ALS! LOT OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR small bottle of “Danderine” makes hair thick, glossy and wavy. Removes all dandruff, stops itch. ing scalp and falling To be possessed of a head of HEAVY, beautiful hair; soft, wavy and free from dandruff is merely a matter of using a little Danderine. pice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a small bottle of Knowliton's Danderine directed and within ten minutes there will be an appearance .of abundance, freshness, flufliness and an incompara- ble gloss and lustre, and try as you will you cannot find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks’ use, when you will see new hair—fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair—sprouting out all ever your scalp —Danderine is, we believe, the only sure hair grower, destroyer of dan- druff and cure for itchy sealp, and it never falls to stop falling hair at once, If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really is, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair—taking one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy and beautiful in just a few moments—a delightful surprise awaits everyone who tries this, Adv Hark! A combination of telephone, micro phone and phonograph has in- vented in France for transmitting sounds to distant pouts or to several points at once. KIDNEY TROUBLE OFTEN been When your back aches, and your blad- der and kidneys seem to be disordered, go to your nearest drug store and get a Bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. It is a physician's prescription for ailments of the kidneys and bladder It has stood the test of years and has a reputation for quickly and effectively giving results in thousands of cases, been placed on sale everywhere. bottle, medium or large size, at your near- est druggist, However, preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and men- tion this paper.—Adv. A Good One. “Did you make any New Year's reso- lutions?” “Yes; one not to make any.” $100 Reward, $100 Catarrh Is a local disease greatly enced by constitutional conditions. t therefore requires constitutional treats ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of jhe 8 tem. HALL'S CATARRH CINE destroys the foundation of oe yr ves the health and assists nature doing its work. Ly er aby aR Catarrh that HALLS MEDICINE 39a to cure. Druggists 5c. Testimonials free. ¥. J. Cheney & C + Toledo, Oho. of | ARRH iron Men. “I have very few acquaintances, but I've got about 3,000 friends.” “Where are they?" “In the bank.” Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp On retiring gently rub spots of dane druff and itching with Cuticura Olnt- ment. Next morning shampoo with Cuticara Soap and hot water, Make them your every-day toilet preparations and have a clear skin and soft, white hands Adv, its Fate. “Do you think the conquered nations ought to be Gismembered 7” “Well, 1 think Turkey ought.” i} bese pro ay ary prompity wit, mighty 1s certain.” us the fisher Bread—An’ Butter -—An’— Apple Butter «LP By BARBARA KERR (Copyright, 1918, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) She was a little brown wisp of a thing, sitting in a big chalr propped upon a box to make her just the right height to stir the apple butter. She could rest the long handle of the stir rer on the arm of the chair so it would not be so heavy, then shé could keep the paddle moving over the bot- tom of the great copper kettle, To new copper cents thoroughly nies for her own, besides, of course, apple butter that she could eat all It was an ideal October day. Along and then a sumach, like an Immense The pokeberries with And Sarah Jane ap- The air was spicy with the outdoor fire near the spring- house, and the long stirrer moved rhythmically over the bottom, pushing the pennies about ceaselessly, Sarah Jane was droning an impro- gurgle of the apple butter as it surged through the holes in the wooden pad- Bread—an'—butter-—an' — apple but. tere— Too much hard stutter—"' “Well, hello, little poet! How do you know? Tried it? [I've brought the rest of your cider from the mill, but it's not hard. Where's your mother?” Ashamed cider will make you that anyone, especially Milo Ward, the idol of her childish heart, should have heard her silly lit tie song, Sarah Jane hung her head in mortification, She would have run away, but she was mindful that Dun. can farm butter, upset her precarious perch, “look out fer the throne!” Milo, as he caught the chair and right- ed it on the box. Then, seeing embarrassment, he took the from her hands, saying gently: mind me, little Say-Jane. give the you find your mother for me.” Sarah Jane needed no second bid ding. She found her mother, “Don’t Let me had delivered the cider and gone, was leaving: Jane, Mra. Duncan; tell her I'll have for I'm go ley. Other children, sons and daugh- ters of the farmers, went to college. Many of them, after finishing rious ways In other places, farm was sold, not remain away; home needed her. er still made apple butter, but not in the big copper kettle, for there were to eat It, Then war broke out, and Sarah Jane, patriotic and sweet and whole the old folks at She would make apple butter She brought forth and she and her When the apple butter was done and She delivered the delicious sand. wiches into eager hands thrust through when she saw a soldier hurrying to meet her. Thinking that he was com- ing for the treat she held It out to “Just one of my fa mous apple butter sandwiches left. Warranted pure cider, fresh from the Duncan farm.” “Bread-—an’—butter—an'—apple but ter!” mimicked the soldier. "And it's little Bay-Jane, too. Don't you tell me you don’t remember me!” and he took the sandwich and the hand, too. “1 remember that you promised you'd have better manners next time, and new you've reminded me of that awfol moment" “When the queen's throne t LL and EE ein Theat OTD “It looks as If you were intent on “Who says so?” bantered Milo. “I have & 20-hour stopover, 1 was going out to your plince, hoping you'd invite me to stay, and then take me around to see the old places. Be- sides one apple butter sandwich is only tantalizing when you haven't tasted the Duncan brand for so long.” Sarah Jane for a moment was tongue-tied with a rush of her old childish diffidence, “Oh, have 8 heart!” he pleaded, as he took her bas ket from her arm. “I'm sure your mother would bid me welcome.” “Yes,” assented Sarah Jane demure ly, “mother Is such a good patriot, she'd do anything for a soldier.” “I've a great mind to make you apol- ogize right now for that remark to an old schoolmate, little threatened as he helped her into the roadster. “We are going to cut out all the hero stuff. international appeal. In fact, sort of domestic matter, the old farm and I'm golog to talk business to you—' “Be careful!” warned Sarah Jane in a panic. “I'm not a good driver— it just about takes all my mind--" itis a wheel, and I'll tell you why I did not come sooner." As he drove through the sweet-scent- termed it, a strict account of himself, tory to all concerned, for while hours' leave 1s all too short, still long enough Jane of his sincerity. old copper kettle was not needed for the Ward granary between seasons of any to be put up for winter use, » ter. HEIGHT THAT FEW ATTAIN Not Many People Can Complete Guiltiessness of the “Seven Deadly Sina” are pride, sloth and The “seven deadly sins” envy, lust, avarice, anger, gluttony. The fathers, the sages, the wise men of the world, handing down from one generation to another through the at last sgreed that all our spiritual and mental miseries, as weil sufferings, from an Indulgence In the thoughts and actions included in the above-mentioned list of sins, Old-fashioned people used to keep constantly before them, and spiritual and physical health in the measure that they were able or unable to con trol their thoughts and appetites In these modern days we are still surprised to learn that the list of seven deadiy sios was ever even made, Come their really covers the whole moral scheme of existence. The man who can finally subdue himself into a state in eh he does not break any of the laws for which the seven deadly sins stand as In may well congartulate He is what we would call a Not to be not to be never to be avaricious or angry, nor to be a lazy man nor a glutton, means that you need fear no man or devil, and that you certainly shall not be afflicted with gout. “Be good and you will be happy.” There's many a saying, but there is to have him as a neighbor. City Brother Had Not a Great Deal the Best of His Relative in the Country. Dr. Samuel Schwab claims that the oldest good story is the one about the boy who left the farm and got a job in the city. He wrote a letter to his brother who had elected to stick by the farm telling of the joys of city life, in which he sald: “Thursday we auto'd out to the PESTOER CF IPRNIIN~ CONFERENCE . the HE list of peace conferences with foreign nations, United States as a bel strictly to the following: of Paris after the Revolution; Peace of Ghent with Great after the War of 1812: Guadalupe Hidalgo with Mexico, and the Peace of Paris after the with Spain. Of the peace Barbary pirates, 1704-07, and by us on them 20 years later: and the convention with France made Techaleally in the latter case not at war, even though war some pertinence, however, are trent we been our h frigate Insurgente and had de «1 another, La Vengeance, Fre siroy: Our independence Recognized. with Great Brital the Hevolution was concluded by com- missioners of congress under the Articles of Confederation, and of courte before an American president or constitution existed, was nr peace mply commander in chief. The November 30, 1182, treaty September 38, Wash of ho The the 1783, General neton having declared cessation tilitles fo January, 1783, American commissioners in the first conference were John Adams, Frankiin, Jay and Henry Laurens: in the second the same without Laurens Richard negotiated for the king in the first conference, David Hartley, M. P.. in the four main questions in both boundaries of the United States, fish- tng rights off Newfoundiand, the pay ment of private debts of American cit {zens to British and compensation by the United States to British loyal fate (tories) whose property had been Osgood second, were The two former questions had fo be further adjusted later on, although presumably conclusive agreements were then arrived at, the United Btates getting the territory between the Alleghanies and the Mississippl, not to dry There Newfoundiand coast, but the catches on those shores, Then we trolleyed back to town and danced until dawn, Then we motored to the beach and Fridayed there.” The brother on the farm wrote back: “Yesterday we buggied to town and bascballed all afternoon. Then we went to Ned's and pokered till morn- ing. Today we muled out to the corn. field and gee-hawed till sundown. Then we suppered and then we piped for awhile. After that we stalrcased up to our room and bedsteaded until the clock fived, Very Possible, A Kansas City business woman the day before Thanksgiving received a box of chrysanthemums, which sho proudly set upon her desk for the de- lectation of her fellow workers, The mums really came from a rival busi- ness concern, but when the other girls wanted to know who sent them she only smiled and sald, “the florist,” in her most mysterious manner, “Come, come,” they said. “Tell us who.” “I shall not” she bantered. "I'm married and it wouldn't do to tell the of debts either way, and American Jegisiation was to ommend making the loyalists im mune from confilscations or prosecn- recovery It iz unlikely that there will ever be an American peace commission of greater ability than this one. Frank. lin, our representative at Paris, had i § invaluable friendship and ald of the French government. John Adams was to be president, Jay to be chief Justice of the United States Supreme court, Laurens was a former president Our convention of peace, commerce and navigation with France, which on What 1t Was About. A Canadian soldier and a public tiouse loafer disturbed the peace one day of the little village lan. The soldier, his face a study in con- contrated wrathfulness, had the civil fan by the scruff of the neck and was apparently just en the point of giving him a thrashing when a belated police man put in an appearance. “Now, then, what's all this about?” demanded the constable. “What's it about?” replied the On wadian, giving the wretched loafer an HENRY CLAY, OVE DF PECOTIATORS or TIERTY WHICH ErvilD WAR OF BJ2 September 30, 1800, ended a war that was not 8 war, was negotiated for the United States by Oliver Ellsworth, Willlam Richardson Davie and Wii liam Vens Murray; for the first con- the following counselors of state: Jerome lonaparte, Charles Plerre, Claret Fleurlen and Plerre Louis Roederer "he quarrel the the Con. on French directory stulnte The change in the ment made side, was a legacy from to Napoleon's frst French govern- reconciliation without formal progress into war. By the France recognized the rights of nentral vessels and promised her nas depreda- ut historian you confer lisworth Fed- 4 ae possible a convention ties for v's Depending on wh read, Ameri ence was mails or that eralis #'s success in the ily the work of El of Murray. John Adams, t, was president at the time. commis- re. and Washington's minister therlands, were strong Davie, English born, a former gpvernor of North Caro- lina and a veteran of the Revolution, seemed to ha early politics. The scene vention was Paris, Two of President Adams’ Ellsworth, who had signed the office of chief justice, who had to the Ne Federalists fust been ve of the lecoming tired of piracy and black. American squadrons attended to the Barbary and between and 1815, when Decatur finally made whole thing sure, (reaties were with the deys and bashaws, The Peace of Ghent, The peace of Ghent was concluded The United States | appointed by President | who was a Jeffersonian | Democratic-Republican, incladed John Adams, then our minister to James A. Bayard, former Henry Clay, Albert Gallatin, Coast, made speaker of the house; ury from 1801 to 1813, and Jonathan Russell, our minister to Norway and Sweden John Quincey Adams was a former from Massachusetts, a strong Federalist state. That is, he had been originally in opposition to Madison in politics, Later he had come into accord with Madison's gov ernment. Bayard was another former Federal jst, but he was the man who had brought about Jefferson's victory oves Aaron Burr when that presidential election was thrown into the house of representatives. Clay was a con epicnous Madisonian, and so was Gal latin, the eminent financier. Russell was a second Massachusetts commis. wioner: of Madisonian partisanship, Ten years later he was elected to con awful shake to emphasize his words “Why, he called me a consclentions ejector! Now watch him being eject. ed "London Tit-Bits, Directed Raids by Radio. Investigation has disclosed that the rived at Santander, Spain, un der Its own power, had been in com BENSRIIN STANK LAN, APURICALY REPRESENTATIVE AT VERSAILLES WHEN ENGLAND ACKNOWLEDGED RIUESRICALY LY DELPENGLESNNCL | gress as a Democrat, in the present- day party sense. For the achievement of our commis. much of the has always best opinion h Gal- late Henry Adams, grand- American chairman on the just “Far sup~ the credit The The the conscientiously writes: ever and a England hi than occasion, storian, contemporaries imagined, the liar triumph 130% especial of treaty was ico, concluded lupe i 1 of such nego and American olas Philip » state depart. like as was dalgo, _ hilef clerk under Presi ‘olk, and, 8 thor i Democrat WOCTHLS There intricate fo negotiate We had gx to War to boundary at the Rio the Mexican cone n for the Nueces peace that wa our government >} of ws aw 1 MERE OILE Den nothing very Mexio are {foaay with ne Grande as against only that boundary but also fixed inder of it. giving New what was then called Up- Tri t's job was to tions and conclude He first met in the Scott had of Triest's mi & made not The satisfied as to portion of the the rema us Mexico California make those stipu 6 treaty yieldin Santa Anna's commi of 1847 notified ETE ana eer [rer y them EEIONDOTS KILI ar General A3883345 sate sad ssion, shen not been and quarreled violently with him he appeared Treaty Made Without Authority. During an armistice in August Trist, instructions ag to New Mexico agreement with the which made rejected all At the end of fighting was resumed, to Sentt Trist was recalled by the authorities at Wash. Before the order reached him. however, he had made friends with Seott and by Scott's advice he re- fo an nna commission, proposals and to come Santa J armistice deference At Christmas time, 1847, Scott's army took the city of Mexiro and Santa Anna resigned the Mexican presidency, Trist then, without any aothority except Scott's, resumed negotintions, procured the treaty that was wanted and took it back to Washington. Polk submitted it to the senate on February 23, Senatorial opposition caused modi. fications to which Mexico acceded, and ratifiention came on March 168 Our treaty of peace with Spain was concluded at Paris, Decomber 10, 1808, The American commissioners were William R. Day, late secretary of state, chairman ; Senators Cashman K. Davie, William I’. Frye and George Gray, and Whitelaw Reid. All hut one of the men appointed by MeKintsy were of his own party. Senator Gray was a Democrat. Spain relinquished sovereignty over Cuba. ceded Porto Rico, the Philip pines and Goam, and received $20,000, 000, intercepted wireless messages from the USE after a French steamer was sunk and its erew kilied by a subma- It ls gute vv the DEE was A order. Ia stut th Santander to
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers