THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. et New Kidneys! trh. kiflneys ye the mot overworked line "." i.iiirinn hndv. and when f pn.il in their work of filtering out and S'Lini off the poisons developed in the Item. thinKB lKm to happen. . I,f the first wnmiwrs is pain or stiff 1 tl e Tower part of the Lack;, highly rine; 1cm of apDetitej lmkcen V ;rriintion. or even stone in the blad- It.. r. lhe"S "',1 tn that dreaded and fata iv '.. 0.,fnntnTTiii inmrate A condition ,,..v- , . - 11 jpitonV , Prtiiht'f disease, for which there f'noHcVy a minute. At. the first in i Sinn of trouble in the kidney, liver, 8'xii.r or urinary organs Btart taking; Wu Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules, and 0'Jd ' lf More it too lute. Instant Ktient is BeeejMrj n Wney and blad- m.i I.. A doluv is often fatal, ir troubles. r "" ,. , Tv.i mii almost certainly find immediate lu in lin'l M-dal Haarlem Oil Capsules. S r more than 200 years thi famous prep i tinn has hc-en an unfailinnc remedy for f; i ;,inv. bladder and urinary troubles, i it in the pnre original Haarlem Oil vour l at iramlMiother used. About two can ! in h dav will keep you toned uo and fcp inn tine. Oct it at any drug store, and g it does not give ym; almost immediate i It vmir money will be refunded. He Ire Vo'i B't the !OLD 51 KUAlt brand. )j,e olher genuine. In boxes, thres ajztl. flUI j fn;iy for n mnn to keep his tem pr if he hasn't any. i Granulated Eyelid Btles. InAsmea Eyts ii,v"d over nlfht by Romsn Ey. U.Imdl J. tristl proves Its merit. Av. I The letter "e" Is In the beginning of trerytMng and In the end of every- OTP. 1 To keep clean ond healthy take Dr. fierce's Pleasant I'ellets. They regu Ute liver, bowels and stomach. Adv. If a girl failed to look at the price Bnrk on her Christmas present it's a tjgu Will fill v min.u lu fev v.. v. Season Opens. Knicker Is Jones an nee 7 Iioiker He cliilius to have swatted (he flies. INot Printable. "Do ye know what my father calls e kaiser?" "No. Sh! Here comes t luOy." Hrowning's Mngnzlne. Unprotected. "Russia's climate Is very Revere." "Cnn't believe it. Those Kusslan inters never could linve survived In really cold climate." I Temper New China. A Chinese merchant gave this bit of Ipformutlon when a rare teaset was purchased from him: Before using delicate china, place it In a pan of cold uter and let it come gradually to a boil; allow the china to remain In the liter until cold. This tempers chlnn fed makes it capable of standing heat. 1 True to Life. 1 don't see how you rend that ushy novel," declared mother. "Do u see nny merit in it at all?" "Why, yes," answered father. "It Is tensely realistic." "What do you mean?" Why, the con- rsntloi) between the lovers Is utterly ly, and their actions ore Idiotically sard." "Yes; that's what I mean," agreed ther, mildly. How Many Work Here? A visitor to the national capital en tered one of the department buildings Oiie day while he was sightseeing. En tering a large room where he expected (d see many clerks, he was surprised find only one occupying the numer iis desks that looked as if they had Jist been vacated. No one was In tM hut a janitor, who wns dusting fed cleaning. Thinking to obtain some Jnowledge of the room, its capacity fcid use, he addressed her : "How many people work In here?" "Humph ! About half of 'em, I 'low." One Per Cent. "Take It from me," sold Ivy L. Lee, ye lied Cross propagandist, a few fiys before Ids departure for Frnnce Jake It from me, when you hear any fing generous or kind or noble on iermnnv's nart the thine turns out to f a ndsunderstandlng. Its like the talk between Skinner lid Grabble, the two storekeepers. hay, Skinner,' Grabble asked, That base o' profit do ye work on?' One per cent,' said Skinner. One per cent !' said Grabble, 'Iloly poke! That ain't lio profit at all. phy. mnn, I run mv store on a profit if 25, 40, yes, and sometimes even 50 r r cent.' Well, yer n greedy devil, then fid Skinner. 'One per cent Is enough r me. If an article costs me a dol- f r 1 let It go for two.' " WarDemands Saving of Sugar, Saving of Fuel, Use of other Grains withWheat No Waste. answers every demand. Its an and deli cious Tbod,abufld erond maintainer of Vigor and Health. TVyit. There's a Reason h i Gran Ms yj TOMMIES MARCHING DOWN A SHELL 1 British Tommies marching along a road which is still under the bombardment of heuvy guns. The ground on ioth sides has been torn up by the shells. GIVES UP HIS LIFE Flyer Wrecks Disabled Machine as German Flotilla Ap proaches Airplane. ORDERS OBSERVER TO ESCAPE Pilot Deliberately Blows Himself and His Craft to Pieces With Bomb to Evade Capture by Huns. London British aviators and me chanics sometimes are compelled to destroy their own machines to prevent the Germans from obtaining a jeal ously guarded secret about the new type of airplane. Occasionally It Is neccssnry for the aviator to sacrifice his own life together .with his air plane. Such an Instance is described In an ofilclnl report of a brnve avia tor, who deliberately blew himself and the airplane to pieces with a bomb to evade capture by a German flotilla of destroyers. There were two men, the pilot and his observer, In one of the latest fly ing boats the British makers have turned out. They had got well out to sen when a fog suddenly cut them off from the rest of their companions. The pilot headed for home, but n few sec onds later the engine "died" and the pilot brought the boat to rest on the water, lie climbed up to the engine to see if he could make good the de feet. A glance showed him that only a repair shop nnd a squad of expert mechanics could hope to make the en gine 'run. Ills fnco was slightly more grave when he climbed dowa to the bull. "Are you going to innke the works go around again, daddy?" usked the observer. Machine Can't Be Fixed. "Can't be done, my son," said the pilot. "We shnll have to wait on some one coming to pick us up." "I suppose the fog will lift soon and give our chaps n sight of us. Wake me up before they come," and snuggling still further down into his seat, the observer went to sleep. The night drew on. The pilot sat up on the deck combing, nnd listened Intently for the slightest sign of ap proaching rescuers, while behind him down In the cockpit slept the boy, dreaming of home. With the coming of the morning the fog lifted nnd the observer glanced eagerly over the shadowy wnters. Far on the horizon was n little black smudge growing steadily in size, and WIFE IN HIS PULPIT The Itev. F. D. Adams, who resigned as pastor of the Unlversnllst church, Urbnna, 111., and after hard training received his commission, not as chap lain but as first lieutenant of the line in an Infantry regiment bound for France. Meanwhile Mrs. Helen S. Adams has been appointed to fill her husband's place in the pulpit until his return. TWO-YEAR-OLD IS MARVEL Infant Prodigy in California Talks, Reads and Tells the I . Time. San Francisco. A tiny two-year-old baby girl here holds the world's rec ord In mental development. The infnnt prodigy is Mnrthn Springer, twenty-six-months-old daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Springer U Mountain View. The child can read like an eight- 4k TO GUARD SECRETS behind it nnotlui smudge, and anoth er. It wus a patrol flotilla fast tip pronchlng them. "It Is German, my son," said the pi lot. "Is your life belt on securely?" 'Tes." "Well,' get over the side nnd swim ns hard as you fan." "But don't you want me to help" His Privilege to Die. "Get over the side," said the pilot curtly, and there was that In his voice which mode the junior man Instantly obey. "Gnod-by, sonny," he added, ns the observer slipiied Into the water. "It is my privilege, you know." About -(H) yards nwny the observer paused and looked back at the disa bled plane. The pilot was crouching on the top of the wing underplnne, Just above the bomb rack, with n heavy sptn.ner In his upraised l.ml heady to strike n blow. A mile away the Jrrst German destroyer was tear ing the sen in twnln In nervous haste to snve the coveted trophy and get nwny before the appearance of the dreaded British patrol. The observer turned nnd swam away from the trn gedy which he knew was about to hap pen. There came the roar of a mighty ex plosion. He heard the swish of the air blast along the surface waters and the rush of the approaching wave from the sen disturbance. The wave en gulfed him Just ns he began to hear the splash and patter of the falling debris, nnd In the blackness of Its heart his senses swam Into uncon sciousness. He wns still sobbing de lirious when the British patrol boat picked him up an hour later. PARIS PUTS A BAN it- Police Mercilessly Hunt for Gos sip Mongers Who Tell Wild Stories of Conflict. SOCIALIST EDITOR SEIZED Defeated Schoolteacher Now Facet Court-martial for Her Writings Wealth or Influence Cannot Shield the Guilty. Tarls. It was a famous French psy chologist who said recently tluit rumor wus one of the evils, among others, of nil wars, and especially of this one. He pointed out that rumors were ns bad ii nd sometimes did as much harm ns the worst of enemy propagandists. The truth of his Ideas has apparently Impressed the prefect of police, who hns begun a merciless hunting down of all gossip mongers nnd rumor dis pensers. The prefect hns decided to take dras tic measures to stop unthinking chat ter in public places nnd the spreading of nlarmlng reports and defentist opin ions. A warning Issued the other day points out that henceforth any person, no matter how respectable he may be, will be arrested und taken to the near est police station if ho forgets himself to the extent of talking not wisely but too well. The warning hnd hardly been posted when the round-up began to show re sults. Boulevnrdlers of all sorts were brought before the local commlssnlres to explain their individual nets of in discretion. There were some whose sole offense, nccordlng to their expla nations, wns that they had merely said they knew n friend whoso con cierge had been told by the post carrier that on the day after tomorrow the Go thas would surely carry out a terrible raid on Pnris. Wild Theory About Big Guns. Others were certain, and let It be known quite loudly on the terrnces of the cafes, that the cannon which re cently bombarded I'nrls was really not nt all as far away as the authorities announced It to be. They were sure thnt somewhere not far from Paris, hidden In n forest, were a number of ordinary small-caliber cannon which had been conserved In dugouts since the battle of the Mame and were sud denly put into action by a buttery of year-old. The father says the child has a normal mhid which simply has been developed by persistent training. At a recent meeting of college pro fessors nnd experts in pedagogy nnd psychology tho child for 40 minutes rend, counted nnd told the time by the clock nnd talkad with the men who wero observing her. Her baby brain did not sag and sha appeared to enjoy the long Interview. All were unanimous in declnring that the baby's case indicates that geniuses are made, not born. The child reads - SWEPT ROAD :1 'lit r. f ... MrtrCrCrCrCrhirtrtrlrtrtrCiirlrb Old Glory Again Flies Above the Schoolhouse Bandolph, Mass. The Ameri can flag Is flying today over the I'rescott school. It took n court order to get the flag back In place. Some weeks ago the halyards broke. The selectmen, who are also the school commit tee, took no steps to have them repaired. William E. Spear, a red-blooded patriot, demanded the flag be flown. He wns met with n smile, but no action. He got the selectmen haled Into court. The court ordered the flag flown at once In accordance with n state law ordering nil schools to fly an American flag. SPLIT BUILDING TO MOVE IT Structure 300 Feet Long Is Cut in Two and Halves Moved Separately. Camp Monde, Md. A building 300 feet long wns chopped In two nnd the two hnlves were moved about 500 yards by a detachment of colored svlectlves here without the use of any special devices and with no delay worth men tlonlnir. A group of 300 men caught hold of the supports nnd ut the proper order they hnd the whole structure off the ground. Then nt signals the slow pull began. Within seven hours the building was In place on Its new site. According to a French electrician, the temperature of the carbon filament In nn Incandescent lump approaches 2,000 degrees. ON WAR RUMORS German prisoners who hud escaped from the camps In France. These nnd other gossipy bits of mis information dropped indiscreetly by some well-mennlng persons have been found to prove a source of extreme an noyance to the government authorities and have resulted In Immense harm. Perhaps the most sensational arrest under this nw edict, although virtu ally mnde ns the result of a luw passed on August 5, 1014, was thnt of Charles Leon ltnppoport, one of the editors of La Verlte nnd Le Journal du Peuple nnd a member of the administrative committee of the unified socialist pnr ty. Itappoport was taking refuge In a cellar during nn nlr raid. With hlra wero a number of women aud men, dwellers In the sume house. Accord ing to a schoolteacher who heard him, Itappoport was directing many deroga tory remarks against the government nnd the army. The teacher reported what he hnd heard to the prefect of police, who ordered the arrest of tho socialist. Woman Teacher Faces Trial. After numerous Interrogations by the military und police authorities, Itappoport wus locked up In the Sante prison, where Bolo wns detained and Cnlllaux nnd Senator Humbert are Im prisoned, as well as the latest arrival, Mile. Helen Brion, the defentist schoolteacher who faces court-martial for her writings. Ilnppoport's arrest crented much comment In ull the news papers, particularly In the radical nnd socialist press. The press of this week, to sny noth ing of the wholesale detentions, convic tions and arrests of the last few months, Is bringing home to the people more clearly the determination of the government to rid the country of Its opponents nnd enemies. One thing has certainly become very clear and thnt Is that the prominence of a man or his wealth and political Influence in no way cause him to be Invulnerable ngnlnst chnrges of Inter fering with the successful prosecution of the war. Premier Clemencenu's de cision is thnt no one shall be spnred who schemes to undo the work dono by the soldiers of Frnnce In the field. Patrlotio Liveryman. St. Louis. In an effort to Increase the Interest In Thrift gardens, J. E. Cnldwell, proprietor of a sales stable In tills city, hns offered to furnish a team to plow any Thrift garden in tho city. Mr. Cnldwell has received many culls since the publication of his offer. nnd spenks with n vocabulary of about 2,000 words. Sh Is large for her ago ud eats and sleeps well. Learns "Art" Is Phony. Philadelphia. Staid old Philadel phia wns shocked when It became known thnt a largo percentage of the "works of nrt" owned by the city and on exhibition in Memorial hall, were counterfeit. Orders have been Issued to clear out the galleries. It was said that most of the paintings hud been willed to the city, Sound Doctrine By REV. J. H. RALSTON, D. D. Secretary of Correspondence Department, Moody Dible Institute, Chicago TEXT But apeak thou the thlnge which sccome lound doctrine. Tltui 2:1. One of the bl-products of the world war is the seriousness with respect to many things that heretofore were c treated very flip- f , pantly. There has iieen a certain dilettantism in al most every sphere of human activ ity, but now man Is driven by the very necessity of his being nnd sur roundings, to eco nomy, thoughtful ness nnd to deep study. May it not he that in religion there hns been a like dilettant ism? Has it not been n com mon thing to hnve men sny, "It makes no difference what a mun be lieves so he ucts right?" Such nn ex pression Is common to the person who has practically no religious profession, but many In the churches of Jesus Christ nrc saying, "Oh, we don't enre! One minister is ns good as another. We are under obligation to believe one mnn ns well as another." Has not thnt position been taken to such an extent that the sense of discrimination ns to tho minister's message has be come deadened or lost? A distin guished Amerlcnn pastor said not long ngo that he was preaching in the Highlands of Scotland nnd he found himself attacked at the close of his ser mon ns to the squaring of his teaching with the Bible nnd with the standards of the Scottish church. Is It not a rare thing to have a minister criticized be cnuse he is not sound or orthodox? How a ndnlster is dressed how he speaks, whnt are his mannerisms? are universal subjects of remark, but rare ly Is It asked, "Is he sound In doc trine?" Many nt once become Incensed If you suggest such n thing ns un soundness In doctrine, and today a large proportion of these are professed Chrlstlnns nnd Ilbernl supporters of Christian work. It is pleading for tolerance to the suggestion thnt what Is tav'it by the minister or teacher should be sound that prompts what Is snld hereafter. The text was written by the Apostle Tnul nnd In the short letter from which It Is tnken Paul speaks some five times about this soundness. An examination of the different verses shows that the word translated sound ns an adjective means prlmnrlly healthful or health-giving. What we note of the trend of Paul's mind guid ed by the Holy Spirit ns found In his writings In the two epistles to Timothy am! the one fYofn which this text Is tnken, lends to no confusion ns to his desire to purify Chrlstlun doctrine or teaching. He warns us, too, of "Many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers whose mouths must be stopped, teach ing things which they ought not." Writ ing about the same to Timothy he spoke of the time when "Men will not endure sound doctrine, but will henp to themselves teachers haying Itching ears, and they shall turn away their ears from the truth and shall be turned unto fables." Doctrine Is sim ply teaching of any kind. It may be profound or superficial, right or wrong, pleasing or disturbing. Now, whnt is sound doctrine or teaching? There must be some cri terion or Judgment. The suggestion of the Apostle Paul In his Initial way gives one of these. This preaching must be henlth-glvlng, and as to spir itual doctrine, that would mean that It must be health-giving spiritually. In the first place, the teaching should be simple, never causing a doubt In the minds of the hearers as to the Intent of the teacher. In his first letter to the Corinthians Paul, re ferring to the mun who speaks for God, gives warning that his speech must not be like a trumpet that gives nn uncer tain sound. Far better is It thnt a mnn Is at once recognized as speaking against the truth than that be Is so un certain In his message that the needy soul does not lpow whether there Is anything In the speech for hlra or not The lndeflnltcness of much of the re ligious teaching of today Is a promi nent churacteristlc of it Jesus Christ was never misunderstood ns to man's belief nnd life. The messngo of "Billy" Sunday, or Gypsy Smith, Is not misunderstood. In the. second place the message should be sound in the sense that It Is in accordance with the accepted belief of jhe Christian centuries. There havfc been alterations from the truth at practically every point, yet the ag gregate of Christian belief Is trust Worthy nnd cannot be misunderstood. The confusion of the present day Is universally acknowledged, but fifty years ago this confusion did not exist It wns orthodoxy or heterodoxy. Tho thirty-nine articles of the Church of England, the Westminster Confes sion and standards, the Lutheran Cate chisms and the doctrlnnl statements, of many Independent communions, are thoroughly trustworthy, and if ndhered to, no uncertain sound is given. The Godless philosophy of todny, un questionably finding Its hatching place la tho German universities nnd theo logical schools, and the theology of the flood of fiction and other more seri ous lUerature tljat has swept over the lnn5, har fallen altogether into ruin In the light of the present w. Red-blooded and thinking men are driven to tho necessity of concecVag thnt possibly Moees nnd David and Isnluh nnd Kzeklol and Jesus nnd Paul were right In their teachings, nnd they nro nsklng for those teachings. Tho neceptaneo of the proposition thnt the Bible Is the Weed of God, Infallible In Its records, and supremo In authority, Is the need of tho day nnd is the only guaranty of the SQUQdoess of doctrine. I "I : State of Ohio, City ef Toledo, Lueaj County pi. Frank J. Cheney makes bath thnt he li enlor partner of tho Arm of K. J. Cheney A Co., dolnir buslrx-se In the City of To lodn, county and State aforeaalri. and that aid Orm will pay the eum of ONE HUN IHED HOLLARS for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the uie of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to befnre me and lubm rlbed In my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. W. (Seal) A. W. Olenson, Nntarv Public. HAL.TVS CATARRH MEDICINE ia tak en Internally and acts through the Plood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. DruifRlMts, 7fc. TistlmonlalH free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Free for All. "Our apartment house is very noisy. I suffer in silence." "l'ou don't have to do that. Get n graphophone yourself." FARMERS ARE WORKIKG HARDER And using their feet more ttma ever before. For all these worker the frequent use of Allen1! FootEiue, the antiseptic powder to be shaken Into the shoes and sprinkled in the foot-bath, increases their ellieleney and In sures needed physical Comfort. It takes the Friction from the Shoe, freshens the feet, ind prevents tired, aching and blistered feet. Women eTerv where are constant users of Allen's FooUEuse. Don't get foot sure, get Allen's Foot Ease. Sold by dealers, every where, 25c. Adv. Chef Mars. Knicker What Is a war sandwich? Boeker A wait between two slices of white bread. You May Try Cuticura Free Send today for free samples of Cuti cura Soap and Ointment and lenrn how quickly they relieve Itching, skin nnd scalp troubles, For free samples, address, "Cutlcurtf, Dept. X, Boston." At drug.'sts and by mall. Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50. Adv. Quick Action. Jack (gallantly) Betty, dear, any thing that you say goes. Betty (quickly) Jack! Important to Mothers Examine curetully every bottle of CASTOUIA, t.nt famous old remedy for lufunts and children, und see that it Ttenra this Signature UZaA2A In Use for Over 30 Yeurs. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria The Boss. Knicker Does jour cook do gen eral housework? Boeker Xo, she does generalissimo. Old People Who Are Feeble and Children Who Are Pale and Weak fvortld be ureal lr bem fltd by theOenemlHtrenirtri enlna TonTc BIWt of OBOVB'S TAS'l'Bl.KSS chill TONIC. It pnnnea and enrlchm the Moid and build up thn whole nydem. A Ueneral HtrettMlB cnlog Tunic for AdalUaad Children. Uc Slimy a man who objects to carrying n bundle homo from a dry goods store goes homo from ids club loaded. Ir. Peery'a "D'a4 Shot" la not a "lo lenge" or "ayrup," but a real old-fashioned dose of medicine which cleana out Wnrms or Tapeworm with a single dose. Adv. It Is the men nnd women who pny attention to saving that become wealthy. flarlleld. ioivi ie Afraid of Vour Etols Take "Eatonic" and Laugh At Stomach Troubles II. L. Kramer, th'6 mnn who origin ated CnsearetF, has discovered a sure, safe, quick-acting relief for bad stom achs. He named U EATONIC for your stomach's sake. You can eat anything you like now nnd digest it la comfort, for stomach ense Is positively assured if you eat nn EATONIC tablet regularly after each meal. EATONIC acts directly with the food the moment It enters the stom ach. It Immediately checks any ten dency toward too much acid and en ables the food to pass from the stom ach into the bowel in a sweetened con dition, and thus prevents the forma tion of sour distressing gases that un set digestion nnd cause a bloated, dull, lumpy feeling that makes your FOOD REPEAT. EATONIC enables you to eat your easy to figure farmers (scores of them from the U. single crop. Such an opportunity for is wortr. investigation. Canada extends to you a hearty Bp Free Homestead Lands of 160 Acres Each or secure srme of the low priced Alberta. Think what yon can make easy to get Wonderful yields also of Oats, Barley and Flax. Mixed farn.Ing and cattle raising. The climate is healthful and agreeable; railway fa cilities excellent; good schools and churches convenient Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to Supt Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to J. P. JSFFRSY. Car. Walnut & Broad Sis., Philadelphia, Pa, Canadian Government bXaBSaQKK All farmers laving it for sale should write us at once for prices Obtain more money for your wool by selling direct to LEWIS BAER & CO., Inc. (Wool Dealer) BALTIMORE. MD. . MARCH TO VICTORY Courage Is a matter of the blood. Without good red blood a mun has weak heart and poor nerves. In the spring Is the best time to take stock of one's condition. If th blood is thin and watery, face pale or pimply, generally weak, tired and list less, one should take a spring tonic. One that will do the spring house cleaning, nn old-fashioned herbnl rem edy that was used by everybody nearly, 50 years ago is still safe and sane be cause it contains no-alcohol or narcot ic. It is made up of Blood root, Gold en Seal root, Oregon Grape root. Queen's root. Stone root, Black Cherry bark extracted with glycerine and mnde Into liquid or tablets. This blood tonic wns first put out by Dr. Pierce In rendy-to-use form and since then has been sold by million bottles as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. If druggists do not keep this in tablet form, send GO cents for a vlnl to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y. Kidney disease carries awny a Inrgs percentage of our people. Whnt Is to be done? The answer is ensy. Eat less meat, rat coarse, plain food, with plenty of vegetables, drink plenty of water between meals, nnd take on uric acid solvent after meals for a while, such as Anurlc (double strength), obtainable at almost any drug store. It wns first discovered by Dr. Pierce. Most every one troubled with uric acid finds that Anurlc dissolves the uric ncld ns hot water does sugar. You can obtain a trial package by sending ten cents to Doctor Pierce's Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute In Buffalo, Jf. Y. A REAL POTATO DIGGER No( mm Plow with a nk aHackmrat, but low priced, KientiaW Implrmcnl, Cleans the buh from ih dirt and the dirt horn trw poutoc at ell ai machines that coat 6v Itmca at much. StreJ beam with high arch lo prevent clownnf. Hoi kWtrd high carbon tteel shovel. Adjustable wheels rrsulalt depth and "pitch' cisctlf. Will tot bruise potatoes. j Don t buv a Drill, Cultivator, nsrtow, Luna rtpteatJer. rotato Oiaifr, or any other pteca of Kaira Machinery before wntiruj lot owipeciafcalalc. Stale what machine you want and four deal. name. Hracb (jS C-pany OK' Tor, tv v r J'leaw tntnttos) $1,473 Net Profit MADE ON $200 ttamnib this oltlea In it d7i' tlnia with PUTS 4 C ALLS. Similar opporlnnlUM looked for la Ibrm In tha cmulng Ml anil tw daya. If yon an iDUtrnaUHl and wlab to tafca adrnntage nf tbcaa opportunltln, writ now for BUOKLBT K-W. it MlToa you all Information. WM. H. HERBST 20 Broad St. Naw York City lMalrr In Ptiti and Calls alnea 1MM. The National Wealth KW!;an.,WSI Then Hfnd atamp tnta fur facta thnt may rhaanv your Kboielife. nlLTMHUl.riu.lBm. Uf.,Muw W. N. U., BALTIMORENO."21-79li! (111 and laugh nt Indigestion, dyspep sin, heartburn, "sour stomach" and all the other bugaboos of "the-man-afrald of-hls-stomach." Kramer says : "EATONIC should M In every home ready for use after ery meal. An EATONIC tablet wilt aid you naturally to easily digest nnd assimilate your food enn be thor oughly enjoyed without tho slightest danger of misery from acid stomach. I strongly ndvlse every one to tnke EA TONIC nfter meals. To correct b4 stomnchs and keep them In perfect condition, It Is a most wonderful dl covery." If EATONIC falls to give yo prompt stomach relief, your money will be refunded ; 50c buys a large box nt nny drug store. Or write to Eatonle Remedy Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave, ChV. cago, U. S. A i aaanaaaaaaa urn , .,...,, y. ( Where in Western Canada you can buy at from SIS to $30 per acre Rood farm land that will raise 20 lo 43 bushels to the acre of $2 wheat its the profits. Many Western Canadian S.) have naid for their land from 100 profit on labor and investment invitation to settle on her lands in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or with wheat at $2 a bushel and land so ma; Agent OL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers