-r.'Aajmm ft. THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO. PA. NURSE TAKES CTOR S ADVICE II ii Restored to Health by Jia E. Pinkham's Veg. (table Compound. ..mi. Ohio. "Because of total L.M of how to care for myself urging Into womanhood, and from 'cold when going to ichool, I auf I from displacement, and each U J 0&U BtiVCJO puma tsuu uniuca fcilway meant a lay-off from work jjj to IOUT uujfi iiuui tun uuio ijjeanoia. nt to Kansas to live with my sis- J while there a doctor told me of Hicham remedies but I did not use then as my iaim in patent meui m limited. After my sister died , home to Ohio to live and that L,n my home for the last 18 years. EeChange of Life came when I wast old and about tnis time 1 saw hjiicsl condition plainly aescrinea Id vour advertisements. Then I L nsine Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg. C Compound and I cannot tell you ttone the relief it gave me in the three monuis. tb put mo rigin Li need not lay off every month Airing the last 18 years 1 have not I nut two dollars to a doctor, ana nave blest with excellent health fora wo inof my age and I can thank Lydia khim'sVepe table Compound for it kinra the Change of Life is over 1 been a maternity nurse ana oeing i v f-sunnorune i cannot ovei U.tfl the value of pood health. 1 now earned a corniortame uttie just by sewing and nursing. J recommended the Compound to with good results, as it is excel (a take before and after child "-Miss EVELYN AOELIA STEW Eophemia, Ohio. m want special advice write to i E. I'lnkham Medicine Co. (coofl- jtlill Lnn, Ma.ss. Your letter will tuned read and answered by a hu and held la strict conildcnee The Old Home Prescription itii pleasant to take and sure to help, is tale's Honey 01 Horehound and Tar lip erarht and relieve cold. Contain io opium nor anyming- injurious. AIIDrurelata. aWni 1ST hi'i Textual PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM 4 toilet preparation of merit. 11.11 toera1i-ate dandrutf. For Rertorin Color and ImuIj to Cray or Faded Hair. 60c and ll.ouat iTmnfiata. 'ae average woman either dresses ;!ease her husband or to worry Important to Mothers umioe carefully every bottle ol pOHIA.auafeand sure remedy foi faU and children, and see that It 'in tha f ST7 7 . tains or LtySttXTTFrAf fj For Over 30 Years. Iren Cry for Fletcher's Castoria f-e female of the species may got tt. but the male continues to pay freight. r Pirn "i Plcamnt Toilets fimt put up I'fiiltu. ilicy regulate and invigorate liver ainl Koivnlu K,,. .....,. Fnule. Adv. W Judge people by their clothes, foil happen to be the washer an. LUDOyCLAS J5.M 'M Jffipl SarjatUtatM 44??N-SVE MONEY BY a.:umi w. i. Tinnni ii nrjnva t' I T.v!' h Do,"'' "a uarantl tha ii iv,. "'la barura th ) ihlfbn. tto" ihS? 15 r!",rr aalnat high prlcoa T i ,oU"r maaaa. w . L. Dou.lai F iI7! """'V wl' fu lJ fur tham. 1? r-""! "h BiT7''l"11 L- WooKlai !' at IniM r,"i! ""! IfalliertUKHl. tiiu would llien r l (i i, - IH N-tirr, hnld llirtr t " W. I i. "," ""n o"1"' "" tor tha pnea. r'H.o.M "u aliiwi lr. noi for lata In Tour f l f.u. K V '"XifT. S'"o nl rrery ' maiiwaivUM F you feel that Vfn 1 ' . uaru smoKing '0 manv o.rfnt-c 7 vibm oj rV ratima ciga ettes. Th f 0re wholesome. The Christian and Amusements B, REV. WIUJAM EVAN3. D. 1). Diraclor ol Bibla CoatK. MoorJr Bibla laMituta Chicago TKXT And whutnoever ye do In word or dood, do In tha name of the Ixird Jeans. KfvlnrT thankn to Uod und the l'uther by hlnu-Col. 8:17. 1. The true Christian will realize the true relation that should exist be tween woik and pleasure. If life Is l ot to bo ono round of work, it most cer tainly is not to be all one round of pleasure. Work, not amiiBcment, is the chief end of man. Let us not miss this point work, not amuse ment, Is the business of life. Qod hug luld upon every man the necessity of work, and for this reason has distrib uted "to every man his work." Is It not just In this connection that wo may be Justified in finding fault with .the professional sport, the man who gives up his whole life to pleasure? When the main thing in college and university life Is athletics are we not Justified in protesting that life's main purpose is being lost sight of? Play and amusement Is but a side issue In life; when It becomes the wholo thing, then it Is harmful and sinful, no matter whether the amusement in question be In the forbidden category or not; then even Innocent amusement becomes morally bad. Amusement Is to work what whetting the scythe Is to harvesting; he who never stops to create an edge tolls hard and cuts but little, while ho who whets the scytbo all day cuts none. If the mother en Joys amusements more than she does her children, the wife, more than her domestic duties, the husband more than his home, the man more than his labor, and the student more than his books, then amusements are harmful and wrong. 2. The true Christian will see to U that his amusements are really recre ative, and not dlsslpative. A man may lie so long In a bath that he comes out of It ull exhausted, or he can take a plunge or shower and come out all the better prepared for the duties of life. So Is It w Ith amuse ments; It may bo Just (ho opposite. The amusements of the Christian should build up lost tissue, rest the tired body and rejuvenate tho Jaded mind, they must build up tho wholo man physically, mentally, morally and spiritually. 1. Tho Christian's pleasures will recreate physically. The body of the Christian is the temple of tho holy ghost. It Is Incumbent upon him therefore that he keep his body In as good, clean, pure, und healthy a con dltlon as possible. The body needs relaxation; It needs rest from the strain and tension of life; It needs new blood, new nerve tissues; It needs by means of recreation, to bo better fitted for tho real tasks that lie with in its sphere of labor. The test the Christian must npply to his pleasures Is this: do they recreate and restore the waste tissues of tho body? Excess In athletics Is not rec reation. Young men have died from over-Btraln In running; girls have been ruined for life by excessive rope Jumping. Many pleasures dissipate tho powers of the body Instead of re creating them. Apply such a test to certain forms of popular amusements prevalent todny: tho theater, the dance, the cord party. Do they recre ate, or do they dissipate? Do thej violate the laws of physical health by their late hours, their Impure atmos phere, their mode of dress and con duct, or are they perfectly consistent with the observance of the laws of good health and hygiene? If these nmusements vlolato the laws of health, then, until such times ns they can be brought within tho realm of recreative pleasures, tho Christian must place them on the forbidden list. 2. The pleasures of the Christian should recreate mentally. The physi cal must not be developed at -the ex pense of the mental. Clnntism must by no means supplant Intellectually. Mind Is greater than body, as Glad stone and Bismarck are greater than John L. Sullivan or James J. Jeffries. The Christian must ask himself, there fore, "What effect do my pleasures and amusements have upon my mind, my thought, my thinking? Do thoy build up, ennoble, purify, sanctify; or do they debase, befoul, besmirch, de bauch? Is my thinking higher, nobler, more God-like because of tho pleas ures In which I engago?" All things are not to bo Judged by the eye; 'the mind discerns also. Shakespeare speaks of tho man "who hath a body lllled with a vacunt mind, gets him to rest crammed with dis tressful bread." The Christian Is to judge his amusements by this stand ard. Apply this principle to litera ture. What books H we read? If the Christian's master should Inquire: "What readest thou?" what would bo our reply? lleware lost our minds bo come diseased by the reading of light and trashy literature. Little or Great? When ordinary men allow them selves to be worked up by common everyday difflcultieo Into fever-fits of passion, we can glvo them nothing but a compassionate smile. But wo look with a kind of awe on a spirit in which tin eeed of a great destiny has been sown, which must abide tho un folding of the germ, and neither dare nor can do anything to precipitate either the good or the ill, either the happiness or tho misery which is to arUe out of it. Goethe. ' ITON&TIONAL SiwrsaiooL Lesson (By B. O. BKLLEHS, Director Sunday School Course, Moody 111 bio Institute. Chlcniro.) LESSON FOR OCTOBER 25 JESU3 AND JUDAS. LESSON TEXT-Matt. M: 14-25. tf-W; 27: Mo. GOLDEN TEXT Woe unto that man ! through whom tha Hon of Mun la be- iruyed. Watt, 26:42 R. V. No literature has a more terrible story than that of Judas. Matthew gives us perhaps the fullest account of his last acts and the part be had In those llnal hours of tho Buffering and death of Jesus. Mary's act of anointing, 'by Jesus commended, and by Judas condemned, caused the latter to fare forth for his flnal act of faithless Infamy. Con trasted with the odor of her good deed, we here have the stench of an evil deed. I. The Bargain, vv. 14-25. (1) The Price, vv. 14-16. Disappointed in his hopes that lesus would establish an earthly k!tiR!om wherein he should hold a high position, stung by the re buke of vv. 10-13 (cf. John 12:4-8) and moved by cupidity, Judas hurries to the enemies of Jesus (see John 13: 27). He saw no further opportunity to profit through "holding the bug." John 13:29, and so got what he could from the rulers. He estimated his worth at 30 pieces of silver about sev enteen or nineteen dollurs, or the value of a slave; see Ex. 21:22 and Phil. 2:7, also the prophecy of Zechar luh 11:12-13. Hate, envy, disappointed ambition, and cupidity drove Judas with rclentlessness In his final act of Infamy. Verily, "Whatsoever a man sowetb, that shall he also reap." Gal. 6:7. (2) The Penalty, vv. 17-25. As we rad tho various accounts of that tragic last night we note that being warned and singled from among the other dltclples In no wise moved Judas to repei.tence. The conspiracy, see Matt. 20:1-5, 14-16, had been consum mated before that last meeting In the upper room. Must Be Born Again. Even grace cannot save us In our sins. All of his gifts, bis nearness to the Son of God, his knowledge, first handed, of Hiobo marvelous teachings of Jesus, did not grip his heart. Heud knowledge alone never saved anyone. It Is not enough even to be numbered among the disciples. There must be a new creation, we must be born again, John 3:7. In verse 24 wo read the final warning and John tells us (13:27) that following these words ho Is com manded to "go out quickly." II. The Betrayal, vv. 47-50. There are four stages in this episode: (1) In the houso of Simon at the anointing of Jesus by Mary; (2) The one Just con sidered and which took pluce In tho "upper room" In connection with the Tassover feast; (3) The third is the subject of 'Ms paragraph and took place In the Garden following the events of last week's leBson. This picture has been painted so often as to be familiar to us all. The Son of Man, tho advancing apostate disciple, the mob; what an appalling scene. Judas had probably led first to the house whence he had left Jesus. Find ing Jesus and the disciples had de parted (v. 30) he knew where, in ail probability, he would find the Master. It was a familiar resort for Jesus and his disciples, John 18:2, 3. Judas had often sat under these same olive trees and listened to him who "taught as never man taught." It was also a place sacred to prayer. Hftw thing are changed. Judas had allowed Satan to enter his heart (John 13:27, see also James 4:7) and with eager feet hu crosses the brook Kedron, past the disciples and Into the presence of Jesus to betray him with a kiss. The Final Stage. III. "He Went and Hanged Him self" 27:3-10. The fourth and final stage Is reached when, seeing that Jesus Is condemned and about to be executed, Judas, filled with remorse, carried back the 30 pieces of silver to the chief priests and the elders. What an exhibition of hypocrisy they evi denced, not to take the price of blood, forsooth! Judas did not really repent. The word here used for "repent" is. rather that he suffered remorse, and that does not necessarily Involve re pentance as we all know. Had he truly repented he would not hnve banged himself and he would have been saved even as the repentant thief was saved. There Is no necessary contradiction between jthis and the account given In Acts 1:8. "If he hanged himself in tho 'field of blood' and tho rope broke tho account given In Acts would naturally follow." The Teaching. As we recall these flnnl things in the life of Judas we must remember that they are not tho beginnings of his defection. Tho de velopment of tho lives of Judas and Teter are profoundly different Doth looked for a temporal kingdom and both were out of sympathy with tho teachings of Jesus as to the necessity of his death. Ono, for personal gain, betrayed, and the other, for self-protection, denied his Lord. Whon Judas saw JesiiB condemned, he too saw the end of his dreams the same as Peter. In that hour be committed suicide, an act of cowardice of the worst kind. 4m0 IL'onducttd by the Nutlomil Woman's Chribtlun Temperance Union.) BOOZE AND BUSINESS. "During the last sli months i have attended .47 banquets," says Elbert Hubbard In a recent number of The Philistine. "Sixteen of those were dry and 18 were semi-arid." At a banquet given by the Kltchburg board of trade, 600 men present, "Instead of booze there was a multiplicity of ap ples. . . . The wholo apple atmos phere was orderly, systematic, kind ly, good nntured and charged with the actinic ray of Individuality. With all of It, there was plenty of laughter. A man who can not laugh unless he is In the hands of John llarleycorn, Is not much of a man, after all." Speaking of another commercial club he says, "No one would think of putting anything Into his mouth to steal away his brains while attending tho Greater Dayton association meet lugs." And further: "The Ad Clubs have very sensibly set themselves against J. Hurloycorn. The ad clubs stand for business efficiency. And tho Idea Is pretty thoroughly circulated among ad men that booze njid business do not blend. One thing my banquet ing experience has worked out In my convolutions, and that is thU: It Is an absolute fallacy to suppose that a large number of men can not get to gether and Indulge In flow of soul without flow of bol. There Is noth ing between boozo and business that forms a bond. The two are much bet ter separated. Therefore, It seems to me a superfluity for any board of trade or chamber of commerce to ever allow Colonel Barleycorn a place at their boards. Huslness stands for hu man betterment All of which Is here presented with malice towards none, and charity for all." "HAS QUIT GOOD AND HARD." In the Saturday Evening Post, Will lam Allen White recently outlined In characteristically virile fashion the situation In Kansas. "The wet and dry issue now rarely comes Into a political contest In Kan sas. Formerly, In the days of the '80's, the suspicion that a man con lorted with the temperance advocates handicapped a candidate. Now even the faint suspicion that a man has a friend who drinks or a brother-in-law who is married to the third cousin of a man who kept a drug store in tho '90's Is a load that few men In politics can carry successfully. Any man who wants to win makes votes by abusing the liquor tralllc. It is as safe a po litical diversion as lighting Into the Turks, and Infinitely safer In Kansas than going after Wall street, for the great red dragon has somo friends, but no one defends the rum fiend. He Is paralyzed beyond recovery." "Kansas has quit good and hard." Is the way Mr. White summarizes It BEER MOST ANIMALIZING. The following utterance concerning the efforts of beer upon tho physical and moral nature has been made by the New York officers of the Home Life Insurance company: "Of all Intoxicating drinks, It Is the most anlmalialng. It dulls the In tellectu: and moral, and feeds the sensual and beastly nature. Deyond all other drinks, It qualifies for delib erate and unprovoked crime. In this respect It la much worse than dis tilled liquors. A whisky drinker will commit murder only under the di rect excitement of liquor, a beer drinker Is capable of doing It In cold blood. Long observation has assured us that a large proportion of mur ders deliberately planned and exe cuted without passion or malice, with no other motive than the acquisition of property or money, often of trifling value, are perpetrated by beer drinkers." Sexton In Hard Luck. Ono of tho healthiest localities In Australia, It Is estimated Is Lithgow, New South Wales, and this has been confirmed by the action of the local sexton, who has complained to the cemetery trustees that, owing to the few deaths, he 1b unable to make a living. He applied for Increased ami--ary, stating that since he took over the position ho has only averaged $5 per week, and could not live ou that The trustees refused the requaL PROTEST OF GERMAN-AMERICANS Tho Dakota Evangelical associa tion, embracing North and South Da kola and a part of Montana, repre sents about 40,000 German-Americans. At Its last annual conference this body In a resolution declaring for national temperance mado this statement: "We Gorman-Americana aro not all In favor of ltcenso and 'personal lib erty,' but resent the effort thai Is be Ing made by the liquor Interests to create the Impression that the German-Americans are the unanimous champions of the liquor traffic. We re gard such an Insinuation as a gross Insult to a large number of our best citizens and emphatically enter pro-est." CLOSE EVERY 8ALOON. If every saloon In the country cloned tomorrow the number of men thrown out of employment, even tem porarily, would be small compared with the number of men who lose their Jobs year after year because of drink. SCHOOLS BURDENED SAYSSCHAEFFER Torn owv imvnntnr win, tfix yoi; frj Mil Mm t Hytt .Onmly for K-d, Wk. WaUtrf Kym und GranalutH Hjrclldi; No rtuirUn- intsi r-ttt Kiuimn, n nm mr imm ni lit fcjre 9 BUUi JHUnn b JUtUiMJJJ IO.. ClUtWtfU. Condemns Making Them Tar gets for Every Question. PRACTICAL EDUCATION GREAT FALLACY. There never was a greater fallacy than that a community, state or nntion must depend on the liquor traffic for money to pay Its running expenses. The greatest financial stroke, the peo ple can make Is to close every saloon and thus relieve tho taxpayeis from much of the burden they are now carrying. LITTLE NOURISHMENT IN BEER. Apropos of beer as a food, bear what Llebig, the great Gorman chemist, says: "If a man drinks dally eight or ten quarts of the best Davarlan beer, In a year ho will have taken Into his system as much nourishment as Is contained In a five-pound loaf of bread." TIME TO THINK. Laws have boen made etrlvlng to keep men sober on election day, but what wo want Is to keep the citizen ship of America sober every day In the year, so that they will have had full time to know what liberty means, to know what the welfare of America means. Archbishop Ireland. Growth Of Vocational, Industrial and Agricultural Education Is Praised Without Stint ITarrlsburg. Dr. Nathan C. Schaef- fcr, State superintendent of public In struction, Inveighs against the custom of unloading upon the schools every problem that needs solution and bandies various matters, Including the teachings of English and tbo condition of the country schools, without gloves In his aunual report on educational matters In the Commonwealth. It re flows things to July 6 last and is one of the most vigorous State documents put out In many a day. Dr. Schacffer attracted some attention a few years ago by denouncing the subordination of the victories of peace to those of war in histories and he proceeds to comment upon certain latter day tend encies In very plain terms. In the course of bis remarks bo says: 'Tcrhaps the teachers should foci complimented by tho number of prob lems which are shied at the schools for solution. The Bible, the ballot, the flag, fires, forests, conservations of our national resources, the high price of living, peace and war, trades and in dustry, agriculture, horticulture, com merce and borne economics, manual training, moral training, religious edu cation, music, gymnastics, swimming, dancing, social center activities, health, sanitation, vaccination, medical inspection, sex hygiene, motherhood and a host of other problems are hand ed over to the teacher after the church, the newspaper, tho community, the po lice, the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. have failed to furnish a satisfactory solution." Equally trenchment la the manner in which the superintendent discusses holidays: Whenever a new Idea strikes a re former, the schools are ashed to lift a collection or to set apart a day for the promulgation of that Idea because it Is apparent that every home can be reached most easily through the schools. A round dozen holidays are men tioned In addition to "authors' days, fair days and other special days" as "permitted to Interfere with the regu lar routine of the school and to divert the teachers' energies." Later on be says: "It should not be assumed that the child's attention may be drawn while at school to all of the problems by which one mny be confronted in adult years." Praises Practical Education. The growth of vocational, Industrial and agricultural education Is praised without stint, the activities of tho bureaus In charge of such work being mentioned and praise given to many places, notably Altoona, Wllkes-Ilarre, Willlamsport, the anthracite region and Industrial towns near Pittsburgh as well as the two big cities. This line is declared to bo of greatest value. A plea Is made for study of Penn sylvania history, the superintendent romarking: "The Stnte has a para mount Interest In preparation for clti senshlp. No one is flt to cast a ballot if he Is Ignorant of the origin and his tory of our free Institutions." On Bible Reading. Comment Is mado upon the fact that the dreadful things that were predicted as likely to happen whan the bill to require reading of the Bible was pass ed have never come to pass. After tho law was Interpreted, says Dr. Schaeffor, "The teachers, although dif fering In religious creeds and customs, proved themselves to bo luw-nblding citizens. Fortunately, the spirit of re ligious toloranee with which William Penn started his province still abldoa In the hearts of our citizens. The silent influence of dally readings from the greatest book on morals which the ages have produced will surely be felt in the lives of all the pupils of our public schools." Teachers who smoke cigarettes aro declared not to bo good folks to In duce pupils to avoid the habit, medical inspection is bringing defects of chil dren to attention of parents and the statement that the vaccination law in not satisfactory In operation are fea tures of comments on health. The rural school, the little red school house, Is declared to offer the "most perplexing educational problem today." The progress In rural schools has not been satisfactory, tho Legisla ture has tried to holp, but It has not done enough and the school code relief did not go far enough, although It took money from the cities and gave It to tho remoter districts. In conclusion he says: "What the rural districts need now, above everything else Is moro money for better buildings and better teach ers and belter highways for tho trans portntlon of the pupils. How ran this money be obtnlned? No problem of more vital Importance for the future growth of the Commonwealth can come before the next session of the Legislature." Style Is one of tho principal Ingre dients In a dressmaker's bill. ERUPTION ON BABY'S FACE Duke, N. C "When my baby was two weeks old, behind his ears turned red and caused an irritation and from rubbing it became raw and stayed moistened all the tlmo. At times It would get so bad as to blood. He was fretful. At the time be was eight months old he was in a bad condition with sores behind bis ears and on his faco. "Nothing seemed to do any good at all till I got Cutlcura Soap and Oint ment. I at once commenced to wash his ears and face three or four times during tho day with the Cutlcura Soap, dried them with a soft cloth, then applied the Cutlcura Ointment. In ten days his ears and face were well and no scars were left." (Signed) Mrs. Lena Leo, Jan. 2, 1914. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sumpln of each free, with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address post card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Huston." Adv. Mighty few people uro to sharp to be fluttered. The Cause Laid Bare Tea and coff.a drink often notice backacba, haadarha, rhrumatlo pain, dla ilneaa, droway, tlrad frellnaa, diaturbt-d urination anil olhar ilana of kldm-r w-aM- Bf-aa. Tha eonaiant uaa of narcntio or al rnhollo drlnka la v. it apt to Irrltata I ha kidney, and w.ak kidney need prompt htlp lo avert all dan.r of drupay, fraval or fatal HrlihC dlaraaa. Avoid tba uaa f Bllmulanla. drink mure water, gal mora ri-at, freah air and raerclaa. To tuna and airennlncn lha llred kidney, ua Doan' Kidney run. I he moil aucoreefnl an. highly ravoiumrnded kidney remedy. A Maryland Case Mrs. K Harmon. New York Kill, Ilrunawlrk, M d . , aaya: "My kldneya rrre In amh bad ahap I wa ordered lo lha hi'eplliii. Thero wa odlmrnl In tha erretln and lha paaangt wer dlatrrealuf. I got o diaiy It lime aomeona had to help ma about, afy bark pained m terribly and I waa unable t rat anything eicepi the while nf an raff Dnrtnr failed and finally I uaed Doan' Kidney I'lll. They inaile m wall and I have bad no trouble ilnca." Cat Daaa'a al An Slat. IOa Baa DOAN'SV.IW FOSTEJt MUU1URN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. JT i Ptr nit J1P iDHOPSYJKS rTHEaTEO.njillyglTeonlk i ri'lH-I.MMin reuiovraiwelUiiK a almrtiireaili.ofu-ngm'ieiiUreri'lUI ' In ll)l..-.filT.TrUlln atmentaenlFi , Dr. THOMAS E. GRKEN. Surreeaar la Or. H. H. Crssn Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga. Nervous Emotional Dizzy ' I Depressed Mr: Ad Jit Carl tin ff ol CtJarSl., Cainjtl., wriltt Dr. R. V. Pitrct at follow ti "I tend SI eetita for your "Com mon Same Medical Ad viler' i or my daughter who haa recently married and I know the book will be of much value to her. lhava read and uied for 26 year the valuable treatmenta contained In tho 'Medical Advtter' and have taken many brittle of Dr. Fierce' t avorlta reecrititinn, and hava bean reatored tohealih aachtimaluaedIL Itiaagreat remedy for women aa a tretirih builder, fine for tha nerve and general health." VyOMEN who aro rcstles". with v constant chance of position, ' fidget iness," who are abnormally excitable or who experience fainting or dizzy epelli, or nervous headache and wnkufulnexs are usually sufferers from the weaknesses of their sex. DR. PIERCE'S 9 f Favorite Prescription Is the soothlnfr, cordial and womanly tonic that brings about an Invigorating culm to the nervous system. Overcomes the weakness and the drag, ginff pains which resemble the pains of rheu matism. Thousands of women in the past forty years can bear witness to its benefits. Tour dealer In medicine Belli It In hVrukf or n-r-coalad tablet form; or you can Bend NJ one-rent auunpa for a tnal hn of Ir. 1'ien-e Kavurita Frrarrlptlon tableta. Addree 1. R. V. Fierce, luvaJkla' liulal and burgtcal InaUtuu, Buffalo, N. V. iiiimmiiiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiimimiiiiimniia Dr. Pierct' Pltaiant PiUrti Rtgalal and lavltarala Stuuca, Liver aa4 Bawala, Saf ar-Caatrd Tiay Craanlaa, iiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Dr. FAIinilEY'S TEETHING SYRDP F.ipcl from lha (tofnarh and bowcla the Ihinga that make baby cry in the night. Let mother and baby alccp all night and get good reeL ( urea Colic in ten minutea) la a tplendid medicine (or Diarrhoea. Cholera Morbua and Sour Stomach. You can't gel anything belter fur peevuh, ailing, pale, akinny, under aiied balnea. s rente at durg itorea. Trial llollle fRI.K by mail of Dra. 1). Fahrnry 4 bun, llageralowiaj lid., Ii you mention ihi paper. LETS BABY SLEEP ALL NIGHT Mlrhtv few nii'ii'a t Humors trot hiieev at the knees from pocketing their prltlc. kk.vfr inn a nun. After Taking Kl IXIIi IIMIFK "My Utile iliiiivliicr, In v.' nr i.l.l. auffcrr.) nearly n year with chillH and fever, moxt of the time under the diH-tor'a cure. I van illHi-our-nir.-d mid n friend ndviwd me to try Mlmlr llelirk. I gave It to liernudelie haa never luul aehlll Mince. It completely cured her." air. t'vrim llclma. !'.' K M.. N. K.. VYnHliinutun. D O, I JIllr llxhekbo cenle, nil ilnu-uNt" or by Purcela Poet prepaid Iruui Kluczcweki A Co., aeuliit-lou, V. U. Source of Appreciaticn. V. It. Trltcs, the Ainericun novel ist who had to go to London to Ret published, where his buoks uchleved a greitt ruccchs, was liuichliiK in tier nuintown when his bout's little son asked: "Father, whrtt Is appreciation?" "Appreciation," said Mr. Trites, "Is my boy, a rnro malady, something like beri beri people get It fur awuy from home." He Felt It. The man In the thin summer coat shrugged IiIb shoulders and shivered, and finally said to the man across the aislo: "It approaches, don't It?" "Yes, sir, It do," was the reply. "It's in the air." "Yes, sir." "It makes one shiver." "It do, sir." "Did you understand me when I Biiid It approached?" "You nieunt tho autumn, I took It." "Olail to meet a man of Intelli gence." "Hut I am not a man of Intelli gence, sir. On the contrary, I haven't the sense of a bull calf. I knew what you meant because. I was ass piioukIi to pawn my overcoat In May, und won't bo able to raise three dollars to get It out before next .luly. Yen, sir, It approaches, and It's in the air. Yes, sir, und be hanged to It, Bir!" Beyond Dispute. "Which bullet do you consider lUs deadliest ?" "The one thnt bits." Money for Christmas. Selling guaranteed wearproof hosi ery to friends & neighbors. Illg Xmae business. Weur-I'roor Mills, 3209 Chestnut St., rhlludi'lphta, l'a. Adv. I-auKh and grow fat and you will find the laugh on you. JLSsi mm YAGER'S LINIMENT .. TheOroalcat llcme.lv For HP WIN 111114 IIUII& M-RAtf HWI.LVV.W OIMH4, SH I I.LlMU. t I I O F PITTM.tPd lv flepet. k. wrlteei IfliiJ VAa..r,e Uniroenta area! help In lha eare of mi horeea I 'n rocomiuend Itaeaiv4 valuable for Mnileee, Hwelllug. Hureueaa, ao for either nan nr U-aet.." 1. KtiK IIOTTI K, Site., at neater OHJtfll BROS. & CO, Inc. mm. Ml Y. M. C. A. Field Secretary Named. II. J. Schmidt was appointed field secretary of the State Committeo of the Pennsylvania Young Men's Chris tion Association. He succeeds E. J. Hockenburg, resigned. Mr. Schmidt was assistant at Philadelphia and later st Wllmeinlng and Willlamsport, this Etate. Ice Company Increases Stock. ' The IIIllBlde Ice Co.. of Stnte Col lege, has filed notice of an lncrcnse In I siock rrom js.ooo to 117,000 and ol Issue of $9,000 of bonds. FOUeiD OUT. A Trained Nurse Discovered Its Effect. No one Is In better position to know tho value of food and drink than a trained nurse. Speaking of coffeo, a nurso In Ta., writes: , "I used to drink strong cof fee myself, and suffered greatly from headaches and indigestion. "Whilo on a visit to my brothers I had a good chance to try Tostum, for they drank It altogether In place of coffeo. After using Postum two weeks I found I was much benefited and finnlly my headaches disappeared and also tho indigestion. "Naturally I have Blnee used Tostum among my patients, and havo noticed a marked benefit where coffee has been left iff . nd Postum used. "I 'observe M curious fact about PoRtum whr:n used by mothers. It greatly helpB tho flow of milk In cases where coffe- Is Inclined to dry It up, and wl.ero tea causer nervousness. "I find troublo J" getting servants to make Postum properly. Put when It is prepared according to directions on package and served hot with cream, it is certainly a delicious bev erage." Name given by Postum Co., Puttie Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvlllo," in pkgs. Postum comes In two forms: Regular Postum must be .well boiled. 15c and 20c packages. Instant Postum Is a soluble powder. A teasnoonful dissolves quickly lu a cup of hot water and, with cream and ( BUgar, made a delicious oeverago in stantly. 30c and COo tins. The cost per cup of both kinds Is about the same. "ThcrcB a Reason" for Postum. r sold by Grocers. EBB" The Wretchedness of Constipation , Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetal) act surely i gently on th liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, nivei. ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.' SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK, Genuine must bear Signature S7K , 'IvJaRTERSI I I JAMCDICAL oicm-all ' i RaMTLCV MOMl RtMCDV I 1 aj l"- ""SENT rptl BY MAIL k I THE JPRAWttYORUCCt I I V l?I BROADWAY NrW YWX 1 Li JlrlEDIECj EYE ACHES A: W. N. U.. BALTIMORE. NO. 43-1914.