BRL KEPT LOSING WEIGHT Lydi Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Built Her Up Beobey, Mont—"1 was working Yor two years—clerking in a store— and seemed to be steadily losing in weight so was forced to give up my work. A neighbor recoms- mended Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound to me and 1 have now taken six bottles and can't tell you how I have appreciated it. I am feeling better and stronger every day. I recommend it to all young girls and if any have the same trouble and will write to me I will ladly answer.”—Mgrs. Emm H. Re, Box 476, Scobey, Montana. LS Relief No more Over-Acidity Gas, nausea, sick headache, heart- bum, distress after eating or drink- ing quickly and surely relieved. Safe. Pleasant. Not a laxative. Normalizes Digestion and Sweetens the Breath { Tas 6 Bevan 'I Hot wate = Sure Relief ELLANS FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ AND 75¢& PACKAGES EVERYWHERE How S. O. S. ‘Helped to The' Higgest business corporation of all time was the Service of Supplies -—the NS, S.—behind the Amer expeditionary forces, in France, 18. The 8. ©. 8. miles of railroad In France; brought over 1,496 locomotives and 18,543 rail- road cars, telegraph and telephone wire, was hung on 2.500 miles of poles; up innumerable bulldings, refrigerator plant for 6500 tons of meat daily; built 16000 portable bar- racks, and two hospital citles, with 4000 beds. The bakeries that were built turned out 800,000 pounds of bread daily. to the personnel of this huge business, ft varied from experts In repairing fleld glasses, to that genius with the acetylene toreh mend- Liberty Magazine, Don't follow the crowd If you want to be a leader, It May Be Hrgent When your Children oH for It Castoria is a comfort when Baby is fretful. No sooner taken than the little one is at ease, If restless, a few drops soon bring contentment. No harm done, for Castoria Is a baby remedy, meant for babies. Perfectly safe to give the youngest Infant; you have the doctors’ word for that! It is a vegetable pro- duct and you could use it every day. But it's In an emergency that Castoria ans most, Some night when consti- tion must be relleved-—or colic pains ~or other suffering. Never be without it; some mothers keep an extra bottle, unopened, to make sure there will al ways be Castoria in the house, It Is effective for older children, too; read the book that comes with It. CASTORIA — pioneer styles—for Schoenbrunn Me- hia, Ohio. & um Spling snd Shaving shin 1927. morial Park. near New Philadelp * 9 By ELMO SCOTT WATSON FTER being “lost” nearly one hundred fifty years, the town of Schoenbrunn is to rise from its ashes ard to live again. The toration its original gite is already under and only the other day state and the eitizens of Uhrichs- Dover and New Philadelphia, gathered near the latter town the replica of the original schoolhouse, which had there July 29, 1773, the first school building in that state. That the dedication of this particu- und the whole plan for of Scho pnbrunn local Interest was nfttest- the fact that of from other states attended emonies and that the plans for of this histori followed with for and historic res- on to dedicate Schoenbrunn has to by hundreds vigitors cor issance are for ificance by of the I brunn, was hor de Ts For Schoen establl Indian § town t art of y which mission, the whites In the Old Northwest territ was later to attract so many settlers lands: in it stood the first church and the first public school building In that part of the territory and there, too, was organized the west of the Alleghanies, It is these facts which give it Importance in our the new Schoen the spirit of the ploneer missionaries did their share in winning pioneers who earried Into the wilder. the ax. of the Moravian Indian Schoenbrunn and its sls- towns of Lichtenau and Onadenhutten is a story of Christian a tale of romance, pathos All of it centers around The story ewelder and David Zels- berger—and most of all, Zeisherger, when he was but sixteen until 1808, when he died, pas- of bringing of the life—that to the Indians nis Christianity Middle West, Early In 1771 Zelsberger crossed over into Ohlo and on March 14 of that yea: arrived at Gekelemukpe- chunk, the principal town of the Dela- ware tribe (now Newcomerstown, Ohlo) where he preached the first Protestant sermon ever delivered In Ohlo. He came back again in March, 1772, and, the chief of the Delawares having suggested that he establish a mission among them, Zelsberger be- gan to look around for a suitable site. While doing this he discovered a gparkling spring which he gave the name of Schoenbrunn (Beautiful Spring) and resolved to establish his mission there. So he went back to Pennsylvania to return two months later with 28 Christian Indians and work was begun at once on the build- ing of homes, a church and a schogl, On August 23, 1772, Rev. John Heckewelder and Rev. John Ettwelin with more than 200 Christian Indians arrived and the next day the mission- aries and their Indian helpers laid out the town of Schoenbrunn and formulated the first civil code ever adopted In the state of Ohio for the governt.ent of their town. By the middle of September the church was finished and services were held in it, For awhile the mission was pros perous and peace and conténtment reigned in the town. The Indians Site of Schoenbrunn Spring. This spring supplied the water for the town of Schoen brunn, founded May 3, 1772. Cemetery in the distance. lh. were not only Instructed In the Chris tian religion but they were shown how to cultivat: the land and to ralse live stock. Visiting Indians were am-~zed to see these Indians content to re- main in one place and to work. But trouble soon came to the peace ful town of Schoenbrunn, stirred up probably by the surrounding tribes who resented the influence of the whites in changing the lives and hab- its of their red brethren. A certkin clique in the town plotted to over- throw the missiongries and, although Zelsherger saw the rebellion brewing and attempted to stem it in time, his efforts were fruitiess. Finally he called a meeting of those who re- maine loyal and there on April 19, 1777, he held the last services, after which he ordered the church to be torn down that It might not be dese- crated by the apostates who had plot- ted against him. Soon afterwards the missionaries and their faithful Indl ans deserted the town and the houses were burned down and the fields laid waste by the “pagan” Indians. From that time on Gnadenhutten was the center of the Moravian dctivity. During the Revolution the Moravian Indians tried hard to maintain a striet neutrality but this attitude won them friends on neither side. The British charged them with aiding the Amer leans and it Is true that they did ald them by ransoming captives from hos- tile Indians and by warning the offi. cers at Pittsburgh of Impending In- dian attacks. But as time went on the Americans also began to suspect the Moravian Indians of being pro- British. The hostile Indians used the Moravian towns as convenient “half. way houses” when starting on or re- turning from a foray against the Ken- tucky or Pennsylvania settlements and therg¢ they got shelter and re- freshment which the Moravian Indl- ans dared not refuse them. Finally a party of Pennsylvanians, led by the notorious Col, David Wil {lamson, set out with the avowed in- tention of wiping out the Moravian towns, They arrived at Gnadenhut- ten on March 7, 1782, and gathered the unsuspecting Indians In (we houses, the men In one and the wom- en and children in the other, Then they told the Indians that they were to be put to death, The next morn. ing the butchery began. The whites entered the eabins and cold-bloodedly put to death the 7 defenseless men, women and children—an massacre and In many respects as re volting a crime as ever the most gav- age Indians perpetrated against whites, From that time on the surviving Moravian Indians were wanderers in Canada ard Ohio, berger continued his the work among them of ei at his in the Indian cemetery ghty-seven he was buried, own request among the people long and so well. When the inrush of geitiers flooded Ohio after the last Indian wars in the Old Northwest, the early settlers of Tuscarawas coun- of the towr of Schoenbrunn, land was farmed over and the site of the village was indistinguishable from the surrounding fields, “lost” city until the efforts of Rev, at Dover, Ohio, who made many trips to Bethlehem, Pa, where over the archives of chureh, resulted in finding which led to the town's in 1823. Excavations “rediscovery” made on church, the Indians, Theis a movement tion of the town was siarted. for the restora. The appropriated the town stood. The next general assembly added $7,500 for three ad- joining tracts and the last general as gembly provided a $25,000 appropria- tion for the actual work of restora. by a committee appointed bys the Ohlo State Archeological and Histor. fecal society. One of the fog cabling, that of John Joseph Schibosh, Zelsberger's assist. ant who married an Indian woman and whose eldest son was the first person killed in the Gnadenhutten massacre, was rebuilt last year. The rebuilt schoolhouse was dedicated July 29 of this year and the dedien. tion of the church has been announced for October 21 of this year. The “Ohio Road” Do you remember the old finger. post at the corner of Main street and the Ohlo road? It was a simple board cut to a long, finger point, and mounted on a tall post; once upon a time it had been painted white, with black lettering. Probably that was as long ago as the had some meaning, for since the mid: dle of the Inst century the name, "tha Ohio Road,” was merely a memory. That r¢ ‘ad was laid out In 1745, and local travel up the river was as much a part of the life of the road as the western traffic, It was the road over which both David Zelsherger and John Heckewelder left Bethlehem and (rav- eled toward the setting sun, with an ax In thelr equipment for clearing a path through the woods and chopping wood for camp fires, The missionaries there came from Bethlehem, and here in Bet lehem are thelr reports, their diaries and thelr history. There Is a diary of a Journey from Cuyahoga to Bethlehem by John Heckewelder In 1786, Such titles re- lating to Ohio can be found by the dozen, The veteran Heckewelder gave an Interesting account and a map of the Connecticut claim. One of the most valuable recent finds was a plan by Heckewelder of the first settlement out there, Zelsberger's village, with the location of each house ard the name of its occupant.—Ellzabeth My. ers in the Bethlehem (Pa) Dally C—O —————— en A tA NARI ounces full-size biscuits here «Try in Planting Trees During the last fifteen years Thom has plant coun- association, Saratoga was formerly a York. What by BOW being the country. Unit- “four four twelve are ruthless lumber cutters, Is on its way toward greatest private forest in the “For evéry tree planted In the States.” Luther, cut for every trees cut down In Europe, planted. We are faced bj course, ul ney instructive, . . . It ad the ine the United forestry 1 con- EaYH down different ertheless the is my ambition to spre forestry in and by pract mean selective cutting and figures are doctr States, ieal simply er In of conser: With a Thomas Luth state, th noble theory ‘ would come dangerously neat ting a pract Oak Always Prized “ » an oak tion thia » this Perfectly Sweet “To you think Liz minded that ful lawsuit she was m “Why, my dear, I th enjoyed it—] know she had a grand jury!” ixed up In? ink she rather told me they fometimes you see a young man who can eat and eat and eat. If he doesn’t quit that overindulgence, he will dle before he's fifty. Old King Cole was a merry old soul, And a merry old soul was he; He called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers three. And when they'd fiddled to his heart's content The famous King Cole said: “Now pass me a couple of SALICON tabs And I'll hie me off to bed.” Because, you see, the King had heard (and heard rightly) that two SALICON tablets, taken just before going to bed, will usually insure a natural and restful night's sleep. SALICON is not a harmful dope. There are no after-effects. SALICON does mot upset the stomach or affect the heart. DR.LD.KELLOGG'S ASTHMA REMEDY for the prompt relie? of Asthma snd Hoy Fever, Ask your druge gist for it. 25 centa and ono dole lar. Write for FREE SAMPLE. Haztinop! &Lyman Oa. 1ac. Butta, NY. t not move you the moonlight it! But, mispronounce that word YOu mean, moonlight sying on the lake?” say, Didn't shimme “the A house where bad temper prevails is better ruled by sllence. It Kills Them! Non - poisonous, Won't spot or stain. The Bee on every package -i8 your guarantee, Send for free insect book- let. If dealer cannot supply —write McCormick & Co., Baltimore, Md. Learn From Mistakes Learn from your mistakes, but do not cry over them. He who never makes a mistake never makes any- thing. The trouble with the man who never makes a mistake is that he does not know a mistake when he makes one. Wise men make mistakes; fools continue to make them.—Milwaukee Journal. Let Conscience Guide Be fearful only of thyself, and stand in awe of none more than of thine own congclence.—Thomas Fuller, Huge Locks in Holland The biggest locks in Europe sad probably in the world with the excep tion of those in the Panama canal, are now nearing completion at Anderton, a village less than two miles from Hanover, Germany. About 827.000 cuble yards of concrete were used in the construction. One. Higher She—Don't you feel as happy a8 a king when you're flying? He-—Happler. I'm an ace.—Kansas City Star. — sete,