(I THB 7T7LT0M COUHTY ITCW8, McCOlfHZLLfBUlO, PA. i i I f ! I i MARKET REPORT. ' COBREOTKD IVKBY WEDNESDAY. The ireln murkeu re ,'J!JI!S ' nburf dily newtpapere. The jwwn , ';' GRAIN Wheal ll00 I!ew whet I-00 l'-rn 175 torn 1-00 OaU 6S Kye; 11s PROVISIONS Ham per lb 8 Shoulder 16 3acen. Sides per lb U Poiatoei, per bushel 1-5 Butter, Creamery 32 Butter, Country 28 Ecrs, per doxen 34 Lard, oer B, 13 LlreCaWei, per Dk .9 Chickens. Der lb ... 15 Advertising keeps on talking at hours when the merchant and his clerks are oft duty. William Brewer, of the Cove had the misfortune to lose a val uable horse last week. So far no one has proposed that the United States must buy Greenland in order to protect the North Pole. Miss Mamie Hoke entertained a number of her friends at din ner a few days ago and at lunch eon, the day following. ' Mrs. C. B. Stevens entertain ed a large company of her friends last week one section Thursday afternoon and another, Friday evening. There will be preaching servi ces at Bethany Church at Big Cove Tannery, Sunday evening at 7 o'clock. Subject: "The Cross of Christ." All are wel come. Mrs. Margaret Schooley, after having spent two months with her daughter Mrs. Shotts, at Tylersburg, Pa., returned to her home near Harrisonville last week. HIDES. Frank B. Sipea pays the highest market price for beef hides at tbeir butcher hop in McConnellsburg, alar highest price paid for calf skins sheepskins and tallow. Advertisement. Mr. Bryan Mellott was in town Monday. His sale last week ad vertised in the News was very satisfactory, and Mr. Mellott ex pects to remove to Ohio about the middle of February. Mr. and Mrs. L B. Mellott and son Paul and daughters Helen, and Nellie Arlene spent Wed nesday night in the home of Mr 3. Mellott's sister, Mrs. George C. Mellott, East Market Street Mrs. J. D. Cutchall and daugh ter Elva, of Hustontown, made a trip to McConnellsburg Monday in a sleigh. With the exception of more or less water in the road in places, the sleighing was good. The magazines claim that they should have low rates of postage because they are popular educat ors, and they proceed to prove it by putting red and yellow pic tures of pretty girls on their covers. The Misses Virginia and Bertha Tritle entertained about forty or fifty, of their friends at their home in Ayr township on Friday evening of last week. . "We just had a grand time" is what every body is saying that was there. Last Saturday's Public Opinion Bays that Miss Rose Fisher was taken very ill with acute indiges tion' while at the home of A. L. Metz in Chambersburg last Thurs day. On Friday evening she was better, but still at the Metz home. Rev. and Mrs. Will R. Truax and son Roy, and their son-in-law and -daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mellott and John H. Strait all of Pieplant Ridge, took advantag of the good sled ding to make a trip to McCon nellsburg last Thursday. All applications for liquor li cense were refused by Judge Charles Corbett in Jefferson coun ty laBt week. This is the second year the Judge has refused all applications in that county. This is offset, however, by the fact that 1090 licenses were grant, ed in Schuylkill county. Dayton Mellott, of Edenville, Franklin County who resides on the farm purchased from former county commissioner, John F. Gelwicks, is recovering from a severe attack of illness. Mr. Mellott will retire from farming in the Spring and will have pub lie sale of his personal proper' y on February 21. . Wanted, Fer Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, Etc RATES One cent per word for each Insertion. No advertisement accepted (or less than 15 cents. Cash must ac company order. Fon Sale Uolstem Bull Calf, week old, well bred. Geo. K. Nel son, Big Cove. Fou Sale: Surrey, good as new, at bargain price. Owner having a car, has no use for it. J. H Kendall. Foil Sale: Two pure bred Jersey Heifers and onepure bred Bull weight about 1200. Will Ball at a reasonable price. D. M. Black, Three Springs, Pa. For Sale: Good Thrush and Stough Fallintr Top Buggy, good curtain-, lap apron, and good sin gle harness. Bargain to quica buyer. Inquire at this office Wanted! Wanted! Wanted 8000 bushels ear corn at ? I 00 per bu. cash. Rye want ed at $1.00 per bu. cash. Pota toes at $1.50 per bu. trade. llAUttY E. Huston, 1 18 4U Saltillo Pa. Daily Papers Two Cents Beginning Monday, January 29 tb, the price of all daily papers will be advanced to two cents per :opy to regular subscribers. For advanced payment subscrip tion rates, h quire, B. F. Shimek. It Sale Register. Friday, February 16, John W. Car mack intending to quit farm ing will sell at his residence on what is known as the Downey farm in Taylor township, horses, cattle, hogs, farm implements, grain, household goods, etc. Sale begins at 9 o'clcck sharp. Credit 12 months. J. M. Ches- nut, auct. Closing Out Sale. The undersigned intending to close out his stock of Groceries, Confections, Tobaccoes, Fixtures Etc., will positively sell at whole sale or retail, his entire stock. Come in and buy one ounce or fifty pounds, and buy at and be low cost. Here's a rare chance to get bargains. Good to Feb ruary 8th. 1 4 6t. Chas. F. Scott. Notice. Notiee is hereby given, that af ter thirty days from the date of this notice viz: January 25, 1917, the County Commissioners ol Fulton County, Pa , will direct the Constable of each township and borough in the said County to bill all dogs not wearing a li cense tig for 1917, and all unli censed dogs tound therein. F. M. Lodge, Chas. W. Schooley, A. K. Neshit, 1 25 17 St. Commissioners. Substitutes for Shoe Leather While the consumer is lament ing the high price of 8hoe3 the manufacturer are considering ways and means of preventing a still further increase in price. The National Boot and Shoe Man ufacturers' Association, which has been in session in New York has been considering the use of substitutes for leather to check the advance in the price of shoes and "to preserve a just balance in the cost of materials." It is suggested that fiber soles and heels can be used to advantage in a majority of all the shoes made. Cloth tops can be used to replace leather. It is explain ed that cloth has not hitherto been used extensively in uppers for shoes because leather has been cheap and the necessity for the fabrics did notjexist. The first thought of consumers will be that some manufacturers have already been using substi tutes for leather in the manufac ture of shoes if we are to judge anything by the rapidity with which shoes wear out. But there is no denying the fact that the cost of the material with which shoes are manufactured has ad vanced enormously. It is quite probable that ' reduction in the hours of labor and increases in wages will add to the cost of shoes in 1917. Unprecedented prosperity seems to be a pretty serious thing tor the American DeoDle and 'ome of them will feel greatly relieved when we get upon a nor mal basis. There's nothing to be gained by nursing a grouch. It will not help your business. It will not help you. Be a BOOSTER for your own business, anyway. We are boosting for our business in a modern way right now. We don't expect all the business but we want more busi ness. We have built up a good strong creditable bank. The more patrons we have, the stronger our bank will become. We need your business. We want you to do business with this bank. But this is only one side of the question our side. We can help you, also. We safeguard your funds! We offer you every accommodation afforded by any reliable bank. It's to your ad vantage as well as ours to make our bank your bank. We have built up our business by boosting our own business. The business man who has a grouch is knocking his own business. Come in and talk business over with us. We are always glad to exchange ideas. FULTON COUNTY BANK. Billy Sunday as a Model. Scoffers and skeptics at the Billy Sunday'u evangelistic work must be affected by the figure of his results. Even on the ba sis of the crowds drawn, it is an amazing spectacle, without para llel in history. An attendance of a million and a half in eleven weeks preaching at Boston, has nothing like it in Christian tradi tion. The ordinary Christian preach er has a lot to learn from Billy. That does not mean that he must pound the table, mount up on the desk, swing chairs, or sling slang like Mr. Sunday. Sunday has a certain natural physical grace that makes his antics a natural expression of his nervous and passionate utterance. Anyone who tries to imitate him simply makes himself grotesque. Wherever Billy goes clergymen flock to hear him. They do well to study his methods. They can distinguish many methods used by Billy that the most dignified preacher can usefully employ in his pulpit For one thing Billy is tremen dously lucid. His language is clear cut, direct, straight to the point Me draws his illustrations and ideas from every day life, from much contact with men and things. Different types of char acter, different courses of con duct, are graphically described and separated from each othet with absolute clarity. The hear er leaves one of Billy's taberna cles with certain positive impres sions that stick in his mind. No man makes a great popular appeal unless he does acquire this habit of clear, lucid, graphic utterance. Many clergymen sur round their subjects with a hazy fog of speculation and philosophy The best intentions and the most spiritual desires often fail to get over as they say in the theatres. Birthday Surprise. A very pleasant surprise was sprung on Mrs. Frank Bowser at her home South Richard Street, Bedford last Friday evening in honor of her birthday. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cessna, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Leffert, Mrs. Henry Arnold, Mrs. Ida Pepple, Mrs. George Hert Mrs. Percy Mock, Mrs. Ella Little, Mrs, Frank Mann, Mrs. Thos. Easter, Mrs Thos. O'Shea Mrs. Frank Mock, Mrs. Nick Mautters, Misses Marie Dren ning, June Price, Mary O'Shea, Bertha Miller, Mary Easter, Effie Fetter, Maude O'Shea, Mary Leader, Lillian Little, Christina Leader, Florence Little, Helen O'Shea, Louise Cessna, Haze) Mautter.and Messrs Fred Cessna, Raymond Little, Bernard Feight and Fred Baylor. It is needless to say it was a joyous occasion and Mrs. Bowser would be almost willing to have two birthdays a year if they would all he as pleasant as this. Legalettes A bank is liable for the loss if it pays a check on a depositor's account which was forged or raised in the absence of gross negligence of the depositer. A man may marry a girl in this. State if his mother and her mother are cousins. The Penn sylvania law prohibits the mar riage of first cousins, but not cousins of more distant degree. A wife cannot cut her husband out of his share in her estate un less he has not supported her for one year or upward. The hus band could elect to take against the will. A child can be entirely disinherited and it is not neces sary to leave it one dollar or aiy other sum. BE A BOOSTER. GEORGE A. HARRIS, President. C. R. SPANGLER, Vice-President. Cleaning Spotted Clothing Nothing is more necessary to the long life and appearance of clothes than the removal of spots which may appear from time to time and which are almost inev itable even it the case of the most careful individual. The home economies extension staff of the. Pennsylvania State College school of agriculture and station suggests two ways of re moving grease spots one by absorbing and the other by dis solving. Magnesium, fuller's earth, starch or French chalk may be used for absorbing spots. The spots should be covered with powder and blowing paper placed underneath the material and over the powder. A warm iron placed on the upper blotter will draw the grease out into the powder. When the powder is removed the garment should be brushed thoroughly. For dissolving grease spots, gasoline, ether, alcohol or chloro form may be used. A soft blotting paper is placed under the spot and the dissolving agent applied with a soft cloth. Light rubbing hastens the dissolving process and prevents the grease from set tling on the edges. Before an attempt is made to remove any spot, all dust should be brushed out, as it is likely to form a dark ring. Mending Trousers. One of the readers of The Sun day School Times sent this story for use in The Illustration Round Table, a department of that pa per conducted by the readers themselves. The department evi dently furnishes very practical illustration, and right , to the point "Two pastors' wives, alleges the Western Christian Union, were visiting together. One mid: T don't know what we will do my husband is so discour aged. Somehdw his people dc not care to hear him preach, and our salary is far behind. My husband feels so blue that he does not like to visit the people and pray with them, and so he sits around at home nearly all the time.' The other sister said: 'We are getting along fine. My husband spends much of his time visiting, and the people like to have him kneel and pray with them in their homes. Our con gregation are always good, am our salary is paid up promptly.' While the two sisters were talk ing they were mending trousers. One was mending her husband's trousers at the seat, the othei was mending her husband's trous ers at the knees." Sweeping Decision In the most sweeping of all decisions upholding prohibition laws, the supreme court had up held as constitutional and valid the Webb-Kenyon law prohibit ing shipments of liquor from "wet" to "dry" states. It also sustained West Virginia's recent amendment to her law prohibit ing importation in interstate com merce of liquor for personal use. After having been vetoed by President Taft who held it uncon stitutional and having been re passed by congress over his veto the law was sustained by the su preme court by a vote of 7 to 2. Leaders of the prohibition move ment declare it is to their fight second only in inportance to the propossd constitutional amend ment. Lawyers for liquor inter ests who heard the decision today admitted it upheld and applied the law "in its fullest sense." Naval Careers for Young Men The death of Admiral Dewey concentrates attention on one of the great naval careers of Amer ican history. As our young men read the dramatic story of George Dewey's life, with its thrilling climax at Manila Bay, a great many of them will be fired with the ambition to enter this career. If the United States should be drawn into war, a great many young men now obscure would in a day become figures of his tory. Those who long for money mak ing will not choose navy life. Republics are ungrateful, and most of our heroes have never received much financial reward. But there are many solid ad vantages in a naval career. The strict discipline of these little kingdoms on shipboard produces a very self controlled and well ordered type of character. The navy men are alert mentally, and erect physically and morally. Their drills makes them quick thinkers. Any family with a naval officer among its boys is prouder of him than of the money makers who stay at home and enter business. Naval officers say that the navy has more democratic spirit than the army. The various grades of the shipboard life meet in close quarters and artificial distinc tions could not live long. American sentiment had de cided that an increase of our navy is necessary in these times of world anarchy, and we need many bright young fellows in our ships. They- should note that Dewey's great achievement was not due to any luck or chance but to the fact that he had pre pared himself for a historic em ergency by a life of incessant industry, study, and technical skill. The Kissing Germ Again If you are of a warm and affec tionate nature; if you have the inveterate habit of breaking into osculatory expression of your joy or enthussasm, you must make a heroic effort to conquer that practice during these days f uncertain weather. If you don't exercise the most rigid self-control in the matter of "this abominable habit of in discriminate kissing," you will either infect with or be infected by the horrid little old germ of cold in the head. An eminent London docter says so and this doctor knows. "Kissing," says the doctor, "is one of the most frequent causes of infection in cases of cold in the head. "Women with a bad cold think nothing of kissing their own or anybody's else children. They think little of the chances of in fecting the child with thejr own ailment although they know that there is nothing more nagging disagreeable than a cold in the head, which lowers the system and makes a person susceptible to more serious troubles." It is the same way with influ enza, this doctor affirms. "A woman who is suffering with influenza will ask her friends to come in and cheer her up, in spite of the fact that influenza is one of the most highly infectious diseases known. " Influenza has not a friend in the world and every county tries to make out that it is a native of some other country. In Russia it is called Siberian fever, and in Siberia Chinese fever. In France it has been called Spanish catarrh and Spain returns the compliment by calling it Russian fever." Babicnbe tor the Nkwp. WILSON L. NACE, Cashier. ROBERT G. ALEXANDER, Teller. Racket Store FLASH LIGHTS. We have gone into the flash light business stronger than ever. The more you buy of these goods, the cheaper you can buy them, and the cheap er you can sell them. So we have bought the quantity and can save you some money. We are selling a 6 1-2 inch 2-cell, Ever-ready flash light at 59c. complete; others,1 at 65, 76 85,90c, SSl.CT, $1.25, 51 40 and $2.00, and. the best batteries 2-cell, 25c; 3-cell, 35c. Bulbs, for same at 12c. Why run the risk of fire, when you can buy something that is safe, and will not cost you much more than oil ? Rubbers Ve sure have sold a nice lot of rubbers this year, and have been fortunate in replen ishing our stock, so that we can still sell at old prices. So, Don'tWorryl We can still save you some nice money. We are still selling quite a lot of goods at old prices and will as long as our present stock lasts. Nineteen Years We want to thank vnn for j - w . neSS OVer 1915. We HOW h.1V our gain over 1915 is R523.90, nv " 1 '"p manning yuu.iur me. ne wisn you an a prosperous New Year. Knowing that if you are prosperous if tc lilralit 4-U4 ...Ill ii iJ uivciy mm WC will UC. HULL & BENDER, McConnellsburg, Pa. ON HAND Some Fine Portland Cutters, one Carload New Idea Manure Spreaders, Steel and Rubber-tire Buggies, Plows and Harrows. Hardware, Specialties, Etc. Thankful for Past Favors, and soliciting contin uance of the same, I am yours ' for More Business. J. F. SNYDER, v WHEN IN CHAMBERSBURG be sure to look at our line of Ladies Furs, Assortment will please careful buyers. We sell furs on honor. HENNINGER The Hatter, Chambersburg, Pa. SAFETY LIGHTS Vic light that satjs "Qfiere it fcf YOU need one of these hand electric light plants. It's foolish to motor without one. Fool ish to be without one anywhere, any night. Think of home comfort and get one before dark. Many styles 75c. and up. You get them at the Racket Store. ihp nirp JnPrAiCA In rmr find w III WW I I ivl WtWW III VUI J UJi fvn in hiicinAce Q voire nt Surely this is mcouraging, and Mercersburg. Penh'a. f I M P with that long-lived W k TUNGSTEN Battery Jill UlllllinhnrmmnmnniinTTiTniiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiMiiiiitllllllll'l ; 1 m i ; 1 1 t r i