Ihiiimfiactfidiaunder and One Cake of Cutlcura >Spuaranteed the Foodaij I IIIBA Soap, Then Her Scalp Cured and Was Exact Copy Ofwrapper Her Hair Grew Again

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Ihiiimfiactfidiaunder and One Cake of Cutlcura >Spuaranteed the Foodaij I IIIBA Soap, Then Her Scalp Cured and Was Exact Copy Ofwrapper Her Hair Grew Again PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON’S CABINET AN EXPENSIVE DISEASE. ?SCOTIAI The Kind You Have I AIWByS BOUgflt ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AVirgelabie # tj» Preparation _ for As- . I Bears the A, \ m Signature //ijJ Sr Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- Mj( lr- "The doctors thought he had appen- ?j nessandßest.Conlainsneither nf /a Afr dicitis until he went Into bankruptcy, 'll Opium. Morphine nor Mineral #l\ IK and then—” Si Not Narcotic |l ulr' “Continue.” ijf* .SOU DrSAMV£I/m/rE/i | A “They diagnosed his case a pain In AuyJn'm S—d - |l/\ ! • the stomach.” MxS—mm 1 W 19 Ell1 faAe&Sa/ts - IJ| Aniu Sfd • a CURED OF SCALP TROUBLE a jn* * «i W.rmS'.d - II 4 ft I111n . CtorSitd Smoar 11 » J B Btratford, Cal.—“My daughter’s Iff Flavor | scalp trouble began as pimples and igQ Wimkrfrrtn |. festered, then formed scales. Her ifco Aperfcclßemedy forConstipa- j|f» II O D scalp Itched and she had dandruff. Fill lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, I M fV Her hair came out in bunches, falling MO Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- I IA/ entirely In spots as large as a silver ness and LOSS OF SLEEP V ¦ Lnv || s» q m dollar. A kind of scab would form In IUI UlUl little white crusts on the spots. These ji“J Fac Simile Signature of spots would be sore. Knowing the Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment were good for the skin and scalp, we Thirty washed her scalp each morning with If Years Cutlcura Soap and then applied the Cutlcura Ointment, rubbing It In well with the hand.' It helped from the start. I used one box of Cutlcura Ointment IHiiIMfiACTfIDIAunder and one cake of Cutlcura >sPuaranteed the Foodaij I IIIBA Soap, then her scalp cured and was Exact Copy ofWrapper her hair grew again. It has been more TMB eaMTAUn Mb»ant, Maw ro<> oiw. than a year since and her scalp la clear and healthy." (Signed) Hiram Crabtree, Jan. 26, 1912. " ‘ the Horse Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold Clad*®™" throughout Sample and Eager for Work J JSEL the world. of each VaH Clip him befor« you pat him at the spring work. VI X M £)U \ W Tak* off bla winter coat that holds the wet I\ 2UT free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address rweata .ddlrt. ¦ V y He'll set more good from hla IL _ _ . VeV ) feed, look better, rest give yoa bet- free post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." iv r *4| t better and IW tex service In evgry way. Don't bay any bat ¦ year dealer Adv. 4rHnv frm .The Stnrart Ball Bearing I The Reign of Woman. Clipping Maehlne I -ftp* Jf Jim coaler, the maehlne that tame clips fiwtarand 1 ¦ I imaMiiJb Women will serve as public porters ¦ closer end stays sharp loneer than any other. M* a. Gears are all tie hard and eat from solid steel Ceteteg and dining car waiters on the special lIIArcWriT ' bM, Geaya enclosed. protected and ran 1m oil. % free Jv2j friction. little wear. Haa ala feet of new style, easy ran- These are the ten men whom President Wilson has appointed to be his chief advisers. An extra chair waa train which Is to carry the Illinois placed In the cabinet room for Mr. Wilson, the first man to hold the newly-created portfolio of labor. suffragists to the Washington parade, and except for the train crew and sol- caucus candidate for United States itary man to shine shoes It will be an f“ senator. example of feminized railway trans- portation. ¦PINK11 111 ML* 1 Mm* AND THROAT DISEASES MEMBERS OF PRES. WILSON’S CABINET David F. Houston. The male shoeblack EYE prompts on Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for Liquid given on tha In David Franklin Houston, chan- masculine reflections the others. dispensation. tongue. Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy; SOo and cellor of Washington University, St new But mere man Brief Sketches of the Advisers may take heart. The time Is still re- il a bottle; IS and $lO a dosen. Sold by all druggists and horse goods of the New Louis, Wilson has a secretary of agrl- houses, or sent, express paid, by mote when there will be women at lo- ® the manufacturers. cuture who is familiar with the pro- President, Who Have Been Confirmed comotive throttles or in the more re- SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. GOSHEN, INDIANA cesses of advancing scientific farm- by sponsible posts In railroad operation. the Senate ing and allied questions this conn- IlflIV IUPIIDiTOD MfinVC lilC Write for book saving young chicks. Bend u In —New York World. of 7 friend# that use Incubaiors »nd gel try. president of nnl*•¦11 InuUDAIUninvuun 1 VII UllluKoVIIIVIXUUltUlb book free. RnlanU Remedy Co., Western Newspaper l.'nlon Newsservice. Mr. Houston was the BlackweU.Okln. Texas Agricultural and Mechanical 28, Washington, March 6.—President vember 1864. He Is a son of Rev. College for a number of years, and Wilson yesterday sent to the Senate Joseph F. Garrison, an Episcopal cler- has taught in several other educa- the names of the following as mem- gyman, and a brother of Justice tional Institutions. He was born In bers of the cabinet, and they were Charles G. Garrison of the New Jer- Monroe, N. C., In 1866, waa educated confirmed: sey Supreme Court. He was appoint- at South Carolina College and Har- WILLIAM J JOININGS BRYAN, of ed to the chancery court In June, 1904. vard, and received the degree of LL. Nebraska, Secretary of State. and reappointed WILLIAM G. McADOO, of Now by Chancellor Mah- D. from Tulane and the University of York. Secretary of the Treasury. lon Pitney, now a Justice of the Unit- Wisconsin. He married Miss Helen LINDLKY M. GARRISON, of Now Supreme Jersey. Secretary of War. ed States Court, In 1911, for Beall of Austin. Texes, In 189S. JAMKS McREYNOLDS. of Tennes- a term of seven years. see. Attorney General. William C. Redfleld. REPRESENTATIVE ALBERT BUR- James C. Mcßeynoldt. William Cox Redfleld has com- LESON, of Texas, Postmaster Gen- Just eral. In picking James Clark Mcßeynolds pleted his first term si a congress- JOSEPHUS DANIELS. of North for the position of attorney general, man, but he has been prominent m Carolina. Secretary of the Navy. FRANKLIN K. LANE, of California, Mr. Wilson selected a man who has the politics of New York for a good Secretary of the Interior. had a lot of experience as many years. In 1902 and he was DAVID F. HOUSTON, of Missouri. a “trust 1903 Secretary of Agriculture. bUßter." He is a native of Elkton. commissioner of public works for tbs REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAM C. Ky., where he was born In 1862, and Borough of Brooklyn. In privets Ilfs RED FI ELD, of New York, Secretary Of C- mmerce. a graduate of Vanderbilt university be Is a manufacturer of ventilating REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAM B. and the law school of the University and apparatus and engines •WILSON, of Pennsylvania, Secretary heating of Labor. of Virginia. From 1903 to 1907 he Mr. Redfleld was born In 1868 In Al- Mr. Bryan's Career. was assistant attorney general of the bany, N. Y„ was educated In the WllllXm J. Bryan has been so much United States. He then returned to schools of that city, and removed to In the public eye for a good many private practice, but has been retained New York In 1877 and to Brooklyn years that a sketch of his career as special assistant to the attorney in 1883. ¦eems almost superfluous. Born In general In matters relating to tha en- William B. Wilson. Salem, 111., In 1860, he was graduated forcement of the anti-trust laws. Mr. Pennsylvania's representative In the with highest honors from Illinois col- Mcßeynolds Is unmarried. cabinet Is William Bauchop Wilson lege at Jacksonville In 1881 and re- Albert S. Burleeon, of Bloßsburg, named for secretary of Covers 30 blocks, comprises scores of monumental structures, with 33 miles of tracks underneath. ceived hie master's degree In 1884. labor. He was born In Blau tyre, Boot- Albert Sidney Burleeon already has In 1883 he was given the degree of land, In 1862, and came to this ooun- served seven consecutive terme as IJ. by Law, try In 1870. The next year he began B. Union College of Chi- congressman from the Tenth dtstrlot cago. After practicing law In Jack- working In the Pennsylvania coal New Texas and was re-elected Grand Central of to the Terminal sonville and Lincoln, Neb., he served mines, and from early manhood he Sixty-third Congrese. He was born in as a member of Flfty-aecond and has bean actively Interested In trad* A wonderful city, within a San Marcos, Texas, In 1863, and was city, built for the Fifty-third Congresses. Having writ- union affairs. For eight years he was educated at the Agricultural and Me- comfort and convenience the plank" International secretary-treasurer of of traveling public. ten the ‘‘silver for the Demo- chanical College Texas, of Baylor Uni- the United Mine Workers of America cratic national convention of 1896 and versity and the University of Texas, The main Grand Central Ter- Ave.), one block from Fifth Ave. the Bade a sensational speech, he was He Is now engaged In farming. Mr. Underneath Terminal City and was admitted to the bar In 1884. minal Building in New York is and convenient to Broadway. and its are 33 miles nominated for President, but waa de- Wilson has bean s member of the last streets ofrail- He was assistant city attorney of Aus- now open to the public.
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