LIVE NEWS OF THE STATF. j SIEMENS SCHMUCKERT DIRIGIBLE BALLOON Lancaster. A conflict betwwu the State Health Department and the City Board of Health lias remitted In the arrest of Dr. J. M. Shartle, of this alty, State rt'nlutrar. A local ordi nance requires that physicians shall report deaths to tlio city lloard of Hoalth, under intimity of a lino of $10. Dr. Slmrtlo hold that having reported to the State Health Depart ment ho had fulQlled all logal obliga tions. As It is the purpose to deter mine th authority of the State lu the promises Dr. Shartle will be rep-ri'HenU-d by the Attorney General's Department. 1'ottHvilk). rottsvlllo ' Borough Council rendered , its verdict In the lane in which Senator K. H. Varo, of Philadelphia, was charged with brlb iry and sending of Christmas preB ints to loeal Couticllmen kind ofllclals ho approved of Varo's street pav ing contract. After the meeting, the Councilmen stated that the local lewfpar editor who charged them ith a number of grave offenses will fce at once prosecuted on charges of trjiiry, n ht-1 and civil damagts. Windsor Caatlo. The coroner's Jury, In the rase of double suicide of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Adam, brought In a verdict that the husband met his (oath by strangulation; and hat MrB. Adam met death by being Induced to lubtnlt to being hung with her hus band. Isaac Kether, father of Mrs. Adam, was not satisfied, and ordered I doctor to make another examination tf her body. rottsvlllo. MaJ. Heber S. Thomp lon, aged 71 years, for many years thief engineer for the vaHt coal lands and other properties of the Glrard Estate in Schuylkill and adjoining Bounties, died of general debility. He was a First Defender during the Civil War and rose from a private In the Forty-eighth Regiment, P. V. I., to rornmand of a battalion In the regl lient. Media. Alohzo, alias "Butch" Madison, a colored man who In De tember and January terrorized the residents of Sharon Hill and vicinity, was sentenced by Judge Broomall, to the Huntingdon Reformatory, where be will remain seven years. Madl lon was convicted of assault and bat tery on Ray Hawthorne and Ruth I. Blair; assault with Intent to rob Myrtle Gorgas, and simple assault on Helen Crothers, all white girls. Wst Chester. The sale of the plant of the Edison Electric Il luminating Company, of this place, to the Pennsylvania Electrlral Com pany, of McCall'a Ferry, was con cluded. The price paid for the plant, Its franchises, etc., Is $.100,000. The Dew owners will, It Is said, operate the plant with power from the Mc Call's Ferry power plant. Reading. Rev. Franklin J. Clark, rector of St. Barnabas P. E. Church, Das ben called to a position on the it a(T of the General Board of Mis lions, New York, as secretary of the Student Movement. Rev. Mr. Clark has been pastor of St. Barnabas' Church throe years and before com ing here was assistant to Rev. Floyd W. Tomklns, rector of Holy Trinity Church, Philadelphia. Norrlstbwn. Emil and Nicholas 3xrge, young men, were acquitted )f manslaughter, because the Com monwealth admitted Its case was so eak that It was not advisable to ask '.he Jury to convict. The men were tliarged with causing the death of Hiram Bice, a relative, In a street fight, last October. Bristol. Michael A. Kelly, a farm er on the Fishery Farm, was struck md killed by a freight train on the Pennsylvania Railroad at China Lane. Two weeks ago Kelly, who a as 45 jears old, was struck by a trolley car at Eddlngton while drlv Ing a hay wagon and was Injured. Sellersvlllo. As John Overholt, of Perkasie, was hunting along the creek, he found the body of a man face downward In the creek, and It fas found the dead man was William Savacool, of this place. Savacool, as 48 years old and had once kept a hotel at Newportvllle. Boyertown. William Bader, of Cumru Township, who came to town ind entered a quarantined home, ahere his son, John, was 111 with llpbtherla, was arrested. Health Officer Eddlnger brought a charge Igalnst him and Bader was fined $20. Media. II. C. Morris was found guilty of receiving money under false pretenses and sentenced by Judge Broomall to one year In Jail. Wit nesses testified that he posed as an igeut for a publishing company, which publishes two weeklies, and re ceived money from people. Bangor. Joseph A. Slamp, a ma chinist, aged 64 years, committed sui cide by asphyxiation. lie shut hlm elf up In a storage room, stuffing bed quilts In the cracks of the door. He had been morose from sickness. Danville. The typhoid fever lituation In Danville is growing worse, with more than forty cases al ready reported. There Is an average of two new cases daily. The cause of the outbreak is generally assigned to the water. Hamburg.' Citizens of West Ham burg have organized a Board of Trade, with W. B. Kline as president; George Rltter, secretary, and John Roth, treasurer. There are several desirable factory building sites with excellent railway facilities located there. Whit's the Ute7 Mrs! Spender "If we deposit ten eenta a day at four per cent. Interest for baby until he's of age, he'll have IU12." Spender "Wbat's the use? By that time be can go to work-" Smooth Faces Blamed. A distinguished Vienna physician haa attributed the Increase In disease! of the respiratory organs to the grow log practice among men of going clean shaven. 6 I I I I THE most powerful dirigible balloon built up to date Is the Siemens Schmuckort, which made Its trial trip suc cessfully not long ago at Berlin. It is 1,000 meters long and has four motors and three gondolas for carrying crew and passengers. One of its first trips It carried twelve men. CHICAGO IS LOVABLE Bishop of Salisbury Says City Is Unchristian. Still 8macks of Frontier and Has Not Acquired Enough Civilization to Make People Calculating In Kindliness. Chicago. Chicago Is not Christian It Is Athenian, although dollar worship la less evident here than In New York or Washington. ' It has not yet gathered sufficient veneer of civilization to make It cal culating In Its kindliness. ' It still smacks of the frontier, al though Its opera Is crowded. Its art gallery has more Interested observers than ever were seen In London, and It has one of the most wonderful of uni versities. And one comes to Chicago to learn the mightiness of man. So concluded the bishop of Salis bury, from observations taken In this city covering a period of several weeks. At least Chicagoans who have been reading the keen and, on the whole, sympathetic criticisms of Chi cago and American life that are ap pearing in the London Church Times, and are tho frankest discussion -of America from a distinguished foreign er's viewpoint since Charles Dickens wrote his American Notes, believe the anonymous critic to be. tho English bishop. If it Is not the bishop, it Is some one who came at the same time, and did many of the same things the bishop did, clergy at the Episcopal cathedral said. The writer of these criticisms lived at a Michigan avenue hotel, visited the University of Chicago and described the services at an unnamed fashion able church which many are certain they recognize as Orace church, where the bishop delivered his lectures In December. The fact Is known, It was added, that the bishop wrote extensive comments on his visit here. "I found the greatest surprises of my American visit In Chicago and Pittsburg," says the trlter. "The Chi cago of Mr. Stead's dreams Is not the true Chicago. I had expected a hideous city; I found a city of promise. 1 had expected sordldness of aim; I found readlnoss to appreciate literature and art, generoua-mlndedness In criticism and a desire for the sweeter things of life. Chicago gives one the impres sion of frontierlsm. Not yet Is It set tled down. Some day they will tear down the hideous 'loop' elevated and make a center for commerce worthy of the vast enterprise. Then Chicago will begin to show the world what a city can be. "Her university Is most wonderful of all. Boys and girls crowd the lecture-rooms; experiments In psycho physics are treated as Intimately Im portant affairs, and are not relegated to back rooms for Isolated research students. Economics draws them In hundreds, and at close quarters the respect which an Englishman has for Chicago's work In sociology Is vastly Increased. "And as Chicago Is open-minded, bo Is It open hearted. Such charities! Such boundless giving In the very streets! Such a passionate desire to give the poor children a Santa Claus on Christmas morning. There are verses and pictures In the papers, all pleading the same good cause. It Is cold by Lake Michigan today, There are pillars of Ice within a few yards of my hotel. There la a heavy fall of snow. But Chicago hearts are win Bomely warm. Not yet have they gath ered sufficient of the veneer of civil ization to make them deliberate In their love of their fellows, or to keep them calculating In their kindliness. "I could wish It were a Christian Chicago also. It Is ao Athenian, so welcomely Athenian, eo anxious not to overlook any deity whatever. But that Is not sufficient. Chicago needs, more even than New Tork, the rigor of discipline. Here Is a fashionable church. It Is well attended. It Is ablaze with organisation. It has ac complished so much that the tempta tion to deify humanity must come very near to It. There Is no God In Its theology." DUKE GREAT COTTON RAISER South African Experiments In Culture Give Good Returns Satisfactory In Yield and Quality. London. The duke of . Westmin ster, who recently returned to this country after a visit to his estate In northwest Rhodesia, has taken an Im portant step In the development of the resources of South Africa he haa be come a grower of cotton. . Ist year the low lying country on bis estate was utilized for the experi mental growing of cotton. The re sults were such that the area of land under cultivation has been Increased from 60 acres to 300 acres, which li expected to yield 60 tons of cotton. In yield and quality the first crop ten tons was more than satisfactory, and when placed on the market at Liverpool the first consignment to this country was aold at from 20 to 15 cents a pound. The duke of Westmlnster'a estate In South Africa comprises 10,000 acres of land in northwest Rhodesia, In the vlnclnlty of the Kafur river. The valua of the land when the Dutch bought It was four centa an acre; Its value since then, with the added value which the success of the experiment' In cotton growing has given to It, haa been In creased to 62 cents an acre. Carborundum Used In Building. Paris. A flight of stairs has been erected in this city over which 14,000, 000 persons have shuffled without ao much as scratching the surface. There steps are almost as Imperishable as If they had been built of huge dla monds, for In the concrete of which they are constructed a generous por tion of carborundum has been Intro duced, and since carborundum is al most as bard as the diamond It has given the concrete a wearing quality which np marble or granite could pos blbly approach. Keeping Boys on the Farm Future of Agricultural Industry De pends on Better Methods In Rural Schools. Chicago. The future of the farm ing Industry In the United States de pends on renovation, Improvement and better rao.thods In the rural schools of the country, according to Prof. O. H. Benson, former county su perintendent of schools In Iowa, and recently appointed head of the bureau of plant Industry of the department of agriculture. Professor Benson In a strong ad dress showing the vital relationship of the rural school to the question of agriculture, home- economics and the keeping of the boy "on the farm." sus tained tbo Interest of 200 grain men present at the opening session of the Council of North America Grain Ex changes, held here the other day. Questions anent the grain situation, the betterment of crops and the scien tific elements of farming were taken up by the association. In speaking of the relation of school to farming, Professor Benson said: "Unless the rural schoola are Im proved and new methods touching farm life taught, Instead of cube root methods, the growing boy will be dis contented with his life. He will look upon the farmer as a type of peasant The method of education will measure the amount of cereal progress In this country. "The girls aUo are discontented. The tendency Is to seek city life That Is the danger and menace to our farming Industry. Place In your rural school teachers who will teach farm ing, make it attractive and valuable, Interest tho pupils, and the crops will be Increased threefold In an amazing ly short tlmo. "Three years ago I made some sta tistics . among schools In my district In Iowa. Out of 164 boys I found that 157 of them, all sons of fanners, had decided not to follow farming, but to go to the city and take up a profes slon. Later, after educational Inno vations, and Instructing the teachers In methods of . teaching agriculture, ! took another vote. I found that out of 174 boys, 1C2 had decided to be farm ers. That shows how education will save your grain and your farm life." Professor Benson also deplored the lack of entertaining and Instructive literature dealing with farm problems and farm life. He stated that the fact that the most of present-day litera ture dealt with urban life was re sponsible for the departure of many farm children to the congested cities. Birds Followed In Flights Aluminum Rings Are Placed on Their Legs to Aid Naturalists In Study of Their Habits. London. Some .-hiking facts have resulted from the Ingenious plan adopt ed by some English and continental naturalists to find out the lines of flight and fondness for home of wild birds. In England the bird-marking Bcheme was taken up on a large scale by Mr. WItherby In 1909, and since then sev eral thousand birds, many of them nest lings, have been decorated with a light aluminum ring. The example was eag erly followed by naturalists. The divergent lots of two starlings from one nest were traced by Mr. Tice hurBt, the first author of the scheme aa preached In "British Birds." One of the youngsters, ringed during Infancy In Its nest In an English cher ry tree, has been picked up wounded close to Boulogne, In France, rather more than a year later. The other, a home-keeping bird, was found In a nest box within 103 yards of Its paternal cherry tree. The blitck-headed gulls, the species that especially haunt London, have pro vided some very Interesting evidence. One killed by flying Into some tele graph wires near Lowestoft had been ringed at Rossltten, Germany, a spot S00 miles nearly due east, 17 months before; and curiously enough, another bird ringed at the same place on the same date was shot at Lowestoft on the same day. Another black-headed gull ringed in Cumberland Is reported to hive been found at Cape Flnlstere. Swallows have proved the love of home with which they are always cred ited by returning to the eaves of their English home after a Journey of sev eral thousand miles to and from Africa. An Interesting record Is given In "British Birds" of the ringing of Eng lish tits. Some of these courageous little birds have been caught four times at varying dates within the same Biggest Liner Is Begun. Brown' & Co. of Clydebank have laid the keel for the immense steamer planned for the Cunard Steamship com pany. The steamer will be called the Aqultanla, and will be of 60,000 tons, 1,000 feet long and ber engines will de velop 90,000-horse power. neighborhood, and one particularly un suspecting bird was caught "almoBt every day." One bcglna to think that he did it on purpose and entered Into the game. It is hoped that Naturalists all over the country will share In this game of ringing and catching birds. The rings do no manner of harm and the news they may convey Is of the greatest Interest. Vacations Will Cost More. Chicago. Summer vacations prob ably - will cost more this year. An advance In summer tourist rates, both east and west, Is being considered by the railroads and, probably will be adopted. Heretofore the summer rate has been a fare and a third, plus $1.60. The new rate for the round trip prob ably will be a fare and a half. Man Proves Real Magnet Bayfield, Wis. A lumberjack of Bay field county la a human magnet and li to be used next spring for locating iron deposits. He can convert a steel knlfi blade Into a powerful magnet by rub blng his fingers over It. kLJ yhy WILBUR D NLPBITt I cannot ilnir th new songi; I cannot sing- tlia old Th latter are culled cheitnuta And era no longer aold. Tha naw ones soil by thouaands. For thay ara all the rage Policemen have to censor Those songs upon tha stage. I cannot sing- tha new songs I do not act a part, I do not dally gambol In hlatrlonlo urC And so I cannot sing them Beeauaa It would be found They muat be expurgated With children all around. I cannot alng the new songs I cannot even name Tha wondrous ragtime lyrics That have their meed of fame. Tha double-meaning titles Ara by all odda too tough; For ma to even hint them You'd aay was quite enough. ' I cannot sing tha new aong Of men that are wild flirts, Nor can I warbla sweetly About a "bunch of skirts." I rather Ilka the old songs Where women all were pure Oh, It would have been better It thay might but endure. I cannot sing tha new songs. And no one sings tha old. The new ones are well, mildly, A Uttle more than bold. Were I to sing the new songs You'd order me to hush And ask If I'd forgotten Tha things that make us blush. Healthy Town. "PUneyvllle, 0.7" asks the man with the sober clothes. "I should lay 1 have Beard of that place. I was in business or tried to be In business there for a year. That town la ths healthiest place I ever knew." "Is that so?" we ask, with Interest Tea. I'm an undertaker, you see, I went there and opened an establish ment on learning that there waa no undertaker In the town. I didn't get a bit of bualnss, and along In the sum mer I started out to pick blackberries for a living. They made me quit They wouldn't even permit any black berrying." We smile wanly. "And that wasn't the strangest part I didn't move out until after a man who had tried to operate a cleaning and coloring shop closed hla doors and failed." "What had that to do with" "Was there any chance for an un dertaker In a town where there could be no dying of any kind?" Against the Rules. "Why didn't you put on tho porous plaster I sent you?" "Plasther? Docthor, I'm a mlmber av th' hod carriers' union and It's fernlst th' rules for me to do anny plastherla'." What It Lacked. They listen to the phonographlo re production of the voice of the great prima donna In the marvelous aria from the grand opera. "Is It not perfect?" asks one. "It's good," responds another. "One could not find any fault with that certainly." "Still, there seems to be something lacking." "What Is It?" "I hardly know. O, I've got It Ton "an't hear the chatter In the boxea." The Optimist. "It was too bad," we say to our friend, "that your house burned down yesterday." ,"I don't know," he replies. 'The fact is, It burned just in time." "How was that? Waa your Insur ance about to lapse?" "No. But my wife was beginning to plan her spring housocleanlng." Essential, "Yes, sir," Bald the dealer, "when we sell you an automobile we Include very necessary feature that should accompany It." "Does that mean," asked the pros pective purchaser, "that you tell ma the correct method of pronouncing c-ha-u-f-f-eu-r?" v The Timber Trust Woodman, spar thosa trees. Touch not a single bough. Tha lumber prices please, ' For they are rising now. Don't even soratch the bark Weil let them atand awhile And by waya shrewd and dark . Bend up the price a mile. Backache Is only of msey symptosis which some wumea t aure- enrougn weakness or displacement ol the womul organs. Mrs. Lizzie White of Memphis, Teno r Dr. R. V. Pierce, M follow! t ' "At times I was hardly able to be on mylt.t. I believe I had every pain and aohe a m, ' could have. Had a vary bad oasa. Inler0(i organs were very much diseased and tnj bank was very weak. I suffered a great deal with nervous headaches, in fact, I suffered all oer This was my oondition when I wrote to jou lor advioe. After taking your 'Favorite Treicrip. tion' for about three months can say that m health was never better." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is a positive oure for weakness and diseas'e ol the femioine orgsniim. It (ln inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. Tones and builds up the ntrvci Do not permit a dishonest dealer to substitute (or this medioioe which but record of 40 years of cures. " No, thank you, I want what I atk for." Dr. Pltnu'M PleMunl Ptllcti Indue mlU matural towel movement ome t ity. No doubt the mind cure Is all right If you have the mind to begin with. All dniECri'ta bcII the famous ITorb Tern tdy, Gurliuld Tea. It correots constipation. Her savings are the saving of many a business girl. ril.FS fTRKD T A TO 14 TMYS Tnnr ilruiurml "111 rcilunil muoer It l'A.o iMVT SIKN'l1 fullM to ritrn Knr caw uf lli-hlng-, Hhod, Biuediug- ur rrulrudlutf i'llea lu 0 to 14 a;a. hM. Fortunate. Mrs. Woggs She Is enormously wealthy. Mrs. Boggs Yes. She was an only wife, you knowl to Ditine orr mat. hi. ANI III II.D l l TFTK aTSTFM Taka the Old standard OHOVB.t TAHl'Kl.lmS dill. I, TON 10. Vun know what you are Hiking. Tha formula la plalnlr prtnuvl on evarr butt!-, J bowing- U la alaiiily uulnlno and Irun 'n a tau aaa torn. Tha Qulnlue drlraa oat Ibe malaria and the Ima bnlloa np the ayitm. bold b aU saaJure tor M yaare. t'rloa Ut ouuta. Plenty of Time to Fatten Up. Cheerful Old Idiot I say, you'll ex ruse me, but d'you know that you are the thinnest policeman I've ever seen. Robert Yes, I'm a new hand, and haven't-got to know the cooks yet. London Opinion. important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Djtnra thn - jm - Signature (JUeZiV. In Use For Over 80 Years. The Kind You Have Always UoughL Cause and Effect. "I see from ,the papers," said Daw son, 'that there Is a great scarcity of chorus girls this year." "I waa afraid there would be," said Wiggles. "It's only another case of cause and effect The French cham pagne crop haa practically failed, and lobsters are scarcer than hens' teeth this season." Harper's Weekly. In Ita Due Order. Champ Clark, at a dinner In Wash ington, pleaded Indulgence for a some what rambling speaker. "He'll arrive," said the Democratic leader, "if you'll only give blm time. He Is like Dr. Thirdly. "Dr. Thirdly was dividing up his ser mon Into its appropriate beads one Sunday morning when a member of the congregation shouted Irascibly: "'Meat, man! Give us meat!' "'Well,' said Dr. Thirdly promptly, "bold on, then, till I'm done carving.' " Kind but Careless. John P. Irish, the San Francisco orator and officeholder, was entertain ing Joaquin Miller, the poet, one night Upon hearing a particularly funny atory by the host the poet fell off his chair In a paroxyum of mirth. Irish thought tho poot had a seizure of some kind and be rushed to the sideboard, took a bottle of whisky and stuck the top of It Into Miller's mouth, hoping to revive him. Presently Miller waved his hands feebly and Irish removed the bottle. "What is It?" asked Irish solicitous ly. "Remove the cork!" whispered the poet, hoarsely, "Remove the cork!" Saturday Evening Post EDITOR BROWNE Of The Rockford Morning Star. "About seven years ago I ceased trlnklng coffee to give your Postum a trial "I had suffered acutely from various forma of indigestion and my stomach had become so disordered as to repel almost every sort of substantial food. My general health was bad. At close Intervals I would suffer severe attacks which confined me In bed for a week or more. Soon after changing from coffee to Postum the indigestion abated, and In a short time ceased entirely. I have continued the dally use of your excellent Food Drink and assure you most cordially that I am Indebted to you for the relief It has brought me. "Wishing you a continued success, I am Yours very truly, - J. Stanley Drowne, Managing Editor." Of course, when a man's health shows he can stand coffee without trouble, let him drink It, but most highly organized brain-workers sim ply cannot. The drugs natural to the coffee ber ry affect the stomach and other organs and thence to the complex nervous system, throwing It out of balance and producing disorders In various parts of the body. Keep up this dallg pois oning and serious disease generally supervenes. So when man or woman finds that coffee Is a smooth but dead ly enemy and health Is of any value at all, there Is but one road quit. It Is easy to find out If coffee be the cause of the troubles, for If left off 10 days and Postum be used In Its place and the sick and diseased conditions begin to disappear, the proof Is un answerable. . Postum Is not good If made by short boiling. It must be boiled full 15 min utes after boiling begins, when the crisp flavor and the food elements are brought out of the grains and the bev erage la ready to fulfill Its mission of palatable comfort and renewing the cells and nerve centers broken down by coffee. "There's a Reason." Get the little book, "Tb Road to "Wellvllle," In pkgs. I Km rrmi above lettert A aw appear traas lime to tlan. Tfcer ara graala, trs, aad fall at aaamaa tatereat. No Apparent Reason. Reporter Colonel, you In,i t . there was money imed In tlebrayne. How much did it '.'ting m hint vu iu aa ncii lull unj, lur 1 nj eol.. a " you there wbb er bribery? to find out. Politician -What rmikr n uri... 1.1 was electedl Domestlo Amen.t (s, Father I think the Imfr, looks !!k you. I CS t0 Mother Yea, It shuU lis P awful lot. For COLDS and ;hip fTloVa' CaPCDlNS la tha l.-i ri-m'tr-,, lleres the aclihitf and fnrrlhn .. runni Cold and rratnres normal c -.i. -iiituna h! Iliiild fITcrts luimeillatcljr. l'L-.,j4c ,ji Al drug-stores. To render your neighbor a serrtct willingly shows the generosity a) your character; to preserve silent over It, the grandeur of your soul. Puysieux. Do Toil Use Rye Bnlvo? Applr m from Asi-ptlo Tubes to i'rvr-nt litl,! Murine Lye Halve In Tube N-w el ie. Murine Eye Liquid -uc-irc. tZ Books In each Pkg. tn Every man Js a comi-r until bi reaches a certain age then bt'i 1 goer. PISV3PLSS "I tried all kinds of blood rrraedis which failed to do nie any good, bat I have found the light thing at last. II) face was full of pimples ami black heida After taking Cascarets they all It ft. I u continuing the use of thrni and rtcoa mending them to my friends. I fl 6m when I rise in the morning. Hopes have a chance to recommend Cascartu." Fred C. Wttten, 76 Elm St., Newark, S.J, Pleasant, Palatable, Potrnt, Tana Oooi Do Good. Never ftlcken.Waaken or (jrlpa. lOo, 25o, S0o. Never sold la bulk. The jei Ine tablet stamped C C C, Uuuuttedtt cure or roar money back, Ul tuu nrubnblr know tr.,m Mix rl- nce wirnt an mimipiIm.iI tnlut i: In but la it sb (if nutn ntv. tl ini mini Da Tina II. uo for an extr.ton.int ft i"d stiinuuDt are now wranmt nur Krn nncia. rmiKieni worn v.m kiiia TlMfto two jrrudoft aro tlio (j V- fi r the muDOT anr hnndon oror 11117 t mintmiri tha li S ttau kW1 duui .ri.l I'll V t- lt. Matin In urirtr of minn-tiM. st pong, Itiat-color miiteriulit tu hu vwrj Your aniT ran mppir it m rnd us hi nmutv ur mi.; nLf and price In aiatn 114 for rnituuin and book or naw patuirns. LTho President Shirt Co. fSPEGA ill West Fayette Strc-U .Baltimore- m n. All til T tXTrH .Maryland i REGULAR (1 COLLARS i II V ,s-TWOFOR28 J w OiCOLLAR f I J.a.. IS. lT-H. V alT'll IBM MUSU" AcTn& But UCii Cm ruoa. Collar Comfort la Insured if you wfnr RI.1P F COtMJJ whli-h all hiiTe the Klip K' T"'"-""""?, ,j Thin Tab allow the kilo ",-, Is the moHt mar heel iinrov-iin-ni ui-" lars during- rerettt ywtra. 'I ',, atyles and ore for wle by liu-t.i '""' If not at your store, write in uJ ' you are aupplied. C.W. FERGUSON COLLAR CO., Troy, II ilp Willi las) CURED A BAD SPAVIN. Mr. B. H. I.r. Marion. N.C. wrllaii "Mr horae had a Ttry ed an ' ,, and nothing did an good 1 ' bhlW Meilcan Mustang tininjeot. ' jth tM apuria frequently and pIcntfTu r ,, liniment and aoon saw aa tml"' ,uii 0( thla treatment t poured my pa' , Mtil iment and then rubbed Hon tl P (rt. nearly dry. I did this three "rfc"' , day and my horaa waa tomple"1' la aora to cure properly uaad. i A apavln is a serious needs a powerful remedy; letter proves Mexican Mu4 iment cures even bad caaai ano it thoroughly, too. 25e. BOa. t a Bottle at Drul",