Ee i i i 5 rvs Sin - vicina BRET ey ¢ SIRE RUS Ted PORTED goods chosen with the greatest care because they are so often open to insidious adul- teration. only from dealers on nd. ow that McKenzie & Smith Meyersdale, Penn’a RR RR RRR BRB ROCCE RS RS, Ghureh E That Tease Your Palate IEEE CEES SESS We get our teas and coffees Purchase from our ; you will get the pure article. >» should always be i whom we can de- store and you RR RR RAR ROE, IV6106s ACACIA (AAA AA AA BOR BCE RSS, Discount During August. Don’t send to a distance for your Church Envel- opes when we print them for the same price, and you can save ex- pressage and parcels post rates. Duplex or Plain Envelopes APRA RRR RRR R080 A0B0R0ECECECHL) REI RARS YOUR PLUMBIN tion. Escaping gas runs waste. HUNTERS’ LICENSES. Three hundred and twenty-five thousand blank hunters’ licenses have been sent out to the county treasurers of the state for issuance to the hunters of Pemn’a. for this fall. This issue, which is based upon the number of licenses issued in the last two years is believed to be am- ple, but the State Game Commission has prepared for even more. The sale of licenses has been started by Co. pink tags are already in possession of their owners. THe revenue from the work only. The commission is now of animads and birds, enue of the last eighteen Wi Write for Samples. K. CLEAVE Meyersdale, Church Envelope Printing Company, R, Manager Penn’a. RR RR RR RR RRR RRR ECE . RRR RR RR RR ROB HRB BOB BORO ECB BCE EEE SIS ALAR AS, HOW TO CURE HAY FEVER. | Pick Your Favorite Pollen, Brew Vac- cine and Inoculate. Boston.—Summer trips to high alti tudes will be no longer necessary to hay fever sufferers if the experiments announced by Dr. Harris P. Mosher at the Harvard medical school fulfill his expectations. Dr. Mosher has been experimenting to find a vaccine for hay fever, and at a public lecture before the medical school he explained that if a hay fever patient could decide on the particular flower or weed pollen which caused his affliction he had only to inoculate him- self with a vaccine made from extracts of this pollen to become immune to its effects. : The only effect thus far noticed from fnoculation with pollen serum, the phy- siclan said. was a local rash, which vanished in a short time. | where He Failed There was a man whose knowledge Made him seem a human college. He could read the oldest hieroglyphics known; He could give you all the reasons For the various changeful seasons And perform a classic tune on the trom- bone. He made startling calculations Of the wealth and strength of nations, And the starry distances he loved te trace. e could capture a bacillus, d the other things that kili us, Though they occupy a very tiny space. ough he did all these so neatly e thing baffled him completely: Each day it caused his pride to take a drop. With all wisdom he was fiirtin’, Yet he never learned for certain On which corner of the street the car would stop. —Washington Star. No. 5 Shipping tags on hand ready | to print what you want on them. Linzoin’s Religion. I have never united myself to any church because | have found difficulty in giving my assent without mental reservation to the long. complicated statements of Christian doctrine which characterize their articles of belief and confessions of faith. Whenever any church will inscribe over its altar as its sole qualification for member- ship the Saviour’s condensed statement of the substance of both law and gos- pel. “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and thy neighbor as thyself,” that church will I join with all my beart and all my soul.— Abraham Lincoln. Why Men’s Hats Have a Bow. A bow is always to be found on the left side of a man’s hat. This is a sur- vival of the old days when hats were costly articles. In order to provide against the hat being blown away in stormy weather a cord or ribbon was fastened around the crown, with ends hanging so that they could be fastened to part of the attire or could be grasped by the hand. The ends fell on the left side. of course. as the left hand is more often disengaged than the right. When not required it was usual for the ends to be tied in a bow. The bow became smaller and smaller. but it still remains and is likely to do go as long as men wear hats. —————————————— Had Discovered That. “How's the baby?” wsked the neigh- bor of the new father. “Fine,” said the proud parent. “Don’t you find that a baby brightens up a household won- derfully?” pursued the friend. “Yes,” | said the parent, with a sigh, “we have | the gas going most of the night now.” | —New York Globe. | 1 ————————————————— | } | date In form material and type. Our wedding Invitations are up-to- are now being stretched. ° The New Commons bra diab, House For Men | ALLEGHENY COLLEGE Founded in 1815 FACULTY REASONABLE EXPENSES GOOD TRADITIONS UNSURPASSED LOCATION FALL TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 14 Write For Catalogue to Pres. ‘ent "NV. H. CRAWFORD, Meadville, Pa. EAKING and broken pipes or loose joints have cost large sums of could have been saved with a little atten- you are using lights, and dripping water from faucets, pipes or joints is another costly form of Tinsmith work and steam fitting No Waste Meads Small Bills D. P. FORD treasurers and many of the salmon-! licenses is to be disbursed for game | paying bounties for scalps and heads | which are a | nuisance to the farmers, from the re7- months. This is also furnishing the funds for |. the establishment of the State game preserves. Several of these have been | located in central counties and wires ALL ITS BRANCHES money that readily your meter just as when done. , EVERYTHING GOOD IN THE MEAT LINE AT DONGES’ MARKET D 5 LOWS, harrows, hay rakes— in fact, all kinds of farm machinery—are to be had at this store. When you come to town, Mr. Farmer, be sure to pay us a visit. Even if you do not purchase now we will be glad to point out the particular merits of the agricultural implements which | we handle —all of well knowa Improved machinery will enable | Xa you to increase the output of your acres. We carry in stock a general line of the best hardware. { New Methods Make New Profits For the Up to { Date Farmer. Be One. Ng ! | | Observing his daughter's hand. The old man tried his best to he said huskily. daughter's hand in marriage.” «I knew that this must come some day. er—ahem! accustomed?” second part. figurative feet of wisdom.” eee Interpreting the desired arrangements. him that.” climbed into the | met out!”—Judge. Read “THE BLACK TORTOISE” | deaf 2s 8p A young Clevelander has been call. ing on a lovely girl for several months, and he is now almost like one of the family. Technically, however, he wa® never an accepted suitor until day be- fore yesterday, when he called on the girl's father with a formal request for occasion was a solemn one,, and the pater was primed and rehearsed for it. When the youth entered the presence the look dignified. «Well, sir, what can I do for you?” «I have come sir,” said the suitor, trying not to grin, “to ask you for your “You surprise me—you shock me!” cried the father in melodramtic tones. but—when it is my little girl the— Can you give my daughter the comforts to which she has been “Yes, sir,” answered the party of the «1 have breakfasted at your house often enough to learn how you complain about the coffee, and I have learned from you how married men read the morning paper through- out the meal and then carry it down town. I have dined at your house un= til I know just how to demand the dis- charge of the cook and to announce that I will dine at the club after this. If your daughter doesn’t get the com- forts to which she has been accustom ed it won't be because I have not fearned about them while sitting at the Mrs. Jones was traveling in Europe, accompanied by her two daughters, Eleanor and Marion. Eleanor planned all the routes they were to take and by what means they should journey, but Marion, who ¥as the only one of the party that could speak any langu- age other than English, was obliged to make all the inquiries necessary for As a con- sequence the others were constantly saying to her, “Ask him this,” or, “Ask One day Mrs. Jones misunderstood what they had planned to do and wrong carriage, | Eleanor looked at her in desperate silence for a minute or two and them | gfurned to Marion and said, "Ask her t0 no other tobacco can be the same as FIVE BROTHERS and FIVE BROTHERS itself can never vary in quality. No matter what tobacco you may be using now, just try FIVE BROTHERS for a week, and see if FIVE BRO- THERS doesn’t give you greater satisfaction, day in Get a package today— sold everywhere. A a A IS A ST In the Old Days “well, say!” exclaimed young Bul- strode, “I didn’t know that every mem- ber of the family throughout the whole country had to approve of me before the wedding could come off Hang it! I'm only marrying one girl!” “My son,” said old man Bulstrode, “getting married is altogether too easy these days. You should be re- quired to pass a more rigid inspection “In my day when a young man ask- ed a young woman to marry him and she consented that was only the be- ginning. He had to journey from one end of the country to the other, meet- | ing her relatives and being polite. He | had to drive over the hills and far | away to some old girl’s abode and | then sit on the edge of a chair and | shout at her, for she was usually as ost. et me et en ih str etn Br and day out, working or rest- ing, chewing or smoking, out- doors or indoors. By the end of the week you'll be a perma- nent userof FIVE BROTHERS. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY than you do under existing conditions. | Live keen for IVE BR Right Up | Among the Wires | The hardy lads who hold down the lineman’s job are a tobacco that has a rich, sweet, mellow flavor —something that's man-size and all there — somethin that makes a he-man fee like a live wire. And thatis ITHERS Pipe Smoking Tobacco i We've spent fifty years and millions of dollars creating tobacco brands. And we know that the reason FIVE BROTHERS pleases he hearty smoker or chewer is because its qua. } is honest and its value the biggest. ~~ Fiore a A sos mm ane a fellow who, after he haa cauea oun forty-seven of the girl’s aunts, not one of whom liked his family or his reli- gion or the cut of his jib, on being told that there were sixteen more aunts of the same style, gave up the cam- | pain and quit. | | “One of the forty-seven had asked: ‘Are you the young Binks that cut up so scand’lous with Mandy Biggs last summer?” “Another had inquired: ‘You ain’t the young Binks that’s always fighting and getting blooded up, are you? Are you the young fellow I heard hollering ‘Nuff!’ over on the lot when another fellow was mauling you there the oth- | er Saturday? Are you him? “Another had*asked: ‘You ain't the young Binks I been hearin’ so much about, tearin’ around with a bulldog and at chicken fights on Sunday—*'” “That'll do dad!” interrupted young | Bulstrode. “I don’t see how anybody ever did get married in the old days | unless the desperate young fellow raa | away with the girl.” et En em meetin, We use the pure Southern Kentucky leaf in FIVE BROTHERS. We carefully age it for three to five years so as to bring out its full richness. The process can’t be hurried. So you see A “The ola girl would probably start something like this: “‘Are you a good young man?’ “Then she’d put her hands up to her ears and the matrimonial aspirant would yell for the benefit of the neigh- bors: ‘Yes, pretty good, I thank you;® “ ‘What church do you go to? would be her next interrogation. “¢ forget what is the name of mother’s church!’ “It was lucky if the young man couidn’t remember the name of his mother’s church, for there would be certain to be objections on that score if he did remember. “ ‘What did you say your name was?” she would ask. * ‘Binks, B-i-n-k-s-!1° # ‘Not the Binkses of Ridgetown?® * Yes.’ * ‘Well, I never new an Ridgetown Binks.!’ id “Such examinations were enough to make a young man stop and think. Every once in a while a bridegroom ~ would flunk out in those days. I kne# —————— T P. E. been as Listie ¢ ular ag spendin Massac] Work erset tr rapidly for. Th siderab! ty of K poles h: be star The 1 new mi Coal Cs school | the chil ment. $3,000, being 1 Irvin the lat! Compai fn his mother ers, Cs McFarl sister, burg, V Whil ash pil berger caved | ger wo but for workm¢ The « Baush of Dall which weddin is a sc Somers the cer The has bes located which age an in mor The m workin ployed The ceased probate debts 1 he set terest ry lots. hold g use. A to her that sl! est fro estate B. Prit should her sh childre Mem Church the Mz ders v Sunda; founde its thi N. B. church ry wil mon a C Col. G. P, mornir of the city. T and has 67 and | There Sunda; ted at A di charge troops ging © The Aero ( fons « bomb 5:30 ¢ onstra mornis Visi tractec There teenth regime ‘Whe arrive: Clyde mster select lines and e the gr try or the si the er corps, t.ons, Troop artille join ( tion a Gov were ¢