McLEAN IS SKATING CHAMPION v;V -jv - .... , y . ..... A; .- ., : ..'. ''.v. f Edward McLean. bdward McLean, seventeen years old, In the western skating champion in the one-eiuarter-mlle nnd one milo indoor events uh a re sult ot victories In the western Indoor championship events now bidng held here. Me-Leun is a Chle-ago product. The one-mile Junior Indoor championship went to Archie .."Mil lot of Milwaukee, while tlio women's half-mile event was won by Miss Margaret Fogarty of Chicago. HARRY WOLTER IS LIVE 0:JE Former Boston Pitcher Was Discour aged Until Hal Chase Put Him In Highlanders' Outfield. "What's the matter with He nry Weil ter?" said the l'.oston fans two sea dons ai-'O when ho was with tho Hed Sox club. "Looks as though he would Harry Wolter, I" a good one to have In there. He Is f.isl and looks to bo n good hitter." Woller had been pitching a great deal 'hat Benson, then lie cowred first base lor a while and followed thnt. Jeb up with (me in the out Held, lie proved a big league player in the three posi tions, lie pitched good ball, but was greater with tho hickory, which ac complishment resulted In placing him as a fielder. Hut a llehlo manager later put him on the bench. It was not long before the Hoston club asked for waivers on lilm and H;il Chase, who had watched the) play er fer a leing tlmo in California and understood him be-tter, went to Frank Hirrell nnd told him that lie could lret a eorklng good ball player for the waiver prle:o. "1 have reference to Ilnrry Wolter," said Chase. "Go nnd grab him nnd have him to understand that he will be slgneI up as nn outfielder. It will give him a new lease of baseball lifo. Wolter has been worrle'd about being shifted about and If lie Is told that l.e Is going to piny the outfield and mulling else I think bo will make a goeid man feir our club." Karrell lost no tlmo nnd got tho player for tho waiver price. Wolter reported nt Athens last spring nnd the first thing he did before putting on VlKi,l,'iellJWilvVD F GOSSIP of sportdom rBwifr tiiiiijwiwiivp Frank dutch, has signed up for a long se'sslem on tho road. Tommy Hums Is said to be down and out financially as well as pngllls tlcally. Connie Mack, pilot of the world's champions, already Is handing out those auto-season pessimistic predic tions.' They picked out the wrong Terry McGovern to make a sensation over at Hot Springs. Wolgast did well to get the tryout ivithout re breaking his arm or Injur ing himself In any way. "Fletcherlsm Is nonsense," says a food expert. Several baseball mag nates will back him In this. Mahmout tossed Roller In a minute and a half last year, yt Doc sayn be Is In the championship class. Scott McLane, traluer for Ubc r I v. C ( vx Sty- wm (,..... V his uniform was to fp.ll the manager over nnd n;:lt him what the club had signed hi m to play. Whin told that he was to be nn outfielder and noth ing clue the player was happy. It was not long before it was discovered that was the player who would succeed Willie Kei l r as the club's left fielder. Hut some of tho sharps didn't like him nnd ho fooled them by making Rood. Ho was fast, could hit. despite; ru mors that he would not bo a member of the Vanakce team, ho kept n-golng. Later ho was rewarded with tlio job ho had FotiKht and It was a pood pleco of news news for Wolter. It made a fine ball player of him. Wol ter, grateful as he always Is. volun teered to play first base In case of In juries to the regular man. Haseball has sure a lane of many 'urns. llng switched around had Wolter bo that ho was thinking or giv ing up the crime. Hut 'hast' was fjul' It to see It tit as an out liclder. Wol ter has said that there U no place in tho country like New York to play ball nnd will lie rtrlving to hold down ih'! position next season harder than ever. Tho Yankee proved himself a good hitler, base runner and a game ball player, lie I". In there every day nnd will not. Ret out of tlio game until he Is counted out. ENGLISH FIGHTER IS CLEVER Digger Stanley snd Frankie Burns Fight One of Celt Bottles Ever Seen In This Country. In tlio greatest boxing bout ever seen in this country, between two little men, Frnnklo Hums, the aspirant for tho bntitnniwoi','ht championship hon ors of the world, fmh hod out an excel lent draw with Digger Stnnle-y, tho Kngllsh e'hamploti, In a ten round ses sion at flu! National Sporting club in New Yeirk tho eithe-r ulglit. It was nn aggressive, slam-bang niTalr, Inter-spe-rsed with fast, clever boxing. From the first round to tho last there wns neit a dull er slow minute during flic entire fight. It wns give-and-take with tho honors rushing back and forth with the lightning-like- rapid ity of a shuttle In a machine. First Stanley would gain nn advantage, thejn Hums would make a rally and even up tlio score. So they fought the ten rounds, the fortunes of each hanging on a punch. Wifely Devotion. "A man must have fo much on his mind," Is the belief by which a wire often supports a cheerful fnco under rough answers and unfeeling words. George Kllleit. Fnhion Ftork farm, Coldwatcr, Mich., has a ye'apilcg ceilt by Great Heart, 2:12!, dam by Tommy Mac, 2: 11 Vt, that Is considered a gre-at prospect. Chris Mahom-y, the former Ford ham twlrler, has slgne'd with the Rod Sox. There is Joy In Minneapolis for Nicholas Altrock has signed a con tract. Goeid ball players and not good fed lows are what tho wlso baseball man agers are after, although they have te kee'p a few of tho "fine" ones once In a while. Long Larry McLean, the "bug" backstop of tho Cincinnati Reds, de clares that he will discard shlnguards. Instead ho will wear leather csca for bis knees. ' The Canadian owned trotter, TJnko, 2:11, is thought to be a sure 2:10 I rotter this year. He Is by the Ohio sire, Mobel, 2:1014, owned by Slelnej Pros, and Malre, of Lima. Mnnnger Chance says Preside' -,i Murphy allows him to do vh.it to thinks best ami doesn't brdicr hliu. Murphy wants a winning bnll team that can bring home the money. STATE CAPITAL CHAT HurrlBburg Correspondence. With tho I. UH makers. Representative Bheru, I'lilladel phla, Introduced a bill which seeUi to Hubdue and control bellluerenl congregations. It provides that tin receipt and distribution of Ihe fundi Df every church, congregation and religious society shall bo controlled and directed and Us affairs and busi ness shall bo conducted subject to ml in accordance with the rules, rations, discipline and requirement! of the religious body to which tin church or religious society belongs. A bill asking for an appropriation of $5G,U00 for the Catholic Honifl for Destltuto Children in Philadel phia was. introduced by Uepresenta live Ftihy. llspresentatlve Keely introduced a Dill providing that all express com panies doing business In Pennsylva nia shall bo taxed 20 mills on th dollar of actual value of stock ol the companies. lu order that their grandchildren and their great-grandchildren shall know of the statesmanship of the present generation Kepresentattv Dale, of York, lias introduced a bill which provides for houio substantial evidence of the fact. The bill to permit adoption ot adult persons as heirs was passed llnally nnd that providing for re moval of the Western Penitentiary was recommitted to tho Appropria tions Committee. A bill appropriating J785.000 for tli maintenance of tho NationnI Guard of Pennsylvania for tho bi ennial appropriation period was in troduced by Mr. Dale, of York. The amount is the same as carried by the act of 1909. A bill appropriating $390,000 to the State normal schools was present nl by Mr. Whitman, Venango. Mr. Kchad, Allegheny Creating In counties having between 800. OnO and 1,4UU,H0U population a board ot three for assessment and revision ol taxes, to bo appointed by the Auditor General. Mr. Shudrach, Luzerne Increas ing pay of miners' examining board members from f.', to $" per day; making fees from applicants payable to State and permitting boards to sit eight days a month. Neevl Municipal Primary. No law exists at present in Penn sylvania for tho holding of a primary election this year or In any other year wlinn municipal and county of- ! . It I.., 1 .. I... t ....... .1 j nee caiMlllluies aie iu lie mumum vu, I according to tho view taken on Capi I ted Hill by a number of State oill I rials. An act fixing a d e in June i or September Is to lie' drawn and sub J mlttod to th legislature so thai ' should the bills e'intimplated by the j election code commission fall to pni n measure will be at hand which can j bo put through to avoid conf uslon. I To repent Seiiexil Coele. ' John S. Carroll, chairman ef the House Committee on Kilui'ation, I which Is in -charge eif the school ; rode, says the code would probably be reported out, of committee' nlionl tlio middle of March. The commit tee will give hearings on the code tr. . all who desire to appear within the j next, tv.o weeks. Herkey II. Hoyd author of the local option bill, says I hat he will make the motion to put the local opllein bill on the raleMidar. notwithstanding 1 ho negative re com liie'iiilallon. on Monday night. It will ho eleiiated and voted on tho follow '.ng Monday. Out For Associate .Iud;;o. Five aspirants feir nominations for I AHsoeiato Judges have tlle'd nominat ing petitions at the State Capitol, al though the primary edi ct ion will no! ho he ld until June'. The y are: Mr n l.our Ceiiiti'y, democrats, Lloyd W. Weilver. l'chaiu;, nnd Martin II Schramm, Danville; Republican, Cur tis Cook, Danville. I'nion nnd Sny der Couiitii'R, l!i'publiinns. Gottloot Itowe, White DeeT, and Joseph D Winters, Lewlsburg. licniing feir Sull'i-nglM. The Senate Committee on Judi lary General has arranged to give t hearing on March 14 on the reso lutions proposing amendments to tli mates Constitution, so that women :an vote. Tlio hearing will bo tlx lirst of the kind ever held at the Capital. Hoth side's will be heard. llre'cht Ite-glns Dutie'S. M. J. Hrecht, former County Su peiinte'iident of Schools of Lancastoi County, tetk his seat as a State Rail reiad Commissioner Thursday, sue reeding John Y. Hoyd, of tills city lie was sworn by Judge l.andis at Lancaster. Vi'i'ilii't Against State-. Tho jury in tho damage sull brought by residents of Florence Jefferson county, against the slat tir re-covery of loss sustained through state police blowing up tlieii house in attempting to apprehend i desperado, brought In a verdict ol $21101. Tills easo wns a test ease. tlie whole number of suits involving $3100, and tho Legislature will be usked to make an appropriation to cover the amounts. F.xpe-ct lleit Pilmaiy Fight. The first nominating petition to be llled for the June primary ap peared at the courthouse Thursday, when David Houck llled a paper to be a candidate for the Republican nomination for director of tho poor. Dnuphin County will have one of the greatest primary fights lu Its his tory. Chairman Milton W. Shreve, of the House Judiciary Gene'ral Committee, Is ill at his home in Krle. It is feared that he has Uphold fever. WOMAN'S APPEAL TO WOMEN Her Influence It Great in Molding Child'! Character for Good or III Do Something. So few of our well-to-do women seem to realize how greatly lnlemerance Is Increasing In their own ranks. Most of them can say that they know one case of a lady who takes more alcohol than Is good for her, but they believe this Is almost a solitary case, and that the habit cannot bo at all usual. The writer can say (hat in the course of five days, from different sources, sho heard of four cases In the town In whleii she lives, all of whom were far removed from the working classes, and two of them were moving In good so ciety, says a writer lu Temperance. One had appeared at a party In a state of intoxication, with Imr husband in the same e onditlon; they were people who were In goeid circumstances. An other of the four, while lu an intoxi cated condltiem, fell over her little girl of three years and broke the chlld'B leg and otherwise Injured her. In the same place, two ladiea (mar ried women), near nelghbeirs, put an end to their lives through tho effect of alcohol on their brains; further, thre-e ladies, living In houses of high rent iu the samo town, close togeth er, were known to have died from the effect of Btrong drink. There are many, very many, who are not what they might and ought to be, because the alcoholic drink which they take, though It doea not apparently Intoxi cate them, is undermining their phy sical, their mental, and their nervous power. The writer has often been told: "I am obliged to tako alcohol for my health's snko; 1 cannot get on without It; I tried more than once three mouths, and had to take It again." A lady doctor said, when ad dressing a meeting recently, that three months was no test; at the end of six or nine months people would feel the benefit of abstaining, and would find thut they could do woll without stim ulants. We women could do ho much to save thoBo of our own class, If wo took a llttlo trouble to get more kuowl eelge on tho Hiibject of the evil ef fects of ale'oheil on tho boily, and then tried to pass the knowledge on. That pe-eiplo often fIiow unwilling ness to listen to anything on this sub ject see'ins to prove that even a meist meiderate indulge nco in alcohol baa taken a hold upon them which they shrink from easting off. They have learned to like it, and to depend em its narcotising powers, and the thought of ileiing without it Is not a pleasant erne. Tlmy are the more concerned with the momentary enjoyment than with Its ultimate cemseepie-uces. A very large number of doctors, who havo lake.'li tho,. trouble to study tlio sul Jee:t, havo come to the conclusion that ulceilieil docs miseiiie f and not good, except. In extreme rases, when used as a drug. Tlie-y ay that mothers who tako it not only injure l heuu.e-lves, but also their unborn babes, and ge on to do Mill more harm to the ui if taking al cohol when nur.im; them. Many will say that iliey doubt this, for tlu-y havo brought up children anil nurseel them on stout, and they aro healthy Mid not inebriates. This may be true, but the' doetors tell us that though stout Increases tho How of milk, the quality is iir.povoiisln d. A Hiinly of the Mibject could not but e-onvinei! iiiiyiiie wishing to do tho best lor their babii'S that the'y would he wise to le-.ivei alcohol alone. Hut, apart from yourselves anil jour eiiil elien, havo you any care for, eir duty to, thoKo who are falling into Intemper ate ways around jou? Cannot you, by example and by helping tei form public opinion on the maile'i, do some thing to stem the tide of fe-inalo In temperance? How will It bo by-anil liy, when the Judge eif all asks yeiu,"U'hat dlel yem do te) stop the e vil?" Will the reply havo to lie, "1 liked it, and was not unsellish enough to give it up in order to help a sister?" May I teil you that II Is an unselfishness wliie li brings Its own reward lu betteT health, better nerves, better urain power, ami a consciousness that you are doing right? I could point out to yem that j'our Influence on the side of tcuiperam-e is great, the greatest Influence there Is, for it Is you who are closely related to those mem who till high positions, as statesmen, clergy, doctors; it is yem who give tho first Impressions of right or wrong to the child and mold Its character for ge.od or III, and "It Is those Impressions lasting through life which affext tho nation. Christian women, I call upon you to search Into the mattiT, and on your knees ask to be shown your duty. It Is a great work, and educated women can do more than anyone else to help it on. Do not led. anyono Bay: "It does not matter what 1 do." If each one said that nothing would ever bo done. Thero la something that each one is meant to do, that can bo demo by no one else. See to it that yeni tako your part in the great whole, and you will not bo without your reward. Less Eeer Eeing Drunk. The consumption of beer in Ger many, according to official statistics published, is rapidly decreasing. Dur ing PJ09 tho consumption diminished approximately f Gli.OOO.Ono gallons, eir one gallon per head of the popul ation. During tho preceding year there had been a diminution of nearly 70,- 000. 000 gallons, while during tho lat de'cado there bus been a decrease of three gallons per head o' tho popula tion per annum. Tho de-cllue In the brewing trade ia also revealed by the diminished number of breweries in Germany. In 1906 there were 6,035; in 1907, E.792 1. 1908, 5,690, and last lear, 4,708. Dur ing 1909 alone there was thus a do crease of 822 breweries. Gn. Benjamin Butler'i Famous Order. The first commander of the North; ern army during the Civil war to real ize the nilschlevems work drink was doing among tho troops, and the first te) Issue Imperative orders prohibiting the Introduction of Intoxicating liquors lv the camp, was Gen. Hutler. COLD, UNFEELING WRETCH Though Hit Wife Hat Saved Him Money, and Looks Well, Ht It Not Interested. "John, will you please unbook my waist?" "All right, at toon at I get my col lar off." "Don't you think this dress Is be coming?" "Yep." "I think It makes me look slimmer, than I look In any of the rest of my dresses, don't you?" ' "I guess so." "Did you tee anybody there who was dressed In better taste than I?" "Nope." "And Think how cheaply I got H made. Do you remember that pink dress I had two years ago?" "I dunno." "O, yes, you remember It, John. The one I had made when I went to St IxjuIb. Would you suspect that I bav had all the beaded trimming from tha gown put on this one?" "No." "Well, 1 have. If I bad bought It now It would have cost $25. Don't yot think I managed well?" "Uh huh." "Do you suppose there's another woman In this town who dresses as splendidly as I do on what you allow me for clothes?" "I've never thought anything about it." "Well, you would think about It It you got such bills as most women make their husbands pay. Did you seo any one there who looked better than I did?" "I didn't look around much." "Did you ever see me when I looked better?" "I guess neit." "Think what It means to you when 1 make such a fine appearance. Every body must get the Impression that you are abla to give me a much larger al lowance than you do for clothes. It gives the Impression that you are prosperous. Can't you see what an advantage It Is to have people get such an Idea?" "I've never noticed It" "O, pshuw! One might as well talk to a stick as to you!" How Good Health Tells. Door physical health handicaps many girl workers and prevents the highest development of their powers. An anaemic brain produce's poorer work than one that Is nourished by blood rich In red corpuscles. The dys-pe-ptln girl Is Irritable, seedy, and out eif ports when all heT vitality Is called on to malto a special effort In Iut work. "N'itvos" may make all the dlf fereneo between succens or failure. To keep her health up to a good standard ought to be the aim of .every girl who wishes to make something of her life. Too many girls allow themselves to drop Into poor health, which 1s so apt to become chronic tin-ie-ss tlio tendency Is checked at the br--glnnlng. A girl owes a duty to be'iseif to ke'op fit and well and attend to her digest Ion, heir museies, her breathing. Tho habits of brcnthlng properly, e he'wing tlio food thoroughly, dally ex-rreise-s enit of doors, nre nil small mnt teis; but emw or two rules of daily eeinduct oe'caslonally broken contrive afie r a time' to alTce:t physical health and personality both. Once le:t a girl make he r mind up to cultivate a habit of self-de eiopmcnt, and sho follows Ihe'se rubs almost automatically. Kncli detail may be unimportant In I'sill, but the' sum of them Is not. They are tho points that tell In the making eif what should be eve ry glrl'i aim to obtain health and personality, Safest to Fly High. That II Is safer feir an airman fo fly hlrli than comparatively lwar the y. round is indicated by mi'teorologle-al lists carried out on be-half of the Hritii-h air office nt Teddlngton. A kite with a special recording appara tus has been semt up to various Ini.'hts. and It has been shown that on a gusty day sudden fluetuatlons In the pressure eif the wind which aro .in airman's peril diminish percept ibly as a klto asce nds. What airmen have eliscove red whe n In flight Is that dangereiuB gusts sweep over woods ,'id hills or through valleys. For this reason when passing across country iliey seek to maintain an altitude of ut least 7,000 feet. Teacher's Aim In Life. To help a child to become unselfish, se'ir-reilnnt, kind, thoughtful, consid erate, honeBt and Independent; to train to habits of usefulness; to pro moto purity of thought and llfo; to have even some smnll part In awaken ing loftier purposes and holler aspl rations; to arouse In tho minds of boys nnd girls nn honest and sincere hope to be ablo to somo extent to make happier the school, tho home, tho community, tho state, the nation, and the world should be the greatest ambition of every teacher. Richard C llarrett. Horticulturist Supreme. In a bouse built with all the latest Improvements, Including every, con venience for hygiene and cleanliness In the Fervants' quarters, the mlstreees was borrlfli'd one day on her round of Inspection to find tlio servants' bnth tub converted Into a geranium bed. The coaiiinian explained that, with the shower so conveniently placed above. It wns too good a chanco for geranium raising to resist. New York Tress. Out of Babes' Mouths. Mrs. l'hllip Snowden, tho Kngllsh suffragette, began, nt a dinner iu New York, her reply to a toast on "rtiA Huge," with tho words: "I once asked a little girl it she knew what leisure was. " 'Yes,' she replied. 'Leisure Is tbt place where married people repent' " Bavaria's Awakening. Graphite mining has been carried on In Bavaria for centuries and the meth ods today are as primitive as they were two hundred or three hundred years ago. Improvements are about to bo Introduced. Flight of Time. "What Is this young man doing asleep In our parlor with cobwebs all over him?" "Never mind, father. He's waltlt; for daughter to dress." wm ,hy WILBUR D NEePBIT A"HOMEEr A homely man Is be lone, awkward iirnid, Anel Bluunlillng legs that mnke Home people pnille; rte-d lianilH that ti-ll of busy toll on fnrnu. Of work that knew no crafty clty-niille Ills lll-mnde garments np about htm They Beem iu goails bli cliuiiBy form to whip Yel In Ids fyiB thorn I a gcntlo glow Thut ittopM the Ji t n-trembllng on your lip. A hnniiiy man -uncouth of foim anil facei, I In blunili i K In his npi'cch, anil bus no way Of elnlng tliliign with oily pflne anil Rrnro, No lliniiglit uf glo'sltiK what lie bus to say. On leeelnu bltn tlt ready epilp In planned, Hut nil your Hlili lnng smiles arej clieeli- evl when you Feel thnt 111 in pressure of his freckled hand Whleh semis the thrill of friendliness all through. A homely man-and lie noes homily f htiigs; No banners flaunt when ho Is passim? by. No toadies, ns of pompous men nnd kitiKx, Hun forth his gentle, deeds to loudly cry. Ills clumsy hands grow soft nnd sootlilng- coof Winn laid a moment on the fevered brow, Tho llncers that rnn wield nn nrtlsts's tool Can p.itnt a picture filled with rest, fiomediow. And. (, his clumsy speech -how fair It grows When h(. up, :iUs to tho ones whom sorrow cars! All penile then. It softens nil grief's blows And shown tlio sanctifying Kraco of tears. Tho kindly deeds ho dois-and not to friends Alnce, hul to nil folk he finds In need. He Is the kind of angel !od will send To those who laek the living, breathing ITl'Oll. A homely tniin? Ah, not For now wo Hei The thinness of the mask that find set there. And wish that all tho mocking ones might h- Fhown his true self nil wonderfully fair. A shambling g.ilt bee, hups n roynl strldei t'pon Hie jiatli thai tlnds the liner gonl- Anil tmlure h.is no nn kwardness to hldo This heiiven-glveii loniellnesH of soul. Making Up for Lost Time. At tlie funeral eif Hie late actor wo ohseuve his manager, who seems strangely happy for such a soie'iun oc casion. "Why this pleased expression?" wo ask. llo take's us by tho arm and lends ns to tho sfree't, where ho sheiws us a long line of hearses. "What's the meaning of tills?" wr. Inepiire. "Surely you do neit ni'od bo many lmarses." "Dem't need 'cm," ho eiine'kles, "but I'm going to use 'em. I always warn ed poor old Harnesteirmer that he'd have to make up feir all the re'lu-an-als lie mlssi'd somo day, and now I'm go ing to have him rehearsed every fifty feet during tlio parade." The Physiology Of It. Unexpectedly ,- tho man found him self with a lot of worthless securities on his hands. Ho tried his best to get on his feet. At about this time ho met tho frleml who had ' Induced him to shoulder the'lll. The friend refused to back htm up. lie could not steimnch such treat ment. Yet he did not havo tho heart to upbraid ills friend. However, ho did not havo loft a leg to stand on. Hut ho had bne-kbono enough to as sert himself. So he went out on his ear. Naturally. Jim hobble skirt Is going out, Vi''ro glad to see It go Hut it's sei lniTnw roundabout It movt s almighty slow. Mistake Somewhere. "When I mariieil you," sighs the an gry wife, "yon snlil you only, needed the helpful Inlluemee of a noble wom an to make n groat man of yourself. And yet you are utterly worthless. What have yeiu to say to that?" "I must have diagnosed one of us Incorrectly," says the pi'iiurbe'd hus band." Dead Giveaway. "Who gave tho bliele away?" asks the belated wedding gue'st. "Her llttlo brother," explains the man who had a front sent. "This kid ran down the alslo right In tho middle' of the ceremony with her old switch In hia hand and told her sho had for geitten her hair." The Treating Evil. "One of tho curses of modern clvlll rntlon," asserts tho man with the long nose, "is the treating habit." "Ain't It a fact?" responds tho man with the double chin. "Why, some folks can't even have a headache with out calling In two or threo doe-tora." ' llm Wm PAL "I have Buffered with piles fl)r tw six years. One year ago last April I i Ran taking Cascarets for coubtiiwij0ll J the course of a week I noticed the nii began to disappear and at the end J ' weeks they did not trouble me Cascarets have done wouders forae tn entirely cured and feci likj , j ' tun." George Kryder, Nupoleo q fWassnt, Pltble, Potent, Tait, Omj flu Good. Never Sicken, Wtmki-a orlir lc, 25c, 50c. Never sold In bulk. The.? ulne tablet stamped C C C. Ouirtmei j, cuie or your uiuusy btvk. XX-y MM Lu, Quln V AstTst But lOCUn Ciwu Mot. Note Slip Easy f eb found on our collars or,!y As necktie cannot touchcillarlrjtt-.j It slides freely. Tab will not get eta of place when relauiuiercd. Co no more than ordinary collars, (jives more comfort, more wear, iinrsr If your dealer don't have tlmia. writs''' C.W. FERGUSON COLLAR CO.. Trey, I.T, Make the liver Do its Duty Nine time in tea when the Iiw it ri i, stomach sod bowel an right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS tolly b lit fin pel a luy liTef to do Hi duty. Curet Co tipation, Jndiga tloo, Sick Headache, and Diatrasi after Ettiaj Small Pill, Small Don, Small Prm Genuine munw Signature WAS JUST COPYING MAV.M Child's Actions That at First My tlfied Father Were E.uily Explained. Tho little tdx-ycHr-old el :-!.- well known e lnh voni:in v. h. her playroom tlio othe r ihe. kinds of ncrolmtic Ft nuts aul t: latlng wildly und weirdly. r nil "What aro you doine.'."' child's father. "I'm playing I'm in a mi '.; BWored. Then nho made n movements with her little Bald. "There, father, yem ;i. That's what they do wle makes them." "Why," tdie said, "I'm i I nm nininma nt her elnh. mamma goes to lie-r elnh motions and the olheia a I heard her say so over t; to Mrs. Smith (his tnoi'i! trutcd Magazine. el !e i , a;,i t!.-a ,s thai never i! .u:t !!,! . h .a --ii.lr Pniygists everywhere !! i . to Nature. His Lltjht. Klla Me Fays that 1 of his llfo. Stella That's r;ih. ONLY ONtt "UHOMII ell I Thnt li I.AXAI'IN K lUl''.-ii i,'l tin- hltfimlurti uf K. . l.Ui i. i bvt r lu Lure a Cultl iu unu ly. 'F." e 1 Latest Quotiitie-b. "How wiinld von like- a : - f,.- ,.,, ,11, .loir n.wn ' , ' i w Cil viisli.irkn. snv?" Vn .mo ulnff for On !'.i!:it CI a picture of a deiznn e Trim Honiilit'.'. "I cttnitrtcn Villi Jll-ei tei l 10 f-l nli-u allien von mv II a !' ' " "I Khould iay not," i i '' M' 'l,,,.rl,ia n.nii Kllh .1 L.ntor Clt V mich'"". ....... ( plltS lU UlOft Of Ills llfo i'l '' 'i''-'"1 Neatl PUt- ,! til The Duchess Daeazes, i M world known, was an ,:n"rl''" daughter of the enornnui geir family. . The duchess was once ta!;li somo amati'tir theatricals nt 1Pj when a New York girl mM ,0 m mother: "Is she n real duchess?" "Yea, my di'iir," tlm 'i;1;'''"' Kniekcrhncker, answered. "Ve. r but machine nindo." I no ouDiiexy oi ri , "John, dear," said Mabel, ns l. f nnd muster entered tho li''BI1' , Just hnd a letter from ninth"''. she Is coming to visit us. It lsPuJ ty expensive trip for litth" Ml"1!J;all 1 wondered if wo couldn't li"l a llttleV , j "Of course we can," saiel 'l"n;,JJ his wife a Rnneroiis l'H ,, you write and tell her that I'll ' " tni. flint tn niiv fur her raill 11:1,1 Ui . ' ..... r...... ... i".,r hae'k home again lis soon lidos te go." Ilarpe'r'.-e We I.IV- coius Miiuynn's Cold Iti'inoely ''fj'llilj head, tl.re.ut im.l luiiB "l"loXZtl,t lv. I'liee-ks Ke'V.'rK, l ' pil tlie nose., tulles ay ull "'";'",' ", f cuuse'il lT ei'lilH. It oiir' ,niO tlnnte CniiKlr; unit lin-v"' it 'jrijj Wrliu I'rof. J ni.yi.li. W ' eW MH I'llllll.. 1 U. iv iUlULL'iy m-u. ivt ll i a T H B. CO OWS t' yf (I COLLARS j ll IV ,5C-TW0FCR28 J J W N5COLLAR3r." i V'y L,T"-" L" euorr ll TV ai'UlTTLI JEmflr UIVER 1 ETT Fl (T KTfor COUGHS B JZZ
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers