THE FREE for TWO MONTHS Try it at Our Expense V? war.t to rrovn to vou that The Ohio Former Is the frrntet farm paper published, and as you can not appreciate its value with out a trial, and comparison with other farm papers, wo will take the risk of sending: It to you every week for elftht weekt, and If you do not want It to come for the next ten months (a yenr In all), write us and we positively guarantee to nop It at one and will not charare you a cent for the two months' trial. It Is the fairest offer we can make, as It Rives you an opportu nity of reaiinR the beat farm paper published. Ions enough to be come thoroughly familiar with it, and without cost to you, If you do not find It Just what you want. The Ohio r'nrmcr is a, large 20-pnKp; weekly H to 4 ft psjrea In the winter reading season), well illustrated, on rich-grade paper, with the largest and most expensive staff of practical editors, correspond ents, and field reporters (all acknowledged authorities in then' lines), and If you are engaged In any branch of farmlnn, you will receive information worth many times the ruhrerlption price. THIS OFFER WILL NOT APPEAR AGAIN, so write at once, before you forget It. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE, to represent us. Rend for complete terms, premium list, ami supplies, all free. It makes easv and profitable winter work. FREE SAMPLE COPY. If you prefer to rend ft sample copy be. fore taking advarituse of our offer we will send you one free on re quest. Address THE OHIO FARMER, Cleveland, Chlo. Cut out this coupon and ...COUPON... THE OHIO FARMER, Cl.T.lftnri, OMo. 1 scs.pt. yotir off.T te t.l Tfca OMi r.rm.r. and yoe m.y .titer rar inharrintlon fnr en. Te.r, at 75 e.nt.. Aft.T t.f.irlng S eortra. I will Ither send yoa 7ft cent.. rr wilt writ, yon to .top th. p.p.r, wn.n yen sr. to e.ne.l tiiln nrd.r, .top th. p.p.r, .nd chare. u. nothing far th. ight Irl.l rnpir.. Slot Machines Prospering. Wncd the Legislature In Nevada legalized slot machines they have been olng a (treat business, and most of the nickels have disappeared from circulation into the machines. This has occasioned ench inconvenience among the public that the banks of Nevada have had to send to the mint for . mew supply. $1,000 To Be Given for Reliable Information We will five On Dollar for m Pottal Card ivinf the first reliable news of chance to sell t horizontal steam engine ot our styles, within our range ol sizes. We do not want Inquiries tt this time for vertical, traction or (as engines. ATLAS ENGINES AND BOILERS hare for years beta the standard for til attsm plaafs. Beat of material and vorimaaahlp. Our big output ansbles us to sell on small prof its. An Atlas, the best la the world, coats as more thaa the other kind. Wtit$ today tar our tptdal otttr. ATLAS ENGINE WORKS Belli of anfwBciM i all citiei INDIANAPOLIS fori I ft Knirinrra nighApMrl pndnM WalMTotstBollm I FonrVkW RneiDH Catnpniirid FnrlnM TnbnUrRoiliri I Aettxnfctic EnglCM Throttling EucIbm PorUbitBtriitn) I AHm InmnM In nrrles I.MA.NW W P. tllu BoiUri in tartiea 4,000,000 B. f. 32Sl9322 SHOES rZ W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot do equauea at any price. r I . IMUHLMS MAKES AMD SELLS ' MtlRF MEM'S st3.HO SHOES THAU AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. 1H nnfl REWARD to snwntwrie eta $ I U)UUU dlaproye thla itttsmsnt. W. L. Doug las $.1.50 shoes have by their ST vellent style, easy fitting;, and siiperlorwearlnf qualities, achieved the largest sale ol any $.t.M hoe In the world. They are Just as good aa those that cost you $3.00 to $7.00 the only difference la the twite. II I could take you Into say factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In the world under one roof making men's fine hoea, and show vou the care with which every palr of Douglas shoes Is made, you would reallre why W. L. Dou.las $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced In the world. If I could show you the difference between the hoea made In mv factory and those ol other snakes, you would understand why Dnusjlas S3. SO shore cost more to make, why they hold thair shape, fit better, wear lontrer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other S3. SO ehoe on the market todoy. W. L. Douglau Strong Umd Shoma for Mmn. $2.60, 02.00. Coys' School Cesas Shoom,S2.SO, 92, S1.16.S1.IO CAUTION. Insist upon havine; W.L.rtong las shoes. 'Juke no substitute. Knne genuine arithout his name and price stamped oo bottom. WANTED. A shnadealerineverytownwhere) - W. L. DoukIss Slifies are not sold. Full line ot Samples sent free for inspection uimn request, fast Color Eytltti used; tlieu will not mmr brauy. Writ for Illnstrsted Catalnff of Fall Rtvles. W. Ih DOUGLAS. Urockton, Mass. FOR WOMEN troubled with ills aeeullar ts tacit sex, usee as douche Is msrveioualy suc- esstai. Taorougaiy eieaoses , auis aisease germs, tops aiMhutos, null ijulammattoo and local aorensss, cures leaoorrbcaa aad naaal catarrh. Paztine Is in powder terra to be diwolved io pore water, snd is far mors cleansinc, healing, nraucidal and economical than liquid anuseptica for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For asle at drugtiau, 00 cents a box. Trial Box and Book ol Instructions Freav Thc n. PaxTOM CoaiesHT . ostom. aa.aa. T7APM Ttifls WantM. Hirhsst pncM pstd. Olve Jf deiM-hi'tioii. Muc.y losned. Ouio Laud Agency, BlaiM-liKHl.r, olitu. CUIUS tllfht All list fAllt. Oonab Srmo. Tasies Ooud. Use in tune, eoiq njr QniSTPsM. If aSTirted -STftopspa'sEyeWatsr wit a Teas IHj fe FOR WOMEN JSAj2 23 lis- attach It to your letter: 1ir7 Indians Growing Rich. The little tribe of Quapaw Indians is destined to be the richest in the world. About two years ago an adop ted member of the tribe was digging a well in the Quapaw Nation, about four miles south of Baxter Springs, Kan., when he struck what proved to be a rich body of '"Jack," or sine ore. This was quickly developed, and over this well now stands a large concentrating plant, producing week ly 120,000 pounds ot zinc and 4,000 pounds of pure lead. Many thousand acres of the adjoin ing lands have been leased from the Indians by white men, says the Ftaur Track News. Over 200 drill holes have been sunk, and in nearly every In stance lead and zinc have been found In paying quantities. The field Is not only a large one, but is richer than anything in the famous .loplln district of southwestern Missouri and south eastern Kansas. STOPS BELCHING.1 Cures Fajd Ttv.atli Faaltlra and Instant Cure Fr.e-No Times Cnres by Absorption. A nrpet breath is priceless. MnU's .Anli-Peleh Wafers will enre had nreath stir! hsrl taste instantly. Belching snd bad taste indicate offensive brealh, which i due to strma"h trouble. Mull's Anli-TCclch Wafers purify the stomach and stop belching, by absorbing foul Erases that arise from undigested food, and by supplying the ditrestive organs with natural solvents for food. They relieve sea or car sickness snd nausea of any kind. They quickly cure headache, correct the ill effect of t.,:cssive eatintj or drinking. They will destroy a tobacco, whisky or onion breath instantly. They stop fermentation in the stomach, acute indigestion, cramps, colic, jr;is in the stomach and intestines, distended ah dnmcn. heartburn, bad complexion, d:7?y speiis or any nlher uitiiclion arming lrom a rlioeased st'n.icli. We know Mail's Anti Belch Wafers will do this, and we want vou to know it. Spkciat, Offf.r.- The rccular price of Mull's Anti-Belch AVnfers is Mc. a box, hut to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two 12) boxes upon receipt of 75c. aid this advertisement, or we will aend you a sample free for this coupon. 1225 A FREE BOX. 130 Send this coupon with your rame and address snd drugciat's name for a free box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers, a cure for stomach trouble, to Mcll's (iSArK Town?' Co., 328 Third Ave., Kock Island, 111. Jin Full Addrttn and Writt Plainly. Sold st all druggists, 50c. per box. Shocks from False Teeth. "False teeth have, been known to generate electricity in the mouth and shock their wearer painfully," said a physician. "Only last week a gentleman came to me and said he feared be was getting a cancer on his tongue. 'Such severe shoot ing pains attack me,' he said, 'that often I utter loud oaths in the most unseemly places at teas, before the minister, and so on. It Is like knife thrusts. Do you think I am going to lose my tongue?' I found that two different meals had been used in fixing the poor man's false teeth. These metals, combining with the saliva, had formed a small battery. Electricity generated in the battery continually, and shock after shock was administered to the tongue. .1 painted the metals with an insulat ing varnish. Thereafter the man had no more trouble." TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY. a Woman Who Has Snfferad Telia How to Find Relief. The thousands of roicen who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders and oth?r kidney ills, will find com fort in 'ho words of il.'b. Jan) Far rell, of 606 Ocean Ave., Jersey City, N. J.; who says: "I reiterate ill I liave said before In oral- . of Doan's Kidney Pills. I had been having heavy backache and my general health was affected when I began using them. My f et were wollen, my eyes puffed, and dizzy spells were frequent. Kidney action was Irregular and the secretions high ly colored. To-dsy, however, I am a well woman, and I am confident that Doan's Kidney Fills bave made me to, and are keeping me well." Sold by all dealers. BO cents box. Foster-liUburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. SAVIXU LOST TRAVELERS SIGNPOSTS WILL BE ERECTED IN CALIFORNIA DESERT. Iron Posts and Stenciled Sheet Iron Plates to Direct to Springs and Water Holes Narrow Escapes of Desert Wanderers and Deaths From Thirst. The last Californdia lrgislature ap propriated r,noo for expenditure by desert border counties for the eret tion of signposts in the desert pointing to water holes nnd In locating new springs and protecting old ones from becoming sand filled or polluted by the bodies of dead cmlmals, says the San Francisco Chronicle. A lesser sum was likewise appropriated hy tho last Nevada legislature. To augment these state appropria tions several hoards of county super visors are setting nside auxiliary funds, .and generally the Initiative for concerted action, tiiiifn by the U's Angeles chamber of commcrco through the persistent, and untiring efforts of George, W. Parsons, an old time mining; expert, is being earnest ly followed. From several of the ten border counties committees are now going out into the r-ilcnt wastes to gather exact data as to trails, springs, etc., and their preliminary work will be fol lowed up at once with post plantings, spring rcnnVRtlngs, well diggings and' the like. A more humane undertaking could scarcely bo conceived in the mining field. Some of the supervisors favor the erection of iron guide posts, deeply anchored in the unstable sands to Insure permanency; also the cutting of directions Into sheet Iron boards, as a precaution against the fierce de sert heal ; which makes short work of such previous substances as wood and paint. Other supervisors suggest the molding of the lettered directions into the very Iron of the posts. Why? Be cause unbelievable as it may sound, there are human fiends abroad In thc deserts of California and Nevada, afoot and ahorse who think it fine sport to unllmber their revolvers and shoot to pieces, for mere devilish pas time, the few signboards they encoun ter in their wanderings tho while knowing, as only such as they can know, that the vandal act may mean and often has meant, bewilderment, torture, delirium and death to the next man who Tares itlong the dim trail. A few instances of death by desert thirst and of escape from death by chance meetings, taken at random from a record kept by thc writer dur ing the last few months, will il lustrate more than could any more statements of opinion thc desperate need for just such action as now, at this late day, is being taken by county officials In southern Nevada and south ern California. For brevity's sake the facts will be statedi in outline on- On tho full of July James It. McRao, 1 prospector, reached San Ueitiardino with the news of a fearful ' tragedy barely averted id the Telescope moun tains, in the Declh. valley region. His horse had died of heat and overex tion, forcing Mclliu; to abandon tin? Water cask the animal bad been car lying. He filled his canteens and started afoot, to the nearest spring. 10 miles away. At thc end of the first five miles ho found that, half of his meagre supply of water had heen lost through an unsuspected leak in the can teen. He drank what was left to savo it, then lay down in the blazing sun under a mosquito bush to await the cool of night. When the sun had gone down he started again for the spring. The fol lowing day he came in sight of it, and let out of his parched throat a shrill cry of joy. Instantly an answering cry came out of the shadeless depths of a near-by canyon, greatly startling McRae. He hurried to the spring and filled his leaky canteen, all the time keeping up a shouting that was an swered at intervals faintly Irom the gulch. Following the direction of the sounds he came upon six prospectors, lying about In the scant protection of the brush, all but one of them too far gone in the agonies of thirst to call out or get upon their feet. The one Who was most alive had dono the shouting for the rest. McRae dosed them with water In small quantities, ind when they had revived s little be led them to the spring, not more than half a mile away. There the lost men covered their faces and filled their cracked and blackened mouths With mud to draw out the intolerable pain. After three days they were able to travel on, having filled their cask and been given their bearings by Mc Rae. A lost child saved Manuel Sepul veda, his wife and throe children from death on tho desert near Moapa on July 19. They had started by wagon from Euvada for Searchlight, and had kept to the beaten track as far as Moapa. Soon after leaving that place they attempted a short cut and be came lost. They found themselves In tho same terrifying predicament that has sapped the courage of tho most hardened prospectors alone in the heart of the Illimitable sage and 6and, without sign of any sort to guido them right or Mt. Hoarding their de pleted water supply for the children, the youngest, a tot of i years, the parents already felt the fierce pangs jof thirst. Their horses were all but finished. Then a thunderstorm came up sud deply," drenching them and partially refilling their cask. Tho next dy Bepulveda saw a train gliding across the horizon. That way lay salvation. l drove bis suffering horses ten hours, trying to reach the track. Mir age! The rattle and roar ot a sec ond thunderstorm made the horses mad with fright, and they broke away,! upsetting the wagon before kicking i free of thc harness. Now death star-) ed at the littlo party, and threatened , them step by step. At this juncture one i of the children was miBsed. Search-1 Ing for it Sepulveda mounted a swale, j snd saw In the distance a camp of miners. The child was found. The campers guided the Sepulvedas to Ivanpah after satisfying their fearful thirst. For want of sign posts Sepul veda had gono 100 miles out of his course. Somewhere In the solitudes of Death Valley lie the whitening boncB or Karl Wellcr and E. M. Titus of Tcllurlde, Col. They gave up their lives In a search for tho glittering beds of placer gold that some believe to be hidden In that furnace valley. Accompanied by John Mullln, they left Hhyollto on June 20 with two horses and lfl burros. Five days later the horses dropped dead of heat and thirst., the men having lost their way. Til us at. once left camp on a blind search for a water hole. Weller and Mullin found a damp spot near camp, nnd by digging got ft small ration of water each day for themselves, but nono for the burros. The animals died one by one. Theu Weller filled three canteens and started out to find Titus. Fifteen days Mullin kept the camp against their return, but they never came. They died somewhere alouo In the desert. Mullin was pick ed up delirious wandering by a Mex ican, who gave him drink and guided him back to Rhyollte. Matt Riley, an old-time prospector, lert O K mine, in the Pale district of Riverside county, July 3, on a pro specting trip. He was accompanied by James Kltt, also an experienced miner. Twelve miles out Kltlo was taken sick and turned back. In so doing ho escaped death with Riley. The lntter's water supply became ex hausted while he was searching with out aid of signboards (of which there were none) for Cottonwood Springs. Following his tracks two weeks Inter a searching party found Riley's body festering under a clump of brush. He had wandered SO miles asldo In his blind hunt for water. On June 30 the west bound Routlv ern Pacific overland brought into Col- ton, near San Bernardino, a pitiable passenger Frank Seamnn, residence unknown. Ho was almost naked, cov ered with mud, and the flesh of his Hands and feet was streaked with blood. Tho ends of his fingers were split to tho hone from digging in moist earth for water. His tongue Mwi.ien to twice its natural size his lips were blackened anil cracked open. He had flagged the passenger train by taking a stand between the rails and refusing to budge at thc fiantic whistlings of the engineer. He had started from Indlo to walk to I.os Angeb's across the desert and became lost. On September 1 a party of prospec tors brought Tom Newton, crazy and dying, into (loldlield. They brought al:-:o tho news that, they had buried ills companion, William Peterson, a former resident in the Fast, beside n end us tree nine miles out in t lie de ficit, nt a spot liair a mile from where they had found. Newton wandering, naked, In delirium. Newton and Pet ersen, both of i hem weil known pro spectors and camp men in the South ern Nevada districts, had started out. from Rhvoliic on a search for the sup poed fabulous diggings in Death Val ley. They lost their way and exhaust ed their slight supply of water. Three days out. Peterson died of heat and thirst. Newton wandered-on, losing bis reason as he went. When found by a rescuing party, he was naked and leaping about in tho blazing sun like a frog. His whole body was swollen, and in many places the skin had burst. They f e 1 him' water In drops until he was sufficiently revived to be carried Into Goldlieldk And so the terrible list could be lengthened through page after page if anything more than mere recital of distressing details were to be gained. The cases cited are but a few among scores of similar ones brought to the attention of the newsreadlng public this year. Not in Danger. This good story comes from a repre sentative from Mississippi: A whang doodle, hard-shell preacher was hold ing forth and wound up a flaming sermon with a peroration which came near taking tho shingles off the meet ting house. He said: "My brethren and sistern, ef a man's full of religion you can't' hurt him. There was thc three Arabian children; tbey put 'em In ft fiery fur nace hetted seven times hotter than it could be bet, an' it didn't swinge a bar on their heds; no, not a single hnr. An' thero was John the Evangeler; they put him an' where do you think, brethren and sistern, they put him? When they put him in a caladronlc o billng water an' ile an' biled him all night an' It didn't crack his shell. An' there was Dan'el; they put him In a lion'B den an' what, my fellow trav elers an' companions in sin, do you think he was put in a lion's den for? Why, fer prayln' three times a day. Don't be alarmed, brethren and sis tern, I don't think any of you will ever get In a lion's den'." Charleston News and Courier. College Education Expensive. "Is It expensive sending jour girls to college?" "I should say so! My wife takes ad vantage of their absence to drews about twenty years younger than she really l.-JJfe. G.ve Up His Gun. The other night an lola man bought a revolver and started out to kill another man. In his search for bis man he ran into a Holiness street meeting. He slopped anil listened for a few minutes. Then he walked up to tho preacher, handed him over the revolver, confessed that he had started out to do murder and aBked for prayers. They were given, and the would-be murderer now spends his nights in church instead of the county jail. Kansas City Journal. FITRpermsnsntlveured. No fllsornervons jiessafter first day's use oT I)r. Kllne'sGreat Nertellestorer,! itrial bottleand treat Iso free Ur.Jt. H. JUikb, Ltd., ltl Areh Kt.,rhlla.,l' Charlotte Bronte's husband ii still !iv at UanaElier. Kngland. ' Mrs, Window's Hoothlnn fiyrnp for Children allays rain, cures wind colic, V5c. bottle Whiteflsh and snlmnn trout tre almost extinct in Canadian waters. riso's Oureoannot be too htlilyspoken ot s laeough cure. J. W. O'Brish, 82i Third Avenue, N., Mlnne inoll, Minn., Jan. 6,193), Kcrca was greatly benefited hy the Russo-Japanese war. Boom In Mushrooms. There Is an unprecedented boom In mushrooms this year in England. So abundant is the crop In some parts of East Norfolk that they are being mowed down with scythes to save tho labor ot hand-picking. BABY CAME NEAR DYING from an Jlwrnl Skin H nmnr Seratehed Till nioml Han Wasted In a Skela Ion Speedily Cured be Cutlcara. "When three months old my boy broke cut with an itching, watery rash all over his body, and he would scratch till the blood ran. We tried nearly everything, but he grew worse, wasting to t skeleton, snd we feared he would die. He slept only when in our arms, 'lhe first application of Ctiticura soothed him so that he slept in his cradle for the first time in many weeks. One set of Cuticurt made a complete and permanent cure. (SignerT) Mis. M. 0. Maitland, Jasper, Ontario." Natural Sun Dial. Greece boasts the largest sun dial on the planet. Thero Is a large pro montory In the Aegean Sf-a, looking to the East, which extends 3,000 feet above the level of the water. As the sun swings around the shadow of the mountain touches one by one ft cir cle uf Islands separated by regular In tervals, which act as hour marks. Catarrh Cannot lie Cored With Local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is blood or constitutional disease, snd in order to cure it you must take Internal remedies, Hall's Catnrrh Cure Is taken internally, and sets dlroctly on t ho blood and miieoussn rface Hail's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed hy one of th best physic eians in this country for years, and is a reg ular prescription. It Is composed of the best tonics known, combined with tho best blood purifiers, acting directly on tho mu cous stirfaeos. Tho perfect combination of the two Ingredients is whnt produces such wonderful results in curing CKturrli. Bend for testimonials, free. 1''. J. Uhknky A Co., Trops., Toledo, O, Bold by druRKists. price, 75c, 'Into Hall's family Tills for constipation Miss Cleveland Makes Fortune. Miss Itoso Elizabeth Cleveland, sis ter of former President Cleveland, la now a wealthy woman. A score of years ago sho Invested $1,500 In nn Island off thc Maino coast near Cam den. Fashion has turned its eyes in that direction, and Miss Cleveland has Just sold part of her Island for $''(in nr.n. nwTMhi.frfr"' MPs There is only One Genuine-SyrUp Of FlgS, The Genuine is Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Thej full name of the company, California Fig Syrup Co 1m printed on the front of every package of the genuine. The Genuine- Syrup of Figs- is for Sale, In Original Packages Only, by Reliable Druggists Everywhere Knowing the above will enable one to avoid the fraudulent imita tions made by piratical concerns and sometimes offered by unreliable dealers. The imitations are known to act injuriously and should therefore be declined. Buy the genuine always if you wish to get its beneficial effects. It cleanses the system gently yet effectually, dispels colds and headaches when bilious or -constipated, prevents fevers and acts best on the kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels, when a laxative remedy is needed by men, women or children. Many millions know of its beneficial effects from actual use and of their own personal knowledge. It is the laxative remedy of the well-informed. .Always buy the Genuine- Syrup of Figs MANUFACTURED BY THB CaumiaITgotpIh Louisville, Ity laBMelttl PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color mortfoMibrlffhUT ind f eelortho anrothardrt- On lv prltmrflnrH flhr. Thr lr ti wr Sttr lhn nr o'.hof -Wo. Yn Md M fUBMBl wiitkoBl llvyl&c tpftrt, Wrilt tof ITM bMkJttUf- M , BU0e n Mil Colors. .11 U .N H ii M UUl'U CO., VmUa'UUt .UiwNfif, THE DISCOVERER Of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. tli Great Woman's Remedy for Woman's Ills. 32 No other female medicine In the unrmalifled endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or sto hosts of grateful friends as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovar-lw Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacement of ths) Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to thf Change of Mfe. It has eured more esses of Backache and Leucorrrhcea than any other rj edy the world has ever known. It Is almost Infallible In such oases. H dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of AV velopment. Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach. Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debit ity quickly yield to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight and backache, tm stantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstance If invigorates the female system, and Is as harmless as pter. It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, ." don't care" and " want-to-be-left-alnne " feeling, excitability, irritability, nervous! ness, Dizziness, Falntness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or the " bines and headache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, or some tm rangement of the Uterus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaint! and Backache, of either sex, the Vegetable Compound always cures. Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundrerl thousand times, for they get what they want a cure. Sold by Druggists' everywhere. Kefuse all substitutes. ' PRICE. 25 Cta 0 CURE THE CRIP "vIN ONE DAY ? fUMPINE Mi r-n. u. 4H. iDOh. The Life Saver of Children ujr M AMI IFATTI IRP Omnp. Cmiirln. CnMs and ensum-inla Is Hex- VVC MAIMUrOIUnt He'-iOrnuiiCu. It .rvent Dli'titliria and Mem- Gas odvinQ Oas Burners r'i a. i.ho.ie, uim.10, m. v. for Boilers, and Hot Air Furnaces, n F1P I ft II Oa ate at 6. rtn Write for t'alnlngue. 1 'feraLMalilJa. 0n rt'eaMIH saHWItlllMI and for widows anf STANDARD KEATING AND RADIATOR CO.. " records or service. I.swsan advice tree. A, H itlrCOKM i( K ft urj, PI1TCBURC, PA. SI8 Walnut Klreet, I Inehmatl, Ohio mm MUCB HM Y ENTS FBI BOTTIX world has received such widespread an. AUTI-GRIPinE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. I won't sell A all Orlplae to a dealer who won't Guarantee It, Call for Tour MONEY SACK 1HTDOMVT CTBS, F. II'. Dinner, It. D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Jfa . SSN I it tsCTI tWaak. fVI..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers