T THE TULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. A good cigarette must be made of pure tobacco and the most choice leaf. Such is Fatima the most popular, mild Turkish blend cigarette, now smoked almost universally in this country ! "Distinctively Individual" It ynu cannot stcur Fallma Cigarettes from our dealfr. we villi bit pleased la send you Vtrr pai taxes postpaid on receipt nf SOc. Address Fauna Dept., hi Fifia Ave, New York.N.Y. on Ike 9-If T-'i .-. U-f fkv . J ; ta i THE SHAVE THAT SAVES 75 cts. to Jur mi' rvrr umnth yuu us The K'ti n pahar Kr. 'Hi) D'it urd bet Jiollur liaior inmln. i-nd 'Jt Cfiiln ttilar Jor 'J'rlul Im.'r. bM-ctul A m.i-t km t liiimlnoun Imthr um frw.ratid ivi'XLra biti'lrn iurl.iJ. Jx-aii-r wnmrd. It. lm ! lluri Co., Ai I re A g Ul iilkUiuuu, a. , AValann F. ( olrman, I alt'Dt l.im-T.V iuliiiituu( I).C AtU'l' ,1 unit (MNtkn Ir-". i nauaaialile. 11 Ighnit rclrrvniM. iianiaorlcnL I ( Varieties of Saucage. A German sauuugo exhibition was held in Berne a few years ago, and 1,785 varieties were exhibited. The center of the production Is in West phalia, where 400 varieties are pro duced. It was there that a young highly-trained chemist shut hlniBelf In his laboratory and nought fame and fortune, and ho achieved both He took unto himself pork, veal, olives, pepper, fennel, old wine, cheese, ap ples, cinnamon and herrings' roes, compounded them with the skill of an artist and the scientific accuracy of ft chemist, and evolved a wonder fnl and original sausage, the best -wurst" of Us kind. Getting Up. When you find an unwillingness to rise in the morning, make this Bhort speech to yourself: "1 am getting up now to do the business of a man; and in I out of humor for going about that which I was made for? . . Was I then designed for nothing but to doze and batten beneath the coun terpane," Marcus Aurclius. forn own nitr.i:isT wn.i. tflt. too rf alunne Km Ki'iui-dy fur K.-d. Wni. WnUTj bn4 ,:rnnilliLt...l Kvi'lldH'. Nu MlllirllnU tint Kik rnuilc.rt. Write lor B.hiH of III" hi uuvil alurlne tio llcuitilr Co., ciiicugu. Any poker player will tell you that It la better to be (lushed with victory than to be four-flushed out of It Most men who say they do the best they can don't. CRIPPLED WITH RHEUMATISM CURED DY I SOME TESTIMONY aw witA inm ho rrhinlert with RhiMl- msliHiotb itiiHcuul.lliUi-.llywulK. After trytnir evirvthiiiir elm wilumit Rfmiiir nnyivlii'f Iwniiwniuuiloil to try Vinri'iV l.inln t '1 11,, lil-ut. iMittlltRCtlMl llUO K ctutnu u:iil affjnloil l;nin.Jito ro'.iof and rt,r U'-i.-K bottlHH bus w:'" en'imy wll, an.t doiint Uor wurlt with perfect Gnntntnl roiufort. . " N ot Ion.' ei rcepno nan nnm n IrjthmihDul.li'i-.oiicoiiiiiro 1 u'l Ynifpr-. Lliiimiinf with tUniwinn remitt. W r iwrrr with juto liotilw la tli houae. I rucuuuui'uii it uiiat highly." TH01U3 1IOOHE, Proffit, V- YAGERS' LINIMENT IS THE GREAT PAIN ALLEVIATOR Only comm in I. arm Bc. Hot t lee t ull (loal.ii, i'reprirwl by C1LCERT BROS. & CO., INC B&kVIMQRE, MO. GRANDFATHER USED IT 50 YEARS AGO CHECKS A COUCH AT ONCE PURE-OUICKSURE TRIAL BOTTLE fRCE, Write (or It end mmUoa tble fmorr. Addreei JU C. AUiV CU & CO. BALT1MOR H. Ma Tuffs Pills atlftiulate the torrid liver, etrenithen the 2i.tiu nrifnn,. r mi lata the bowel. A rem- mar lor alck headache. LnrquaJed ee en ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE. Elegantly auger coated. Small doee. Price, 25c trn-LILLEY PILE REMEDY Cflr JUL (hwmntrrd to n-liiiTOor niunor re- JUW , rmiOOII, IU-ninK. I!iilin. ill in- Cwliutf JPtlcs. i. k. luita, una uu aw., aWUawn, aa. W. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 48-1914. YAGER'S COLD Bt)IS SHORT f -SkWf TfianlgMcig Day CENTL'ItY ago, the celebration of Thanks giving day was con fined to New England. Even had it been the national holiday It Is today, the struggling young republic of the United Shates In the year of grace 1814 would have feasted on turkey and trlmralngB without en thusiastic thanks, for the nation was In the gloomy midst of the second war with Great Britain and It had migniy little to be thankful for. The capital had been caDtured by the invaders and the public buildings at Washing ton had been put to the torch, vv nne the llttlo American navy hod won wonderful vlctSrles against great odds and written a chapter in history that makes our blood ,thrlll with admira tion, yet Great Britain, with its bltf fleets, was still mistress of the seas and American commerce ceased to exist. On land the American army. rent with dinsentlons and generalod by political Incompetents, made a record of humiliating defeats, the sting of which was to be removed in 1S15 by the signal victory of Jackson and his backwoodsmen over the tried veterans of Pakenham at New Orleans. Pol itical animosities flamed at a white heat unknown today. Sectional feel ing was high and bitter. The national treasury was practically empty. Grass crew in the streets of the cities and shipping rotted at the wharves. Busi ness and Industry were paralyzed and the nation tottered on the verge of bankruptcy. The collapse of the young republic with Its Ave or six million people scattered over an Im mense territory, was freely predicted, now that England's hands were loosed by the fall of Napoleon. Only In New England In 1811 was ThankBglvlng day observed, and even In the ancient birthplace of the holi day It Is safe to say that the celebra-, tlon was far from being the Joyous feast of the past. For New England as a whole had a big, bitter grouch and didn't care who knew It. The New England states were fiercely hos tile to the war and had been hardest hit by Its effects. Its commerce, the chief Eonrco of Its wealth, had been completely destroyed by Jefferson's embargo law and the blockade or us ports by the British fleet. Its militia were not permitted to serve Deyona the borders of Now England, and the leaders and a great part of the popu lace openly nnd warmly advocated secession from the Union either as an Independent republic or as an Eng lish province or colony. Under such circumstances, Thanksgiving In New Encland In 1814 took a somber and more religious cast while the Thanks giving sermons, once a significant fea ture of the day, were shaJowed by gloom and saturated with pessimism. It wns under conditions ns Inaus picious ns these that the homegather- ing feast of old New England was usn- ered In. How profound the change wrought by a century In the life of the Hennhlic! Thnnksglvlng day, this year, will be observed by almost if not quite a hundred minion people, the citizens of a great and prosper ous nation, the richest In tho world and the most powerful ever conceived In the loins of time, A century ago, the day was observed by not quite a million nnd half New Engenders alone amid gloom, uncertainty, appre- hension and poverty following the Bell Threatened Destruction An alarming occurrence took place when the congregation at St Will- Jam's clinch, Rochdale road, Man chester (Eng.) were assembling re cently for service. During the ringing of the bell, which is said to wolgn about fifteen hundredweight, a dull, heavy thud was heard In the vicinity of the belfry. An examination showed that the boll, the to.ie of which had been suddenly hushed, had DroKen No Such Thlna Untalented. In the Woman's Home Companion Anne Bryan McCall, wrltlns a Tower Room talk entltlod "The Talented Girl," said that "strictly speaking there are no untalented people." She continues In part as follows: "When we envy the gifts of others we do but forget our own. You may tell me what you please about your life be ing unglfted. No life Is ungirted. There 1b no personality which has not Its own peculiar and rich talents. 1 Jf our lives seem to us untalented, V V ravages of war. A ceutury ago, the Federal Union was an experiment In government that. In the winds of ninx, was foredoomed to failure. There was no nation; rather a loose confederation of hostile sections and Jealous states. It was out of the struggles and sufferings of this very war that the American nation was born. Today, 100,000.000 Americans, In Identity of political and social Idenls, language and Institutions, pre sent a picture of the moBt thoroughly nationalized country of which history hus record. , But in a hundred other ways did the Thanksgiving of 1814 differ from the one to be celebrated this year. Of course there were the funda mental essentials of turkey, pumpkin pie and cranberry sauce; there were the homegatberlng of relatives aud the reunion of the family around the old hearthstone. But beyond that all has changed with the passage of the fleeting years. Could a boy or a girl of today, by some ledgerdemaln of time, be transported back to one of those old fashioned Thanksgiving day of a century ago, he or she would think they were being robbed of their holiday rights. Even the wealthiest people of those old days could not have on their Thanksgiving table many of the things found today on the tables of the humblest citizen. In fact, there was a great poverty of vegetable variety on the Thanks giving table a century ago. No as paragus, no sweet potatoes, no string beans, no corn, no green peas, and so on down the attractive list that consti tutes the appetizing trimmings of the Thanksgiving tuble of today. The tin can era had not yet dawned, and Its possibilities of smashing seasonable monotony wore undreamed of even by epicures. And there was the same poverty In Thunksglvlng fruit The list practi cally started and ended with apples and of a kind that most farmers now feed only to their hogs or leave to rot on the ground. Grapefruit was a word not yet Invented; oranges would have been worth their weight In gold; and the banana was to await many years for Its Introduction to the American housewife. Nor would It have been possible for the voracious youngster of that day to gorge him self with luscious grapes and delicate raisins. Pineapple was another un known word. Of course there were nuts, but only of native varloties. Almonds, Brazil nuts, peenns and the English walnuts, without which no Thanksgiving table of today would be considered complete, were then un known luxuries. Tho farmer of that day was a slave of tho season and the produce of his toll was governed strictly by the cal endar. There were no hothouses to force fruit and vegetables out of sea son. The good people of those days would have considered It almost Bacrl lege, an attempt to Improve on the divine plan of things. A request for strawberries or cucumbers at Thanks giving would be equivalent to an ap plication for admission to an asylum for tho InBane. But the difference does not end with a comparison of the eatables of the feast a century ago and today. It is even more startling when we com pare the tusk of preparation now and then. The good housewife of 1914. If called upon to get up a Thanksgiving feast with the utensils and under the away from Its bearings, and was rest ing upon a wooden beam, which pre vented It crashing through the roof into the church. The church was quickly cleared, and the Are brigado was summoned, with a view of restor ing the bell to Its fastenings, and so remove the threatening danger. With the aid of the Are escape thoy reached the belfry, but were unable to render the services sought, nothwItbBtandlug unglfted, let us be sure It Is only be cause we have allowed our natural gifts to be uncultivated. 'We are nobly born,' says Stevenon, with his charac teristic pride and Insight; and then, with his characteristic thoughtfulness, he ndds, 'Fortunate those who know; blessed those who remember.'" Took the Hint ' "Philander," said the pretty girl to her baBhful beau. "1 wish you'd tie this ribbon at my throat. I can't see to do It without a glass." "Of course; kitchen conditions of 1814, would throw up her hands In despair, and If the task was put up to the average servant of today would Jump her Job in an Instant. The hardworking housewife of a century ago, had neithor range nor cook stove. They had not yet been invented. Her tur kev and her nles were baked In the great fireplace, and her fuel was wood, for coal was not yet UBed. If relatives were to be Invited to Thanksgiving homegatherlngs In those old days, the invitations would have to be dispatched weeks and perhaps months In advance of the event, for It required the best part of a week for a letter to travel from Boston to New York, as long a time, In fact, as It now takes to cross the conti nent. Were It addressed to Chicago, a mere trading poBt at that time, It would be sent the previous July. And the Invitation Itself would be written with a quill and blotted with sand, for in those dayn there were no steel pens, no typewriters, no blotters, no gummed envelopes, no postage stamp's. And the son or daughter In the city who wished to return to the old homestead for Thanksgiving In 1814 faced an ordeal before which most of us today would quail. For traveling a century ago was a hazard and a peril. The railroad was at that time undreamed of, and all inland travel was by river or road. If a man on his way to a Thanks giving feast at the old homestead In the country was thrown from bis horse In the road, breaking a leg or arm, his case was one to be pitied. For most of the doctors of those days were Ignorant and careless. If ampu tation was necessary, the victim was generally held dnwr by main strength while saw and kmfe cut their agon izing way through the tortured flesh and bone. For 1814 was before the days of anesthetics. Ether, chloro form, cocaine and morphine were as yet unknown, and as for antiseptics, the protection against germ Infection of the wound, that was to wait for more than fifty years. There was no quinine, no strychnine, no tinc ture of Iron, no carbolic acid In fact, there were scarcely any of the com mon and familiar drugs of today. There was no pepsin for that Thanks giving indigestion, and a cold or a toothache was a thing to bo dreaded. In literally millions of homes on Thursday, the Thanksgiving dinner will be preliminary to a visit to a football game or a theater, things Impossible to the sturdy stock of 1814. In fact, the religious feast ot our grondslres has become to a large and growing extent a part of a sport ing and amusement holiday In which real Thanksgiving, In the sense of the origin of the day, Is conspicuous by Its absence. Nevertheless, when a person stops to think about It, comparing the material comfortB of today with those of a century ago, considering the marvelous growth of the republic In wealth and prosperity, the wonderful advancement of educa tion, science and knowledge there are many profound reasons why this annual feast of ours should be pre ceded by a moment, at least, of sol emn and reverent thankfulness. Accounted For. "It takes like to produce like." "Perhaps that la the reason Jims Is so sharp since be has been living la a flat." that the men spent considerable time on the tnsk Bcallng the steep roof and adopting other methods of reaching the bell. Inspiration. Half the difficulty of fighting any severe battle or accomplishing any hard task vanishes when a man feels that he has comrades at bis side light ing In the same cause, or that the eyes of those he loves are upon him, and their hearts praying for bis vic tory. C. J. Perry. I'll be glad to," he said, and at once grappled tho strings. After an unsuc cessful effort of Ave minutes, during which be got as red as a brick house and perspired like a pitcher of Ice water on a July window sill, he stam mered: "I I don't think I can tie a respectable knot, Miss Mary." "Sup pose, Philander," she whispered, with a protty little blush, "suppose you call In a clergyman to assist." Like the unveiling of a beautiful mystery, the bltuntlon unfolded Itself to Philander, and he feels better now. I A Thanksgiving I Sermon I I Br REV, JAMES M. CRAY. D. D. Deu tt Motif Bible lattitale 4 ? Ckieaaa i TEXT We know that all things work together for Rood to them that love God. Romans 1:23. This Is one of the texts of Scrip ture that always comes Into the mind around Thanks giving time. It has preached many a soul-Inspiring ser mon to the Lord's meek and poor afflicted ones dur ing these long nlnetoen hundred years. In many an hour of trou ble It has been their consolation '.it.--, ..V...-.9...l! mm mm mM1 mm and in many a happy moment their chief Joy. (1) There is a kind of certainty about this text that gives it a pe culiar value. "We know that all things work together for good." It is not a surmise but a conviction; not a conclusion based merely upon the testimony of others, but a pos session of our own experience. We know It from the word of God, and we would rather trust that than our own understanding. We know It Indeed from tho very nature of the case, for given the existence of a God, holy. Just, all-powerful and good, It must be as the text says. To deny It is to deny God. We know It from the bis tory of the world and of mankind whose panes are Illuminated with Us truth, but especially do we know U from the record of our own lives. If we are true Christian men and wom en, we can look back over the past year In all Its vicissitudes and set our seal to it as fact. (2) There is a universality in the range of the text which gives It a peculiar value. "We know all things works together for good." What measureless compass there is In that declaration! In the mind of the In spired writer, the "all things" as In dlcnted by the context, are very espe dally "the sufferings of this preS' ent time;" but there Is no reason why we may not employ the language In the broadest and mos,t comprehen Hive sense. Things known and things unknown, defeats and victories, losses and gains, the small and the large, all are working together for good to them that love God. It la easy to be lieve this when all Is prosperous and happy, but faith clings to it when the clouds lower and the storms rage. It Is that which distinguishes the Christian from the mnu of the world. (3) There Is a sense of divine ac tivity in the text. "All things work together for good." God does not al low things to come to pass by chance, but has an arrangment in everything, a plan, a purpose bringing forth ef fects. He Is continually subverting and conserving, scattering and bring ing together, in order that he may find stones to polish for a temple Into which he may enter and permanently abide. (4) Then think cf the harmony ex pressed "all things work together for good." There Is no discord or opposition In the heavenly counsels, though we may not always perceive this with our eyes of flesh. Like Han nah More's dialogue of the two weavers, we may sometimes think that The good ore troubled ami ipircsned, And all the wicked are the bleeaod. But when we reach that world of IIkH And view these works of God aright, Then bIib.1I we see the whole design. And own the work Is all divine. nut finally, it is the particularity of thla text that, we need moBt to dwell upon. It Is 'to "Them That Love God," and to them only, that all things work together for good. But men in their natural state do not lovo God, nor can they love him. There must be created within them the clenn heart and renewed within 'them the right spirit before they can love God. And this is God's own work In them, which he does when they believe his testimony concerning his 6on, Jesus Christ. Have you done this? Have you yet by faith received Christ os your Savior and confessed him as your Lord? There was a time when Paul who wrote these words, did not himself love God, though he was very religious and very active In his rellnlon. But one day he Baw Christ In the glory and submitted himself to him, and all this was changed. He then loved God because hn had come to know that God first loved him and sent his son to be the propitiation for his sins. And so this text gives us fauis own testimony. He had had a won derful life especially after hla remark able conversion. Read his own de scription of It In Second Corinthians from Chapter 11, Verse 21 to Chap ter 12, Verse 12, and see what It must have meant to him to utter such words os these. In everything had he seen the hand of God so vividly and the most unpromising circum stances redound to his own good, that no mathematical proposition could have been more clearly demon strated to him tha this. Volcanoes In United States. In Washington Mount Rainier is a volcano believed to show evidence ot Internal heat, and Mount St. Helena Is reported to have been In eruption In 1843, while Mount Baker, the most nprthorly In the United States, was in eruption In 1843. Your Parents' Diplomas. Although your parents may have no college diplomas, remember that they are graduates of the school of ex perience, in which you ore the merest freshman. Youth's Companion. a. i SlKTSOlOOL Lesson (By K. O. SELLERS, Acting Director Bun- day School course, Moouy xiiuie inuu tute, CMc,)WWVw LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 29 ' CHRIST CRUCIFIED. LEBSON TEXT Mark 16:22-39. . (Luke 2t:8M3). . . t GOLDEN TEXT Hurely ne nam Dome our grief and carried our sorrowe: yet we did esteem him etrlcken, smitten of God. and afflicted. lea. 63:4. Last Sunday we saw Jesus on trial before Gentile power. Today s lesson brings us to the central event of his saving mission to men. We must read all four1 accounts of this event attentively, reverently, humbly, for it cannot be treated even as other events In the life of our Lord. I. The Procession to Calvary, v. 21. Twas a physically exhausted Christ that loft the Judgment hall. A night of vigil, mocking, buffeting and with out food since the previous evening left blm too weak to bear the cross. Then- it was that a son of Africa, Simon of Cyrene, was "impressed" to bear the burden. The Romans da mnnded that the victim bear his own cross. He accepted the human help, but refused the aid of the drug, Matt. 27:34. Luke gives us at this point the Incident of the weeping woman. Mark 15:23 seems to Indicate that Jesus had to be assisted to the place of the cross. On the Cross. II. The Place, Calvary, vv. 22-27. Here we see him, the brightness of God's glory and the express Image of his person, the Incarnation of truth, in whom dwelt the fullness of the God head bodily "crucified." Sin has done its worst. The Scriptures are fulfilled, Ps. 22:16, Zech. 12:10. It was neces sary for our salvation that he should die exactly as he did, Gal. 3:10, 13; John 3:14; Deut. 21:23. Even tha parting of his garments was prophe sied, Ps. 22:18. The presence of two malefactors had also been foretold, Iso. 63:9, 12. III. The Passers-by at Calvary, vv. 29-32. The people and the priests Joined in heaping scorn upon him. Even those that were crucified with him "reproached him." Yet he loved them all. There seem to have been no gibes for the two thieves, John 15:19, II Tim. 3:12. The cry of the mob now "save thyself" (v. 30). 'Twas spoken In mockery, but they snoke a truth, nevertheless: It was necessary for the good shepherd to give his life for the sheep, John 10:11, and by no means to use his power in saving himself. They did not believe on him after the resurrection of Laza rus; Is It to be believed that they would have accepted him had he "saved himself?" To have saved him self would have been for him to take himself out of the hands of God an act of disobedience. IV. The Person on Calvary, vv. 33. 40. In the midst of this awful scene, in the confusion or the mingled cry of the mob, there Is sounded one note of triumph. As Jesus was thus "lifted up from the earth" (John 12:32), one of those, his companions, ceased to revile him. and cried out, "Art thou the Christ?" and, to be literal, "If so, save us." The other seems to have had his vision cleared, for he rebukes his fellow criminal by saying that their condemnation was a Just reward for their deeds. Turning to Jesus he exclaims, "Remember me ... In thy kingdom." The answer was imme diate and significant, "Today Shalt thou be with me In paradise." This Is a graphic Illustration of the whole meaning and symbolism of the cross. In his undying hour the Savior of men loosed this sinner from his sins and granted him the right to fellowship with him in the life beyond. Jesus hung upon the cross three hours, Bearing shnme and scoffing rude. In my plnce condemns! lie stood fcVnlod my pardon with hi blood. Hullolujuh what a savior. His Faith Triumphant. Then God drew the curtain, for even he could not look upon that scene (II Cor. 5:21; Heb. 1:13). We do not believe the eclipse theory, but rather that God caused the darkness, anoth er Illustration of tho closeness of man and nature. Rom. 8:20, 21 R. V. The dying cry, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me," wns uttered when Jesus sensed the full and complete realization of being separated from the Father. Death Is not annihilation, but separation, and Jesus was sepa rated from God tho Father because of our sins, Isn. 53:6. Yet In that terri ble moment his faith does rot waver, for he cries, "My God." Conscious of his personal Innocence, but Buffering for the sins of others, his faith Is triumphant. This lesson suggests that all who study it yield themselves to a search ing self-examination. Such a manifes tation of divine love should call forth our utmost confidence and our un questioned trtiBt In our divine redeem er. The revelation ot the enormity of man's sin as Been on Calvary ought to fill us with an uncompromising hatred of Bin. The story of tha Sa vior's sufferings ought to Impel us to a constant conflict with sin. Those who witnessed tho event of that day Baw him "stricken, smitten," but God was In him reconciling the world to hlmsolt Did You Know That Frogs' legs are useful to men for eating purposes, but more useful to the frog for jumping purposes T Fountain Pens Long In Use. Fountain pens were Invented short ly before the beginning ot the nine teenth century. Dangsrous. A little trigger la a dangerous thing. Life, HAVE YOU A CHILD? Kony women tong for chHdrin. but b-. J Some curable physical dernnKnnent ""f oi thia greatest of all happmrss ""'WMi The women whose names follow J to normal health hv I.vrf.. t K,"ii Write and ask uiia I took your fV,. Pound and have . un. strong baby. "-ton John Mitchell, Mu. eua, . X. Lydia E. PinVt, .J Vegetable Compound Is i wonderful medicine U eApeciani moUien," Mrs. A. M. Mvebs, Gor. uuiiviiie, juo. I highly reeoimn., Lydia E. Pinkham etoblo Comjiound beforef child-birth, it hits done ji much for i!K"-lirs J M.Doemi, It. R.LConi BnonocKen, 1'a. "ItookLvdiaE. Plr1 ham's VcUUe CorJ pound to LuiM up m system and bsve th mm dearest baby pr j u world."-Krt. Mo? ELAKIXLY, ImperiaLPa "I prnlse the Con I rrt mu pound whenever I h a chance. It did somu for me before my litt: girl was born."-Mri E. W. Famifjis, Rowl. luo:, W. Va. rrjr,.n inirj "I took your CmJ pound before liahy J bcrn and feel I owe n life to it "-Mrs. Winn Tiu.i:!, Winter Uuvtrf "4 Florida, WANTED TO SEE THEM GRO Three-Year-Old Miss Gave Potato Fair Warning as to Doings In Her Abience. Harry Godfrey lias a ci anrldaught In the three-year-old class. She hi Ideas all her own aliout things ui of doors. A short time aso Bran dad planted a patch of potatoes In hi garden. Miss Three Year-Old observ tho proceedings with Interest. Pref ently darkness ranie on und she missing from the family hearth. search Immediately was insiltuta and, to the surprise of all, they fond her sitting beside a row of otat' "Why, what ate you doing her granddaddy Inquired a bit pecvlrhl "Walling for the potatoes, lo c up," was the reply. "Well, you come on Into the br.' You've scared us all half to death! Unwillingly she t'-.k granddil hand and started toward the hod) Suddenly she bmhe aay ana a back to the potato row. 1'oinlltig finger at It as if in command, said: "Potntoes, don't you dare come till I get back." Verse and Worse. Two nt least of the llritlsh m In nnDers. In reporting one of Asauith'B recruit ins sp'cchcs, trH tim well known quotation, -,.o hour of tlorlotis llfp, It wero the speaker's on. The n li ml that V doiignuui nuns oi --- , ever done stands to the credit o Birmingham reporter, no down" a peroration somewhat is lows: "Tho galla:il major v.--ki lv remarking Ibat bi.i 1.,-arts wero superK L,.w.i ...d simple faith Infinite! be proferred Gen "Will the g I, d out the A forward n little?" 1 conductor of the ! vllcy car. ,i ;r. (ireueb. "I u-nn't " PrilW 1 " ..... A.u-T hung to a strap th( "Oh. I dldu t ask u, - ductor. T-u- rnuun Fits. Alice-"I)os Maad'.n wants peopiu w . . . . . ,",.relv Blin A tril'KSiei ,,h lie I .Pt Them Speal: For Themselves Wlv. word for the mp f Pnst Toastiei r ,rka from n crisp, sweet 7- J au" Yv , ...... ;f vouw'H Post Toastiei The Superior Corn Flakes 1 -made trom in , finest Indian , j cooked, season i , toasted. .inf Vnrn flakes, rc. ri "Hen you want Hake, to Mkj" Post Toasties If 8 HtiTfTillij to Norman w I . " i tlemen uniy. I ,),. ,, please mi"'.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers