THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. WEST ERN GI1ADA Co-Operative Creameries Show Tremendous Increase in Butter Production. -he Dairy Commissioner, at first an- u,l convention .of Saskatchewan rwlrymcn'i association, reviewed pro treat of 1015 which shows a great In Lgse In the huttor production of the operative creameries amounting to 1.500 000 lbs. He ulso said the Im provement In quullty Is shown by the reference accorded Saskatchewan butter In outside markets. Shipments out of the province for the year to tiled r2 carloads, According to bulletin Just Issued by Ibe Manitoba deportment of agrlcul nrt the dairy Industry had a very lUClcfl(iful year In 1015. There was un increase of over 1,000,000 lbs. of crenm err butter produced, as against the previous year, about 200,000 lbs. In (Tease AairJ n",,or and 0VPr 25,000 lb. Increase In the cheese output. The inrrense f the total value of milk and milk products was over $427,000. The production of dairy butter for Mani toba during the yeur was 4,150,444 lbs md It brought an average price of 23c per ; f creamery butter 5,839,007 lb?, were produced which commanded. 29c per on t,lft nvpr"Ke; cheese pro duction was 720,725 lbs. which sold at id average price of 15c the total rolue of these three products Is given ii $2,7tS0.I8, In addition to which the milk produced Is valued at $'j2fM5Ti9 md the crenm at $158,827. the average price of the milk being reckoned at 2.1c per lb. and of sweet cream at 32c per Il. bulter-fnt. In connection with the dairy Industry It Is Interesting to note that almost the most Important fodder crop now Is corn, of which the 1015 production amounted to 100,132 tons. The biggest cultivated fodder rrop Is timothy which for last season produced 103,357 tons and the next most popular crop was broine grass with 45,815 tons; of nlfulfu and clover there were produced some .18,000 tons. The nnmbci of ctittle In the province It given as n.'i1,00. which Is an In crease of 130,000 over the previous year. The fact that the Red Deer, Alberta, cheese ftictory Is handling four times is much milk this season as last win ter shows the growing Improvement In the dairy Industry. On Feb. 14, It was innounced the factory hud Just shipped two tons of cheese for Calgary market Cnrdston, Alberta, creamery In 1915 raid Its patrons rate of 27'c per lb. for butter fnt and had a profit re maining over all expenses of $5,584, The creamery during season dlstrlb nted among farmers $01,117 and manu factured 250.000 lbs. butter nnd 13.000 lbs. cheese. Average price realized for butter was 28 cents. The development of the dairy Indus try of Northern Alberta Is well Indi cated by the growth of n prominent dairy business here, which In 1015 pro duced 2.525.000 lbs. butter, an Increase of 400.000 lbs. over the previous year. This product has found a market In all parts of Canada and this year will en ter the export trade. Advertisement Paradoxical Trip. "Why Is that fellow always coining round?" "I guess it Is to get a siiunre meal.' Going It Too Hard We nr Inclined nowadays to "go It tm hard:" to overwork, worry, cut nnd drink too much, and to neglect our rest and sleep. J ms fills the blood with uric ucid. The kitlncvs weaken mill then It's a siege of backache, tllr.zy, nervous spells, rheumatic pnlns and distressing urinary disorders, non i wan ior worse troubles. Strengthen tnc kidneys. Use Donn's Kidney rills. A Pennsylvania Case . John SIom, 7t Ku- I'ltleburBh, Pa., says: "I could ltanliy sloop on account of tbe dull pnln through my kid neys and I sot weak and nervous. My kid neys acted Irregular ly and (he leant cold made the trouble worse. I lout weight and almost gave up In deapnlr. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me after everything .'pr muni. i mivnii i m I( bail a sign of kidney trouble since. Cat Doaa al Aar Stem. BO a Baa DOAN'S V?AV FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y. Every .Woman JiVnnta IM FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE . Dissolved In water for douche stops Delric catarrh, ulca ration and inflaro- nation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pmkham Med. Co, for ten year, A haalinf wonder for luteal catarrh, ore throat and aoreeyea. Economical. Hu eitiaadnarr dauxine and ernnicid! rower. ISuiale Fraa, SOc ill dniteatt. " P"'fu V WHY WOT TRY pQPHAM'S ASTHMA MEDIGIHE Gives Prompt and Poetttve Relief In Eeery Caae. Hold by Druggleta. Price Il.ttJ. Trial Package bt Mail 10c WILLIAMS MF8. CO, Props. Cletebnd, 0. THE HUH QUALITY SfWINB MACNINf AT (nm nanra ivi aTUia I1MI " rl" er free boeklel "Point to be considered b.fere """I a arwtng machine, warn THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO.,0nNGE,MA6a DlTcriTo Watson F. Coleman I H I r II I -X i.,.t l.wter.WMbiriifUn ",,B Ii litYloelDd booUIree reasonable. BlibMlretereaoee. BnlMrrloaa I OWN ""'1 teeon bottom farmli mmlaorer ' un" ebanie. W. A. Howell, Walnul Hldae, ark yyfa l nri I ll Ii -ik-j i V VL,r '"l'lnl. -iIMVf i,ITer a BWBIwn reniruj if "'J-Kuluiureih,piereiiiel. Write UKlar. W- N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 33--19U NEVkkQME LIFE ETERNAL REV. ROBT. M. RUSSELL, D. D., Teacher of Bible Doctrine anil Homilelki, Moody Bible I minute, Cbu-agu TKXT And title is life etetnul tltat they ahoultl know thee the only true Ood. nd him whom thou illdHt eend, even Jcaus Chrlnt.-I John 17:3. Life eternal Is a condition of exis tence Involving both quality and uan- tlty. Tlie quullty Is reully tbo su premo feature, for endlessness to bp a blessing must mean tlitf perpet uation of Hint width Is desir able. No one would desire nil endless existence (hut Involved ei ther pain or dis comfort. Quullty, therefore, has the first emphasis In dealing with the matter of eternal life. Life Ii Knowledge. Life bus been defined as the func tioning of an organism with Its envir onment. Alt life therefore Is a lorin of knowledge, and Is high or low, brond or narrow. In accordance witn he environment thnt Is apprehended, The worm has a low order of life be cause Its environment Is simply Ho oil. The worm knows nothing but mud, anil that by the one sense of touch-. Ulrd life Is higher than worm life. The bird knows the earth nnd the air. the sky and the clouds, and bus delight In the fellowship nnd song of Its mates. Man's life Is the highest of earthly creatures, because bis range of knowledge Is the widest. He knows mere about the earth than the worm, and more about air and cloud and sky ban can the bird. He apprehends the conditions of his own country utid age. an I then sweeps In thought the con dltlons of other Inntl-t and times. He multiplies his sciences until these cm braco the multiplied facts of earth and air nnd sky. He forms his philoso phies dealing with the mystery of ex Istence. Mnn's Ufo Is thus the hlgliest of the earthly creation because the widest In knowledge. Eternal Life. The widest circle of human knowl edge litis to do with Ood. Science ex ults In the scope of her domain when she turns the pages of the rocks to rend the story of earth, or sweeps the heavens with the telescope, to murk out the pnthway of the stars, but there Is truth deeper thnn that written on the foundations of the earth, and high er than that written upon the scroll of heaven with burning stars. There Is a sun behind the sun. Ood Is the wlilest circle of truth. In the realm of the physical the du ration of life depends upon maintain ing correspondence between the or ganism nnd Its environment. If either falls the Issue Is denth. The lire or the fish continues while Its Inner vi tality has the supporting ipfluence of the flowing stream. Let Inner vital ity be Impaired, or let the stream run dry. death must follow. In like man ner mnn has a political life when bis soul Interests are awake to poUlcnl surroundings, and when these sur roundings minister to a continued In terest. Let there be a change toward Indifference In the soul of the man, or some separation from political sur roundings, and there Is an end of what we term political life. Man's spiritual life has In It the element of the eternal because bis fellowship Is with the eternnl Ood. Through regen eration the soni of mnn Is made allvo by the life of Ood. , In Christian liv ing the soul of man nbldes In contuct with the living Ood. The conditions of an endless existence are therefore fur nished. The redeemed soul has In It the life of Ood and hns for Its envir onment Ood himself the eternal one. The conditions for both a happy and nn endless experience are therefore furnished through the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Knowledge That I Life. The knowledge of God which con stitutes eternal life Is a personal knowledge. Ood may be known me chanically through his works Just as men may be known thronch the build ings they have erected. Men nmy be known blogrnphlcally In the story of their accomplishments; but this is not the nme as a personal acquaintance. To know Abrnhnm Lincoln as the all thor of the Emancipation rroehimn tlon Is a way of knowing him, but he was known In ft better nnd personnl way by soldiers who received his par don when through excessive weariness thev fell asleep on sentry duty. To know tiod Is to rejoice In his father hood ntid to feel the thrill of sonshlp through faith In Jesus Christ. Immor tality Involves an endless blessedness In the knowledge of Ood. Human pa rents are powerless to prolong the lives of their children. The eternal God Is Lord of life. The risen Christ will never withdraw his supporting Ufo from the redeemed soul. "He that hnth the son hnth the life; he that hath not tho son of Ood hnth not the life." no matter what else he may hnve in world knowledge or culture. Rejoice Alway. Cheerfulness honors religion. It nrocliilms to the world we serve owl Master. It Is a friend to grace; It puts the heart in tune to praise God. Uucl.eerful Christians, like the spies, bring an evil report of the good land; others suspect there Is some thing unpleasant In religion that they who profess It hnng their harps upon the willows, nnd walk so de jectedly. Bo serious, yet cneerrui, "Kejolco In the Lord alway." 4 mm. mm I ea 1 1 8afety. The Christian Is Insured against dnncer. Of course, what the world egnrds as harm may como to him, but nothing can really harm him; nothing can Injure .he only thing he can tnke out of this world Into the next world, bis character. f - ' i f"k a- ; A ENFORCING THE LAW. Amusing stories are being told by London newspuper correspondent con cerning the cnrrylng out of the "no treating" orders Issued by Hie British board of control. On one occasslou two detectives nttired as dockers vis ited a Liverpool house. One of them ordered "two pints" and tendered money In payment. The hurtimn brought the drinks nnd the change, whereupon he was Informed that he had broken the law. "Not u bit of It. replied the npron-wearcr, "you ordered two piiUs, nnd I'm going to aland here and see you drink them .vourneir. A New Brighton "public" was the scene of this story: Three men en tered and ona of them ordered am! nnld for three bottles of stout. The burnmid brought the bottles un corked ami one glass. On being asked for two more glasses she politely In timated that the man who ordered the three bottles must drink thein, and thnt she had nothing to do with his companions. HIGH COMMERCIAL 8TANDING. A few years ago a commission came over from Germany to Investigate the causes of the industrial supremacy of the United States. In their report they asserted that the victories of American trade are largely due to the fact that for thirty years children in the public schools have been taught the evils of Intoxicating drink, and that In more than 400 lines of Indus try no man could secure employment If be were known to be addicted to Intoxicating beverages. It might be added that the laws In all the states requiring scientific temperance Instruction In the publlo schools are the result of persistent work on the part of the Woman's Christian Temperance union. BEER AND GRAIN. Germans are beginning t chafe against the liberty granted to the brew er to waste grain, while the consump tion of bread Is restricted and cattle are grudged their usual sustenance. Dally S.VH0 hundredweight of barley are wasted by Germans In producing beer. To make a litre of beer nearly half a pound of barley Is required, nnd some Germans drink five litres a day. One writer sums up the case against the beer drinker in. these trenchant words: "Whoever drinks beer during the war takes away a piece of bread from his fellow man, robs his people of meat and butter and deprives our children, our sick and wounded of the milk and eggs so nec essary." FEW GUESTS IN WORKHOUSE. The city of Wheeling, W. Va., has been maintaining a nice, comfortable workhouse, where three square meals were served every day. It now ap pears that it may have to be closed. In February it had but nine inmates. Formerly at that time of year it has had from ninety to one hundred. "The lack of patronage is blamed entirely upon the absence of saloons," says a West Virginia paper. "The floaters that formerly accepted the entertain ment of the city at the workhouse, it is declared, give the city the go-by now because the saloons are gone, while the old rounders who used to make extended visits have left for other less arid communities." HE SET THE PACE. In 1S!)9 Secretary of the Navy Long forbade the sale or Issue of liquor to enlisted men. All that Secretary Dan lels did was to extend the rule to offi cers, "taking the step upon the offi cial recommendation of the surgeon general of the navy." Tills policy that was to make the United States ta "laughing stock" of the nntlons was "followed within the year by all oth er world powers." MORE PERSONS EMPLOYED. The city of Cambridge, Mass., has been for many years a no-llcense city, The Mansion house at East Cambridge In license days was a roadhouse, the bar its chief feature employing seven persons. After Cambridge voted "No," and continued to do so, the place became the home of the Man sion House Ice Cream company, which today employs over 45 per sons. GOOD SALOON UNKNOWN. "What about good saloons? I never heard of one. My honest opinion on that subject, and I don't think I miss the truth very much, is that the good saloon, and the better saloon is the worse saloon, and the best saloon is the worst saloon. The good saloon sows the seed, the bad saloon cul tivates the crop, and the devil reaps the harvest." Father C. P. Baron. ASHAMED OF HIS VOTE. Standing before 000 members of the Seattlo Commercial club, Mayor GUI nald to a cheering crowdi of business men: "I voted wet nnd am ashamed of It. In six months I haven't had a woman In my ofllce crying and saying that her husband hnsn't turned In any money. I have not had one since the first of January. There used to be four or five a day." ASHAMED OF ITS CUSTOMERS. The saloon Is ashamed of its best customers. GOOD PLACE TO LIVE IN. A big liquor dealer of Tortlaud, Ore gon, Shortly before the state went dry, moved his liquor saloons to Ran Fran cisco, but he bought a flue home for his fumlly In rortlnnd. Even a Uquoi man realines that a dry city Is a good place In which to live. LIQUOR MEN BARRED. Twelve million men belong to over COO fraternal orders In the United States which have passed laws exclud ing saloonkeepers, bartenders, etc, from membership. MlMriONAL SMMIOOL LESSON 1 By E. O. 8EIXEH8. Actinic Director ol the Sunday School ourae ct ma momiy nihln Irmtittlte. C'hlt'RKO.) (Copyright. 16, Wntcrn NcwepP"r Union.) LESSON FOR AUGUST 13 THE GRACE OF LIVING. LK880.N TKXT-II Cor. 9. rwn T1I.-W Tl'VT-lti all tl-.lncs t tav you an exumple, that no laboring ye oiiKhl a kMn ttiA wi-uk. nnd to remember the worda of the Itrd Jcnus, that he lilmsell paid. It Is more blessed to Klve man to receive. -Acts 2U:Si. Paul's letters to the cburcb In Corinth are n divine commentary upon church iroveriunent. A stricter aa- herence to the principles enunciated mill a clearer Interpretation or tnose principles to the church of Jesus Christ would save us from many errors unu heartaches. In this rich nnd populous nation the lesson for consideration to day Is most vital, for It concerns one of the fundamental principles which unilerly the progress or imuiKinu ua well as the kingdom of God. 1. Cheerful Glvina (vv. 1-7). One of the dangers assailing the early nris t in ii church was that of division be tween the Jewish nnd Gentile believ ers. One party suggested that the Gentiles ought to have a closer union with the Jews; on the other lutnil, cer tain Gentiles could not see the necessi ty of the Jewish ceremonial, and In this Paul agreed with them, anil there fore thev refused to assume any un necessary burden. The great feasts at Jerusalem were crowded with pll crlms. both Jews and Jewish Chris linns. The pilgrims were often very poor, nnd fatigue must have fostered diseases. Here then was a place where n work of ministry to the needy itiiL'lit he done with tlio money wine bad been systematically gathered through the weekly contributions of Christian believers. Note how skiu fully Paul appealed to these Colin ihlnns. He recognizes their forward ness of mind nnd their zeal (vv. 1 and Am. R.l. Most delicately does lie compliment them upon their work, for, said he, "I glory in your behalf. lie desired their collections to be a matter of bounty, and not of covetous- ness or extortion. Paul 8 principle oi 'iviiiL' is that t shall tie a matter oi ... . . free niid beneficent clfts. not a mutter of covetous creed : not n quid pro quo lie says that they who sow sparingly shall roup sparingly. In the spirit of pouring out a bless liiir mum others, those who sow nounu ftillv shall rean also bountifully. Giv lug is sowing. Small, indeed, will be the harvest of many professed Chris linns when they reap according ns 1hev have given. True giving begins with the tmrnose of the heart (v. D but what a man purposes In his henrt lie must carry out in his actions, not "of necessity" that Is, because be is forced to. God loves the cheerful, glad elver who delights to see his hunt earned money going out of his own pocket Into that of his needful brother. II. The Results of Giving (vv. 8-15). Tho law of reaping according to the seed we sow nnd of reaping in propoi tlon to the quality and quantity of the seed sown Is ulso to be supplemented bv the law of the necessity or s.s tninntle rrlvinir fSee I Cor. ld:2). One of the sweetest and most cheerful and Inspiring promises of the Bible Is found In verse 8 or tins section, "Ood is able." He Is able to make all e i-ii eo abound, nnd be does this "to the bountiful giver." Nothing more surely limits the measure of grace thnt we receive than our penurious, nig gardly giving (Phil. 4:1! and context). This irlvlne of grace Is "In order that ye always having all sufficiency In all thlnes may abound unto every good work." God's abundant grace Is be stowed upon us thnt we may work for others, nnd ve abounding, suliicient lives In everything. How poor Indeed our lives must appear when measured bv the standard of this verse. Literal ly this Is "hilarious giving." God loves the full-souleiL hilarious giver who gives time nnd money. Such giving Is like unto Gods giving, who gave nis onlv beirotten sou. If we sow as God provides, he will multiply the seed for sowing und increase the rrults or our righteousness. If we do not sow, he will cense to suntilv. This liberality will work through us to others und thanksgiving to God on the nnrt of those who receive (V. 11, u V.). Such giving ubounds to his honor and glory through the many thnuks L'lvliiL's which It will occasion (Heb i:i:1.r). The more we give, the more God will increase our power to give, nnd in this way we will be enriched In everything unto . all liberality (Prov. 11 :U4--5). Tho church In Jerusalem, when the saints of Corinth hail given nrmif Itv the ministration to their neea would L'lorifv Cod for the obedience of the saints in Corinth and their confes sion of the gospel of Christ, and also for the liberality of their contribution unto them (v. 111. H. V.). They would rennv the r ueneroKity wltn pruyer tv. 14, R. V.) and they would long after them by reason of the grace or uou which was In them. Paul's words about our giving with thanksgiving to God for his unspeak able gift (See Ch. 8:0) the unspeak able gift of God, Jesus Christ (John 8:16; Bom. 8:32) is an exhortation to us. Nothing should so move us to give to others as tho thought of what God has given of bis very best and dtarest for us. The Sunday school, us the training school of the church, ought to give In struction not alone In salvation truth nnd life teaching, but alio In systematic giving. Train the children early to give to the church a portion of their substance, and they will learn to love it nnd support It In the years to come Persistent practice Is the secret of mastery here as In everything else. We say: "When a rich man dies he leaves all his wealth behind him," True, but It Is nlso true that we change into the currency of the coun try to which we are going the gifts which we have given here. APART FROM WORLD DWELLERS IN ARCTIC CIRCLE LEAD SECLUDED LIVES. Know Nothing of What Transpires Be yond the Narrow Limits of Their ' Own Territory Warfare a Thing Undreamed Of. Battle history halts at the arctic circle. Beyond that human life Is so difficult to sustain that Its willful waste is unthinkable. The Lapps und Samoyeds of arctic ltussln, like tho Es kimos of North, America und Green land, are so often compelled In times of dearth and famine to sacrillce their aged weaklings that this form of death has become a vague religion nnd so cial principle with them. The armies of the great while czar, like those of the king-emperor, are not recruited in such distant places; In deed, the men are of such meager stature and Intellect that n military training Is next to Impossible cer tnlnly not a thing to be thought of In the days of a great campaign, Pear son's Weekly observes. The population of arctic Russia, both In Asia and In Europe, outside the of ficial and mercantile classes, contains few elements which are truly Slavonic, hut In the minds of Insular Britons the reputation of arctic dwellers pertain to nil the people living in Siberia, which Is always portrayed ns a .land of Ice and snow and unhealthy marsh. The Siberian battalions, which hnve won so great n fame In the Russian cnmpnlgus, are drawn mainly from territory ns near the equator us Great. Brltuln. It Is undeniable that their winters nre terribly severe, but In the hot summer crops of the utmost value can be sown, ripened and harvested It Is not Impossible to lead a robust life In the Siberia of military Russia, The real natives of the Arctic tan endure hunger nnd fatigue can mutch In their own fashion through hiirrl enne and blizzard but their value. Is rather to the explorer of the Inhospi tnhle North than to the soldier. As hunters they nre wonderfully clever, yet they nre curiously formal In ad ministering the coup de grace. They will apologize to the fierce white hear which they have cornered before advancing to a close attack with bone-tipped nrrows and spears, a duel In which the odds seem decisively on the benr's destroying the man. They nre therefore not cowards in any sense, and few British sportsmen would risk their lives against bear nnd wolf and walrus protected only by futile weap ons nnd their own personal dexterity. How goes the news of war to these arctic dwellers? Most casually and slowly, without n doubt. There nre colonies In the fro wn North which have not yet bean of the Russo-Japanese war. nnd cer tainly have no knowledge of the pies cut war. Thev are free from national duties and taxation, and their Intercourse even with fur trailers of blood alien to their own. Is meager Indeed. There re dialects sunken by these tribes which have never been Interpreted am never reduced to writing, and thel Ideas of the great world outside the tundras and steppes are very crude. A generation may pass before the story of the grand duke's great cam puign filters north, nnd even then will be incomprehensible to persons to whom n crowd of even a hundred human beings would he n marvel. Now anil again a stray whaler or explor log ship comes within sight of the shore camps, and n little barter by means of 'signs Is carried on. but the Inland dwellers hnve not even this communication with the outside world. For Pleasure and War. As nn indirect result of the valu able service rendered by wwer bonis during the conflict abroad, some little attention has been nroused in this country to the udrisuhtllty of organiz ing a "mosquito fleet" for mine patrol nml scouting duties. A plan contem plating the registration of all pleasure craft of this kind so that they might be available for service In nn event of war, has even been proposed. Of lute, however, another step bus been taken In this direction which is particularly significant und Interesting. According to Popular Mechanics Magazine, sev: erul Easterners are having "scout boats" built for their private use. These have been designed by naval architects, and nre not merely suit able, but In part equipped, for naval purposes, nnd would be prnt.tict.lly ready for Immediate use If necessity should ever require that they be turned over to the navy department. War Brings Autos to Crow Indians. The British nre anxious to secure good horses for use In the present war, and they are buying large num bers from the Crow Indians. The Crows are the wealthiest of the northern Indian tribes nnd their horses nre the best. The British are paying good prices to the tribe, each horse fetching SIM). It has become quite a craze to sttend the money thus obtained In buying motor cars. Kven the poorest Crow possesses from ten to twelve horses. At the first opportunity he sells these and buys a car. During the Boer war the British army purchased thousands of the In dian ponies. The nnlmuls were light, hut strong, and capable of great en durance. With the money from their ponies, the Crows Invested In thor oughbred stallions and marcs, finally possessing a remarkably tine strain. Messages $1 a Word. The Society Islands, fur away In th? South sens, now have a wireless com munication with the outer world, a radio station having been opened by the Trench government on the Island of Tahiti last winter. Communlcntlon with tbe United States will be by way of Samoa and New Zenland, und thence by cnblo to San Francisco. It Is expected that the cost of messages to the United States will eiceed $1 a word. Later on It Is hoped to reduce this more thnn half by sending tbe message! over an all-wireless route. "Dark Lightning." The expression "dark lightning" teems to he paradoxical. As a matter af fact dark lightning Is a product of the laboratory. In the development of camera plates that have been exposed fo lightning Hashes some of the streak Images nre reversed, litis is thought to be due to overexposure. Prints made from the negatives show the strenks as dark lines, hence the ex- resslon "dark lightning." 'J he path of a lightning Hash Is rrequeniiy sinn ed by wind. The action of the wind ppears to broaden the line or light ning until It resembles a ribbon. J he uniform broadening along the entire length of a lightning flash has proba bly never been observed. RED, ROUGH, SORE HANDS May Be Soothed and Healed by Use of Cuticura. Trial Free. Nothing so soothing and healing for red, rough and Irritated bands as Cuti cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. Soak hands on retiring In hot Cuticura soapsuds. Dry, and gently anoint bands with Cuticura Ointment. A one-night treatment works wonders. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address poBtcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere Adv. IU Class. 'Gladys 'explained the reason she couldn't dance with me was because she had sprained Iter ankle." 'And you believed such a lame ex cuse?" A firm name sometimes Indicates business Infirmity. Don't Poison Baby. FORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must hava PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it alivp. These drugs will prodtico sleep, and a FF.W DROPS TOO MANY wUl produce the SLEEP FROM- WUICH THERE 13 NO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or who health has been ruined for life by paregoric, lauda num and morphine, each of which is a nurcotio product of opium. Druggist, are prohibited from selling either of the narcotics named to children at all, or ?o anYbody without labelling them poiaon." The definition cf narcotw" U : "A medicine u-hich rdievtt pain and product tlerp, but which in jrwaon- . j...... v mtunnr yimi. rontrtJtioni ana death. ine tame ana ,. !.... mm t,. s i. ,m..i Astoria CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears of Chas. 11. Fletcher. (Jenulne Castorla always bears the HAVE TWO QUEER SCARFPINS How the Chinese Employ Bright Plum age of Birds in Works of Art. (iovernor Brumbaugh and Col. Louis J. Kolli are wearing the most unusual scurfplns In Pennsylvania. I have not seen anything quite so thoroughly oriental since I wus In China, says a Philadelphia Ledger writer. That Is where the piece tie resistance of these two pins cnine from. You have doubtless seen beutitlfiilly decorated enamel watch cases anil whatnots. Well, the Chinese artists do their coloring and decorating with the bright feathers of birds. 1 saw them at Hint sort of work in Canton pasting the tiny pieces of feathers with camel's hairbrushes upon metal nnd glass and Ivorv. Colonel Kolb recently bought some very hnniNyine pieces from an Amer ican art collector and he hud two si-arfplns mounted on gold. The ori ental work in both Is identical, and consists of two brilliantly-colored birds upon a Held as big as a clinic, niiil all made from the feathers of real humming birds. 1 was told In China by the men tanking similar articles that If pro tected the color In a bird's feather would not fade In a thousand years. Colonel Kolb gave one of bis pin to the governor. There would be no objection to boys being boys If they would only he men nfter they get to be men. No matter how greai a philosopher a man may be. be can't figure out bow he happened to gel married. smell OI meuioinea i-uuuiuuns -'-ft , , , . . of Drops," Cordials," " Soothing Syrups," etc You should not permtt any medicine to be given to your children without you or your physician know Three Words To Your Grocer "New Post Toasties" will bring a package of breakfast flakes with a delicious new corn flavour flakes that don't mush down when milk or cream is added, nor are they "chaffy" in the package like the ordinary kind. These New Poit Toaities are manufactured by a new process using quick, intense heat which raises tiny bubbles over each flake, the distinguishing character istic. And the new process also brings out a new corn flavour, never tasted in corn flakes of the past Try a handful dry they're good this way and the test will reveal' their superior flavour. But they're usually served with milk- or cream. New Post Toasties . for tomorrow's breakfast Sold by Grocers everywhere. RELIABLE REMEDY RESTORES KIDNEYS For many years druggliti have' wtch4 with much interest the remarkable reoors maintsined by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, the grest kidney, liver sod bladder rear It is physician prescription. Swsmp-Koot is strengthening medi cine. Dr. Kilmer used it for years in bif private practice. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do tbe work nature in tended tbey should do. Bwamp Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit ani i'. will help you. No other remedy caa successfully tske its place. Be sure to get Swsmp Root end start treatment at once. However, if you wih first to test til great prrpsration send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Ititiglmmton, N. Y., (or sample bottle. When writing be sure mention this paper. Adv. Highly So. Grubbs lias old GiHliaiu s-.rcor4 for activity dining the war? . Stubbs You bet he bus! Why, lie) was so active he eluded the recruiting, officers throughout the whole pi-rloa of that struggle. Richmond Times Dispatch. Nothing Relieves Tender, Aching Feel like a hot foot bath with Johnson's Foot Soap. Composed of Borax, Brun ani Iodine. At Druggists or sent postpaid for 2.'c by Thos. Gill Soap Co., 711 Kent Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Adv. , Prescription for Poverty. "Social Insurance" may be u cure of poverty, but the real remedy Is steady Job and thrift. 4tyiilflH and soil does rur the signature , a .fJjL&TJtTfTA signature of WtVZ JZCSUK CLOCK HOLDS SHIP'S SAFETY Chronometer Is the Most Wonderful and Accurate Timekeeper Made. A ship's chronometer Is the mo wonderful and accurate timekeeper made, for upon Its accuracy dept-nt the lives of all on hoard. So accurate.. Indeed, Is a ship's chronometer that It does not vary a second u day. An error of only a few seconds Uiuj pin a captain of u vessel miles out cf his reckoning at sea, anil run the shiy Into great danger. For that reuaoa every ship's timepiece goes throat;', the most thorough tests before it Ul pronounced perfect. It Is set going in a very hot room nml then transferred to a cold one, for it nmy he used In any part of tit world, from the polar regions to the tropics, and It must always keep gooi time. Most large vessels hnve three chro nometers on board In case of accidents, and whenever a vessel goes Into port they are sent on shore ami tested t see if they are still accurate. On bonr ship the chi'unoiiictcr Is kept nmidsbif because there is the least motion an4 the smallest variation of temperature, England Uses Repulped Paper. We are living In ramaikable day. The shortage of paper has resulted It the repulpiugof paper that already Inif been used, .line of the effects Is that ceiiuin Id! cis which seem to buv been more deeply impressed than their fellows survive the process and coin to light in unexpected nnd Inconse quent places. We meet with an "o" here anil an "h" there which have ne sort of relationship to the otherwl blank shew. London tilobe. 1 under the name V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers