REPUBLICAN NEWS-ITEM JOHN B. ENGLISH, Trop. LAPORTE PA. Wrestlers may win in straight falls, but aeroplane racers, never. Automobiles would be even more •popular if they did not smoke. A fireproof building is always fire proof as long as there is no fire in the vicinity. The man who pays $27,000 for a •Bible does not expect to get 127,000 worth of reading out of it, A wealthy soap manufacturer ad dressed the hobo convention at Cin cinnati and escaped without a scratch. How fickle is humanity. In summer we kick about the high cost of ice, and in winter we trample it under foot. A Baltimore man has been on the operating table 24 times. He must be the fellow who casts the scattering vote. The conning towers on the battle ships outnumber and outrank the cu polas on the temple of peace at The Hague. A doctor told a woman's club "how to make a child sick." His talk could be spread usefully for the benefit of grown-ups. They call it the United States of China, but the states are about as firmly linked together as a mess of chop suey. A Boston minister tells men to vote as they pray. With a good many of them that would be never until they are about to die. Labouchere, the English editor of Truth, left ten million dollars. If that is the result of Truth, what is the use of so much lying? The Denver man who traveled 9,000 miles to take unto himself a wifo can hardly be said to be the victim of a leap year proposal. Kitty Gordon tells us that it costs S2OO a week to be beautiful, and yet few women are complaining about the high cost of beauty. A scientist has figured out that a bee travels 48,000 miles in collecting the material for a pound of honey. What a beautiful price basiß for a new trust! "Thehe is no telling a woman's age nfter she passes 25," sagely enunci ates a contemporary. On the con trary, every friend she has cheerfully tells It on her. Who says the Filipinos have not at tained a high degree of civilization? Manila is grief-stricken over the de parture of the troops for China. The beat baseball team in the city weht •with them. One of Alaska's most popular vol canoes is In violent eruption. If it is assisting to temper the atmosphere in ; 4ts vicinity it is likely to make itself <iearer than ever to the hearts of the Alaskan people. A child 5 years old in New Vork has j T\ad his income raised from $3,000 per j year to $15,000, thus permitting him J to support his guardians in the style ! to which they alleged that they have j been accustomed. The French government asks for au appropriation of $4,400,000 for military aeroplanes. Those who Imagined that the aerial navies would reduce the cost of "peace insurance" may have to revise their ideas. Paris authorities have order Ray mond Duncan to wear more clothes In public. Evidently Raymond labors un der the impression that all the world's a bathing beach. A California boy 22 years of age has married a lady of 63. We hope t-he will be good enough to refrain from spanking him In case she hap pens to catch him stealing jam. Silk stockings are no longer consdd- | ered fashionable in Washington. Has that any possible connection with the j crusade the women of Washington are j waging against high street car steps? No man is a hero to his stenograph er. So say the organized women ste nographers of Chicago. For self-pro tection then, we shall have to hire | male stenographers for whose opin ion we don't gave a hang. A woman in lowa laughed so long end so hard at a Joke that they had to •send for three doctors to chloroform her. This ought to be some encour- ! egement to those mournful members j of the community, the jokesmlths. A Harvard professor advocates a course in aviation at all our universt- I ties, Just as if the average college stu dent Is not flighty enough. A Buffalo woman says she can't live with her husband because he is bald, lit must also be that his ears are too tsmall to afford a good hold. The czar ordered the banishment of Bishop Hennogenes and he went to fehirovitzky monastery In a private tar. That's better than Siberia and ,*alklng. COAL STRIKE WORLD WIDE Prussian Miners Follow Lead of English Workers. MORE THAN 1.000.000 OUT London County Council Curtails Ser vice—7so,ooo Other Workers Idle —Number to Double—No Loans to Unions on Securities. New York.—With more than 1,000,- 000 coal miners on strike in England the Prussian workers also decided to quit work. In France there is much unrest. A shortage in supply is already feared, and the action of the English and the French miners. German workers is likely influence In this country preparations are be | ing made to face a great walkout of j anthracite workers, who threaten to j quit on April 1. Coal owners are I guarding tlieir stockades in the Penn sylvania fields by barbed wire. The I men's demands have thus far been re- I fused, and strenuous efforts are being I made to accumulate sufficient re- J serves to meet the situation. COAL STRIKE VOTED IN NORTH GERMANY. ) 150,000 Miners in Ruhr Region Meet at 80 Points and Declare War on the Owners. Essen, Rhenish, Prussia.—A strike j throughout the Ruhr region was over j whelminglly voted at a meeting of the i delegates representing the three coal | miners' organizations, j The Christian Unionists, who were | not represented, have issued a pro | test, but it is said that they will ap | prove the demand for increased I wages, and it would not be surprising | to see them eventually join the move ment. Eighty different meetings were held in the various mining districts and not less than 150,000 miners attended. Much enthusiasm was displayed and the men enthusiastically favored a fight to a finish with the employers. All the meetings were orderly. The official notification of the proposed strike appeals to the miners to be law abiding and "strictly avoid liquor." COAL SCARCE IN IJ.NGLAND. Conferences Planned, but Strike's End Is Not Yet in iight. London. —As the coal strike in Eng land continues the fear increases that, unless it is settled soon, there will be a general coal famine. Already pre cautionary measures have been taken by the railways and the big industrial , concerns. The American Steamship Line lias I announced that all its sailings from ; Southampton have been suspended, j owing to the coal strike. Hundreds of factories closed down j indefinitely, and until the strike is j ended there will be no work for the 1 employes. Figures received at the I home office show that 750,000 men j other than miners have been thrown I out of work since the strike, and it is expected that the number will be dou- j bled in a week. Several of the big daily newspapers i will be obliged to cut the size of their ' editions. Meanwhile from every city comes ' the report of great suffering among 1 the poor. In many places the author!- I ties are commandeering coal and oth er fuel, and it is being parcelled out in small quantities to those who can- j not buy it. Food supplies are running j short and prices have advanced. An important question has arisen as j to strike finances. All the funds of the striking unions are invested in j stocks and mortgages and amount to ! .£2,500,000. On Lombard street a con- 1 troversy has arisen as to whether the hanks should make advances against these securities. This, it is argued, would amount practically to financing the strike and leading institutions have decided not to provide the money. YUAN SWORN IN AS PRESIDENT. I American Legation and Military At taches Only Foreigners at Ceremony. Peking.—Yuan Shih Kai was sworn in as president of the provisional re public of China at the Wai-Wu Pu, or Chinese foreign office. The delegates from the Nanking Assembly, a num ber of provincial representatives ur.d other prominent persons, as well as the secretaries and military attache of the American legation were present at the ceremony. The other foreign lega tions were not represented. Yuan made an avowal of loyalty ,o the republic which was supplemented by an oath that he would retire when a permanent president was chosen. ELECTROCUTED AT BATH. Attorney Killed Accidentally by Grasp ing Electric Fixture. Rutland, Vt.—Standing in the bath tub, partly filled with water, with his hands grasping an electric fixture, Robert A. Lawrence, an attorney was " found dead in his home, a victim of accidental electrocution. The wires for lighting purposes are supposed to carry only 110 volts, not enough to cause death, but had ap parently become crossed with an other more powerful wire outside. SNAPSHOTS AT . STATE NEWS ' All Pennsylvania Gleaned for Items of Interest. REPORTS ABOUT CROPS GOOD Farmers Busy In Every Locality— Churches Raising Funds for Many Worthy Objects—ltems of Busi ness and Pleasure that Interest. Eggs sold for 18 cents a dozen on I the Lancaster market. S. E. Post, of Wyalusing, during the ■ ! fall and winter trapped 150 muskrats, | i tea minks and seven oppossums. In its report to Court the Grand i Jury condemns the Lycoming county I jail because of inadequate ventilation and lighting. > | The Rev. E. J. Mackernagle, who re | signed as pastor of the Lutheran j Church at Elizabethtown, has accept ed a call in Toledo, Ohio. There are more than 100 inmates at j the Tioga County Home, while there j are less than 50 in the Home in the | neighboring county of McKean. Charles Wychulis' rig was wrecked and he barely escaped alive, from a grade crossing collision at Shenan doah. Caught in an explosion of gas at | Mc-Lurk's colliery, Girardville, John Marshall was seriously burned on the ! face, head and hands. Application has been made for par dons for John Burke, Michael Cuff and j Fred Zimmerman, convicted of elec ! tion frauds in Schuylkill county. The Lancaster Court has refused all j j new applications for liquor licenses 1 and two old licenses, the latter be- : i cause the hotels were not properly j kept. Asserting that they are paid less j and work longer than other employes | I of their kind, 40 breaker boys went on j ! strike at McLurk's colliery. Girard- j j ville. Twins, a boy and a girl, have been j j born to Mr. and Mrs. James Beck, in ! I Upper llrush Valley, Centre county. I ; This is the second pair of twins born j | to this couple, and all are living. Miss May Went worth, vocalist at a j vaudeville show in Shamokin, was at- j I tacked by ruffian at the stage door, I j but was rescued, badly bruised, by [ pedestrians. Pietro Demutis, of Lebanon, was i sentenced to imprisonment of not I j more than seven years nor less than : | 21 months in the Eastern Penitentiary I i for shooting Paul Rrougli. Mike Bratice, Alfred Aubrey and I Mike Ferko, young men charged with ! | pouring coal oil down a chimney and almost incinerating nine boys at Eck- I ley, were held for Court. Paul H. Richard, of Meadowille, j has been awarded the work of draw | ing the plans for Crawford county's | new jail. It is stated that the new I jail will cost between $45,000 and $50,000. Samuel A. McAdam, of Lebanon, ! j was acquitted on a charge of larceny, | j in a $4400 shortage in his accounts as j passenger and freight agent at the j | Lebanon station of the Cornwall &. ! ; Lebanon Railroad Company. Inconvenienced by a shortage in wa- J | t.er supply, the Troy borough authori- I ties have engaged drillers to explore j j on the spring lot owned by the village j j in Farmers' Valley and at the site of j the old oil well on the Herman Sling- I erland farm. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Leroy, of Scran- j ton, have returned after a month's ; visit to several Florida points. Mr. I Leroy is at the head of a lumber com- j pany. While at Indianola Mr. Leroy i shot an alligator 15 feet in length. The skin was cured and Mr. Leroy ! brought it to Scranton with him. He intends to have it made into pocket books and traveling bags for his friends. George J. Aitkins, of Marietta, re turned from a three weeks' business trip to Mexico. He crossed the border on the last train into Texas via the Eagle Pass route. The t#ain just be fore it reached the Rio Grande River was held up by Mexican rebels, who robbed the express cars and stole all of the blankets and supplies from the train. Anthony Capello was found dead on a mountain road near Shamokin by men on their way to work, and it is thought he grew exhausted while walking and died from exposure. H. O. Dunkle, general superintend ent of the Erie Railroad, has informed the people of Sharon that it is the in tention of that company to make a railroad centre of that place, and that the first steps will be to abandon the old passenger station and erect one of considerable size and architectural beauty. EVERY PATENT AN OCTOPUS Chief Justice Predicts "Untold Evils" Will Follow Decision IMPERILS ALL TRUST SUITS jj Chief Justice Opposes It —Says It Means Extension of Monopoly and Affects Every Household in the United States. Washington.—Officials of the« De partment of Justice and lawyers all over the country are exercised over the decision in the case of A. B. Dick & Co., handed down by a majority of the Supreme Court and which it is i believed gives so new and far-reach ing effect to the rights of a patentee that it is likely to seriously embarrass the government in several pending suits under the Sherman law. The suits that may be affected by it are those in which the alleged monopoly rests on patent rights, such as United Shoe Machinery and the bath tub trust case. By officials of the Department of Justice the decision is regarded as the most important that has been | banded down since the Standard Oil j and Tobacco trust decisions. It is by no means certain, however, j that the decision will be permitted to i stand. The vote in the court stood 4 |to 3. The majority opinion was read j by Justice Lurton and concurred in by I Justices McKenna, Holmes and Van [de Vanter. A vigorous dissenting | opinion was read by Chief Justice 1 White and concurred in by Justice i Hughes and Lamar. Justice Day rti-l j not sit in the case. At the time the j arguments were submitted he was at the bedside of his wife who was ta'ai j iy ill- Because of the far-reaching effect j that this decision may have ou pend ! ing anti-trust cases and on every | household in the land the government, I although not a party to the suit, will ; take steps to bring about a rehearing j of the case before a full bench as soon J as the nomination of Mahlon P. Pit ! ney to fill the existing vacancy is j confirmed. I The case arose in New York. The : firm of A. B. Dick & Co. of Chicago, | which owns H patent on a "rotary j mimeograph," brought suit against i Sidney Henry of New York for al j leged contributory infringement. Dick j Co. sold a mimeograph to Christina ! B. Skou, of New York, and upon the I machine was inscribed what purport j ed to be a license under which the | purchaser was entitled to use the ma chine. The conditionss were that the ! purchaser should use only such sten cils, paper, ink, and other supplies in the operation of the machine as were manufactured by A. I!. Dick & Co. Miss Skou purchased ink from Sidney | Henry that had not been manufacture i ed by the Dick company and in viola | tion of the license. Justice Lurton and his associates | held that the violation of the license j constituted an infringement of the j patentee's rights, and that the case was one which came within the juris diction of the Federal court. Their decision held in effect that the paten tee had the right to prescribe the conditions under which the patent may be used or sold. The chief justice pointed out that under his decision a patentee might sell a cook stove and prosecute a user for infringement if he cooked more than one kind of food on it. DEMOCRATS WIN IN MAINE. Again Carry 11 of 15 Cities, but with Reduced Majorities. Augusta, Me. —Elections were held in 15 cities in Maine and the result ! was the same as last year—the Demo j crats carried eleven, the Republicans ! four. The returns, however, show a I total Democratic loss of 2,000 votes. These are the cities where the elections were held: Biddeford, Saco, South Portland, Auburn, Lewiston, ! Halloweil, Augusta, Waterville. Rock \ land, Bath, Bangor, Eastport, Brewer, I Belfast, and Ellsworth. KILLED BY DYING WIFE. ; Shot Husband, and Then, Desperate, Ends Her Own Fast Ebbing Life. Cleveland. —So great was Mrs. Cath erine Bucholzer's love for her hua t band that she could not bear the thought of being separated from him by death. She crawled from her sick bed, shot and killed him, and then cut her own throat. Mrs. Bucholzer, who was 24 years of age, previously had threatened to kill herself, knowing that the disease with which she was afflicted was fa tal. Bucholzer, who was 28 years old, was seated at a table in the kitchen just after breakfast when he was shot, VILLAGE STARVED TO DEATH. Tragic News Comes from Icebound Nova Zembla Town. St. Petersburg.—lt is learned here that the entire population of a small fishing village in Nova Zembla is dead of starvation. The cemetery is full, showing that the few dead persons found uniuterred had buried those who died first. The vessel which was take food supplies to the village was held fast by the ice for months and when it got through the people for whom the food was destined were dead. OLD AND NEW WORLD BRIEFS FOR THE BUSY The Ruussian council of minister do cided to introduce in the Douma a new Naval program. The bill calls for the expenditure of $250,000,000 in the next five years. The right of the New York city board of health to prescribe that certi ficates of death must be signed by a medical practitioner was upheld by the Court of Appeals. Hundreds of young Christian peas ants are emigrating from Crete to America. Johannes Ivaempf, Radical deputy for Central Berlin, was definitely elected speaker of the Reichstag. Mr. aud Mrs. Pethick Lawrence were arraigned in London charged with conspiracy and inciting tiie re cent suffragist riots; they were re manded without bail. The funeral of Mrs. Annie Yeamans, who was the oldest actress on the stage in the world, was attended by many old-time theatrical stars with a fair representation of the younger players. The services were held in the Little Church Around the Corner, New York. Tientsin was set on fire in fourteen places and looted by mutinous Chinese troops. THE MARKETS. (New York Wholesale Prices.) MILK.—The wholesale price Is 3-T»c. pel Quart in the L'tic. zone or SI.SI per 40- quart can, delivered in New York. Butter. j Creamery, specials Sl'/ifj).. ! Kxtras «, 31 I firsts Seconds 28 f „2<i Thirds 26 Hold creamery specials .......... <u... * lrs,s , 29 029* &YY"" U 27>2 Thirds 25 twtieS State dairy, Itnesi ',2'.)'- .10 Good to prime 27 029 Common to lair 2J (j/ 26 Eggs. State, Pa. and nearby, hennery white l'ancy, new laid, large'. .26 0.. Stale, PH., and nearby, se lecled white, lair to good 24 fn 25 Gathered brown, mixed colors. 23 (u Brown hennery, fancy 21 r>i 25 Western gathered, whitu 23 <n24 ci 25 firsts 23 ut Duck eggs, Baltimore, No. *il fit-i.: Duck eggs, Southern 33 (,t3(. Live Poultry. Chickens via. express, per lb @l3 Chickens, prime, via freight <y;l3 Fowls, via express uj 18 i-owis, prime, via freight, per lb.. (ais cowls, Southern 17 di IT'A Fowls, poor to fair 17 (<il7u Roosters, per lb 0 i w i 1 urkeys, hens, per lb Ui2o Turkeys, toins ( U ,15 Geese, per lb 10 011 Guinea, per pair 050 l'igeons, per pair (fj3 o Vegetables. Artichokes, per drum .. .„ 6.00(Ti9.00 Brussels sprouts, mr quart .... iuiu> is tie.ins— Florida, per baskrt 1.50(95.00 Beets, oid, per ban el l 2.Vy i.50 •\ 11. per 100 bundles 3.UW((i4.UO Ca ulitlowers— Caulillower, per crate (03.50 Carrots— New Orleans, per 100 bunches.2.ooo3.so Old washed and unwashed per bhl or bag 125 @2.00 Cabbages— tied, per ton 25.0011 35.00 lied, per bbl 1.7603.25 Danish seed, per ton 40.0U050.00 Moriua, new. per crate 3.2iiir3.50 Chicory, per barrel 3.uoty 1.00 Kndive, French, per lb I|.~, u; llggplunts, Kla., per box or bskt.2..iofa 4.00 liscarol, per bbl 3.2504.25 Horseradish, per ion bunches . .3.1104/ 4 50 Kale, Virginia, per 11) I.2sj_i 1.50 Kohlrabi, X. 11., per 100 bchs...2.sor<> 5.00 Lettuce, per basket 1.0003.00 Okra, per carrier 1.50(/2.50 uyster plant, per 100 bunches .. l.oom 0.00 Peas, Florida, per basket 3.00ry8.00 i'eppers, barrels, boxes or car riers 2.00©5.00 Parsnips, per bbl 1,60 <i. ,>u ltomaine, per basket 7501.59 Per box 50(ii 1.50 Shallots, x.».. per barrel 6.0008.04 Spinach, Virginia, per bbl -cOO 1.1 0 Squash, tine new white, per box. 2.00 tj) 2.50 New yellow 1 Ooy 1.25 Squash, old, llubbard, per bbl . .1.2501.75 .Marrow, old, bill or irate ....1 5002.00 Turnips, Rutabaga, per bbl 1.25(y2.00 Wane, per bbl 1.00(yU.50 Watercress, per 100 hunches . .1.5002.00 Hothouse. Cucumbers, No. 1, per doz 1.500>2 00 No. 2, per box 3.0003 ru Lettuce, per strap I.OIHII 2.00 Mushrooms, 4 - lb. baskets t 20'y J.OO Muttons, 1 - lb. baskets Tf.'./j.l'u Mint, per dozen bunches :V"fi) 00 Uadislies, per 100 bun'nes I.su«i , 'J.l<o Rhubarb, per «loz. bunches .... tioci 1. 00 Rhubarb, per bundle 400 GO Tomatoes, per lb 150 10 Potatoes. Bermuda, No. 1, late crop 6.00©7 00 Bermuda, No. 2 late crop, per bbl 5.0005.60 Cuban, new, per crate 1.2)^.1.75 State, P* r ISO lbs 3.50^3.62 state, per bag 3.2503.40 .Maine, per 'BO lbs 3,50(^3.75 Maine, per bag 3.4003.65 L.UI opeau. No. 1. per 108-lb bag 2.50® 2.75 Kuropean. undergrade.-, per liis-lb. bag •. 1.5002.25 Sweets, Jersey, No. 1, per bsst.. 1.25(Jj<1.65 Apples. Standard barrel — Greening 2 0004 00 Spitzenberg 1.a0n4.00 Spy 1.500)3.75 20 ' 2.i'o\( 3.50 King t 50(;/ 100 Baldwin I.aOSnH.oO Ben Davis 1.a0(>i3.00 York 1.6003.00 Ga lie 3.H0 fa 3.25 Common l.ootyl.oU Live Stock. BKRVKS.—Common to good steers sold at $5.8007.40 per 100 lbs., oxen at sit!o 0.25, bulis ul »Ruis cows al (2.os'ti 5.2J, tailends at J2.25 u 2.35. Dressed beet' at #Ol2l-sc. for native sides. CALVKS. —Common to prime veals sold at $0.50010 per 100 lbs.; ted calves at $4.5005.60i» Dressed calves easy, at 13H016V2C. for city dressed veals, 1 1 14c. or country dressed, Willi best selling up to 141-2 c. SliiildP AND LAMBS. —Common to prime sheep (ewes) sold at $405.25 per 100 lbs., bucks and culls at $3;ij3.50, com mon to prime lambs at $607.50. Dressed mutton steady, at IlifrSc. per lb.; dress ed lambs at 10V-12e.. hog dressed at 12 loc , country dressed hothouse lambs, at $4 03 per carcass. HOiiJi. — I'rices weak and lower, at $6.7508 per 100 lbs.: pigs sold at »O.uU; country dressed hogs at 6'.so!»c. HAY AND STRAW. —Hay, large bales, timothy, prime. 100 lbs., $1.35; No. 3 to No. 1. $1.0501.35; shipping, 9uc.<Lisl; clov er, mixed, light, $1.20; heavy, $101.20; pure, $101.20; straw, long rye, 85<y0ac.; oat and wheat, 50^60e. Spot Markets at a Glance. Wheat, No. 2. red, elev 1 03H Oats, standard 50 Flour, spring patent, barrel 5.25 Corn, steamer Flaxseed, spot ...03 Lard, prime, 100 lbs 9.20 Tallow, city hhds 06 Pork, mess, barrel 17.00 Coffee, Hio No. 7, per lb 14 5-16 C Sugar, fine granulated, lb ».80e Sugar, raw, per lb 4 25c Butter, creamery 31 • 3 cheese, stale factory 18^4 lCggs, firsts 23 1 'runes, dried, per lb 05% Raisins, seeded, packages 07'4 Tomatoes, 3s, dozen 1.27' a ltiee. per lb i>4 Molasses. N. 0., gal 35 Cotton 10 45 Tobacco— Havana. R. 1> 50 Conn., wrapper .60 ON A PROFIT-SHARING BASIS Manager's Offer Most Generous, Still It la Possible That the Greaser Rejected It. A common method of dealing with | greaser laborers In the new state of | New Mexico Is to have them work on ! shares. A somewhat original appllca j tlon of the system Is told on a well j known manager of one of the 30,000- i acre ranch corporations, j A certain Mexican had been ao | costing the manager several time« and asking for a Job. j "Well, come over to my office," the j boss told him finally,"and maybe I I can fix up something with you." "Now I need a lot of postholes dug," : he began. "What will you give mo?" asked the j Mexican. "Well," replied the employer gener ously, "I will give you half. You can dig my half on my ranch, and can put your half wherever you please—pick i out soft ground for them If you want to."—Metropolitan Magazine. DISTRESSING CASE OF HIVES "I retired one evening end after Bleeping a couple of hours was awak ened by a burning sensation ail over j the upper part of my body. It was | Just simply terrible and made It im | possible for me to sleep the rest of | that night, so I had to sit up all night, j changing my position every couple of j minutes. Aa the hours went by It j grew worse and soon I started to j scratch myself. When daylight ar ! rived I saw that my body was covered j with large red marks about an Inch Jor two apart. My face was also af j fected. I went to see a doctor. Ha told me that I must have eaten some- J thing poisonous, and I had the hives, j He prescribed a medicine and also gave mo some ointment. "As the days went by I steadily j gTew worse, the marks changing from | one part of my body to another. The j medicine and ointment were of no i use. One evening by chance looking ! over the papers I saw the Cuticura Remedies advertised. I immediately procured some Cuticura Ointment and j applied It to my body. It seemed to I ease my skin right away. I kept on ! using the Cuticura Ointment for a 5 week and can say that It certainly was I the finest preparation I had ever used, j It completely cured me, and I have not j been troubled since." (Signed) Wil« 1 11 am Waterman, 129 E. 109 th St, New j York City, Dec. 8, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to ! "Cuticura," Dept L, Boston. NOT SO FAMILIAR. Carrye—Do you love art for art's sake? Daisy—l beg your pardon, but hlo name is Arthur. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle ot CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Stingy Thing. She —Oh, I have no doubt you lovo me; but your love lacks tho supreme touch—unselfishness. He—What makes you say that? She —You admit it. You want mo for yourself alone, you say. W. A H. Walker, Pittsburgh, Pa., malte over EOO dally household necessities and ecll direct by mall to fainlllesevery where, saving middlemen '» prottts, losses and expenses and to customers they give clothing, furniture, etc., representing tlie'saving— 1- In value for Jl. Write for 224 page CaU-iogue No. 19. Yon can be secretary of » Walker Co-operative Club. Learn how. It boosts a young man wonderfullv In the estimation of a girl if his front name is the same as that of the hero In a romantic novel or play. Kye Naive In Aaeptle Xnbes Prevents Infection—Murine Eye Salve In Tubos for all Eye Ills. No Morphine. Ask Druggists for New Siz« 2f><?. Val uable Eye Book In Each Package. No one but a gossip can attend to everybody's business at the same time. It's the contrariness of her sex that Induces a w oman to agree with a man Just when he doesn't want her to. The woman who cares for a clean, wholesome mouth, and sweet breath, will find Paxtine Antiseptic a Joy for ever. At druggists, 250 a box. A woman's mind Is like a bed —it must be made up occasionally. To Dyspeptics! Others have found a steady course of Garfield Tea a plcatanl means of regaining health. Why not youT A man never forgives his enemlea until he wishes them prosperity.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers