TJra FTTLTOH COUNTY IOBWB, KcCOaygLLPI, TtX Does Your Lamp Smell? . . II All Itam. evil. Allkero uH ltispi don't smell. Yours won't, either, if you uso ATLANTIC . . ... t j.-f..n fmm tha nrrflnarv Irtndt. It's SO 'ant odors and throat-burning smoke. ' If vour lamp does smell, try Rayolteht .Oil and you'll never be atufied with any other. Look lor tne acaier wnu ub "---l5S , h i .loreT "tfantic RayoliBht OU for Sale I lore." Always ask for it by name. It costs no more than inicnor aioua. If,actntlfla fact ihml. cf any artificial tight, kre "J, tamp I. Ma ' n.tful and pleating to th, .y. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY Philadelphia and nttsDurgu PERFECTION Smokeless Oil Heaters Jnititriketinitch. The room will U warm and coiy In few uluuUa. Ma hi. amoke. toot or smell. See Rayo Lamps A eeninl draught )unp that produce! a .oft. clear and reMful light Many beautiful draiffnitoEbooMfrom. Safe and eur to keep clean, beeyouroeaiw. Prlee, 9i. up. r a yuuruciren ihwi a 1 I 4UtoH.60. I STOKE Rayo Lanterns Give the mot light and hot bTLr jtTtet F.iT to light and ?l,.n. Stay lUted In the atrongeit wind. Bee yourdealer.krnee. MARKET REPORT. CORRECTED BVEBY WEDNE8DAT. The grain markets are taken from the Cham eraburg dally newapapera. The provlalon Hoee are tboae teat ootain id mauucnaiu- GRAIN tfheas 2.06 tfew wheat Jran 2 00 Jorn 1.25 JattS 5 Kie .7 1.60 PROVISIONS Butter, Creamery Butter, Country , 36 I Bggs, Fp dozen m... 40 Yeast Cakes at Runyan's. Dr. and Mrs. N. C. Trout, of : . Fairfield, Pa., spent the time from Friday until Monday In the home of the Doctors mother, Mrs. M. B. Trout in this place. Fresh Bread at Runyan's. Miss Joan Morton 6f this place and Lillian Burket, of Chambers- bure went to Wells Valiey last 1 1 Friday afternoon and spent the time until Sunday evening with I friends at Wells Tannery. Yeast Cakes at Runyan's. Oklahoma ha? joined the States whidh prohiiat possession for sale of aiurettes. and in taliior- I ' .... nia the sale of aigrettes birds of I oaradise. eoura pigeons and cer tain other birds used in millinery is now illegal. Try that Bread at Runyan's. ( Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnson Mrs. Johnson's mother Mrs. Sarah Suders. and Mrs. Abram 1 Runyan with John McLucas at the wheel, motored to Gettys burg last Friday and spent an 1 - . hour or two in Chambersburg. Good Citizenship A bank account makes a food citizen. - That's a broad assertion but it is universally true. , A good citizen is one who is independent, self supporting, and who does things conducive to the best interest of the community. The man who has a bank account is independent, he is able to pay his way and he contributes to the general. wealth of his community. His funds are in circulation. He pays taxes and helps to make things go. Likewise a man who has money and property in a com munity is anxious to see that the community prospers. We pull for the man with a bank account. FULTON COUNTY BANK "OLDEST AND STRONGEST' SESBJHEaHJ RACKET Well last week we told you about filaw .jar tin cans, jar gums, coal oil, etc. We can sUU sell yWglass jars-quarts at 60 cents, and gallon at 85 cents; jar rings at 5 and 8 cents a doz. or 35 cents a pound. Tin cans at 50 cents. Coal oil 12 cents a gallon, now. Underwear Shoes and Clothing. We are in shape to.save you some monyon un deJehoes,aSdcthing. We bought all these good?early, and we are going to give you the ben efit of the nice saving. You want to see the Men's fleeced underwear we have for 50 cents each; also, the one at bp. ?Ws union suits at $1.25, $1.35 $1.90 $2 50 and $3.75. Men's wool shirts and drawers $1.00 nrl 135 Children's separate underwear, 15 ftd 85 ceTseach. Boys' union suits 55 ,cts, MisMsheavy. 55 and 65 cents. Boys' sweater S,50S,o$15. Men'ssweater coa, 5 ffo na nnva' snort coats. $3.25 to $ .OU. M.heavybveraUs $1.00 and $1.25. .Gallon Men s neavy v 0cent9 Mf!n,s tTsVirlsTs "cenuand $1.98. We think we can save you, also on Shoes for the Whole Family These. goods are hard to get, but we expected this and bought heavily, and we are now very glad 11118 ... nrA.., rprpived a work shoe for .7as ordered Wee months ago .hat i, ".f.-Jrnriceaslastyear. Linoleum S3 UM TJX. 100 split riveU 5 cen corn . i ok nta hpd blankets Jbl. o to $18.00, $20.00 and $zz.uu, sei " cents, Fire Extinguisher. ' . ..r. , r Mtincuisher. Anyone we nave fihnuld have one. They S LSTSS might save the price of a new machine. If you have rats, why not try Ra rit will kill them, and you won't have a smell i., on ant 45 cents a box. This Is the Ume of year to get your stock and E. in good condition for - - Jus. try Dr. Hess's remeaies. " HULL & BENDER Sale Register. . Thursday, November 22, Bretherd Waltz, intending to re move from tho State will sell ai bis residence about two miles South of Andover on the Creeb road. 2 good work horses, good I cow, huifer due to be fresh in April, good brood sow, 6 eight weeks-old pigs, 2 buggies, Brown waeon. sled, plows, barrows and other things. Sale begins at 10 o'clock. Credit 6 months. John H. Strait, auctioDeer. Saturday, November 24, Rus .ell E Mentzer will sell on the Paul Jones farm about 2 mil- 8 north east of Burnt Cabins 2 borses, 2 mules, 4 cattle, 6 P'gs. harness, buggy, wagon, plows, corn, etc. Sale begins at 1 o'clock. Credit 6 months. Tuesday, November 27, Geo. N Kline intending to quit farm- tug will sell at his residence on t,he Uriah W. Kline farm south of Andover on Licking Creek good cow, spring calf, wagon, buggy, harness, cultivator, plows, bar rows, corn, wneas, rje, (juwiwi-. tits. hav. household goods, poui trv. etc. Sale begins at 10 o'clock. Terms 6 months. A. L. Wible, auctioneer. Wednesday, November 28, L W. Funk will sell at.bis residence I mile east of Need more, borses, aattle. hoes, grain, etc. . bale logins at 10 o'clock. A. It Wible auctioneer. Kill Your RHEUMATISM And Hit The Trail To Health Does this Rheum.ti.m mon.te'r m.ke your life nb"rb.le' Da " sur the .orturc. of psin .no, cr dsy-t , bol of Opa, he world wide Known, muiuu.inr - .... -. thousands of sufferers to rcBain health and s Buaranteed to kill pa.ny U r M THE WONDERFUL EUROPEAN REMEDY i a private formula of Dr. Akkerboom the noted ' Hutch physician, who has successfully uied it in Europe for yearsj but this is the 'first time it . has been introduced to the readers of this paper. Every sufferer should try this wonderful Euronean remedy. Why suffer another day when pos.t.ve relief is offered te your If y.u have tried other remedies only to have them fail, do not be discouraeed. Enclose SI bill or money order today for , a full sized bottle of OPA-Bive it a fair trial and it will not only kill your Rheumatism but e've you a new lease on lite. MAX DUWE Cl CO., Inc. Sul'e lOO 2524 Webster Ave., New York City Red Cross Work. McConnellsburg. Pa. HOWARD YEAGER BOOKSELLER, STATIONER, NEWSDEALER, TRUNKS AND SUIT CASES, 29 SOUTH MAIN STREET Chambersburg, Penn'a. Annual members of Taylor township Red Cross Auxiliary. Mr. Mariorie Scott. Mrs. Alice Clevenger, Ruth Lyon, Olive and Alice Clevenger, Alice Laidig, r.lara Lvon. ' Verda McElhaney, Roy Cook, Jennie Brant, Lydia Price. Anna Laidie, Maria Dor- sn, Mrs. Wra. Heefner, Julia Mellott, Agnes Lyon, Lame Ed wards, Howard Kirk, N. L. M. Hoover. James Lyon, Mrs. C. J. Rarrnn. Mave Barton, Alice and Jessie Cutchall. Elizabeth Hix- Russell and Jesse B. McClam, R. I). Harper, J. W. Cutchall, ft J. W. Cutchall. W. K. Berkstresser, Mrs. W. R. Berk- itresser. BELFAST AUXILIARY. fi E. SiDes. Chairman; Floyd r. Hart, Treasurer; Mrs. J. J. Palmer. Secretary; Mrs. G. E. Sipes, EstaHart, Mrs. F.P. Hart, Gladys Sipes, Maria raimer, Stella Powers, Mrs. D. A.-: bar- land, Mrs. Grant Mellott, Mr.ana Mrs. Bennett . Mellott vernona Mellott, Viola and Cora Kersnner, Mrs. Lewis Clark, Nell Jf aimer, Mrs. E. N. Akers. ' BETHEL AUXILIARY. Julia Rankin. Blanche Smith, rflrs. J. G. Mellott, Mrs. Lee I" a VS 1 . Charlton, Mrs. Lewis lonser, Hon. H. K. Markley. XM. &. m. larnell. Pearl Carntll, Verdie ?r.oTr Maude Lay ton.. HISTORY OF PRUSSIAN MIL ITARY AUTOCRACY BY DAVID F. HOUSTON SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. Ab jut the time of tbe discov ery of America, the llobenzollern family ruled over ao insignificant tract urrounr)ing the village of Berlin. Iu 1611 its power was extended by the union of the Mark of Brandenburg and the rwhv of Prussia. In 1640 a strone character, Frederick Will mm came into power. He exer cised despotic rule, but put his bouse in order and developed a relatively strong standing army with which to make further headway by lorce as opportunity might offer. In 1698, the date of the Restoration in England, and the beginning of her orderly con titutional government, Freder ick the Third, an ambitions men vidua!, became fiead of the house His title was Elector of Branden r,np and Duke of Prussia. He v-r was anxiflus for recognition, for the title of King. Tbe War of the Soanish Succession was about to begin. His overlord, the llolv Roman Euperor need d assistance. Frederick .was nrerjared to trade and promised the aid of his army in exchange for the title of Elector of Bran Henburc and King cf Prussia This be secured in 1701. Here was the first phase of the con- tai.t with Austria, the last of mriir-.h in seen in our own day in the complete subordination of Austrian to Prussian mnuence A violent, brutish person Frederick Williamjihe First, be San to reign m 1713. Like his ancestors be kept his eye on tbe nain chance, husbanded his re sources, and added to Lis army, which at his death numbered 80.C00 an immense trained force fnr that day and time, lie, too, was ready by force to add to bis patrimony at the expense of -any convenient neighbor. It was loft, to his successor to make use hnt. he had prepared In yj l vts-imv - a i74f the Emperof or Austria, Cha $s the Sixth, tbe last of the male line of Hapsburg, died. He had bound the leading powers by solemn pledge to recognize as hi nuccegsorhis daughter Ma ., Thornsa Frederick tbe 1 in fireat uromptly gave Maria Tbe resa strong assurance of friend Bhio and support, having, it in mind at tbe very time to commit n crime aeainst her. He sudden lymovei his army against her province of Silesia, and after eight yers f desperate warfare .nrnnrta!Al 1'. lid at Uait I More Than Pleased We were more than pleased with the encouragement you gave us at our opening. Make Your Wants Known. If our salesman doesn't have it, he will bring what you do want It will be our aim to please lu every particular. Drop in and see us. No Obligations. Every Saturday at the old Fulton County Bank Room. C. A. Shinneman, Jeweler, CHAMBERSBURG. ' McCONNELLSBURG. made no pretense of virtne and is reoortcd to have sid: 'Ambi- lion, luteiest and the desire 01 makine people tnlk about me cirued the day aud I decided for war." Prussia was defeated and hu miliated by Napoleon in a quick campaign in 1806 but tbe libera movements of the penoi scarce ly affected her. She bided her time and laid her plans. Her next considerable advarce was maden 1804, when she induced Austria to jam her in taking Schleswig and llolstein from Den mam. Austria received llol stein; and In 1866 Prussia picked a quarrel with bor and qoickiy vanished her. appropriating lioi ateln and annexing llanover, Hesse, Nassau and Frankfort, which had takea sides with Aus tria. Thus she rounded oui ner territory. Whea' the Prussian Parliament protested that force wasnota sufficient justincuion for what had been done to Den mark Bismark replied: "Our neht is the right of the German nation to exist, to breathe, to unite." The claim of a place in the sun the doctrine of necessity and the richt of might are not of recent appearance in Prussian history, lhey have boon tne outstanding characteristics of her thinking and practico since she emerged fiom mednvai oo scurity. THE CRUSHING OF FRANCE The next step w8the crushing of France in 1870 71 theannexa tlon of Alsace-Lorraine and the imrjoaition of Prussiau leadership ou Ger msny under the guise ol a confederation. No wonder Bern hardi wrote: "The lessons of history corjfir m the view that wars which have heon deliberately provoked by farseoing statesmen have had the ha piest resulic" No wonder Prussia believes that a grel armv U the cornerstone of bcr wbll-bt:io as a ration and tb&t war is a positive good If it sue ce da. So Prussia has come to domi nam Gurmauv. She now seek to dominate the whole of central Europe and a part of Asia; and, if she gains what she wants in this war she persistently lay her plans for tho next great aggres give move. I'UUSSIA IS GERMANY. Prussia is Germany. She has three-fifths the area and five nights tha population. The Ger man EnairjH a feleratiou only io name, l ismark's aim was to moun P-namii AQDreme in Ger- III Ok - - many and Germany supreme in Europe. He knew how to do the j jib. Thii is the underlying taoi:( Prussia is Germany and Prussia politically is feudal. In such a syetem aoveroignty is the pri vate right of rulers. Tbe prince may'desl with hit people as pri vate individuals do with their lands. Recently we had a clear pratical illustration of this in Germany. The ruler of Waldtck got into debt. He could not raise the money to fquip his army. He therefore sold bis rights, his pos aessions, and his peoples to tho King of Prussia and went to Italy live on his income. The peo pie exist for the Government and not the Government for the peo ple. Frederick William was not joking when he wrote: "Salva tion belongs to the Lord and everything else is my affair," or aeain. "We are lord and king and can do what we will.".Neith er was the present Kaiser when he asserted: "We Hohenzollerns talro nnr crown from God alone and to God alone are we respon aible m the fulfillment of our duty." He was simply revealing the true Inwardness of bis royl medieval mind and ol Frusaian Dolitics. speaking from the back trround of centuries or ieuuai traditions. Prussia la a feudal State. It practices paternalism nn ft ln.rcA scale in this modern day as did the Duchy of Prussia on a small scale centuries ago, It asserts the divine right of the king and of aristocrats to rule, LANDOWNERS AND INDUSTRIAL LEADERS CONTROL. Prussian governments ar rangements today of all grades are the legal expression ol the pennomic interests and domina tion of the large landowners and of their recent allies the great industrial leaders. Feudal es tates still persist in the kingdom, wiih their principal strongnoids in East Prussia, Posen, and Pomerania. In Prussia 31 per cent ot the land is in estates of over 250 acres, large holdings for nontral and western Europe; in Poieno55per cent and in Po merana 52 per cent. Tbe aver age size of 8,365 estates in East Prussia is 1.132 acres; of 2 1Q6 in Pomeraua 1,380 acres. Many of thtise are very large and are own od hv descendants of feudal lords. The great landhold er tbe iuuker, is an iudividu alist. independent, militaristic, conservative in favor or armed Btrenctli coudescendiug to Infer iors with a feeling for power and With the lustinct of a soldier, a supportes of monarchy as long as monarchy has a strong arm and auooortr bim and his later ests. At first the junker iougtn the nev industrial class but a reconciliation was effected and receitly the powerful Jeaders of the two classes have cooperated. The caste syste n prevails ev.-ry where. Society is stratified a the individual in cmch strati is traiued for bis duties m particular sphere. EJucati aud society as well as the ar are orgauizodoo this basis; there is no small truth in witticism that "every PrussiaJ satisfied bocause he has sol body below him to kick." R ; ty, the jankers and the great dustrial leaders run Prussia Prussia runs Germany. Save Good Yearling Dens. Among farmnrs geuoraliy the common practico to sell hens that are past a year oldj poultry whoa they stop JayiO the fall. Under the usual I ditions this is good policy, fi a rule only about half of tbe lay well enough the second I to be profitable, and tbe i who has pullets enougu i nlace all his old hens sees vantage in keeping any of over. Thia vear. however, Datriotic farmers who des dn thwir Dart to increaa nonltrv and egg supply . j ulrt rt retain nnn it. npxiruuic u i siderable proportion of th ling hens. Farmers iu ii i' til nniir ui t Aoncma iv win their interest to bold all t yearling hens thoy nave, Buch addition to wh hmie eouiDmentas may - . ,i essary to properly v both pullets aud nw crowding must bo vu neither pullets nor ben their best. Don't Sell the FamiH I mi l., irht. sDoear to - lUiau"5 r. r Koacrnod time to sell tnj cow or tbe family dairy J cause prices for ojw. J and it is easy to sell, w you do sell? Ml. onii VT! Prices or "u high-seem nigu. buy than when you ornsalPK :ri,VobvAbrah4 whenheadvisea , horses www Tn arlV CftSe, atream. x--. . h better if theft"0'? the family dairy .u- mim know " . nnr Owners Feel Li The latest ris food in New , dogs at sever J hotels. Ann today that a -t0 has been iscd cues9' rai charged or TJ ... coato" j linn nun i and the Pce i ltd 7 u liooste? las m pound to 7 .ka .Subscribed I T It lie 1 f Iaer i fa I'M ill Mi rod t 1 Ki rife c iensv; f At! hi ktem ins on i as it bdmo Fra Jfless wa h.1 J all i i can onlj Pe for a aembej PKh ai fash "ays bn Ntoi Hath, 'jfirculosi un ellaal wrems tie cei Nser idayby 'Wand. hi beaut :ber of ptende ite of , '4 sha n, decea husband Ru and nam Li ar rSshinrr :, a si is as Nun 1 V shall I with '.on the Wnil-inr 2. A.. II ue iav "0 Sllnr. or at ai V at hut. . ,"e-8Dent Mtl fr;