SUFFERED FIFTEEN YEARS. A Case of Chronic Kidney Trouble and How It Was Permanently Cured. t\ P. Semmel, Sr., 236 N. 6th St., Le higtiton, Pa., says:"For over 15 years I suffered from kidney trouble. *Jy kidneys were weak; the secretions t contained sediment and passed with a smarting sensation. Sharp pains shot through my body and bent me almost dou ble. I became so bad I could not drive to my work. After doctoring -without benefit, I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills and soon received relief. Continued use cured me. I believe Doan's Kidney Pills saved my life." "When Your Back Is Lame, Remem ber the Name-DOAN'S. 60c. all stores, foater Mllburn Co., BufTalo, N. Y. COMPARISON. He—Ab! Genevieve, when I looks at the immense expanse of boundless ocean, It actually makes me feel email! PAINFUL FINGER NAILS CURED "I have suffered from the same trouble (painful finger nails) at differ ent periods of my life. The first time of Its occurrence, perhaps twenty-five years ago, after trying home remedies without getting helped, 1 asked my doctor to prescribe for me, but It was not for a year or more that my nails and fingers were well. The inflamma tion and suppuration began at the base of the finger nail. Sometimes it so painful that 1 had to use a poultice to Induce suppuration. After the pu3 was discharged the swelling would go down until the next period of inflam mation, possibly not more than a week or two afterwards. These frequent in flammations resulted In the loss of the nail. "Perhaps ten years later, I began again to suffer from the same trouble. Again I tried various remedies, among them a prescription from a doctor of a friend of mine, who had suffered from a like trouble. This seemed to help somewhat for a time, but It was ! not a permanent cure; next, tried a prescription from my own doctor, but this was so irritating to the sensitive, diseased skin that 1 could not use it. 1 began to use Cutlcura Soap and j Ointment. I had used the Cutlcura i Ointment previously on my children's I scalps with good effect. I did not use the Soap exclusively, but I rubbed the Cutlcura Ointment Into the base of the nail every night thoroughly, and as often beside as I could. I had not used It but a few weeks before my nails were better, and In a short time they were apparently well. There was no more suppuration, nor Inflamma tion, the nails grew out clean again. One box of Cutlcura Ointment was all that I used In effecting a cure. (Signed) Mrs. I. J. Horton, Katonah, N. Y„ Apr. 33, 1910. On Sept. 21. Mrs. Horton wrote; "I have had no further return *t>f the trouble with my finger rails." Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere, a sam ple of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cutl cura," Dept. L, Boston. Always Leap Year. "It's le£yj year every year in Papua," said an emlinologist. "The reason isn't that the women are the bosses there. No, quite the contrary. The reason is that love-making is supposed to be a thing beneath the notice of the Pa puan male. "All women look alike to him. So the matrimonial pourparlors all fall on the female sex. "If a man accepts a girl's proposal, the fact that he is engaged is chalked on Ills back. But on the girl's back the engagement is branded with a red hot iron." ' Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infantß and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Styles in Ailments. "Well, here I am." announced the fashionable physician in his breezy way. "And now what do you think is the matter with you?" "Doctor, I hardly know," replied the fashionable patient. "What is new?" Lose Either Way. Reason —Remember, my boy, wealth does not bring happiness. Rhyme—Maybe not, but fighting the wolf is no round of pleasure, Hoxsle'i Croup R«mcdjr for Cronp, Cotijrhs and Golds, stands Ht lh»' fop a Micros for thirty yeu.i» - PreTenU Pneumonia. Druggists. 60 cent*. A milkman may be as rich as hla cream and still not be wealth/. WILL OF PEOPLE SHOULD BE COURT OF LAST RESORT, SAYS ROOSEVELT Ex-President Gives Views on Legislation in Address Before Ohio Constitutional Convention—Favors Strict Government Supervision of "Big Business" —Other Recommendations. Columbus, 0., Feb. 21— Ex-Presi dent. Theodore Roosevelt, in an ad dress delivered at the Ohio constitu tional convention, in session in this city today, expressed his views regard ing state and national legislation. He declared that unless laws enacted by the representatives of the people were subject to recall at the command of the people government was not truly representative. Referring to trusts he declared himself in favor of strict government supervision and curtail ment of all special privileges. After thanking the members of the convention for the honor extended In inviting him to address the body, ho said, among other things: I believe In pure democracy. With Lincoln, I hold that "this country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending It." We progressives believe that the peo ple have the right, .the power, and the duty to protect themselves and their own welfare; that human rights are supreme over all other rights; that wealth should be the servant, not the master, of the people. We believe that unless representative govern ment does absolutely represent the people it is not representative govern ment at all. We test the worth of all men and all measures by asking how they contribute to tfie welfare of the men, women and children of whom this nation is composed. We are engaged In one of the great bat tles of the age-long contest waged against privilege on behalf of the common welfare. We hold it a prime duty of the people to free our gov ernment from the control of money. In politics. For this purpose we ad vocate, not as ends In themselves, but as weapons in the hands of the peo ple. all governmental devices which will make the representatives of the people more easily and certainly re sponsible to the people's will. . . . Believes in Constitutionalism. I am emphatically .1 believer in constitutionalism, and because of this fact I no less emphatically protest against any theory that would make of the Constitution a means of thwart ing instead of securing the absolute right of the people to rule themselves and to provide for their own social and industrial well-being. All consti tutions, those of the states no less than that of the nation, are designed, and must be interpreted and adi«n istered, so as to fit human righls. Lincoln so interpreted and adminis tered the national Constitution. Bu chanan attempted to reverse, attempt ed to fit human rights to, and limit them by, the Constitution. It was Buchanan who treated the courts as a fetish, who protested against and con demned all criticism of the judges for unjust and unrighteous decisions, and upheld the Constitution as an in strument for the protection of priv ilege and of vested wrong, it was Lincoln who appealed to the people against the Judges when the judges went wrong, who advocated and se cured what was practically the recall of the Dred Scott decision, and who treated the Constitution as a living force for righteousness. "I hold it to be the duty of every public secant, and of every man who In public or in private life holds a position of leadership in thought or action, to endeavor honestly and fear lessly to guide his fellow-country men to right decisions; but I emphat ically dissent from the view that it Is either wise or necessary to try to de vise methods which under tthe Consti tution will automatically prevent the people from deciding for themselves what governmental action they deem Just and proper. . . . Constitu tion-makers should make it clear be yond shadow of, doubt that the people in their legislative capacity have the power to enact into law any measure they deem necessary for the better ment of social and industrial condi tions. The wisdom of framing any particular law of this kind is a proper subject of debate; but the power of the people to enact the law should not be subject to debate. To hold the contrary view is to be false to the cause of the people, to the cause of American democracy. Aim of Good Government. The ends of good govern ment in our democracy are to secure by genuine popular rule a high aver age of moral and material well-being among our citizens. It has been well said that in the past we have paid attention only to the accumulation of prosperity, and that from henceforth Unloading Memorials. A Colorado woman, bemoaning the loss of ti valuable ring, was astonish- i ed to see it on the hand of au Ice | cream vender from whom she was i making a purchase. She called the police. The vender politely explain ed how he got the ring. It was given i him some days before by a young ! woman. The young woman had re- , celved it from her sweetheart, who had proved unfaithful, and.to rid her- < eelf of his memorial, she gave the rlnff to tl:e Ice cream vender I- we must pay equal attention to the I- proper distribution of prosperity. This i- is true. The only prosperity worth s having is that which affects the mass 1- of the people. 1 hold it to be our e duty to see that the wage-worker, the small producer, the ordinary consum e er, shall get their fair share of the 112 benefit of business prosperity. But it y either is or ought to be evident to e every one that business has to pros t per before anybody can get any bene l- fit from it. Therefore I hold that he is the real progressive, that he is the s genuine champion of the people, who i endeavors to shape the policy alike of a the nation and of the several states so as to encourage legitimate and l honest business at the same time that he wars against all crookedness and Injustice and unfairness and tyranny in the business world (for of course we can only get business put on a basis of permanent prosperity when the element of injustice is taken out of it.) Regulating Big Business. What is needed is, first, the recog nition that modern business conditions have come to stay, in so far at least as these conditions mean that business must be done in larger units, and then the cool-headed and resolute deter mination to introduce an effective method of regulating big corporations so as to help legitimate business as an incident to thoroughly and completely safeguarding the interests of the peo ple as a whole. It is imperative to exercise over big business a control and su pervision which is unnecessary as regards small business. All busi ness must be conducted under the law, and all business men, big or little, must act justly. Hut a wicked big interest is necessarily more dan- | gerous to the community than a wicked little interest. "Ilig business" in the past has been responsible for much of the special privilege which must be unsparingly cut out of our national life. I do not believe in mak ing mere size of and by itself crimin i al. The mere fact of size, however, I does unquestionably carry the i>o tentiality of such grave wrong-doing that there should be by law provision made for the strict supervision and regulation of these great industrial concerns doing an inter-state business, much as we now regulate the trans portation agencies which are engaged in inter-state business. The anti-trust law does good in so far as it can be j invoked against combinations which | really are monopolies or which restrict production or which artificially raise prices. Hut in so far as its workings are uncertain, or as It threatens cor porations which have been guilty of anti-social conduct, it does harm. Moreover, it cannot by itself accom plish more than a trifling part of the governmental regulation of big busi ness which is needed. The nation and the states must co-operate in this mat ter. Among the states that have en tered tllia field Wisconsin has taken a leading place. All business into which the clement of monopoly in any way or degree en ters, and where it proves In practice impossible totally to eliminate this ele ment. of monopoly, should be carefully supervised, regulated and controlled by governmental authority; and such control should be exercised by admin istrative, rather than by judicial, offi cers. No effort should be made to de stroy a big corporation merely be cause it is big, merely because It has shown itself a peculiarly efficient business instrument. Hut we should not fear, if necessary, to bring the regulation of big corporations to the point of controlling conditions so that the wage-worker shall have a wage more than sufficient to cover the bare cost of living, and hours of labor not so excessive as to wreck his strength by the strain of unending toil and leave him unfit to do his duty as a good citizen of the community. We also maintain that the nation and the several states have the right to regulate the terms and conditions of labor, which is the chief element of wealth, directly in the interest of the common good. You, trainers of this constitution, be careful so to frame It that under-it the people shall leave themselves free to do whatever is necessary in order to help the fanners of the state to get for themselves and their wives and children not only the i benefits of belter farming but also those of better business method® and better conditions of life on the farm. Moreover, shape your constitutional action so that the people will he able through their legislative bodies, or, i falling that, by direct popular vote, to Horseradish for Hoarseness. Horseradish will afford instantane ous relief in most obstinate cases of hoarseness. The root, of course, pos sesses the most virtue, though the leaves are good till they dry, when they lose their strength. The root Is best when It is green. The person who will use it freely just before be ginning to speak will not be troubled with hoarseness. The root boiled down una sweetened into a thick Byrtip will give relief 5a the severest cases. provide workmen's compensation acts, to regulate the hours of labor for chil dren and for women, to provide for their safety while at work, and to pre vent overwork or work under hygienic or unsafe conditions. How to Achieve End* Sought. So much for the ends of govern ment; and I have, of course, merely sketched in outline what the ends should be. Now for the machinery by which these ends are to be achieved; and here again remember I only sketch In outline and do not for a mo ment pretend to work out in detail the methods of achieving your purposes. Let me at the outset urge upon you to remember that, while machinery is Important, it is easy to overestimate Its importance; and, moreover, that each community has the absolute right to determine for itself what that ma chinery shall be, subject only to the fundamental law of the nation as ex pressed in the Constitution of the Uni ted States. ... In the first place, I believe in the short ballot. You can not get good service from the public servant if you cannot see him, and there is no more effective way of hid ing him than by mixing him up with a multitude of others so that they are none of them important enough to catch the eye of the average, worka day citizen. The professional politi cian and the professional lobbyist thrive most rankly under a system which provides a multitude of elec tive officers, of such divided responsi bility and of such obscurity that the public knows, and can know, but little as to their duties and the way they perform them. The people have noth ing whatever to fear from giving any public servant power so long as they retain their own power to hold him accountable for his use of the power they have delegated to him. I believe in providing for direct nom inations by the people, including there in direct preferential primaries for t lie election of delegates to the nalional nominating conventions. I believe in the election of United States senators by direct vote. Just as actual experience convinced our people fhat presidents should be elected (as they now are in practice, although not in theory) by direct vote of the people instead of by direct vote through an untrammeled electoral col lege. so actual experience has con vinced us that senators should be elected by direct vote of the people instead of indirectly through the vari ous legislatures. 1 believe in the initiative and the referendum, which should be used not to destroy representative government, but to correct it whenever it becomes inisrepresentative. Here again 1 am concerned not with theories but with actual facts. If in any state the peo ple are themselves satisfied with their present representative system, then it is of course their right to keep that system unchanged; and it is nobody's business but theirs. But in actual practice it has been found in very many states that legislative bodies have not been responsive to the popu lar will. Therefore 1 believe that the state should provide for the possibility , of direct popular action In order to make good such legislative failure. As to the recall, I do not believe that there is any great necessity for it as regards short-term elective of ficers. On abstract grounds 1 was originally inclined to be hostile to it. 1 know of one case where it was ac tually used with mischievous results. On the other hand, in three cases in municipalities on the Pacific coast which have come to my know ledge it was used with excellent results. I believe it should be generally pro vided, but with such restrictions as will make it available only when there is a widespread and genuine public feeling among a majority of the voters. Believes in Popular Government. Many eminent lawyers who more or less frankly disbelieve in our entire American system of government for, [ by, and of the people violently an- i tagonize this proposal. They believe, 1 and sometimes assert, that the A met- ! ican people are not fitted for popular I government, and that it is necessary | to keep the judiciary "Independent of j the majority or of all the people;" that there must be no appeal to the people from the decision of a court in any case; and that therefore the judges are to be established as sover eign rulers over the people. I take ! absolute issue with all those who hold j such a position. I regard it as a com- j plete negation of our • whole system of government; and if It. became the dominant position in this country, it ! would mean the absolute upsetting of i both the rights and the rule of the I people. 1 do not say that the people are In fallible. Hut I do say that our whole history shows that the American peo ple are more often sound in their de cisions than is the case with any of the governmental bodies to whom, for their convenience, they have dele gated portions of their power. If this is not so. then there is no justification for the existence of our government; and if It is so, then there is no justi fication for refusing to give the peo ple the real, not merely the nominal, ultimate decision on questions of con stitutionaj law. The Best In Life. Growing a little every day; looking out upon life fearlessly and hopefully; doing with our might the common task that stands before us, trying to make ourselves good, and other people hap py. rather than ourselves happy, and other people good; treating work as a joy rather than a task; laughing often, j worrying about nothing, and loving all men—if this does not bring success, it will bring something better, for it : carries with it all that is best iu life. I —Walter T. Held. 1 OLD AND NEW WORLD BRIEFS FOR THE BUSY Emilo Yasquez Gomez, In a manifes to issued from San Antonio, Tex., ac cepted the provisional Presidency of Mexico, complaining that the plan of San Luis Potosi had not been carried out by the Madero government. Charles W. Morse, unaccompanied by a physician, sailed for Mediterra- Premier Asquith in a speech in tha House of Commons said Lord Hal dane's recent visit to Berlin was at th« instance of the German government; he expressed the hope that more than negative results would be arrived at from the conversations thus begun. A large fleet of oyster boats is ice bound in Chesapeake Bay and many men are out of employment becaus* the packers cannot get the oysters. A published statement that th« United States army had cost $1,896,- 000.000 in the last thirteen year» brought a vigorous protest from Sec retary of War Stimson. THE MARKETS. (New York Wholesale Prices.) MILK.--The wholesale price is 4a per quart in the 26c. zone or $1.91 per 40-quart can, delivered in New York. This new price went into effect Febru ary 13. Butter. Spe ° ia,s 32 @32>4 Jsr 3s 3 .:::::::::;::;: isgngj® Rxtra r ß ea :"? ry Speclals "112? *32* Firsts * (frfllVa seconds :::::: Thirds 29 j -State, dairy, finest •••••"« g<-8* Good to prime I Common to fair 028 i ~ Eggs. State, Pa., and nearby hen ! "bite fancy, hew laid ! state Pn'' n'wi *i 41 <G** U hi'ii . nearby selected to sood 39 <®4o < H .Vu- ;.'', " I,lixell colors ...'l7 038 I oiovvn, hennery, tancy 39t(r/40 I pjfri* rn ' , KU,h, . !r, 'd. white ....:; 87 040 j Jefngerator, fair to prime 33 @34 Live Poultry. ! !;!;!;:{!?"*• vlt } express, per lb.. .12^013 I y . 1 •, P r "»e, via freight ®l"i.A Howls, via express . is ?, KI 112 owls, prime via reight;' ib." ! ! fit I- ' sou, l>ern ($1414 howls, poor to fair mi<l Roosters .per ll> ij 1 ~,* Turkeys, mixed liens and toras per lb ... ir, Ducks, per lb 7 §{£ Cieese. per lb . "Ji ° Guinea, per pair " Ego Pigeons, per pair " %20 i .. Game. \ enison, whole deer, per lb ....18 02 0 I \ enison, saddles »•» Rabbits, cottontails, per pair*" ' I . prime 1 „ 1K Jack rabbits, per pair :::!25 040 . , Vegetables. Artichokes, per bag* « OOffrnn ftA Beans- sprouts ' «l«ar{ .::: Florida, per basket 50®4 oO Beets, old, per barrel 1 s&Sti&Q Carrots— New Orleans, per 100 bunches 2.00(ff13.00 t old washed and unwashed ier bbl or bag 1 »;«,« -e Cabbages— i«0,(f1.,0 Red, per ton 20.00®30.00 i Red, per bbl 1.50@1.75 Domestic, per ton 15.00020.00 Domestic, per bbl 1.2501.60 Danish seed, per ton 30.Uy035.00 „' er 1.5002.00 Florida, new, per crate 2.75 03.00 Chicory per bbl 1.0002.00 Kg:grplants, Ma., per box or bskt. 1.25(?i;2.50 ' Cuban, per box 1.0002.00 Escarol, per bbl 1.0002.75 ! Endive. I-rench, per lb n® 14 Horseradish, per 100 bunches. .3.0004.50 I Kale, \ irginia, per bbl 1.5001 75 Lettuce, per basket 1.0004.50 Lime beans. Ha., per basket or crate 2.00(95.00 ' Onions — Cuban, new, per crate 2.75 0 2.85 Old, crate or bag 150®0.00 Okra, per carrier 1.0002.50 Oyster plant, per 100 bunches. .4.00®5 00 l '«as, Florida, per basket 2.00 0 6.00 ! Peppers, barrels, boxes or car riers 1.25 0 3 60 Parsnips, per bbl 1.5001.75 Romaine, per basket 1.00 03 00 I Per box 1.00(02.60 | Per barrel 2.0004.00 Spinach, Virginia, per bbl 1.00 0 5.00 Squash, tine new white, per b0x.2.0002.50 Per basket 1.5002 00 New yellow 1.0001.25 Squash, old. Hubbard, per bbl . .1.0001.25 Marrow, old. bbl or crate 1.26@1.60 Turnips. Rutabaga, per bbl ....1.0001.25 White, per bbl 1.0001.50 Tomatoes. Florida, per carrier. 1.2503.50 Watercress, per 100 bunches ..2.00® 2.50 Hothouse. Cucumbers, No. 1, doz 1.0001.25 No. 2, per doz 3.00® 4.U0 I.ettuce. per strap 1.00 02.00 Mushrooms. 4-lb basket 1.25 02.00 Mushrooms, buttons, 4-lb basket 1.0001.25 Mint, per doz bunches 500 HO Radishes, per 100 bunches ....1.5003.00 Rhubarb, per doz. small behs.. 60® HO Rhubarb, w'n, per large bunch 40(a) tiO Tomatoes, per lb 100 40 Potatoes. Bermuda, No. 1 late crop, per bbl 6.0006.50 \ Bermuda, No. 2 late crop, per bbl 5.0005.50 , Long Island, No. 1, per bbl 3.6004.00 | State, per 280 lbs 3.2503.50 j State, per bag 3.0003.25 1 Maine, per 180 lbs 3.5003.75 Maine, per bag 3.2503.50 European, No. 1, per 168-lb bag 2.30 02.50 Sweets, Jersey, No. 1, per bskt. . 1.2501.85 1 Apples. Standard barrel— Spitzenburg and Northern Spy ..1.5004.00 Twenty Ounce 2.0003.75 | King 1.5003.75: Baldwin and Greening 1.5003.50 [ lien Davis and York Imperial. .$1.5003.00 ! Common and badly frozen ....1.00 0 1 50 Far Western, boxes 1.00 0 3.00 | Live Stock. BEEVES.—Ordinary to good steers sold at $5 #007.10 per 100 lbs.; common oxen | at $4.75; bulls at $3.7505.40; cows at $2.26 j 04.60; dressed beef slow at B@l2c. per lb. j for native sides. C YLVtCS. —Common to choice veals sold at $7010.76 per 100 lbs.; culls and throw- I outs at $5 06.60. City dressed seals steady j at ll J /24<16c. per lb.; country dressed at 1 ' AND LAMBS.—Common to ! prime sheep (ewes) sold at $3((|4.*..> per ' 100 lbs.; common to prime lambs at $5 oO 07.05; culls at $4.50(6 4.7 d. Dressed mut ton at 6HOBC. per lb.; dressed lambs at #vi® 11 Vic.; country dressed hothouse ; 1h inb" lit S4fyl/ • Cili'li' m fi'lS—Quotations were $6.50@5.70 for light to heavy hogs; $606.40 for pigs. Country dressed hogs steady at 6'2 090. for heavy to light. HAY AND STRAW—Hay. largo bales, timothy, No. 3 to No. 1. 100 lb.. $1.0501.35; shiooing. $101.02V4: packing,, 65070 c.; clover mixed, light. $1.1601.20; heavy. Jim 120; pure, $101.20; Straw, long rye, mo® 95c.; oat and wheat, 50® 60c. ' Spot Markets at a Glance. Wheat, No. 2 red, elev 1.02% Oats, standard 61 Flour, spring patent, barrel 6.25 Corn, steamer „"3* Flaxseed ••••.: 2.0614 Lard, prime. 100 lbs 9.30 Tallow, city, hhds 06 Pork, mess, bbl 17.50 Coffee, Rio No. 7, lb 14*4 Sugar, tine granulated, lb. 6.70 c flutter, creamery 32tfc Cheese, state, factory 17Vi Kggs, firsts 38 I Cotton ( 10.70 Tobacco — I Havana, R. D 60 I Conn., -tapper 60 \ SFRE I want every p. who is bilious, c< paled or has any i send for a free pac of my Paw-Paw to prove digestion. Sour *, aoh. Belching, V Headache, Ner^ for Consti patlon!* l ! this I am willing to flrive milltons of free p ages. I take all the risk. Sold by drugi for 25 cents a vial. For free package add Prof. Munyoft. 63rd k Jefferson Sts.. Philadelphia Splendid Crop In Saskatchewan (Western Can* Bushels from 20 acr» wheat was the thrrihe -eturn from a Lloj minster farm in t MvltUr& I " M ™ ° f 1910. Ma l/l:ltlEKtfrf I eld »'n that as wrll I other districts yie ■ A led from 25 to 33 I I nftj shels of wheat tot ,ULr^|flacre. Other (rains Vf 4 proportion. 112 PROFIT >re thus derive from the FRK grifflnl HOMESTEAD LAM) TtfvteJ of Western Canada. This excellent showing cans j3b i- P rlces to adyance. Land *alu should double In two ▼ears' tin) t Oraln If rowing,mixed farn Sw • «Ciei ,n S* eaitle rutslhtf umt dali*' in * aro profitable. Fr« tHomesteads of 100 acres at I k&> | jTel to bo bad In tbe very bei districts; 100 acre pre-emi # J4k W{ tlons at 53.00 perMcra wltf In certain areas. Schools an linml churches In every Mettle 3k ment, climate unexcellet T* soil the richest; wood, irate j and building materia l^r particular! as to locatior * ow settlers' railway rates au Gtftr tf descriptive illustrated pamphlet y/" >T "bast Best West," aud other in W formation, write to Sup'tof lmmi ! gratlon, Ottawa, Canada, or t« v Canadian ttorernmeut Agent. i *> J- S- Crawford, Canadian Government kftn W. t% , A 3 01 6enesee Street, Syracuse, New Yori PIeARA write to the agent nearest you Ira Cures Strained, Puffy Ankle Rf Lymphangitis, Poll Evil, list ul llolls, Sores, Wire Cuts, Itruisf luJ Swellings. I.ameness, and alin> AT Pain <iulckly without ItllHterin Cm removing the nair, or laying the hop ■«r<ir« ktimm 11 P- Pleasant to use. f2.LO per hottl delivered. Describe your case f< special Instructions and Rook ft E free. ABSOHHINE, JR., liniment for mankind. F« Stßiins. Painful, Knotted, Swollen Veins, Milk 1,0 j Gout. Price SI.OO per bottle at dealers or deliver* W. F.YOUNG.P.D. F.,310 Temple St.,SDrinflfield. Mas JhMJM.HB.H 11 \ jjM || Beat Cough Symp. Tastra Good.UaeEj P|4 ■in tima. Bold by Drut*i«ta. El Tf ' 1 ■ 112 I'niTKw^i.w^.irr^i | J AS SCHEDULED. j Mr. Booze—Well—hie—you married me for better or worse—-kio —didn't you? Mrs. Booze —Yes, and I got the worst of it. Among the Ancients. Democritus had just announced the theory that the visible universe is j merely the result of the fortuitous : concourse of atoms. "Subject, of course." he said, "to the approval of Mr. Gompers." For he did not wish to be drawn into a magazine controversy over it. Many a girl fails to select the right husband because she is afraid of be j ing left. y \ From Our Ovens To Your Table Untouched by human hands — Post Toasties —the aristocrat of Ready to-Serve foods. A table dainty, made of white Indian corn—present ing delicious flavour and j wholesome nourishment in new and appetizing form. The steadily increasing sale i of this food speaks volumes J in behalf of its excellence. An order for a package of Post Toasties from your ( grocer will provide a treat for | the whole family. "The Memory Lingers *' Poetum Cereal Company, Limited Battle Creek, Michigan
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