- fHE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG, Pa. Bob Stillwell's Christmas By ANNE CAREW OB STILLWELL mt dowu on lils sled with bis chin In his nilt tened hands and tried to plun what he could give folks (or ChrlHtmns, for It was only three duys away.' "I cnn't give a thing 1" he mut tered ot last, for he did not have a penny of his own, and he knew thut money wus very seurce on the farm that yenr. The. S 1 1 1 1 w e 1 1 . children would he lucky If they all hud mittens ond warm shoes nnd stock Ings. Tet Bob knew thut his sister Nun wns dreaming of a doll house, little Peter wunted a puppy all his own, and be didn't dure think of his big sis ter Amy and big brother Elmer uud Bis father and mother. "Why not make 'em something?" was the thought that came to him. Bob Jumped up and went home whis tling through the woods. Under the pine trees he stopped and brushed away the snow. When be got through bis pockets were full of dried pine eones, large and smull, and some pieces of birch bark. The day before Christmas Dob un locked the woodshed door and looked at the result of his labors. ' There wns a doll bouse for little Nnn made out of an egg crate, with real He Saw the Grandest New Sled. wall pnper on the walls of the two rooms, bits of carpet on the floors ond some enrdbonrd furniture that Bob had made, lie had even tacked little scraps of luce at the windows for curtains. For Amy there was the lovely pic ture from the Sunday newspaper which he had admired. Bob had remember ed and had made a frame for It out of strips of wood, and on the wood he had glued tiny pine cones, pieces of birch bark and dried moss, and as the picture was a woodland scene you can Imagine how pretty It was. Bob bad found a chair rung, which he scraped and polished with some oil nnd turpen tine. He put some screweyes in me ends, and Amy gave him a piece of narrow red ribbon to mnke loops and, behold, there wns a necktie holder for Elmer I for his mother he whittled a reel for her clothes lines, and it was a wonderfully handy thing, and for his father he bought a pipe. It happened this way : He did some errands for the mnn who kept the tobacco store In the village, and when the mnn would hove paid him some money Bob said he'd rather have a pipe. So now they were all provided for except little Peter. How wns Bob going to get hold of a real live puppy? Tou go over to my brother's place at the foot of Long hill, nnd you tell hlra I sent yon," said the tobacco man "Maybe be will let you have a puppy and work it out for him on Saturdays. He has a pnper route. Til do It If he will!" cried Bob eagerly. Hulf on hour Inter he hurried Into the woodshed with a wriggling little puppy under his coat Of course be hod to tell his mother about that , And how Bob did enjoy the secret run ning to and fro with milk and scraps of meat for the puppy i When Christmas morning dawned think Bob Stlllwell wns the most sur prised boy In Little Klver. He was so Interested In watching the pleasure of his brothers and sister with the gifts be had made with his own hands that he stood smiling, forgetting to look at the tree for his own presents. "Look, Bobby i look 1" screamed little Peter. Bob looked and turned pale with sur prise. The grandest new sled, pointed a bright red, runners and alL His fa ther and Elmer hnd made It together. And there was a red woolen muffler that Amy had knitted for him and oth er thing that Santa Claus brought him. Santa In Disgrace. 'It would never do for the children to hear about this." . "About whatr "I see where a department store Bnnta Claus was discharged for being Intoxicated while on duty and having a fight with a floorwalker." Thought for the Day. The toxn of emperors and cobblers ar cast to the same mold. The same reason that makes ua wrangle with a aelghbor cause a war betwixt prlncoa. v-Uontatgna. , V-LruvJ3 Jul. MACKI&' NED WAYNE kicked his toes egolust the door. "Soy, mother, can't I go skat ing?" he asked. , "Not today, son," said Mrs. Wayne. "It is Christmas eve, nnd I want, you to go Into the woods and get some laurel and evergreens to trim the house. The servants are all busy with the housework." "Aw, bother 1" whined Ned. "Dear me, Neddy, that Is not a nice spirit to show nt Christmas time," sighed his mother, for she was much worried about her little boy's selfish spirit. Ned had a beautiful home and fond pnrents, but he teemed to love his own way above everything else. So when final ly Ned, sulkily enough, took a hutchet and went toward the woods his moth er did not see that he had his skates hidden un- der his thick overcoat When he reach ed the pond he found all the skaters hnd gone home, for who wants to skate on Christmas eve when there are so ninny other delightful things to do? So Ned took a few turns around the pond, knowing nil the time that he wns disobeying his mother nnd feeling very unhappy all the while. Bv nnd by he took oft his skates and went to the woods to cut some laurel branches. It was snowing very hard now. nnd he hnd to work fast, because by this time it wns growing dark In thn woods. At last his arms were fun, ana he staggered along through the snow trying to find the path, but the snow naa cover- cd it up completely. Ned was lost in the woods on Christmas eve I ne began to cry, nnd the tenrs froze on bis checks. Right be side him was a great oak tree, with a hollow trunk. There was narrow open ing in the trunk, and poor, cold, tired, lost Ned squeezed his way through the open ing and found It snug and wnrm Inside, with a thick bed of dry leaves. He stop ped up the open ing with branches of evergreen, and that kept the wind and snow out It was very lonesome In the hollow tree. Somewhere an owl wns hooting, T? Took a Few Turns Around the Pond. Christmas Seals Dy CLARISSA MACKIE T was only a few days before Christ mas, nnd little Amy Wells wns so happy. The teach er hnd given her some Red Cross seals to soil, and when Miss Smith had distributed the red and white and green seals among her schol ars she had ex plained to them all about the pur pose of the Red Cross society and how the money earned would be used to help the wounded soldiers. And she had not sold one single, soli tary stamp of her twenty-live! How she hnd trudged around from door to door, only to meet the same kind Rmlle and shnke of the hend 1 Amy told her mother, and when Mrs. Wells offered to buy all the stamps herself tho little girl shook her head. 'I ought to be able to sell them out side my homo, mother, dear," she said. "That would be renl work." Mrs. Wells sighed and smiled. She couldn't very well afford to buy even the twenty-flve stamps thnt Amy want ed to soil, for every penny wns needed In that little household. Mr. Wells hnd died a year or two before, and Amy's mother bad to sew for a living. She was very busy, for she was trying to finish some work so as to receive the money In tlmo to buy something for Christmas. 'Kiss me, little daughter," Mrs. Wells said, with a smile, "and then carry this dress up to Miss Granger on the hill." The Grangers lived In a big house at the top of the hill. It was quite the largest house In Little River, and the three Indies lived there alone with two servants. They were Miss Belle Granger, Miss Lucy and Miss Beth, They were not very young, but they were very kind nnd sweet. The mold admitted Amy to the front hnll, nil warm nnd glowing from a great fire on the hearth. "How do you do, Amy? Wouldn t rou like one or these uttie mince IPs 111 IS 1 A Great Tree With a Hollow Trunk. "I Hope You Will Have a Happy Christmas," Mlts Lucy Said. i tarts?" And there was Miss Beth Granger with a plate of mince tarts. "Oh, thank you 1" gasped Amy as she took one. 'Walt a moment and Annie will wrap It In a pnper nnpkln so you can carry It home," said Miss Beth as she pressed a button for the mnid. But when Annie came with the pnper nap kin, which wns all gny with holly and Chrlstmns bells, Miss Ruth put all the mince tnrts In It nnd gave It to Amy ' flBetit- ) i?y Georde McKirmi& Temperance rctes" (Conducted by the National Woraan'l Christian Temperance Union.) I Hurried Across the 8nowy Yard. T was Christmas eve at the Bayvllla Home for Orphans, and three little boys sat In the chilly dining room looking out at the flying flakes of snow. It was after supper, and there was a clatter of dishes In the kitchen. "They say," snid Jimmy, "there's going to be a big Chrlstmns tree In the parlor toraor dow, and candy and presents and everything, but I'd rather hang up my stocking than have all the old Christmas trees. You betcha I would!" "So would It" echoed Bobby and George. "Thnt trustee1 who was here to day would make, a dandy man fof a father or an, uncle," said Bobi by. "He's a w f a 1 rich." "And he ain't got any children or any folks at all." "I wish he'd dopt me," r fleeted George, "ne patted my head." "He must be lonesome without any folks," began Bobby. Then he leaned over nnd whispered to his companions, Fifteen minutes later three little boys, the oldest ten and the youngest six, let, themselves through a basement dool and hurried across the snowy yard to the opening In the hedge which led through a patch of woods to the village. Mr. Bnrtley, the trustee, wno onen visited the home, lived In n big nouse with a wonderful gnrden. Everything wns blanketed In snow now, nnd the big house wns dark save for a few lighted windows on the lower floor. Soon thev stood on the porch peer Ing In at a cozy library, where Mr. Barti ley Bnt In a mg chnlr before the fire, looking very lonesome. A big dog, a collie, snt beside hlra with his head on his master's knee. Suddenly the dog lifted his hend and barked. Mr. Bnrtley looked to ward the window nnd saw the three little frightened boy faces peering In. In a jiffy he hnd jumped up, opened the win-' dow and lifted them In one at a time. "Good gracious me! What are you doing out there?" he demanded. , TO THE MODERATE DRINKER. "Nations, as well as Individuals, art accepting the unquestioned nervous damage of alcohol," says Rr. Robert S. Carroll In his book, "The Mastery of Nervousness." Many appalling and distorted statements have been made to frighten the drinker from his cups. But k would seem thnt when a com mittee appointed by a government to Investigate the harmful effects of al cohol reports that the drinker's life is shortened 25 minutes by every gloss of alcoholic liquor, even the reckless would hesitate. Six years nre knocked off the enrthly existence of the over- age drinker. The tippler answers thut It Is his own life that he Is short ening, nnd If he pleases so to live and die, he alone Is hurt. There Is an other tiling to be considered: 1 "Three out of four of the offspring of overage drinkers show Inherited defects, chiefly of the nervous sys tem. Mnny an Intense, unhappy, mis erable, high-strung neurotic of today Is the defective daughter of a genial, Jovial, easy-going, old-school gentle mnn whose mint Juleps of good-fellowship burn hot In the brains of his chil dren. Numbers of fearsome epilep tics go through lives of fierce uncer tainty, the unhappy products of a single ancestral spree. These Inno cent victims are condemned, before birth, to live with nervous systems nt tuned to discord, cnpnble of express ing life only through minor strains, hopelessly deficient pitiable, de pressed, morbid, blighted lives." Mdmhonal SOKfSOlOOL Lesson (By K O. SELLERS, Acting Director ol the Sunday School Course of the Moody , Bible institute, Chicago.) (CopyrlKhl. I17. Western Newspsper Union.) LESSON FOR DECEMBER 16 NEHEMIAH ENFORCES THE LAW OF THE SABBATH. LESSON TEXT-Nehemlah 13:16-22, GOLDEN TEXT-Romemher the Sab bath Day- to keep It holy. Exod, 20:8. Based On Cost Per Tablet ... It Saves 9V2C CASCARAgflUININE co id ubwu nam so- . srr.80" ritured on proportional, tablet, you 9He hi 2 HiU' Cur Cold in nourt ftia in 1 dirt Moon beck Mln.li" jjflll 4TbUuforIS. m any tmif store THE WINNING ARGUMENT. "It Is Idle to argue from prophecy when we may argue from history," pithily sold Sidney Lnnler. What has really happened as the result of dry law Is of more value as prohibi tion argument than all the prognosti cations of liquor advocates In nnd for territory now wet. In a recent cam paign Issue the Union Signal gives column nfter column to this worth while history argument Flrst-hnnd testimony from 14 dry states (there was no space for more) proves that prohibition Is a boon and a blessing, socially and economically; that it In creases man power nnd money pow er. "The success nrgument," says the editor, "is the winning factor in present-dny prohibition campaigns. It effectually silences tho Hquorltes." Thnt argument Is abundantly sun piled by enthusiastic statements con tinually given out by governors, nttor ney generals, mayors, sheriffs, bank ers, by business managers, labor com missioners, and prominent residents of prohibition states. The Dog Lifted Hl Head and Barked. "Oh. thank you so much!" repeated and' again he heard some four-footed Amy. thinking how her mother would nnlmhl fnurhnna e fnv irn nnr-nntrlnr? COlOy ine luris, over the snow, lie wns not exactly frightened, but It surely was very lone some, Sometimes he slept nnd dreamed of his nice worm home, nnd he thought of his good, kind pnrents and bow worried they would be, and he re solved never again to disobey them After a while he slept and was awakened by the Round ot the church bells ring' Ing in the glad Christmas 1 1 d ings. shouted back, and presently he wns In his father's arms. When Ned woke Found All the Beautiful Gifts. next Christmas came around he would be worthy of all the blessings that were showered on him. And his parents always said, "Ned' die has never been the same since be spent the night in the hollow tree." "Mother sent the dress." "My sister Is trying It on," said Miss Beth. "Walt a moment, Amy, ana i will get the money for you." She hnd Just disappeared wnen Miss Lucy Granger came bustling through the hnll. "I wonder If you would mnll these little packages for me, Amy 7 she said. "I am so provoked because I have used up my Christinas seals." "Of course I will mall the packages, Miss Lucy." snid Amy ; then she added shyly, "I I hove some Christmas seals If you would like them." 'You have? How very fortunate r Amy told her about the seals nnd bow she had been unnble to sell even nn of them. To her great Joy Miss o h t,nH l.nov boucht the whole twenty-flve and voices calling his put the money In Amy's pocketbook, name, nnd he together witn a origin for herseir. "i nope you hi very happy Christmas, dear," Miss Lucy said. The next day Amy took the Red PrnKs monov to her teacher, and Miss up on Christmas Smith told her she hnd done very well. morning ana r.uny --- ---- found all the ger nuto enr stoppea ueii beautiful glfta door, and the chauffeur brought n a thnt Santa Claus great basket lor Airs, we . had brought to wns a new dress for Amy. with a arm him he registered cloak for her motner. oesiaes . cummin a vow that when doll. The Douom ui " fliiori with eooa tnings to euu "My Christmas week began with oora" lnuched Amy as bright drops fell on her round cheeks, "nnd It Is ending In tears tool" i.Tnr nf hnnnlness. darling, snia her mother. "Please, sir, we're from the home,' said Bobby. "We knew yon lived all alone and we thought maybe you'd like to hire us three kids to spend Christmas with you. We don't wan! any tree," explained Bobby. "We Jusl want to bang up our stockings and wnke up something like home befoio we came to the 'sylura.". Tears wer In the boys' eyes now. Mr. Bnrtley flourished a handkerchief nnd tried to laugh, but his voice crack ed so queerly. "Now, that's a funny thing," he de clared. "I was Just wishing I had three nice boys to spend Chiistmal with me nnd maybe live with me all the time." By and by Mr. Bnrtley called a man' Bervant, nnd together they took the three little boys up to bed. Then they hung their stockings on, the corners of the big four-post bed stead, and In twd DRY BIT8. r' Grammar a la prohibition: Dry : Comparative. Dryer: Superlative. Bone dry: In 1920 the United States will be In the superlative cot dltion. The constitution of the United States gives to each man the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happi ness. The liquor institution sends mnn to death, slavery and the pursuit oi wretchedness. St Paul wrote to Timothy to use a little wine for his stomach's sake, A good many Timothys since then have j too eagerly followed this advice and I have gone to seed. LIQUOR AND LABOR. A department superintendent of one A the big tire factories in Akron, O. Bscs CO men In each shift. They are making gas masks, miners' respirators, ind other vital war material. That de nartment is working only two shifts a lay Instead of three, because of the scarcity of labor. They pay off on Friday. On one Saturday only six of the sixty men in one shift reported for work. "Ninety per cent of our labor troubles nre due to booze," snys this juperlntendent. If the government would shut down on the liquor traffic we could lncrense our output enor mously. There Is no lack of labor. The only trouble Is to keep It working full time." To Make Christmas Wreaths. rjnnd Christmas wreaths may be made by tying small branches of Doug las, or other spruce, firmly about a barrel hoop. Sprays of ruscus or other colored material, and pine cones may be worked In for color. Mabel's Odd Request One morning Mabel'a mother gave her a bunch of grapes; when abe got through eating them, she gave the stem back, saying: "Mother, put some more on here." A Resolution. "Wlah you a Happy New Yearl" That'a goln' to be my speech. I'm goin' to put the polltlci Away back out o' reach. I'm goln' to be forgetful Of problems gatherln' thick. An' wlh you Happy New Year Down to Pohlck on the Crick. Won't talk about the weather, Xf the weather len't fine. We'll aet tha log nre blaaln If the sun torgeU to ahlne, The iorrowi an reeentrnenta, We will eend them on their way. "Wleh you Happy New Tear, That's all I'U have to say. PASSING OF THE PENITENTIARY. Citizens of Colorado are inquiring what is to become of the state peni tentiary a few years hence. Despite asleep, while th the Increase In population the prison . th,8 Nehemlah entered upon a, servant, Martin, Quota, Warden Tynan says, has been cleanglng process, (vv. 30-31). The use, nodded In a cbalj ; reuucea since proiuoiuou wem iuiu ei- of th(8 word "'remember" in verses n, tect at tne rate oi ten a monin. snouiu minutes the! A were sounq Nehemlnh remained In Jerusalem twelve years, from B. C. 444 to B. C. 432. He wos then recalled nnd was In Persia some years, pcrhnps five or seven, but returned about B. C. 425, the year Arinxerxes died, for we know that he returned by permission of that king. Therefore, the date of tills les son would be sometime In the summer r early autumn of 420 or 427 B. CM 16 or 18 years following lost Sunday's lesson. Tn thn section, vv. 10-14. we see that the gifts for the house of God and the Levltes, who led in worship, hnd Seen neglected. Whenever the nouse of God nnd Its service of worship Is neglected, we may expect thnt the Sab bath dny ond the worship of God will also soon fall into contempt. Ezra has ilmpped out of our history without a hint ns to his end. He mny nave re turned to Babylon, seeing thnt his work wns completed, or have been re called by the king. Perhaps he nroiignc inck Information to Neheminii nt uie Persian court, of the declension which hnd already started In the city of Jem- Vilem. Three times In tins ciinpier the word "remember" Is emphasized. Perhaps that offers a suggestion ns to our outline. I. "Remember" (v. 14) the Neglect of God's House, (vv. 1-14). ine neg lect of God's house grew up out or tne Incursjon of heathenism Into Jewish '.lfe. Nehemlnh realized that the pur ity of the race depended upon absolute wnnrntlon from the mixed multitude. (v. 8). Nehemlnh also confronted the . difficulty of having n priest ,(vv. 4, 5), ! who hod defiled himself and nlso dese crated the temple, ond flnnlly the por tion for the support of the priest and the temple worship had been withheld, (v. 10). This wns the state of things with which Nehemlnh hod to contend. II. "Remember" (v. 12) the Sab bath Day. (vv. 15-22). Nehemlnh's next nnd most difficult reform wns re garding the fourth commnndment. ne nt once set.nhout to learn the facts; then relates what he snw (v. 15). The record also tells how he testified ngnlnst them in thnt they were selling merchondlse on the Snbbnth dny. He contended with the aobles thnt they hnd done evil on the Snbbnth day. (v.' 17). ne testified ngnlnst them tlmt the merchants and sellers of ware had lodged about and within Jerusalem, (vv. 20, 21). The root of the trouble with Judnh was that they forgot God's word and followed the devices nnd de sires of their own henfts. The Jewish' Sabbath In Its outward form on the exact day of the week Is not binding upon Gentile Christians (Col. z :iu, 1 1 ). Tr wns riven to Israel as a peeP,e- (Deut. 5:1, 2), as a memorial of their, deliverance out of the land of Egypt1 nnil the house of bondnce. (Deut. a W The Christian, by the denth of Christy Is made dead to the letter of the law) of Moses. (Deut. 7:4), but tne pnn-. rinl of the Sabbath is older than eveni the law of Moses and Is as binding! nnnn the Christian believer as are uie many other principles which underlie, the Mosaic law. In Its exact form, the seventh day, the observance of the, Sabbath belongs to the old order and' not to the Christian order, cnrist, wno. rose from the dead (Rom. 7:4), rose. nn the first day of the week, and we, as Joined to Christ, nre not under otn iiMtinn to the Mosaic Inw, but to. Christ. Therefore, the Lord's dny, thej resurreetlon dny. the first dny of tne( week. (Rev. 1:10; John 21:20; 1:10- 20; Acts 27), Is the day or privilege. not of obligation nnd is more sncrcti. to ns thnn the Snbbnth day of these Jews. The Jews In Nehemlah's timet showed their contempt of the Lord's' rinv hv mnklna it a doy ot proiit, neno this exhortation which we see set forth In this section. This shouia De a warn-, Ing nnd on exhortation to us in those, days of a secularized sobnatn III. "Remember" (v. 29) the Holy; Priesthood, (vv. 30-31). In this section) we see that the priesthood had even! nflioH themselves witn women. ar.u, Women Hard at Work Four million dollars to be expend by women for women In a 8inKie m was never before heard of. These m days or nmozing tilings, (,( tills what the -Young Woman's Christian loclatlon has undertaken, fmV .w New York Letter. Within two niootij aiier me ueciimuion or vnr , spring, the association, with r0 i experience behind It In work for girl was in tne neiu witn its wur w. .Aimnll r wmt ,1... wuiitu i.v iimtvi iiiu in-run or Wfll) and girls everywhere, both hero nil abroad, who are in mornl or i)i)x, dunger because of wnr-rhiinRwl con tlons. Hostess houses fur women v Itlng the training cimips, and eM gency housing for girls who nre tnl ing the places of men In Industry, J Ohe of the cliler needs. Twenty wnrj ers nre already In Europe, and oih. are on the way or arriving. Thej i opening cafeterias In France and ItJ sla for the women who are doing nn work, and are providing rest undrn ntlon places for nurses nt the (ri during their hours off. KIDNEY TROUBLE NOT EASILY nil Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected An examining physician for one el prominent life insurance companiei, in interview . of the subject, made the toniahing statement that one ream J to many applicants for inaurance in jected is because kidney trouble unci mon to tne American people, and the LJ majority of these whose application) declined do not even suspect that tf have the disease. Judging from reports from dnid who are constantly in direct touch j me puuuc, mere is une preparation i has been very successful in ovcrm: these conditions. The mild and be intlucnce of Dr. Kilmer's SwampRocI soon realized. , It stands the highest its remarkable record of succeu. We find that Swamp-Root U iti an herbal compound 'd we would vise our readers who feel in need ol w remedv to live it a trial. It u on at all drug stores in bottles of two iJ medium and large. However, if you wish first to teit grent preparation send ton centi to Kilmer & Co., llinghamton, N. Y, f sample bottle. When writing beam mention this paper. Adv. True to Life. "I don't see how you enn read trashy novel," declared mother. ' you see any merit In It at ulli" "Whv, yes," answereu miner. Intensely realistic." "What do you mean? vny.uw versatlon between the lovers Is utt silly slush, nnd their actions ire otlenllv nbsurd." , -v,,., that's what I mean, m futher, mildly.. . ... ...im. with Roman ! I 'ri. th. mnM SrrifrMU.d aid etrsniiB.. ' your eyes. aqt. She Had a Pap Once. Tho little clrl's futher had or a inn? time In search of h' Ills memory must hove grown M the child's mind. One afternoon, n helne rolled out In her gWtft saw a little child run by to t man yond nnd call. "Papa. i'F ..1-1 r,d tn her niotrjer Hint? ,lll iu'" remarked In a sorrowful tone, i we hod a papa." In Two Minutes They Were Asleep. outside In the hall and Mr. Bnrtley, button ed into a fun lined overcoat, went striding down the snowy street to the brightly lighted shops. I don't knotf who was the hap pier that Christy mas morning, the three little boyfl with stockings full of treasures or big Mr. Barh ley, whom they called "Uncle Dick." And the best of it all was this same ratio be maintained the pen itentiary will be emptied in less than six years. Other dry states face similar situ ations. If Kansas were not providing for federal prisoners nnd prisoners from other states, most of her penal institutions would be closing up. WHY HER COW IS LIKE KEN TUCKY. First Lady Did you know I have the dearest little pig, and I call It Ink. Second Lady And why do you call your pig Ink? First I.ady Sura, because It runs jut of the pen. Second Lady Aw, lwd cess to ye! But did ye know that I have a cow. I have that and I call her Kentucky. First Lady And why do you call .v.. tr. t..inn nAnrtaH all three of vnnr rnw Ken tuck vT mm lui. ai iicjr ituvv- i , - - the little lnds who came to blm that; Christmas eve, and they are growing up Into such fine, big boys. Danger of Christmas Fires. The danger ot nre at ennsunas times from candle-lighted trees and other Incidents of the season ought nnt tn he forcotten. for a little fore- Second Xady Because she's golnu 3ry. CONSUMER PAYS THE TAX. When congress was considering In creasing the beer tax the National Liquor Dealers' Journal said. "The brewers will make no complaint over thought and prudence may prevent the war tax. The tax will not be one some shocking accidents, in partic ular, measures should be taken to re duce the annual amateur Banta Claus cremations to a minimum, if not whol ly stopped. Exchange, Optlmlstlo Thought A man becomes learned by asking' questions. on them although they will act as the clearing house for the government in Its collection. The taxpayers will be the ultimate consumers. Some of the big glasses of beer moy be cut down a trifle, or a little more foam added to the ordinary glass will make up the difference." 22 and K9 gives strong emphasis to thej three cardinal 6lns against wnicn hemlnh was battling. IV. Summary: As In Nehemlnh's time, so now. Sabbath desecration is' the surest rond to national ruin, nnd & Inrce nronortlon of our present calam Itv can be traced to growing irrever-. ence for the Lord's day.' Jesus swept owoy tho cobwebs of Sabbath irrever-. ence, but did not tear down tne nouse., He kept the principle, but removed the bornncles with which the Pharisees' nnd Jews had encumbered It. Jesus taught that the Sabbath was made for mon nnd not man for the Snbbath (Murk 2:27, 28), and he set himself ns on example in this regard, for he Is Lord Of that day as well as the other rinvs of the week, The Sabbath is a day of rest and if observed, workmen without exception win nroduce more than Is possible If It is not observed. Recent confirmation nf this nrlnclDle can be found in the report of the British ministry of muni tions. To observe the Sabbath or any other divinely ordained principle tends to nrosoerlty (I Tim. 4:8). The chief value of the Snbbath, how ever, is In connection with the wor- hln of Ood. The feeding of the spir itual nature ; the rest which Is to be differentiated from mere holiday or pleasure ; Us need for adult and child life j Its educational value j Its oppor tunity for Chrlstlnn service ,nnd exal tation of family relations, all show It to have been created to nil a real need and to manifest the wisdom and gooa qsss of Clod. ' For Lameness Keep a bottle of VJ Liniment in youf statu"" spavin, curb, splint of w enlargement, for ihotjj diporsweeny.woundJ.JT scratches, coflarorshoeo" epraini and any la It absorbs swellings a' largements.anddispd' and stiffness very JL MTWmM Jam-rL 35c Per Bottle At All Dealers Each bottle con tains more than the usual 50o bottla ot liniment. ' IILBERT BROS. BALTIMORE, MD, r7r5TS! WANTED 100 LIVE Aw In th south. Hlrt "Jnu i Quit Suffering SaJsSfr, Addrsss B. A. BMITU, MH- I I a oi r w ctcxopep' A,,9rPi!.'' KAIITV. If. fro. Do'lfTi BUUABL AOHNOt, I ' W. N. U., BALTIMORE