MIDDLEBURG POST. t,n k just common cold," people SerV. o danger in that Ad ". Ttheir statement, then there are Zmmi cold, coius wnicu are uan a fatal tick nets betrina hth , com. - ,ld from the uncommon we could Ziie safe Bat we can't The Uuumoii van- 5 w ija on the pg there vtnptom of Dr. rm" ,jjen Medical ljcov7 f"" ,,-hs. uron- bit Infisi and oiua r .1 MttS 01 "IB Uni of resptr U It Uses the sup L nf mire, rich tod ,).uill,, took t which Killed ,h oroncniai HIV. Ul ihfll '8ur Cure. almost withou Lhtr I w led to try Dr. Pierce' Golden Ehai'DiKiivenr. ' o0'c ,w0 bottles ni1 Komi have stayed cured. When I think of mat pain I hud to enaure, ami me ternme ah I hail, it ieemi almost a miracle that I -,n relieved. That God may (pare you In. cri and abundantly bleaa you ia the lr of your grateful friend." ou ask your aeaier ior -oouien idical Discovery" because you have ifidcnce in its cures, do not allow urself to 1 switched off to a medi ie claimed to be "just as good," but jch you did not ask for and of which a know nothing. Pitrce's Pleasant Pellets cure dix ,tss and sick headache. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. Lewistown DiviBion. . In effect May 25, 1902. Ud. I rrATioKi. A M 9 20 9 09 9 01 8.M 8 49 8 47 8 4 r M 40 4 40 tm 427 4 4 18 ludi HnnDury 10 lu 8ellnirrove Junction 10 is sliiiBrove WW Pawling 10 v7 K reamer 10 i Meiaer 10 n Ml Idleburj 10 42 ?nfer 1051 - ttown 10 60 i tings 11 0.1 K ' ills 1109 MuOi 84; 407 8 35 8 7 8 2o! m 8 1.1; 8 44 8tr7i T87 838 8 28 8 24 8 2o 8 18 80s 80s 11117, va-Mr 1121 Miinaie 754 UM ralnierviue 11 jj Maitland II 4u Levtatown 11 Iliitown (Main Mreel. 11 45 Lewintown Junction. 7 49 743 7i 80q in leaves Sunbury 6 30 p m, ar rives at behnsgrove 5 45 p m vesSelinsfirovefiiOOp. m., arrives at Sunbury 6:15 p. m. ns leave LewUtown Junction : m. 10 14 a m. 1 10 0 m.lSOn m 4 Sin in. 7 B7D la p m, 12 36 a in tor Alumna, Plltauurg und Hal'.imre and Washington BOS am 9 90, 31 4 S3 8 10 d in For Philadelphia and New s.0B. 9 80am. 1011(14 88 and lilt p h Hinifbuin 8 10 p m Jiiladelphia & trie R R Division. I AND FORTITEKN CENTRAL BA1LWAY WESTWARD, km Ifaw s.'llb!rrove Junction dtlly lor Jury and West. Im, ia 58 p m, 4 82 p m. Sunday 9 35 a m, m. Is leare Sunbury dally except Sunday: " rui iuruuuaiu,i a a m ior Jine ana can ua m ior Hsiieront brie and Uanandalirua in lor IcU Haven. Tyrone and the Weal. p m for Kuffulo, 1 13 p m lor Itellcfonto Tyrone and uananualvua m lor krnnvo and Elmira lor w llllumsport M14J7 a m for Buffalo Tla En porlura, in ior brie, 5 10 a m for Erie and Osuan i 8 84 n m for Wn m for Lock Haven and kiort m, !Uam 2 00and 5 25pm lor Wllkes- i ii i, In 111 111 a m 'J IW n m K 0 n Iab CI ! Mount ilarmel aay a a m lor wiikeibarre rrtltu leave SellmgroTe Junction - . iiviuH av ruiiauoiuaia Im NhW Vnrk IH n m D n I . I o . i I aw.Hwwuuu, UMW1HU1I , , U Ul pnKton 416 pm w m.iaiijr arriving at rniianelnhla k m N. Vnplr n. LI n I a I ... n i f. Hi.W),,UiUg IHU IB BllKtoU 10 56 p m. fn, a any arrlvlnir at Philadelphia an t. V..Flr f l . t-li .... r : " iiaiH,M!iimon ou am liiKtdn 4 05 a in a .im iv ouuuurj ; I ID ilnllv tLrrtvlnv , pi,n.Af.iki m to m M .r.7a m Waahioirton 830 am New a ill Weekday!, 10 a m Sunday, , -""wounuaya nam- L .VH Washington 880 a m, Baltimore n. Vtatlilnirton 1 It p m. u. nan arriving at Pblladeiphla li,irin . , B "aiuiuore) u ju p ."R ..u i iojjui P WMJf dyi anrtTtnr at Philadelphia SlWM uT.' P m' fi'Om0r' P ?!lal,1,ar,1?lnR at Philadelphia 7 82pm ' S P Baltimore I 80 p m, Wash- Milan leave i Sunbury at 80 am and 20 ju. lor Harrlaburg, Philadelphia and UTCUlNSdN Uan'l Manairer. REVIVO nauak RESTORES VtTALm Made a Well Man of Me. i r, iwi aii s 9 at. Kim'"1'' Care wh" all others fall VI60 Will aw-i- . . . . In :-" "ir m mannooa.anaoig Mirwover tholr youthful vinr by nelni L vi. ,?2.'cilT "ni "' restores Marvouo !r 7m ImDO'y. MUhlly Erqtaelona, CTJ Ji ? Motnory, Waatlna Dlaeates, and CaiVjr "b" or excenaand IndiacreUon rM,,''Wad'b,,rt'"orniarriage. II b'"Urt" at the anat of disease. but k IvTV!,!,l0 "d blood builder, brlntj. I IU af. glow.to r belu and r wLIL, "'.Tonth. ft warda off InBanlti fi e he carrlfKl In teat pocket. By mall rrttEE 1"' w ix r s'0i with a poal S ,'n MMMurqh, Pa., by Wr.EURon DRia ca mi l, w.i r rill H1 "r drnmn-ta. 2 J SAT tflK51 IBS SURDAY SCHOOL. i..... I. l.er..M.-.l for XaTesaber S3, llMlil GUiii mm the Tkree Haaared. THE LESSON TEXT. (Judires 7:1-8.) 1. Then Jerubbaai, who la GlcVon, and a'.l the people that r lth him. rose up early, and pitched1 beside the e,i of Hi. rod; to that the boat ot the Mldiunltea vivre on the north side of them, by the hiii of .Menu, oi the valley. 5. And the Lord raid unto Gideon, The eople that are" with thee are too many for me to give the Midlanttea Into their h ir e, test Israel vaunc themselves arilnet Me, laying. Mine own hand hath saved me. 3. Now therefore go to. proclaim In the ears of the people, saying. Whoso, ver la tearful and afraid', let him return and de part ear.y from mount Glleudi And thtre returned of the peojiie twenty and two thousand!; and tot-re remained ten thou and. 4. And the Lord said unto Gideon, The people are yet t,oo many; bring them down unto the water, and 1 wlU try them for thee there; an? It shall be, that of whom I tay unto thee, Thl shall go with thee, the t in e shall go with thee; and of whom soever 1 say unto tlue. This shall- not go a'ith thee, the same shull not go. o. So he brought down the people unto the water; ur.di the Lord su.d unto Uhlei n. livery or.e that lappeth of the water with bis tot.tcue, as a dog lappeth, him th .It thou st by himself; likewise every one that boweth down upon his knees to drink. 6. And' the number ot thtm that lapped, putting their hund to their mouth, were ;hre hundred men; but all' the rest of the people bowed d'uwn upon thetr knees to drink water. 7. And the Lord aajd unto Gideon. By the three hundctd mm that hipped will I tave you. nnd-duMver tha Mid'.anltc-s Into ihli e hund; und let all the othtr piople go every nuin unto hi place. 8. So the peop.t' took victuals In their hand, and1 tl.i ir trum.-etr; and he tent all the rest of Israel every man unto his tert, und retained those three hundred im-n;und the host of Midlui: was beneath him In the valley. I.OI.DF.V TKXT. It la better to trust In (lie l.iird than to put coiillilenee In ni.nn.-I. UNiN. OUTLINE OF SCKirTL'KE SECTION. Gideon's call..., Judatev . Oidtron't victory Judges'. Uidton's rewiird Judgt-s 8. TIME B. C. law and 1249. l'LACE Ouhruh. Vutley of Jizrecl aj-.d) Canaan. NOTES AND COMMENTS. (Jod used liidcon, s lie hud used the other judires, to tench a lesson to Is rael. Thnt lesson wns that in God was the nation's help. H was difli cult for the people to learn this truth, just as it is for nations nowadays to p-asp it. Whenever the people were faithful to Jehovah, He protected them from their enemies: when they forsook Him they became subject to oppressors. The period of the Judges has been called Israel's "iron ng-e," nnd of course we read the stories of its bloody deeds with horror, and yet even here we find a gradual moral development. The historian makes the accounts of the early days of Ilia people teach a powerful religious lesson the some lesson over and over again. The chil dren of Israel do "that which is evil in the sight of Jehovah," ITe delivers them into the hands of their enemies; He hears their cries for He loves them, and raises up for them these deliverers, during whose lives they have pence. The events of chanters 3-5 are selected from n period of perhaps 150 years. Chnpter VI give us n picture of the way in which the rich fariningcotintry of the valley of Jereel wns continual ly raided in harvest time by the liedouin Arabs from beyond the Jor dan. They defended upon the fields in. hordes, with their camels; the inhab itants fled before them, and they did not leave till the country had been stripped of everything thnt could be carried away. Famine could be the only result. The situation was des perate. At fiich a time as this the angel (mesenger) of Jehovah appears to Gideon, and commissions him to rid the land of the Midinnite invaders. He is assured of Jehovah's help and bless ing, without which he could hope to do nothing, and the assurance is- con firmed by a miracle (V. 21). In verfrs 25-32 Gideon forskes Ttnnl worship and detroy the family altor .to the local Baal. There is a rising of the surrounding tribes at his will (33-35), and he is assured of victory by the miracle of the fleece (36-40.) Gideon's? army now numbered 32, 000 men. But Jehovah wished to do something more important than rid the land of the Midianltes 'that day. lie wanted to teach the people that their security lay not in themselves and their might, but in faithfulness to nim. Deliverance by 300 men would certainly be attributed to God, while if the victory had been won by 32.000 it would have seemed like a purely hu man occurrence, snd God's main ob ject would not have been accom plished. "Jerubluial:" Another name for Gideon. "Whosoever is fearful:" God was going to do the work, hut He wanted good niateriul to work with. Two-thirds of the army were nfraid. But victory by the 10,000 yet remain ing would not seem miraculous enough. The number must be reduced, again. At the brook it wa teen thnt the vast majority "bowed down upon their knee to drink." Only 300 lapped of the water "as a dog Inppcth," yet by this handful of men Jehovah chose to deliver Israel. This may have in dicated watchfulness and temperance, or may have been simply nn arbitrary device for reducing the number. Those who were rejected took part in the pursuit (23, 24). PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS. If one but ha God upon his fide, he need not fear his foes however numer ous? they may be. God has no use for the faint-hearted in the conflict with evil. He wonts ' men with the courage of faith. A few consecrated men become In ' the hands of God a mighty force for Ihe overcoming of evil. Life cannot be all sunshine if, it would be of any service. Conscience is n good watch, but it will not wind itself. FIGHT DUST WITH TAR. rreaebataa Are aw Experlmeatlac Aloa laa-a-Mtloaa Cainlasi All t Way front Catlforalm. Terhnps it is thought that petroleum serves but to burn iirvUnips and-furnace and rnn our automobiles. That is the use, perhaps, that we make of it, but In America, California for ex ample, petroleum is employed to water even public roads. J'ersuns who have seen the operation Hectare it to be marvelous. There is neither dust nor odor, because the petroleum 4iir.nl p.miates in a way with the dust and clothes the soil wirh a sort of coating, solid nnd durable as asphalt. The towns which have ndcpteil this system .economize, it is calculated, 4." per cent, of the expenses, occasioned by the old plan of daily sprinkling with water. As n ton of petroleum costs only 2!) francs in California and 250 francB in Kruiice, it is. not prac ticable to adopt the American plan. There is nothing, however, to forbid us using mineral tar. of which the price varies from 15 to 50 francs the ton. That is what I)r. Grgliclmfnrtfi rrcrm mends, who has employed It at Vunte Carlo with the same refills i:s pe troleum. Wetted with the 1 :i r l''c road become eon: pat t ' ! end rain water runs upon i. ui;;, tit penetrat ing. Now it Is in the dust that nestle the microbes, since 2.0(10,000 is the mean number found in one gramme of dust, so the new- system of watering Is ecn sidereil eminently hygienic. The ex pense of sprinkling n route five meters wide would be about Hon francs per kilometer. Since 1SS0 a tarred route has existed in the Giroiide before the gns works. The Touring club of France will make an experiment nt Chnmpigny, outside Paris, with tar nnd tar oil. Paris Letter in Chicago Post. DRIVEWAY ENTRANCES. Fnvornlile InipriMiiiloiia Are largely Hue to the KnrrounilinKa of a llnnilnome lloiiir. So much hangs on the effective nr rangement of drivewnv entrances the portals of the home grounds, tlirougu which critical visitors must mostly pass and receive their first impression of the place and indirect ly ot the occupants great euro should bo bestowed unon them. lniv. ing on eye to the road itself, its man- AN EFFECTIVE DRIVEWAY. ner of approach through the grounds. toward the dwelling, nnd to the plant ing general landscape effect. The accompanying photograph shows n side nppronch thnt nccms perfect in all its details. The road way hag a gentle, sweeping ascent by well-kept sod borders. The shrubs massed on cither side are ntrnetive throughout the year, and especially so at the time our picture was taken, when the hydrnngens were at their showiest, set oft by the edging of Japanese barberry. Median's Month- MODERN ROAD MAKING. Inatrnetlve Information Collected by the Inquiry Office of the Aitrl rultnral Department. ' Some astonishing facts have been developed by the otlice of road inquiry of the department of agriculture. Who would havo supposed, for in stance, that bad roads are ao costly in comparison with good ones as to increase the expense of moving farm products and supplies threefold ? Yet such is the truth, and it is estimated thnt the money thus thrown away more than equals, in the aggregate, the entire expenses of the United States government! (In the average American rood it costs 25 cents per ton to move produce one mile; on good roads the cost is only eight cents. The rond office finds the macadam road superior to all others. Powerful machinery for road-building has re cently been devised, such as an elevat ing grader, capable of lifting earth from cut-s and dropping It Into wagons with great rapidity. A very interesting style of rontl now used in several western and middle states possesses a double steel track. laid in a concrete bed, each rati being eight inches wide, with n llnrige on the Inner side, the epace between the rail being such as to suit all standard gauge vehicles. On these roads loads are drawn with surprising ease and Btviftness. One instance is recorded In which a single horse drew a load of 11 tons, which could only be moved on nn ordinary rond by 20 horses. The steel-track roads vary in cost from $1,500 to $.1'i00 per mile. Owtnopoll ton Magazine. The fee ret of Hood KiMid. A hard surface, well rounded. co that the water will run off quickly, is the secret of a good rond. Attention after a road is once permanently built is imperative, so thnt the washed-out places and depressions where water stands mny lie repaired. A little time ly work will keep a road in good shape. - After the Marat. "Lightning seldom kills a Georgia mule." "No, the mule always meet it half way nn l kicks it to pieces." Atlanta Constitution. Keie II I m Tired Kluht Alonar. i"l)ont you ever get tired doing noth ing?" asked the hi usekeeper. "Lady," replied the trnapV-I git so tired doin' nothin'dat I cau'tVo nnth in cite." Philadelphia Keei.rd. Hard It nail la Travel, "The man who traclson his check,'" tvmurked the obseiA-r of events and things, "has a hnril rotul to travel." Tonkers Statesman. Well I'ruiHirtloneil. "He has the right kind of a head for busines man." "Ye. It is inoaily eheik." Tuwr. Ipics. Something of a MjntTy. Jack I treated May anil then sat on ' the piazza with her for an hour after- i ward. I TomAnd what do you think of her? Jack -Well, it strikes me that there is n great disrretmnev lu iu.-.n h....... j pacity and her waist ineasiiremt'iit. Town Topics. A Slander. Mrs. Muggs That horrid Mrs. Frills told Mrs. Nextdoor that I was n reg ular old cat. W'hut do von think of thnt? Mr. Muggs I think she never saw you in the same room with a mouse. X. Y. Weekly. Her rimrnia. "Isn't she a queenly girl?" ex claimed the doctor, looking after the beautiful maiden us she swept grace fully along the street. "Ilmv divine ly talK" "And how. devilishly pretty!" add ed the professor. Chicago Tribune. Amenilli'K, "Miss Gabbins says she loves the truth above till things." "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne; "she realizes that, ns a rule, the truth is the most disagreealde thing yon can say about nnybodv" Washington Star. A "Illrd," Anynay. Mrs. Spenders That's what 1 call u "duck" of a bonnet. Mr. Spenders Yes? I (.,n t h "pelican." Mrs. Spenders A "pelican?" Mr. Spenders Yes, on account of tin size of the bill. Philadelphia V ress. In each pound package of H ff-fkrrr naf aCA. '.ma uauu a'roin now until Christmas will be found a free game, amusing .rul instructive 50 different kind:;. Get Lion Coffee nnd a Free Game 4 at Your Grocers. I The f lvecent packet is enough for an ordin ary occasion. The family bottle, Sixty cents, contains a supply for a year. of Bestec P'&tHsp ftf Y Writes an Open Letter fw ths Ceneft t. rry vj'13 may ba Suffering from Dlaoi cr Cutaneoas Disease Br. DarM irTTuritv - -am. aavu j k I' fj32SC!nc5 Frr ;w:rn rcTlnz from:? T".'sjb.-?: cl' Ixrf:. A .A icvcraS uU!t?r ce4 iac5c;.r-cj vi:harC Giicccr.-:. '-.'.Ir, V lv.u7tl ?Atuc Recced? to essc, VtkU'Zk 1 furc:.:; -.ir.-: Jtjcn its two with tI:o Led r.vafta.i lit pi:r2fi'.i. ;iv ltlzi &r.i tha baiU tUsapiiCwi e', zuii 5 aa ciory in :S.b hosi of iiraltli. " UllQ. SJASlTtiA COW. . If yoilHUlTer from kidil- y, li.or r- V;..;.l,.r tr...il:io i:i n:iv form, diabetes. J right s.lis.-:,se, rlii'uinaiiM,:, .h: .cp. :.:. IT ....... .... J'.. .11 CHICHESTER'S EKELISH PENNYROYAL PiLLS I'''.; , ; r-Hnble .all.-..inkPrii:-irtit J . ; ': K!il.l. in Ke.l . . ...-u.il .- li,n..s, s,...,i .1, i.taac r "i" no toiler. Ita-fuar tlif "-rou v. ,, li.lilli . ,l liiiiliuloiik. Hi. Ivnurllr. it M-ivl le. 111 mmi.-. I,,r I'm iciiliira. '. i. : ui.-i .I'li,., i,r r ;mii, - ir I'V rcluni nH. lo.UIIO Tea: iiiiuiuuln. . . all lnii;KisiH. CHICHEKTRR CI1KMIOAI. CO. 8100 nadtoui; H.iuare. I'll I LA , j-A MroUaa Ikl. tmyt. Cut tliisi out ntul tnko it to M V burg dii'ir storo niul ct 1. u. Raniplf of Cliaiubt'iliiii.'s St. Htul Liv r Tulili-tH, the bent 1 TIip.v cloanso ntul iivigorni. t stounU'li, iiiiui'OVH l ho npiu'tit. u leguliito tbo bowo'.H. llauliu .. 2-V. per In ix. It nnturiillv iiiiikiH 11 nuin bo hi be tlirowu down. "Lust winter an infant cb l r f inino bml croup in n violent f .1," Ray h Kkler Jobn V. Itogri a Clirirttiim Evangelist, of Filloy, h. "I gave her a few dospR of ('i inu berluiu'a Cough Remedy nnd in ;i fibort time nil durger wnH pn..-,'ii nnd the child recovered." This rein etly not only cures croup, but when given ns soon an the iirst nyuiptoins nppenr, will preveut the attack. It contaitiH uo onium or other harmful F.ubHtanceaud bo given or confident ly to a baby as to an a ult. For sale by Middleburg Drug Store. Fame Is merely an entree; fortuno is a feast. Martlfuir, lint Trne. "If every ono'knew wlint a grand medicine Dr. King's New Life 1 lis if," writes D. H. Tumor, Dctupsey lowu, Pa., "you'd Hell all you jiave in a day. Two weeks' use baa made a new man of 1110, lufulhlilo for constipation, stomach and liver troublep. 'J-'ie.. at Middleburs.' Drui; Si ore, Gray bill, (tartnan & Co, Dr. I, W. SanipHel, l'euns Creek. .i noiu.ii:, iioui wie s'eii in-ssc-' ;c-'ii:,-,r to vinci'd tli.U It. iVivid i-'-:. Iv'-i I awiri'e J von may liu". e a trial In I -. . !. .dvti-lv frr... ; by HvndiiM yonr r..:.i. v.v.'.i p..t oiric'. ad.lrWs. Juration. Il..r.' n. N" V.. -i-i-.it';. ,r.' tig tlii-' m-v lr l-i i I K.-.n-l.-'-. I.r,'..r ,e Jli-.-e-'v f, bot:V. iv ii b ..;!-! f.,r SYKi- lesi thin , , Cr. Osvid KciMizty'aCi'ilcn Zix;.: ; . . .i. . am, I doctored for a year and a half for what the doctor told me was gall stones. I hadread so much about the relief Ripans Tabules gave other people I thought 1 would get some. I have used eight of the 5-cent boxes and have not had a spell since. J FE33. n. rcpt. 3rd, 1901. K.ef. AM I. Irrvi t::. Imn anO. ..:n.t r :,,n. form t ldoo.1 din-asc, or, ii:r s-"j. :;m.I i' not nl read v con- ic.'v i-: Vi" medicine yon need, !i a v:;Via! ' ':;rd'n :il pampiilut. to I'm i-r. iiuvid Kennedy Cor .'ftletiy i.'.l drugiiiU at fl.00 ;'i-.lili. iu- .JtLri.ULrjf I5c. Vf, LIPPINGOTT'S MONTHLY MAGAZINE A FAf. lLY LIBRARY Tha Cest in Current Litciaiura 12 Complctc Novels Yearly MANY SHORT STORIES AND PAPERS ON 7! I'd ELY TOPICS $2.50 per year; ,'5 cts. a copy NO CONTINUE . STORIES EVERY NUMBER COMI ' :TE IN ITSEL '-l"H' Do ynii need any fiiri.Ii m e ? I f so, don't ('nil to come to our ftiiro and j;et our juices. We can suit you in style and prices, from the cheap est t the better graco. Ii Hard wood, gcldcu r.k finish Only $12.50 Mattresses - 81.90 Dedsprings - $1.25 Good "Wliitc Ennmcl Ucds witlx Spx'luss SG.OO riwiM, loi'kcrr, Couehps Sido h(ird, Kumy And cheap ti nuiii Titlilt-g, Itahy C'arrlisnt-H and tio-vartN, t M. HARTMAN FURNITURE CO. Mlllhiihnrir, I'u. :