12 DOES RHEUMATISM < JOTHERYOU? I Many Doctors Use Musterole ' m "So many sufferers have found relief In Musterole that you ought to buy a email jar and try it .Just spread it on with the fingers. Rub It in. First you feel a gentle glow, then a delicious, cooling comfort Musterole routs thp twinges, loosens up stiffened joints and muscles. iJustcrole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It penetrates to the seat of pain and drives :t away, but does not blister the tenderest skin. It takes the place of the mussy, old fashioned mustard plaster. Musterole is recommended for bron chitis, croup, asthma, pleurisy, lumbago, neuralgia, sprains, bruises, stiff neck, headache and colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). $2.50. EEOT! HOT WATBR PEHHIHNG W YOSI ©GNT FEEL MOTff Baya glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast washes out poisons. If you wake up with a bad taste, bad breath and tongue iB coated; if your head is dull or aching; If what you eat sours and forms gas and acid in stomach, or you are bilious, consti pated, nervous, sallow and can't get feeling just right, begin Inside bath ing. Drink before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in It. This will flush the poisons and toxins from Btomach, liver, kidneys and bowels and cleanse, sweeten and purify the entire alimentary tract. Do your in side bathing immediately upon aris ing in the morning to wash out of the system all the previous day's poison ous waste, gases and sour bile before putting more food into the stomach. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became loaded with body im purities, get from your pharmacist a quarter pound of limestone phosphate which is inexpensive and almost taste less, except for a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and women who are usually constipated, bilious, headachy or have any stomach dis order should begin this inside bathing before breakfast. They are assured they will become real cranks on the subject shortly. A FINE TREATMENT FOR CATARRH EASY TO MAKE AND COSTS HTTLBI Catarrh is such an insidious disease and has become so prevalent during the past few years that its treatment should be understood by all. Science has fully proved that Catarrh is a constitutional disease and there fore requires a constitutional treat ment. Sprays, inhalers, salves and nose douches seldom if ever give lasting benefit and often drive the disease further down the air passages and into the lungs. It' you have Catarrh or Catarrhal deafness or head-noises, go to your druggist and get one ounce of Parinint (Double Strength). Take this home and add to it % pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated sugar; stir un til dissolved, take one teaspoonful 4 times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head-noises, clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and mucus stop dropping into the throat. This treatment has a slight tonic ac tion which makes it especially effec tive in cases where the blood has be come thin and weak. It is easv to make, tastes pleasant and costs little. Every person who wishes to be free from this destructive disease should give this treatment a trial.—Advertise ment. TOO WEAiT TO FIGHT The "Come-back" man was really never down-and-out. His weakened condition because of overwork, lack of exercise, improper eating and living demands stimulation to satisfy the cry for a health-giving appetite and the refreshing sleep essential to strength. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules, the National Remedy of Holland, will do the work. They are wonderfulK Three of these capsules each day will put a man on his feet before he knows it; whether his trouble comes from uric acid poisoning, the kidneys, gravel or stone In the bladder, stomach derange ment or other ailments that befall the over-zealous American. Don't wait un til you are entirely down-and-out, but take them to-day. Your druggist will gladly refund your money if they do not help you. 25c, BOc and SI.OO per box. Accept no substitutes. Look for the name GOLD MEDAL on every box They ar the pure, original. Imported Haarlem Oil Capsules.—Advertisement. "Making Frantic' Efforts To Get Coal Supplies" When you read such head lines as this in the day's news there must be something wrong with the coal supply. SCARCITY OF LABOR SHORTAGE OF CARS are two of the factors that are threatening a serious con dition this winter. • If you delay you may not be able to get the coal need ed to keep your family com fortable this winter. H. M. KELLEY & CO. Office, 1 North Third Yards, Tenth anil Stnte Use Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING, TEMPERANCE IS TOPIC OF DAY Sunday Schools Will Consider Text From Romans; Think in Millions (By William T. Ellis.) This is one of the occasions when Christians are reminded to think in millions. For thirty million members of the Sunday school, not to mention other church folk, will observe No vember 12 as World's Temperance Sunday. Such a concentration of at tention upon a single theme is of pro found significance. It shapes im pulses and convictions that will have unmeasured consequences. There is no way of knowing what part these regularly-recurring studies of tem perance in the Sunday schools of the world have had in the remarkable progress of temperance sentiment: certainly it has been great. It is a jubilant host that is to-day facing the question afresh. The past year has been the most triumphant in the history of the temperance movement. Russia's results from the total abolition of alcohol are clearly known, and wholly glorious. Ru mania has followed suit. Germany is openly grumbling over the use of grain for beer that is needed for bread. Britain has increased her re strictions upon the sale and use of Canada. British Columbia and Ontar io, have gone "dry." At this writ ing Ave American States are prepay ing to vote upon the abolition of the saloon. Even the liquor men them selves know that the traffic is doom ed. That idea has come to be a set tled conviction in the public mind. When, a few years ago. Rev. Dr. Francis E. Clark, leader of Christian Endeavor, raised the cry for the Unit ed States and Canada, "A saloonless nation by 1920," the slogan was not taken seriously. The press either ig nored it or laughed at it. Now the cry Is being raised by reformers ev erywhere. Victory in the long, hard fight with rum is almost in sight. So to-day it behooves the Sunday schools, as they consider the annual temper ance lesson, to view the entire sub ject in the largo. Catching: Up With Paul If heaven ever laughs at earth, Paul must indulge in many a Chuckle,, -as lie sees the "progressive" modern world catching up to his pro gram. The "last word" in tho tem perance reform to-day is "economic efficiency"—: alcohol hurts a man's productiveness and impairs his so cial value. He Is being forced to give up the glass for the sake of the gen eral welfare. I have under my hand at the moment a sparkling booklet against booze issued by a big manu facturing concern. It is of a piece w-ith the new kind of temperance literature. Which, after all, is but getting into tune with this Sunday School lesson, written nineteen centuries ogo. Catch the "modern" note in these phrases, "Let no man put a stumbling block In his brother's way. ... If thy brother be grieved with thy meat thou walkest no longer in love. Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ died. . . . It is good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth or Is offended or Is made weak . . . We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves. . . . For even Christ pleased not Himself." There you have the Law, the higher Law. Society is repeating the lesson after the old apostle. With cruel blows the present war has beaten the same truth into humanity; "No man liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself." The old individualism of selfishness has become unendurable. As John Stuart Mill said sixty-five years ago, "My liberty ends when it begins to involve the possibility of ruin to my neighbor." Before the Judgment seat of Brotherhood, which is the bar of God, strong drink has been condemned to die. Let it be re membered. however, that this Law is no new discovery of the sociologist; it was written in the New Testament be fore even the word sociology was In vented. Barring the Bar Page advertisements jn the news papers, a bookful of modern songs, brilliant cartoons by the score, ridi cule and scorn and jest, are all new weapons wielded against the liquor business. Contrast the character of the lachrymose temperance litsrature of half a century ago with tlje virile militant productions that pour from the press to-day, and the changed status of the fight will be 'apparent. Out of a prison cell is said to have come this indictment of "the bar," which is a colloquial name for the saloon: "A Bar to heaven, a door to hell; Whoever named it, named it well. A bar to manliness and wealth; A door to want and broken health. A Bar to honor, pride and fame; A door to grief and sin and shame. A Bar to hope, a Bar to prayer, A door to darkness and despair. A Bar to honored, useful life; A door to brawling, senseless strife. A Bar to all that's true and brave, A door to every drunkard's grave. A Bar to joys that, home imparts, A door to tears and aching hearts; A Bar to heaven, a door to hell. Whoever named it, named it well." A clever flank attack upon the drink habit is this bit of current ad vice to the married man who "must have'' his "occasional" drink of whisky: "Start a saloon in your own house. Be the only customer (you'll have no license to pay). Go to your wife and give her two dollars to buy a gallon of whis ky and remember there are sixty-nine drinks in a gallon. Buy your drinks from no one but your wife, and by the time the first gallon is gone she will have eight dollars to put into the bank and two dollars to start business again. Should you live ten years and continue to buy booze from her, and then die with snakes in To Get Rid of Wrinkles and Bad Complexions It ia more Important now than dur ing the period of profuse perspiration, to keep the pores clean. All cosmetics clog the pores. In cool weather this Interferes greatly with elimination of waste material, injuring Instead of aid ing the complexion. Ordinary mercol ized wax serves all the purposes of creams, powders and rouges, giving far better results. It actually peels off an offensive skin, at the same time un clogfelng the pores. Minute particles of scarr skin come oft day by day, causing not the least discomfort Gradually the healthy, younger skin beneath tteeps out, and in less than a fortnight you have a lovelier complexion than you ever dreamed of acquiring. Mercollzed wax, obtainable at' any drag store, is spread on nightly like cold cream and washed off mornings One ounce usu ally suffices For removing wrinkles, without stop ! ping the pores with pasty stuff, here's a neve%-falllng formula: One ounce powdered saxollts, dissolved In one-half pint witch hazel Bathe the face in this dally for awhile; every line will vanish completely Even the first application gives surprising results—Advertise ment IMMBMBMM—77/E NEW STORE OF WM. The Men You Admire Are the Men Who Wear * I Wm. Strouse Clothes jrl They're the fellows that seem to have just JgK 3 a more "push" than the others—and 4 */i£if judgment is reflected in.their dress— * Everyone who sees the handsome overcoats and suits at y? Vl /I? f | The New Store acknowledge that it's the finest selection JwCsWsll they've ever seen—Not a style or shade is missing—Single |, I ft 8f i< and double-breasted, pinch and full backs of unfinished wor- fIM P'Ws I.r sted or cheviot—ln many beautiful patterns of grays, browns, ft§• & heather or blue. oPS W0- And the Biltmore—Fashion's latest decree—lt's DOUBLE- JR t KA ftt? %> 1 BREASTED, BELTED BACK with belt extending through F A~