CHILDREN IN ROWBOATft. Somt of New York Street Flooded to a Depth of Five Feet. New York, June 30. New York and viclnltj, as well as this part of the country, were flooded by a downpour of rain during which about half ai much water fell as In the prolonged period of wet weather this month. The storm was accompanied by thun der and lightning, and several con spicuous spots were struck by bolts. Streets In various sections of Great er New Yrrk 'were Immdated and It Is expected the damage by water will be great. The flocd was mest serious along the shore front, on South and West streets In Manhattan and In the Willla.msburgh section of Brooklyn, where much damage was done by floods 12 years ago. For a good portion of the; day here. the 'water In som of the? streets was four and five feet deep and many fam ilies were hel1 prisoners In their homes. A novel sight was that of chll dren going to school In rowboats. Mr. Payne's Vacation. Washington, June 30 Postmaster General Payne was at the department, hut under the orders of his physician remained only a short time. AcconT pnn'od by Mrs. P?vne. he will leave here next Friday 'for the C.U'kIHs. to be the jnietq of Roswell Miller of New York. Mr. Payne in 111 retwaln over the Fourth of July and expects to return to his desk early next week. He M no news to make public re garding the postal service. Cunard Line's Withdrawal. New York, June 30. A special meet ing of the board of directors of the International Mercantile Marine com pany has been called for to consider the position of the various lines In the shipping merger, and the conditions brought about by the forthcoming withdrawal of the Cunard line from he transatlantic rate agreement. The Cunard line's notice cf withdrawal does not go Into effect until July I. MARKET REPORT. New York Provision Market New York, June 29. WHEAT No. 2 red, 8Gc f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 northern Duluth, 93Vic. CORN No. 2 corn, 58c f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 white, 58. OATS No. 2 oat3, 43yiC; No. 2 white, 47c; No. 3 white. 47c. PORK Mess, 17.75 18.25; family, 118.50. HAY Shipping, 8085c; good to choice, $1.201.3o. BUTTER Creamery, extras, 20Hc; factory, lC16c; western Imitation creamery, 18c. CHEFISE New large white, 10V4c; light skims, 8c. EGGS State and Pennsylvania, 17c. POTATOES New York, per 185 lbs., $3.003.25. Buffalo Provision Market. Buffalo, June 29.. WHEAT No. 1 northern, 88e; winter wheat, No. 2 red, 82c. CORN No. 2 yellow, 56c f. o. b. afloat; No. 3 yellow, 55c. OATS No. 3 white. 44c f. o. b. afloat; No. 4 white, 42c. FLOUR Spring wheat, best patent per bbl., $4.755.00; low grades, $3.00 3.25. BUTTER Creamery western tra tubs, 22c; state and Penn sylvania creamery, 21V4c; dairy, fair to good, 1517c. CHEESE Fancy full cream, 12c; good to choice), llllc; common to fair, 910c. EGGS State, fresh fancy, 17 & 18c. POTATOES Old per bushel, $1.00 1.10. East Buffalo Live Stock Market. CATTLE Besta, steers on sale $5.15 5.35; good to choice shipping steers, $4.905.10; fair to good steers, $.30 4.60; common to fair heifers, $3.25 3.65; choice to extra fat heifers, $4.254.75; good butcher bulls, $3.00 3.50; choice to prime veals, $6.50 6.75; handy fat calves, $5.006.00. SHEEP AND LAMBS. Spring lambs. $5.50(g6.50; yearlings, fair to gocd, $4.505.00; culls to common, $3.25(fi,'.n0; wether sheep, $4.505.00. HOGS Mixed packers' grades, $6.106.15; medium hogs, $6.056.10; pigs, good to choice, $6.60 6.75. Buffalo Hay Market HAY Timothy, per ton, loose, $19.0021.00; hay, prime on track, per ton. $19.0020.00; No. 1 do do, $18.00 18.50; No. 2 do do, $16.O017.00. Utica Dairy Market. Utlca, June 29. On the dairy market today the fol lowing sales of cheese were made: Large white, 5 lots of 337 boxes at 10c; large colored, 15 lots of 1,192 boxes at 10c; large colored, 2 lots of 160 boxes at 9c; email white, 7 lots of 558 boxes at 10c; small colored, 20 lots of 1,960 boxes at 10c; small col ored, 10 lots of 960 boxes at 10c; condition, 20 lots of 1,800 boxes. To tals, 79 lots of 6,957. BUTTER Creameries, 12 packages at 21c; 27 at 21c; 18 at 22c; 500 1 potind prints at 23c. ' Little Falls Dairy Market Little Falls, June 29. Sales of cheese on the dairy market today were: Large colored, 1 lot of 75 boxes at 10c; small white, 32 lots of 2,075 boxes at 10 c; small colored, 33 lots of 2,560 boxes at 10c; twins, colored, 9 lots of 578 boxes at 10c; twins, white, 33 lots of 1,320 boxes at 10c. Total, 107 lots of 6,608 boxes. ARE YOV liOIN; ANYWIIEKE West within the next 30 days? If so write II. C. Allen, C. P. t- T. A. Nickel Plate Road, ft State street, Erie, Pa., for rates, routes, dates of pecial partin, etc. 20 years experience, teNtimonials galore, bent accommodations and always cheapest rates available. Write to-day. A2UJD24 TO tTHE A COM IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggiMts refund the money if it fails to cure. K. W, Urove's signature is on each box. 2.re. 1-14-ly H OW aliont your stock of Stationery 7 Liook it up, then call and see us. THE KNOCK OUT BLOW. Effects Produced by the Paclllatle Jolt on the Jmtr. All boxers know the knock out blow on the point of the Jaw, and not a few have lively recollections of what It feels like, but probably not one In a hundred has any Idea why the trick has such effective nnd to the performer valuable results. The generally accept ed theory was that the impact traveled direct through the socket of the Jaw to the bony envelope of the brain, which was stunned by the shock, but Mr. J. G. luincnnson, writing in the British Medical Journal, suggests nnother rea son. In the ear Is a set of canals tilled with fluid nnd lined with a delicate ar rangement of nerves. The notion set up by the motion of this fluid on the nerves plays nn all important pnrt In the process of balancing the body. A sudden and violent rotation of the head produces a correspondingly violent mo tion of the fluid. The knock out blow planted a little to one side of the Jaw lit a somewhat slanting direction causes Just such a rotation, the muscles which regulate the turning of the head being comparatively weak, and the result is a complete loss of the power of balance and generally of consciousness also. Hon- Some nrri Are Alinaed. A young nurse of my nciiuiiintnnce was found early one morning uncon scious on the entry floor. Upon Inquiry the doctor learned that from Monday morning till Thursday night she had been without Sleep or even enough time oft to bathe nnd change her clothes. Of course she was extremely foolish to permit such a thing on the patient's account as well as her own, but It was her first private case, and, feeling shy about obtruding personal wants In a time of general stress, she had relied on coffee and determination to pull her through. The stale joke, "Why, do you have to sleep? I thought you were trained:" unfortunately con tains not a grain of exaggeration. I have gone to a house where after a day's nursing, a night spent In spong ing n typhoid patient, at 10 o'clock on the morning of the second day the nurse was still In charge. No one had given her night lunch, breakfast or even a cup of coffee. She had been on duty for twenty-six straight hours, working strenuously all the time. Not a member of the household seemed equal to taking her place or Indeed dreamed of the necessity of doing so. Later It was rumored that this girl had become Intemperate. Mary Moss In Atlantic. Boole Pnbllahlnn; In the Middle Aura. When In the middle ages an author at any European university desired to publish his thoughts his book was read over twice in the presence of the au thorities and if approved might be cop led and exposed for sale, a practice In which the germs for state licensing may be readily distinguished. It was evidently necessary, however, to keep a strict watch over the persons em ployed in this business, and the stat utes of the I'nlversity of Paris show that the booksellers were subjected to n very severe discipline. They were obliged to keep a list of the books they sold and to exhibit their scale of chanres, and they were forbidden to purchase any manuscript till it had been duly approved by the authorities nnd publicly exposed to view for four days. Stovea of the Middle Abu. The stoves of the middle ages and of the era of the Roman empire nnd throughout Germany nnd Scandinavia generally were built of brick, tiles or similar material and were so large as Xcf be stationary, sometimes taking up the whole side of a room, and In the latter country In winter the couches nnd blankets were spread thereon nnd the family used them In lieu of the bedsteads of subsequent yenrs. The lire was built at the bottom, nnd the heat and smoke passed through va rious flues, distributing warmth, before they made their exit to the chimney. Some of them were faced with porce lain and were highly ornamental. A Fool'a Retort. One day at the court of Ferdinand II. a silly courtier fancied that he could amuse those present by his frivolities, which prompted Jonas, Ferdinand's fa vorite fool, to answer him nccordlng to his folly. But this so enraged the court ier that he shouted: "Fellow, be silent. I never stoop to talk with a fool." "Well. I do," retorted Jonas, "nnd therefore lie good enough to listen to me in your turn." Mndelra Inland Honda. In the whole of the Madeira Islands there are no wheeled vehicles, for the roads are too rough and mountainous. There are a few heavy sledges drawn by bullocks, but the favorite modes of locomotion are hammocks slung on poles nnd borne by natives and basket sledges. The latter are used for de scending the mountains nnd are skill fully-guided by a runiier behind. I.nrkr Choice. Mrs. Crawford She married a car penter. Mrs. C'rabshaw Isn't that just love ly! Now she can huve shelves put up whenever she wishes without having to ask ihe landlord over and over again. l'uck. Too Many K'a. Mother Yon are at the bottom of tin spelling class again, are you, Dorothy? liorothy Yes, mummy. "How did that hapiM-nT "I got too many r.'s in 'scissors.'" Boston Globe. When a man works because be li compelled to he is never a good work man. Atchison Globe. KKIU (l:i UATKS TOtiETTYsnriMS For the benefit of those desiring to at tendend the exercises to be held at Get tysburg, Pa., commemorating the fortieth anniversary af the battle, on July 1, 2, and 3, the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany will sell round-ti ip tickets to Oet tvMnirtr from all stations on its lines in the Stale of Pennsylvania east of and ex cluding Johnstown; also from stations on the Philadelphia and Erie Kailroa.i Division and the Buffalo and Allegheny Valley DiviBion north of but not includ ing Oil City, at rate of a single fare for the round trip (minimum rate. fl.O1). Tickets will be sold and good going June jo, Juiy l, z, ami 3, anil good to return uum juiy o, inuiubiye. i . .... I FR Ml A PAR f f WINDOW J "By Mary Wood T Copyright, tuoS, by T. C. McClurt The elevated train always slowed up lefore It came to the curve. On this particular afternoon It came to a dead stop. Philip Bryee gazed listlessly from the window. He was tired after a hard day at the oitiec, and the prospect of a lonely restaurant dinner and a lonelier evening in his apartments was not in viting. He gave an Impatient sigh as his glance traveled up the height of the brownstone building. "Just like my house," he commented. "Probably just as full of people, each one knowing lit tle and caring less about the rest. Lord, but a big city's a selfish sort of place!" Just then his glance reached a win dow on the level of his own and rested there. Ills face brightened, for the somber curtains framed u girl, nn un doubtedly pretty girl. And yet there was something so pathetic In the pic ture that Bryce's heart gave a throb. The girl leaned forward, her delicate face supported by her clasped palms. Under a waving mass of pale gold hair dark eyes looked sadly far beyond the train Into n scene pninted by her Imag ination. Suddenly, as If waked from her day dream by the fixity of his gaze, she turned. As her eyes met his a wave of crimson surged up to the roots of her hair. With a proud little movement she drew back Into the shelter of the curtains. And at the same moment the train, obeying some unseen signal, moved off around the curve. As it jolted upon its way Thilip Bryee leaned back, with a sigh. But this time the sigh was not for himself, but for the girl. "Poor little soul!" he said softly. "She looked even more lone ly than I. Wish 1 could do something for her. Well, I'll look out for her to morrow, anyway." Strange to say, the recurrence of this philanthropic thought infused brightness into his en tire evening. There was nn unusual element of hnste In the way In which he sprinted up the stairs of the elevated station the next afternoon. It seemed a matter of the greatest Importance that he should catch the 4 o'clock train. He told himself that it was only because It was his usual train, and he prided himself on his regularity. But there was that In his manner which belied his words. As the train slowed up for the curve his eye eagerly sought a certain win dow. The girl was at her post. She might have been reading, for a book was in her lap, but Philip felt sure that she saw him, felt sure that sud den color flushed her cheek. Such mar velous power has the human eye on occasion. The young man was unrea sonably happy over his discovery. And so for many days. When twi light fell earlier, t lie girl's slender fig ure was silhouetted against lamp light. The curtains were never drawn, and she was never absent. She wntched for him. .The assurance gave Bryee the cour age to call on the Janitor of the brown stone house and Inquire as to the prices of vacant apartments nnd Inci dentally as to the girl. The janitor wns loquacious, after the manner of Janitors. As he wntched the smoke wreath up from one of Philip's best cigars he felt that for once he had a listener worthy of his powers. The third stoiy front flat? Ah, yes. Miss Mctcalf lived there a nasty, cantankerous old lady. Her companion, poor little Miss Lambert, had a hard time of It with her. How she ever stood It all he didn't see. She was some sort of a poor relation nnd likely didn't have anywhere else to stay. But it was a shame the way the old lady deviled her. The Janitor grew quite excited over it So did Philip. In fact, he had some diflicnlty In restraining his feel ings. But he forbore to Interrupt the janitor. Such information was pre cious. "The poor young lady never gets a breath of fresh air except when she goes driving with the old one, and never n minute to herself except when her tyrant Is sleeping." Sudden enlightenment came to Philip. Evidently Miss Meffculf took an after noon siesta. He luico thank the god of sh-op for these stolen meetings, if meetings they might be called. The Janitor's story had strangely ex cited him, however. It was in an ex alted mood that he sallied forth like knight of old to the nearest florist. The purchase of a large bunch of vio lets somewhat soothed his feelings. But he reddened shamefacedly as he Inscribed a card, "From the man in the car window," and addressed the box to "Miss Ijimbert." That he, Philip Bryee, matter of fact business man, should be caught at such a schoolboy's trick! And yet he gloried in the in congruity. The next afternoon he could hardly wait until the train reached the curve. Would she wear his flowers? Would she smile her thanks? But t lie girl was not at her post; the curtains were tightly drawn. The pain of the disapiHiiiitinciit stung him into energy, lie had allowed this girl to grow into his life and thoughts. Should he let her slip out again? Never! With sudden determination he left the train at the next station nnd walked straight to the brownstone house. The Janitor recognized him. He volunteered to show hiin the way. The girl herself opened the door. Her cheeks were paler than usual and her eyes henvy from weeping. She, too, by her startled glance, recognized hint- rhlltp started forward Impetuously, but she drew back and leaned, trem bling, against the door as she said in u frightened whisper: "You? You?" The janitor had discreetly with drawn. Philip felt a pnug of reproach as he looked at the shrinking girl. He had startled her too much. His voice was very gentle as he said: "Yes, Miss Lamlx-it, it Is I, the man from the car window. You set? I know your name. The Janitor told nie. And I've come to Osk you whether you liked the violets. And. oh, when I missed you from 1 lie window 1 could not stand It. I Just The Rcadj .to-Serre Cereal for doctor and patient m m Ho.s Eexten Three Causes. 'I was attacked last May by appendi citis. As I showed signs of recovery doctor and I began to cast around tor a suitable diet and as a reiult we fell upon ' Force,' which has been a wonderful boon to me. I huve eaten almost three cases. II. II. Mills a." V S nan to come ana una out wmu was me matter." The girl's eyes were downcast, her cheeks crimson, as she said In the same frightened whisper: "Yes, I got your violets. They were beautiful, nnd you were very kind to send thein. But you ought not to have sent them, and you ought not to have come here. Miss Mct calf found me with them, nnd I had to tell her all about them and you. She was dreailWIly shocked. I I did not know thiNr had been doing anything wrong, lt she said that I had been very bold nnd forward and that you you wore not a good man. And she made nie promise never to watch for you again, nnd she threw the violets away my poor violets." Her voice trembled, but she raised her eyes trust ingly as she said more llrnily: "I don't believe everything that she said, though. I know you meant to be kind, een though It was wrong." Philip Bryee gently took her hands In his. "No, it wns not wrong. Do I look like a man who could not be trust ed?" Something In her face seemed to give him confidence, for he went on Impetu ously: "May not n man send (lowers to the girl whom he loves? Little girl, I am all alone In the world nnd very lonely. You nre lonely too. 1 read It In jour face day after day. And you need some one to take care of you. If you can trust me, if you think that some day you can love me n little, won't you let me take enre of you? I can wait patiently. I have been loving you for these many weeks, but I can wait till you are ready, dear." As she looked up Into his earnest, inanly face and read the love shining lu his eyes she laid her head down on his breast nnd whispered, 'I am ready now." So Miss Mctcalf lost her companion, but Philip Bryee gained a wife. How DerinK Died. Iu Harper's Magazine Collins Shack elford tells the true story of the fatal expedition of the explorer Bering, from whom Bering strait Is named. Here is bis account of the adventurer's death after the loss of his ship: "Bering, who had been for some time totally disabled, was brought ashore on a hand barrow In a Iwnt and placed in a sheltering hollow, where his still faithful men a mere handful had cleared the snow from the sand. Even then he was dying. Ills great age and the hardships he had undergone on this voyage made his struggle for life hopeless. "Ills slow passing away was pathetic and pitiful. In effect he partially l,nrl...l lilmenlf tillvo lie l:i v miller the shelter of a tent made from an old sail. Long suffering had made him childish nnd petulant. F.nch day and nil day his weakening hands were constantly busied scraping down upon his body, beginning at his feet, the sand from the ridges on either side. "He would submit to no Interference with this occupation. Insisting that the sand wanned him. When he died, Iec. 8, 1711, a month nfter the landing, his body was already half burled, and It needed but a little work on the part of his skeleton comrades to inclose this hero of the arctic regions In a coffin of frozen sand. Kill Your l.nnK. Breathe more. Breathe deeply. Breathe freoly. Why don't wo take more of this vital power into our be ing? We must If our lives nre to be full and vigorous. The puny, whining, stingy Individual Is not the one who has a full, deep res piration. She Is stingy and crabbed with herself first. Fill your lungs full. Fill the upper part. Fill the lower part. Now be sure you cannot get another bit of air any where. Slowly and steadily exhale. Whenever you are outdoors do It, walking to and from the oflice. Oct up from your sewing and go out on the porch and try it. When you feel nerv ous try It. When things get tangled up and you are becoming confused try it. If you feel cross try it. In short, when you feel the need of vitality fill your lungs and take It. Control the exhala tion, nnd if you persist you will find restlessness, worry and impatience will inse their grip and newer power will possess your being. God's gift, fresh air. plenty of It! Will you take 11 '-Medical Talk. Hard Medicine to Take. "Doctor," said a fashionably dressed woman to her new physician, "I want you to give me a prescription which will cure me of a most Irritating trou ble." The doctor bowed and waited for her to go on. "About 11 o'clock every evening." said the patient. "I am overcome by n feeling of sleepiness no matter where I am-at the opera, at a dinner parly, wherever I may be this dreadful sen sation comes over me. I have suffered from It now for five weeks, and no remedy has seemed to do any good." "Oi t.Mn give von a prescription Jim Dumps' physician once fell ill. Said he: "I'll have no draught or pill." Said Jim: "Ho, ho, you're on the shelf, Vou who cure others, cure yourself." Then Jim sent up some " Force " to him, "That's what he needs," quoth " Sunny Jim." that will prevent It from overcoming you ever again." said the doctor. Ills new patient was radiant, but when she looked at the slip of paper the doctor g;ive her her face clouded. He had written: "Bed from 10 at night till 7 the next morning. Repeat dose once In twenty four hours whenever symptoms occur." HOW TO BOIL WATER. An Important Point When the Coffee In Helnu Mnile. "To boil water is the simplest tbinj In the world," said the steward at one of the leading hotels of 'Waslilngton, "but how to boll It Is quite another thing. I believe we have the name of having the best coffee of any hotel lu this city. Of course we use good cof fee; but. let me tell you. much of the praise is due to the fact that the water with which to make the coffee has been properly boiled. The secret in boiling water is just tills: Always use fresh water and let the kettle lo warm before the cold, sparkling fluid is put into it. The lire should be quick, so that the water will boil at once, and the water should be removed from the fire the instant boiling point Is reached and poured upon the coffee or tea or whatever beverage is In demand Im mediately. So many people make the mistake of permitting the kettle to re main over the lire, where the water steams nnd simmers away, wasting the good water In vapor. Those who drink hot water before breakfast, as many do, should Insist on the use of fresh water and having It served as soon as boiled." Doctors say, however, that to kill germs In suspicious water boiling should last about live minutes. Wash ington Post. Mitnlcnrlnu; In Fnlille Plee. Cleanliness nuiy be next to godliness, but the persons who manicure their nails in the elevated trains and street cars win their way to paradise at the cost of endangering the salvation of others. Hundreds who wish to make a presentable appearance at their ollices and places of "business use the cars of the elevated and surface systems as places In which to complete their toi lets. A man will pull n knife from his pocket nnd proceed to remove the grit from beneath his linger nails. When he completes his operation he looks around with the air of one who thinks he should be commended for his habits of personal neatness, lie wonders why many persons glnre at him from over the tops of their papers in such a dis gusted manner. He does not realize they have put him down for a consum mate boor wlio should be confined In a separate compartment. New York I 'rpsa TnkiiiK It Out mi the Family. Mrs. Ferguson (icorge, what partic ular failing of yours did the preacher touch on in his sermon this morning? Mr. Ferguson What do you nsk me that question for? Mrs. Ferguson Because you have been as cross as a bear ever since you came homo from church. ' Chicago tribune. Making n Hit. "All my achievements," said the great race horse, "are due to the fact that I always put my best foot for ward." "I find," replied the wicked mule, "that I accomplish more by putting my best foot backward." Exchange. ' Proof. Mother-Why, my child, flint little burt couldn't possibly have made your kr.ee so stiff as that! Little Lizzie-Yes, it did too. Just you try to bend it and see If I don't scream. Baltimore American. A flatfooted refusal Is not well bred. Nothing betokens breeding like the arched lnstep. Puck. Is the New and Bettor Breakfast FoikI, so different from all others that it pleases everybody. Get a package to-day at your grocers, his Giiiksee Pukb Food Co., Lb Rot, N. Y. BUY AT HOME! When you need a Range or Cocking Stove consult your e r. Then if it i not as reprettuicJ you know it will be Besides you will k r l -i kw. i . i mi Mti a ini i . -L. . . V . VJ? 30 PEIi Off XT. Get our prices ami tee it' this is not an absolute fact. SCOWDEN & CLARK. County Thone 22. rn IP 3 I V i I LiVU -oj m Opium. Laudanum. Cocaino and all Drug Habits permanently cured, without pain or detention from business, leaving no craving for drugs or other stimulants. We restore the nervou3 and physical systems to their natural condition because we remove the causes of disease. A home remedy prepared by an eminent physician. WE GUARANTEE A CURE FREE TRIAL TREATMENT Confidential correspondence, especially with physicians, solicited. Write today. Manhattan Therapeutic Association Dept. A 1 135 Broadway, New York City THE "OLD RELIABLE" PARKER GUN MADE ON HONOR. lias Stood the Test for Over S3 Yen. Is noted for its simplicity of construction, beauty ot proportion,' excellence of workmanship, faultless balance, and Hard Shooting (liinlllleN. Experience and ability have placed the Paki.kk Gvs in an envi' hie and well deserved position as tllO Best Gun in the world. Made by the old est shot pun manufacturers in America. Over 110,000 of these gu: 8 in use. NerAkRSRnN84Tr' iJSIUS, PARKER BROS., MERIDEN, CONN. Fred. Grottonborgcr GEN Kit AL BLACKSMITH & MACHINIST. All work iicrtaiiiiiiK to Machinery, Kn KinoM, Oil till TooIh, (.ias or Water Fit Ijnp.anil (Imtcral HlackHinithiiiK prompt ly done at Iiow HntoH. Ktipairinir Mill Mi.chincry given apecial attention, and satmfaction guaranteed. Shop in rear of andjiiHt went of the Shaw Hou.se, Tidioute, I'a. Your patronage solicited. FRED. ORETTENBKRUKR. Jos, ir fi.ivm PRACTICAL BOILER MAKER, ltepalrM ISoilers Stills Tanks Agitator. IJujs nnd Scllsj Second - hand Hollers 1"'. Wire or letter orders promptly at tended t'. End of ii9ppririi Bridge, Third ward, Oil, CITY, A. Children prove the dellclousnessof Wheallet by cilline f or a second dish, whlleother cereals (TO by untouched. Their rosy checks and roDusi oodles testiry mat WHEATLET Is mad from h.ird seed Spring wheat, fifty per cent, more nutritious th.m the many stirchv 1 unrelkh.ihle cereals mnde from white Winter j wheat because of greater proht. Is Imitated but never equaled. Wit Be sure you (ret the orlInM whole wheat products. Your grocer can supply you. The genuine made only by The Franklin Mills Co., "A 11 Ihe Wheat thaFt Fit to Eat." Loch port, N. Y. Wanted-An Idea Who enn think if to litltt'DW Prefect your ldiw: thT m.-ty lirin vm wiviiih. Wr1u JOHN WKUDF.Kiil'KN ft t:o.. Patent Att"f neyt. WimMnfftmi, D. '., fir their ricQ oflor and lint vt two hundred iureutiouA wttuuul. 1 W 1 borne deal made right. ft TIONESTA, PA. HAS NO EQUAL. WATCH REPAIRING Clock Kcpairiiu and all work pertaining to the jowolur'a trade, promptly and accurately done. Xo Silvt'riiic Watch Cases traded for Old Silver Chhcs In any condition. Old watches taken In ex change for new ones i. t. ,txii:usoiv, Anderson A O' liar a barber uliop, Tlonesta, Pa sl&GUsr Mosicr OFTICIAK Ollicc i t VA National Hank lltiilding, OIL CITY, I'A. Kyea examined free. Exclusively optical. AUTHORITY OF THE mmm PEOPLE can well be claimed of a book that has received the unquali fied indorsement of the Executive Departments of the Government, the U. S. Supreme Court, all the State Supreme Courts, all the State Superintendents of Schools, nearly all of the College Presi dents, and Educators almost universally. The New and Enlarged Edition of Webster's Inter national Dictionary of English, Biography, Geography, Fic tion, etc., has quarto pages with 5000 illustrations. 25,000 new words and phrases have recently been added under the editorship of VV. T. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D., U. S. Commissioner of Education, bringing the work fully up to date. LET US SiZND YOU FREE "A Tost in Pronunciation" wlilrh uironlsa ilr:t-',i,t iii.il in.-t riiL-t i c l veiling's euter- tUilltlR'tlt. lllustinu (1 piimplik't irlso free. G. 6 C. MERKIAM CO., Pub- . Springfield, Mass. IT PAYS LOJ TO A DVKUTISk. IN THIS l'Al'Kjt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers