THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. OUR DEFENSE 1 In the spring we may be attacked at inv moment. Toxic poisons pile up within us nfter a hard winter, and we 'Tun-down," tired out, blue and .discouraged. This is the time to put our house In order cleanse the system ad put fresh blood Into our arteries. You can obtain an alterative extract from Blood root, Golden Seal, Stone ind Queen's root, Cherry bark, rolled into a sugar-coated tablet and sold by most druggists, In sixty cent vials, as rr l'lcrce's Golden Medical Discovery. This blood tonic, In tablet or liquid form, Is Just what you need for "Spring Fever," for that lack of ambition. It will fill you full of vim, vigor and vl- ' fc'hillineiii, when other people feci warm tnough, is a sign of biliousness, or of IllUittimi 1U1BUIID PV IB 0 furred or coated tongue, loss of appetite, head aches or giddiness, anil a dull, drowsy, debilitated feeling. It's your liver that's at fault. You want to stimulate it and invigorate it with Dr. Pierce's Tlcasant Pellets. With every trouble of the kind, these tiny little TPJ I. n things act like a mirncle. I"! I tr You can break up sudden iVir if """cks f cid"-Fcve' 1 Tnflnmmnfinni with kern. They'll give you permanent bene fit for Indigestion, Constipation, bour E'omach, Sick Headache, and Dizziness. They are small and pleasant to take, ana the most thoroughly natural remedy. Jwenty-five cents at most drug stores. Frost Proof Cabbage Plants r express, yos paying eharf at. t 600. Il . tixio at 1T6 f I Kiuikil.uil POST Pain ii,iu ob. tier p. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C I Speaking of real estate In cities, a front foot Is often worth more than a lack yard. j 1 Acid Stomach, Heartburn and Nausea Julckly disappear with the use of Wright s ndlsn VestUble Pills. Bend for trial boa to 171 Pearl 8t, New York. Adv. (Missing From Illinois Farms. Illinois Is said to have lost 100,000 farm workers from Its 200,000 farms. Chicago News. ) Itching Burning Skins. For eczemas, rashes, ltchlngs, Irrita tions, pimples, dandruff, sore hands, Ind baby humors, Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are supremely effective. For free samples address "Cutlcura, Dept. X, Boston." At druggists and by mall. Eoap 25, Ointment 25 and 50. Adv. Nothing to Go By. "She's quite refined, Jack, really! $ou can never judge a girl by her itlothes." You don't get much of a chnnce to, Jove !" Cassell's Saturday Journal. Some Guide. "The submarine blockade," said a fovernment official at a dinner, "Is n JilulT. It does harm, of course ; It does tuitnld harm, but as u blockade It is k biuir. "The binding, bragging submarines finilnd me of the hen. "A hen, you know, set out to see the V'orld, and met a crow in a remote forest. j "'Hut, madam,' said the crow, 'are 7011 not afraid without wings, of losing jour way In all this dense tangle?' 'Afraid? Oh, no! said tho hen. ftvery little while I lay an egg to guide luyself back by.' "Anon. Mason and Dixon's Line. Jnmes Y. Cnhlness, n traveling mnn f'f Evnnsvlllo, told the following story She other day: "Coming home recently from Ofc'.n- jioniu I heard a bit of .darkey humor. J was nn a train and Oklahoma has a Jim Crow' law similar to the one In entucky, However, there had been uch n dt'mnnd for troop coaches that ur train had" only tho old-fashioned urs without any compartments. One i a group of negroes who had segre- pnted themselves In one end of the J'onch gravely took a piece of twine ('ut of his pocket and stretched It ".Hiss me aisle from opposite winuow ucks. What's thnt line?' nsked one of Is friends. Mason and Dixon's.'" he erlnned. Indianapolis News. A Package GrapcMits teaches food conservation. Saves FUEL SUGAR TIME WHEAT AND WASTE SOLD BY GROCERS. iti j jii IMPROVED UNIFORM IHTERHATIOHAl swrsoiooL Lesson (By REV. P. 11. F1TZWATKH, D. D Teacher of EnRllxli lllblo In tlx Moody Bible Inxtitute of Chicago.) (Pnpyrlnht, 1918. Western Newspaper Union.) it m LESSON FOR APRIL 28 JESUS REBUKES SELFISHNESS. LESSON TEXT Mark :30-W. GOLDEN TEXT If any man desire to be llrst, the snme shall be lust of all, and servant of all. Mark 9:35. DEVOTIONAL KEADINO-I Corln thlans 1.1. ADDITIONAL MATEHIAL FOR TEACH EIIS Matthew 6:41-42; V:'3-n; Luke 22:24-30. PRIMARY AND JUNIOR LESSON MATERIAL Mnrk 9:30-37. PRIMARY MEMORY VEnSE- Bo kind one to another. Kphcslnnn 4:32. JUNIOR MEMORY VERSE-I John 4: 1L I. The Stupidity of Selfishness, (vv. 80-32). Jesus with his disciples Is on his way to Capernaum for the last time. lie Is Boon to louve for Jerusa lem, where ho Is to die on the cruel cross for tho world's sins. He still seeks the way of retirement In order to be alone with his disciples, bis ob Ject being to lead them Into the appre hension of the meaning of the cross. The teaching which was Interrupted at Caeserea by Peter's rebuke Is now re sumed, and with dellulteness he de clares tho future event as nlready present. 1. "The Son of Man Is delivered Into the hands of men." 2. "They shall kill him." 3. "He shall rise the third day." While pressing upon them continu ously the fact and necessity of tho cross, he never failed to show them tho bright side his triumphant vic tory over denth In tho resurrection. The hearts of the disciples were so steeped In selfishness that they failed to understand his teachings. If the disciples had more definitely attended to his teaching concerning the cross, they would have been better prepared for the hour of temptation which was so soon to overtake them. II. The Wrangling of Selfishness, (vv. 3!l-37). 1. The searching question (v. 33). The omniscient Christ knew the se crets of their hearts. The fact that the disciples were wrangling about of ficial position while the Lord was fac ing humiliation and death for them and the whole world, shows how com pletely the Lord wns alone In his sor row. 2. The silent disciples (v. 34). They were ashamed In his presence, because the selfishness of their henrts wns revealed. To realize the presence of the Lord would shame us of much of our selfishness. 3. The stinging rebuke (vv. 35-37). "If any man desire to be first, the same shall be last of all, and servant of all." The greatest among men are those who aro willing to take the low est place and serve others. This truth he enforced in a concrete way by plac ing a child In their midst. This child was an Illustration of dependence and Ignorance. Py example nnd word he shows thnt true greatness Is expressed by willingness to nld tho weak, to In struct the Ignorant and to serve those In need. All such render service not merely to thoso in need, but unto Christ and God. True greatness, there fore, consists not In selfseeklng, but rendering cheerful service t6 the needy In the name of Christ. . III. The Intolerance of Selfishness (vv. 38-41). 1. John's guilty conscience (v. 38). In the light of tho teaching of Jesus, John was a little disturbed over having "forbid". a worker for Christ who did not follow after him. Doubtless this Intolerance wns In part due to Jealousy for Christ, but also a selfish ambition. Many times Christians mistake bigotry for zeal for Christ. 2. Whom to tolerate (vv. 30-41). (1) Those who are casting out devils (v. 39). We should really satisfy our selves that supernatural works aro be ing done. Are demons being enst out? However, this Is not final, as there Is a supernatural work not of God. (2) Those who aro not doing this work In Christ's name (v. 41).' Any worker going forth In the name of Christ, nnd for the glory of Christ, should be given Godsfieed. If he is doing a good work, even though not In your way, or If not a member of your church or school, "Forbid him not." IV. The Awful Issue of Selfishness, (vv. 42-50). Selfishness results In ruin to others (v. 42), nnd also to the Individual (vv. 43, 45 and 47). In either case the Is sue Is eternnl torment In hell. Selfish ness Is opposed to God, nnd that which Is opposed to God must be eternally separated from him. Self-renunciation should be so complete that we should bo willing to abandon the most necessary and lawful things In life hands, feet nnd eyes when they be come occasions for stumbling either to ourselves or to others. Be Uncommonly Good. Here Is a sentence of Coventry Tnt niore's, one of the1 many jottings which were found In manuscript after his denth: "If you wish to bo good, the easiest, Indeed the only way, Is to bo heroically so." That Is profoundly true. We are not going to be common ly pood until we are uncommonly de voted to goodness. That Is to say, tho easiest way to God's will on the ordi nary rnd Is to bring to each task nnd duty a life of uttermost consecration. It Is only the really full life that will make little things live. If there Is to be tho heroic flavor In our ordinary fellowships It must bo born out of a supremely surrendered life to tho fel lowship of God Id Christ our Lord. We are too prone to try to be good on a perilously low pressure, nnd we ennnot get along. There Is no strength In our goodness. We are not impressive. It makes no mnrk. It ennnot burn a trail 1 Thero Is not heat enough. If we had more, heat, If we were baptized with the Holy Ghost nnd with fire, the ordi nary things of the ordlnnry day would pulse with the power of holy consecra tion. J. H. Jowett, D. D. The Safety of the Christian By REV. D. B. SUTCLIFFE Extension Department, Moody Dibit Instituts, Chicago TEXT-When I cry tinto thee then shall mine enemies, turn Luck: this I know; for God In for iiie.-Ts. W:9. David, the sweet singer of Israel, has set down for us In tho expression of his own emo tions nnd expe riences the heart of the hel lever's comfort and assur ance. The Psalms contain the voice of the spiritual life of one who holds communion with God In the midst of n world opposed to lilm. A , . " 111 '"o anove text i'' 'here Is much of 1 "' I comfort and ns- fc Mirancc for the t-v? rrmmw' ..... l..,,,.. I1V .fc foes of righteous ness and truth. The Neea of Safety. This psalm declares In the second terse "they be ninny that fight against me" and this Is echoed by every Chris tian's heart. The world with Its In finite variety of subtle temptations, adding huge stores of fuel to the pride of life, npp'uling In such crafty ways of the Christian's natural self; tho flesh with Its never-ending tug nnd pull drawing one in multitudinous ways to Its desires and the devil with his unnumbered wiles and devices leading into the avenues which appear so good and even religious, which yet are the paths toward death. Numer ous Indeed are the hosts of enemies. Malignant too these enemies are offer ing no quarter, showing no mercy but as thl psiilin says they "would dally swallow me up." They are as persist ent as they are numerous and malig nant. There Is no respite from their attacks ; they are "righting dally," con tinually. Surely there Is need of safety for the Christian In the midst of these foe u The Time or Safety. Our text says "when I cry unto thee, then shall mine enemies turn back." In his desire to teach us the Lord seems to permit us to go on fighting with our own strength, struggling with our weakness, striving to win la the unequal strife until we come one of old to the end of self and self's power nnd cry "O wretched man that I am." Put while he permits this, It is only thnt he may lift us up In victory and mokes us superior to all the attacks however bitter and hard pressetl they may be. It has been well said that "the end of self Is God's beginning" for "when I am weak then am I strong" Strong no longer In the power of my own res olutions nnd the force of my will, but strengthened with the might of the God who Is omnipotent. When tho Christian comes to the end of self, with his hack to the wall and with a realization of his insufllclency, then he cries to the almighty one and finds swift deliverance from all his foes. The Certainty of Safety. The psalmist has had sufliclcnt ex perience to be assured thut this Is no mere pious ami beautiful thought but out of the furnace of personal history comes the glad confidant ringing cry "this I know." The Christian need not merely hope for safety with the uncertainty of human hope, but with the Divine assurance founded on the Immutability of the eternal power of God. "If God be for us who can be against us," Is the Apostle's word In Romans 8:31. Peyond peradventure, without the shadow of doubt the Chris tian may know that when he cries unto the Lord, then will his enemies turn back. Not merely because ho Is a good mnn, not because he Is h spe cial favorite with high heaven, not because he bus some special Influence with God but because God has said, "I will never leave thee, I will never fall thee." Pelylng therefore on the omnipotent power and tho unbreak able promise of the Almighty God ho can say "I know." The Cause of Safety. The cause or reason of the believer's safety does not depend on the believ er's own strength nor ability, but In the simple fact that Got! is for him. (iod was for him when Christ died for him upon the cross. The less Is al ways Included In the greater and "He that sparetl not his own son, but de livered him up for us all, how shall he not with him freely give us all Mugs?" Ilotn. 8:32. God was for the believer when Christ tiled, he wns for the believer when salvation wns bestowed, he was for him when he wns brought Into the family of God and being now one of the father's children In Christ, God will be for ti 1 iti In the time of danger to provide safety from all his enemies. Oh, that the children of God might learn to believe "when I cry unto thee then will mine enemies turn hack: this I know ; for Gotl Is for me." Thy Will, Not Mine. Thomas Carlyle lost a great deal of belief, but he never lost his belief In the Divine Providence, and when tho first volume of his work on the French revolution was burnt through a friend's carelessness and he had no notes wherewith to re-wrlte It, this is what he wrote In his diary: "Oh, that I had faith, oh that I had It; then there Is no burden too heavy to be borne, and no task too difficult for me to attempt." Acknowledgment of God. Humility Is but the sincere acknowl edgment In, thought, in language, in nctlon, of the first nnd most com manding of all facts; It is the sincere acknowledgment of God. And as long as tho Gospel revelation unveils God, In his nwfulness nnd In his beauty, to the soul of mnn, so long Jesus Christ will be followed to heaven by genera tions of the bumble. Rev. II. P. Lid Jon, D. D. i V iConuucieil by the Nutlunal Woman's Christian Temperum-a Union.) TH.I PROHIBITION SITUATION AT THE BEGINNING OF 1918. A survey of the wet nnd dry situa tion throughout the country, taken by the board of temperance, prohibition and public morals of the Methodist church, shows that on January 1 there were 2,374 dry counties anil 015 wet counties. This Is a dry gain for the year 1017 of 88 counties. The year 1017 gave the drys state wide victory in New Hampshire, Utah and Indiana by legislative action and in New Mexico by vote of the people. Iowa failed by a very smiill majority to make Its prohibition constitutional. j Ohio reduced Its wet majority almost to the vanishing point. New Jersey I elected a local option legislature and j Kentucky elected one pledged to sub i mission of state prohibition and ratifi cation of the national amendment. New York ncMcd 105 towns to Its dry list nnd Illinois closed saloons In tho state capital. The United States Supreme court Upheld the Webb-Kenyon aiitl-shlpplng law and sustained the rigid Idaho bone dry law. Congress voted tho District of Col umbia dry, passed the Iteed bone-dry law, shutting liquors out of all prohi bition states ; enacted a law prohibit ing the sending of advertising of li quors through the malls Into states where It Is forbidden ; enacted prohibi tion for Alaska in response to the ac tion of the people at the polls; made Porto Uleo prohibition territory; for bade the sale of liquor to soldiers and sailors; prohibited the manufacture ami importation of distilled liquors during the war; gave the president power to stop brewing to save grain; and submitted an amendment to the Constitution for national prohibition. JHOW TO ENFORCE THE LAW. "They tell me that the prohibitory law Is not enforced," says William Jen nings Prynn. "My answer Is, elect men who will enforce it I Don't you know thnt the first thing that the liquor In terests do Is to name men who will not enforce the law? The man who accepts the nomination from the men Interest ed In liquor must take an oath In ad vance that he will violate the oath that the Constitution requires him to take. That Is the condition upon which they give their support I "Hut I have another answer. If you tell me that we will have blind tigers If we don't have saloons, I answer that If a tiger wire after my boy, the blinder the tiger, the safer my boy would be ! If the tiger Is blind, my boy must hunt him up ; if the tiger can see, ho can hunt my boy up. If we close the saloons and they still sell liquor, they do It In the byways anil In the al leys, nnd those who sell are criminals; and those who deal with them do It with shame upon the face. "If we close the saloons nnd then elect men who will enforce the law we are not to blame If, In spite of all we can do there may be some selling with out a license. We are no more respon sible after we have done all we can than we ure for the work of a burglar who enters a house In spite of the fact that we have a law against burglary." HOW THE SALOON PAYS ITS LI. CENSE MONEY. Some one may claim that the sa loon helps to pay his taxes. This Is a great error. Can you squeeze water out of a sponge? If you think you can, go down to the drug store and buy one. I will squeeze It. How much water do I get? The only way you can get water out of a sponge Is to bring the water In a basin, drop In the sponge and let It absorb It. Then yon can squeeze some of the water back. If you wftnt to get money out of a saloon, the only way Is to put the saloon down In the community nnd for every $-8,KK) It takes from the pock ets of the people you can squeeze ono thousand of It back In tho form of city license. The saloon must pick the pockets of the poor to pour a thin golden stream of revenue. Exchange. NATIONWIDE PROHIBITION LOGI CAL. War efficiency and the liquor trafllc have been treatetl In all belligerent countries ns Irreconcilable enemies. Every military administrator recog nizes this. Congress recognized It when It Inserted In the selective con scription law provision forbidding the sale of alcoholic liquors to soldiers and sailors. And when congress went thnt fur It admitted the logic of at tempting to check or abolish the use of Intoxicating liquors In every other field of war effort In the industrial sphere as well ns In the, fighting zones nnd the training camps. New York Tribune. FOLLOWS THE USE OF BEER. During the Spanlsh-Ameiicnn war a group of physicians of this country signed this statement: "It Is not only In the state of drunk enness that men step Into danger of in curring venereal diseases, but In the state of exhilaration nnd weakened self-control which follows the use of a comparatively small amount of alco holic liquors. This Impairment of self control not only follows the use of the stronger liquors, but may also fol low the use of beer." HOW IT WORKS IN UTAH. "The marvelous results of prohibi tion In this state have exceeded the most extravagant claims of the prohi bitionists," declares Governor Bam berger of Utah. "Our people owe It to the rest of the Union to let the poo pie know of these results. In order that the day may be hastened when liquor will be abolished throughout the na tion." The most dnngerous saloon Is the high-toned place, not tho barrelhouse with the sawdwit floor. SAW WAR'S HORROR English Lady Writes of Experi ences in Roumania. Veritable Inferno When Oil Fields Vere Destroyed Russian Soldiers Pillage While Their Comman der Is Occupied Elsewhc. I had not thought that we could pos sibly enter Into a new phase of horror, but It was born on Boxing day, when the first whispers reached us of tho destruction of the oil fields. Frankly, we had, each and every one of us, com pletely forgotten the oil! A man, a friend of ours, drove up In a motor, streaked with grime, weary and dead to the world. After lunch he started to tell his story, fortified by a big cigar. He had been one of a pnrty who went out alone to the petrol city to destroy. No one would give them help, nnd he told ns wonderful ac counts of the scenes which he hnd wit nessed, Tho first step had been to capture every single man and boy who knew anything about the petrol plans and deport them bodily to Moldavia, so that the German! should find no skilled workmen to utilize to their own profit. And then n few pnlrs of hands sufficed to crumble nnd lay In ashes what many hundreds of brains had worked to build. First they broke up all the machinery the how of the happening Is Immaterial ; the most primitive nnd brutal weapons served them best. Then they poured benzine from the roofs of fnctorles down their walls nnd set them alight, they dug5 trenches round the vnts nnd stnrted blazing channels of flame toward the reservoirs. These blew up each In turn, nnd soot nnd flames made of what had been sunlight an eternnl night where tho fire king went mad. Town by town saw the destroyers come to let hell loose, and factory nfter factory writh ed In a denth agony of twisted Iron to send Jets of poison fumes nfter the four small flying motor cars. Tho de vastation left by a retrentlng nrmy lay before them, turmoil of nn enemy drunk with success stirred In tho wind gusts that fed the flames from the south. One enn hnrdly credit tho fact that those few little men hnve so ef fectually accomplished what they set out to do that It will be six months be fore the Germans can squeeze a drop of petrol from the snturnted earth. In our English hospital there Is n man who has had his foot amputated. He lay pinned under a burning car. A hatchet was brought by a doctor to n French oflicer standing near, and tho doctor said: "Do It If you can; I have no Instruments and feel paralyzed." The Frenchman did tho thing In the whole horror of the sunlight, whilst tho Russian privates who were his charges took advantage of the oppor tunity nnd pillaged private passenger luggago on the train I Lndy Kennnrd In The North American Review. Making Shrapnel. New Inventions hnve been made by Americans, nnd Amerlcnn machine tools for shell making hnve been sent to Europe nnd are used In the fnctorles there. The number of shells of shrap nel mnde In this country Is almost be yond computation. Long before we en tered the war our different fnctorles were turning out hundreds of thou sands of shrapnel a week, nnd It wns due to this demand for munitions that enabled us to turn out the big product we are now mnklng. This Is so not only of shrapnel, but of powder nnd explosives of all kinds. Before the war one company wns making about 400, 000 pounds of military powders per annum, another wns turning out 800 12-Inch shells per day, and n third mnklng 000,000 londed time fuses a month. The orders of the allies ran Into many hundreds of millions of dol lars nnd It Is snld that nlmost $2,000, 000,000 worth of war supplies were contracted for by J. P. Morgan & Co. alone. Tragedy of French Trees. Broken homes, ruined factories, shattered churches, violated graves, It had seemed to me we had rung all tho changes on the destruction of war. But there remained one tho tragedy of tho trees. You can rebuild houses, churches, towns even for thnt takes only money. Bijt you enn't rebuild or chards of fruit trees nnd avenues of great shado trees for that takes time. We were seeing them everywhere now orchards with trees that wero but faded, shriveled bunches of brown lenves lying on their sides; orchnrds, where these hail been cleared away, that showed nothing but white-topped stumps. They say that, when tho warm spring came, some of those or chard trees, lying on their sides but not wholly severed, lenfed gently nnd then Just before they died bloomed once again for France. Inez Haynes Irwin In McClure's Magazine. Meter for Telephone Calls. A recently Invented telephone meter Is designed to prevent errors In charg ing calls and to make the service more satisfactory to the subscriber in other respects. Being of comparatively sim ple construction, It can be Installed In the signal ense of a coin-operated tele phone with slight alterations. .The de vice comprises two counters which are actuated electrically "nnd are loented Just buck of apertures In the front of the case so that they are visible to the subscriber. When the device Is used with a coin-operated telephono It shows the subscriber at nil times how many calls have been made. Popular Mechanics Mngazlne. Call for Men and for Capital. The 325,000 acres of wheat land re taken from Germany this year In northern France may be made to pro duce enough wheat next year for 1, 000,000 men, according to the estlmnte of a mission appointed by the agricul tural department of France, which has been examining tho liberated territory. Both men and money are required nnd the mission asks for 1,000 volunteer Amerlcnn farm hnnds and a loan from American cnpltol, Win the War by Preparing the Land Sowing the Seed and Producing Bigger Crops Work ia Joint ElTort the Soil of the United States and Canada CO-OPERATIVE FARMING IN MAN POWER NECESSARY TO WIN TUB BATTLE FOR LIBERTY The Food Controllers of the United States and Canada are asking for greater food production. Scarcely 100,000,000 bushels of wheat are avail able to be sent to ihe allies overseas before the crop harvest. Upon the efforts of the United States and Canada rests the burden of supply. Every Available Tillable Acre Must Contribute; Every Available Farmer and farm Hand Must Assist Western Canada has an enormous acreage to be seeded, but man power is short, and an appeal to the United States allies is for more men for seed ing operation. Canada's Wheat Production Last Year was 225,000,000 Bushels; the Demand From Canada Alone for 1918 Is 400,000,000 Bushels To secure tl.is she must have -.ssistance. She has the land but needs the men. The Government of the United States wants every man who can effectively help, to do farm work this year. It wants the land in the United States developed first of course; but it also wants to help Canada. When ever we find a man we can spare to Canada's fields after ours are supplied, we want to direct him there. Apply to our Employment Service, and we will tell you where you caa best serve the combined interests. Western Canada's help will be required not later than May 5th. Wages to competent help, 550.00 a month and up, board and lodging. Those who respond to this appeal will get a warm welcome, good wages, good board and find comfortable homes. They will get a rate of one cent a mile from Canadian boundary points to destination and return. For particulars as to routes and places where employment may be had apply to: U. S. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Drastic Control of Flax. The British Ihix coin ml hoard or dered that no II. ix, Mux line, or flax tow may without permit be spread, carded or otherwise put Into iiininifuo- tare after January 1J. No yarns n- posed wholly or partly of Mux or tow may without penult be wound or warped after .In unary Yi. No yiirn or flax or tow may without permit be boiled, bleiu'hed or put Into any other process of treatment after January 5. All existing licenses to spin are can celed and from uhove dates applica tions for further permits will be re ceived. FOODS TASTE BETTER COOKED -TOBACCO TASTES BETTER TOASTED Since the day of the caveman, who liked his meat raw, civilization has learned a lot about the scientific treat ment of the things we eat. Naturally none of us would now prefer to have our meat raw, our po tatoes as they come from the ground, our coffee unroasted. And naturally follows the grat dis covery recently made by The Ameri can Tobacco Co. that tobacco tastc9 better TOAFTEE: This wonderful new idea simple like all great inventions was first used in producing the famous LUCKY STRIKE Cigarette made of toasted Durley tobacco. Bur Icy has a mellow flavor, entirely different from the tobacco usually used for cigarettes. It is a pipe to baccoand LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes taste like a pipe. Adv. Anyway, half of the world knows that the other half Is looking for tho best of It. To keep clean and healthy take Dr. Plerce'a Pleasant reliefs. They regu late liver, bowels and stomnch. Adv. Many a man's dyspepsia Is due to the mistaken belief on the part of hta wife that she can cook. Lend Him AHanc For PATRIOTISM UFA "Actions speak louder than words-Act - Don! Talk - Buy Now hshhIi of Gold' fiSmisJ coming to farmers from the Western Canada. Where you can at $15 to $30 per acre and raise of $2 wheat to the acre it's easy offers ia her provinces of Manitoba, 160 Acre Homesteads Free to Settlers and other land at very low prices. Thousands of farmers from the U. S. or their sons are yearly taking advantage of this great opportunity. also of Oats, Barley and Flax, fully as Profitable an industry as schools; markets convenient; Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to supt. Immigration, Uttawa, Canada, or to J. P. JAFFRAY, Cor. Walnut A Broad Sis., Philadelphia, Pa. Cunadlnn Government Agent As Age Advances Small Pitt, Smsll Dose, Small Price But Creit In Its Goad Work Colorless or Pale Faces vu www a condition which will be greatly fiv w .'. j it riTrnri r signature Naturally. "I i ou remeiiiher the lime when there was sueh u race for red hair?" "Oh, red hair Is dyed out." GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER Has been used for all ailments that are caused by a disordered stomach and Innctlve liver, such ns sick heud nche, constipation, sour stomach, nervous Indigestion, fermentation of food, palpitation of the heart caused by gases In the stomach. August Flower Is a gentle laxative, regulates dlgestloa both in stomach and Intestines, cleans nnd sweetens the stomach nnd alimen tary canal, stimulates the liver to se crete the bile nnd Impurities from the blood. Sold In nil civilized countries, Give it a trial. Adv. Can Be Taken Either Way. "Imitation Is the nlncerest lluttery." "Not at all," rejoined Miss Cayeium. "Flattery Is the Inslneerest Imitation." $100 Reward, $100 Catarrh Is a local disease greatly Inflo erred by constitutional conditions. II therefore require constitutional treat ment. HALL'S CATAKRH MEDICINH Is taken Internally and acta through th Ulood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys tem. HALL'S CATARKH MEDICINH destroys the foundation of the disease, Slves the riatlent strength by Improving the general health and assists nature la doing Iti work. Iinono for any case of Catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MKDICINB falls to cure. Druggists 75c. Testimonials frea. F. J. Cheney It Co., Toledo, Ohio. Polite Reply. "Are you trying to make a fool of me?" "No, Indeed. I never attempt t Improve on the works of nature." Why be so aggressively clniritiihhs ns to liuike the helpless benetieiariea uncomfortable? Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOUIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, nnd see that It Bears the Signature of( in Use for Over 30 lenrs. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Marriages, whleh should miike one) out of two, often result In sixes and sevens. ENOCH MORGANS SONS CO. Buy SAPOLIO ECONOMY rich wheat fie' bay good farm land from 20 to 45 bushels if; to make money. Canada Saskatchewan aad Alberta ft 1 Wonderful yields mixed Fanning is (Train raising. Good climate excellent. the Liver Requires Six yfTi . l occasional slight stimulation. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS correct CONSTIPATION !T M,Il5d,c't lh 'bmc of Uoa ta tne blood, aft fvn helped by baiter SlrOnrillS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers