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THE LAKE PLACID NEWS,

Makes flesh]and strength)because it ismade of parefood ele-ments whichnourish thesystem. Best for Colds—throat and lungs.

No alcohol or poisonous drug*

of Sort.

Your liverIs Clogged UpThat's Why Yoa'r* Tat

—Have Mb Appetite.CARTER'S LITTLELIVER PILLSwill put you rightin a few days.

T h e y dojtheir duty.,

Cure ConBtipauon, , ,Biliousness, indigestion and Sick HeadacheSMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.

Genuine must bear Signature

THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDSthsi make a horse Wheeze,Roar, Irnve Thick Windor Choke-down, can bereduced with

INEalso any Bunch or Swelling. t$o blister, nohair gone, and horse kept at work. Con-centrated—only a few drops required at asapplication, $2 per bottle delivered.

Book 3 K free.ABSORBINE, JR., antiseptic liniment for man-kind, reduces Cysts, Weas, Painful, KnottedVaricose Veins, Ulcers, $1 and $2 a bottle atdealers or delivered. Book "Evidence" free.W.F.YOUNG. P. 0 . F . , 310 TemcUSV.SoHncReld, Mass.

WANTED TO SEE THEM GROW

Three-Year-OJd Miss Gave PotatoesFair Warning as to Doings In

Her Absence.

Harry Godfrey has a granddaughterin the three-year-old class. She hasideas all her own about things out ofdoors. A short time ago granddadplant*1*-] a patch of potatoes in his gar-dfiii. Miss Three-Year-Old observedthe proceedings with interest. Pres-em!> darkness came on and she wasmissing from the family hearth, Asearch immediately -was instituted,and ro the surprise of all, they foundher sitting beside a row of potatoes,

"Why, what are you doing here?"aranddaddy inquired a bU peevishly.

"Waiting for the potatoes to comeup," was the reply,

"Well, you come on Into the house.You've scared UP all half to death."

Unwillingly she took granddad'shand and started toward the house.Suddenly she broke away and ranback to the potato row. Pointing herfinper at it as if in command, she said:

"Potatoes, don't you dare come uptill I get back."

Let ThemSpeak

For ThemselvesYou needn't take any-

body's word for the superior-ity of Post Toasties—

Get & package from yourGrocer, pour some of thecrisp, sweet flakes into a dish,add cream or milk, and asprinkle of sugar if you wish.

Then be the judge of

PostToasties

The Superior

Corn Flakes

ade from the hearts of thefinest Indian Corn, skilfullycooked, seasoned, roiled andtoasted.

Toasties are not ordinary"corn flakes," so.rememberwhen you want Superiot CornFlakes to ask your grocer for

Post Toasties

Two Afflictions,"I have an electric runabout on

my hands.""And I have a shocking: run-around

on mine."

When a young man tells a girl thathe'll love her forever, no doubt he be-lieves it.

IP-

DEMOCRATS FILECOST OF ELECTION

TOTAL EXPENDITURES OF THEDEMOCRATS IN THE RECENTCAMPAIGN THROUGHOUT THESTATE WERE $116,212—RECEIPTSWERE $119,892.

(Special Albany Correspondence.) ;Albany.-—The Democratic State com- :

mittee spent $116,212 in l ine recent;campaign, according to the election ex-penbe statement filed with the secre-tary of State by Treasurer Fflward K. •Perkins, of Poughkeepsie. The re-ceipts of the committee, the statementshowed, were $119,892.

Tbe heaviest contributors were .Thomas P. Ryan, $5,000; Nicholas F. !Brady, $5,000; Ambassadoi James W. !Gerard, $5,000; Jacob Ruppert, $5,000; ;Governor Glynn, $2,500; William \Church Osborne, $2,000; John D. Crim- !

mins, $2,355; C. K. G. Billings, $1,000; \Charles Steele, $1,000; Morgan J. ;O'Brien, Jr., $2,000; Joseph P. Knapp, •$1,000; William Sohmer, $1,000; Cleve- iland H. Dodge, $2,500; Daniel Meehaii, 1$1,000; Samuel F. St«urer, $1,000; Mar- \cus Daly, $1,000; Barron G. Collms, $1,- •000; Joseph B. Mayer, $1,000; A. Bus- ;Bey, Jr., $2,500; George Ehret, $2,500; jAugust Belmont, $2,000; J. B. Lackey, I$1,350; Theodore Groves, $1,000; A. S. !White, $2,500; W. C. Collier, $1,250; jThomas B. Lockwood, 12,500. \

Other contributors were: George E. ;Van Kennan, $300; Albert E. Carp, I$500; Royal K. Puller, $100, John D. :Moore, $200; Frank Hashrouck, $250; ]Samuel Untermeyer, S500: Albert E, ;Hoyt, $125, James M. L.ynch. $100: ;John M. Carlisle, f300; Henry De ;Witt Hamilton, $100; James A. Par- ;sons, $500; Edward Lazansky, $100; ;Charles'Hervey Jackson, $100; Joseph ,D, Suiwab, $200: Seymour Van Sara- ivoord, $250: " Frank Irvine, $350; ;George Gordon Battle. $250: Devoe r\ ;Hodson, $250; Henry Morgemhau, Jr.,$100; George V. S. Williams, $500; IEdgar M. Cullen, 5250; James A, O*- |Gorman, $250; Abram I. Klkus, $100; IJohn F. Donovan, $250: Mitchell May, :?400; Calvin J. Huson: $300; William 'F. Sheehan. $.'<.">; Alcon B. Park*1'-.$200; iPeter D. Kiernan, $f»Oft; Thorns 'Spratt, $150: Robert B. Van fort.and, '.$625; John B. Stanch field, $500 Mar- :tin %r. Decker, $200; William TempleEmmet, $250; W. Caryl Ely, S500; Jo- ;seph I). Killer, $500; Duncan W. Peck, !$500; Morris Coiin, $500; Theodore N.Alien, $600. Edward F. Clark, $500; jJames E, Horan. $500: Matthew Cor- !bett, $500; J. M. Forbes. $95<i; Alex-!ander Konta, S500; B. V. Severson, :$950; Claude F. Dawes, $125; Kdward •A. Bates. $225; Del^ancev Ratikiru$250.

There is due ihp Democrat:!.' Platecomnnrtpe SS,*<*•.< from the -SS membersof the commirtpe. Th>j ••Uynn cam-paign conir.jitT.^-; contributed $4,125.

CAN'T -SELL WHISKY INDRUG STORE, SAYS COURT .

jWORK FOR SHORT SESSION i

Recent Election Has Done Muchto Clear the Way.

Measures of Importance Upon Whitthe Country Will Demand

Legislation,

Democratic Party Has Been Shown toBe a Minority Party—Chance to

Restore Good Government toCountry in 1916.

As compared with the vote o£ 1912,the Republican party has gained, buthas not gained enough to dislodgethe Democratic party from control ofcongress.

The Progressive party has shrunkfrom second place to a bad third.

The reason for this reversal is notfar to seek.

The nation was not Democratic in1912.

: In the spring of 1912 the Republi-can party was stronger in the nationthan it had ever been. The Republiccan voters were cohesive and knewwhat the:ures.

wanted in men and meas-

MEYER LONDONof New York.

MR. LONDON, new SocialistCongressman from New

York, is, he says, to be the"Little Schoolmaster of Sociai-ism" in Congress at its nest ses-sion.

These voters were defeated and in-sulted by a conspiracy of politicians

| W n g the Chicago police force to over-} aw© the delegates in the convention.

Prom this attempted enslavementthe Republican voters revolted.

In the states nearest to the conven-tion, where the convention proceed-ings were best known, the revolt wasmost violent. In states where thetruth was printed in the newspapersthe revolt was equally effective. Onlyin those backward commonwealthswhere the press as well as the poli-ticians was under the control of siuis-

ALCOHOL-3 PER CENTA\fegetebfe Preparation For As-siroitating the Food arid Regulaing the Stomachs and Bowels of

Promotes Digestiof\Chc«rfLj ness andRestContains neitherI Opium Morphine nor MineralI N O T " N A R C O T I C

flrtrpr efQM Ik-SAMOAmSffleit

CommitteeSpent $14,950 During

the Late CampaignAlbany.—Total comributicm to the

Republican State committee were$104,437, according to the election ex-pensi- statements filed he-re. The ex-penditures were about *:2i"»,00(« morethan the /receiptc;. which rep-resentsthe indebtedness of the committee.The largest single contribution of|7,000 was anonymous. Two othercontributions of $1,900 each and an-other of $500 were credited to cash.John D. Rockefeller was the largest , i9ir>

•r influences, BO that the people j p u b H c t h eVeport oTth.could not learn the facts, did the Re- j T h e e m m t r v s l l 0 l l I d

Publican national convention of 1912

Albany.-druggist CU

t h a t

ugh

in*1 ground?eil liquor in his place(;ut a written preserip-

Excise departmentys for ComruiKsiorser

Farley, has been successful in g-pt-tin*r a v**raiet of $5oO in favor of thedepartment against a Delhi druggistin Justice Gladding's Court in Dela-ware i.-oun-ty. The *-a.se was tried afew days ago. The de<-it--ion is lookedupon as one of the most importantmade during Commissioner Farley'sterm because frequently oases withevidence such as was introduced atthis trial resulted in the departmentbedng reversed.

The action was brought to revokethe license. The druggist asked fora new trial after the verdict had\meu announced, claiming that themoney claimed to have been paid forthe liquor had not been received orrecorded on his cash register.

Justice McCan.ii denied the motionto admit such testimony and an ap-peal war taken frr-m the trial termto the Appellate Division. The highercourt affirmed the decision of theTrial Court unanimously. The courth'Md that cas-h register slips were notlegal or competent evidence andcould not legally he admitted or of-fered at a trial of the bond action.

Commissioner Farley has other suchcasf>.< ready and the attorneys willbegin actions all over the Stateagainst druargi^ts who have beenfound ronducting a liquor tade.

ROOSEVELTS CONTRIBUTENOTHING TO PROGRESSIVES

Albany.—A remarkable thing aboutthe election expr-ns^ statement of theProgressive Srate committee was theabsence of any record of a contribu-tion from Col. Roosevelt or any of hisrelatives. The 'Progressives had re-ceipts of $12,299 and expenditures of$10,755. From the •national commit-tee of the National Progressive party$8,392 was received. Other contribu-tors were: Rohert H. Elder, $400;Lloyd Collins, $500: Sydney N. Steur,$200: Chairacey J. Hamlin, $350;Charles C. Alden. $100: Seahury cam-paign committee for stationery, $13:Frederick M. Davenport. $150. andWilliam M. Chadbourne, $100.

PAST TWO WPEKS BRINGSBIG FF?EIGHT INCREASE

Albany.—-A big increase in freightbusiness has come for the New YorkCentral and Delaware & Hudson rail-road companies within the past twoweeks, according to statements of offi-clala of both companies. The greatnuaatiiy of business being done wasbailed with enthusiasm by officials

'individual contributor.Arthur Curtis James contributed an

additional $3,000 to the committee.Andrew Carnegie, W. P. Clyde andGeorge F. Baker, $2,500 each, andWilliam H. Moore, $2,00<\

James W. "Wads-worth, Jr.. senator-elect, contrihu-rp-d $2,^)0 and the firmof \y. A. & M. White, bankers, ofwhich the treasurer is a member.$1,900.

The following contributed $1,000oach; E. E. Woo^ury. attorney gen-•--ni-olsct: Jan>* \>. Wells, treasurer-eieci: Eugerv* M. Travis, comptroller-ele-ci : Edi^ird Schoeneck, lieutenant.g-overn^eleet: Senator Kliini Root,Charles II. Peabody. .lames McLeau,Clarence H. Mackay. L. F. Loree, E,M. Knox. P. F. Kellchar. F. L. Hine,McDougal Hawke-s. J. Horace Har-ding, George Eastman, former SenatorChauncey M. Depew, C. H. Cutler,George F. Baker, Jr.

The following $50* contributionsi*'ere received: Otto T. Bannard, E.J. Berwind. S. C. Clark, Alexander M.White, Frank M. Williams, State en- jgineer and -surveyor-elect: E. S, Clark. •"Cash," A. E. Ciearwater, J. Doherty, •James B. Ford, E. S, Harkness, C. G. \He-acock, A. D. Juilliard, T, W. La- \mont, H. I. Pratt. O. A. Quayle, H. T. |Pratt, O. M. Severson & Sons. George ID. Pratt, Harry Salvfri, H. L. Schell- Iing, Charles M. P r a t t G, Wellborn, jJohn T. Pratt,

fail of repudiation.; Population revolutions, even poltti-i cal, as opposed to forceful revolu- |' tions. Err- turbulent things.

In revolutions men of good judg-1 ment lose influence in favor of men

of extreme counsel.I This happened after the Republican: national convention of 1912,

The men who over almost all the• country bad ihrowrs out the old ma-

chine bosse? and •who counseled asteadfast adherence to the Republi-can party in Progressive hands, tberejection of the fraudulent nominee

; for the presidency, and the completecapture of the party machinery in

largely unheeded, and ex-tremists forged to the front.

In the election of 1912 WoodrowWilson was elected president by aminority vote. A majority of themembers of congress from north ofthe Mason and Dixon line werechosen by a minority of voters.

It is clear from the recent electionthat the Democratic party is still aminority party in rhe United States.It is equally clear that a return to thedominance of the bosses of 1912 Ivillnot be considered by tiie voters.Whether they call Themselves Pro-gressives, progressive Republicans, orRepublicans, the voters will neverstoop to that dictation.

On the contrary, the election has

Tae coming short session of con-gress is likely to see little attemptat legislation, The appropriationsbills must be passed, and there willprobably be another fight over therivers and harbors measure, andstrong pressure for the enactment bythe senate of the "water-power" bill.

The senate has an opportunity to {write one really constructive piece of 1legislation upon the statute books by jenacting the kind of "water-power" jbill approved by the war department, jThe advice of the war department ;

should be followed. It is based on jactual experience in handling the con- jstruction of dams, and the army engi- jneers are aware of the difficulty in jfinancing such projects. !

Aside from this one bill, both the \senate and the house would do well •to exclude all general legislation. The !"water-power" bill and the appropria- jtion bills will be sufficient, especially jsince the framing of the military and |naval bills will require much thought jand debate. j

There can be no question of the :fact that the people of the country de- isire and expect congress to remedy jthe inadequate military defenses. At- ;tention nmut be given to the coast de- ;fenses and to the purchase of more |modern guns, armored automobiles, Itorpedo boats, submarines, aeroplanes jand dirigibles. \

The general board of the army and inavy is working on plans for the fu- Iture. viewed in the light of the expe- jrience obtained from the European >war. Secretary Daniels set. an excel- ; _____ _̂__lent precedent last year by making ; ^ k n r E = r ? E : : r . ~ ~ ; 7 : - -

general board. '••be informed '

frankly with reference to the needs :both of the army and the navy. |

It would be a mistake to adopt a :

long program for the coming session.The things that should be done are so !important that they should be given :

a clear track.

CASTORIATor Infants and Children,

The Kind You HaveAlways Bought

Bears theSignature

of

£"0;l A perfect Remedy for Constipa-*£$][ lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,,.^C!j Worms .Convulsions,Feverish- |^ \ j ness and L O S S OF SLEBP

Exact Copy of Wrapper.

InUse

For OverThirty Years

CASTORIAFarmer's Part in the Elections,

'"It was the farmer who brought de-feat to the Democrats in New England,and it was a foregone conclusion be-fore election," declared Robert Harris,a prominent farmer of Connecticut,quoted by the Washington Post.

"It didn't take the farmers of mystate long after the present adminis-tration came into power and it wasdiscovered that a Democratic congresswas to take the duties off farm pro-ducts to realize they had made a mis-take in 1912. Before the inaugura-tion of tbe president, there was astrong change of sentiment among thefarmers, for they began to understandthat the Democrats purposed to dis-criminate against them without givingthem anything in return. New Eng-land farmers corae into contact withCanadian competition, an<i they arebrought face to face with, the fallacyof free trade.

"'"There can be no getting around itthat the next presidential campaignwill be fought en the tariff issue, andit matters not what efforts the Demo-

War Snatches,Simeon Ford, the humorist, said the

other day:"We are a nation of humorists. \YP

extract humor even out of war. As Iwalked down Broadway \l\ii othermorning, I overheard scrap?; of talklike these:,

ing for aeatheD in the v, rung; enn::-trieE.'

" 'What 's thfi matter with idtr Jln>i-yard Kipling resurrecting himself andgiving iip a new war song?'

" 'Carnegie's peace palace" Thekaiser has turned it Info a fort-'**--Philadelphia Bulletin.

YOU NEVER TIRE OF CUTICURA.

The Soap ro cleanse and purify, theOintment to soothe and heal. Thesefragrant super-creamy emollients andprophylactics preserve, purity andbpautify the skin. The daily use ofthe Soap for all toilet purposes andoccasional use of the Ointment tendto prevent pimples, redness and rough-ness, dandruff arid red. rough bauds.

: Sample each free if you wish. Ad-dress postcard, Cuticura, Dept, X, Bos-ton. Sold everywheie.—Adv.

A good cigarettemust be made" of puretobacco and the most chokeleaf. Such Is Fatiina—themost popular, mild Turkish-blend cigarette, now smokedalmost universally in thisCOUIltry I "Distinctively Individual,"If you cannot secure Fattmn Cigarettes fromyour ifr«/..-T, wf u-HS fr<: piea.n\i m send youtllrrf tia€kaKPS postpaid <>n rt^,>ipt ,:,f Sf'tc,Address Fanms Depi,. i n Fifth Av?.. he?. Yot"

2t

cleared ground sufficiently to take uv i f a t f m*J' ™**.?° subordinate the.. - • - " tariff. The president himseif. I be-the rationrsi, steady course of progres;

where it was broken off in 1912.: Putting principle above partisan-j ship, and rsaiiona! welfare above per-| sonal ambitions, the same elementsI which made the Republican party pro-] gressive in 3 912 can control it in 1916.

If they do control it in 1916, theparty will be successful. If a spiritof revenge is cherished, or if discour-agement prevail, if the hard-faced,soft-bodied men of the Chicago con-vention of 1912 return to the saddle,the Republican party will not succeed.

Starting the New Banks,It was decided by the secretary of

The^Whitman campaign committee j t h e t r e a s u r y a n d t h e federal reserveboard to open the 12 federal reservebanks November 16. One or two ofthe Western banks objected that theycould not have the preliminary ar-rangements completed by that time.But the order has been made, andthose who could not be completed

d

certified that its total receipts were$14,920 a,7id that it* expenditures were$14,799. Arthur Curtis James, a closepersonal friend of Governor-electWhitman, gave $10,000 to the Whit-man committee. His is the largestsingle contribution made this year.Among the other contributors to thecommittee were Lafay Davidson andR. B. Ward, $500; Frank L. Babbitt,Francis L. Williams, John D, Arc!bold, Charles C. Wickshir*

r e a d y t c a t time had to start in a

,jj*|awaited with infr^v-f tion is that the n

partial form.The effect of the opening will be

:erest, The expeeta-^ 'eductions of cash re-

Moses J. Grossman. $250 each: Frank ! serve will put a large amount of cashOberkireh. John A. Davis. J. M. E. j a t disposition for easing the money

I market. One way of putting it is thatit will release $400,000,000 In cashnow held as reserves. This Is prob-

: O'Grady, S. L. Keyes. J. A. Brener,! W. D. Embree. W. A. TJlman, Robert: C. Taylor, W. A. DeFord, Charles ,• Meyer, John C. Heintze, Martin Me- j a b l y excessive, as it is over half the

Avoy, Jr., James A.each.

VACANCY PUZZLES GLYNN.

O'Melley, $100 | sold coin now held by the banks! But| it is probably below the expansion of| bank credits that will be possible if: the demand calls for such increase.I It remains to be shown whether the

Albany.—Court of Appeals Judge- I system will be as stable with a re-elect Samuel Seabury talked with j serve of 6 per cent held in the banksGov. Glynn regarding bis resignation ) and 9 per cent more to be drawn fromas a Supreme Court Justice and his j the reserve banks, as it has been un-

der the old plan. On that point theexperience of years will be requiredbefore a positive verdict can be given.It will be awaited with hopes that itwill prove to be all that has beenclaimed for it.

appointment by Gov. (llynsa at once asa member of tiie Court of Appeals tosucceed the late Judge William B.Hornbiower. Justice Seabury's elec-tive term as Court of Appeals Judgodoes not begin until January 1. j

Gov. Glynn is in a qua-ndary over jfiMng the vacancy on the Supreme JCourt bench in New York City caused jby the death of Justice Amend. i

WATERVLIET MERCHANTSSEE BOATMEN'S TRADE GO

Albany.—Watervliet merchant* do-ing business on the banks of the Eriecanal, who for many year? have de-pended on the trade of boatmen fora livelihood, are much interested inthe rumor that the aqueduct crossingtiie river at Crescent will be destroy-

: ed this winter. This ends boating.

Not a Lew-Tariff Country.The election's result is a repetition

i of the verdict that has uniformly been! registered following a national expe-! rience with low tariff. The country! has gone Republican because It is notj a low-tariff country. The tremendous

sweep that the Democracy accom-plished two years ago, by reason ofthe division of the Republicans, didkot commit the country, in sentiment,to the Democratic tariff policy. Butthe enactment of that policy into lawbecame inevitable as a consequence,and now comes the reaction.

lieve, is on record as declaring thatthe tariff must always be the dominantissue among political parties, and how-ever much the administration wouldlike to dndge it in 1916 it cannot bedone."

Classed as Spring Chicken-Motorist, (who had run over a pa-

triarchai fowl)—But the price is vt-s*yhigh. The bird's in this second child-hood!

Irish Peasant—It's the thrue "yer honor's epakein'. Thim youngchickens is terrible dear at tins saison

Path of Economy.There is one broad way that the

Democrats have not found. This Isthe path of economy. Their billionand a half gait is far in excess of therequirements of the times. They arelong in promising prosperity andshort in disclosing the power to pro-duce it. They are long in their prom-ises of retrenchment and short in ful- )filling these promises. They want I$1,000,000 and they propose to raise \this by a special tax popularly de- jnominated a war tax. j

All along the pathway of economy jare growing the fair flowers of relief ifrom the stringent condition of thetreasury. Having cut off revenues

e Kou.-a;. Co.. Chicago.

High, At! Right."Do you ever wear a high hat?""Yes; my Sunday lid is an $8 ve-

lour,"--Boston Evening Transcript.

Defined."So the Turks have proclaimed a

holy war.""Wholly unnecessary."

by their tariff act they are prodigally j ^ L ^ l twasting revenues by their extrava-gance. Between this upper and nethermillstone tiie people are being ground.The power applied in the process Isthe special tax that is destined to bemade a law.

The great masses of the citizenswho are viewing with wide concernthe rather arduous climb of bushenterprises up the hill ot economyfrom which they were thrown bodilyby Democratic legislation and men-aces are not satisfied to pay the hun-dred-million-dollar tax without regis-tering their conviction of the folly ofDemocratic measures that have madenecessary such a recourse.

Is the man who profits by his mis-takes any better off than the man whonever makes any?

NAVARREHOTEL

7th AT. at 38th SL

NEW YORKCENTRE OF

EVERYTHINGROOM WITH BATH, $1.50, $2.00, $2.58ROOMS, 2 PERSON& $2.00, $2.50, $3.00k Penn Safety Razor for Each Guest

VaMfe Celwed Ma; of Hew T«fc GnsfeEDGAR T, SMITH. Managing Director

May Prove Lively Corpse.Although partisan newspapers are

busy preaching the funeral of the Pro-gressive party, it is possible that thecorpse may have a word, to say on. thesubject later on.

W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 48-1914.

Canada is Callin£Ybnto her RichWheat Lands"""*"*"• She extends to Americans a hearty in-

vitation to settle on her FREE Home-stead lands of 166 acres each or securesome of the low priced lands in Mani*toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta,This year wheat is higher but Canadian land justas cheap, so the opportunity is more attractive thanever. Canada wants you to help to feed the worldby tilling some of her soil—land similar to thatwhich dttring many years has averaged 20 to 45bushels of wheat to the acre. Think what you

Vdftlg c a n n i a ^ : e with wheat around $1 a bushel andJ*!eF land so easy to get. Wonderful yields also of

Oats, Barley and Flax. Mixed farmingfully as profitable an industry as grata

The Ejection. }The Democrats foolishly pitted the I

personal popularity of the presidentagainst the real issues before thepeople, and they have deservedly lostthe election.

In districts where the protection is-sue was unclouded, the Republicansmade great gains. The Democraticr^tjority in the house has narrowlyescaped annihilation.

Democratic congressmen indorsedby the president solely because theywere Democrats were not saved bysuch indorsement.

f A i ^ ^ l 5 3 ^ ^ l ^ ^ > ^ The Government this year is askingV 2 H 3 f i m V i i l i i l l i ^ L farmers to put increased acreage into

grain. Military service is not com-pulsory in Canada but there is a great demand for farm labor to replace the manyyoung men who have volunteered for service. The climate is healthful andagreeable, railway facilities excellent, good schools and churches convenient.Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to SuperintendentImmigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to

J . S. CRAWFORD301 East Geoesee Si reel. Syracuse, N. Y.

Canadian Government Agent

Made of naturally wavy, lustrous fatmaa hair, mounted on three*bort stems. Mail us two dollars and a sample of your hair—wewill send -you, charge* prepaid, a beautiful switch to maiefe.Money back if not satisfactory. Send for bo.JiUt.

H9 >S7ARP CO_ Eliairu. N. Y.

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