The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 July 1913 — Page 7
WHEN CHINA WAS RECOGNIZED BY UNCLE SAM zOk EWjf ■***»-* Al&UkiHkX' g . wßwff- Oils Rafl^L. /**& g&»*- jXjHnnMS s®/t •& ;-• ~ My mm ■ i ~ WhWWMwW - jl s® ■» ' '' tSsSk I IHK-’;.- wSSSs ~rWßbm) ?ss9m —S# l xzdPf?- ■?• ■:$:•• " • - • - - JjT'.Vj. : - : r/ ? ’' a * :ia^'';,;s ' ,v j»&F : ’ ' ■«£&?■ JB§g* RW* && IWhen President Wilson’s letter recognizing the Republic of China was read to President Yuan Shi Kai this photograph was taken in front of the palace in Pekin formerly occupied by the empress of China. The group includes President Yuan in the center, members Os his cabinet and staff, E. T. Williams, American charge d affaires, and members of the legation staff.
ETON SPORT BRUTAL
Cruelty in Weekly Run of Hounds and Horses. Canon Defends the Practice, Declaring That He Thinks It Good and Keeps Crusading Spirit From Undesirable Activities. London. —Almost under the walls of Eton college a scene was enacted'reeently, which, for sheer brutality, it would be hard to beat. A hard pressed hare which the boys of the college had been hunting with a pack of hounds (for beagles), maintained at the college for this purpose, twice .swam the river with the pack close behind and a half hundred boys yelling like fiends bn the banks, and was in the act of swimming it a third time when it was pulled under and killed amid the enthusiastic cheers of the young Etonians who, of course, are mostly the sons of noblemen and other aristocrats, and form the nucleus of the ruling class of the future in this country. This termination to the regular weekly run of the Eton beagles was a little more brutal than usual, but not much more. The Eton beagles, which are supported by subscriptions, nearly always succeeded in killing, as the phrase goes, when the carcass of the slaughtered hare is whirled triumphantly round the head of the chief boy whip and torn to pieces by the yelping pack, amid whoops of triumph from a gloating field. A similar triumph ot the Eton beagles, it may be remembered, was recalled by that noble sportsman, Lord Rossmore, in his recent book of reminiscences in these words: “One of the prettiest things I ever saw was a hare, very hard pressed, that took to the water and swam right out into the middle with all the hounds after her, but she was, unfortunately, so beat that she was drowned from sheer exhaustion halfway across.” The latest exhibition of brutality at Eton has shocked humanitarians, and an influentially sighed petition was presented the other day to Canon Lyttelton, the reverend head master of Eton college, begging him to do away with the pastime of hare hunting at Eton, on the ground that its effect is “to stimulate cruelty among the young.” This, by the way, is by no means the first petition of the kind that has been laid before a head of the famous college with a similar object, others in the past ‘ having been signed by Herbert Spencer, Sir Frederick Treves, Sir A. Conan Doyle, the late Lord Wolseley and other famous men, but all without avail. After due reflection Canon Lyttelton, who himself is the son of a lord, has replied to the petition in a letter in which he declines to do away with the beagles, and an exceedingly remarkable letter it is. To begin with, this man of God, who, before becoming ' head master of Eton, was the honorable canon of St. Albans, and who is the author, among other books, of one called “Studies in the Sermon of the Mount,” asserts that far from there being an increase of cruelty among English boys, “many educators are hqt without misgivings at the almost unnatural gentleness of the modern schoolboy compared with his forefather.” “How insignificant, then,” says the canon, “must the Influence of this kind of hunting be in the opposite direction.” ' The reverend canon ends his letter by declaring that, “as far as possible, all cruelty has been banished” from the hunting and killing of hares by the Eton boys. Needless to say, his shuffling apologia, it is termed, has called forth a‘ broadside of withering sarcasm. One of those who pay their compliments in the canon in nb uncertain terms is Sir Philip Burne Jones, while among the reverend headmaster’s critics are several old Etonians, one of whom, after recalling Lord Ifossmore’s “pretty sight,” remarks: “That’s my idea of how the youth of the nation should be brought up.
JEALOUSY IN MONKEY CAGE X Susie Breaks Betty’s Leg Because Baldy Is Too Marked in His At tentions to Her. •i — New York.—Mistress Jealousy seems able to slip right through the iron bars of a monkey cage. She performed this feat at the Bronx zoo. Result, Betty, a popular fire-year-old chimpanzee, is laid up with a broken leg. Gossip, as it was bandied about
and that’s why I am in hearty sympathy with Canon Lyttelton’s reasoning. Let him go on as he is going, then he will run no risk of offending Lord Bung, or Sir Gorgias Midas, or other influential people who have their sons at Eton. I was nearly seven years there myself, and was never troubled by any stupid humanitarian teaching.” ROOSEVELT TO REDUCE FAT Strenuous Colonel Will Ride Horseback and Hunt Last Indians in Arizona. New York.—Ease and an office chair and too much sugar on his cereal have done the trick for Colonel Roosevelt. He's getting fat—again. There’s only one course possible to the vigorous colonel when this bulbous condition of the equator develops. He at once determines to get out where he can ride a horse and holler and work that superfluity down Jo a hollow. So that this summer, according to the gossip that has fizzed up from Oyster Bay, he will go out to Arizona and hunt for a lost tribe of Indians. • Incidentally, he will re-discover the last hole in his belt. “Lost Indians in Arizona?” said Doctor Goddard of the department of anthropology of the Museum of Natural History. “Not precisely. But it is true that there are some out there that have never been found.” It appears that there are Indians scattered all over Arizona —the Wallapals and the Hopis and the Pinas and i F I .»»>.--» JET I ? Jwl if I'•* •• • •■■ * L. / J\ yv 7-a ■ - Theodore Roosevelt. the Papagoes and the Apaches, and chief of them all the NavajoeS. A good many of them earn an honest living by giving an aboriginally modified Bill show for the benefit of summer tourists. Others keep sheep and scream every time one touches schedule K. Still others peddle Massachusetts blankets in bright colors to persons from Boston. And? others live out in the mountains, far from the maddening white man, just about as their anoestors did about the time that Cortez discovered the toehold as a means of getting rich quickly. "The wildest lot,” said Doctor Goddard, “are the Navajoes. They are perfectly peaceful, but we have had no report on the tribes in the western part of Arizona. There ate men twenty-five years old who have never seen a white man. No doubt a Visit to them would be entertaining and instructive.” It will be if the colonel Is the vlaitor. Lightning Kills Brakeman. Landers, N. Y.—While standing on top of a moving freight car, C. R. McCauley, a brakeman, was struck by a bolt of lightning and killed, thus putting to flight the old theory that lightning will not strike a moving railroad train.
; animal circles, had it that Baldy, Lothario of the chimpanzee cage, of late has been overdevoted to Betty. This attitude of Baldy has made no great hit with Susie, a more than intelligent chimpanzee. Betty, apart on a bar, was quietly making ready for an afternoon’s diversion, Susie, who waa swinging on a trapeze, noted her. Susie thereupon jumped from the trapeze, giving It a vicious push that sent It crashing into Miss Betty, at her toilet Doctor Blair put Betty’s leg In splints.
MUST SWIM FOR DIPLOMA Columbia University Student Passes Other Tests, but Balks at Swimming Pool. New ' York. —Columbia university has taken a new stand in the matter of graduation requirements. The anthorities declined to award a diploma to Felix Metzger Rosenstock at the commencement exercises unless he could prove himself cured of caroanserinusabmetu. In other words, there is a rule at Columbia that no college degree can be won unless the candidate has learned to swim the length of the pool in the gymnasium. The only exception is allowed in case of physical disability, attested by a physician’s certificate. Rosenstock, who passed all the other examinations, completely balked at swimming throughout his college course, and as an excuse declared he was suffering from a terrible skin disease known as the caroanserinusabmetu. He obtained a physician’s signa, ture to this statement. The physical director could find no visible trace of such a malady, but from a Latin lexicon he evolved this explanation of the student’s affliction: "Caro/ meaning flesh; anserinus, resembling the goose; abmetu from fear; or, freely translated gooseflesh from fear.” The authorities, however, did not have sufficient sense of humor |fl cause them to extend leniency to Ros enstock. CAT NO MATCH FOR HIPPO Caliph 11. Routs Louise Inglorlously When He Plunges Into Big Water Tank. New York.—George Sichert, a keep er in the Central park menagerie, wai aroused by a wild scrambling in the cage of the hippopotamus. When h< turned he saw the favorite mouser oi the menagerie, a cat named Louise perched on the back of the park’s big hippo. The cat had been seized by th« tall and thrown Into the quarters oo cupled by Caliph 11. by a mischievoui small boy. Caliph was soon imitating a bucking broncho, but to no avail. Louise had secured a firm hold with all her claws The grunts of Caliph 11. started all th< lions roaring. Sichert edged into th< cage to remove the cat, but not quite soon enough. Caliph floundered Inta the tank, and Louise let go. Slcheyt lifted the dripping cat oui of the tank with a broom. It wai only a few days ago that Louise went to sleep In the hay and barely es caped being eaten alive by the hippo WILLIAM TELL IS OUTDONf Insane Voyager Tries to Shoot Cig arette Out of Mouth of Jamaloan Negro. New York.—When the steamer Ora ba was nearing Cartagena, Colombia John George Cunningham of South ampton, a first cabin passenger, force* a Jamaican negro to stand ten yardi away while he attempted to shoot i cigarette out of his mouth. Cunning ham fired six shots before the nolst brought Chief Officer Green to th» scene. Greea tripped Cunningham up, but I took four sailors to lash his hands an< feet and carry him to the hospital where Dr. Morton declared the mai was insane from alcohol. Cunninghan was put ashore at Colon in a strait japket Performs Own Wedding Ceremony. Beaver, Pa. —Dr. Askelon Mercer seventy-five, and Sarah L. Calgrove sixty-five, performed their own mar riage ceremony in the presence oi witnesses here. This is the groom’i sixth matrimonial venture, and h< declares that all former ceremoniei were performed in the same manner Girl Without “Perfect Feet." La Crosse, Wis.—“ Perfect feet” to the standard of the class formed bj Miss Amanda Clement of the Young Woman’s Christian association here Not one In the first class of seventy five is without a pedal flaw.
Divorce Follows Honeymoon. New York.—Because her husband compelled her to remain In a dark room alone during a thunderstorn while they were on their honeymoon Mrs. Edward Galllnger has asked foi a separation. President Braves the Mumps. Washington. — President Wllsoa , braved the danger vs mumps to saj • “Hello” to Joseph, Jr., son of Seo retary Tumulty, who had coutmcted the disease at sehooL
DANGERS TO BLONDES PERFECT PREY FOR BURNING < RAYS OF THE SUN. Serious Complications In the Skin Are Set Up by Foolish Exposure— Some Precautions for the Fair One. The brunette is more or less protected from the violence of the sun’s rays by the very color of her skin and hair. The darker she is naturally the greater her protection, and the less care she need take.* But just the reverse is the case with the blonde. The fairer she is the more perfect prey Is she for the burning rays of the sun, and the more dangerous is it for her Jo go about bareheaded, as so many of the girls do at the seaside and in the mountains. If you are of light complexion and have ever been so foolish as to expose yourself in a bathing suit to the sun-rays on the beach for hours at a time, as some do, you will remember with considerable distinctness how you suffered from the blistering of your skin. You did not know, perhaps, that very serious complications in the skin were set up in this way, ‘and that nature has all it can do to thi\w oft the poisons generated by your foolish exposure. The protection of your eyes by the shade cast by the hat-brim is no less important, for the glare of the strong sunlight, especially at the seashore, where the sun-rays are reflected powerfully from sand and water, is most trying upon the eyes and through the eyes upon the entire system. The point of all the discussion is that there was never a more stupid, unphyslological and foolish fashion than that of going bareheaded in summer, especially for blondes, and as most of us are more blonde than brunette, it applies to a large majority of men and women living in our latitude. If you would be well and really enjoy your summer to the full be sensible enough to wear your hat, and if you want to be very sure add tinted glasses to protect your eyes from the glare. NEW STYLES OF BRASSIERES Coming of Warm Weather Has Brought Out Many Clever and Dainty Designs. With the coming of warm weather many new styles of brassieres have been put on sale. The heavier linen brassieres, some of them edged with Irish plcot and with inset motifs of Irish lace for decoration, have given place to filmy, light brassieres of lace and net and ribbon. These thin brassieres have much of the strength of the heavier kinds and are as carefully fitted and made. One of the dainty new brassieres is made for decollete wear, cut with a low V back and front. It laces in back and hooks in front, and so can be nicely adjusted. It is made of fine embroidery and lace, and lace straps hold It in place over the shoulder. It Is really almost as dainty in appearance as an underbodice of chiffon, and of course it is far more durable, much more easily cleaned —for it can be put in the washtub without suffering for it —and suitable for a woman much too
RIBBON TRIMMINGS jEffi jL. P ifws v The darker hat Is of black and ■white striped straw with a smooth facing of black velvet around- the brim. The bow of black moire ribbon is placed at an effective angle against the uprolled brim. The white hat is of plain wood fiber TO KEEP AUTO VEIL CLEAN / —• Washable Chiffon When Soiled Can Easily Be Cleaned If Care Is Exercised. Cleaning adds so much to the original cost of any article of apparel that it is often well to pay a little more In the beginning to get something that will stand soap and water. A washable chiffon veil, therefore, Is a real economy. Os course, any sort of chiffon veil can be satisfactorily Cleaned in gasoline, but it is rather unpleasant to have anything cleaned tn thia way come in close contact with the skin of the face. When a washable chiffon veil is soiled fold it neatly and tack the folds securely with basting thread. Then wash the veil carefully in soapy water and rinse it in salt water to set the color. Press the folded veil between a couple of heavy bath towels to get the water out, and do not wring it at ill. When as much water Has been pressed out as it is possible to get out cut tts bastings and pull them out. Lay
stout to wear one ot me chiffon bodices. Some of the daintiest brassieres are made of heavy cluny lace mounted on net. They are but slightly boned, yet boned enough to keep their shape. They are a really beautiful foundation for a net or chiffon bodice, and they are as durable as the plainer brassieres of heavy linen. REDFERN’S LATEST jjjL Mlle. Laravia in a Redfern model of charmeUse, partly veiled by black chiffon with silver beads at the corsage; a typical model of the new sleeveless style, revealing the shoulders. The necklace is drawn up into the coiffure. Black Summer Hats. All black hats are being shown for summer wear, and they are very smart. The shapes are growing gradually in size, and the latest fad is a black tulle fold hanging from the rim of the hat. This is not more than an inch in width, and gives a draped effect to an otherwise strictly tailored hat Some of these new creations are trimmed with elaborate bows of black stiff ribbon which stand straight up at the back. A black tagal sailor had One of these hanging tulle folds as its only trimming. To Take Off Shiny Appearance. Sponging with a cloth .dipped in borax water and then pressing carefully on the wrong side will take away much of that shiny look from coats and skirts.
with a simply arranged bow of bright or silk ribbon, held In front by a cluster of silk fruit, showing bright red and green shades. HEART SHAPED SCENT BAG Novel Arrangement Is Made of White Silk Marquisette and Filled With Dried Roses. A novel heart-shaped scent bag is made of sheer white silk marquisette and is filled with dried roses, and additionally perfumed with the natural odor of the flowers. The same idea may be effectively carried out in violets or In lavender. The rose and violet are particularly good for perfuming the contents of bureau drawers, wardrobes, trunks, etc., imparting the delicate fragrance of the natural flower to the gown, waist or lingerie. The lavender bags are appropriate for perfuming the linen closet or chest. The dried flowers in their natural colorings are visible through the marquisette cases, making them very attractive. Morning Cap. The following is an easy way to make a pretty cap: Cut a circle, 20 inches in diameter, out of dotted muslin, dr any other material. Put a 3inch hern all the way around the circle, and sew narrow lace, an inch or wider, straight on the other edge of the hem. Run about 20 inches of elastic through the hem, and fasten. Put a small ribbon bow on one side. They launder easily when the elastic is removed, as they are then put a flat circle. one edge of the veil straight on the ironing board and iron it dry with a moderately hot iron. Then iron each of the other sides dry, and then iron the middle of the veil until it, too, la dry. By ironing the edges first the veil can be ironed without stretching or pulling out of shape. Lay the veil flat on a bed for an hour or two after it is ironed. If it is ironed in this way it will keep its shape and will not wrinkle easily. A Place for School Books. Provide a place for your children’s school books, and so prevent their being lost and laid about all over the house. In one household I know of shelves were put up in an end part of the hall, each child having its own shelf. A curtain could be hung in front of the shelves to prevent dust from entering. Keeping Buttons On. If buttons tear away from a woolen sweater or woolen fabric, try sewing them on with a small linen button on the wrong side. Pass the needle through both buttons at one time.
CAMP FIRE OLD GUN IS VALUABLE RELIC Piece of Artillery In Cemetery at Kendall, N. Was Once Used by 17th Pa. Artillery. Referring to your article by George W. Sweet, Troy,-N. Y., asking about the history of a gun in the cemetery at Kendall, N. Y., on the soldiers’ plot, the gun being marked on the muzzle No. 6, 17th Pa. L. A., and came from the Rock Island arsenal, the history j ot the 17th Pa. Battery is as follows: The 17th regiment, known .in the State Militia as the Ist Pa. Art., was originally formed as a battalion, Sept. 16, 1814, at Camp Dupont, under the command of Maj. Andrew M. Prevost, writes Andrew S. Collum of Baldmount, Pa., in the National Tribune. Nov. 19 of that year it was organized as a regiment, when Maj. Prevost was chosen lieutenant-colonel, Cornelius Stevenson first major and Thomas W. Duffield second major, Col. A. J. Pleasanton succeeded Col. Prevost In command, and upon his resignation Col. Henry Bohlen was elected. This regiment was always relied on by the civil authorities to respond promptly at their call in case of disturbance which they were unable to suppress. In 1844, under Col. Pleasanton, It rendered efficient service In preventing the destruction of public and private property by a mob. June 6, 1859, an election of field officers was held, and under this organization it was mustered into the service of the United States by Maj Charles F. Ruff, April 25, 1861. The following were the field officers: Francis E. Patterson, colonel; Robert O. Tyler, lieutenant-colonel; Wm. A. Leech, major; Gideon Clark was appointed adjutant. Recruiting was commenced April 15, and it was ready with the maximum number foi muster-ln on the 18th. The companies had armories where they were quartered and the new re crults drilled, rendering it unneces sary to go inter a general camp oi rendezvous. The officers served unde, their old commissions, and the regi ment was known in the service as the Ist Pa. Art. until the order of Gov, Curtin, dated May 15, 1861, changed Its designation to that of the 17th Pa Since the 19th of April, when the 6th Mass, was fiercely assailed in the streets of Baltimore, Md., no troope had passed through the city, and ne attempt had been made to force a pas sage. Troops which had reached the capital from the north had pro eeeded via Annapolis. The necessity of holding the direct route had be come Imperative, and Gen. Patterson determined at all hazards to open it He accordingly ordered Col. Patter son to proceed with the 17th Pa. on May 8 to Perryville, there to be joined by Capt. (since Gen.) T. W. Sher man’s light battery and five companies of the 3d U. S., all well armed and supplied with ammunition, thence to embark on transports for Baltimore, landing at Locust Point. Col. Patterson made such disposition 01 his force as to enable him most successfully to repel attack, and commenced his march through the city, which for nearly three weeks had been subject to mob rule. Without molestation or any symptoms of a hostile demonstration he arrived at Camden Station five days later. May 13 Gen. Butler took permanent military possession of the city, through which the *tide of volunteers soon began to flow, not again to be disturbed. June 10 the 17th Pa. was sent to the Rockville expedition, and later were at Point of Rocks, Bunker Hill and other places, and was mustered out Aug. 2. Therefore, you will see the comrades have secured one of the most valuable relics of the Civil war, as it dates back to 1814. A Soft Answer. When some of 'Sherman’s bummers were out getting supplies a lieutenant had an altercation with a farmer’s wife. “You’re a low-down thief, and the truth ain’t in you,” said the lady. ' “Madame,” rejoined the lieutenant, “Is it as bad as that? Wouldn’t you believe anything I say?” “Not a thing; I wouldn’t believe a thing you uttered. You can’t tell the truth.’’ "In that case,” he replied, “permit me to say that you are a perfect lady.” How He Was Caught. “How did you happen to get caught?” asked a prisoner at Andersonville of a “fresh fish,” who hap? pened to be an East Tennesseean. “Wai,” he answered, “I was agoin’ home on a pay roll, an’ they dun ketched me befo’ I got half way up the mountains.” Shooting at the Tar Gate. A “green” Irish recruit, at practice, was singularly consistent in never hitting the target. “What in the world are you firing at?” wrathfully exclaimed the instructor, who was standing near a freshly tarred fence, some distance from the target. “I’m firing at the gate, as ye told me,” was the reply. “What gate, you fool?” asked the Instructor. “The tar gate, of course,” replied Pat, with charming simplicity. Brains He Had—Nix. A captain came upon a hardworking • Irishman, tolling, bareheaded, In the hot sun on the fortifications. “Don’t you know,” said the captaliL "that to work in the hot sun without a hat Is bad for your brains?” “D’ye think,” asked the Irishman, with wrinkled brow, “that Oi’d ever enlisted if 01 had any brains?” In Germany there'has been invented a balloon fabric having an inner lining of pulverized cork to overcome the danger* of the sun’s heaL
COMPLICATION OF WOJMS ILLS Yields to Lydia E. Pinkham’s V egetable Compound. Athens, Texas.—‘‘l had a complication of diseases, some of them of long
standing. I wrote to you for advice and took Lydia IL' Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and some other things that you suggested. I must confess that I am much better in every way and have been relieved of some of the worrt troubles. Myneigh-
liiiyi? A-*
bors say I look younger now than I did fifteen years ago.”—Mrs. Sarah R. WhatleY, Athens, Texas, R. F. D. No. 8. Box 92. We know of uo other medicine which has been so successful in relieving tha suffering of women, so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E» Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In nearly every community you wiR find women who have been restored to health by this famous medicine. Almost every woman you meet knows of tha great good it has been doing among* suffering women for the past 30 years. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seeking health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, many of them state that it has saved them from surgical operations. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. CANfiDA’SOFFERINB TO THE SETTLER S AMERICAN RUSH TO WESTERN CANADA IS INCREASING I Free Homestead. S ' ' I In the new Districts of A J Manitoba, SaskatcheM I J wan and Alberta there are thousands of Free ft Sr Honiesteads left, which Wf — tothe luanrinakingetilry Js It a3 *,al In 3 years time will be ' * '■w’Jmhl worth from 120 to F 25 per acre. These lands are well adapted to grain ( growing and cattle raising. KXCKLLKNT BAILWAY FACUJTIXB In many cases the railways tn Canada have been built in advance of settlement and'in a Vs IHm short time there will not be a settler who need be more than / '*l fc ten or twelve miles from a line tf/J! of railway. Railway Rates are •[, ‘I regulated by Government Com’ll •> mission. | fffl I * Social Conditions Inll I The American Settler Is at home ■MW 1 In Western Canada. He Is not a BS A Stranger In a strange land, havH w XVwR nearly a million of bls own Kft A- Vk tx people already settled there. If Swl -A vLM you desire to know why the con(SHg MC aitlon of the CanadlanSettlerls IBK prosperous write and send for literature, rates, etc., to W-S-NETHERY, r-ISL* Sts CARDXTR RLDU, Tolads, Okla, m> r 3lv3£s ßl4Tr,oU “* Tarwinal Bld ( .,la<Uu.p4U Canadian Government Agents, or address Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Cuaia. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief-Permanent Cure CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fait Purely vegetable — act surely AnTrpc but gently on mitt if * the liver. W ™ Stop after 0 Lillsl dinner distress—cure , indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the eyea. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICt Genuine must bear Signature 1- 1 For Teething Troubles, Colic and Diarrhoea Give Baby KOPP’S BABY’S FRIEND Recommended by physicians and druggists. Dr. I D. 8. Hatfleid, Grand Rapids, Mich., writes: I am i well pieased with your BABY’S FKIEND, Have used several bottles, large sire, with unusually good and satisfactory results. Thanking you sos the sample you sent me and .rtshing you sucoeaa. Writeforonrleafletcontainlngmany useful hints about the care of baby. AT DRUGGISTS, 10, 25 and 50 CENT* Get a free sample from your druggist. KOPP’S BABY’S FRIEND CO., YORK, PA. “Save the Man” Try HARVET'B "5 day” TREATMENT tor liquor or drug habit. The formula of a noted phvaiclan that for years has been successfully Used Ln one of the largest sanitariums for liquor and drug habit In the country. Sanitarium price C6O, out prlco 110. If you are Interested, write us. Money refunded if the treatment should notdoall we dials, for It. HAKVEI TREATMENT CO., County rights, sold to 169 XUver Street, responsible agents. Troy, N. I, iRv j| of this paper I Readers "5“ advertised in its columns should I insist upon having what they ask for, I refusing all substitutes or imitations. | PALSY FLY KILLER &!•*■ Neat, clean, or. n.meutal. eonvenl.ut, K cheap. Lull alt Made of metal, can'tsplllortlg over; win not toll oe injure anything. Guaranteed effective. Alldeelereoros.nl - It- =sl exprwa paid for SI.Ma MAKOLD 80MEBS. Ito DeKalb Av..', Brooklyn, M. S, FOR SALE Farm 18 miles from Beaumont. 466 acres, 100 acre* fenced with bog wire, 20 acres In cultivation. Mt young fruit trees. New < room house and narn. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM A.. toils* preparation of merit. Bslp. to .radloat. dandruff, for Rrotorins Color and Beauty to Gray or Fadad Hair. d OO - Mt Druggists, HOW IS YOUB MEMORY? If It is bad. bet ter It; If It is good, perfect It. My nona method rets resulta Easiest thing in th. NOW; get it prep "1A Ttu VESVS' BATH COMFAJiY, Dept. 8-A. D.ss ton. Fnyatts Co., Pa. INVEST »1W or rilors In safe, sound, moneymaking business) at least 20 per sent yearly llvldend guar., with good obanos to make •**-> fei: ■ ■■■■'."• ~ W. N. U.. FORT WAYNR, NO. Z7-WIA,
