THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. L Finest tobaccos, skillfully blended that's the source of thut rare flavor which has made FAT I MA CIGARETTES fa mous. 20 or SALESMAN WONDERFUL SELLER-REPEAT BUSINESS W am liftoff jon how to earn dnlUni wlrnr yon arn now rarnlng cnni. A lluntlnr can mm Tor AO.O HWkly. ft.44.00 UiUf torkiiand (Miiilp yon in your own county In ou all yclirnMina.nusuniptalilon btiftlnvi. (junr antMl Artl l, exohtHlvo territory, feint application Klvun prufrtrence, Addrvtsi TIIK MAKACtUUPAMf, Inc., 44 Emit 3l Htifft New York City PATENTS Wntma F.Co1mB,Wa1v Inirton, l).U llookKfre. 11 ik sat references. Usst nauiia. ' Cno Cllt Pupa, sroim, pnnty and thnnitiKhty run OSLS trained tux tiuDnaik'lrlalalluwoa.UDjp for reply. 1. II. HUchter, Moliotou, Vviuu The Finishing Touch. The young nan hesitated to believe the statement of her little brother that the young lady was not at home. He repeated the question, at the same time displaying a quarter. The boy eyed it longingly and again replied in the negative. "Put didn't she toave a message for me?" asked the disappointed swain. "Yes," said the lad-and nothing more. As one who sees a great light, the young man tossed him the coin. "Now," he said, "out with the mes sage." . "She said she's not gonna see you any more and you're not to give me any money." Philadelphia Ledger. A New Course. In a Philadelphia family recently bo engagement of a daughter was an nounced. A friend calling was met at the door by the colored maid, who an nounced: ' "No'm; Miss Alico ain't at home dis aft'noon she's gone . down to de clnss." "What class?" Inquired the visitor. "You know, Miss Alice Is gwine to be ma'iod In de fall," explained the maid, "an she's takin' a cou'so In do mestic silence." Life. ' Ain't It the Truth? "What-kind of ships do we encoun ter on the voyago of life?" asked the propounder of silly questions. "Hardships, mostly," replied the pessimistic person. Sure. "Do you believe that there is a higher power?" "My dear 6lr, I married her." Life. Torn own niM'ooisT will tfll tod Try Murine Ky lieniedr for lied. Weak. Winery Kyen and (JrunuUitcd Kjelldw: No i-marmti-iiiMt Ryn onmmm Writ fir Hxk of th hyc bj uiuil t'rott. Murine hjo Hi'Diedj Co.. tulcuitu. The Modern Trend. Young I.dy (In book store) 1 want something popular. Clerk Wicked or vapid? Few self-made men live long enough to finish the Job. Backache Warns You Backache Is one of Nature's warning of kidney wenkueaa. Kiduey disease kills thousands every year. Don't neglect a bad back. If your back a lame if It hurls to stoop or lift-tf there is Irregularity of the secretions suspect your Kidneys. If you suffer head aches, diuineRa and are tired, nervous and worn-out, you have further proof. t'se I loan's Kidney I'll Is, a Hue medicine for bad backs and weak kidneys. A Virginia Case Mrs. E. C. Hamp shire. 713 Jacob St., Norfolk, Va., says: "Injun's Klilni-y Pills worked wonders In my caae. For five years I had kidney dlaeaae and was dis couraged. My sys tem was all run down and the heavy, dratraingtdown palni In my back were terrible. X was nerv ous, weak and lr1 table and my nervea were badly ahat tered. I had awful headaches and my appetite wns poor. Iioan's Kidney Pills cured these troubles snd I have had no return of them." Gt Doan'i at Any Stwa, 50c a Box DOAN'SiV FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y. The Reliable Remedy for lumbago, gout and RHEUMATISM GET8 AT TUB JOINTS KBOM TUBS INSIDK For sale by all drug-gists TAKE- Ms Pill The (Imt done often sstonlnhes the invilld, giving elasticity of mind, hunyency oJrxxly, GOOD U.GtSIION, i regular bowels and wild llesh, Price, i'S cts 3i weepy rfli I'lrlurs fVfeTw WT 11 .1 wanting m me Light By REV, JAMES M. CRAY. D. D. Deaa of Moody Bulla latitats Chicaso TEXT If we walk In the light as lie Is In the Hunt, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jpkus C'hrlnt his son, cleunaoth us from ull sin. I Jon 1:7. What Is meant by walking In the light? According to this Inspired apostle in tho first and second chap tors of this epis tle, It means: (1) To perceive and confess sin In the faith of Jesus Christ 1:8 2: 2. If a man says be has no sin be is not In the light, but in darkness. The Christian be liever has indeed no sin "on" him, since Its guilt has been borne by his substitute, Jesus Christ, but he still has sin "In" him. To "confess" this sin Is different from simply asking forgiveness for It. A man may ask forgiveness without ever Identifying his sins, but when he confesses them he enters Into de tail and brings himself into the place of judgment for each. But to hold fellowship with God in such confes sion Is to know Jesus Christ as the propitiation for sin and the ever-living Intercessor for bis poople. He Is the way, the truth and the life, and no man can come unto God save through bim. Jesus the Carpenter. (2) But In the second place, walking In the light means keeping God's com mandments (2:3-6); and this is not limited to an external observance of tho decalogue, but includes heart sur render to all his revealed will. It is walking, even as Jesus walked, who did always those things that pleaded his father. Nor does this mean only the public Jesus, the Jesus of the threo years' ministry, but the private Jesus, the Jesus of the home, the vil lage school, the shop. It means Jesus, the carpenter, who, as Campbell Mop gan says, "never made a yoke that galled an ox." It was because the father was well pleased with those si lent years at Nazareth that the great er honor of the public ministry was conferred. God gives the Holy Spirit to them that obey him. (3) Walking In the light means lor ing the brotherhood, verses 7-11. Dy the brotherhood here Is meant those that are In Christ. To love one's neighbor Is an old commandment, but the "new commandment," of which John here speaks, Is loving the breth ren. This love Is not an emotion or passion. It Is not a natural, but a supernatural experience. We see It defined In I Corinthians 13, as Includ ing such simple things as long-suffer ing, kindness, humility, courtesy, un selfishness, meekness and the like. I am with the priest who publicly re buked a collcgo president for advising the graduate that the way to g)t along was to push and crowd other people out of the way. That may be the way of the world, but It is not the way of Christ, and he who acts upon It will never know fellowship with God. World Slipping Away. (4) Separation from the world thus becomes a fourth means of walking In the light, verses 15-17. There Is a proper love for the world, but It Is not that which Is Incompatible with the love of the father. There are two ar guments against the love of the world: first, It passcth away and the lusts thereof, and second, "he that doeth the will of God abldeth forever." Chauncey M. Depew was defending the second marriage, late in life, of his colleague, Senator Piatt, and said that a time came when the love of power, of wealth, of fame, of pleas ure receded, and loft nothing to a man but the companion of his fireside. The difference between Chauncey M. Depew and the apostle John is this, however, that In the one caso we have the world slipping away from the man, and in the other the man Is slipping away from tho world. ' It is the last that understands and appre ciates the fact of fellowship with God. O. L. Moody's Memory. Oh the tombstone which marks the grave of D. L. Moody at Round Top, Northfield, Mass., Is engraved that In spiring sentence of John, "He that doeth the will of God abldeth forever." How true it is that D. L. Moody abld eth still In the hearts and lives of thousands in this country and Great Britain, whom, by the grace of God, he won to Jesus Christ, and in the missionary and philanthropic enter prises which were sot In motion as the result of his great evangelistic work. But be himself abldeth In an other sense the literal senso that John meant, because the life of God was communicated to him through his son, Jesus Christ. In this sense it is the privilege of every one of us to abide forever. "Because I live," said Christ, "ye shall live also." "The wages of sin ig death, but the gift of God Is eternal lire." Who would not accept this gift so freely offered through the son' of God? Who would not walk in the light here, that he might forever walk in It in fie life to come? ' Happiness In Hit Presence. He is so Infinitely blessed, that every perception of his blissful pres ence Imparts a vital gladness to the hcart. Every degree of approach to him ls.n the same proportion, a de gree of happiness. And I often think that were he always present to our mind, as we are present to him, there would be no pain, nor sense of mis ery. Susanra Wesley. 5r?a J.' . LWMIONAL SUNMSWL Lesson (Dy E. O. SKI, I. KH8. Atln Director of Btinrtny School Course.) LESSON FOR JANUARY 10 DEBORAH AND BARAK DELIVER ISRAEL. I.KSSON TKXT-Jmlgcs 4:4-18. OOI.UKN TKXT The rlRliteous cried, and Jehovah heard and delivered them out of all their troubles. Ps. 34:17 It. V. There are two inspired accounts of this victory, one in prose (ch. 4) and one In poetry (Judges 5). They pre sent different views of the same event. Israel had been oppressed for 20 years under Jabln and Slnera, his chief captain (4:2) though It seems to have been that the northern tribes of Naphtall, Ashur and Zebulun, the Galilee of Christ's day, were chiefly conrerned. Mother In Israel. I. Deborah's Call to Service, vv. 4-9. As the people forsook God be forsook them, and they became easy prey. If we withdraw from his service we also withdraw from his protection. Al though Joshua had burned llazor (Joshua 11:1-11), yet because of Is rael's backsliding It Is now strong enough to become the ruler. It Is so with sin- allow it to exist and it will conquer. When, however, Israel re punted and cried unto God (r. 3) be raised up a deliverer and In this case It was a "mother in Israel" (ch. 5:7). The word Deborah means "bee," and It Is suggested that "she answered her namo by her industry, sagacity and usefulness to the public, her sweetness to her friends and sharp ness to her enemies" (Matthew Hen ry). Her husband's name is given, but none of his achievements. From her dwelling place at Jebus, as she sat beneath a palm tree she gave forth her wisdom and Judgment to the peo ple who brought their difficulties be fore her (Ex. 18:13; Deut. 17:8-12). Judgment of sin always precedes any manifestation of grace (I Cor. 11:31, 32). Deborah, the Judge, recognized the gravity of the situation, for she was not only a Judge, hut a prophetess by divine appointment (11 Pet. 1:21). When she called Barak at once recog nized her note of authority (v. 6). Deborah gave Barak explicit Instruc tion and direction. In this chapter only the two tribes most Interested are mentioned (5:17, 18). Bold, Sagacious Leader. II. Barak's Conquest of Slsera, vv. 10-16. Barak was a bold, sagacious leader and chose one of the world's best and most famous battlefields, Es- draelon. Barak led his men to Mt. Tabor, from which could be seen the whole region where Slscra's armies were spread out upon the plain. From chapter 6 It appears that some came to the battle from the tribes of Manasseh and Issachar (5:14, 15) and that others were expected who failed to obey tho summons (5:15, 17). From the slopes of Mt. Tabor, Deborah and Barak saw Sisera and his iron char lots advancing across tho plain. One of the descendants of IIobA, Moses' brother-in-law (Num. 24:22 It. V. m.. and Judges 1:16) had revealed the place of Barak's camp (v. 11). Hcber should have been In the land of Judah and Simeon and not In such close proximity to the enemies of Israel. Josephus says that when Barak saw Sisera's army drawn up, and attempt ing to surround the mountain of his encampment his heart failed him, and .he determined to retire to a place of greater safety. Deborah, however, urged Barak to attempt tho battle, "for this Is the day In which the Lord hath delivered Slsera into thine hand." The thing was as sure to be done as If It were done already. As we read verses 11 and 12, together with 5:17-19, It would look as though Slsera seemed to have the advantage against Barak and his ten thousand men. Slsera did not, however, count upon Barak's powerful ally God. "Is not Jehovah gone out before them?" Deborah had enthusiasm and zeal, but needed Barak's action. She depended upon the sure word of God and was devoid of fear (Rom. 8:31). She knew that victory was certain, for God had said so (v. 7). Her charge, "Up, Barak!" was a clarion call and served to nerve the entire army of Israel. Vrse 15 tells us who It was that won the battle that day (see also 5:20, 21; Josh. 10:10; 1 Chron. 15:1517). Even the stars fought against Sisera, mean ing that God turned the elements to the advantage of Israel's army. Showers of meteors have been recorded In this land In recent times and 5:21 tells of the floods of water that "swept away," overthrew, the chariots of Slsera. The word "discomfited," we are told, scarcely suggests the sudden terror and confusion which fell upon Sisera's army. Like all of God's victories, It was most complete. By this battle the resistance of the Canaanites la completely overthrown and the Israel ites secured the complete ascendency over the land. Slsera fled northward toward Hazor, the capital city, along the same path followed by the Turks In 1799, when Napoleon and his allies defeated their army on this same field. Barak followed the main drmy and the chariots and thereby missed the chief prize. Slsera In his flight came to a settlement of the Kenltes, which he thought he could trust, and turned Into the tent of Jael, the wife of He ber. Weary, he fell Into a deep sleep, which gave Jael her opportunity. Taking a hammer and a tent pin she drove it through his temples into the ground, completing the victoiy of De borah and Barak, and fulfilling 'the prophecy of verse 9. Wo are told that the Bedouin tents of the women are always closed, whereas those of the men are always open on one side. For a man to enter the tent of a woman, other than that ef bis wife, Is punishable with death. Jael defended her life and her repu tation by the only course open to an Arab woman, And especially in a time of war. FRUIT LAXATIVE FOR SICK CHILD "California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver and bowels. Every mother realizes, after giving her children "California Syrup of Figs" that this is their ideal laxative, because they love Its pleasant taste and It thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels with out griping. When cross, Irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If coated, give a teaapoonful of this harmless "fruit laxative," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bow els, and you have a well, playful child again. When Its little system Is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, Indigestion, colic remem ber, a good "Inside cleaning" should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers koep "California Syrup of Figs" handy; they know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask at the store for a DO cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups printed on the bottle. Adv. MONEY MOST WISELY SPENT Millions Expended In the Campaign Against Tuberculosis Will Surely Have Its Effect. More than $20,500,000 was spent last year in the campaign against tubercu losis In the United States. Of this urn C6.8 per cent was derived from public funds, either federal, state, county or municipal, and the remain der was contributed by private philan throphy. These are some of the In teresting figures contained In the an nual statistical statement of the Na tional Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, made pub lic recently. The statement Is based largely on actual reports received from anti-tuberculosis agoncies lo cated throughout the country, but where reports are not available, the figures have been estimated. Institutional tare and treatment of consumptives In hospitals and sana toria makes up the largest share of the total expenditure. More than $17, 300,000 was spent for this purpose, with an additional $925,000 for spe cial treatment of tuberculosis insane and prisoners. These figures include not only the cost of maintenance, but In some instances the cost of construc tion of institutions. Antituberculosis associations spent the next largest sum, amounting to a little over $900,- 000. Care of patients In dispensaries and by visiting nurses cost almost as much, approximately $860,000. The growth of the open-air school move ment Is shown In the fact that last year more than $300,000 was spent for this purpose, as against $10,000 ex pended five years ago. State and city boards of health spent $200,000 directly on tuberculosis work. IF HAir. IS TURNING GRAY, USE SAGE TEA Don't Look Oldl Try Grandmother's Recipe ta Darken and Beautify Gray, Faded, Lifeless Hair. Grandmother kept her hair beauti fully darkeued, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sago Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appear ance, this simplo mixture was applied with wonderful effect. By asking at tny drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe, ready to use, for about 60 cents. This simple mixture can bo depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and Is splendid for dan druff, dry, Itchy scalp and falling hair. A well-known druggist says every-, body uses Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur, because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied it's so easy to uso, too. Vou simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one strand at a timo. By morning the gray hair disappears; after an other application or two, it Is re tored to Its natural color and look glossy, soft and abundant. Adv. Safety Appliance Lacking. "Didn't you say," demanded the young man of the captain, "(hat this ship was equipped with all appliances for human safety?" "I did." "Then how docs it happen that I now find myself engaged to a lady I did not know when the vessel left her pier?" Judge. Precaution. "Is she going to marry the young man who saved her from drowning?" "I think so." "But Is she sure that he. is able to support her In the style to which she has been accustomed?" "Yes, she looked him up in Brad street's before she fell in." Her Only Alternative. "What! Is Helen sick?" "Oh, no. Her skirts are so narrow the can't walk, her shoes are so nar row she can't stand, her corset so tight sho can't sit, so she is lying down." Humorlstlcks LIsty (Prague). What the Neighbors Say. "No matter how sheltered a man may be, be receives some hard knocks while Journeying through life." ' "That's true, and some of the hard est knocks he gets he's unaware of." What has become of the old-fashioned man who used to say there would never be any more big wars? Speech is brittle. Any man caq make a break, but mighty few can mend it. If death loves a shining mark lt'a up to some men to wear wigs. If. A (Conducted by the Nntlonnl Woman's Christum Temperance Union.) LIQUOR BUSINESS A PARASITE. (By LIKUTKNANT OOVKUNOR WAL LACK of California.) Business Is an exchange of com modities. It Is buying and selling, and there must be advantage or gain in the barter. For continued com merce the gain must extend to both parties to the transaction. If the re sultant advantage of a business deal Inures to the benefit of one party only, there Is an economic defect. The buyer-must bei:efit by his purchase as truly as the seller by his sale. The buyer gets from the grocer flour, from the hardwarnman nails, from the lum berman lumber, and In each case buy er and seller are benellted. The same buyer goes to the saloon to get wine or beer or vhisky. The dealer makes a profit on the goods sold. Hut here Is a break In our business principle. The buyer makes no gain. He parts with his share of the barter, and gets nothing valuable in return. At every other counter there was gain on both sides; here the gain was on one Bide only. The transaction limps; it is false to business principles. It repre sents economic waste. The economic waste becomeB a mul tiplied factor when the argument is extended to liquor's effect on the pur chaser who consumes It. The liquor traffic Is a -parasite. Any business blood that it has Is sucked from the vigorous body of healthful business. It contributes nothing, but draws heavily. If a town or city prospers where traffic In liquor Is allowed. Its prosperity Is less than It should be by Just so much as liquor takes. It gives nothing, and what it takes is so much subtracted from the general gain. TWO SCENES. (Excerpt from one of Mrs. L. M. N. Stevens' Annual Addresses.) A young society woman, a total ab stainer, remarked that it was very hard to make a strong argument in favor of total abstinence when there were so many moderate drinkers In her circle who wore successful In business and happy In their home life. To this we say, In your clrclo you see but one section nt one stage of action. Let us shift the scene a little. A temperance specialist was per mitted to sit In the office of a certain Banltarium while the patients came filing In with bared arms to take their seml dally treatment. When the last one had passed out the doctor said, "In that line were representatives of many business enterprises, of educa tional institutions, of every profes sion; men who are still possessors of large wealth, and others who have wasted their fortunes and are now trying to get well that they may be gin life anew." TOLL OF 2,000 A DAY. According to Doctor Demme, who studied ten "temperate families" an' ten "Intemperate families" for 11 y' In the same class of society, the d of children under five In the group were five times as many the former group 25 against Since the deaths below the age of five comprise 30 per cent, of all the deaths, it is evidently more than conseryatlve to take the comparison of adult mules given above as a measure of the rav ages of alcohol for the total popula tion, says Richmond P. Hobson, In "Al cohol and the Government." If we were a nation of total abstainers we would die off at the rate of 5G0 per 61,000 of the population, whereas we are actually dying off at a rate of 1,000 per 61,000. In other words, alco hol causes the premature death of 440 citizens out of every 61,000 of the population every year, which means that alcohol kills about 700,000 Ameri can citizens every year, about 2,000 a day every day the sun rises. MONEY TO RUN COUNTRY. "Where will you get the money to run the country if you cut out the sale of liquor?" asks the liquor advocate. "The best answer we know of," Bays the North American of Philadelphia, "Is the action of Russia, England, France and Germany, which at a time when every cent that can bo got Is urgently needed for the conduct of the war, find It more profitable to reduce this revenue than to run tho risks In cidental upon the general use of alco holic drinks among the soldiers and, as la Russia, the general public." CHURCH PROPERTY VALUES. According to the United States re ligious census of 1906, the CuthollcR of Portland, Me., own church property to the value of $46 per capita. The Cath olics of "model high license" Philadel phia own church property of $32 per capita. The Catholics of beer-famous Milwaukee own church property of $16 per capita. J. F. Cunneen. HIS LAST, DOLLAR. A gripping sentence of eight words, telling apparently the story of a wrecked life and the squandering of a fortune, was detected the other day i - a dollar bill, by Paul Wentx, a jew eler of this place. . It read: "The last of $100,000. Booze done it all!" Mr. Wentx does not recall who gave htm the bill. He has placed It on exhibi tion. Pittsburgh Dispatch. DISTILLERS PEAR SOMETHING. . It Is reported on, good authority that the distillers of' Peoria. III., will not make a lease for a longer term than five years, and some of them re fuse to extend the time beyond two years. Evidently they fear something may happen In the state or the nation In the next few years. DIMINISHES BRAIN FUNCTIONS. Even the moderate quantity of alco hol contained In a glass of wine or a pint of beer Is sufficient to paralyze, retard or diminish brain functions.- August Forel, M. D., professor of psy chiatry, University of Zurich. i ara hi i il ii mm 00 a ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT Avertable Preparation for As similating (he Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Dowels of lie Jo I 'a Promotes Digcslion,Chcerful nrssand Rest Contains neither 1 Opium.Morphine not Mineral NOT NARC OTIC Pxipt SOIH DrSAMVUftTatS i jlniit SttJ tfyyfrmt M Sl.d . Anrrfctl Remedy' forConstiDa lion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, We 1S Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP Facsimile Signature of The Centaur Company, j.r NEW YORK. it ( fa Exact Copy of tyrappsr. C REALLY NO ANSWER POSSIBLE Carter's Explanation Sufficlent.Though It May Not Have Satisfied An noyed Tourist. Arran Is still tho haunt of the walk ing tourist, says the Glasgow News, but summer days are sometimes al most too warm to be comfortable for tho pedestrian, as two middle-aged sightseers recently discovered. On the outskirts of Whiting bay they rested by tho wayside; then, di vesting themselves of Jackets and waistcoats, they crawled up the, steep Incline to Pippin, and then on to Kll donan. When they came to put on their waistcoats and jackets, one of the men discovered that his wnlstcoat had been left behind at the place where they had rested. He reluctant ly turned his steps toward Whiting bay. On the way he met a carter, who asked: "Are you looking for a waistcoat, sir?" "Yes, my man," replied the pedes trian, hopefully, "have you got It?" "No; but I saw It on the gruss at the black rocks." "Why didn't you bring it with you?" thundered the'other. "Weel, ye see, sir, I didna Just ken ch way ye had gone." le Arran natives are adept in the pie retort. The rest was silence. Boarding-House Statistics. It was dinner time at Mrs. Meane leigh's high-class hoarding establish ment. "Well," said the statistical boarder, leaning back In his chair, "we have at this meal tho representatives of two widely separated generations." "How is that?" asked tho inquisitive boarder, rising to the occasion. "Why, tho hen we have been trying to eat was in all pn liability, tho great-great-grandiiiother of tills ome let!" Then there fell a palpable Bilonce. Judge. She Was Not to Blame. Mrs. A. So your son is home from college? Mrs. H Yes; and he hns the strang est Ideas! He says he's descended from a monkey, hut I'm Btire I don't see how that can be unless, of course, It's on his father's sldo. Two of a Kind. "Buhl heads remind me. of kind words." "Why so?" "They can never dye, you know." Tho best man at a wedding is gen erally the minister. STICK TO IT Until Coffee Hlta You Hard. It Is about as well to advise people to stick to coffee until tbey get bit hard enough so that they will never forget their experience. A woman writes and her letter Is condensed to give the facts In a short space: "I was a coffee slave and stuck to It like a toper to his 'cups,' notwithstand ing I frequently had severe attacks of sick headache; then I used more cot fee to relieve the headache, and this was well enough until tho coffee ef fect wore off. "Finally attacks of rheumatism be gan to appear, and ultimately the vhelo nervous oystem began to break down and I was faBt becoming a wreck. "After a time I was Induced to quit coffee and take up Postum. ThlB was half a year ago. The result has been most satisfactory. "The rheumatism Is gone entirely, nerves practically well and steady, di gestion almost perfect, never have any more sick headaches and am gaining steadily In weight and Btrength." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well villo," in pkgs. Postum comes In two forms: Regular Postum must be well boiled. 15c and 25c packages. Instant Postum Is a soluble pow der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly In a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious bever age Instantly. 30c and DOc ttn The cost per cup ot both kinds Is about the earne. "There's a Reason" for Tostum. sold by Grocers. NSLGnarantegtl under the Foodanj) ILyHTflll For Infants and Childreo. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Signature A of UJJI.. Ip CSS For M Thirty Yea mm on ic His Indorsement The lute Lord Roberts once sent bus orderly to the bunk to cash a check. Bays Pearson's Weekly, and the clerk wanted It indorsed. "What for?" demanded the soldier. "Well, It's the rule, and I can't pay you the money until you do Indorse lt he was told. "Oh, all right!" grumbled the me, sengcr. So ho took back the check and bit the end of a pen In deep medl tutlon for a minute or two. Then a wroto this: "I beg to say that I have known Lord Roberts fur several years, and he ha proved himself, times without nuna ber, to be as brave as a lion, but al ways kindly considerate to those wb serve under him. And I have, there fore, great pleasure .In respectfully indorsing his check." , Comparative Liberty. "Do you believe the poet'a saying that ',Stono walls do not a priso make, nor iron bars a cage'?" askedl Mr. Twobbie. "I don't know," said Mr. Meekso thoughtfully, "but I dare say thai stono wulls and prison bars seem rather Insubstantial things to a mj) who has been hedged about for ft years by the glances of a walcnftfl wife." Making Allowance. "Is the boy trustworthy?" "I consider him so. I'd trust htn as far as I could see him. Of courM I'm mighty near-sighted. Clevelaael Plain Dealer. Awkward. Hostess I want you to sing, Mrs Dasso, but It's such u. pleasant party I hnte to break It up. CRIPPLED WITH RHEUMATISM CURED BY SOMR TESTIMONY Mr wlf wns so rrlppM with Rhm tnnlinin tb itahncuuMuunllTwalk. Aftvr tryinir iTi'rytliinir clw without seton any ivlitf 1 win pnuu(lci to try airwV Liniment Tho tlrxt bottle ai-tnl like cruiriuamlarTorilH iramttliatareliuf ami aftiT u-i.jg H but lli sha wns n'trrlf well, ami lining ber Work With pur feel euxo ami comfort " Nut ImiK kincx sho had anothnr attack In thtothinililxr.oiiCHinnr I wd Yaner' Ltnlint-nt wilb thn mi mo rwulL V' ar jiHTer without a Inula in Ilia bouse. I rvuuiuiui'uil tt mist highly." THOMAS MOOUE, Promt, Va- YAGERS' LINIMENT IS THE GREAT PAIN ALLEVIATOR Only comes In I jircn trie ItotUt at all dealers, Prvpartxl by GILBERT BROS. 4 CO., 1st BALTIMORE, MD. GRANDFATHER USED IT 50 YEARS ACQ PURE-OUICKSURE Writs for It and mention tbls paper. AJdms A. C MhV tH A COM BALT1MOKB. Ma Cf)r LILLEY PILE REMEDY CO. hbb-m itinueu, urninr. jfrru nn, or pm UluiiUtf i'licf, C. k. UktfcvM, UM4 UJ At, UmltlmmhZ W. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 2-191Sr- JM - m m m m rv , 1 K Is. YAGER'S uiHuuuDiikaau h . . CUTS CHECa cold liiCnr )ll couch shortJ tWF' IAT ONCE 4 ( v v 5-f 7 iU
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers