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JU.I i 'fj!,11/..1 y.I'j. nu "iiii'iii iflBii1 E When you want the one > best drink for good taste * % and good health. \ "Bear" In Mind i ? i Enjoy the good taste of hope, the loam and the sparkle. Drink all you want?it's non-infrrarlf wflng I At grocers,* at druggists,' in fact at ] all places where good drinks are sold. 1 JLEMP Manufacturers ST. LOUIS CRESCENT CANDY CO., Diatrib. 1 Walter Sc Chestnut Streets * Wilmington, N. C. * IF THE GOVERNMENT FAILS t REAL ESTATE VALUES FAIL f t Very few people have ever stopped t to consider why real estate is re- r garded as the best security on earth, r H. H Woodward, of Conway, S. C., t has given a very convincing idea on the subject, and it is so brief and ? clear that the war savings committee r r deems it worthy of wide publication: J1 "Real estate has been regarded as the best security a man can have. p Why is real estate safe? Only be- e cause the government is safe! If the e governr ent fails the title to land I fails, and the real estate mortgage ? goes with it. All legul documents ^ are effective only because the gov emment stands behind them. A war " savings stamp is therefore just as j safe security as land can ever be. By p investing in these stamps you loan t your money to the government and t thus aid in winning the war; which ^ if we lose, all is lost, including land. 11 Are you a patriotic citizen, a loyal * member of your free democratic govemment, or are you a slacker who is r unwilling to help. If you are will- p ing to lend your money to the gov- ? ernmefct at a good rate of interest t you will invest in war savings and " thrift stamps to the greatest extent that you are able." OAKLAND Rev. J. K. Hair preached an interesting sermon at Oakland Sunday. There was a large crowd to here him. = Mr J. C. Smith and family visited Mr. J. T. Wallace and family Sunday. R Mr. Roy Burr and wife visited Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Melton Sunday Best wishes to all the readers of J The Advertiser. c< w.s.s. f, WOMEN TORTURED! n p b Suffer Terribly With Corns Because of High Heels, but Why e: Care Now. ft I Women wear high heels which iBMS kle up their toes and they suffer ribly from corns. Women then ceed to trim these pests, seeking^^^f lief, but thev hsrHHIw terrible danger from infection, I I * Cincinnati authority. Corns can easily be lifted out the Angers if you will get from drag store a quarter of an ounc^^^l a drag called freezone. This is cient to remove every hard or corn or callus on one's feet. ^B^l simply apply a few drops diriH^^ upon the tender, aching corn or ^^^B lus. The soreness is relieved at and soon the entire corn or ca^^^f root and all, lifts out with out^^H particle of pain. c This freezone is a sticky substance a which dries in a moment. It Jjuat r shrivels up the corn without inffam- j ing or even irritating the surrounding l tissue or skin. Tell your wife about ] this. AdfcJ? 1 mm .. - w - - T7 'r- ' pn ssssemmsmKmrnmsexeuMmastmamm PRESIDENT'S WIDOW . INWAR WORK Wrs. Thos. J. Preston, Jr. (Formerly Mrs. Grover Cleveland) Aotive Secretary of Security League Committee. Mrs. Thomas J. Preston, Jr. (formerly Mrs. Grover Cleveland), who vas recently elected a member of the Executive Committee of the National Security League, the first woman to )e so honored, has Joined the execu:ive staff of the league as secretary >f the Committee on Patriotism Through Education, through which the eague Is promoting a campaign liroi 'hout the country to awaken the >eople to a realization of the true MRS. TH0MA8^L PRE8TON, JR. neanlngs of the war and the necessity 'or Its efficient and aggressive prosecuion. Mrs. Preston Is Ht her desk In the lew offices of the Security League, 19 Vest Forty-fourth street. New York Ity, dally, conducting the voluminous orrespondenee connected with the vork of her committee, which now exends Into every state In the Union. In accepting the secretaryship, Mrs. 'raston wrote Dr. Robert M. MeElroy : **I am happy In accepting this opporunity to work with the league. I cun hlnk of no way In which I could more inrely contribute my share to the pres mt needs of our country than by Jolting in the very Important work which our bureau has undertaken." JUNQLE LAW. (Contributed by ROBERT HERHCK to the Natlonul Security .^ague's campaign of Patriotism Through Education.) ' Returning from Europe, cursed with var, 1 was more - convinced than of inythlng else In life that what Is bang slowly settled In that grim trench and over there DOES mean somehlng to us?more, oh, so much more, han money or legal rights or sympathy for bleeding humanity. Not hat 1 am eapeclally apprehensive of a aid on these United States, the crumbling of our skyscrapers, with the exictlon of colossal Indemnities. Thut, oo, of course, might happen If Gernau arms were triumphant, If the mx Germanics were Imposed upon a >eaten world. But that Is not to me the worst. To ne the German peril does not lie ho nuch In her big guns, her submarines, ler "Prussianised war machine." It les In herself, in her Image of the vorld. If Germany could win even a artlal victory under her monstrous reed of applied materialism, lllumlnat;d as It has been by every sort of cyncal crime, with Its reasoned defiance f contract. Its principle of 'Indispensable severities," Its military logic, etc., THAT must become the moral law of ill the world?the Jungle law 1 In orler to survive we must all accept this ! aw of the Jungle. And of all the irostrate peoples of the world forced o accept the victor's new version of he ancient commandments proud tmertca would be the first. We caniot resist the fascination of success. k> the Germnn ideal, the German yrnnny over the Individual, the Oernan morality?one rule for you and ne as individuals and another utterly rresponalhle nile when we get togethir as a state?would he Imitated by is more than the Oerman thoroughless In civil and military organization. PATRICK Union services were held at the aptist church in accordance with l te President's proclamation. Rev. ' . E. Carter of the Methodist church >nducted the services. There was a iirly good congregation out but ot nearly as large as it should have een. 'The services were very interring and we hope will prove benecial. Rev. H. L. Baggott went to MdceDHnnnuM^Bji'n e e r b e m e long in their regular order, male or I 10 male. Take thp males away from'; our flock during the summer, and ;eep them separately or kill them, rhe infertile eggs will keep longer i^^^ke^^^^oufeern Ruralist. NATIONAL MOVE 1 FOR PHYSICAL v REGENERATION N Started by National Security League Through Committee i? Headed by Walter Camp. S al Impressed by the fact that 29 per ai cent, of the young men called to the ai colors In the draft are being rejected fll for physical disability, the National Se- B1 curlly League has started a uatlou- w wide movement to promote the phys- rv ical welfare of the youth of the laud jj through the organization by communl- y ties of branches of a Committee on ni Physical Reserve, of which Walter F* Camp, veteran trnlner of athletes, Is si cliairmun. In answer to a letter sent by the leugue to the mayors of all the ciuos 111 tne country of over 5,000 pop- B< uluilon asking them to appoint com- vi mlttees to co-operMte with Mr. Camp, 01 200 committees In 30 states have already been uppolnted to carry out thei Tt Idea. Associated with Mr. Camp ou tt the Committee on Physical Reserve hi are William O. Anderson, member of bi the Advisory Committee of Yale Unl- j aj verslty Gymnasium, and Joseph E. dl Ilaycroft, member of the Wur and P1 Navy Departments Commission on Training Camp Activities. "Economic Disaster." : (i. In discussing this new effort of the di Security league, 8. Stanwood Menken, al president of the league, said: ec "The Natlonul Security League has T1 taken up this work because the coun- st try cannot ufford without serious eco- r" noinlc disaster to lose the benefit of , the service of nearly one-third of tho u men who are drafted for military duty ni because of physical unfitness and whose places must be taken by those flj who have dependents. The draft fig- al urea show that 2D per cent, of tho n( men are physically unfit. The work Is tr necessary, as, with the strain upon th American brain, It Is essential that public attention be focussed upon the ul need of paying also due regard to physical sufety. The efficiency of the human engine and the ability of the ra man-power of the nation to withstand Ki attrition, and the extra work that the <a men who are doing tilings have to bear at present, makes It Important tu that these men should recognize the tr part that physical exercise plays In their ability to bear their full loud of Pc work. rf> Life Worth $11,000. "Furthermore, with the difficulty In supplying a full quota of labor for industries, It Is necessary tliut the mnn power of the nation should be in- tr< creased by the maximum measure of ta. physical strength. Every indiv'dual I i has a direct interest in seeing (hat. this result is brought about. As an eco- ge nomlc matter, each life Is estimated to on he worth to the nation $11,000 and we ta cannot afford to waste any purt of an this most valuable national asset. As tn a human mutter we cannot as a Christian people, su|)]H>sedly representing *** the highest Intelligence and clvlllzn- on tlon, allow our people to neglect the Qf simple things which would save them If fully understood. Ull "The work which Mr. Cump has un- toi dertaken is a movement of such nation- uti wide Importance and so manifestly a i needed thut Its mere presentment will po commend It to every thoughtful Atuerican." "Thoroughly Aflret." 7" Some of the indorsements of the Security League idea In organizing this re nation-wide campaign for physical regeneration reud: wt Mayor Connell of Scrauton, Pa., "I hu thoroughly agree with you as to taking TT care of our young men physlcully and of morally, and I am pleased to co-oper- la ute with you." i Mayor Hasmussen of Falrport Harbor, O., "Anything that will promote ^ the welfare and manhood of our young T men throughout these United States an has my full sympathy." m( Muyor Ilincke of Plnckneyvllle, 11L, pi) "I am very much In fuvor of this move ment." ga Mayor Hickman of Altus, Okln., "I th assure you that I look upoti the num- by ber of young men rejected In the draft *n) for physical disability with gruve concern, and It Is gratifying to me to know that steps are being taken to remedy this condition of nffalrs." Mayor Itardina of Juniata, Pa., "Wo are ready to work band In hand with nu any object that Is for the upbuilding of our town and will make It a better qu place In which to live." i ca Mayor Iturron, Eau Claire, Wis., "1 tli am very much Interested In the auc- ^l1 cessful operation of your plan," ?? orl wl A STARTLING MESSAGE 1m Y. A traveling salesman, in a strange jq, town, was given the shock of his life ? when he received a message from his | wife, whtch read as follows: "Twins arrived tonight; more by mail." Si CUCUMBER PICKLES Use small cucumbers, or large ones cut lengthwise. Clean and place over fire, with viegar, mustard and pep- ^ per. Let boil up once, then can and 0| seal.?Southern Ruralist. w av/AW.WA: d< ".svv.v.y.wH;h V.svaw.WW jamj ' IWULO HHBM j. VfjOtjOCi um mcT X,*sr? 3 a la |K MAKM trmwi ?n A^CKESTY^W ? / rUKINA rUKINA w* '' Um thear two feed* and we will guaran're DOUBLE DEVELOPMENT .< during the (wit u week* of a rhickr life or &i MONEY BACK J ll pay* to uae the beat leeda? Purina Sold in Chockerboard 1 h*< PAR NELL MEEHAN HE RED TRIANGLE IS F< KEEPING US PROMISES . M. C. A. Secretaries Follow The Soldiers Out Into No Man's Land ' V Job Too 8matl For The Diggest Of Men The American Y. M. C. A. is keep- f ig its promises. American secretaries ti e now, and have been for man/ eeks, at work in the forward areas 1" long the battle front in France. To i indeterminate number of Red Trl- \ lgle men "over there" gas and shellre and mud and actual battle are a t -im reality?a part of the duy's j ork. A personal letter of absorbing inter \ .v t. laiml irtcuru lrUUl 1Y1T. Kalptl arblson, president of the Pittsburgh | j. M. C. A. and a well known business an of that city, who has been in ranee oc a special Y. M. C. A. Mis- 1 on. The Letter "Casualties had occurred among our > [ >ldlers just before we arrived at our llage," the letter reads, "and we were . dered to get under cover of our de ; ilte. After a supper of chocolate, war , ead, and canned beef, the six of u* sec. taries were ordered to the cellar of le 'Y,' together with fifty soldiers who ippened to bo in the old shell-torn '' lilding, as the boche were beginning ' jain to shell the town. We took can- Ii es, a big basketful of canteen sup- c les, to last us In case we should have tl i be dug out later, overcoats and blanks. We fitted our gas masks on to h } sure they were working well, an 1 en settled down?or tried to?In the ? ingeon. We expected to have to stay 1 night, but in an hour a sentry eaJ 1, 'AH out,' and up we gladly went. 1' he rest of tho evening we spent up M airs in one of the reasonably whole oi ioms, with piano and songs and sto a bh and tho ever-present and wonder- G| 1 canteen, at which 1 took my turn V) "Needless to say, I slept, none thn' ght, with all the bang and noise outde, but nobody does, I'm told, the at night. The night before I gor \v tout two hours of dozing with a stiff ol 5ck, sitting up in a crowded night tt ain, but, strange to say, I never felt tl e lack of It for a minute. "We were up tho next morning at . le bonne heure, and after breakfast the officers' mess Clarke and I arted off for the trenches, each of 1,1 i ladened with about fifty pounds of H inteen supplies besides our helmet, ft is masks, carried at all times at t< lerte,' etc. H, "For two hours wo pursued a *tor- Nv ouk way among the various linen of enches and connecting trenches, opping frequently to dispense our >pular wares among: the boys, some ,H pairing the trenches, some building " w ones, some on sentry duty, some e< eeping in the dugouts, some man- tl ng guns and watching for German sada. "As we entered the front-line snches, we suddenly ran into Seere- 11 ry Baker and accompanying officers. li stopped aside as well as I could, sa- tl ted and said, 'Good morning, Mr. kl tcretary.' As they passed I heard 0 of the offloers say to tho Secre- 1,1 ry, 'You see, Mr. Secretary, the "Y" tl en are right up in the front-line snches with the boya.' C "Time was flying, and we knew t, ere were still more soldiers further j, 1 who would be glad to see us. Soon . entered 'No Man's Band' by means ' a *?ench, a land which we had " en frcm the rear lines In the disnee on tour earlier, all uprooted an.1 d; rn and desolate, and after some mln- si es we crawled, hot and winded, Into hi shell hole?the furthermost listening- pi >st In our lines ? and found six sol- j.| srs on guard, all very much alcrc. ley gave us a warm welcome, and ? conducted our communications in w whifpers, for there were three (1 irman snipers In three different dictlons only seventy five feet away. s< "Needless to say, our gunnysacks bi ?re empty when we came out. We ,rried back to the sign of the Red p dangle in the village, drank a cup |t hot chocolate, and started in again j, another direction. "Wa watrhM the ernlottions rettlnr >aer and closer, ench one preceded 11 the weirdest kind of a wail and line through -the air, and then dur- JI g a let-up we rushed across the open d Into the dugouts In an embank snt, where our second pack of sup- \ ies disappeared. | "Two of the secretaries had been ssed the day before we arrived at is place, and one slightly wounded shrapnel, while others were brealc- ' g under the physical strain and needrelief. I'm sure we will hear of y talities soon, but since my experlce In the trenches I don't ask the lestlon any more ? 'Is it worth tile?' Never was such an opportun' given to man to servo his fellow ?n as this. "Pass the word on, and paaa It Ickly, that five hundred of the most ! pable, earnest, and blg-souled Chris- t] in men are needed here today in adlion to the weekly stream that Is ming. We are cabling New York sfpiently, but they don't coine. It is Y Itlcal, and we must not fail, but we ? 11 unless more and better men oome imedittely. As I : ee it, there la no M. C. A. Job over here too small p r the biggest men in America." F E GLAD TO TESTIFY < ____ ti ?y? Watoga Lady, "As To What * Cardui Has Done For Me, So As To Help Others." u ?? B Watoga, W. Va.?Mrs. S. W. Gladwell, 11 ' litis town, says: "When about 15 years 1 1 age, I suffered greatly .. . Sometimes ? ould go a month or two, and I had ? rrible headache, backache, and bearing- * )wn pains, and would just drag and ' id no appetite. Then ... it would last j. . . two weeks, and was so weakening, ^ id my health was awful. c My mother bought me a bottle of a r/fi.: o../i t * aiuui, rtiiu i uc^dii iu im^iuvc <iiici i kii.g the first bottle, so kept it up till I J ok three ... I gained, and was well j id strong, and I owe it all to Cardui. < I am married now and have 3 children I . . Have never had to have a doctor for ' male trouble, and just resort to Cardui 1 I need a tonic. I am glad to testify to , hat ft has done for me, so as to help ihcrs." If you are nervous or weak, have head:hes, backaches, or any of the other Iments so common to women, why not ive Cardui a trial? Recommended by lany physicians. In use over 40 years. Begin taking Cardui today. It may / e the very medicine you need. NC-iao SUFFRAGISTS 1 IN WAR WORK By MRS. JAMES LEES LAIDLAW, 'ice Chairman New York State Wo- N man Suffrage Party. T. The New York State Woman Sufra?e party, si nee It finished its great T ask of carrying New York slate for r., ,,,, ISB|, ^ woman Huffi-aa* ? November 0, 1JH7. u| forms of civic mill I n f'man's hospital unit I United States. Tills unit Is the 11 * "War l'abv" <>f the ' National Woman ?' **"" " * * Suffrage Assyria- j Irs. J. L. Laidlaw. t'on? "1th whirl, <>f we are atllllated. We have Just held a great naval and f)| lllltary meet at Madison Square Caren, where a large sun, was raised for lis remarkable unit, which lias sailed W( > do such valuable work In France. [very person In It, even to the plumb- , j, rs and mechanics, are women, and hey volunteered for dangerous service. (j, Other brunches of fair war service jH, nve been an Intensive food consorva- -pj on campaign and the War-Savlnus i ? lamps campaign. In all tills active \ s)) atrlotlc work we feel inspired with p0 i<? thought of our own chairman, 0f Irs. Nonnan deH. Wliltebouse, abroad ,n( a un Important government mission ov nd muny others of the rank and tile f our women who are engaged In de- va oted service "over there." n,l Citizenship Schools. 011 Another interesting branch of our ! ec. ork Is the great university extension ite f citizenship. Schools are being held fa irougliout the state under our ICducu- ! tl, onal Committee. an Another line of work Is that of our "k itelllgence Committee, which lists of- ; ill cluls of nil political parties ami nil \ icn In every township anil county in tr le stutc who have run or are to run hs >r oftice. It Is believed this eonnnli- sa e will become extremely intelligent wi i time goes on, and lis intelligence j ill react on the civic welfare of the th ate most tellingly. hii Our Amor! anl/.ntlon Committee has m isued some very effective and eiluca- J onal literature and Is organizing In th rery center nnd community where m lore nre foreign groups. en Maintaining Morale. xv' We realise that a great part of a mi- Rt on's war time erticlelcy Is in keeping 1" fe normal and etllclent at home. In le last analysis that nation which a> peps most nearly steady and normal B' i Its industrial and domestic life will lutntaln that morale which will win ! le war for It. The work of the Rural Problems ! onimlttee perhaps is of particular lit?rest In this publication which is he- 1 ig sent out by the National Security j eague. Very few people In the coun -y have stopped to realize how In our : ody politic the rural committees are j Iscrlmlnated against In the matter of >clallzing forces. Our great cities j live their amusements, their muiiici- | nl halls and hatha, their community Itchens, their public libraries und lecire courses and ianumernlile settleicnts and eluhs where people are rawn together and stimulated men- J" illy and spiritually. We feel that mie of those advantages should ho JV ought to the country districts. i Any rural woman who wants to lie n. nl In louch with our leirlsliitlv* hul. 'tin, with our correspondence courses 1 civic education or any information !f; i reference to the work of the Wolan Suffrage party should write to ih mt orKanizatlon at 30.1 Fifth avenue, ! {[;' ew Tork city. c"' ini r. M. C. A. WORKERS I 1 blc ON ARMY TRANSPORTS z ? i . M. C. A. Secretaries Now Accompany Troops From Home To The Crmp And From Camp All The Way To The Boche Trenches Y. M. C. A. secretaries have carried tieir work to the troops in transport, ays an announcement just received rom the National War Council of the v M. C. A., and are now promoting a ystematic rocreatlonnl, educational, ociaJ and religious program for the t; oldier boys en route by aea to a 'ranee. With the sanction of the War a lepartment each transport now car- ^ les one or two such secretaries whose j unction it la to do all that is possible r> make the voyage both comfortable c a?/i i.n irw'ililo ti\i? t la o Hirlii in ir i non m n i broad. LI "Games are provided, musical find lovie entertainments staged, maga- j Ines and books are supplied and writng paper is issued free to the men,' ^ he statement continues. "A report f a transport worker recently arrived hows that in his equipment there were 0f uch articles as a folding organ and . . ong books, motiVn-plcturc equipment 1 vith 20 reels, pocket testaments, writ- *'r ng paper, boxing gloves, medicine th ?all, rope quoits, checkers, dominoes, a] /dctrola and records and a Sonora ma- , hine. "Th? appointment of transport seer?- 1 arles completes the link of Y. M C. I. work, which begins with the re- a :ruit? in camp, continues through the ol raining period, comas overseas on the u .ruiiHports and goes on in the camps n France all the way from th? porta P1 ,o the front line trenches. Transport a! lecratarlAs are assigned to ships, and sr remain on thait ships aa does tin |( irew." P< ^ lo m Evsry time you buy a War I raving* stamp you help |H weaken the Hlndenburg line. 01 tl " m ? "** . k 111 ' " 1 11 1 I II' 1 1 I ^ he Huns Abroad and ' The Pacifists at Home ?? (Contributed by CASPAR WHITKY", now at the front for the "N. Y. ( rlbune," to the National Security . eague's campaign of Patriotism | hrough ICducatlon.) Although (Jermnny, while yet a friend," intrigued against our peace id onler, urged Japan and Mexico to j ake war on us, and murdeiyd our j en, women and children, there are | lose among us professing loyalty and | telligence who practically say this Is it our war and appear unable to reale that the defeat of the boche Is us (hi 10 UN Americans as whs tlie vlciry of 1770. Then wf declared for independence; >\v we fight to uiulntntn It. It Is not merely that we fight In lswer to indignity and material lniry done us through attack on our ghts as a nation and on the fives ' our citizens?not merely to uphold ir place among self-respecting peo- I es?that we are at war; but literally r our self preservation as a republic. I To muzzle this war-mad wild lieast c have taken up arms?that the 1 ?rld shall be safe for the freemen of 1 e world. The world cannot rest in peace while ?rmany holds the destiny of other oples in her blood-dripping hands, te world cannot live in pence with people that commits, or permits her onsors to commit in her name, the ul acts of treachery, of vandalism, bestiality, of murder, that have irked the trail of the Herman ariny er 10 u rope. One doctrine or the other must preiI ; either the ficrmt.n brutal right of Ight or the civilized might of right-e or the other?must succumb In tUls nfllct to the death. And should It the Herman doctrine?then shall we II under the domination of a people ill have robbed and raped and looted . id burned ?ud killed, tlmt the , ultur" of h military oligarchy shall k '* l Prussinnlsm is devoid of honor. ( utli. Justice or mercy, as its own acts ive proved, and Its defeut is a neeesry first step for the pence of the arid and the freedom of civilization. For the safety of American institu his it must lie destroyed; for the fety of American freedom, yours am! Ine ami of all of us. We are In the midst of war, our war e war of every freeman, of ever.* an and woman who does not Indors. iwnrdly murderous assault upon tlx eak and innocent, brutal Injustice id atrocious acts; and If we would eserve the Stars and Stripes and nil icy stand for we must fight the Huns iroad and the pacifists at home with I our strength. fws.s.| WJL SAVINGS STUffl ISSUED BY THE UNITED STATES .GOVERNMENT v Buy Them And lelp Win The War j OR SALE EVERYWHERE 1 siarr1:"l Dpafne! s Cf.np.ot i o C;>red local appltc.iit .n?, r.e tie ? i -it r acli UiMcatt <t ( . : t. . nt ll - . V. . rc " t.:> one way k < nr.- < at . I d?afn re i 1 that i? l.y a cons'.t-.>i I iinu-Uy. lnn li.it li.-r. imi'B In caur-.1 by hi In- ; in 1 corditu n of the iieno-n mi.nf of i liustiK tiinn Tube. Vtlu-i itils lube is t lino <1 you have a ruinrit.' k t>-un-i or ; in-rtfd iicarlnif. anil whi n it Is entirely aid. Dial noes is tin r>.iolt. l.'nlies tlw [ inimimiiuil I'till uu l u vi t (i unu fills U1UC ilurcd to Its ncvjii'il con<llt> >n. h*r?rinfr II be u?*troye<l fipii vtr. M.u.y < isej ol nlnns i:ru cnjn< 1 by cntnrrli. Vi.lvli U 1 Intiuu <1 condition of tin- mucous eur*rs. 11a I s Put.irrh Cure ?utz thru lS?c tod on the mucous surfaces of the ays- l n. tYe trill rIvc One Hundred Hollars for y ces- of <"n tun ha I p ?* that .-annot rur. ; I 1! ill's Pa' vn Cure. Circulars It. Ail Dru'ttlitt. ' c r. J. CHENEY U CO. Toledo. O. 1 Catarrh of Sic Did Not Know Mrs. Selena Tanner, Athens, Ohio, l rites: "1 cannot find words to ex- ! ress my thanks for your kind adice. I never once thought 1 had ca- ( irrh of the stomach. I commenced . iking Peruna, as you directed. .My tomach continued to hurt mo for^* hnnt ttt'A U'Aftlta nffnr I '.'.Atron lediclne, and then it stopped. I now ave a good appetite, while before was nearly starved.' Those who object t.. liquid medlines can procure Peruna Tablets. IMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR ( uke this Beauty Lotion for a Few Cents and See for Yourself What girl or woman hasn't heard lemon juiee to remove complexion emishes; to whiten the skin and to irur out the roses, the freshness and e hidden beauty? But lemon juice one is acid, therefore iiritati g, and ould be mixed with orchard white i a. ....... c>?i L _ c. .uiu i , ir> Ysuy. uiiaiu tin itukri ?i iint* iiuiii j | it* juice of two fresh lemons into ; hot tie containing about three | inees of orchard white, then shake 1 , ell and you have a whole quarter i , nt of skin and complexion lotion at ( out the cost one usually pays for a j nail jar of ordinary cold cream. Be ! ire to strain the lemon juice so no lip gets into the bottle, then this ' tion will remain pure and fresh for onths. When applied daily to the j ice, neck, arms and hands it should *lp to bleach, clear, smothcn anil > jautify the skin. Any druggist will suppy three uncos of orchard white at very liP*e cost and the grocer has the Icons. Adv G. | ^ WHAT THE VICTORY OR DEFEAT OF 6ERMANY MEANS TO EVERY AMERICAN (Contributed by ALBERT PAYSON TKittlUNK, author and globe-trotter, to the National Security league's campaign of PatrlotiMiu Through Education.) Germany's vlctnrv wnnin "??? 11 V - - J II vuiu 1UCHU mi I lint the ulurmtsts have said?the sethack of humanity, democracy, clvillr.at loi?, rights of man, etc. But, to America, It would mean infinitely more. It would mean our first national defeat; and, thus, would smash our perfect record for victories?a record us old as our nation?a record that means more thau the right to brag. Kven as u heaten army never wholly regains Its old form?even us u beaten ring champion sinks at once into desuetude?so our nution (Its traditions of victory gone) would suffer far worse deterioration than the mere fuct of defeat could Inflict. It would mean that the nmu who has risked all In his country's struggle for Lllght could never again feel his former aim certainty that Klght must trljitiph. Thus,\lhe moral tone of the inlividual, us well as of the nation, vould Inevitably be lowered. This country lias never embarked In i war of conquest. From 177f> to the resent we have fought for Liberty or or Union or for the Oppressed?e ver 'or some sterling principle of right, 'roin childhood we have been taught o believe that the high unselfishness >f our war alms has given us the vleory. We have seen the decay or deitruetlon of men and nations that have uttled for dominion?as Oerpiany Is iow battling. Should we fall In this, ur mightiest war for the Right, the iverage man must lose forever the simple Faith which has led our dear ountry from nothingness to Its pres ut estate. For that Faith, more than Tor anything else, our sacrifice Is a lundredl'old Justified. :alomel salivates and makes you sick \cts like dynamite on a aluggiih liver and you lo?e a day's work There's no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating cal>:nel when a few cents buys a large >ottle of Dodson's Liver Tone?a icrfect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid vhich will start your liver just as urely as calomel, but it doesn't make 'ou sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can take )odson's Liver Tone, because it is lerfectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercury and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today nd you will feel weak, sick and naueated tomorrow. Don't lose a day's i-ork. Take a spoonful of Dodson's ,iver Tone instead and you will wake in feeling great. No more billiousicss, constipation, sluggishness, headiche, coated tongue or sour stomach, four druggist says if you don't find )odson's Liver Tone act better than torrible calomel your money is waitng for you. Adv. 3. Nearly I I Starved PERUNA Made Me Well ASHCRAFT'S Condition Powders A high-class remedy for hor.se* niitl mules in poor condition and in need of a tonic. Jiuilds soli u muscle an'd fat ; cleanses the sy tern, thereby producing a smootn glossy coat of hair. Packed ill Jjoses. '<55c. box Solo by D. H. LANKY No. 666 Thia ia a prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS A. FEVER." K"tve or aiz doaea will break any caae, and taken then aa a tonic tbe Paver will not return. It acts on tba liver better than Calomel and does not tripe or etekao. 2S? w . _