k. iw r"w ifl jarsaparilla ics all humors, catarrh and eumatism, relieves that tired 3ling, restores the appetite, res paleness, nervousness, ' ailds up the whole system. fiat it toilny in usual liquid form 01 plated tablets called Sarsataba. ale'sBI oi?ey of j Uorehound and Tar GOUSgO and Colds 1 . p' TooMinchr nrnpa ' rJ Cure iu vnc annum t Irect Running Saw Mills iratlii- heM on Hie market forportnW w. Tho TJ n.lll.!..l. eil)T U. mil I. Ml) ihimllM'. Tlll-J " : V. ic.m.rji iHfiiiiw tiii-y rt'iiui wn lw ti iitr mid I V "HI ent aieuleat. lonoiinl ot 1 aVr'ul Mist 'X"-nBi-. If you nam lo net i aL Unlit In H"- In'"""' unIIM nml make Mill ! Tu'iw-i hivetli'ite the Kiwi Mill net. ire Iiiiy Ulirwi lul (riM-i'alUiK,Ullll"K yulir requirements V.M. BARTLEY & SONS, Bartley, N.J. CANNING FACTOniES FOR SUE W I Far Farms. Lam Communl. IHitrTiMM. 15 alien. Prices $.6 to H50. Capadtlta an hlith as 9.iio cans tomato or20.0(iucaiii fruit In 10 hours. Tcrmh: Awl of nark. r 2 or S yearly payment, or f or caah. i. or booklet. THUS. U. ",, SpnnUld, . r EK TriinHirluiinn Klurlilii nml Return. ifYitllirH tlir I" '"I iMiyiTti. TlhB 11(1 llllH VMlllC. Oal-.uri.iii l-imil )niJW't,JuiaiiUllle,Kloriilu, . On the Stage. "We've got lo get Bonifbody to piny thll light I'rt." "Why not tho electrician?" Haiti tnor? American. SiifT ni'cli T TWsn't amount to nitieh, but u.iili l p disigrcenhlo. You will lie mtr-p-iiti in m i' how iinrklv Hamlin Wizard til. will dine that HtiffneHs out. Olio n.int. t ha l ' "II- Disapproving Constituents. Ilnv la your member of congress paining the liolldnys?" Imin' not ti in' at home Instead of In WttMngton." lOI'ItMKOI T JUMBM A M HI I I.I) I I' THE NVKTKVi m lh I'll .-Limliiil l.liliVKS TAs'lhU.-s l UJ ToNU'. Vi'il know wliut you am taking-. f'irimiLi l iiliilnW printed on evorjr Naiio. ImtwI iik it ii mi'? ijulnltie and Iron in a tnte 4 1. .mi. Tin vullilne ilrlvt'H out the Iltnluila a d Oil- Iron Mllli fc.ter tor & iiur. up tho Hytiu. t'riio tai ccuia. bold by ull His Opinion. -What do you think of the N'pliow rra? Ptifle .lofh Them women In th' ljt a ouglit to he able to ntlse enough rovyon their diamonds to buy some colics with, by jinks! ) Jmportont to Mothers Examine, carefully every bottle of CAETOKIA.a tafe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it nnru I hp rpature of QixZi. InTse For Over BO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. A "Friendly Match." sponk of a "friendly match," not at all forgetting the dictum of the old Eoot to whom his opponent, breaking tone trivial rule, said: "I suppose you wan t claim that In a friendly match?" "Friendly match!" was the reply. "Flore's no Bitch thing at golf!" LAilon Telegraph. 1 Feminine. local ironworker who has been Hrrled a couple of years always de c'.irci Hint hl.i first son Bhould b Darned Mat, after one of his best Mends. learning thnt the Ironworker and i'l wifK had recently been blessed tth a charming baby, the friend rilled all over his fnce when he greet ti ti e father on the street. ?Ve," iu. beamed, "how Is little V.UV "Mat. nothing," answered the fa ther; "it's Mattress." Younemown Telegram. Great Baseball Play. jWhi.t was the greatest baseball r'y you ever saw?" asked a friend of Coveriior-elect John V. Tencr. j 'Mlln Kreal,,!,t Play 1 ever saw," said "took jilace In an amateur game ca n tow n lot nt Charlnrol. The teams Playing on a wet field and an oJHder who wore a derby hat went a high fly. Ho came to a little Pofi'l ami taking his eye off the ball "!- a jump to cross It. As he was '1'IK Hie hall struck him on the '' went through the crown of his Eal and ItKltretl there. The base run n aa out nml the fielder had not m-y.nl tt. ban with his hands. Can J"S heat it?' lOtidem- -Washington l'lttHburg DlHpatch. Corre- H Yoa Knew How Good (TQ ,Iw s-t'Lt, crisp bits of Post ToastSes 'ou would, at least, try 'em. Jho food is made of per- v 'Ipe White corn, rrvnt atoned, rolled and toasted! t IS SerroJ j: t I,. , uirt-ci irom rK Wlin cream or and sugar if desired A breakfast favorite I 'The Memory Lingers" P0ST,lC?RHAL CO.. Lid.. ""Ha Li.uk. Micilt NdL1 Appearance: B n. LINCOLN'S per sonal appearance has been tho sub ject of Innumerable anecdotes and jokes. He was not unaware of the od dity of his flguro iui:l the character- hties of his face. He came of n hrnky race, gaunt, powerful people, and callable of great endurance. Their hard lives were not conducive to grace of fig ure or motion and their faces were often seamed mid strongly marked. Climate, toll and improper or Inmif llclcnt f'Kid had much to do with giving to the western and southern ploneen the peculiarities of form and action and the facial markings w hlch Identified them geographically an easily as did their speech. Lincoln never was ashamed of these things at least he never changed his habits when he came into nalionnl prominence, hut his continuance of them did not arise from affectation. They were natu ral to li I in and he was not willing to have one set of manners for Wash ington and another for the people back In Illinois. That he was careless of his ap pearance there was no doubt. When he sat for a photographer he never straightened his tlo or smoothed his unkempt hair, but, like Cromwell, told tho picture man to take him as he was. He knew that a portrait of a "slicked up" Lincoln, as ho would have said, would not have been recognized In Springfield, and he didn't wont thetu to think he was putting on airs because they bad elected him to the presidency. It was his homeliness which per- . .iv y . v i if TitY-Y, 1 VAv?'';vir J i i jn l. ' ' "1 If lm Mimm minded the people that he was one of them the moment he made his appearance on the plat form his homeliness and his Intimate and apt use of the simple speech they could understand. There are anecdotes which are Intended to show that even In n community of persons not noted for manly beauty he was considered pre-eminently the reverse. Yet, although this was the subject of Jests at his expense, no one thought any the less of him for It. This homellness--call it ug liness if you will of his face, the awkwardness of his form, and the ungainllness of his gestures and attitudes seemed to the people to go natu rally with his goodness of heart and the simplic ity of his nature. In their eyes when advocating the cause of the oppressed and when opposing the forces which would destroy the nation he became to many pos itively handsome. As years afterward one old man "who knowed" him said: "Lots of 'em will tell you he was homely. Seems to me that's about all some folks around here has to tell aliout Abraham Lincoln. 'Yes, I knowed him,' they say. 'He was the homeliest man in Sangamon county.' Well, now, don't you make no mistake. The folks that don't tell you nut hin but that never knowed Mr. Lincoln. Meb be they'd seen him, but they never knowed him. He wa'n't homely. There's no denyln' he was long and lean, anil he didn't always stand straight, ami he wasn't pertlkeler about his clothes, but that night up to lllooniington In ten minutes after hu struck the platform, I tell you he was the handsomest iiinn I ever see." The month after his first election the publica tion Once a Week In Loudon printed the follow ing personal sketch of Lincoln: "Abraham Lincoln Is a gaunt glnnt more thnn six feet high. strong ami long limbed. Ilewalks slow, and, like, many thoughtful men (Wordsworth nml Naiioleon, for example), kecpa ills head Inclined forward and downward. His hair is wirv black, his eyes are dark gray, his smile is frank, sin. cere and winning. Like most American gentle men, he Is loose and careless In dress, turns down hlB flapping white collars, and wears habitually what we consider evening dress. His head Is massive, his brow full and wide, his nosv largo and fleshy, his mouth co.trse and full; his eyes 'are sunken, his bronzed face is thin and drawn down Into strong corded lines, that disclose the machinery that moves the broad Jaw. This great leader of the iti'publican' party this abolitionist this terror of the iiemoerals' this honest old lawyer,' with face half Koman, half Indian, o wasted by climate, so scarred by a life's struggle, was born In 1X09 In Kentucky. His grandfather, who came from Virginia, was killed by the Indi ans. His father died young, leaving a widow and several children. They removed to Indiana, Abe being nt the time only six years old. I'oor and struggling, his mother could only afford him some eight months' rough schooling; and In the clear ings of that new and unsettled comiiry the healthy stripling went to work to hew hickory and gum trees, to grapple with remonstrating bears, and to look out for the too frequent rattle snake. Tall, Ftrong, lithe and smiling, Abe tolled on as a farm laborer, mule driver, sheep feeder, detr killer, woodcutter, and, lastly, as boatman on the waters of the Wabash ami the Mississippi." Another Kngllsh writer In describing the pres ident Is still more realistic than his countryman when he says: "To say that he Is ugly Is nothing; to add that his figure Is grotesque Is to convey no adequate Impression. Fancy n many six feet high, and then out of proportion; with long bony arms and legs, which somehow seem to be always In the way; with great rugged, furrowed hands, which grasp you like a vise when shaking yours; with a long Fiiuggy neck nnd a chest too uiirrow for the great arms at Its side. "Add to tills figure a head cocoanut shaped and somewhat too small for such a stature, cov ered with rough, uncombed and iincombnble hair, that stands out In every direction at once; a face furrowed, wrinkled and Indented, as though It had been rcarrcd by vitriol; a high, narrow fore head; and sunk deep beneath bushy eyebrows two bright, dreamy eyes that seem to g;un through you without looking nt you; a few Irregulur blotches of black bristly hair In the place where heard and whiskers ought to grow; a close set, thin lipped, stern mouth, with two rows of large white teeth, nnd a nose and ears which have been taken by mistake from a head twice the size. "Clothe this figure, then. In a long, tight, badly fitting suit of blr.ck, created, soiled and puckered up at every salient point of the figure (and ev ery point of this figure Is salient I, put on large, Ill-fitting boots, gloves too long for the long, bony fingers, and a fluffy hnt, covered to the top with dusty, puffy crape; and then add to this an air of strength, physical as well as moral, and n strange look of dignity coupled with all this pro tesqileness, nnd you will have the Impression left upon me by Abraham Lincoln." Ward I.amon, who knew him Intimately, gees more Into details. He says: Mr. Lincoln was about six feet four Inches high, the length of his lc;s being out of all proportion to that of his body. When he sat down In a clmlr he seemed no taller than an average man, measuring from the chair to the crown of his head; but his knees rose high In front, and a marble placed on the enp of one would roll down a steep descent to the hip. lie weighed about ISO pounds, but lie was thin through lite breast, narrow across the shoulders, and bad the general appearance of a consumptive subject. Standing up, he stooped slightly forward; sitting down, he usually crossed his long legs or threw them over the arms of the chair us the most convenient mode of disposing of them. Ills "head was long nnd tall from the base of the brain nnd the eyebrow;" his fore head big and narrow, but Inclining backward as It rose. Tho diameter of his head from ear to ear was C'i Inches and from front to back eight Inches, His ears were large, standing out almost at right angles from his hend; his cheek bones high and Hi (SJJv) (iy Mum hiH prominent; his eyebrows heavy and Jutting forward over small, sunken blue eyes; his nose long, large ami blunt, the tip of It rather ruddy nnd slightly awry tow ards the right hand side: his chin, projecting far and sharp, curved upward to meet a thick, material lower lip, which hung downward; his cheeks were flabby, and the loose skin fell In wrinkles or folds; there was a large mole on his right cheek and an un commonly prominent Adam's apple on his throat; his hair was dark brown in color. Miff, unkempt, and lis yet showing Utile or no sign of advancing age or trouble; his com plexion was very dark, his skin yel low, shriveled and "leathery." In short, to use the language of Mr. Ilerudon. "he was a thin. tall. wiry, grisly, raw-honed man." "looking woe-struck." His countenance was haggard and careworn, exhibiting all the marks of deep and protracted suffering. Every feature of the man the hollow eyes, with the dark rings be neath; the long, sallow cadaverous face, Intersected by those peculiar deep lines; his whole air, his walk, his long, silent reveries, broken at long intervals by sudden and start ling exclamations, as If to confound nil observer who might suspect the nature of his thought1 showed he was a man of sorrows not sorrows of today or yesterday, but long treas ured nnd deep-bearing wilh him n continual sense of weariness and pain. He was a plain, homely, sad, weary-looking man, to whom one's heart warmed Involuntarily, because he seemed at once miserable nnd kind. .lames n. Fry, who became Intimately acquaint ed with Lincoln early In the hitter's political ca reer; says: Lincoln was tall and thin; his long bones were united by large joints and he had a long neck nml an angular face and head. Many like nesses represent his face well enough, but none that 1 have ever seen do Justice to the awkward ness and ungainllness of his figure. His feet, hanging loosely to his ankles, were prominent objects, but his hands were more conspicuous even than Ills feet due perhaps to the fact that cere mony nt times compelled him to clothe them in w bite kid gloveB, which always fitted loosely. Both In the height of conversation and in the depth of reflection his hand now ond then ran over or supported his head, giving his hair habitually a dis ordered aspect. His expression In repose was sad and dull, but his ever recurring humor, at short Intervals, flashed forth with the brilliancy of on electric light. I observed but two well defined expressions In his countenance; one that of a pure, thoughtful, hon est man, absorbed by a senso of duty nnd respon sibility; tho other, that of a humorist bo full of fun thnt he could not keep It all In. His power of analysis was wonderful. He strengthened every case he stated and no anecdote or Joke ever lost force or effect from hla telling. Apropos of Ills large feet there Is an anecdote told of Lincoln when he was in tho legislature: He had walked his hundred miles to Vandalln, In lSod, as he had In 1834, and when the session closed he walked home again. A gentleman of Menard county remembers meeting him and a de tachment of the "long nine" on their way home. They were all mounted except Lincoln, who had thus far kept up with them on foot. If he bud any money he was hoarding It for more important pur poses than that of saving leg weariness and leather. The weather was raw and Lincoln's clothing vim none of the warmest. Complaining of being cold to one of his com panions, this irreverent member of the "long nine" told his future president that It was no wonder that he was cold "there was ro much of him on the ground." None of the party appreciated this homely joke at the expense of his feet (they were doubtless able to bear It) more thoroughly than Lincoln did. We can imagine the cross fires of wit ami humor by which the way was enlivened during this cold and tedious Journey. The scene was certainly a rude one and seems more like a dream than n reality, when we re member that It occurred not many years ago, In a stale which now contains hardly less than three millions t:f people and 7.C0O miles of railway. Casslus M. Clay in describing an address which lie delivered at Springfield in 1S5C says: "Lincoln and Browning lay upen the ground whi't'dng sticks and heard mo throughout with marked attention. Hurrying on to my appointments, I saw him ihcn no more. I never shall forget his long, ungainly person nnd plain but even then sad and thoughtful features." Dickens' Desk A writing desk which belonged to Charles Dickens is to be sold this week at the mart In Wellington street. This Is the desk whose reckless treatment by American railway por ters he bitterly laments in a letter ad dressed to John Forster, dated De cember 22, 18G7. "Nearly every case I have," he writes, "Is already broken. When we started from Boston yester day I beheld , to my unspeakable amazement. Scott, my dresser, bearing a flushed countenance against the wall of the car and weeping bitterly. It was over my smashed writing desk." Among other relics of the novelist which will come under the hammer Is the cane chair used by him In his pri vate office when he edited All the Year Bound. Westminster Cnnette. A non-inflammable moving picture film has been brought out In Germany. Not Wholly Disabled "I ain't feclln' very well today," said the man with the ginger colored beard, taking his accustomed seat on the pickle barrel. "I've got a touch of the rheumatlz in my right Inlg, a kind o' dull ache lu the small of my back, my head's all stopped up, an' " "Yes," Bpoke up the grocer, "and you've got corns, lngrowin' toenails, neuralgy, chilblains, bunions, ring bone, spavin, heaves and your liver's all out of order, but there huln't been a day for the last 14 years when you wasn't able to come to my store and put up a holler about the way the country's goln' to the devil, and what you'd do if you was runnln' things! Why don't you git somo real dlsablln' disease, gosh durn ye!" It always costs more to buy than you think It will, and you always get less than you think you will when you want to sell. A READER CURES HIS CONSriPATIQN-TRY IT FREE Simple way for any family to retain the good health of all Us members. The edlton of "tlrnlih T!!nt" and "UueHlimia and Aiihwitm" hnvt- uiic quo Hon thai Is put In lliein mere often than Biiy other, and which. stniiiKi ly i'IuiukIi, they find the most iliflliiilt lo Hitxwor. That la "How tun I cure my nuiM.p.t tloirr It. Caldwell, nn eminent rpeiiallHl In dlHiiixea of tho alumni h. liver and Imwela baa Itwikt'd the whole tield over, hua firne lls.'d the apeclnlty for forty year and la rnnvlnred that the Initredtenta rnntntnifl In wiuit la i-alled Iir. Cntdw ll' Hvnm f efisln baa the heat claim to iittenllon from foncttpnted people. f I h siicci Ka In tile euro of Ktuhhnrn ron- tipatlon has donu n.urh to il.spla. e the una of aiilta. wntora, strong cathartic and au.-h thin. Kyrnp Pepuln, by train ing the alomach and bowel muaclea to nKiiln do their work nnturally, and with Ha tonic InurodlenlH atreiiKtlienliig the nerves. Iirlnga 8Kout a luatlnc cure. Anionic tta alrongext aupporlera art Mr. John Uravnllne of 9S Mllwuukre Av., Iietrolt. Mlc.h., Mr. J. A. Vernon of Okla homa Clly and thonannda of other. It nn ho nhlalned of nay druit;lat at fifty rent and one ilnltnr n hottlo, or If yntl want lo try II llrst n free anmple hnttle ran lie obtained hy w-rlttnc the. doctor. Kor trm free attmplo ndilreaa Tr. W. H. ('nlilwoll, ;iil. Culdwell building, Monti i i llo, 11L COLT DISTEMPER j'. V ' - V rvitihU,tiif. no iiiulUt Iiow iimhi1." kil'1 fit -in iiur the tilt J0Th fcyW, ...' ,' s'.'l 'J t'T MUM MOUNT l-Igi;lU IHHTS.MI'KH CI Itk. t.ir on -rff.t J-' ' 4 " tli' Uitrmt, (if In ffiHl. Act on th Jiioml rul pi r-n grrtn iC fi '.' V t V' ' foi,'iM if iIu's'ihit IUt munlf tv(-r l-ru.wn for limn in rL F.A - ' v '''It -'LI . i '!" lHitttMnmrfit.il U run. ntimnt. fV mi'1 1 Ih.i.Iw; I:iiiJ r'ii n f f'lit'irvfrmf tlniKiiif ti.l Imrmtw tli-..t'r, nr nt iiri-M' tnnl br V n iu r filrti'turvm. Cut fhuw Imw t i"uittfit tlin'ti. Our (( '. HirintT v.iti i I'MTi.. I "11 mv III" au (.-. Wl'Hf ' Tai ' ','. v l '' Ti HJU-iy lUt).lJlt:UOa lw' VCt .' m 0 AT THE 20C. mm rr iSiZ; 1 "ace M Mr. Bird Thin, my dear, is the In sect kangaroo. The greatest cause of worry on Ironing day can be removed by using Defiance i'tarch. which will not stick to the Iron. Sold everywhere, 1C oz. for 10c. mm "Cured Neuralgia x v ( -j wrmnT FRENCH BEAN COFFEE, A HEALTHFUL D3INK. The healthiest ever: you can grow it in your own garden on a small patch 10 by 10, producing ."ill pounds or more, liipens in Wisconsin '.Ml das. Vsed in great quantities in France, . (Ii i iiiany and till ovt r l'u. t,;e. Send i l.'i tt'i.ts In stands and wo will mail you a package giving fui culture ill-lei-lions as also our mammoth seed ; catalog free, or si ml ,11 louts and g' t i In addition to above lU.IMnl kern -!s j tinsupassiiblo vi gctable and llower I seeds i hough for bushels of i go- tahlci and f'owi rs. .loon A. Sal. er I Seed Co., 1S2 S. St!i St.. La Crosse, Wis. ' mat i nan a ncurniL'ia pain m my arm for five years, and I used your Liniment for ones week and was completely cured. I recommend your Liniment very highly." JIrs. J. McOraw, 1216 Mandovilla St., New Orleans, La. Cured Quinsy Sore Throat Mr. IIexrv L. Caulk, of u p Wilson St., Wilmington, 1 el writes : "I bought a lxt tle Sloan's Liniment for the quinsy sore throat and it cuttd me. I shall always keep a Lottie in the house." via m i. Wa Raising the Temperature. Frank had been sent to the hard ware store for u thermometer. "Did mother say what sir.e?" nsked the clerk. "Oh," answered Frank, "g'tnme tho higfiest one yotr've got. It's to warm my bedroom with." Success Magazine. 17 TnYi H M I' 9 H K L1M lii. Ml ! i Free Blood cure. It oti liaw piiapio. o lii.-e tnipl old su:e, vale rr. lU-ion, r-. t . ei ein i, uppiuatum swi iliii.s. I nt.e I. 't skin, i.r tl m ur l.i". d i- 1 hi:i pure, ili.-n liiitaine i'dnnd ltiJin il.l will lit .".I even :, -ni nil itelni.g make the blond pine and rail. i'ih"m i all id-e laiia. Sl.o.1 tier late buttl tirng storei.. S.niiple ft re bv wt'titii; I I 'i. Int t o., Atl. in;. i, (.a.. 1. pai '.im n: nu.g t. ii i.ll.l nnd ilu r i' at "on 1 11. Afraid of Disfigurement. She Aren't you golr.x to ask papa tonight, (ieorge? He No, dear. 1 think I'd better not. 1 want to have my picture taken tomorrow. Yonkers Statesman. Many hllilrro Arr Mi Ul.v. Mother l.ril.v'a hwert l'ouiters Ii r rlillitren hreuk tijt eolila In !M lio-arn, rt'lieve ti-M-risli-lirN. Iieaihli'lie, Mtotlilietl trollli.e, t". tiling iliMonler, move nml rivnlnte the houelH, iu.4 ilelroy wortUH. '1 liey lire no pleamit to tau elillilren like tlieni. t'ril hy inotlierN for lSi .leiirM. Al till itrilKVla'H, hiouile liHiilnl KKKK. Aililrean. A. tj. Olnialcil, l.ello.1, ,V V. gives instant relief from rheu matism, lumba go.sciatica, neu ralgia, croup, sore throat, ton silitis, h oarsc ncss anJ chest Iains. PrIces,2So.,EOo.41.CO HloBii'n TmmIc on h'r.,riit.il hhfM'p n til poultry fttmt Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mtuf., U.S.A. 1 Vj' i.7.iiKA What a deal of grief, and care, and other harmful excitement does a healthy dullness and cheerful iusi nsl billty avoid. Thackeray. Tor OLI nml f.HIF lllekf t'Ari'liiNR Ik the he.l remeily re lievra the aellllitf h nil fev,rii.litirH- euten I he t'olil mill restorea norleal .'oiiiIIIIoiih. ll'a Uipilil elTretM luiuirilii,el . lot., uml niv. At tlrilg aturra. CUUIbLS HROUND THE WORLD TWO GRAND CRUSTS of b-ut t:na and one halt month' duration nfich. Tha Ur M to loAve firm York . 1, 1911, a 1 tha second (torn Sji I raaciut lea. 1 7, I ill 2, by the late ttanvatlantic steamer "Cleveland" iSSSz la:tuiit all txftnn hkti aal Ithtii lUMntlPl.-AMI IMfAN I INC, 41-41 Uruailway, New tnrk. P.O. Ball :7 SWAMP-ROOT A pessimist Is a man who can't en joy the beauties of an apple blossom because he only thinks of the possible stomach ache It represents. l'II:s CTRFM IV fl TO 14 MAYS loiii-'lruutdM will rilun.l money It lo t'INT. MK.NT t.ol to run. iinv him- of lu-li i., Illltnl, Uivilin ur I'rotruanut l'lle iu liui 14ila. Uiu Foasting of saying what you think is often 11 n excuse for not thinking what you say. la not recommended for everything; but If yotf have kidney, liver or bladder trotihln It will ha found Just the remedy you need. At drug gists In llfty cent unit dollar ilzes. You mny biivo n sample hottlo of this wonder ful new (llarovery by mull free, alao pamphlet telling ull nlnilit It. Aililwaa, Pr. Khmer A Co., Illnctaamlon. N. T. PtRrtCT HEALTH.' Tutt'a 1111 keep the vntcm In prrfrct order 1 hey r eg u lute the howcla anJ pntUuce A VICOROtS UODY. Cnrf nick headache, conttl.aHnn am1 mntarla. Mr. Wlnnlnw h SKthin(r Syrup for riiililrt-n IfiMtitiibT, mifti'iiH thf ifilmvH tntliiiiiina tiuu, uUu.Vm iiiiln, rurvn wiml culif, D,V u Ituttlc lutrs Pills Live making is one kind of cold weather picnic. DEFIANCE STARCH SuUC I W. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 6-1911. We Give Away Fre rit aitiiifi" eeo The People's Common Sense Medical Adviaer, in Plain r.ngliah, or Mcuivine Soiiplilicd, by K. . Pierce, M. I)., Quel CDiiaiillini! I'liyician lo the Invalids' Hotel and Sur fictil Institute at lliillalo, a hook of 1(MI' Urite naiiea and over 7U0 illtmtrationa, in Trench cloth t i n J i n , to any ne lending 31 one-cent tiimpa to cover cost ol wmppinf! and mailing , Uvcr (vSU.UOO copiei of th!j complete I amily Doctor Hook were told in cloth binding1 at rrfjular pries if $ 1 .50. Afterwards ubout two and half million copies were (fivrn away tl ubove. A new, up-to-dute revised edition ia now ready (or mailinjj. Ilcttcr send NOW, before all are done. Address: Womo's DisritMAar Mbuical Association, Dr. K. V. Pierce, President, BnTalo, N. Y. k. rii:nci:'s favoicitis prescription THH ONK RF.MI'.DY lor woman's peculiar ailmaata food eaoujH that its maker are not afraid to print on ht oatsida wrapper it every ingredient. No Seoreti No Dcccptioa. THE ONF. RI'.MF.DY for women which contains ao alcohol and bahit-l'oruiinf drufs. Made from native medicinal forest root of well established curative value. W. L. DOUGLAS VaWl3, 3.50 & 4 SHOES J5o!5m iv Voir cori.n visit w. U ioi ;l.s l.U(;k FAtri'UKIKS AT HltOCKTO.N, MASS., and at-e how carefully V. L. Douglaa alinoa urn in.nle, you would thon uniler suiul why dollar (or dollar tliey are gu.trituteed to bold their aliupe, liK.lt and lit utitUirand wear lunger tlian any other SIMM), J:i.5(lor Sl.oil hIiim.r you run liny. Quality rounu. It baa made W. L. Iini;lrta ahina a houaefiold word ayen-whon. W. L. Iioiilaa nmna and tha retail pi lea ara alaniel on tha bottom, wlilrh la a aafea-iiard aitnlnat aubatlluiaa, tha trua yaluea of wlileh ara nnknonn, Itefnaa all Iheaa iilialltniaa. You ara vntltlatl to tha beat. Intlat upon havlmr tha sratiiilna VV. I.. Doug-las ahiwp. It your .Icoa ,-. t nilr v.Hi with W . fc 0nu.a li,H, wrIUi tr MaU Orvier Catalog. W. L.. Uuuglus. 144 ark kl., Itrwcktou, Saaaa. I Tj im-f Bora SHOts 11.00 l.BOe.tS.O?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers