breasts of their followers would be possible under present conditions Politicians we have to be sure whe sway men their way against all reasonable arguments, but it is in a different way from the impulses that thrilled the heart of "Marse Bob's boys." We sometimes wonder if the relations that existed between Lee and Jackson and their men. is possible in anything except in the old South of chivalry and slavery.? Greenville Piedmont. FRATERNAL ORDERS TABERNACLE COUNCIL, No. 72, Jr. O. U. A. M., P. M. Plyler, Councillor. Meets Saturday nights before 2nd and 4th Sundays. ANTIOCH LODGE. No. 272, F. & A. M. Meets on Wednesday on or before the full moon of each month, at 8:30 p. m. B. F. Adams, W. M. RED HILL COUNCIL. Jr. O. U. A. M. No. 152. Meets on the 1st and 3rd Saturday night of each montn it 8:00 p. m. B. F. Adams, Sec'ty. RED HILL W. O. W.. No. 501. meets the 2nd and 4th Saturday night of each month/ B. F. Adams. Clerk. JACKSON LODGE, No. 53, A. F. M. Julius Blackmon, W. M. Meets svery Thursday night on or before KEYSTONE CHAPTER. No. 10. ft. A. M.. E. M. Croxton, High Priest. Meets 3rd Tuesday night in inch month. WITHERSPOON COUNCIL. No. 13, R. and S. M.. H. R. Murohlson, Thrice Illustrious Master. Meets 3rd Tuesday night in each month. LANCASTER COUNCIL, No. 38. Jr. O. U. A. M.. H. K. Williamson, Councillor. Meets every Tuesday night at 8:30 p. m. REACH CAMP, W. O. W., No. 376, Irvin Jackson, Council commander. Meets first and third Friday night in each month. LANCASTER COUNCIL, No. 4, D. of A., A. J. McNinch, Councillor. Meets every Thursday night. DIXIE CAMP, No. 282, W. of W., B. H. Ciyburn, Councillor. Meets every fourth Saturday night. DIXIE COUNCIL, no. 43, Jr. O. U. A. M., W. A. Clifton. Councillor. Meets everT 1st ?nrf and 5rH flo?. urday nights. TABERNACLE CAMP, No. 205, W. of W., B. B. Plyler, C. C. Meets first Friday night in each month. CAMP CRJ5EK COUNCIL, No. 79, Jr. O. U. A. M., R. A. Williams, Councillor. Meets every second and fourth Saturday night. UNITY COUNCIL, No. 89. Jr. O, U. A. M.. J. A. McCain, Councillor. Meets every Saturday night. TAX NOTICE. Public notice is hereby given thai the City Taxes will bo received by me at the Lancaster Savings Bank A Trust Co. from December 1st to December .list inclusive. E. C. S.ECRE8T, Acting Clerk and Treas. To Cure a Cold la One Day Take LAXATIVR BIOMO Quinine. It flops th? Couth and Headache and worka off the Cold Dninlila refund money II It (alia to cure. 8. W. GROVB'S signature on each boa. 25c FRIDAY, DEC. 8. 1916 BAK THEM PROM THK MAIL. Men are daily starving. freezing, i dying of gun-shot wounds and stabs or kicking their lives away at the end of ropes because of a system which yields the liquor mail-order house about ?4 per gallon profit on whiskey and which yields the Unltod States, in addition to the revenue, tho price of a two-cent postage stump. Here is a specific case: j Olaf Jacobson. a tiler, working .near Guckcen, Minnesota, was found dead on the farm of John Gorry at 7 o'clock on a morning not ten days gone by. Jacobson had died from exposure and alcohol. tteside the body was a jug full of "Welcome" i booze which had been ordered by express in response to advertisements conveyed to Jacobson by the federal ; government at a fee of two pennies. Sometime ago the father ot a poor family in the State of Alabama, becoming alarmed at the long absence or' his eleven-year-old daughter,1 started out to find her. He found her' order house at a fee of two cents, had . i mint c nn hoe * ,.^1 uiuiiiiii^ .inn nor swollen tongue protruding from between her teeth. A few miles away the ( guilty man, a mulatto negro, who had been known as a reliable and j , hard-working fellow, was found! , asleep on the hay In a barn. By his I .side was an empty whiskey bottle. I .The United States government, act-' ing as a solicitor for a liquor mail-| , order house ata fee of two cents, had , [ induced this man to buy and con-' t sume the stuff which had brought in its train such a series of fatal conse- ! i ( quences. The Jacksonville liquor , dealer got his few dollars of profit :j , the little girl got shame and agony and death; her father and mother got humiliation, bitterness, and sorrow unspeakable; the government got the price of .a postage stamp. I The board of temperance of the' Methodist church has a record of, scores of murders, suicides, deaths front exposure, assaults, and minor jcrimes, all committed in different iparts of the country during one week. |because of beer and whiskey. A considerable number of these crimes re suited from the drinking of whiskey bought in response to solicitation conveyed from trie liquor dealer to it he customer by the federal government. It may not be said that the United States is simply a mechanical agent of conveyance in these cases. The United States has recognized its responsibility in the matter of lottery ti? kets, refusing to carry them through the mails or to convey advertisements of them. Alcoholic liquors themselves are excluded from the parcel post, not because they are liquid, for the mails do not exclude many other liquids, but because of their inherent viciousness. The moral responsibility of the United States for the mails and interstate commerce is as complete as its pow ' is. rnis principle was recently recognized in the passage of a law excluding the products of child labor from interstate commerce. The time has come to put the thing to the issue. Is it right for the Unified States to assist in creating and intensifying an appetite for alcoholic I drinks, by inducement and sugges- ; It ion causing men to consume 1 i?| u <>i who would not consume it if the> were not induced? If it is right the present practice should continue. If if is wrong the coming session of congress, without any attempt to shift responsibility upon the State, should recognize the wrong and exclude from the mails liquor advertisements and solicitation. Will congress sit still while murder and rape Is being promoted for profit by every device of modern trade? Will congress sit still while every i effort is being made to extend the debauchery of the drink habit to American womanhood? Will congress sit still while liquor dealers offer premiums to rural mail ' carriers for "lists of boys" who may be induced to begin the drink habit? Will congress sit still while liquor dealers are using the malls to place drink invitations into the hands of persons of all aees ami hnfh Will congress sit stiM while drink sellers advertise that they will ship drug poisons in deceptive packages, thus facilitating their reception by small boys and girls and adolescents? Will congress sit still while decent citizens are subjected to the burning annoyance of liquor solicitation? The United States must cease to play pandorer for the pitiful sum of two cents to the trade harlotry of al' cohol.?Spartanburg Journal. RUB-MY-TISM Will cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old [ Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Ec; zema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used internal!" or externally. 25c " L' OUR LUNGS DELICATE Overwork, lack of fresh air, mental strain or any sickness disturbs their functions. Stubborn coughs tear and Wear the sensitive lung tissues. SCOm EMULSION should be taken promptly for hard coughs, unyielding colds* Mot when strength is lowered from any cause. Its high nutritive value creates resistive force to ward off ?irlr. Eness. The rich cod liver oil improves the quality of the blood to relieve the cold and the glycerine is soothing and healing to the lung tissues. Refuse Alcoholic Substitutes Which Exclude the Oil. )M CHUKCH ADVKKTISING. and the Word of God says, iRxcept a man be born again he cannot see the There appeared in Sunday's , kingdom of heaven.*?John 111:3. Greenville News a full page d's-' .... . , I " Have you been born again? Do played advertisement of the Fourth Presbyterian church of that city. We you knmv whttt il means to be re" quote from the advertisement. It born? We want to give you this insays: j formation direct from God's Holy "This is a church advertisement. Word. We will do this at the Sunday If we had a store, a mill or a farm, ;evening service, beginning tomorrow and we were anxious to sell you the evening." property or the products, we would The advertisement concludes with advertise that fact as widely as pos-Jthe name of the church, the pastor's sible. If wc were giving a lecture j name, ltev. J. Sproles Lyons. Jr., and and wanted you to come wc would [a list of the deacons and elders, inadvertise it. There would be noth-,eluding some of the best known men ing undignified in that. In the city of Greenville, and those "We have nothing to sell, but we regarded as the most conservative have something that belongs to you. men in the city. We are under the and we are as anxious to deliver it to impression that this is the first you. as is the most zealous merchant church advertising to appear in a to dispose of his goods. We are tak- South Carolina newspaper. Certain, ing this means of telling you. What 1>. it is the first of such display. The wo have is God's message of salva- result will be interesting to those tion, which teaches you: How to who have been interested in the arthink right; How to live right; Howlguments that have taken place as to to die right. |the effectiveness of church advertls"You are going to die some day. ing.?Spartanburg Herald. j Iffivice a.. I number of cups in apound I |Jna the best coffee I yrou)ever drank. I We guarantee for Luzianne. If M \ \ 1 I I it does not prove out on both points H | 1/I I after you have used the entire con- |M Iff J tents of one can according to direc- ? II tions, tell the grocer you want your |g \\l money back and he'll return it with- B out a question. Buy this better coffee H V jy today. Write for premium catalog. ? -^The Re ily-Taylor Co. New Orleans I JiflZMMMl I 1 " i \ I INSURANCE AT COST. the Farmers Mutual Fire Insurance Company is the only one that can furnish it to the Farmers of Lancaster County. Write to 0- E. BONEY,AGENT j YORK - - StUJTII CAROLINA ' * II Fruit Cake Ingredients ? .? \' And Dried Fruits H ! ! i; ,[ ,, M . . . . 11 | I Scfdfd Raisins Light Brown Sugar Spices Seedless Raisins Flavoring Extracts Celery 11 Dried Peaches Cranberries Currants J ! Dried Apples Shelled Almonds Dates |? Dried Apricots Shelled Walnuts Pecan nnts j j | f Candied Cherries Candied Pineapple Dried Prunes j \ !! Have Plenty, of Turkeys and Chickens j | | | [ Give Us An Order For Melrose Flour. jj f | EDWARDS & HORTON jj I