Resinol Soap is a real baby soap because it is absolutely freo from the harsh, injurious alkali present in most soaps, whilo it contains the same soothing, healing, anti septic balsams as Resinol Oint ment, so that it is usually sufficient to prevent rashes, itchings, chaf ings and other distressing baby skin and scalp troubles. Your druprprist sells Resinol Soap (25c) and Kesinol Ointment (50c). For sample of each write to Dept. 12K, Resinol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver i9 right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gentlybutfirmly com-|!l£sHp« pel a lazy liver to jj^aHwpipTFn'c do ks dut£ digestion, and DUtress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Popular Exploration. North polar exploration had attract- j ed tiie attention of adventurous and ' ambitious men for nearly 400 years ! before Peary reached the top of the world. Search for the south pole has always proved less attractive, and only during the last 140 years have ex- j plorers turned their attention toward the goal recently reached by Amund- i sen. Barber Shope In China. Since the Chinese revolution a great ! many Chinese have had their cues cut j off, anu tiiis has Ihfl to the opening of a. large nuiiiber of barber shops j mrougliout the far east wherever Chi nese are located, says an exchange, i Several progressive business men of j rimsrnpore, anticipating this, imported a largo number of American barber j chairs, and tney are now unable to pet supplies quickly enough. It has tilso been learned tlvit the Chinese in- ] e'.at on having American hair clippers, and refuse all other makes offered them. It would seem that American manu facturers of barbers' supplies should ! experience a large increase in their j Oriental trade. WANTED INCENTIVE. ''''' She—Would you save me If I should etart to drown? He—Sure, if your father Is -well rated. j A Large Package Of Enjoyment— Post Toasties Served with cream, milk or fruit —fresh or cooked. Crisp, golden-brown bits of white corn delicious and wholesome A flavour that appeals to young and old. "The Memory Lingers'* Sold by Crocera. Pactum Cereal Company, !. Jtnhrd. rni ir~l Advertising I j-] Talks | Jo ooooooooooooc dJ 1 MEN BEHIND THE COUNTER ! Retail Clerk a Most Important Factor In Merchandising World—Qualifi cations Ha Needs. Reams and reams of stuff have been ! written about the qualifications of a man in most every trade and profes j pion, but when we get right down to I cases the same qualities that make a successful clerk would make a suc , cessful man in any line. I have read with much amusement articles on the clerk's deportment and things of that sort by men who have i built up successful mercantile busi nesses, and they tell how the clerks should always be neat and clean, fln ! ger nails trimmed, voice modulated, i and give advice of that nature in large do6es. I believe that any human being yho amounts to much, no matter how S lie earns his living, has enough self | respect and pride to care for his per sonal appearance. The two qualiflea- i | tions most necessary to success are, | j of course, knowing what to do and i how to do it. While service must be j the watchword of every business, 1 whether it be manufacturing or mer cantile, I do not know of any man who must carry out the word "service" to its fullest extent more than the re j tail clerk. I believe that salesmanship over the j counter calls for Just as high an order j of salesmanship as salesmanship on i the road, and in my experience behind ! the retail counter 1 made it a point to j study tiie character and likes and dis- 1 likes of all the tegular customers, so as to make them permanent custom ers, and to do the same with the chance customers so as to make them regular customers. Togo on in an abstract way naming the different qaalities, specifying them as courage, perseverance, etc., which ! a clerk should have is simply to | enumerate the qualities which are nec- | essary to make any man a success, j I believe that it is the time that j I ensues between waiting on customers that works most damage in a retail ! store. The clerk should keep himself occupied during that time in keeping his stock in shape and figuring out little schemes for displaying the goods and talking them, so that when he goes to bat the next time a cus j tomer comes to his counter he Isn't | thinking of matters foreign to the business. If the clerk has any ambition at all, and he isn't much of a clerk unless he does have, he desires to become the I proprietor of the store himself, or to j become a traveling salesman. It doesn't make any difference which de- j | sire he has, the means to the end are , the same—to study his employer's business as if It were his own, to know all the why of everything, the buying, the accounting, as well as the : selling. I believe that every retail clerk will | take a renewed interest In his work if he will think of his work not as aim- ; ply the handing of something across | the counter, but as work which Is the | most vital and most important in the I business world. Practically all the products of the , | world are eventually sold across the ; counter by the retail clerk, and to 1 just the degree that he studies his work and its significance will he be- I come a factor in the mercantile world. I Horse Sense. If you work for a man, lif heaven's name, work for him. If he pays wages that supply you your bread and butter, work for hiin, speak well of him, stand by him, and stand by the insti- j | tution he represents. I think If 1 , worked for a man, I would work for j him. I would not work for him a part of his time, but all of his time. I would give an undivided service or I none. If put to the pinch, an ounce of loy alty is worth a pound of cleverness. If you must villlfy, condemn and eternally disparage, why, resign your j position, and when you are outside, ; damn to your heart's content. But, I : pray you, so long as you are a part of an institution, do not condemn it. Not j that you will injure the institution— I not that —but when you disparage the j concern of which you are a part, you disparage yourself. And don't forget—"l forgot" won't do In business. —Fra Elbertus. WtfWHCW'gyiflgrgKiiMaiiißk.'gHiiii nynatwi P Many a hen cackles for anoth- H l{| er to lay; but a business man should not depend upon com !j{j petltors to advertise for him. fjj] [ril T? Principles of Salesmanship. Skill, Perception. Decision—these are the bedrock bases of salesman ship. Skill sweeps away the obstacle of non acquaintance and creates a fa vorable impression. Perception recog nizes an opening for what it is—a lead to opportunity. Decision materializes the opportunity by closing the bar gain on the spot. Create—see—de cide, and you will sell. Worth Advertising. A thing that is worth puttlug In window 1b worth advertising. WHY IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE BY HERBERT C. MAY. There are many owners of enter prises who must be convinced that ad vertising will benefit them. There are many others who believe they should advertise, and would, if they knew how By telling them what others have done, are doing and how they did it, it is possible to be an aid to them In learning how to apply advertising to their own particular needs. They will learn through exchanging and discussing experiences and plans practised by others. These experi ences and discussions are to be had by reading, by association, by listen ing to others talk and discuss adver tising. When you once thoroughly feel the necessity of advertising and begin Its study It will be found to be one of the mosT'fascinatlng studies you can make. Its foundation restc upon the science of psychology. What Is more enter- i taining than studying how to influ ence and direct other people's minds to follow yours? Every advertiser is or should be a firm believer In bringing to the non- J advertiser a knowledge of the benefit* to be derived from honest, truthful ad vertising. The influence produced by the ad vertising of an article, a city or state, | by several Individuals, is catholic. ! I The Catholicism, even though each de | sires to sell only his own particular | goods, in proportion, creates a greater j demand than does a single advertiser. Each thereby receives greater returns than if he had the entire field and had to develop it himself. In a few Instances the public's con i fidence has been imposed upon by dis- , I honest advertisers. This has caused some doubt to exist as to the truth | fulness and honesty of all advertisers. This doubt haß almost been elimi : nated. It is a fact now that unless 1 an advertiser's goods are meritorious i and reliable, he cannot be permanent ly successful. You have heard men say that they don't believe in advertising, that they give the customer the benefit saved , thereby. That sounds very nice to the customer who wants to believe It without investigating. Have you ever found that he sold as good goods at a better irice than the man who adver -1 tises? j Who pays for the advertising, any how? The advertiser doesn't, for he would i;o broke. The consumer doesn't, for i he would refuse to trade with the ad ! vertiser. Nobody pays for it —but It pays : both the advertiser and the consumer. As the advertising becomes more ef- I fective, demand for tho commodity ! increases and Its cost of manufacture and selling decreases to the point 1 where the manufacture and selling be ! comes so highly specialized that the | cost is cut from 50 to 100 per cent. The advertiser then finds that by ! lowering his selling price a larger , field is opened up among a class of ; people who before could not afford to pay the price. BiHtMJMIMJgMMMiMMIBEMMWMimfflg " : 'MI ' ftt| « GET BUBYI Hi :9 Do it. Get your body Into ac '"j tion. Your Brain imagines— jH )<: your Brawn utilizes the thought. m ! ,*s| Inspiration conceived the Pan- K It ama Canal; perspiration built K 1 I it- I k Schubert composed the "Un- te , .jj, finished Symphony" In his mind, ft | j &j We can hear It because he ere- pj j I*, ated It. k Marconi saw the wireless tele- g ? graph In his brain. There'd c a have been no Titanic survivors R ! tjjj if he hadn't made the coherer. G I Get your dreams into action. be idle dreamers live In the clouds S [«i and on their uppers. The prac- K •5) tical dreamer lives In the clouds fc and on Fifth Avenue. Castles $ jS In the air are pretty, but the § «, store feeds the kiddies. fjjj Utilize your imagination, K j X Visions of a future Marshall |ft' Field's are all right In their j{J j "• place, but a clever window dis- [» ;; play means customers now. y ,H Don't be a stick-in-the-mud. DO pj a .SOMETHING! Si |bl i»; j Advertising. That newspapers are better medi ums than magazines for advertising automobiles Is the conclusion of the Henderson Motor Car company of In- | dlanapolls. It has turned to the use 1 of newspapers exclusively as a result j of an experiment made with newspa per .advertising on a large scale, the results of which are stated by the gen eral manager In this paragraph: "The returns from the beginning of our campaign were simply wonderful. 1 We were forced to add and keep add- j ing to our stenographic and clerical force until we were working almost j twice as many stenographers as any automobile concern In Indiana. And still we were behind. It has simply been Impossible to take Immediate care of the flood of telegrams and let ters of application for the Henderson agency which we have been receiv ing." I Those Priceless Moments. Firemen say that the first five min utes at a house on fire are worth the next Ave hours. Similarly in adver tising; the first five guineas spent on starting a campaign rightly are worth the next five hundred spent in carry lng It out.—Thomas Russell, London, England. ' HERE AND THERE IN THIS BUSY WORLD Two sections of a big water main in Kansas City were biown up by dyna mite. The break will require three days to repair. John D. Archbold testified in cor roboration of Senator Penrose's state ment about Standard Oil contributions to the Roosevelt campaign fund in 1904, and attributed "unjust attacks" to refusing to give $150,000 more. Senator Penrose was examined and repeated his statement. Attorney-Generai w tckersham an nounced that the American Telephone and Telegraph Company had got with in the Anti-Trust law. MARKETS. (New York Wholesale Prices.) MlTjK.—The wnoiesale milk price is SVsc. a quart, in t'ne 2Gc. zone, or *1.71 per 40-quart can. Butter. Creamery, extras 26 Firsts 20 Q)25Va Seconds i!3V&24Vi I Thirds 22 #23 J State, dairy, finest 25 Co.. Ciood to prime 23% fy'24',4 Common to fair 21 ©23 , Process* extras 24 #24V4 Egos. State, Pa., and nearby, hennery white, fancy and new laid ....31 ©32 I State, Pa., anu nearby, selected white, fair to good 27 @3O | State, Pa., and nearby, selected 1 whites, common to fair 23 (f£27 ! Prown. hennery fancy 25 Gathered, brown, mixed colored.2l @25 j I Western, gathered, white ....24 @26 j Fresh, gathered, extra 24 @26 j Fresh Killed Poultry. I Chickens —Barrels, i Piiila. <& other nearby squab i broilers iter pair 50 @so I riiiia. .Vr U 1., fancy, per lb ..25 @26 i Penn. broileis, fancy 22 @23 i Western, dry picked, milk fed..24 @2o j , Wn, dry pkd, corn fed, 2 lbs j each @22 | I Western dry picked to average run 18 @2O I Western, scalded IS @2O Turkeys. Old hens and toms, mixed 16 @l7 j other Poultry. „ „ ] Old cocks, per lb @l2 i Spring ducks, L. I. & east'n @l2 i i Spring ducks, Pa @lB | i Sqbs., pr white 10 lbs to dz per dz @4.00 Sqbs., pr white 6@6H lbs. to i d z 2.00iff2.25 | Sqbs., dark per dozen @1.75 Vegetables. ! Asparagus, Jersey, dz bunche5.,1.25@2.25 j i Beans, W. N. Y., per basket... 75@1.0U | Jersey, per basket S>o@ 75 i j Long Island, per bag 50frt 75 Baltimore, per basket 50@ i5 | Beets, per barrel 1.26@1.60 | I Per 100 bunches 1.50@2.00 I Carrots—- . . j Per barrel 1 1.25@1.50 I Per basket 50@ 65 \ Per 100 bunches I.oo® 1.50 i I Cabbages— -1 Per 100 1.30@3.50 Per barrel 60® 75 j Cauliflowers, I.ong Island, per barrel 2.00@3.00 i Cauliflowers, state, per barrel. .3.00@4.00 Celery, per dozen 15® 60 Corn, Jersey, per 100 ears 50®2.00 j I Cucumber pickles, per bbl 1.25®2.25 j j Cucumbers, per package 35® 75 j ; Kggplants, per crate I.oo# .. I Per basket 50® 75 : Horserad'=h, per barrel 6.50frr7.00 ! Lettuce, for basket or crate.... 25# 80 j Lima beans, per basket 75w2.50 ! Mushroorns per basket or erate. 1.25@ 1.50 j Okra, per basket 50@1.00 j Onions— <'t. Valley yellow, 100-lb bag.. 1.25® .. Orange Co.. red. 100-lb. bag.. l.OOfi 1.25 j I I-. I , yellow, per bbl 1.75W2.00 Jersey, per basket 60#1.00 [ Va. and Mil , per bl.l 1.50®2.00 Bait . yellow, per basket 65# 80 i Peas, per basket or bag 75@1.75 | ' Parsley, state, per crate or basket 30® 60 | Peppers bbls, boxes, or carrier.. 40®1.50 i I Romaine, per basket 3060 i I Radishes, per 100 bunches ®I.OO | I Spinach, per bbl 2.00@2.50 | Souash — Marrow, per bbl 1.00#1.50 1 White, per barrel 75@1.00 j White, per basket 35# 60 Per box 35 it 50 Crooked neck, barrel 75#1.00 i Crooked neck, per basket .... 40® 60 j Per box 35® 40 i | Tomatoes, per box 20© 50 ! Per carrier 30# 60 [ Hothouse, per lb 5# 7 | I Turnips, rutabaga, tier bbl .... 75#1.00 j Turnips, white, per bbl 1 00#1.50 ! I Turnips, whit?, per 100 bunches.l.oo@2.oo | Potatoes. ! Southern, white, per bbl 1.28W2.25 ; ! Jersey, round, per odl or bag... 2.00@2.50 j Jersey, long. per bid or beg ... .1.60®1.90 i I Long Island, tier bbl or bag... .2 25®2.60 | ! Sweets, Jersey, per basket .... 1.50® 1.75 | Sweets, southern, yellow, bbl.. 2.25®5.50 Sweets, southern, red, per bbl. .2.00#2.75 Yams, southern per hh! 2.oo@S.£i Ftuits and Berries. Apples, new. H. P.— Ductless 2,50®3,00 Astrachan 2.25®2.75 X. 2.50 Sour I? 2.00®2.50 I Sweet B 2 00®2 35 Windfalls 1.00#1.75 Pears, barrel.— Barlett 3.50®4.50 Bartlett, basket 1.25® 1.75 KeitYer 2.50®3.00 Le Ponte 3.00#4.00 Grapes, per carrier.—- t T . R. champ 60® 75 X. C. r>el ®1.25 Aid champ 75® .. lid M . 75@1 08 ! Currants, per c,t.— Fancy 6® 8 Small 3# 5 Raspberries, qt.— W. N. T 8® 11 | Pp R 8® 10 N. J 7# 10 Blackberries, per qt.— . Cp river 8® 12 X. J 9# 15 Huckleberries, per qt.— Pa 7® 12 N. J 6# 10 Peaches, per crt.— X. J 50#1.00 Ga„ fancy 1.25@1.76 .Musk melons, per crt.— X. J 50®1.00 Balto 60® 75 Oel 50®1 25 I Jtd 5001.26 Vn 60® 1.00 Watermelons. — X C 100s 12.00® 20.00 X. C. "ar 100.00ff1200.00 l_lve StocK. I BEKVES. Medium and common ! grades l<»®2sc.; bulls. 25c.: hologna cows ! j n little stronger: steers, s6®o 30: oxen. 54.85®8: bulls, $3.25@5: cows, $2.25®.'.60; I | tail-en'is, J2. CAlA'ES.—Common to prime veals sold : at $6 50«10 per 100 lbs.: culls nt |4.50®6; I grassers and buttermilks at s4#s: culls, I $3.50; yearlings, f3®4 25: City dressed I ! yenls, 11®15'jc.: country dressed, 10U.® i ; 14c.: dressed grassers and buttermilks, I I 8® 10c. ; SHRKI' .\xn LAMPS—Common to I prime sheep fi wes) sold at $2.50®4 per 100 ' i lbs.: culls $2®2.25: ordinary to choice I j l.imbs at culls $4®4.50. Dress ed mutton at 7#9c\; dressed lambs at 10 @ 12c. HOGS.—Medium and light weight hogs sold at $8.75<?i8.80 per 100 lbs.; roughs, $7.50. HAY AXr> STRAW.—Hay, large bales, timothy, prime, 100 lbs., sl32'£; Xos. 3WI, 95c.@5130: shipping. 80®flnc ; clover, mixed, light. $1.05®51.15: heavy. 80c # tl. Straw, long rye. 95c.®$1: oat. 35®t0c. Spot Markets at a Glance. Wheat, No. 2 red, to ar 1.08 Oats, new stand 47H I-lour, spring patent, barrel o.?-i Com. steamer, yellow nom. !,ard. Ref., Cont., cwt 11.25 Tallow, city bluls Oe-'Ho Pork, mess, barrel 20 00 Coffee. Rio Xo. 7, lb 14,3 Tea. Formosa, lb 14,- Sugar, tine, gran., lb E.Ooc Mutter, extras 2i;i4 Cheese, specials 18 extra firsts ',23 ton 12.00 c Tobnrco— vnna. R. r> 60 Conn, wrapper .tt MAST TREES FOR THE CROWN | Mark of the Broad Arrow Was Placed on Pines In the Plym out Colony. In the provincial charter of 1691, under which the Plymouth colony and the province of Maine were united with Massachusetts, it was provided that all trees of the diameter of 24 Inches and upward of 12 inches from the ground, growing upon land not heretofore granted to any private per son, should be reserved to the crown for the furnishing of masts for the royal navy, Harper's Weekly ob- - serves. A surveyor general of woods was ap pointed to see that this provision of the charter was carried into effect. Near the coast all white pines of suit able dimensions were marked with the "broad arrow"- —three cuts through the bark with an ax, like the track of a crow. This was the king's mark. Long after the revolution had obllt- 1 erated the royal authority men who had been taught in boyhood to re spect the king's mark hesitated to cut such trees. In felling a tree it was necessary to "bed it"to prevent Its breaking. This was done by cutting the small growth and placing small trees across the hollow, so that there should be no strain upon one section more than upon another when the monster pine struck ground. The mast was hauled out of the woods on one strong sled, whether In j winter or summer, and so many oxen j were required that the hind pair were often choked in crossing a hollow, be ing hung up in their yoke by the pull ing of those aheaa of them. A mast hauling was a great event, and everybody within walking dis- j tance came to see It. FACE MASS OF ECZEMA Brownville, N. Y. —"Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured me of a stubborn case of eczema . which followed a severe case of scarlet fever. My body ! and face was a mass of sores so that I was practically a shut-in. I grew worse until my hands and feet were swollen and running sores. I tried many remedies. One kind which I used fairly burned my skin up so that it would drop off in scales as If it was ecalded. But thanks to good advice I then used Cuticura Soap and Oint ment. In a short time I was entirely cured. Now my skin is clear as ever and I have had no return of the dis ease. I hope this letter will help the suffering ones who are fighting ecze ma." (Signed) Miss Edna Bidwell, Jan. 10, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skiu Book; Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston." No Concern. "Mr. Mips must be a singularly pure and upright man." "Why do you think it is unusually BO?" "Somebody told him there were well-defined reports that a Burns de tective had been operating secretly in the neighborhood he frequents, and he said it was nothing to him." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a sal'e and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it In T T se For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Patriotism. Marks—So your Italian barber re fused to shave you. Why was that? Parks—l told him I'd just had a Turkish bath. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup fop Children teething* nofteus the gums, reduce** inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c u bottle. People who build castles In the air are never sure of their ground. g^ ;7 : l : ; To Fortune and Happy Life " »-(, in California , . ~m ' '•• <J \—-- Messrs. J. S. & W. S. Kuhn, the Pittsburgh bankers, are • doing in the Sacramento Valley what the U.S. Government S=si- is doing elsewhere for the people. jr\fpffji*- There is ten times more net profit per acre In California irrigated land than in the East and with less labor. jaafc'ffijS Let ua take you where there is comfort and happiness besides profit, climate equal to that of Southern Italy, no frosts nor snow, no thunderstorms nor sunstrokes. Let us take you where big money is noiv being made, HMnjj KjUUR markets are near, demand for products great and income RRHI Let us take you where railroad and river transportation vfiN* is near, where there are denominational churches and graded schools. |shgp»pSjl jgffi-ffglip Noiv is the time to buy this land—get in with the winners, the great Panama Canal will soon be ready and you can 'SSV^V 1 ■_ share in its triumphs; farms are selling rapidly, and we stiongly urge you to purchase as soon as possible. You can buy this land on very easy terms—sls.oo an acre noiv and the balance in ten yearly payments. ffc&£3tk Give us an opportunity to take up all details with yon Bf. fcLjSfljf —write us noiv. « let u; send you our fine illustrated printed matter telling all about it. Write for it at once —it gives you absolute prooia. IpSe KUHN IRRIGATED LAND CO. j§Rc& : j De P L muSi 601 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK. N. Y. CRITICAL TIME OF WOMAN'S LIFE From 40 to SO Years of Age. How It May Be Passed in Safety. Odd, Va.:—"l am enjoying better health than I have for 20 years, and I !-n : !.: believe I can safely : • 'I' Ra y now I am a ' well woman. I was W '»■ s '. reared on a farm and 1 i K had all kindsof heavy : « (/ . ■ j\ - 112 caused the troubles '■ • • •' that came on me la ter. For five years IWfIP during the Change of I F 1 If "I V was no ' ' ' * to lift a pail of wa ■ ter. I had hemor rhages which would last for weeks and I was not able to sit up in bed. I suffered a great deal with my back and was 90 nervous I could scarcely sleep at night, and I did not do any housework for three years. "Now I can do as much work as any woman of my age in the county, thanks to the benefit I have received from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabls Compound. I recommend your remedies to all suffering women."—Mrs. MARTHA L. HOLLOWAY, Odd, Va. No other medicine for woman's ills has received such wide-spread and unquali fied endorsement. We know of no other medicine which has such a record of success as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. For more than 30 years it has been the standard remedy lor woman's ills. If you liave the slightest doubt that Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound -will help you, write ; to Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad vice. Your letter will be opened, : read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. Wftitfemore's ft Shoe Polishes Finest Quality Largest Variety "GILT EDGE/* the only ladies" shoe dressing that po«- tivelv contains OIL. Blacks and Polishes iadie*' and children's hoots and sho<*s, shines without rubbing, 25c. ''French Gloss," 10c. "STAR" combination for cleaning and polishing all kinds of ruswt or lan shoes, 10c. "Dundy" size2se. "QUICKWHITE" Hn liquid form with sponge) quickly and whitens dirty canvas shoes, "ALBO"cleans and whitens canvas shoes. In round white caknpackedin zinc-tin boxes, with sponge, 10c. In liandsomcjarge aluminum boxes, with sponge,2sc. If your dealer does not ke»p the kind you want send us the price in stamps for a full size package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO. 20-26 Albany St., Cambridge, Mass. Tht 0 hit it and Largtst Manufacturer.i o_f Shot I'o/tthts in tht World 1 READERS I I of this paper desiring to buy any ■ thing advertised in its columns should I insist upon having what they ask for, I refusing all substitutes or imitations. AGENTS—Grand opportunity for men. women and l boys to tttnkn easy money selling our product. Send I 12c for convincing sample—this will be relumed Ith tirst order. \vo certainly offer a liberal propo sition. tul luiat I'rndurta to., 50 iburth St., Ken York >«feTHOMPSQNS *»EYE WATE R Xr'** JOHN L. TUOMI'SON sons A CO.. Troy, N. X. EARN MONEY NURSING PHILADELPHIA SCUOOL FOK NLKSKS 2227 C'hubluui Street Philadelphia, Pr. W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 35-1912.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers