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II I ?= LEMON JUICE IS FRECKLE REMOVEI Girls I Make this cheap beauty lotioi to clear and whiten your skin. E h . Squeeze the juice of two lemons in to a bottle containing three ounces o orchard white, shake well, and yo\ have a quarter pint of the best frecklt and tan lotion, and complexion beau tifler, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons ant any drug store or toilet counter wil supply three ounces of orchard whit* | for a few cents. Massage this sweet ly fragrant lotion into the face, neck arms and hands each day and see hoq freckle.; and blemishes disappear ant. clear, soft and white the skin be comes. Yes! It is harmless.?Adv 'j MB DISCHARGE NOTICE On 30th July next at 10 A. M. 1 will Hubmit my final return and apply to the Probate Court of Chesterfield County for a discharge as Administlfetp * of the Estate of Karl F. Taylor, , deceased. f June 27th 1917. J. O. Taylor, Administrator. No. 666 This is a prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS A. FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and If taken then as a tonic the Fever will not return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and docs not gripe or sicken. 25c b I? there Is No p There's No Pit 1 !?r A L<inc liiHilC YOUR HOME VS IN Tl If yon are asked you STRONG FOR THE ACTIONS SPEAK LOU Patronize the local me READ THE SPEC I To Rj>e ' The Chesterfii I This Guarant I a is ^7 V.W * ^ SS.00 With Order Bkkensderfer M 709 Chestnut St. Write for ( I Plan Your I ATTRACT!' II nrriiFfcC i Iuura s Tours From 411 Expen New York Boston White Mountain* The Saguenay Quebec Montreal Lake Champlain Lake George Ausabel Chasm St. Lawrence The Thousand Islands A Series of Ten-Da) Chaperoned Parties of Se The very highest class ol asure comfortable and ei The Tours cover the mo >nl places of Scenic and H 'cutest Country in the Wo Writ* for Rates, Booklet GATTIS ourist Agents, Sealx ppg* 1' J " ? A ONE HUNDRED t PER CENT PEOPLE^ It is u pleasing coincidence that 11 the Red Cross campaign for $100,000,000, which immediately followed - the conclusion of the Liberty Loan f campaign, resulted in an over-subscription of practically the same percentage as the oversubscription to the 2 loan. The American people are well over 100 per cent patriotic and well over j 100 per cent generous. Use Lime We can always use lime profitably on our leguminous crops. Indeed, on ' , land deficient in lime?and that P means most of our land here in the ' South?the results will be out of all proportion to the cost, when compared ' to other methods of fertilizing. It can | be pu?chased by the carload in bulk | at a nominal cost. If it is unslaked? . and it is usually better to buy it in '! this shape when it must be transporl'j ed any distance?pile it un in small pil ?s about tbe field, throw a little . water over it, then cover the pile with diic and let it stand a day or so until it is brokin down and fine. Then spread it.?Southern Ruralist. DISCHARGE NOTICE On 30th July next at 10 oclock A. M.. I will submit my final return and apply for a discharge as Guardian of Annie Mary Ingraham. June 26th 1017. O. D. Turnage, p Guardian.! I HIS TOWN i will declare that you're HOME. ] DER THAN WORDS rchant. I HOME PAPER '' ' t < :ial ' |; adcrs of \ eld Advertiser 1 I I teed-Machine j; === ==* ll , % 12.00 in 30 Days 4 j i! lamifacteing Co. ! Philadelphia, Pa. | Catalogue M2 j , Vacation How | m SUMMER | FOR 1917 1 10 to 40 Days I scs Included ^ Niagara Fall* rtj Pacific Coast J Atlantic City ^ Canadian Rockies jj Luke l.ouise f: Vancouver K San Francisco i' Yellowstone National Park 9 Salt Lake City ? Colorado Rockies P* Los Angele i? r Tours to Atlantic City & lect and Limited Membership ft r service, which makes travel for r ijoyable. k st attractive routes and the prinistoric Interest throughout the B rid. | ta and Descriptive Literature. L I TOURS 1 Mtrrf Air Line Railway. . NORTH CAROLINA | Greatest^Crii^e^ Ever Known, 5 Extract from article in Bosto Transcript. This Boche really understood th whole business. He was unlike an; other Hun I have seen. I suppos you must call him a Boche becaus' he was born in Munich and was serv ing in the German army. But mos of his native Bochery must have beei purged out of him by living nmonj civilized people. He spoke English not a bit like a foreigner, and altoge ther it was difficult to realize that hi was a Hun at all. For years, he said he had been dealing in land and mine: and thinirs in Amprira. Tie hnnneno/ to be visiting London when the wai threatened. He'd never taken ou pupFT?T"Tn the States, and he unafraid of being interned or something so he skipped out the day before wai was declared and got to Germany For a long time he was employed there on special work, but when tin Somme push was on last year and men were needed, he had to join up. He had served on different parts of the front. This is what he told, quivering now and again as he thought of it: "This war is the greatest crime the world has ever seen. The crimes thai made the French Revolution are nothing if you compare them with the crimes of the beasts who are running Germany today, and keeping this war going. They were only thieves and brigands now they're the bloodiest murderers by wholesale that the world ever produced. There never was anything like it before. They know perfectly well they have lost the war; they've known for months that the last chances they ever had are gone. Hut they are too frighten<?/! f f U?l?? ? - ' - " * * *" .wi uivn own sums 10 admit it and call a halt, and because they are frightened of what the people might do when they learn the truth, they keep the tiling going and sacrifice many thousands of Germans every single day and millions of money? what for? To shield the reputations of a handful of princes and politicians. It's the greatest crime the world has ever known. Here on this front our people are being killed like flies. Your artillery kills them in bunches. There isn't a minute of the day but legs and arms are being blown off. Our men would gladly irive themselves up to end it, but you enow they cannot. When there seems Lo be a chance, there is always an olli er or non-com missioned officers ihoul. It is not only your guns that till. Many Germans fall every day with German bullets in them. They ;ire driven like dogs to the lighting. REPORT OF G. R. KNIGHT FOR OLD STORE TOWNSHIP (2nd Quarter 1917) Bill, on hand April 1st 1917. . $ 'J.81 Rec. April 2nd 2GO.OO Roc. May 7th 12.81 Total $20.7.62 I'aid out from April 1 I ill 7, to June I 50 1917. i VY. R. Smith $ .50 VY. A. Plyler 3.10 L. E. Blalteney 50 It. M. Usher 1.30 April 7 .1. M. & C. W. Trant. . 15.75 1 April 7 J. M. Arant.-. 1.50 April 7 L. A. Griffin 2.50 April 7 Lumer 1.80 April 10 John Morton 2.00 April 11 K. Chisholm, lumher. 1.00 April 11 B. It. Price 2.00 April 11 M. W. Allen, work.. . .40 April 11 A. J. Allen, work 10 Apr11 11 M. C. Clark, work... .40 April 11 J. I>. Watts, work... .40 April 1 I Joe Watts 40 April 11 Tiling 1.25 April 13 J. C. Games 85 April 13 Lumber 2.60 April 13 Tom Mcmanus 40 April 13 Nails 25 April 14 R. M. King 1.60 April 14 Pearl ItiggiiTs 1.00 April 14 Nebrasca Funderburk 1.25 April 14 J. It. Watts 3.00 April 14 Jesse Watts 1.00 April 14 P. M. Arant 2.50 April 14 J. It. Funderburk... 2.25 April 14 T. A. Funderburk. . . 1.75 April 14 It. W. Jenkins 50 April 14 Ed. Terry 75 April 14 William Terry 75 April 1-1 Hugh Terry 75 April 11 Zcb Smith 75 April 14 Cecil Smith 75 April 14 Henry Smith 75 April 14 James Doster 75 April 14 Wagon 1.50 KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL Health Is Worth Saving and Some Chesterfield People Know How to Save It. Many Chesterfield people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when they knew these organs need help. Weak kidneys are responsible for a vast amount of suffering anil ill health, but there is no need to suffer nor to remain in danger. Use Dunn's Kidney Pills?a remedy that has helped thounsands of kidney sufferers. The following statement leaves no ground for doubt. Mrs. K. J. Wicker, King St., Bennettsville, S. C., says: "I had pains in my back all the time anil in the morning I was so lame and sore that I could hardly get out of bed. The kidney secretions were irregular In passage and I had other kidney disorders. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me in eevry way." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?gel Doan's Kidney Pills?the same thai Mrs. Wicker hml. Foster-Milburr Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. adv ?? ? rhe World Has iays German Soldier n And to what end? Because our cursed Kaiser and the creatures wo call statenien are afraid of their lives for what will happen to them when ^ . the people know it's all up. e ! "But plenty of them know it now. _ - Many knew before ever I was forced i I' to join up. And perhaps I never j should have been made to join if 1 ' g had known less, and never said a . , word of what I know. I talked a lit- : . tie of what I knew. And that was L? enough. In Germany today the man j who tells the truth must be hustled s tout of the way.' That is why I see no j hope for Germany, because those who j r are left in the country have no spirit, I can do nothing. All the strength of. , j the country, such as it is, is in the t J fighting lines?helpless as slaves. I - The others, there in Germany, they ' are slaves; starving, starving quietly. I never daring to say a word. The few . who speak soon find themselves hus I ! tied into the front line?and no more 1 | I is heard of them. They go on paying |the price; thousands of lives every j day, every single day. The Central Powers casualties now must he l')0,000 a week?all for what.' The crazy dreams of a few bankers and merchants, and the cowardly fears of a few politicians and of?of ih<- llohenzollerns. They say the Jlapshurus, too; hut the Austrians would be 1 thankful to make peace tomorrow but they cannot. They are as much sacri- 1 ficed by Berlin as we poor devils hero on the front. All the bloody slaughter of this war, with its milliards of I money and thousands of lives lost? 1 every single day -what keeps it go- 1 ing after it has been finally decided, ' is not the will of nations. No, it is 1 the murderous criminality and co- ( wurdice of a little handful of men in 1 Berlin, who never have been anything 1 but a pest in Europe. ' "Is not that the greatest crime the 1 world has ever known? An I is it * not strictly true? Docs any sane ' 1 German suppose the annoir.ted end 1 lean bo altered when the whole New 1 World is ranged against CJermany as ' well as the Old? They know all about I the hundred millions in the States, 1 |and the millions of millions of money; ' the innumerable factories and ship- ' ! yards. They know that America can ' ! put hundreds of thousands of fresh 1 'troops next spring, and that the ex- 1 haustion of Germany long before then ' I will be frightful ?is frightful now, 1 has been frightful for a year or more. 1 I They know it all, and, brute devils ! i that they are, they chose to keep the 1 awful slaughter going, not because ; I they hope it can alter the end, but for ' what you call 'wait and see'?because they fear to face today what they can 1 put olT till tomorrow at the cost of another few thousand decent lives, ' another few milliards of money, ' "Never before since the world be- : j gan has a twentieth part <>f such suf- { fering been allowed to continue day ' by day and month after month to proteet a handful of exalted criminals ' from general recognition of their * crimes. The Russian people rose and | smashed the bonds that bound them. ' | But not our people. Our tyrants ' have been much cleverer. It was only ' j the bodies of Russian people thai ; were fettered. Their minds were ' I free. No German mind in Germany A i has be<*n free since 1870. Tin- Berlin , criminals have seen too well to that.! viur jitMijuv.' iniiiiv mey nave ueen wen educated. So they have; very well, ' very carefully, for just what are they J1 I are doing now ?for the blindest and most damnable kind of slavery the woi Id has ever seen, for a slavery in i which the will of the masters must he 1 , paid for daily by steadily running; streams of blood of their victims? 1 victims taught to hare their own throats to the knife on the word of command. "If your armies could reach Ger- | many itself the slavery might end suddenly. Hut Germany today is one j vast prison full of starving slaves, | who cannot lift a hand to hidp themselves, and it will remain while William the Murderer can go on buying a daily reprieve for his miserable family in return for the blood of his 10,000 slaves. Thank God 1 am out of it!" Hoover And His Experience In China During Rover IJia-Uing. Iiy Will Irvin, in the Saturday 1 Evening Post. I> <rit:g those days of foreign occupation in China his compound was a , r imnntic spot, Not >nly fr\ m HoovJ er, but from othe 't who worked with ( him there, I have heard such tales as Kipling never v.ro.c. Sometimes : these tales are ramie and somet hnes I [ very tragic. allied Kuropcan armies used ?o lnk?> turns in policing | the district, and the ofliccr*, by peri mission, were usnvllv quartered in : the command a sofi assignment for | here were houses with il'jiopenii conveniences. One night, just after the Germans came to take their turn. 11 >o?er's Chinese servant woke bin: with Hallows that bad things, very bail, were | happening down at the works. He , ran out to discover the who! Chines population heating at the gates of the 'company wall. Hoover ordered the j gates opened, and thousands of < hinose men, women and chialren packed the machine shop. The Germans, a little drunk that night, had begun to attack the women. For a dishonored Chinese woman suicide is the only course. Next morning the little river that flowed through Lh ? town was ; chocked with bodies. !,ong before I th's war Hoover undi rstood why! t German frightfulness meant, and m i vain he used to try to watn the unr.us. picious English. ' "W STORING AND MARKETING SWEET POTATOES Emphasizing the imp6rtance of making the most of present crops as well as for the future, the govern- I ment has issued Farmers' Bulletin | j No. 548 on "Storing and Marketing 1 ! Sweet Potatoes," and the Extension Department of Clcmson College has 1 i furnished blue prints, specifications ' land bill of lumber for the building of < suitable store houses for sweet pota- ; toes. Those interested (and all should be interested) will do well to get this bulletin and see Mr. W. J. Tiller, about plans and specifications for t building. i We quote from the bulletin: Every year the sweet potato is becoming of greater importance as a noney crop in the South. The value 11 of this crop in the United States in 1 top was $34,*12!),000, f>0 per cent, i] of which was produced in the Southern States. The total area devoted t-> sweet potatoes in the United States " increased from 0*17,000 acres in 1899 to (it 1,000 in 1909, and the yield increased from 42,f>00,000 to 52,200?- 1 Ono bushels. The total value of th?* crop increased at a much more rapid rate than either the acreage or yield, showing an increase of 78.3 per cent, in 10 years. : With better methods of storing and marketing the potatoes, their value could be doubled without increasing the acreage or production. This is especially true in the South, where the potatoes are either rushed on the market at digging time, when the price is low, or stored in outdoor pits nr hanks, where a large portion tb'Cay. Very few of the sweet potatoes stored in pits or banks ever reach the market, for from 25 to 50 per ( cent, spoil and those that remain are riot of good quality. Even if the pit '* >r bank method of storage would keep :: the potatoes it is not economical. Too ' much labor and exocnse are required l' <> make these banks every year and to ' gel the potatoes out when wanted for ' market. Sweet potatoes can be marketed more economically and to much letter advantage from storage house.*.. ' It is not advisable to open a bank ' Alien the soil is wet or the weather :old, as these conditions injure the " potatoes and cause them to decay. ' Dutdoor pits and banks cannot be depended on. Some years a very small ' numbers of tin' potatoes spoil in ,l hanks, while in other years pratieal'y the whole crop is lost. The only saf. 1 and practicable method of storing sweet potatoes is in a storage house, is the potatoes can be taken out at ' iny time without subjecting them to I unfavorable conditions. * To keep sweet potatoes in good'" condition they must he ( 1 ) well ma- " Lured before digging, (:!) carefully ' handled, (.'?) well dried or cured after ' being put in the house, ami ( f) kept it si uniform temperature after they ire cured. The grower e:ui judge when his sweet potatoes are ripe by breaking ' or culling the tubers and leaving ' hem exposed to the air for a f -v mi-.- < ules. If the cut <>r broken su'Tace | ' Iries they are mature, I>ut if the sue"ace remains moist they are not ready i 11 ,o he dug. In regions where early j '' frns's occur the potatoes may be j-s' lug about the time the first frost is! rxpeeteil, regardless of the stage of |' maturity of tubers. The second essential, careful hand- | ' ling, is of great est impci-iaoce and ' should be praticed in digging, gat la ring, hauling, and unloading. The n - should lie sorted in ti.- field and gathered in i>:ultl <1 l>:i !: s or j | I ?>.*? lo present bruising ?>r !>! a! ing Im skin. Thi' bar si is or - h ?uM ' j l)i* loaded on ilit wagon, Ii t<> the storage house, ami ilie potatoes rai' fui.'y poiii*i'11 into hins. If they an? to ' lie hauled very far a wagon with holster springs should he used. Sweet | j>-. -to. should m 1 er he thrown from one row to another, I > eled loosely 1 into a wagn body, or hauled in hag because any of there me hods will ht uise them and give a ehance for 4 disease to enter. The third and fourth ("sent".!', thorough drying and a uniform tern-!' perature, can he secured in a storage ' , house wliere arthicial heat can be supplied. It is essential thai the h -use he constructed in such a way that it j* can be thoroughly ventilated when '' necessary, hut can he made nearly air tight in cold weather. These re- j (luirements are provided for in the!" type of house described in this hulle- ' tin. I1 It is economical to build a sub- ! ^ . tantial sweet-potato storage house, I because it will last lon?'er and re?ju:r less attention than a cheap, poorly * consttuele I one. It would lu> pes: it.l.. <? L... r> >i l iii a eneap- | it nnd less carefully coastrufij? bouse. I>ut thi* attention required and the additional fin ! would soon exceed the cost of the extra care and mate 4 rial required in a hotter one. The chances of loss are much greater in a poorly built than in a well-built house. IT IS THE PEOPLE'S WAR "The great fact that stands out ihove all the rest is that this is a people's war, a war for freedom and jus i tire and self-government among all i In* nations of the world, a war to nahe the world safe for the peoples who live upon it nnd have made it ' heir own."?NVoodrow Wilson, I'resi lent of the United Slates. WANTED?OLD FALSE TEETH Don't matter if broken, I pay to % 1 f? per full set, single and partial l dates in proportion. Send by parel post and receive check by return I -ail. F. TERL, 403 N. Wolfe St., I ' iltiiv.ore, Md. THE BURDEN BO Under the above title, Granville Forleseue, in the National Geographic Maira;:ine, rives an Hluminulini; account of the tremendous burdens which France has had t<> carry and of the sullerinps which her people have nul to endure in the strurrle <;f that jountry to save the world's civilizn,ion. It is 1'ranee and Knvr'and and their I \llies that we are indebted for hav- j nr been protected up to the present ! me from bein?j over-run by Germany n its eirort at world conquest. From r.!r. Forlcsi ue's article we ;ike the following interesting state- , nents: "France has ta' en war's foulest ' dows full on her hreu During the 1 I nv.t two yours of onMict (i -rnum nrnies spread !>(')' <> ;* proline- ^ i?rovi: ? <?:; a pray corroding id, entinjr tlu'ouifh 1 inn, orchard, in , d?-stid.-.i \f e most valuable voiu I ty and mo i u - fui lives of the , 'ranch nation. "Hid th.-':- '. in <!'?' not err !< lie spirit i.i' It I! .1 r M~ ? ty ouirajjo:- rein*"! cath<wi "ds, rannckt'd honn-s, ra.vu ' women i.used the l'1-' irh jr > '< to : territde cnliv.at ion of the <! !: n tin*. . gainst ih world "For the French man and woman, ivo of France, u ' .? 11-,. s....,|. . nr fir, h'!came a ' r 'i -i .r here falh ".-, in .'' . dm h rs, claimed (lie I 1 pri- ' a orded tie- da" ! ' r!l'."iate ncrilicc that .in unrlyr's rown. "The battle \vl. ed the 1 rea.tist expression .'.:? 1 sav tfery the vmid 1 . t djioe ' ears is ofto . :?! I ' Vi -of u* Marne. Sv mira<-he hirim* three e in! i : m out h unrils poini ! r d-sin'.tn-d nee tips at tie 1 i t. i 'i'o >-r. stiyit" iMifidently: 'Vv'i?! .n tlv week and ur t'att v ill d'.at fro n the hiirhest innacle in Franc ' tint the (iod ho weavs tie- v i !d'e dest iny in >v ' rv I ; o'" ! ' . < . r he mil.s- was | I'aris, I lie mid o -air. it : a i "i "1 of I I Kin nn em h, w.i \ I from sr. ' :nl rapine. "It is ! I* ' I..M < > int wIVt French : : ! ! . -Ill* hoiv"." yintt An ? !'>'! ty It li ??.?!s < : i ^ sad t'. i ! , i Wli. i c i i: . i : ii ' . < -it' .:km\ ; . :? . i . . i '1 . ' on II,: Itor of |ij riotism, one : n c rtain nv.orilrne ; in smindii. dpthf this f? !i'v. '<f ;.i-*ilyzi!>:r i'1trieys, f?f c:iIciiinlini* its rcsuhs. "When < :rt!i's l;i-;t .judgment iv! on. ill" t war, France v, if! I im| ; > have --awl tin- word 1 front spot'en. I> !'l"i)U ls. diima i; :;rs, ill,' 11?"" : kv-il I ho r* st l>o"' n ii "i t .-r: <-y .-? .?! d ; t fi i i dn'tinn m.h oi lii" w< v i. in i'.t tn-'- io ilia*, cr.dn res i'mma i \1 ii" champion of i'?e nocr: ey, ami n '. tier c" pre < t' 1 <tc:u<n m. ie ii (*i t exists than l!n- '" r t.?i :>r: y. j "When the French A? ;;. is men oiled today, the French people : I l plied, for tint whole nation : ! u:x! l in- .'in : i snotv! ties i i the tr+ol.s j. ti triumphs e.f the fiyhliny .evtfon f til" ponnh'.ce. "Fnniri-siir.u* the French v i'h tie* arc (in C'OilSCri})L!o!l, | i< y aic radicr.My : ; ihi-v ' * j I. >;r;itioii ( !' n . Ylv I'.- ' . cul , 10 (ienvian amies arc compli c',\ i !>:?'*:st? in sou!. 11: ry " '' e | !. Vti-)' Ml* of v .*? I '.V.a th I :: 'tench i!r ! ' 1 -r ry . n. t tho nlorj i>f (Iret i !.' : e. The : torean :.r< c oriom :-t. v. .!> tit' > < ' 1 ; ' ;Uur' to (he : <11 ; j' oundnriox of Carthi and ( ii ? ?vi rnmosl villages of ( nil. The ll<>ni;u' , <! rorid iloi a , iv . c 1 his- . .1 ! >i\\vi% fi a 1 11 <>i 1 < will <n th 11 pe far. in (.:( < ' f iVnel ho demos (he I 1: .. 1 f <x. .?m' the :i 1.1 \ 1. < f ihi* m < \ . p !> . T. .1 lihich i ipire.l I lie t 1 '>11 r ' .lined in ser . 1 , . ' > lay tlie ideal in?; 11 in Vance. 'Mil :n ;* 1 e/*'v ' rii .f tii 'n rich aoldii r l> * r in . (his vita! iCl-'Ol. AH H f: "* Af.D E.-JTNANO. EXAMINA'i ;ON UNlVT.RSl'i V or south Carolina '1*1. e\..i ,!i . 1; i l T ' siw .?' i o :!< ?/! itcl in iJr.ive . > ' 'with Catvi i 'i' ndmis.-ion ol H'W sI ikI'M . will In: !iv' i at t ii*.* aunty run:: !; - on Friday, .Tuk I"{, :f, 0 . A; ;il:<auis MUM not Ik ?ss th:i years of Wlton olv?! m a vacant after Jul.*. "1 i!i ' v. ' o. awarded to tln> iial:it :r ;!i hi ;i sL a.eraj?p at e\ .mi.ii'.l ), pn>\ "! .| they nuM't tin 'iiitlir ,i tin* award. A > .!i<- 1 i; fin* i i.niarshipa should wri'i o President CuiTi 11 for scholarr1, -xamination blinhs. 'I he. e hi..in 1 properly lillod out by the y, '? :i houhl he filed with i'lelidei! Fill" ell hy July (ith. Scholar. ! dps are worth ? "o, fre luition and foes, to;a! :J; <. Tie. 1 ..'on v ! ope i i ' ' 1017. For ft: lier in for i : . ealalo^oc, addrtss President W. ' CorrcH, Coiui.w i, L'?. 0 I I *' ???? RNE BY FRANCE c* ^8 ______ fact?fijrhtinK is an emotional act; and it is admitted that an emotion sprin^itiK from an ideal is necessarily finer tlv.m one founded on a person. I'he German noes into battle with the Kaiser's sparkling figure in the hack of his mind, while the Frenchman fights for all that is counted in the one word France. t "Frankly, the Gorman honors, re\ re . me.dies w.ir; the Frenchman hates, despises, abhors war. I have seen 'he soldiers of both nation in I attle. 1 have studied them and talked with them after battle. I have e at cited for some unconscious expression jrivintf the clue to the real feelings of the French and German soldier, and when some phrase of the !: .). or flare of the eye marked the true stale of the inward soul, I have toted it. "I > c<> iiitlcss ways the German shows tli.il i _ is the Kaiser that he itfhts for; that dominant, disdainful ipu i ui'inic system, nspirir.?t the German race to the ulliii:.i : orifice in the oil'.rt to spread hat system over the fa< e of the earth, ".'.' vcr lias the French soldier ijiven ny indication other than that he i'^hts for h'.< country, his cities, his ai. is, his homes. Never does he nive ray to the lust of battle for battle's lie ^ i.< th:s war an evil, a no e laying waste hi-, beloved coun:; , ami he < ? ua iv c.. it to be his duty a ii ! r-'f:.! .u . himself, and his hihiren to i. 1 the ?ar'th of this 1 . The cul i\.?ted Frenchman. i- ike paas to explain to you how i" al, umntelliio'Mt, uncivilized is : yet you will see this same eultiated f leiichmon wearinjj the uni >] i i of his motherland racing like a trhlint* fury to th muzzles of the iachine ;{uns. "V. ill m l the m: :t who recognizes i' : 1 . i i.f war, still does not esi. ite .? p.. it penality, merit t * .' I. ro Ih in he who ii iy anibi.ion'f!'?Manuectui" .- j.c id. mi AQ OCifiT-DC #/ ?" ;.>jb '"V: ^ i % $&r *?$3? ''? j f^lilliPinii^ljj! ^ |g i /. . ' . '.': >. ' . \%-- - '* '&* i- ' Carrying the Stars and Stripes at ic-ad of troop of scouts. TL Mncorr.AT i r* nr- ? . ? . 13 rs trtU 3V/UUI. A t? mlerfnot may not bo nblo to ji? lit into I Ik- woods after n ruin and nil i n tiro, and Ids ll;i|>jnoks may ho inch on iho ouisido and raw in the -idlo. arid when ho cooks bneon he m.v tinhh with a fiyitiKPan full of iirm ori ;;>o, wiili .lust a speck here nd tle re to rcpros. nl his hreakfast, nl ali tin- same the only difference n i ween him and ev>n the senior paI o| leader i -- growth. A lilih s. , diiim' Just hatched out of ui neiirn m y have a lot of developm nt ahead of ii. nevertheless It's oak il the way throtnrh. A tenderfoot is coin 11 >I the way il,:iui)_'h, as has been i' ' i'il lime ate. ji .aiii on the Witter, >n the id . :.l I1" s and in the woods. ?* Jf rjf..7iectecl, f.t ' !Ss iOl'.S i.tdwbK e . it m fted. lends a '.s, i ; M'.tnt ; a ' iiiilt toe , ?- hi n> < . . t>i t y d lev r, e \ appea I :ii ami * ? '.! i r M " dis --t jj e : : tvn i hale. I'dot: < 1 7 Co . < : x - ' l,o.t, le'fiJ! f.'iI II i' I 'eel > o 1 / . / < ! ' it- tit hi, < . , ' \ v.. A? rt, 6 S .1 i:t > St., 1' 'Mii| i nor, " : Vt? ?.1 - \ "i v -?.-?i "*' , / I Vlt'l ' t i 'II - - J a: ,1 . r.>r V? :< ' : t :n*r -i f | | * ' ' h' ii oitsi i. | have In -n f -i < '1.1.:1 " :i Tinny 11'!. 'IP ;:i t ? be a 1.1. I > <i'? III . 1. I Wi >1.1(1 b' 'IMC V> : . . ? ill II l' ,e r-ni.U .!(> Tl . V : . "MR I I .1 II 11 < ?> !'i. Ml. I nxn; c T..li<ix, and i ' ii'- i font .! 1 I hI nev.rr 11 i t' a : .1 III Sii'-h k i ' . > ' .> lviiiMFo r. | helluva I b i t ! foar.it tin- i .-metly that no.. my c.. ..." I ?'' ! '>f pe ! !c arc sufferers front lia! i!**.? 1 cons'- H'.i'-n and ' ? l -ii ly read./ so-netbin,; oi ' 'I.Mv?T of this condition, yet ti <<"1 l"o lortj to employ proper cii.vii-.r men -.tcs until si riotts i 11tn - . often r< -silts The advice of ali ; li^ i?*i: ii is, "k.-rp y?utr bowels clean/ and it's *; "d advice. !>: Mi!. Laxative Tablets are ! l>v all drnygi ! ., at -'5 cents a b >v i a ii*?invc 25 doses. If not ;!sfactory, your money is ret'.- ted. 7 MIl.Lo MEDICAL CO., Ell-hart, loci. lain