Voices from the rs:' 'ami. re. r '-(Am, j 4 "o? Unknown Ten Telephone Is Now Widelu Used on the Battle Fronts MflOW would vou like to &J""tt2 take up the telephone In i l',e seclusion of your 11- nrary aim iaiK to your son on the battlefields of Krunco something on this order? Scene: An American home some where In the United States. I'amlly reading the latest war news from the front. Mother, dad nnd sis ter Sue thinking about the big pnrt Itroiher Hill Is nlavinir in ttm it.m.i ttnim over there. . Il b-b-b-llng!' The telephone rings 1 Itad takes up the phone. Central ska If you are there nnd then hooks up the connection. After an Instunt enmes a familiar voice: "Hello, hello! Is that you, Dad? This Is Itill " t ""Well, well. bov. where are vim?" ' Vust got In from ramming another liole through the Hlndenburg line. 1 the Hun on the run. Feeling Treat. Good luck; good-by!" ' If Knlser Kill hnd delayed pulling 'down the roof on the house of the world a few yenrs longer It Is quite likely such scenes would have been possible, snys a writer in the Hiiln delphla Public Ledger. Fathers and tuothcrs would have been nble to talk to their sons In the faraway military cump hero at home. They could have conversed with them thousands of miles out nt sen while the great gray ships were conveying the boys over the blue. They could have heard mo voice or me noy irom me mime scarred fields of France and Flanders. I DliKHo-telephony nt the beginning of tlic world war had Just about reached flie Practical stage where It was to tiiTo If.i place with radio-telegraphy a one one of the marvels of the age. One year after Mars unloosed his guns tin- liiininn voice was projected across the Atlantic ocean from Arlington, Vn.. to the Klffel tower In Paris. In telligible speech was transmitted also from New York city to I'earl Harbor In fnrnwnv Hawaii, close to 5,(XX nil lew, or further thnn from New York t lsirlH, Home or Vienna, or from New York to the North Pole. , Sell nt Ideally demonstrated ns a feusllile proposition, the wireless tele phone wns nbout to be commercialized when tho wnr Intervened. Fathers and mothers of America could tulk to their sons In France today as out lined above were the facilities avail able. Hut man has hnd to devote nil M endeavors to the overthrow of militarism, and ns a consequence the peaceful developments of the scientific world have been held In abeyance un til the time when the beast of carnage shall have been cnged and the human family take up ngaln the wonders of the new ern. War Hastens Development. The wnr. If nnythlng, however, hns but hastened the universal utilization of rndlo-telephony. While the world ! I engrossed In the titanic struggle the greatest proniem we nave at from Iielglum to Switzerland, It has hand," he said. "We do not know ex not had time to note nil the remark-1 nctly what causes them, but from our able progress that has been nccom-, Hfst experiments we know thnt they pllshed In the conversion of the "theoretical" to the "practical" the dream turned reality. Aviation was a hazardous game In America before the wnr scoffed nt Not Afraid of Hangman. There are said to be nbout 20,)0 Crccho-Slovak troops In a single group with the Itnllan army. They were trained near the hill town of Perugia, and then moved to the bnttlo front. They are mostly deserters from the Austrian army, and their uniform cheerfulness, In view of the fact thnt a hangman's rope possibly awaits them, should they be Pnp'ured, is re markable. Rut Italy Is taking no chances with these Invaluable addi tions to her fighting force, who, though Correct Standing Position. Practice this standing position If you want to grow straight nnd tull. Place yonr heels nearly together, the toes pointed slightly outwnrd, the legs rigid, the trunk and hend well erect, and the ahoulders somewhat back, so that the chest can expnnd freely. The nrms should hnng easily at the sides, the fingers slightly bent with the thumbs la front You will feel self-conscious at first when standing correctly, because the more unnatural the position aeetna to yon, the more Incorrect your stand- ns me sport or tiureiicvil fanatics. Tel at this iiiomcnt tho winged mem bers of our ulr cuvalry take to the clouds with the same nonchalance thnt the average motorist tunes up for a trip to the seashore or mountains. Kobhed of Its Imttlo dangers aviation toiiny stands out as an accomplished fact, to bo negotiated with ease, com fort mid safety. Our boys after the war will turn thilr garages Into hnn gars. The aerial postman breaking records today between New York und Washington Is a harbinger of the new era of air transportation. So after the war the wireless tele phone will be developed ns n cusual commercial asset and men will talk with their business partners In Lon don, Paris nnd Rome, say the scien tists, Just 'is today they use the tele phone to communicate with Atlanta or Chicago. In the army nnd navy of the United Slates this fall, radio-telephony Is playing a potent part In the business of winning the war. Thousands of young men who go up to the radio arms of the service are linking togeth er the fighting forces of the nation so thnt each and every separate unit Is closely wilted under n single guid ance, working cohesively for the one supreme attulninent and lit n moment's notice In tte most Intimate contact with their military directors. The great vrnblcm In radio-telephony at first "N'ns the question of suflUient energy font nil. It was nec essnry to develop transmitting sta tions capable of generating high-frequency currents and radiating them so that the currents Induced In the re ceiving apparatus when rectified would cause no disturbing noise in the telephone receiver. It was neces sary also to find the means by which the amplitude of the high frequency currents could be controlled and mod ulated by the voice so that the ampli tude of radiated waves followed close ly every variation In the voice. Brought Under Control. All of these difficulties have been overcome In the last few years by the world's renowned scientists. A sys tem of control has been bullf up with the pllotron ns Its potential pivot so that the amount of energy In the wire less telephone transmitter need be no larger than that commonly used In standard telephone circuits. It has been found possible to connect up this rndln telephone with the regular tele phone lines so that conversation may be carried out between two people, both of whom iire.connected with the radio stations by means of the regu lar hind Hues. Two fields of activity for radio-telephony opened up with the develop ment of the first wireless telephone. The first was for long distance where wire telephony was Impossible over submiirlne cables nnd expensive on hind. The other was for short dis tances between ships at sea, and be tween land stations. Atmospheric Conditions. Transoceanic communication Is like ly to be developed faster than Inland rndlo-ti-lephony. It was pointed out some time ago by J. .T. Carty, the elec trical mglneer whose achievement Hindu possible the first wireless tele phone messages from New Yoi to I 'ear! Harbor, Hawaii, that transmis sion ncross the ocean was easier than n cross land because there were fewer atmospheric disturbances. "Overcoming these disturbances M are greater in summer man ui winter, so are probably caused by electrical disturbances In the atmosphere. Theo retically any number of messuges can be kept separate by tuning tho nppn- they wear tho Itnllnn gray-green uni form, carry on their collars the stripes, red nnd white, of their natlonnl Bo hemlim colors. They are to be used only when Italy strikes her next blow, nnd can advance lnstend of re tire. Judging by the way things are going for Austria, the smiling, singing Roheinlans ought soon to be finding their hands full. Thoroughly dry bran will quickly cleanse the finer velvet nnd woolen fabrics. Ing position hns been In the past. Prac tice for n while at home until the po sition will become r.s natural to you ns breathing. An Incorrect standing or sitting position Is responsible for a multitude of Ills, both beauty and or ganic. This is dun to the fact that the entire orgnnlc system Is thrown out of plnce and so cannot perform Its work properly. Woman suffrage was approved at the convention of the Minnesota Stt.te Bar association. Clouds nil us and other devices. Practical!) when It comes to the rapid vibrations necessary to carry the human voice, the number Is very limited. There Is no wuy of preventing anyone within the zone of communication from tak ing any message his Instrument Is tuned to. And If there' were many messages at once they would Interfere with each other." It would appear now that these dlf Puillles wer. being overcome for, ac cording to reports from the battle fields of France, the wireless tele phone Is proving a mighty valuable as set In the maneuvers of modern war fare, despite all the gunfire and Hie. disturbed atmospheric conditloiis.Jo Ing over the top In trench warfare, the old reliable telephone was a handy asset In commulcatlng to the rear the. results of the advance. Rut lately the tnHijM have been going forward so fast that as six n as one telephonic linn would be set up another extension would be necessary to keep pace wlrb the flying Yankees. "Helios" From the Clouds. It lh III the air service that tlie wire less telephone now Is being employed to such remarkable advantage. Voice ont of the air, messages filtering down through the clouds, report the obser vations made during a reconnaissance flight and convey to headquarters thr valued Information as to the move ments of the enemy troops. It Is said the nirpltmcs now In (light uncoil n long strand of wire which acts as the antennae for transmission of the message. An Observer In n huge 'plane, noting the desertion of a village by the retreating Huns, has hut to take up the telephone and "hello" his chief with the Important message. Instniitcr the Yankees aro away In pursuit.' The Incandescent lump plays nn Im portant part In the great game of wire less telephony from air fleet to land battlements. A tiny lamp that can generate one horsepower of energy Is wed to receive the faint currents, ami a larger one boosts the currents sn that the ordinary telephone apparatus can receive them. According to r.-port. It Is n common I occum nee for a young American or French aviator now to be talking to base headquarters while Hying high In the heavens hi) to n 1'X miles away. With the receiving apparatus on the earth attuned to take the contact of wave lengths from his sending appar atus nlofl he Is able to rctort Instant ly on the developments below. The wireless telephone has been lit tle more than ten years on the way In the matter of actual demonstration of theories long held tenable. It began with simple experiments in the New York laboratories of Professor Lee lie Forest, who succeeded In transmitting a distance of a few feet across a ta ble without wires. Message of Peace. It was first employed at sea on ship board in July, 1007, In reporting yacht races from the yacht Thelma In Put-In-Rr.y, a distance of four miles. Next experiments were made on the battle ship Connecticut off Cape foil. With out wires messages were relayed to the battleships Kentucky and Illinois, a distance of eight miles. Flom this beginning radlo-telephnny wns developed Kl triins-oceiinle communication became possible. All that lias been done In a military way cannot be revealed until the war Is over, hut It Is certain then to unveil some startling disclosures. It seems certain, for one thing, thnt the mes sage of peace, proclaiming the over throw of nernian militarism and tho 1 triumph of democracy, will be relayed I .,.!... .1., ihi.iiml It. a t.r.,,.1.1 I... II... wireless telephone n voice out of the clear sky proclaiming the dawn of the great day. Manless Bombing Plane Invented. Jacob Welsbnum of Cincinnati, Ohio, has Invented what he calls the "Wels bnum manless bombing plane." He claims the machine, without the aid of human hands nfter It lenveg the ground, can be propelled through the air at terrific speed townrd nn objec tive upon which It will automatically release death-denllng bombs. Japanese claim to have Invented matches that wfll light perfectly even w.hen wet. He Takes the Blue One. Of courso you've henrd nbout the hnrdworked guy whose Job wns to pick the blossoms off tho fumlly cen tury plnnt; the bloke who sticks the spots on double-blnnV. dominoes nnd 'be culprit whose life work Is making bird seed for curitoo clocks, but the chiimpeen, double-bowknotted, flontln' axled and vuleunlzed wnr loafer Is the cuss who snld he was doing war work by picking up the stitches his wife dropped when she knitted. Indlauapo 11 Star. CALLOUS AMID HORRORS OF WAR Grewsome Sights of Battle Fail to Shake Nerves of Yanks. JUICKLYAOAPT THEMSELVES Admiration of French and British Vet erans Is Aroused by Conduct of Americans on Bloody Bat tlefields of France. With the American Army. The cal lousness nnd steudy nerves of fresh American troops In recent advances have gladdened the hearts of veteran British und French who have observed them, as well us tilled with prldu their own ollleers. The horror of warfare Is more tip pureHt during nn offensive when nn army Is advancing than at any other time; even during u defensive nctlon In a retreat. Attacking troops advance over the enemy's positions, dotted with dend nnd dying, then dig In nnd fight among the corpses and maimed. Often In n counter-attack they are temporari ly thrust buck n few yards, and there dig In and fight agirin, this time among the bodies of their own fullen com rades. When their ndvnnce becomes deeper nnd the enemy's retreat more general, ns In Von Roehm's retirement from the Mnrne to the Vesle, the terrain be comes even more ghastly. A wide belt of country Is littered with dead men nnd dead horses. The advancing urmy, eager to maintain contact with the enemy nt all times, has no time to bury or burn these corpses, respec tively. The supporting troops follow ing up the advance guards must live nnd eat among these grewsome sights. Never Feased Them. Fresh, untried Americnns, who had not seen the frlghtfulness of wnr, nl though they had been trained In Its artifice and hud been In the line In quiet sectors, traversed the ghastly country like veterans, never turning a hulr nt the sight of dend, friends or foes, even when they enme upon such sights ns Reddy farm, Rellevue farm. Clergies, Serfages et Nesles and Sergy. In these places, particularly the first two mentioned, the bodies of the Pmsslun Guardsmen were literally lying In heupa, for these picked troops WIPER OUT OF THE ...umj-j. rriyllii h mmnnirmmnimrmmn ,p""Ti I i i 1 This Is one of the small Rritlsh tanks that do such vuliaiit service in wljilng cut the muchiiie-gun nests that tliu enemy relics un tu wake ifuud his retreat. FOE FEARS FRENCH TANKS With the American Armies. Greater laurels dally are being won by the French light tanks which are co-operating with the Amerlcun forces In pushing the Germans back toward the Rid no. Among the many Individual fents of the tanks und their drivers which have come to light, one of the most Interest ing Is thut of Rrlgudler Celller, who bus been decorated with the cross of the Legion of Honor for his work In a light tunk which enabled 15 American soldiers to capture 700 Germans. Several hundred of these tanks led tho counter-offensive from the Vlllers Cotterets forest in July, which marked whut appears to have been the turning point of the war. They broke through the enemy's Hues, destroying Ids ma chine guns, overcoming strong centers of resistance nnd spreading panic r.4d demoralization in the German ranks. Where the infantry was preceded by the "chars d'ussaut," us the French HUN SELLS SUPPLIES SEIZED French Forced by Germans to Pay In i Coin for Rations They Once Owned. I With the American Troops In France. Renewed evidence of Gerninn 1 ruthlessness In dealing with the civil I inn population of Invaded territories I ;r contained In a captured army order. It prescribes the treatment and the procedure to be followed in a section jouth of the Vesle river (Mnrne sali ent). All the Inhabitants capnble of work ing, the order says, must be used for the needs of the army, regardless of their age. Their "salaries" aro to he paid In paper currency nt the rate of 50 cents u day ns tho maximum for men ; 40 cents for men and women be tween the ages of seventeen and twen ty j and 30 cents for boys from fifteen to seventeen. The Inhabitants, however, must pay In French gold or silver for their ra tions. The supplies, of course, were tuken from the population before be ng gold back to them. " had been told to maintain their strong point positions until death, and In most cases they followed orders. Tho dead were In tho distorted posi tions that Indicated how tho end had come to them. Those killed In inn-chlne-guu lilts were smashed to bits, the effect of hand grenades und bombs which American advance guards hud tossed In among them after working round their flanks and getting In be hind them. Occasionally one saw German snip ers or niachlno gunners sprawled Hat on the ground at the foot of a tree nfter they had been shot out of their camoullaged positions among Its foli age. The most sickening sights were where bodies of the enemy had nt tciripted to make stunds In ditches or beside sunken roads and had been trapped by American enfilade machine gun lire. The deadly automatic rllles hud ripped through whole lines of derailing, and Investigation frequently showed that every man's body wns pierced by seven or eight bullets nnd that frequently the sariiu bullet passed SIGNAL MEN HUSTLE Thw Down n MnrV Dmirllu oc I ucy nave lu nuin nauiuii u ' , rigni nages. Wire Connection Is Prime Necessity No Matter How Fast Shells May Fly. With the American Army In France. The signal corps men had to do some fust work during the recent lighting to keep up with the Infantry und to keep communication always open be tween hcudquHrter nnd tho village newly captured where the doughboy were. Tho slgnnl corps wns the connecting link between the Infantry, artillery, ambulance service und headquarter. It's no cinch being the signal corps lifter a division thut Is continually gaining ground. "As soon as the Infantry makes a push you have to get a telephone line strung Into the furthest ruins or wood or wheat field, no matter how nuiny German shells ure sputtering madly over the urea. Then, about the time you get a wire MACHINE-GUN NESTS call them, the advance was thrco miles n day. It was these same French light tunks which preceded the Americans In their advance upon Juvlgny and Teruy on the Solssons plateau. One of them, manned by a lieutenant, killed more than -(M) Germans on tho plateuu. Iiociimeiits thnt have come Into the hands of tho French staff show that tho Germans uro greutly worried by the light tanks und ure studiously coaching their men In methods of de fense against tliein. The light cars have the advantage of greater speed and of being more easily handled than the heavier tanks. They require u crew of only two men, a driver and u gunuer, and carry one onc-and'U-hulf-liich gun and u machluu K"ii. r rude unionists In Sednlln, Mo have heel-tile Interested In co-opcratlon and u.-f selling stock to start u store. HARD DAYS FOR THE CROOKS New Draft taw Makes It Easy to Hunt Down Criminals. Clevelund. It's getting harder every day for nn honest crook to get by. Po lice here are not satisfied to hunt crooks In the regular way, but are go ing out of their line to look them up, according to the plaints of the under world. It Isn't enough to make them give up their eusy life, earned ut tho expense of the city, to register und go to wnr, but now the local police are go ing to get a lot more of them by means of registration cards for the draft. Many of tho robbers nnd other crim inals have escaped detection through a series of nllnses, but with their reg istration under tho eighteen to forty five cull they had to make known their right names, and police assert that it will be "easy picking" now to gather In a number of men who have been wanted for some time. French stock! of absinthe are being converted luto IwredleuU for explosives. v i through three or. four men. Those corpses looked like heaps of rags or discarded uniforms nnd equipment, so closely did they overlap one another. No Trace of Nervousness. Rut, despite all, tho Americans inarched forward, Btopped three or four times a day for meals, nnd then made camp, nnd slept nt night nmld the horrible surroundings without ever doing more than showing n surprising preliminary Interest In the matter. If they saw a corpse In khaki they looked It over closely to ee If they knew who It wus. Only occasionally did they have time to Inter It ; that wus left to' the burying parties that followed them up. As they walked through woods and fields to get water or supplies, they Implanted rifles, bayonets down, In the ground to mark the spot of every dead American they discovered. Rut there wns no trace of nervous ness and no evidence of any of the men worrying or brooding over the fate of their fallen comrades. The corpses were entirely Impersonal to them and never rattled even the new est recruit. Tho doughboys showed no back wardness about appropriating Luger automatic pistols, the most prized souvenir to be hud, from dead Roches, nor did they hesitate to pluck off well camouflaged helmets from the pates of Hun cadaver. stretched along the ground and In - working order, call up headquarters in tell them, "This Is the new post nf Squeedunk; give us n ring to see how she works," along comes another Roche shell and cuts the communication. There's nothing to do hut go out and find the cut nnd fix It, and probably tnore Roche shells are trying to make more cuts In commwilcatlon, or even cut you off. The signal corps hnd wires every where, In bushes, along the ground, on poles left by tho Roches, underground, through ruins. Ifendqnnrters say they never had such qrrfcfc service, and they were never ont of ctmrnnmlnitlon with regiments longer than the few minutes ft took a slgnnl corps nmn tn Inspect the wires and repair a brenk. A signal corps man was stringing some wires ncross n wheat Herd. "Some wnr this," he said. "T An vent had n steep- for more than- lw days. I sup pose T(f fall asleep- on the Job If It weren't for these shells that come whistling nlong. Duck. There romes one !" "JERRY" NEW NrCKiVAME FOR GERMAN SOLDER It's Jerry nowr not Frirzlev It hns been noted' recently hi soldiers' letters thnt the prt name for the enemy among trie Yankees In France- Is ".Terry." At the beginning of the war the name- was applied only to Gernian aviators, but It Is rap idly being adopted' for all' of the troops. J HAN0 MIRROR SAVES LIFE Used to Make Signals of Dictrese by survivors of Torpedoed Steamer.- London. A woman's hand mirror was the means of snvlng fiO lVves from the torpedoed liner Gatway Oistle. Among the survivors on a raft was n woman who took from her hnmChag u small mirror nnd suggested one of the sailors use It for making heilographle signals. The attempts was made and the sig nals brought up a destroyer at full speed which took off the survivors from the raft as welt as a number of sailors clinging to wreckage. SERVANT LACK AIDS HOTELS Scarcity of Help In Homes Sending Families to New York Hostclrles. New York. Although the fuel prob lem which developed in New York homes last year is to a great extent re sponsible for the unprecedented busi ness of the apartment hotels this fall, there buve been new developments which increase the Influx of apartment hotel dwellers throughout the city. The greutest Individual reason Is the serv ant problem. Persons who have had servant staffs for yeurs without a change have lieen known to lose ns many as three In a single week lutely because of unprece dented llemund for experienced help and tho prices offered for It. The apartment hotel habit Is easily formed, and with the scarcity of fuel, scarcity of help, scarcity of suitable apartments and scarcity nf vans to ac complish large movings the fact that there Is hardly an apartment hotel va cancy left In New York Is not especial ly remarkable. BUILD MOTOR MAIL SLEIGH Vehicle Designed for Mall Delivery Work In A'aska Completed for Government Cleveland, O. The government's first motor sleigh, designed for mull delivery work In Alusku, hns been completed here and shipped to the West coust, where It will get a test tour before entering the regular work of delivering mall In the frozen North. The machine was Invented by F. G. Homer, former Clevelunder, who for several yeurs hns been with tho motor transport service In Washington. It Is 25 feet long, three feet wide and Is expected to cover ut least 100 miles of Ice or snow truck a day with a burden of 1300 pounds of mull. Present deliv ery In the field the sleigh will euter is mndo by dog teums. What Our Heirs Think. "Our lowest ambitUm should be a life of ninety years," says a noted physician. WelL It Is sort of a lew ambition Just merely to liuug on. Ik ton Transcript. WOMAN'S NERVES HADE STRONG By Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound. Winona, Minn. "1 suffered formor than a year from nervousness, and waj uuu i couiii not rest at night would lie awnkcsnfl get so nervous f would have to B0t up and walk around and In the mornins would be all tired ?uL h r.Md a,)out Lydia E. Pinkhan, ', Vegetable Com. pound and thought 1 would try it. M, nervousness boob left tnn I .1 M well and feel fine In the morning B' j able to do my work. I gladly record mend Lydia 13. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound to make weak nerves atrong." Mrs. ALBERT Soltzi;, ooj OlmBtead St. Winona, Mipn. How often do we hear the exproBaioo among women, "I am so nervous, I run not sleep," or "it seems as though I should fly." Such women should profit by Mrs. Sultze'a experience and gjvi this famous root and herb remojy Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Cum pound, a trial. For forty yean it has been overcom ing such serious conditions as displace ments, inflammation, ulceration, irn-g. clarities, periodic pains, backache, diz tineas, and nervous prostration of women, and is now considered the eUa dard remedy for such ailments. A Cold Proposition When yon are wheezing and sntez ing, coughing and hawking, you're facing a cold proposition. Handle it right. Hales Hoacy of Horehound and Tar quickly relieves bad cswea. All druggists, 2Scts. a bottle. trr Plfc' TotWW thmm Up Against It. A corporal was drilling his squad, ind before he noticed where they with going they had marched right up l u fence, nnd, according to rules, with marking time; The corporal', trying ic remember tho proper command; lonkii puzzled for u moment, then loudly gave the command, "tilt uwuy I'miu i hut fence march !" Important to NTotliere)' Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOItIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Rpnra tha Signature orQCfTt! In Use for Over 'M Yeurs. ChUdrcn Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Safe Excursions.. "There is a deathless Joy In natural icnuty." "Oh, that's one result of the ,-a.sless Sundays." There are more fugitives from. Injus tice thnn from Justice. Suffered Terribly! "Every Step a Torture " Says Mrs. Whilenack But Doan's Cured Her Mrs. Florence Whitonack, M Ann strong Ave., Jersey City, N. J.,, says: "I suffered with rheumntism for six or seven years. Illy limbs and joints were so stiff and swollen, 1 could walk only with diltioully and the pains in my hiiis were bo severe, I could hardly bear tliein. Every stop I took wn torture. My feet and limb were owolli-n and so sore, I could hardly bear my weight on them. Dur ing the niitht I would lie awake for hours and be come so nervous, I would . have- to get up. Dizziness -"bt aume over mo suddenly and my tighl blurred. I was never free from the miserable backaches and rheumatic Btin. 1 used duTerent remedies, hut I didn't get nny better. Then 1 com menced to ue Doan's Kidney Pills. The swellings began to leave rii;lit way and I continued to ue tlx'tii. The pains and aches left my back am! hips and I am cured of tho rheumatism and all signs of kidney trouble." Sworn to acore ROBERT KINO SEIDEL, Notary Fullio. Cat Data's at Aay Star. 60s Bos DOAN'SV FOSTER-KULBURN CO BUFFALO. N. Y. wnpaiaso Young! Kuu uciuuruii aiiu Itchina with Qiticura Ointment Shampoo Wild Cillcsra Snip roMSJJnaBlJBllJ One Hundred Per Cent American. "What can I do to prove my ih'v0 tlnii?" he usked. "Ituy more Liberty bonds," she re tiled for she was 100 per cent f :otlc. Grove's Taateleas chill Tonic 'oatows Tiulltj and eoernT br porlf. nil ana ? r:cbln the blood. Yoo cud noun foal lu SUome onlos, ln IgoiaUog BBoot Frio Sua. A man's Idea of a perfect day ' that which ends by sticking the otlur fellow for the dinner. A torpid llrer condition praranla PrP' food aaalmllallon. Tona up your llv" Wright's Indian Vagrlabla Hlls. Tbar oi i.-nlljr anf sural?. Adv. The world soon forgets a mun ttlns his laurels nnd then quits. who The best thing going Is nn unwel come guest. V,..M Granulated Eyelids. VT .,,ratoSBB.Dslna W " quickly relieved by Msriw lyeBeaiedy. NoSmsrting. yes 4 luit nye "i"""" - ..... ! 'u- It ARe otr Bottle or Bosk el Ike tys free write -lurlne ry Remedy Ch Cblcao i Lu J Mi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers