THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG. PA. L. DOUGLAS "THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE " J.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8 aKVMBii Money by w swing w. uougiai l For sale by over 9000 ahoe dealer. e Known a""" w vvwnu. - I .k nrira u aramned An rtia kt. OURlal name " . i -- w all shoes it the factofy. The value u guaranteed and protected eg unit high prioei for inferior shoes. The fare the xme everywhere. They coat no mora in San ,en they do in New York. They art always wotth the or them. W of W. L Douglas product b guaranteed by more p yean experience in malting fine ahoe. The (mart the leaden in the Faahion Centra of America, nude in well -equipped factory at Brockton, Mais- at paid, willed snoemajcen, unaer me airtction and . of eiperienced men, all working with an honest n to make tne PCX snoaa iot uie pre mat money hoe dealer for Xf. t Bongtaa shoes. If he ran. r too wlih the kind you want, tnke no other tin (or Interesting booklet explaining how lo ( the blgheet standard of quality for the price, all, postage irww. and Id on i nMw. .r s-, .-.ro fZ3$tmM or wj l fBtrvV Shoes !XrrA MJL mnwXw the retau pric. p j 18 Spark St., Brockton, Maas, nda Offers 160 Acres free to Farm Hands i Western Canada Land lo Men Assisting in Maintaining Needed Grain Production nd for farm labor in Canada is great As an inducement ;he necessary help at once, Canada will give IUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES OF VND FREE AS A HOMESTEAD ihe time of the farm laborer, who has filed on the land, to sidence duties, the same as if he actually had lived on it. il concession is the reduction of one vear in the time to luties. Two years' residence instead of three as heretofore, men working on the farms for at least six months in 1917. j for farm help is in no way connected with enlistment r service but solely to increase agricultural output A won Drtunity to secure a farm and draw good wages at the same adian Government will pay all fare over one cent per St Paul or Duluth to Canadian destination. Information ailway rates may be had on application to i JArTRAY, Cor. Walnut and Dread SI., Philadelphia, Pa. L Canadian Comment Aient J do much for others and In posthumous fame. ! KIDNEY MEDICINE THIS RECORD? mdled Dr. Kilmer's Swamp ice we atarted in the drug here ii not a ningle medicine ihat gives at universal tat cur preparation, and those t do not fail to recommend lave tried it. ' Very truly voum, TTSVILLE DRUG CO., f By T. E. Hruce, Prop, j Scottsville, Vs. )imp-Root Will Do For You Bts to Dr. Kilmer & Co., I. Y., for a aample size bot envince anyone. You will i booklet of valuable infor about the kidneys and blad riting, be lure and mention leRulsr fifty-cent and one ttlet for sale at all drug 4 e tiinn who declines to bles seriously. a, carbuncles, dry up and I Doctor Pierce's Golden wry. In tablets or liquid. i Into the hnblt of going four bristles up. f ' s to clean., tht system and live functions. WRIGHTS fAULB PILLS are not only Ho Adv. 5 EM ALL IN END Germ Manifests lits Centenarian About to First Auto Ride. :irat Au one hm one hundred years old, kr, Igny Karlsch, only esolved tlmt they would I Institution for the nged. that had blown the roof Vl'inttora' shnnty was y over the meadows tl. I., where they lived, 'thing to eat. Hut they jp leave their homes Just would be coming soon, f nightdress on nil day llee, for she reckoned fake a lady through the Huhtdress. , Sard a purring sound, 'r, then seemed to stop Mr door. They tottered Vge. sleek automobile, take you for n ride," a I announced. "We're County hosptnl." Kitty In an automobile be- looked at the big car i germ Infected her soul, nnanded, "how fust can t placer New York I I Had Em. t are your terms for 1 tadheats and bums. f very monotonous If It Int amusements. Ileal success consists In achieving satisfaction. If you have Worms or Tapeworm, no doubt you have taken aome kind of "ver mifuge." But did you KM positive results? Take Dr. Peery'e Vermifuge "Dead Shot" and get certain and quick action. Adv. Fools throw kisses, but the men deliver them In person. wise OS EE' GERMAN S U A Valued Household Remedy for Over Half a Century. In our climate, with Us sudden changes of temperature, rain, wind and sunshine often Intermingled In a single day, It Is no wonder that our cliildren, friends and relatives are so' frequently taken from us by neglected colds, many deaths resulting from this cause. A bottle of Boschee's German Syrup kept In the house, and a few doses taken in time, will possibly prevent a severe Ill ness, a doctor's bill, and perhaps death. For fifty years this has been a very successful remedy for roughs, colds, throat or lung troubles. It Induces a good night's sleep with easy expec toration In the morning. For sale by druggists In all parts of the civilized world, 25 and 75 cent bottles. Adv. Youngster at Church. Ills first Sunday nt church : "Maw." "What Is It, Bobby?" ' "Look at that man with a kimono on." "Hush, Bobby. That's the dominie, lie Is in his vestments." "I don't see enny vest on him." "Hush, Bobby." "Say, maw. Look at that man with a pan of money where did he get It?" "That's tHe offertory for the poor and the heathen. Now you must be quiet." (Silence for a moment) "Maw, I wl.sht I wuz a heathen. Say, maw, everybody Is gettln' up and goln' home, nln't they?" "Yes, Bobby, and we must be going, too." "Maw, when they get all the money anybody has they make 'em go home, don't they?" "Bobby, you'll not come to church with me agnln." Richmond Tlmes-Dls- Comfort First Two little girls whose parents were natives of Norway had Just been lis tening to . .eeturer who prulsed the people of that country very highly. "Just think 1 I was born In Nor way!" said one with a good deal cf prldo. "Well," the other answered, "I could have been born there If I'd wanted to, but I thought I'd rather Just be born In America, and then I'd be here." Christian Herald. ''HIJJt'iMtTtlltinMmMMHIIIH. 2 OF THOUSANDS ?0N THOUSAMnc: jfltinr BOYS a GIRLS EAT jrape-Nufcs ID CREAM EVERY JRMItvir dcai icl? ISE MOTHERS KNOW L"Efk A m. mm ii'ieresaKesson The Nemesis of Sin By REV. W. W. KETCHUM Director of Practical Work Courts, Moody Bible Institute, Chicago f fa i TEXT Be sure your aln will find you out. Numbers 82:23. These words were spoken by Moses to the tribes of Iteisjien and Gad when Israel stood on the cast bank of the Jordan ready to cross over Into the promised land. The rcqifest mudo by these two tribes was that they might be permitted to find a home for themselves on the east bank of the Jordan where the fertile plnlns offered abundant pasture for their sheep and cattle. They promised Moses that their Ci'htlng men would cross with the rest of the tribes and help them drive the enemy out of the Innd. Upon this condition Moses grant ed their request and said, "If you fall to keep your promise to help conquer tne lund, be sure your sin will find you out." These words spoken by Moses so long ago are true In all generations. They should be to ult people like the red danger slgnnl that warns the trav eler. God In his mercy flashes these warning words before us, and by them bids us beware of sin. "Will' Find You Out" Note, these words do not say, your sin will be found ont, though that is true. What they say Is, your sin will find you out. That, you see, Is quite a different thing. Something, I fear, most people do not take Into consid eration They are fearful their sin will be found out and so they try to conceal It. But bury sin, never so deep, there will come a time when It will be uncovered, for "the Lord will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts." (I Cor. 4 :0.) Some Bcera to think they can lose their sin down through the years ; that the lapse of time will annihilate It ; but there is an ever-present tense to sin and It always keeps pace with the years. A man's hnlr may have turned grny, his form become bent, and bis step tottering, but the sins of his youth have not been lost They still dog his stops, for as echo follows song, so sin trails on I on I on 1 Neither -can sin be left behind by changing one's dwelling place. Many a man has tried It but never yet has anyone succeeded. Though he has put thousands of miles and oceans wide be tween him and his sin, he hns never gotten away from It, for like Banquos' ghost It cannot be left behind. When least he expects It, It gibbers at him; then thinking to escape It he turns an other way when lo I It greets him there. Sow arid Ye Must Reap. It Is also a law of nature and so a law of God, that whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap. He may think he Is cunning enough to es cape the consequences of his sin, Just as the criminal thinks when he com mits his crime, "others may be caught but not I." O foolish mnnl deceive not thyself. As thou dost sow, so shnlt thou reap. A day of reckoning Is ahead and thou shnlt not then escape the Judgment of God for, "Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before to Judgment; and some men they follow after." (I Tim. 8:24.) But even now our sins find us out Memory, thnt plastic piece of wax upon which everything Is recorded, and from which nothing can je erased, brings before us our- sin, nnd con science, which the Greeks called the whisper of God down the aisles of a man's soul, says, "Thou art the man." Herod, told of the mighty works of Jesus, cried In alarm as memory and conscience did their work, "It Is John the Baptist risen from the dead," and he trembled with fear. Nothing pierces one and lends to despair like an accus ing conscience. Many a man with no other accuser has cried out "My God I I am found out at last I" . Deadly Virus of Sin. Walking down our streets are many who by their halting steps and pallid countenances verify the text Fair once was the body God gave them, sweet and clean, but alas 1 The deadly virus of sin has poured Its foulness through the blood and now they are wrecks physically. Sin has found them out In their bodies, which God Intend ed not for sin, but for temples of the Holy Spirit. But sad as It is to see a body wrecked by sin, Infinitely sndder is It to see a ruined soul. For sin sends Its deadly virus deeper than the body, it sends It Into one's moral being. There Is the place where sin finds one out Con science and memory may fall to do their work now, and perchance the body may escape the defilement of sin, but not so the soul. Sin there is lnex pungeable. It makes us what we are. It has wrought death within, nnd un less we avail ourselves of the grace of God, we shall because of It die eter nally. But God has a way of escape; it Is through his son Jesus Christ upon whom he laid the Iniquity of us all. He Is the only way, "for there Is none other nnme. under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved." (Acts 4 :12.) How then shall we escape being found out by our sin if we neg lect so great a salvation which (Sod by his grace has provided? Great Commandment This Is my commandment, thnt ye love one another, even as I have loved you. ... I soy unto you, , Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them thnt hate' you. , . . And as ye would that men should' do to you, do ye even so to them. Jesus. , IfflDMnONAL Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director 01 the Sunday School Course In the Moody Ulble Institute of Chicago.) (Copyright, 1917. Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR APRIL 29 JESUS WELCOMED AS KINO. LESROV TEXT John 12:12-19. GOLDEN T EXT Blessed la the King of Israel that comcth In the name of the Lord-John 12:13. This lesson marks the beginning of that lust tragic week In the life of our Lord, the most important week In all history slnco creation. The date was probnbly April 1, A. D. 30. I. The Lesson of His Kinship, (w. 12-10). Reading cnrcfully the record of each evangelist, regarding this tri umphal entry, we are still nt a loss fully to describe the scene. It oc curred the day following the supper In the home of Mary and Mnrtha and Lazarus, 1. e. on the Jewish Sabbath. From Bethphage Jesus sent two of his disciples Into Jerusalem to secure the colt. They were to loose him with out asking anyone's permission, nnd bring the ass and her colt to him to whom nil things belong, with no other explanation than, "The Lord hnth need of them" (Matt. 21 :3). This command wns In line with the prophecy (Zoch. 0:0). The young ass was a symbol of pehce, but tho going of the disciples, In obedience to his command, wns an act of faith, and obedience Is the su preme test of dlselpleshlp (John 15:14). In response to their faith, they found everything Just as he said it would be (Luke 10:32). Placing their garments upon the colt (Matt. 21:7) Jesus rode upon it toward the city, the people crying, "Hosnnnn" literally, "Save. I beseech" (Ps. 10:37 40 ; see Luke 10 :38 ; Mk. 11 :0-10 ; Matt. 21 :0). The enthusiasm of the moment wns tremendous. For the moment this great cr wd (Mk. 11:8) believed that Jesus wi s really the Messiah, threw the gnrmeu of their holiday attire In his way (.Vt. 21:8). and cast their palm branch. before him. The Phari sees protesteo Luke 10 :30-40), but the enemies of Jesu.- .'or the moment were Impotent (John j?:10). The Phnrl sees forgot their d,i.'nlty to such an, extent as to get excited along with the multitude, though with another pur pose (See Luke 10:37-40). Unfor tunately the enthusiasm of the peo ple was not long-lived. Many of the same ones were soon crying, "Crucify him" (Ch. 10:14-15). Jesus himself did not Join In the general Joy (Luke 10:41-44), for he, with prophetic eye, saw the outcome (Luke 10:41-44). All the city was stirred as Jesus entered (Matt. 21 :10). When he truly enters a city It Is always stirred. It was not until after the resurrection thnt the disciples of Jesus understood the meaning of this event. They then re called what the prophet, Zochnrlah, had said, and saw In the fulfillment of his prediction the Messiah of whom he spoke. II. The Lesson of Reverence (vv. 17 10.) It Is one thing to acknowledge Jesus as n King. It Is quite another to revere him as Lord and Savior. Never was there a time when we need more to hove reverence for things holy nnd for constituted authority than the present day. The act of reverence on the part of this multitude for the God anointed King oiiKht to be n suggestion to those who look upon Jesus merely ns a man. Ride triumphantly; Behold we lay Our lusts and proud wills in Thy way. Jesus' grief Is In strange contrast with the Joy of the multitude. Tho practical application for us today Is: "Have we cast our talents before him, God's rightfully anointed King?" There had been a large company of people present when Jesus was at the tomb of Lozarns, and raised him from tho dead. The testimony of these eye witnesses to the power of Jesus must have had great weight with the multi tude. The enthusiasm of this crowd for Jesus excited the hatred of the Tharlsees, making It nil the more In tense, for they snw the crowd forsak ing them, nnd following one whom they envied and hated. To one anoth er they exclaimed, "Behold, how ye prevail nothing." Notice the personal pronoun "ye," seeking to lay the fault upon others rather than taking their own share of the burden, another touch of human nature which Is evi dent even todny. It la very easy for present-day readers of the life of Jesus to be swept with enthusiasm, and to exclaim, "Had I been there I would have gladly Joined with the multitude's cry, and cast my garments before Jesus." The more practical question Is, "Are we willing todny to crown him King?" Are we not more fre quently Joining In the carping criticism of the Pharisees? There Is a day, how ever, when Jesus' triumph will not be Bhort-lrved as It wns that day In Je rusalem (Matt. 25:35-40). Before that glad day comes we may herald him as King by our testimonies in our day to tho Christ-rejecting world, nnd thus we will be laying our palm branches of victory and our garments, which are of no value, before him who Is alto gether worthy. III. The Lesson of the Greek Pil grims (vv. 20-20). These Greeks came first to Philip, who himself was a Greek. The hour had come (v. 23) when the work of Jesus for the Jews was to be finished. The Jews had been threatened with Greek religion; and thnt assault had been stopped by the Phnrlsaes. Christ camo first to the Jews that through them he might reach the Gentiles. Now his work for tho Jews Is done. He rejoices ns he seer the Greeks coming to him, for it was to be In Greek dress nnd in Greek form of expression that Christianity was to conquer the world. But this rejoicing Is tinged with sorrow, for It was a prophecy of the price thnt he must pay for the redemption of the j world. (Conducted by the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union.) WINE MAKES DRUNKARDS. Some years ago, as a W. C. T. U. srganlzer, I had occasion to take a freight train ono Monday morning across a beautiful stretch of the Sac ramento valley to meet an appointment for that evening. A freight train is not supposed to stop often, but tho only passenger trains being through trains with Inconvenient hours, this freight became Un accommodation train and stoppud with terrific Jolts wherever flngged. This occurred many times nnd each time a drunken mnn, perhaps two or three, came aboard. Usually they nt once fell asleep In their seats and with each Jolt of the car were liable to roll off. Asking the conductor for an explanation I was told, "Oh, these are Just Monday drunks, mostly farm hands from ranches who have been over at the winery on Sunday and were too drunk to get home last night. Half of them won't be fit for work before Wednesday." I spent a month la Sonoma county before the present cross-country rail roads were In. use. I went back and forth like a shuttle over the stage roads, often with the same driver, of whom I asked so many questions thut I afterwards learned he assumed thnt I was a widow looking for a home to purchase. His business was largely ex press, taking produce to market and bringing parcels from town. At every stopping place the courtesy of a glass of wine wns offered. He sometimes ac cepted, extending the offer to his pas sengers. In declining It I asked, "Is this native wine intoxicating?" He re peated my question, "Is it Intoxicating, ye say? Do ye ruolnd that? There was a Sunday picnic from the city up here yesterday," and he pointed to the help less figure of a well-dressed young man lying batless In the gutter under the broiling sun, adding, "They get drunk slower on this native wine, and it takes a deal longer to get 'em sober. He won't get to work for a day or two." On my last day with this driver he volunteered some friendly advice. "Now, if It's a home you're looking for don't buy one of these pretty vineyards. They don't pay. I've been deputy sheriff of this county many years, and I know who cts sold out by the sheriff, for I serve the papers," and the good mnn drove out of his way to show tho chicken ranches that paid better than vineyards. "And I know that too," said he,' "for I take their chickens and eggs every week to the railroad and bring back their money." Dorcas J. Spencer. JEWS FOR PROHIBITION. "The Drink Question From the Jew ish Point of View." This was the sub Jcct of an address in the Free Synn gogue, Carnegie hall, New York, by Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, one of the lending Hebrews of the United Stntes. The Jews, he declared, believe In pro hibitionprohibition, not for the few but for everybody. "Rum," he said, "Is a blessing only for the idle rfch, for the extinction of their kind, nnd as a means to make their perpetuation Impossible, but to Jews and non-Jews alike it is a men ace. To young Jewish men generally I say, 'Free yourselves of the harrow ing restraints of the cocktail and the cigarette.' The prohibition question Is no Jewish question. It is an Amer ican problem. Do not let us think about ourselves, but let us think of the welfare of the whole country. Let the verdict be, 'Alcohol must die.' " CONDEMNS ALCOHOL. "Realizing the death rate caused di rectly and Indirectly by the use of al cohol, It seems a part of the duty of the medical profession, whose work It Is to prevent as well as cure disease, to use their efforts to discourage and put a stop to this evil, which is exact ing such a heavy toll from mankind. "Therefore, be It resolved, thnt the Manatee County (Florida) Medical as sociation will discourage the writing of prescriptions for Its indiscriminate use. "Resolved, second, That alcohol as a stlmulnnt, can be eliminated from the pharmacopoeia without In any way crippling the efficiency of the doctors' armamentarium." The Right Medicine in Many Cases Does Better than the Surgeon's Knife. Tribute to Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Doctor Said Operation or Death But Medicine Cored. Pes Moines, Iowa. "Mv husband says I would have been in my gravo today had it not been tor Lydia E. rinkhanvs Vegetable Compound. I suf fered from a serious female trouble and the doctors said I could not live one year without an operation, My husband objected to the operation and hod me try Lydia E. Pirkham's Vegetable Compound. I soon commenced to get better and am now well and able to do my own housework. I can recom mend Lydia . llnkhum's Vegetable Compound to any woman as a wonderful health restorer." Mrs. Blanche Jefferson,703 Lyon St., Des Moines, Iowa, MOTHERS SHOULD ABSTAIN. Doctor Condi in "Alcohol a Danger ous and Unnecessary Medicine," says: "Never was there a more absurd or pernicious notion than that wine, ale or porter is necessnry to a nursing mother In order to keep up her strength, or to increase the quantity, and improve the properties of her milk. So far from producing these effects, such drinks, wh.-o- taken In any quan tity, Invariably disturb more or less the health of the stomach, and tend to impair the quality aud diminish the quantity of nourishment furnished by her to her infant." Another Operation Avoided. . Richmond, Ind. "For two years I was so sick and weak from female troubles that when going up stairs I had to go very slowly with my hands on the steps, then sit down at tho top to rest The doctor said he thought I should have an operation, and my friends thought I would not live to move into our new house. My daughter asked me to try Lydia E. Hnkham's Vegetable Compound as she had taken it with good results. I did so, my weakness disappeared, I gained in strength, moved into our new home, do all kinds of garden work, and raiswl hundreds of chickens and ducks. I cannot say enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. M. O. Johnston, Route D, Box 100, Richmond, Ind. Ol course there are many serious cases that only a surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge this, but tne above letters, and many others like them, amply prove that many operations are recommended when medicine in many cases is all that is needed. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Plnlcham Medi cine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Bolivia has an extensive deposit of coal at an altitude of 13,0(10 feet above sea level. Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove'i Tasteless cbill Tooio ia equally valuable as a Gen era! Tonic because It contains the well known tooio properties of QUININE and IKON. It acts oo the Liver, Drives oit Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds np the Whole System. SO cents. December is the wheat harvest month In New South Wales. FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS srlr JrrnGCbarlMtoB Wskfll6, Bucawloa nd fll liuich. WJforll UU;1 Ouuforl. v: t.UM stll.lt, t o. s. bare ; postpaid Mo par 1UU. hiWn'iaun.w, SWSirr POTATO PLANTS I m mad it hlpoianv. Mane? Hall ana Porto Hloo, ljul k ft,oa at B IM luuuunpatll.iu.f.o. b. bora. Tomaf plants too, 7tc l.uui (or II is-. hW and Peppai plants WU fur II IW nuuO, (or II 60; I uuq and up at i b. ( o. b. bare, foatpaid uo par luu. . .lsioi.ai aaisiUJJ.sc TREES ! TREES ! Commercial Orchardlit aak fur our Hat of varieties o( orach, and apple trees. Mr. Farmer, yon want a borne orchard. We ran supply yoa with suythlur needed. FRUIT and HHADB TREES, all rlaaars. Oroamrntala In 8UHUB BKKY and EVHHUREKNH. We yet bate 60,0 FKACH and APPLK THICKS SPUINO 11)17. THE MOUNTAIN VIEW NURSEBY CO. OmtmlogFrtm. WILLIAMSPOBT.MO. Do You Neglect Your Machinery? The machinery of the body needs to be well oiled, kept In good condiUon Just as the automobile, steam engine or bicycle. Why should the human neglect bis own machinery more than that of bis horse or his engine? Yet most peo ple do neglect themselves. To clean the system at least once a week Is to practice preventive measures. You will escape many ills and clear up the coat ed tongue, the sallow complexion, the dull headache, the lazy liver, if you will take a pleasant laxative made up of the May-apple, Juice of the leaves of aloes, root of Jalap, and called Pleasant Pellets. You can obtain at almost any drug store In this country these vege table pellets In vials for 25c simply ask for Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. There can be no counterfeit If they have the Dr. Pierce stamp. Proven good by SO years' use. NEW JERSEY NEWS Belleville, N. J. "I have been doc toring for liver trouble for the past four years and I could not regulate myself as I should, but after trying the 'Pleasant Pellets' I have been greatly relieved, and can safely say thut I am thoroughly cured of this complaint I think It no more than fair for me to make this statement so that others who ore suffering ran try the same remedy." P. J. CULLEN. 33 Dow St. Pnulsboro, N. J. "I have used all of Dr. Pierce's medicines at different times of my life and have always found them to be all and more than was claimed for them; in fact I always keep tho Anurlc Tablets and Pellets on hnnd, nnd recommend them where ever I see any need of a like medicine. I hnve felt better during this last six months than I have for a very long time. If others troubled as I have been will give these medicines a thoro trlnl they will certainly receive bene lit." MUS. J. B. GItEliN, 82 New St. SOBER ARMY. "A change has come over the army,' declared MaJ. Dan Morgan Smith, at a .meeting of tho Illinois Anti-Saloon league at the Great Northern hotel of Chicago. The major had Just returned from the Mexican border. A corporal will now say to the men, "You hnve got to hike to Austin, but you can't drink nnd hike." When a man falls out of the ranks he Is given spirits of ammonia and not ardent spirits. When an officer says to a brother offi cer, "Let's take a drink," they both head for a drug store "UNDER THE INFLUENCE." Beer Is never taken because of the nutritive properties It contains. It Is used solely because It Is on Intoxicant. Take the alcohol out of beer and Its sale Is at an end. One glass of beer contains sufficient nlcohol to cnuse In toxication. I do not mean thut it will cause a wobble In the gait, but It will cause the mind to wobble. The man under the Influence of one glass of beer Is not altogether himself. He hns lost, In a measure, his $ower of self control. Bis judgment Is less relia ble. Ha la rot so safe a man. Canada's Liberal Offer of Wheat Land to Settlers is open to you to every farmer or farmer's son who is anxious to establish for himself a happy home and prosperity. Canada's hearty Invitation this year is more attractive than ever. Wheat is much higher but her fertile farm land just as cheap, and in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskat chewan and Alberta 160 ken Htmttass An Actullr Fiw tt Srttlen us Other Libs' Sell it trssi IIS to $20 acr Acn The greet demand for Canadian Wheat will keep up the price. Where a tanner can get nesr w lor wnesi ana raise u to s oasneia to the sere he is bound to make sooner I hat's what you can expect in Western Canada. Won derful yields also of Oata, Barley and Flam. Misad Famine in Western Canada ia fully as profitable an industry as grain raising. Tha eimllMit f rsiiess, fall of nutrition, are tha only food rqntml either tor beef or dairy purpoapa Good schools, churches, markets convenient, oil mate excellent. There la an annaual demand for farm labor to replace the many roans men who bare volunteered for the war. Write for llteratnre aud rartlculara si to reduced railway rsiee W enpt-uf aiulsrauoa, Ottawa, Can., or lo j. p. JirrRXY, Cr. Walnut A Oroid Sis.. Phlladdpbli, Pa. Canadian Oovernment Agent e m 8 Favors are seldom satisfactory, The best way Is not to need them. Bora Eyes, Blood-Shot Eyee. Watery Eyee, Sticky Eyes, sll healed promptly with night ly applications of Roman Kye llalaam. Adv. Some men have courage only when they lose their tempers. FOR SKIN TROUBLES That Itch, Burn, Torture and Disfig ure Use Cutlcura Trial Free. f e weeaee The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal. They usually afford Immediate relief In Itch ing, burning eczemas, pimples, dandruff and most baby skin troubles. They also tend to prevent little skin trou bles becoming great If used dally. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dcpt, L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. Nigeria reports coal discoveries. Wvakuess and murder will out. Allen's Foot-Ease for the Troops. The antiseptic powder to he shaken into tha ehoeeor used In the foot-bath. Voune men In every community are using: Allen's Foot-Ease in their drills for Military Preparedness. Deed by the Allied, French and Knitllnh trtxipa be cause It reals the feet, takee the friction fron the shoe and makes walking eeui. Adv. The ball Is the oldest toy. IjAX-FOS) A dlcentlve liquid latatlte, reibartle and liver snnle. I'ooiblnea mrensth with palatable, eromaUa teste, iluee noi gripe or dlalarb stomach, sua Occupation is the scythe of time. Luxurious 7avy Hair Send dime for trial package of Luxalon or fifty ents for box of 0 full treatments. Guaranteed pure. Contains no dye or in jurious substances. Van AcK Co.. 950 Rogers Avenue., Brooklyn, N. Y. Notet Wanted one woman In every town to ad as reprrs ntutire. pleusaut work good pay.. ass.-, it,,. """"ntiimwNiMiiiNiiiiiiiieinijj Alter ino n,i. t rir.4 r. a 3 RttfmhM-RftUrvs. Murln Its Favorit 5 ry and .mart. 3 Mi.. Murine Is for Tired Eyes. M0VI8S Red Eyes Sore Eyes Urannlated rellda. Rants Olveyonr Sres aa miu-hof roar lovlna care a as yonr Twii h and with theaame rwatilarity, S B rtlE FM THEM. YOU CAIflOT IUT NEW ETFSI I Bold at Drug and Optical HloraS or by stall. I all Hurts, ire lm.e Ca, Cilaus, tar Ens Iwk iiuuiiuiiiuiiwianiiiiuiiiiHiiuuiiiuiiiiiiisiiiiHiiiuiia ni Pla,f tYO Watson B.Cnleman.Waaa Mil I P I J IN Infton.D.C. Boosafree. lli.b I M I ami I I W eat references. Heal meulia. SOFT SAND SOAP ri',',' ippanstnt; I rand 10c; prloUnl dlnvotlona Ifo. htd-AU Cswulca. Coupu7, bus W, Uaaibriiltj, B, Mam. Make and Sell Your Own Goods 0n tb big snoopy. tVnd fnrottvtiiaron fnrmnlai anil lrla rKrta. Hpirinl Indaiwmtiits fur pmtnpt io lion, aUawsriMi TrtsiMT, f, 0. 4, tons-,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers