The Fulton County news. (McConnellsburg, Pa.) 1899-current, June 13, 1918, Image 7

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    THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA.
H MRS. BOYD
AVUIUtU AN
OPERATION
rton. Ohio. "I Buffered from
inw i . - ,l.Ph a.iiMl rnA much
suffering, and two
doctors decided
that I would have
to go through an
operation before 1
could get well.
"My mother, who
had been helped by
LydiaE.rinLliam
Vegetable Com
pound, advised ma
to try it before sub
mittingto an opera
tion. ltrelievcdme
from my troubles
V,I cn do my house woric without any
Siflculty. I advise any woman who is
flitted with female troubles to give
Ivdii E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
I H VI v " - - -
howa
K."-Mr. Marie Boyd, 1421
r. m v. .. Lanton. umo. r
there are serious cond!
. l a tinonttnl nnnrt5nn la ihm
. -n.AtivA Knt nn thai nthor hnnrl
' Lny women have been cured by this
Loui root and herb remedy, Lydia E.
Finkham's Vegetable Compound, after
Ltori have said that an operation wss
cemry-every woman who wants
to avoid an operation should give it a
fair trial before submitting to such a
trying ordeaL
i if complications exist, write to Lydia
r pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.,
lot advice. The result of many years
wperience is at your service.
RelyOnCuticura
ToClearPimples
Soap 23c. Ointment 23 and 80c.
j Courtship 1ms Its roiuiinct's and uinr
.ige 1ms Its lrt'viirtcntlons.
MI'S TRIBUTE TO
iT
WESTERN CANADA SOIL
That there Is pood reason for the
onderful crops of grnln grown in
Western Canada, wlilch have mnde
(l.ousnnds of former residents of the
tnited States wealthy, Is not always
,vpn the thought that It deserves Is
Quite apparent. But thnt there must
be a reason Is quite evident. Proba
bly more than one but the one that
nqulres emphasis Is that the soil Is
Of the nature that will produce pood
trops. It was not long since that the
firmer selected his land In the most
kiphnzard way. He need not do so
May. He will select It on the soil
innlysis plan. Soil from Western
Canada was submitted to I'rof. Siev
es, soil physicist of the State College
f Wnshincton, at Pullman. Wash. Ills
tiport should no doubt further encour
l?e settlement in Western Cunuda. It
finds as follows:
"We have nnnlyzed this sample and
find thnt It runs hlph In lime, very
fcjh In potash, phosphorus and In ni
trogen; thnt It has a splendid supply
tf organic matter and Is In the best
f physlcnl condition. There Is noth
fcc wronp with this soil from the
llandpnlnt of crop production, and I
:n satisfied that it will give splendid
ft suits wherever put under cultiva
tion." , It Is soil like this properly worked,
Ind on scientific lines, as Is the
pie todny. that gives the opportunity
lo quote the experiences of fanners
ftio hnve Increased their incomes
from $.XK) to $30,000 In two sensons,
nd whose story would read as fol-
"I have threshed altogether 7,000
panels of No. 1 Northern wheat from
J"0 acres, which went from 24 to GO
It acre sod breaking 24, spring
flowing 30, back setting 50 bushels
"favernKe being 35 bushels per ncre."
The newsnnner elvlnir nn account of
Ms man's exnerlenre Rnvs : "When he
?'sPosed of his 1.000 acres from north
Brooks, Altn, to four Oak nnrhor
pn, he was worth $30,000. Two yenrs
fro he came here with $500 and a few
orses."
't Is the soil of Western Canada.
N the knowledge of what It will do
Pat brings to Cnnndn the hundreds of
Idlers thnt ore dally arriving at the
J'fder, A growing enthusiasm for tho
prtlle prairie lands of Western Can
Ma Is spreading all over the continent.
This enthuslnsm is the recognition of
?'le fact thnt sufficient food could be
pdueed on these prairie lands to
J',(,1 the world. From the south, east
)nd west, hundreds of men, too old for
military service, are pouring into
pstorn Canada to take up land or
f wrtt on the farms. A great mnny
Why We Believe
the Bible
By REV. W. W. KETCHUM
Director of Practical Work Court.
Moody Bible loitltuM. Chicago
"le Ineonilmr crttlipG hiivn nrrtvpd
?' s,,(,h central points as Calgary, Ed
fonton, and Lethbrltlge, Alberta, and
f! Keglnn, Moose Jaw. nnd Saskatoon.
'uii, imu
katehownn.
f their hnnsch
Judging from the hulk
h0US(hn1H tifTnnia tln nnmlior
F their horses and cattle, nnd the
pinnty of Implements they are brlng
J"B with them, most of the new nr
?lvals nlso seem well blessed with the
fold's poods.
Reports from North Tortnl, Sns
'i cnewnn; Coutts, Alberta, and Kings
P p. British Columhln tho principal
Wtewayg into Western Cnnnda from
?" United States-indicate that the
CRCnt lnn,,x f farmers Is In such
,lme s has not been witnessed for
F'any yonrs. From Vancouver, Brit
Cm i 1III,,ln' PP'o "re going to the
Uh for sun,mf fnrin work, mnny
i in the intention of taking up land
.j'mse ves nt tho end of the summer.
Lt, r l,,n"pnce of this tide of farmer
uii greater rood production will
more rendiiv nnn.wnt if
Cono',ln-.i .....
iko nt tne average settler
"eg i,p nt ,pnst fwIce flg mnch Jnnd
's ie has hitimr i i j
Iter ! . ncro for ncre, produces bet-
""sit crops. Advertisement.
It may be helpful to some who are
wondering If the IJlblo Is tho Word of
God, If we stuto
some reasons why
Christian men and
women Mleve the
lilhle.
It Is not a mark
of learning, as
some would hnve
us thlnif, to dis
believe the Bible.
Mr. G I a d s t o ne,
England's great
est s t a t e s m an,
suld, "It has been
my prlvll'-ge to
know Intimately
sixty great men
nnd all but six of
them were earnest
acknowledged Christians."
Belief In the Bible Is not a leap In
tho dark. It Is not attempting to be
lieve It when we hnve no evidence
whether It Is true or not. Belief In the
Bible rests upon evldeneo which to
those who believe In tho Bible Is suf
ficient for them to accept lt as the
Word of God or man.
I. Ono evldeneo upon which our be
lief In the Bible rests, Is Its own testi
mony. Believing lt Is unfnlr to Judge
lt without hearing what It may have to
soy for itself we listen to Its own tes
timony. One does not rend far In the Bible
before he comes to such statements as
these: "Thus suld tho Lord," or
"The Lord said." These phrases, or
like ones, occur over five hundred times
In the first five books of the Bible, and
over twelve hundred times in the
prophetlcnl books. In addition to this
we find that the men who wrote the
Old and New Testaments claim their
utterances to be divinely Inspired. And
the New Testament tells us that "holy
men of old spake as they were moved
by the Spirit of God." nnd thnt "all
Scripture Is given by Inspiration of
God," that Is, God-breathed.
Besides this, the book assumes to
speak authoritatively from God to man.
Now with this testimony before us, we
are shut up to one of two conclusions;
either It Is what lt claims to be, or It
Is a fraud. Having exnmlned, studied
and tested the book with the acid test
of experience, we are persuaded that
Its lofty clnlm Is established.
II. Another evidence which hns led
us to this conclusion nnd upon which
we rest our belief Is the unity.
While It Is a library of sixty-six
books, It Is nevertheless one single
book and while lt wns written by about
forty different writers, lt has a single
ness of iftan and purpose. This In the
face of the fact thnt Its authors wrote
over a period of something like fif
teen hundred years. There is only one
wny to account for this unity nnd
that Is by believing thnt there was a
grent architectural mind that designed
and executed his plan.
III. Again nn evidence upon which
we rest our btdief in the Bible Is Its
teaching.
It is the one book thnt tells us nbont
God; who ho Is nnd whnt he Is; that
tells tis about man, whence he came,
whnt he Is, and whither ho Is going.
It reveals the love of God In the plan
nnd purpose of redemption through
Christ. Without the Bible, we should
by searching try to find out God nnd
by guessing to discover ourselves. By
It, we have come to know God, whom
to know aright Is life everlasting, and
to know ourselves.
Whnt wns snld of our Lord can be
said of the Bible: No book ever
spake like this book. It Is, Indeed, a
lamp unto our feet nnd a light unto
our path and shows us the way to thnt
city whose builder nnd maker Is God.
IV. A fourth evidence upon which
our belief rests Is fulfilled prophecy.
Take for Instnnce tho prophecies
concerning Christ of which there are
three hundred and thlrry-three In the
Old Testament. All the prophecies
concerning his first advent have min
utely been fulfilled. These prophecies
Stand the severest tests, so thnt we
know thnt we nre not deceived ns to
their fulfillment so there wns no pos
sible wny for the prophet to hnve
known how they were coming out. But
they came out as predicted. This Is
only one of mnny lines of prophecy,
which we would exnmlne. Those con
cerning the Jews which led a court
preacher, when asked by his sovereign
to prove the Scriptures, In ono word
to answer: "The Jews, your majesty,
the Jews." And the prophecies con
cerning the grent political systems of
the world ; such ns Babylon, Medo-Per-sla,'
Greece, nnd Borne.
Let anyone, who Is In doubt about
the Scriptures study the evidence of
prophecy nnd he will find ground for
fnlth In the Bible.
V. Then finally, the evidence of whnt
tho Bible does is ground for our be
lief In lt. By its fruits It can be
Judged. It hns civilized nations, trans
formed the lives of millions, given
hope to the hopeless, cheer to tho
downhenrted, comfort to the sorrow
ing, consolation to the dying nnd tnken
hell out of life nnd put heaven lu.
What the Bible does gives us ground
to believe It must be of God.
iMrrcrrzi unroRM international
SdnMSaiooL
Lesson
(By REV. f. is. KlTZWATEn. D. T
Tenphnr nt Knirlluh Bible In the
Moody Iilble Institute of Chicago.)
(Copyrifht, !, Writern Newipaper Union.)
LESSON FOR JUNE 16
night
wrongs no one.
WT?iIourEyes Need Care
Murine Eve Remedy
BWttvk Jrt' Ifree Bre Book.
If We Persevere. '
The Great Consolation.
"A peasnnt of Suvoy heard of the
death of the second of his sons, killed
In the Vosges, as he was setting orth
to tho fields for the autumn plow
ing. The oxen were yoken In front
of the house. The pottmnn handed
him the letter bearing the heading of
the prefecture.
"Ho went Into the house to fetch
his spectacles to read In the presence
of his wife, who, anxious, hud fol
lowed him, and In that of the neigh
bors, who already knew the news; then
banding the paper to the companion
of his life of labor, said simply: 'God
found them ready.' He added slowly :
'My poor wife.' And he went off to
the plowing." From "A Crusader In
France. :.
THE 60N OF GOD GIVING HIS LIFE
A RANSOM FOR MANY.
MSSRON TEXT Mark 15:1-47.
GOLDEN TEXT Truly title man wac
the Sun of God. -Murk If. 33.
DEVOTIONAL llEADlNU-lHalnh 52:13
53:12. ADDITIONAL MATERIAL FOR
TEACHERS Matthew 27:32-61; Luke 23:26
56; John 19:16-42.
PRIMARY AND JUNIOR TOI'IC-Jesue
give hie life for olhrre.
INTERMEDIATE TOl'IC-The suffering
Bnvlor.
SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC-Chrlet
dying for our sine.
The grand climax of the yonrs les
roiih thus far Is reached In this one.
If the significance of the crucifixion Is
not apprehended, all the lessons thus
far are meaningless. It Is not a mat
ter of learning lessons taught by a
great teacher, or Imitating the example
of a great nnd good mnn, but of ap
prehending the vicarious atonement
made by thu world's Bedeemer. Christ
snves, not by his ethics, but by his
shed blood. His death was purposeful
and absolutely voluntary.
I. Jesus Arraigned Before Pilate (vv.
1-15).
In tho early morning, nfter the mock
trial before the high priest, they bound
Jesus and delivered hlin to Pilate.
They act freely In this according to
tho evil desires of their own hearts,
yet he was delivered up by tho deter
minate counsel nnd foreknowledge of
God. The Jews would gladly hnve
killed him, but they had not the au
thority to do so. They delivered hlin
to the Gentile governor, thus Involv
ing the Jews nnd the Gentiles In the
crowning act of tho world's sin. Pilate
questioned him without delay, for they
accused him of pretending to be a king
a reliel. "Thou snyest," wns bis only
reply. To the slanderous accusations
of the chief priests and elders he made
no reply, to the utter astonishment of
Pilate. Pilate sought to release him
becnuse he wns convinced of his Inno
cence. After several unsuccessful ef
forts to escnpe responslbllty the ex
pedient of letting the people choose
between Burabbns nnd Jesus wns re
sorted to. He no doubt thought thnt
they would choose Jesus rnther than
the notorious Barabbas. Many today
are seeking to escaK responsibility
like Pilate, nnd others are making the
awful choice of Burabbus Instead of
Christ.
II. Jesus Crowned With Thorns (vv.
lO-'JO).
Knowing that Jesis had been con
demned for claiming to be Israel's
king, they In mockery crown ilin wlth
a wreath of thorns, and snlute him
"King of the Jews." Not only this, but
they smote him on the head and spit
upon him nnd went through a process
of mock worship. The crown of thorns
typifies the curse which he bore for
man's sin,
III. Jesus Crucified (vv. 21-11).
1. Led nwny to the place of crucifix
ion (vv. 21-23).
At first they compelled him to benr
his own cross, but when physical weak
ness made this Impossible, they com
pelled Simon tho Cyrenlan to bear lt
for him. It Is beautiful to note that
the son of this Cyrenlan whu bore the
cross of Jesus came to believe on him
(Romans 10:13). Because of the
scourging and cruel Indignities heaped
upon him, they nctunlly were obliged
to hear him to Golgotha. His face wns
marked by the thorns end cruel blows,
so that there was "no form or comeli
ness" (Isa. 53:2). All this he endured
for us. lie drank this bitter cup to Its
very dregs and refused to drink tho
"wine mingled with myrrh," which
would have deadened his pain. He
went nil the wny In his sufferings.
2. Gumbllng for the clothing of the
Lord (vv. 21, 25).
Having nailed him to the cross they
gnmbled for the seamless robe under
the very cross where he was dying, nnd
In their heartless cruelty they sat
down to watch him die (Mutt. 27:30)
3. The superscription (v. 20).
It was customary to place over the
victim on the Cross the name and
crime of the offender. Though Pilate
did this In mockery to vex the Jews,1
the title wns absolutely true. He was
Indeed their King. They had long
looked for hlin, and now when he came
they crucified him. Though ho wore a
crown of thorns In derision, be will
come ngaln wearing a crown of glory,
and before him all shall bow.
4. Between two'thieves (vv. 27, 28)
This added to his shame. His Identi
fication with two robbers was the ful'
fillment of the Scripture "Numbered
with the transgressors."
5. The dying Savior reviled (vv. 29-
82).
This reviling wns engnged In by
;he pnssers-by, the chief priests nnd
the thieves who were crucified with
him. In this nameless agony nnd
shame they taunted hlin by bidding
him come down from the cross, nnd de
risively saying, "He saved others, hlnv
self he cannot snve." They uneon
sclously uttered a grent truth. Ho
could not save himself nnd others, so
he chose to de to snve others.
0. Darkness upon the land (v. 33),
This was nt noonday. So shocking
wns this crime that nature threw
around the Son of God n shroud to hide
him from tho gnzo of u Godless com
pnny.
7. The cry from the Cross (vv. 34
37).
What nwful nngulsh when God laid
the world's sins upon his beloved Son 1
When the price wns fully pnld. Jesus
dismissed his spirit No one took bhj
life ; he gave lt up. His death wus un
like that of any other.
8. Tho rent veil (v. 38).
This symbolized the giving up of his
life (Heb. 10:20).
0. The centurion's confession (v. 39)
10. The lingering group of women
(w. 40, 41).
They who hnd lovingly ministered
to him In life were waiting to see
where they could bury his precious
body. ..... ,
Glen Gable Farms
Wyebrooke, Chester County, Pennsylvanii
Announce an
AUCTION
of
ONE HUNDRED
REGISTERED
GUERNSEYS
Wednesday, June 19th, 1918
Starting at 10:30 a. m.
Which will include deughtere of the
noted "MAY ROSL" Bull,
Langwatrr Jewel Langwatrr Cavalier
w tt i': iJ n r l
May ioee Mng lu pmu rrgni
Border Raider Faehion Plate'i May King
Langwater Rival, etc.
Probably the feature of this sale wit! be
the large number of twtf and three year
old heifer, bred to our herd lire.
jngwntrr Jewel Langwater Cyclop
Faihion Pkte's May King
For catalogue addreu
GLEN CABLE FARMS, WYEBROOKE, PA.
TIRES
t lets than
FACTORY
PRICES
Not chmply made tire
but fine hiiih grade
tiin of ttanduic niakri,
that have become ihop
w.rn or lli-d to that
they cannot be (old a
, All .tankard
W Buy for Cash mk in our
-Sell Quickly Uxk'
We .ive ynu 50 and lve yoa better
tires specially nialeaniplet and factory
"urplu"itutk. WearetheUrgot buyer
of nample tire In America. Get our prlre
lit No. IS nent fr-e. HIl bargain llil
month. We lup C. O. D. ubjecl to ycur
Inspection. .
FACTORY SURPLUS TIRE CO.
JOO N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa.
1
1
100 Per Cent on
LIBERTY BONDS
WW, Interent nn Lilierty Bond and Wnr Matin?
htiiinpa p"llle. We want t0.mO worth at
fnre value In denomination of and up
ward, NO LIMIT. Write quirk what ;ou hat.
JOHN H. CAIN & CO.
Suite 200 Elk Bldg. Brownwoed, Texas
Glenn's
Sulphur
Soap
No other
toilet soap
is as effi
cient in
clearing
the com
plexion of blemishes. The sulphur
Purities
(All DrunnU.)
Contain 30 Ttire Sulphur.
HUT Hair I Whfckir 0y, tlaik r Intra, SO
Kill All FIIgs! THo.sEAsf9
Pld anywhere, Daisy Fly KII1f attnoteandkltU
ftil flit. Neat, elfkvit,friifttnsntal,ocnTnlnl and ebaaa
Uata all tt,soD. Md
of m(al. ran t anil I at
tip t; will iaI soil at
Iniur anrlhintr (uaras
toad a(IU. Ask lor
Daisy Fly Killer
,M by r, I MM
iplrM. (lila. 91 00.
HAMOLO MM. 110 D RAIS AVI.. BDOOKIVN. N. t.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit,
llelpi to rul irate tlftnriTUfT.
' Far Rettorin Color and
Baauty toGray or Faded I lair.
bt. and ti ooat I'ruL'k'""-
Wyoming Oil Making Small Investors Millionaires
But the lloyaat luca ttoek that will ell for a many
dnHarn In a Rhtirt time Write fur particular
l'UU HUTU OIL IIKHM.SG CO.. UrejbQll. Wo.
OH PAI.K-Oond Vermont Kiirmv Write NeUpn
'oiwln, Wuuditoik, Vermont for price and teroia.
W. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 24-1918.
BET USED TO SUDDEN DEATH
Grim Humor In the Trenches by No
Means Denotes Callousness of
Disposition.
Y.t. l.t'oiuinl ('. WHIs of Bnltlmore,
who rcceiilly permitted himself to lie
hi Hen by nviirli lice, thus contniet
liiB trench fever, Hint the doctors
nilulit study lt, snld on his return
home :
"To submit yourself to the hunpry
Jnwx of the trench louse Is n j.'rtml.V
humorous procedure, Isn't It? Well,
wiir Is ci-luily humorous in mnny of its
aspects.
"They tell over tlie water n story
nbont a coinpiiiiy of touch doU!.'h boys
from New York's Kiist side who sat
playing poker one uilil In n dugout
dui'lnc a bombardment.
"The "nine went on, (lie shells
whlz.od and banned outside, mid then
n jrrenude come llirouch the doorwny
nnd Mulshed one of the poker plnyers'
playlnc forever.
"While the rest snt wnltliiR for
the sti'ctcher-bcnrers; the nearest
(loiich hoy took up the cards from the
dead man's hand, studied tlieni, nnd
then put them down ncnln and snld:
"it don't mutter, fellers. 1'oor Hill
couldn't a mnde It, anyway. I hud
four kincs.' "
Undaunted.
Yomic Wife If you ennnot support
me I shall 'no home to my mother.
Husband If you do, net your father
lo irlve uie n Rood reference, so I can
Bet a better job.
When you think of
Whcax-Savinjfoods,
Post thmkof
TOASTIESM
-SUPEQI0R
CCRN FLAKES
i wibp'v in- r ivbi v i
m " - ' - - - -
1 -SxX-ir-- 4&-Q-XX0
PENKSYLYCHIA
i CHIEFS
While canoeing In the .Iiinlntn river
near a clubhouse, live miles east of
luti;li:ploi, a man nam il Hurley anil
!t s'.:-j ear-old boy named Myers were
drowned. Myers- fa'aer was i.iso In
he boat when II c.i,,si::oi, but he wss
a I'd. All wer- from AI:ooiin.
Mrs. Charles ; l'.iii hmun, need fifty
I wo, w ife of nn Kiisiun (lrnj;i;I. wu:i
tl'Ickell Willi npoplexy wliiie she wus
iia.'ii'l.C to operate an iiiiiouiohilr, ami
Aplivil liisianll.v. K. W. Toll'it. ;:e, who
W!s deinniis.raiJic the car, iliove It io
'ler home wilh the lifeless body.
Mie las; iiieelinc of the slide board
'i par.ii i,s for the summer w ill bp
hebl .l.ll.e 11).
Vi'M'bfal Impiisltivt revs as to the
'i:iViis of a Ir;n! I ii cap caused com
plele blindness and the loss of much
i f the rich! hand of Tony Swutlskie,
IRi d e'clil. of Kulpuiolit.
'i'lie I. chihion school hoard has fix
ed the lax rale at twelve mills, Hie
li'chesi of any borough in the coun-V-
Wrlilni; from lrnnce, where she Is
iiTviin: as a lied I'ross nurse behind
the I'.rlllsh lines, Miss K.illier'.ne Ivb
wards, of New I'aslle, tells her ui
rents: "Yon do not need to fear for
us. We have decided that we will kill
ourselves before we will lie taken pris
oner." Miss Kdwards went to l-'raiice,
with a Philadelphia hospital null.
Tile employes of (he I'cntisylvnnlil
and Hillside Coal and Iron conipi'.nles
(.'live S'JI.IMIO lo the second lied Cross
fund. Kvory man in the employ oP
each company u'nve n day's wiikch
This money totaled one-half of the
ipiotn for the I'iltsion district.
The service thij; of the Kas!on lodne
of Moose contains 11 2 stars.
Ceiil'Re 11. Hoffman, eighteen years
old, of York, was n member of the
crew of the 1'nlted States transport
President Lincoln, which was sunk by
ii hostile l'-boat Friday inoruiuc. Xo
liiformnlloii concerniir.' his safety has
been received by his relatives ill tho
city.
Two new cases of smallpox hi.vo
been reported to the ollice of the state
department of health. One case Is
In Lebanon, and the other Is in Krie.
The patient Is n necro who traveled
from St. Marys to Krie. The conch
has been disinfected and the matter
taken up wiih the Si. Mary's health
authorities.
One of the largest classes in the
history of Shumokin hih school wns
Krnduiitcd. The honors awarded were:
Valedictorian, .1. Harold .imtiirfniaii :
snluliitorhin. Iwlcht Ilowerth; pre
sentation. Mary L. Steward, and his
torian, Sidney K. Scott. There were
twenty-nine men and forty c'rls in the
class.
The Pennsylvania state sheep insti
tute wns orirunl.eil in llnirisbur',
wilh Charles K. P. Pillion, secretary of
agriculture, as president. Arrniice
'fiits wore made for a sheep show to
lie held ill V.'tll'llvstMirt ill November.
Waller .1. Adan. s. nj;d tiTty. a ltnl
llinoie and Oido railroad engineer,
died at Connollsvillo from injuries re
ceived in a wreck last November. He
had been employed by the railroad
thirty years.
.Indue Solly, nt Norrisiown, has
awarded William 11. Hetterer and
wife, of V.rid-eporl. $7i:l for nursinc
nnd boarding' Martha McClcnry, who
Inherited money throuch the death of
a sister in Philadelphia. While there
had been no promise to pay the I'et
terers, .lud'.'e S illy rules that they are
more enlitb'd i" the money tbnn the
collateral heirs.
A record-breaking crcp of straw
berries Is promised III Lawrence r n-
fy this year. Unln durlnc the past
few days has been especially beneficial
and the plants are white with bios-
Tin. "rowers nre contromaid
with a scarcity of pickers lit
hii:roii:jii
ml n e.Tl
1
Is to be made for school children of
the county.
Struck by a Pennsylvania railroad
train, Laura, the scvcnteen-iiioiitli-old
dnuiditer of Mr. and Mrs. fins F.
Spanker, of Sprint: C.rove, m ar York,
was only sllirhtl.v injured. The child
was tossed some distance from the
track.
Local business men hnve become In
terested In the ostnblishliiK of the Sus
iiuehiiiiiui trail In York county. The
proposed trull would cover the route
from Harrlsburs to York.
There has been a bin jump In enlist
ments In the army and navy nt the
Lancaster recruiting ofllees. In one
day twenty slcned up at the iinn;- and
ten with the navy, while the murines
hnve been averajrlnp two a dny.
John Farrls. of Pittsburgh, bus been
appointed ennlnoor to prepare plans
for the new state bridge nt Tlonesta
by the board of public grounds and
hiiildlnirs.
The Northumberland Gnu company
has sold Its plant to (Jeoriie W. Uoek
ell and H. J. Stannert, local business
men.
After servitiR the Ilnzleton Nation
al bank ns cashier twenty-four years,
A. M. F.by retired, nnd wus succeeded
by 11. 10. kunkle, assistant cashier.
At the reunion of the Slinmokln
Hinh School Alumni association n
service IliiK contninini! ninety-four
stars wns dedicated nnd unfurled.
A pnrade wns held nt Ha.leton In
honor of twelve volunteers who enlist
ed In the regular army anil bft for
Fort Slocuin.
IHkIi salaries all nlonp the line, In
creaslnc the annual budget $P(Vmi, wns
Rrnnted by the school board to Fasten
teachers.
A South SldV, Connellsville hen has
proved her elinlhlllty for membership
In the Itcd Cross. A few weeks ago
Mrs. IV Frank Jones, of Cedar avenue,
placed seventeen variously assorted
eiriis under an old "cluck," wrltlns n
name on the shell of ench. Among them
were "Lilierty P.ond" nnd "lied Cross."
The hitter egg was the first to hatch
out ami the tiny chick ushered Into
the world proved to be n Ithode Island
Red.
Allentown council failed to receive
a single bid for n sheet Iron stamlpipe,
with a capacity of oOO.OOO gallons,
when lt was rmliip at sul. 4
Appevizin& Vienna Sausage
"'HE aroma of Libby's Vienna Sausage
I tells you that it is delightfully seasoned.
The first taste that it is made of care
fully selected, meat seasoned to perfection.
Have Vienna Sausage for luncheon
today. Your husband your children
will ask for it again' and again.
Libby, M?Neill & Libby, Chicago
It Is estimator that nbont ?1.(Kki,imki
Is Invested In the llrltish X-ray Industry.
Slunk Mary is the richest nutlv
woman in Alaska and catches her Qsk
supply.
Bridging the Gap
From Steer to Steak
Live stock is raised on the
farms and ranches of the West.
Meat is eaten in the large cities
of the East, and by our boys in
France thousands of miles
away.
The day of transporting live
animals from ranch to seaboard
and overseas has passed. There
was too much waste. The mod
ern packer locates his large and
specialized plants in the produc
ing regions. He ships the dressed
beef in refrigerator cars, and
holds it in his own refrigerated
branch warehouses until deliv
ered to the retailer. For ship
ment to foreign ports, he
transfersthe meat to refrigerated
ships.
By means of his nation-wide organ
ization the modern packer maintains a
continuous flow of meats to all parts
of the country, so that each retailer
gets just the quantity and quality of
meat his trade demands, and at the
time he wants it.
Swift & Company recently shipped
1,000 carloads of meat products in one
week to our Armies and to the Allies.
Bridging the gap from ranch to con
sumer can be done successfully and
at low unit costs and profits only by
large business organizations.
Swift & Company's profit on meat,
always so small as to have practically
no effect on prices, is now limited by
the Government to about 2 cents on
each dollar of sales.
Year Book of interesting and
instructive facts sent on request.
i a j j e- r. n r
W aarcss owiu ompany
P' Union Stock Yards, Chicago,Illinoi3
Swift & Company, U.S. A.
Sapolio doing its work Scouring
for U.S.Marine Corps recruits.
Join Now!
INOCH MOOajT
ton ca
APPLY AT ANY
POST OFFICE
for
SERVICE UNDER THIS EMBLEM
Mori
who wear
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cmblea
re
US.
MARINES
WOOL
All farmers Wing it for sale should" write us at once for prices
Obtain more money for your wool ly selling direct to
LEWIS BAER & CO., Inc. (Wool Dealers)
BALTIMORE, MD.