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Free Portage. When the postoffice was first open ed at Kal Feng. China, the clerks bad a fight with come men who bought stamps and refused to go away until the stamps were lickc-3 and stuck on their envelopes for them. The for eign postefflees in Palestine are us ually convulsed by a spirit of keen competition. If a parcel exceeding the regulation weight or size is la ban to an office and refused, the trav eller, in the majority of cases, has only to threaten to take it to a rival office and it is straightway received without a murmur. So keen la the rivalry between some of these offices that residents in Palestine possess a free post within certain districts. Be tween Jaffa and the surrounding col onies, and also within Jerusalem, the German and Austrian offices make no charge for the delivery of local let ters. —Chicago News Those Ht.ky La-uere, A farmer was driving in Elk street l few days ago. Coming close be hind him was a fire engine. “Look out for the Fire Depart ment!” shouted a man on the curb The farmer pulled in close to the curb, and after the engine had pass ed started toward the middle of the street again. Then a hook and lad der crew whizzed by and took off one of the rear wheels of his wagon. “I told you to look out,” said the man at the curb. “I know you d'd,” said the farm er, "and I did look out, but look at what those drunken painters 'With the wagon load of ladders dil to my rig!' —Buffalo Fxnrpfia An Ambiguous Laudat'-on. A well-known divine was preaching ono Sunday morning on the subject of ‘The Great and Small Things of Creation." To illustrate his thought that nothing was either too vast or too tiny to bo of interest to God, ho proceeded in these words; “The Creator of this immense uni verse created also the most infinite simal atom in It. The Architect of these vast mountains fashioned also the tiniest thread of gold running through them. The God who made mo made a daisy.”—Lipntncott’s. Hew He Knew. In an assault and battery case tried m a Cleveland court the prosecuting witness testified at length that the defendant had knocked him senseless pnd had then kicked him for several Minutes. “If this man’s attack rendered you unconscious,' demanded the magis trate, “how is it that you know he kicked you when you were down?” This question seemed to floor the witness, lie was lost in reflection for some moments; then, brightening, he replied: “I know it, your Honor, because that’s what I would have done to him if I'd got Ihim down.” —Circle Magazine. THE STORY OF THE PEANUT SHELLS. As everyone knows, C. W. Post, ol Cattle Creek, Michigan, is not only a maker of breakfast foods, but he Is a strong individualist, who believes that the trades-unions are a menace to the liberty of the country. Believing this, and being a “nat ural-born” scrapper for the right, as he sees It, Post, for several years past, has been engaged In a ceaseless war fare against “the Labor Trust,*’ as he likes to call It. Not being able to secure free and untrammeled expression of bis opin ions on this subject through the regu lar reading pages of the newspapers lie has bought advertising space for this purpose, just as he is accustomed to for the telling of his Postum "story,” and he has thus spent hun dreds of thousands of dollars In de nouncing trades-unionism. Asa result of Post's activities the people now know a whole lot about these organizations: bow they are honeycombed with graft, how they obstruct the development of legiti mate business, curtail labor’s output, hold up manufacturers, graft upon their own membership, and rob the public. Naturally Post Is hated by the trades-unlonlsts, and intensely. He employs no union labor, so they can not call out his men, and he de fies their efforts at boycotting his pro ducts. The latest means of "getting” Post is the widespread publication of the sto:* that a car which was re cently wrecked in transmission was found to be loaded with empty pea nut shells, which were bein~ shipped from the South to Post's establish ment at Battle Creek. This canard probably originated with President John Fitzgerald, of the Chicago Federation of Labor, who. It Is said, stated It publicly, as truth. Post comes back and gives Fitzger ald the He direct. He denounce* Fitzgerald’s statement as a deliberate falsehood, and underhanded and cowardly attempt to Injure h!s busi ness, having not the slightest basis in fact. As such an effort it must be regarded. It Is significant that this statement about “the peanut shells” Is being given wide newspaper pub licity. In the “patent Inside” of an Eastern country paper I find It, and the inference naturally is that labor unionltes are Insidiously spreading this He. An Institution (or a man) which will resort to moral Intimidation and to physical force, that will destro> machinery and burn buildings, that will maim and kill If necessary to ef fects its ends, naturally would not hesitate to spread falsehood for the same purposes. We admire Post. While we have no enmity toward labor unions, sc long as they are conducted In an hon est, “llve-and-let-llve" kind of a way we have had enough of the tarred end of the stick to sympathize thor oughly with what he is trying to do He deserves support. A man like Post can not be killed, even with lies. They are a boomerang every time Again we knenr, for hasn’t this wea pon, every weapon that could b* thought of, been used (and not sim ply by labor unions) to put us out ol business, too? I am going to drink boo cups ol Postum every morning from this time on. and put myself on a diet of Grape Knts. Bully for Post!— Editorial in The American Journal o f Clinical Medicine, TRIALS of the NEEDEMS I*lo FOR THAT ' E- fit. 'VYQU HAD fetteraa^ HEX! (fit *’ORDER A NEW PAY j V .OGQWN TO GO WITH RESOLVED: THAT WHEN THE STOMACH AND LIVER ARE NOT RIGHT ONE FEELS BLUE AND STINGY MUNYONS RAW PAW LAXATIVE PILLS KEEP ONE IN G<X?D SPIRITS 10 FOR IQ* I fltunyon’* Fnw tnw Fills coax tbe llverlnto activity ;>y -penile methods. They do not scour, aripe or weaken. They are a tonic to the stomach, liver and nerves, invigorate Instead of weaken. They en rich the blood and enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that Is put into ft. it: -sc pills contain no calomel, they are soothing oea..ng and stimulating. For sale by all druggists In iOc and :45c sizes. It you need medical advice, wmc Mttn yon’s Dot (ors. They wl.l advise to tbe best of tnoir ability absolutely free of Charge. UI N \ ON’H S3d and Jeflerson feta., I'bila.dcli‘hia, Fa. Munyon’s Cold Remedy cures a cold in one day. Price :>.V. Munyon’s Rheumatism Remedy relieves in a few hours and cures in a few days, Price ?r*- More Japanese have been capture* in the act of seal poaching. While the people of the United States seem to have determined upon the extinc tion of the seal, contends the Phila delphia Ledger, they desire no as sistance. They attended to the buf falo without help. Rather than wear her old clothes, another season a woman who has to economize will buy a cheap now suit of worse material than her old suit, snarls the New' York World, which in every respect except in fashion and age may be more suitable for wear. Some schoolboys of Denver are go ing to appeal to the courts for a vin dication of their natural and inalien able right to be enrolled in the an cient and honorable fraternity of Al pha Sigma Sigma. There ought to be a spanking machine connected with the Denver courts, declares the New York Tribune. A tourist returning to the east on a transcontinental line, wliile pass ing through a forlorn-looking town in the desert heard two men con versing as the train stopped for wat er. “Goodby. Bill,” said one. “I am leaving this burg with just one pair of pants, and not another thing on earth.” “You are lucky, old pal,” re plied Bill, “that’s more than anybody else ever took away from here.” Senator Dolliver in a recent cam paign told this story to illustrate tbe logic of an opponent; Did you ever hear about the young woman in Fort ’Dodge? One spring morning she sat on the piazza of her pretty little home sewing a button on her hus band’s coat. The husband himself appeared and she said, fretfully, “It’s a perfect shame the careless way the tailor sewed this button on. This is the fifth time I’ve had to sew it or again for you.” Alaska has too much unoccupied area and too scant and sparse a pop ulation to get any real benefits out of the organized territorial form oi government. It should wait and grow’, announces the New York Tribune. Nevada was made a state on a credit draft drawn on the future, and has been trying for over forty years to measure up to statehood. As an un organized territory Alaska can push ahead until its population is large enough and coherent enough to justi fy a greater degree of self-govern ment. Loyalty to the truth leaves no man free to think as he pleases or to act as he pleases unless his will has been subdued to obedience. Ijooking at freedom in his way, the Christian Register think it is folly to claim that no one is free or intelligent or of a liberal spirit who does not come to the conclusions which are com monly described as liberal. In so far as he was loyal to the truth. Jona than Edwards was as much a free man as Dr. Channing. That they reached antagonistic conclusions in theology was the natural result of applying logical principles in the search for truth to facts of an en tlrely different order. We are glad to note that the Post office Department has decided upon a more liberal policy in registered let ter delivery. Hitherto rules of the department have made it Impossible for postmen to deliver letters to any one other than the person addressed. This has resulted in vexatious delays and serious inconvenience to -busi ness and professional men. Hereaf ter, asserts the ißoston Post, regis* tered mail is to bo loft at the place to which it is directed, if signed for by some responsible adult. The de partment properly reposes trust in the discretion of the postman, who is presumably a person blessed with common sense and acquainted with the character of many on his route. Safety, which is the sole considera tion In registration, is still sufficient ly safeguarded. Whistles. Whistling is a fixed habit in man, but it can be overcome. The man on the tugboat is only an overgrown willow-whistle boy. The boy is spanked into a knowledge that there Is a reason and a time when whist ling may bo indulged without rousing the ire and edging the nerves of the neighborhood. There is a certain legal spanking which may fit the seat of the present noise-makers. —Chicago Post. France has an aeronautical club *qt women. JACK CADS. The Shakespearian Portrait or Carica ture Corrected. Shakespeare cared nothing for his torical accuracy; he confounded cheer fully for dramatic purposes the de mands of Wat Tyler with those of Cade and the men of Kent, and his absurd travesty of Cade’s revolt even today finds popular acceptance. Cade and the commons of Kent rose against the Intolerable mlsgov ernment of Suffolk and the gross mis management of the French war. Suf folk and two of his ministers —Bishops Moleyns and Ayscough—were put to death by the people before Cade reached London, so general was the discount. The demands of Cade and the commons were almost entirely for political and judicial reform. “They based their complaints and demands on the existence of grievances, poli tical, constitutional and local, which could not be gainsaid” (Stubbs, “Con stitutional History”). Hollnshed de scribes Cade as "a young man of a godly nature and right pregnant of wit,” and admits that when Buck ingham and Archbishop Stafford met him in conference at Blackheath they found him “sober in talk,” wise in reasoning, arrogant In heart, and stiff in opinions.” Cade’s chief followers and supporters were the country gen tlemen of Kent, Surrey and Bast Sus sex (see Durrani Cooper’s “John Cade’s Followers in Kent”), and “they had risen against the intolerable fee bleness of the government, which gave free play to every nlnd of malversa tion and tyranny. No man could en ter a court of justice with any hope of success unless he had interest at his back” (Sir J. H. Ramsey, “Lan caster and York”). Thorold Rogers warned us years ago that “the stories about Cade’s hostility to property and learning are late inventions of the Tudor annalists, and at variance with contemporary testimony.” Cade with his army of 50,000 men in London maintained strict discipline and punished with death the one or two cases of robbery. That Cade him self compelled two city merchants to pay tribute is true; but the jewels Cade took from Malpas the draper (a strong I ancastraln) were the property of the Duke of York (with whom Cade claimed connection as a Mortimer), and when they were sold with the rest of Cade’s goods later by order of the Crown the money was paid to York (see Denvon’s Exchekuer Rolls),Cade’s compulsory levy on Curtis of St. Mar garet Pattens no doubt turned the oity against the rising; but the city had welcomed Cade and the commons, and expressed no disapproval of the beheading of Lord Say and Sheriff Crowraer. The city never voted a farthing toward the clmmissariat of Cade’s army; it was willing for Cade to do the political work of execution on unpopular ministers and officials, and then meanly withstood him when that work was done. That Cade himself was a man of substance is proved by the act of at tainder passed against him. That he was a brave, honest, disinterested patriot, who at this length of time, af ter study of the reign of Henry VI., can doubt? —From a letter in the Speo tator. Going Berrying. The pleasure of huckleberrying is partly in the season —the late sum mer time, from mid-July to Septem ber. The poignant joys of early spring are passed, and the exubet ance of early summer, while the keen stimulus of fall has not yet come. Things are at poise. The haying is over; the meadows, shorn of their rich grass, He tawny-green under the sky, and the world seems bigger than before. It is not a time for dreams nor a time for exploits, it Is a time for —for —well, for berrying! But you must choose your days carefully, as you do your fishing and hunting days. The berries “bite best” with a brisk west wind, though a south one is not to be despised, and a north one, rare at this season, gives a pleasant suggestion of fall while the sun has still all the fervor of summer. Choose a sky that has clouds in it, too, for you will feel their movement even when you do not look up. Then take your pall and set out. Do not be In a hurry, and do not promise to be back at any defin ite time. And, finally, either go alone or with just the right companion. I do not know any circumstances wherein the choice of a companion needs more care than in berrying. It may make or mar the whole adven ture. —From the Atlantic. Why He Was In Luck. “It is the American characteristic to make the best of everything and to put up a smiling front in the face of fate’s hardest blows,” said Prof. I. M. Rutherford of the University of Cali fornia at the Stafford. “I have thought that in this regard Americans were exceptional. Some of the richest humor in our literature is founded on this trait. A few days ago, as I came East on the Southern Pa cific, in passing through a forlorn-look ing town in the desert I heard two men conversing as the train stopped for water. “ ‘Good-by, Bill,’ said one, T am leaving this burg with just one pair of pants and not another thing on earth.’ “ ‘You are lucky, old pah* replied BUI, ‘that’s more than anybody else ever took away from here.’” —Haiti* more American. A Perfect System. “I can’t save anything. What I want Is a patent bank that will take my pay envelope away from me every Saturday night and hand me lunch money every day.” “What you want is a wife.” —Wash- ington Star. The Taciturn Barber. Confine yourself to themes of pith In your confab. And don’t annoy the barber with Mere idle gab.—Washington Star. Two Sides to It. “Few married women learn the use of money.” “Few ever get any to practice with.”—Louisville Courier-Journal, KIDNEY TROUBLE Suffered Ten Yta rs—Rt lirvtd in Thru Months Thanks to PE-RU-NA. 0. B. PIZER, Mt. Sterling, ky., sty* ; “I have suffered with kidney mad bladder trouble for tea yean peat “Last March I commenced using Peruna and continued for three months. I have not used it since, nor have I fell a pain.” The Natural Laxative acts on the bowels just as some foods act. Caecareta thus aid the bowels just as Nature would. Harsh cathartics act like pepper in the nostrils. Soon the bowels grow so calloused that one must multiply the dose. sn Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at dmpr-storaa. Bach tablet ol thr genuine is marked COO. Youth Is forever challenging, never qualifying. For COLDS and GRIP. Illck's Capcdisk Is the best remedy- re lieves the aching and leverlshuess— eafes the Cold and restores normal condition-* It’* i liquid —effects Immediately. 10c, 26c. and 60c. it drug store*. A man’s idea of a had temper is a wife who won’t be scolded without scolding back. Piles Cured in G to 14 Days. Paro Ointment is guaranteed to cure any rase ofltchinsr, Blind. Bleeding orProtrudi ng Piles in 6 to 14 days or money i efunded. fiOa A sneer on a woman’s lips la Ilka poison in nectar. In Winter Use Allen's Foot-Ease. The antiseptic powder. Your feet feel un comfortable, nervous and often cold and f damp. If you have sweating, sore feet or t tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-base. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores, 25 cents, j Sample sent free. Address Allen S. 01m- | rted. Le Ilov, N. Y. There's nothing a woman does so j skillfully as to have her weight so aa a man has to guecs where It Is. Mrs. Winslow's Sooth.ng Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Infiaraa tlon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. The thing that makes a man most conceited about himself Is for a girl to tell him he doesn't seem so. Dr. Fierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver rml bowels. Sugarcoated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy. It’s Imagination that makes people believe they are having fun when they are just being plain fools. Have you a cough or cold? If so, take at once Allen's Luna Balsam and watch re sults. Simple, safe, effective. All dealers. A man can always get more inter ested In a theory about Mars than in a fact about his bread and butter. To Caro a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. I Druggists refund money if it fails to cuio. £.W. Grove’s signature is on euv-h box. 25a People on the stage could learn a lot about acting by studying family reunions. Exposure to cold and wet is the first step to Pneumonia. Take Perry Paris' Pain - \ killer and the danger is averted. There Is ever so much more steady dependable fun in content than In happiness. For HEADACHE—Hicks’ CAPUDINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or Nervous Troubles. Capudlne will relieve you. !t‘s liquid—pleasant to take—acts Immedi ately. Try U. 13c., 25c. aud 60c. at ding •tore*. The reason a girl can get so much out of her father by wheedling him Is she can make him believe nobody could do it to him. Nothing More Dangerous Than a neglected cough,” is what Pr. J. F Hammond, professor in the Eoleotl t Medi cal College says, “and as a preventative remedy and a cuartive agent, I cheerfully recommend Taylor’s Cherokee Eemedy of Sweet Qura and Mullein, Tested CO years. Nothing better for whooping cough, croup or consumption. At druggists, 250. and 600. Sympathy for people In trouble is preceding you feel as bad for them as they would pretend to feel for you if It was your trouble. Itch cured in 80 minutes by Woolford’i Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggist*. A woman can believe her marriage was made In heaven If she lives it in a hell. How to Keep Baby's Skin Clear. Few parents realize how many es timable lives have been embittered and social and business success pre vented by serious skin affections which so often result from the neglect of minor eruptions ir infancy and childhood. With but a little car* and the use of the proper emollients, baby’s skin and hair may be pre served, purified and beautified, minor eruptions prevented from becoming chronic and torturing, disfiguring rashes, itchlngs, Irritations and chaf ings dispelled. To this end, nothing is so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective as the use of Cutlcura Soap, assisted when necessary, by Cutlcura Oint ment. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., sole proprietors. Boston, Mass., for their free 32-page Cutlcura Book, telling all about the care and treat ment of the akin and scalp. When a girl doesn’t know whether she wants to marry a man or not it’s a sign he’s probably the fellow who will get her. HADITB OF THE-HEDGEHOG. ■ U ■ JV ' Oeatrcycr of Cockroach* — How H* Gets the C*tt*r of Adder*. The hedgehog, that fcutt of Juvenile rustie (horseplay, ia tho poaseasor ol tastes which like Sam Weller's knowl edge cf London afe “extensive and peculiar.” Scorning iaatldlousneas It can make a hearty meal of nearly any insect and If on® Of the few ver tebrates which oan taokle the repul sive cockroach. For etectual exter mination of beetle* and cricket® It Is as useful as a mongoose among the rats, but it is not generally known that it has a partiality toward snakep and adders. The methods It employs for the attack are Interest ing . Having come upon the adder It goads that reptile to the offensive and at the first dart Immediately rolls Into a hall. The adder Is then left to attack the apinvn in which en counter it natural!* tomes oft second best. After a little, when the hedge hog feels that his antagonist has ex hausted his power, It once more opens out and makes a (bit© at the adder’s back, thereby breaking its spine. It then proceeds to crunch the whole Of tho reptile's body by means of its powerful jaw ( and after that it Is said to start at the tall and devour Its prey. Of eggs the hedgehog is also very fond, thereby giving Just cause to keepers and farmers- to de stroy It on sight. Cases have been known where hedgehogs actually forced the hen pheasant oft her nest and then pro ceeded to demolish the contents. There Is a tradition among country people to the effect that the hedge hog will suck the milk from oowe, who certainly show strong aversion to the hedgehog, but eminent natur alists scout the idea, their explana tion being that It is the heat of the cow which attracts the hedgehog, the cow’s dislike being no doubt caused by unpleasant contact with the prick ly eplnes. Hedgehogs are invulnerable to most of their enemies except man, although the wily fox has been known to get the better of them oo casioually.—From the Scotsman. Men deny women’s brains because they are afraid of them. AFTER FODRVEARS OFMISERV Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md. “For four years xny life was a misery to me. I suffered from irregulari ties, terrible drag | ging sensations, l|i extreme nervous i ness, and that all Hi! gone feeling in my stomach. I had ||;j given up hope of ij; ever being well lii when I began to jii! take Lydia E. Pink -11l barn’s Vegetable Compound. Then 1 felt as though new life had been given me, and I am recommending it to all my friends.”—Mrs. W. S. Ford, 2207 W. Franklin St., Baltimore, Md. The most successful remedy in this country for the cure of all forms of female complaints is Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. It has stood the test of years and to-day is more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. It has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflam mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir regularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, Indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means had railed. If you are suffering from any of these ailments, don’t give up hope have given Lydia E. Pinkham’s \ ege table Compound a trial. If you would like special advice write to Mrs. Piukhara, Lynn, Mass., for it. She has guided thousands to health, free ot charge. PL 4NT COTTON SEED that will tnorewe vour Lint Hto st*> poutvlg P**r acre Write GUARANTEE SEED COME ANY, Raleigh. N.JU QUIZ CLASS. Teacher—How many make a ciik ilon Johnny? Johnny—Not many.—Judge. WHEN YOUR HACK ACHES SUSPECT THE KIDNEYS. Backache Is kidney ache In most cases. The kidneys ache and throb with dull pain because there Is In aflaramation within. You can’t be rid of the ache until you cure the cause—the kidneys. Doan’s Kid ney Pills cure sick Union St., Jackson ” Dull, nagging back ache and Irregular action of the kidneys bothered me for fiv* months. Doan’sKid ney Pills proved just what I needed, driv ing out the pain and , aeys to normal condition. Remember the name —Doan’s. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Cos., Buffalo, N. Y. If. If man were not vain the power of at,man would cea—Smart Set. (VIX. 8.—’10). PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter and faster colors thanan? One ViVn KOE D KIG can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write for tree booklet— How to i>ye. tueaou auu ... - Fads for Weak Women enoS Nine-tenths of all the sickness ol women is Aoyonw denotement or dis ease of the organs distinctly feminine. Such sicknefe can be cured —is curid every day by -jaoQ ?uv,T .IB X&J ©ill 3s Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong, . O ,„ !H;JE , BUB Woman Well. It acts directly on the organs effected and ta at the saipe time a tire tonic for the whole system- It cures tamale complaint right m the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, ejtaminafteoa and local treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, and so abhorrent to every modest woman. , Wa shall not particularize here as to the symptoms of those peculiar affections incident to women, but those Sag? wanting full information as to their symptoms and , means o i positive cure are referred to the People's Com mon Sense Medical Adviser — 1008 pages, newly revised and up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of 21 one cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only; or, in cloth binding for 31 stamps. - : jSSBO^K3mBr Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. <ri* It is also the most abundant in the plant. Unless f it has enough Potash in soluble form at the right time % m it cannot use the other plant food you or your soil may % m supply. Take no chances. Tie to facts, I m not to theories. Many soils need only Potash J \ a to raise big crops. All soils need Potash / I sooner or later. Begin to use it before the I I crops starve. Do it now, for | e%/\TA OVk- V POTASH PAYS Urge your fertilizer dealer to carry Potash salts i in stock. You and ha will have no difficulty in ft \ buying them if you will write to u about it. j: | GERMAN KALI WORKS JfS M BWj., Baltinon, A B OCO CONSTIPATION, BILIOUSNESS, RHEU M- T atism, stomach and liver complaint BETTER THAN PILLS FOR LIVER ILLS fj a. H. uwu mtpictni 00.. a-r. Lome, mo. YOU CAN GET THIS NEW LABOR-SAVING DOUBLE ACTION HOE IN ANY OF YOUR FAVORITE SIZES W AND PATTERNS. ||| The “John Rclly” Hoe| The Hoc With Keen Cutting Corners i Q Requires onc-lourlh less labor. <J Never skins or bruises the cotton stand. <1 CUTS Instead ol pushes away the stalks not required for the cotton stand. q More than 120 thousand In use last yean pja twice as many will be used this year. E 9 When you buy hoes this spring call for the pfi "John Reily" hoc. f, 'A MANUFACTURED BY THE AMERICAN FORK AND HOE CO. J - ASK YOUR DEALER, OR WRITS TO |||| THE JOHN RE?LY HOE CO., New Orleans, La. If kFor Rheumatic As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the mus cles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold easier. Sloan’s Liniment quickens the blood, limbers up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache with astonishing promptness. Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism. Mrs. Daniel H. Diehl, of Mann’s Choice. R.F.D., No. i, Pa., writes:— “ Please send me a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment for rheumatism and stiff joints. It is the best remedy I ever knew for I can’t do without it.” Also for Stiff Joints. Mr. Milton Wheeler, 2100 Morris Ave.. Birmingham, Ala., writes: — “I am glad to say that Sloan’s Liniment has done me more good for stiff joints than anything I have ever tried.” Sloan’s Liniment A is the qickest and best remedy for Rheuma- & tism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises and Insect Stings. I p^3# . r - i Price 25c., 50c., and SI.OO at AU Dealers. j Send for Sloan’s Free Book on Horses. Address E g DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. m&smsS