' GRIP IS PREVA LENT AGAIN. A prompt remedy is what every one is looking for. The efficiency of Pcru nais so well known that its value as a grip rem edy need not be ques tioncd. The grip yields more quickly if taken in hand prompt ly. If you feel grippy get a bottle of Pcruna at once. Delay is almost certain to aggravate your case. For a free illustrated booklet entitled "The Truth About l'emnii," address The Feruna Co., Columbus, Ohio. Mailed postpaid. PILES PampT. treatment ItrnCaom File and Flitula Cur and Pork pent by mall FREE. RE CO.. DEPT. B. 4 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Artificial Marble. A substitute for marble which nn swers ninny of Its purposes satisfac torily Is made of waste sing from blast furnaces and lime, pulverized, compressed and then treated with carbonic acid. Only Ono "llroino Quinine" That la Laialive llromo Quinine. Look for the signature ol n. v. uruve. ur.ra in V orlu over to tjure a l-oiu in jm uixj. tuv. 8 Generally True in These Days. y . (cis ii n in; tt l id rni in in uinui-u, Johnny (vivaciously) Hy earth quakes, sir. Iloston Traveler. Every Woman Will Ho Interested. If you bavo rains thn Urinary, Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a pleasant herb cure fur woman's Ills, try Mother Grny's At Atrnlinn Leaf. It is a re liable regulator. All DniKiristsGOets. Hom ple free. The Mother Oray Co.,Le Roy.N.Y. Not Worrying. . Teacher What, Mickey, you don't know how many quarts are In a gal lon? I am ashamed of you. Mickey Don't have to know. We don't buy more'n half a gallon at a time. Cincinnati Enquirer. One Ohio Lincoln Elector Left. General John neatly Is tho Inst sur vivor of the Ohio electoral college of 1860 that cast the vote of the State for Abraham Lincoln for president. That was a good while ago, and not much was thought of it at the time, but now that he stands the lone rep resentative of that distinguished body, he becomes an object worthy of note, not merely because he was a presidential elector, but because his presence recalls the most thrilling chapters In the history of the Nation. And yet, as a man and a citizen, General Beatty commands no little at tention, for he was one of the strong, dependable men In those troublesome times, and we always admire strong men wherever they are found. It has ever been so, and so It will ever be, for weakness Is never regarded as a virtue. As colonel of . the famous Third Ohio regiment, and as brigadier gen eral, he won for himself, and for the troops he commnnded, no little fame In the Army of the Cumberland under Rosecrans and Thomas. Nor was he less famous as a stanch, conscien tious citizen of his native State. Eranius Wilson, in Pittsburg Gazette Times. Parcels-Post in Germany. Germany has parcels-post arrange ments with nearly every Important country in the world, and, with the exception of the United .States and South America, these arrangements include provisions for collection and delivery of goods up to $200 in most cases and $100 in others. These privileges help to build up trade, and have, In fact, done so. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegunn,reduceinnarnrna tion, alleys paiq, cures wind nolic, 25c a bottle. GOOD CHANGE Coffee to Postam. The large army of persons who have found relief from many chronlo ailments by changing from coffee to Poatum as a dally beverage, la grow ing each day. It Is only a simple question of try ing It for oneself in order to know the joy of returning health as realized by an Ills, young lady. She writes: "1 had been a coffee drinker nearly all my life and It affected my stomach caused Insomnia, and I was seldom without a headache. 1 had. heard about Postum and how beneficial It was, so concluded to quit coffee and try it "I was delighted with the change, air can now sleep well and seldom ever have headache. My stomach has got ten strong, and I can eat without suf fering afterwards. I think my whole system greatly benefited by Postum. "My brother also suffered ' from stomach trouble while he drank cof fee, but now, since using Postum he feels so much better he would not go back to coffee for anything." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Micb. Read, "The Road to Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There's a Rea son." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and foil of human Interest. WASTE OF THE AMERICAN FORESTS. The American peoplo are cbaiged wMh being tho most wasteful and prodigal in the world, and there is a common expression that other races of people cau live on what the Americans throw away. At any late the destructive disposi tion of our peoplo Is strikingly seen In the extermination of iho wild buffa loes, millions of which roamed upon the Western plains of this country within the knowledge end experlenee of many persons of the present gen eration, but of which today not one exists In the wild slate, and but few under private ownership. Tho prodigality with which the vast American forests are being cut down without any effort at reforestation is ono! tier example of wholesale Ameri can wi ste. When the first English set tlers landed on American soli three cen turies ago the entire region from the Allnntlu coast to the Mississippi, and from fur up In Canada, to the shores of the Gulf of Mexico, was densely covered wllh virgin forewtfl. Today, the great est part of tlirot vnt region of one mil lion square miles has come under the woodman's ax and has been denuded uf lis forest giowth. West of the gveat river the forest growth does not extend westward for more than one hundred miles, and thence to the Rocky Mountains there are few or no trees except along the banks of the streams and nmong the hills whore there happen to be such prominences In the broad table lands of the went The rapidity with which the American limber supply Is being exhausted has recently been brought to view by a report made by United States Inspector of Forests It. S, Kellogg. His report shows that the value of the annual output of forest products Is about one billion dollars or more. He shows that the country now consumes overy year between three and four tilmes more wood than all its forests grow In that time. Actually, there fore, we are exhausting our foreft cap Hal at a terrific raito, mid though the tolnl supply continues to be enormous certain kinds of lumber are rapidly decreasing, and great sections of the cwinlry have passed the maximum of thr1r producing power and are on the iecllne. As regards consumption and popula tion, there Is the following statement: Raipldly as the population of the Unked States has Increased, the lum ber consumption of the country has Increased el 111 more rapidly. In round numbers, and allowing for Incomplete reports, the lumber cut In 1880 was 18, 000,000,000 feet; In 1890, 24,000,000,000 000 feet, and In 1900, 35,000,000,000,000 feet The Increase In population from 1880 to 1900 was 52 percent, but In lum ber cut 94 percent. The United Slates Is now uwtng annually 400 board feet of lumber per capita, while the average for Europe is but 60 feet per capita. As the timber lands belong chiefly to private owners, there Is no law to re strain those owners from cutting and destroying the trees at their pleasure, and it 1b only where there are govern ment lands etlll bearing forests that any public core can' be given them. Of course, the Northern forests have received the worst treatment, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois were first cleared of thoid forests hclefly to open tho land to agriculture. The trees were cut down, and to a large extent burned in vast piles to get rid of them, but up to the present time the chief Northern Umber supply has been drawn from Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Penneyhanla, which since 1880 have had en aggregate output of nearly 25(1. 000,000,000 feet, or 36 percent, of the country's production. Until 1870 tho Northeastern states dominated In lum ber production, ranging from 54.5 per cent in 1850 to 36.8 percent in 1870, and then declining to 16 percent In 1900. Today large drafts are being made on the Southern forests, Texas standing first In Southern production, Arkansas, Georgia, North Carolina, - Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana following in the order named. The passing of the dominancy from the Lake States to the South has been about coincident with the passing of the day of white pine, In dicated by the statement at the begin ning of this year that since 1895 nearly 250 Arms, representing an aggregate annual output of 4,250,000 feet of pine lumber, had quite business because of the exhaustion of the lumber supply. At present the South Is cutting about 12,000,000,000 feet of yellow pine, or more than one-third the total cut of all lumber In the country. United States Inspector Kellogg1 shows that while within the period from 1880 to 1900 the population of the United States lnrceased but 62 per cent, the lumber cut Increased from 18, 000,000,000 feet to 35,000,000,000,000 feet, or 94 percent That Is one of the striking facts emphasizing the conten tion that the forest wealth of this coun try is being rapidly exhausted with the present annual consumption of wood In all forms from three to four times as great as the annual Increment of the forest and pointing to the absolute ne cessity for prompt and vigorous work for the economic handling of a source of wealth now representing more than $1,000,000,000 a year. Much of this richly timbered land could be reforested If only some sys tematic and effective methods were em ployed', but since there is no law or authority that can force landowners to reclothe their broad acres with trees, there is no resource but to educate the people Into the necessity to providing for the future. It is true there are extensive forest areas west of tbe Rocky Mountains and extending down to the Pacific coast, but as that section of the country shall become populated, as Is rapidly being done already, there will be, without doubt, (be same sort of wastefulness. Picayune. CARNAC. Meaning of Strange Monuments Around a Breton Village. Nothing more curious could well be Imagined than the low plain on Qulbcron Bay, with Its vast number of prehistoric monuments. They say there are 2,833 separate atones, any way, there are far too many to count, and they stretch over acres of ground with nothing to break their serried monotony but patches of gorse and heather. Tho only way to get a general Im pression of Cnrnac Is to ascend the tumulus known as Mont St. Michel. Eastward Is the Gulf of Morblhan, wllh all its Islets, and at our feet the wide, wonderful plain, with Its lines of monhlrs and dolmens, Its stern avenues of upright stones, which might well be supposed to mark the last resting places of a race of giants. Here and there tho lines are broken by a rude semicircle, a place where nil altar probably stood, or by two or three huge blocks of stone supporting another laid horizontally upon them, thus forming a gigantic tnblo for shel ter. Such an nrrangement Is called a dolmen, or If very largo, an alios couverte. The Menhir Is a single standing stone; when these menhirs are so placed as to form a circle they are called a cromlech, but If thejr stand together In parallel lines we have an alignment. Some of them stand thirty feet above the soil, though nono of exceedingly great height Is to bo found at Carnnc. The talleet ever known In the whole country was sixty four feet high, but unfortunately It was shattered by lightning. The renl meaning of these mysteri ous monuments is a subject of much different opinion, even after the Inves tigations oi ocent years. The se crets of these silent slones have a tremendous fascination for some peo ple. A Scotch antiquary, JameB Mlln, lived at Carnac for several years, from 1874 to 1880, devoting all bis time to the subject His conclusions are the same as those of the French authority, M. Lee Rouzlo, and Baring Gould, who baa given Infinite study to tho Dnrtmoor alignments antiquities which In a way are even more val uable than those at Carnac, bocause they have been left absolutely un touched, while the Breton farmer has been unabl to resist Interference with the treasures of his own land. Bering Gould snys- "The dolmens and alleeB couvertes were sepulchres, (aniily or tribal, and the alignments consist of stones erected by the tribe In honor of the several dead who were laid in the dolmens. He reminds us that to this day the Bedouin when he visits tho tomb of a Moslem saint erects a rude block of stone In token of homage. The same authority furth er tells us that: "The stone circles were either places where the dead were burned and funeral feasts were held or, were places of tribal gather ings for palavers; generally they served both purposes. Isolated men hirs were either memorials to the dead or boundary marks. All dolmens were originally burled under cairns or tumuli." But It is hardly likely that the peas ant1 will be content with a scientific explanation. He tells you that every stone on Carnac plain was once a human being; that all together they formed a vast pagan host who cruelly pursued the blessed St. Comely, the patron of the parish church, until he was In Imminent danger of drowning. But when ho got to the edge of the waves he made a last effort and cursed his pursuers vigorously, and le bon Dleu turned every one Into a pil lar of stone. New Orleans Times Democrat. Bit of Local Art Criticism. The late Gen. Lew Wallace was rec ognized In art as well as In literature, and he was the recipient during his lifetime of compliments from many distinguished people because of Iris work with the brush. His fame lives after him. In January, 1876, George C. Harding, at that time the brilliant and versatile editor of the Saturday Herald, of this city, In referring to one of General Wallace's paintings, said: His binary purple passes the maxi mum f intensity by undue reciprocal lightening in Juxtaposition of Its com plement. Dan Palae, whose eye for the ridicu lous was unexcelled, referred to this criticism as "reaching sublimity," but he was never quite able to understand what Harding meant, and the brilliant editor went to his grave without ex planation. However, the painting sur vived. The Automatic Age. A New York retail dealer recently sent out some form letters advertising a small article for sale. The letter heads and signatures were printed on a small electric self-feeding press, and the typewritten work . was executed on a machine. The sheets were folded on another appliance. The envelopes were addressed on an addressing ma chine and were sealed and stamped automatically on still another device. The money received In reply was plac ed in and rung up on a cash register and the deposit In the bank Was check ed on a slip record of an adding ma chine. System. The Exceptional Equipment of the California Fig Syrup Co. and the scientific attainments of Its chemists have rendered possible the production of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, In all of its excellence, by obtaining the pure medic inal principles of plants known to act most beneficiJly and combining them most skillfully, In the right proportions, with its wholcsomo and refreshing Syrup of California Figs. As there Is only one genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna and as the gen uine is manufactured by an original method known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only, it is always necessary to buy the genuine to get its beneficial effects. A knowledgo of tho above facts enables one to decline imitations or to return them if, upon viewing the package, the full name of tho California Fig Syrup Co. is not found printed on the front thereof. Not the Aggressor. Paterfnmillna Nellie, I want an explanation from you. I saw you kiss young Johnson this evening, i .Nellie Well, papa, ho kissed mo first llnrlam Life. IN AGONY WITH ECZEMA. Whole Hotly a Mass of Itnw, Bleeding, Torturing Humor Hoped Death Would Knd Fearful Huffc-rlng In Dtwpalri Cured by Cutleurn. "Words cannot describe the terrible ee sema I suffered with. It broke out on my head and kept spreading until it covered my whole body. I was almost a solid mans of sores from head to foot. I looked more like a piece of raw beef than a huifiKn being. The pain and agony I endured srlmcd more than I could bear. Mood and pus cored from the great sore on my sculp, from un der my finger nails, and nearly all over my body. My ears were so crusted and swollen I was afraid tliey would break off. Every hair in my head foil out. I could not sit down, for my clothes would stick to the raw and bleeding flesh, making me cry out from the pain. My family doctor did all he could, but I got worse and worse. My condition was awful. I did not think I eould live, and wanted death to come and end my frightful suffering. "In this condition my mother-in-law begged me to try the Cutieura Remedies. I said I would, but had no hope of recov ery. But oh, what blessed relief I experi enced after applying Cutieura Ointment. It cooled the bleeding and itching flesh and brought me the first real sleep I had had in weeks. Jt was ss grateful as lee to a burn ing tongue. I would bathe with warm water and Cutieura 8oap, then apply the Ointment freely. I also took Cutieura Re solvent for the blood. In a short time the sores stopped running, the flesh began to heal, snd I knew I was to get well again. Then the hair on my head began to grow, and in a short time I was completely cured. I wish I could tell everybody who has eo tema to use Cutieura. Mrs. Win. Hunt, 135 Thomas St., Newark, N. J., Sept. 28, 1908." Potter Drug k Chem. Corp., Role Props, of Cutieura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Anything to Please the Boas. The fact that I-ord Creighton, the lord bishop of London, rolled and smoked nineteen clgnrets the other day, while talking with a newspaper man, recalls the story of a big, burly bishop and the little curate In the compartment of a railway car. "You will not mind my smoking, will you?" said his lordship. "Not If your lordship doesn't mind my being sick," submissively replied the little curate. Waterbury Ameri can. 3.1.00 Personally Conducted Ex cursions. Colonists' one-way tickets, Chicago to the Pacific coast, via the Chicago, Union Pacific and Northwestern Line, are on sale dally during March and April at the rate of $33.00. Corre spondingly low rates from all points. Double berth in tourist sleeping car only $7.00, through without change to San Francisco, Los Angeles and Portland. No extra charge on our personally conducted tours. Write for itinerary and full particulars to S. A. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Depart ment, 212 Clark street, Chicago, 111. Changs In Car Wheels. At the recent meeting of the Amer ican Street and Internrban Engineer ing Association at Atlantic City a new system of street railway construction was proposed. The Idea was to form the car wheels without flanges, but Instead, to place the flanges on the rails. f OR P I t 1 1 PINK EYE PUTNAM Color more rooda biirtatftr And faatar eolora than any eaa dyo any garment without ripping apart. Write CURE THE CHILDREN'S COUGH before tk constant backing leari the delicate eaembraae ol tliroal and luagt, exposals; tnem to the ravages ol deadly dneas. F'a Caw goes straight to the seat of the trouble, slops the cough, strengthen the lung, and quickly iclievea onbealdiy crjotfeinns. BecaoM ol its plrjaunt taate and heerjoa (torn oaagerous iogncEeats it is the ideal renedr lor children. At tlx ant ajaipiosaa of a cough or cold is lbs bus ooee roa will save sorrow and suffering if 70s) GIVE THEM nSO8 CUKE Lf Why Streams Are Disappearing. Anyone who hns reached the age of 75 hns noticed the disappearance of the small brooks where be played In his district school days, while larger ones have shrunk to summer threiidn, and rivers that filled tholr banks all tho year are hnrdly more than rivulets In summer. Commis sioner Whipple of New York Stnto, tells us that the upper Hudson, In August of 1907, had no more than two Inches of water where It used to roll a heavy volume. There Is substan tial agreement that this change has been due to the denudation of our hills and valleys of the water-holding trees. It takes a century to grow such forests as we found covering the continent; It hns taken half a cen tury to destroy them. Why Nevada Is Invincible. Let Japan bewnre! It was easy enough to fight Russia, with plenty of water for the troops all along the line. Rut It would he a different matter to tackle Nevada. Her her oic defenders, who do not know even the taste of water, could easily lure the Japanese hordes Into tho stark and tortuous canyons of Death valley, there to dlo a miserable death. !ct Japan think twlco before assaulting such a people. Washington Post Piles Cured In 0 to 11 Days. I'ato Ointment Is guaranteed to cure any rn-eof Itching, Itlinil, llleeding or Protruding I'iles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. COo. WHERE MEN USE 8TILT3 In Low Districts of Gascony the Soft Soil Necessitates Their Use. In some parts of the world, partic ularly In the low districts of France, stilt walking Is a necessity. In Gascony there are great lovol plains covered with stunted bushes of dry heath. These waste lands have a soli that Is so permenhln, so soft and yielding that the slightest fall of rain makes thorn practically Impnssablo by ordinary methods of pedestrian Ism. But these wastes must be traversed at all seasons by the poor people of Gascony, and necessity hns accordingly made the Gascons a stllt walklng people, and men, women and children may be seen at all seasons of tho year stuck upon high stilts, trudging through the waste lands, carrying baskets, bundles and the like. The stilts used are about Ave feet long and often higher. The shepherds of tandes all go on stilts, and they think no more of be ing perched up from dawn to dusk with their feet on a level with a man's head than Chlcagoans do of wearing shoes. Tho shepherd Is provided with a stout staff that an swers for many purposes. At the proper place In the staff Is a flap, which makes a comfortable seat when turned down. On this tho shepherd quietly sits and watches his flock, and while he sits up there he knits or spins with a distaff thrust In his girdle. The Lnndes stilt walker ran do marvelous things with these five-foot leg extensions. He can run with a speed that will tax a horse, pick up a pebble or pluck a flower as the cowboy reaches to the earth from his pony, and he can drop to the ground level and regain the perpendicular as quickly as a boy can turn a hand spring. Chicago News. Ifow's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. V. J. CiiEXEif A, Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last Is years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldino, Ki.tNA ft Marvin, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, aet ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur faces of the system. Testimonial) sent free. 1'rice, 75c. per bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pilla for constipation. He'd Be Just the 8ame. A gentleman who had some expe rience with western land agents and had just returned from Dakota, when asked bow he liked the country, said: "Well, sir, every bunch of willows is a mighty forest, every frog pond a sylvan lake, every water fall a second Minnehaha, every ridge of rock a gold mine, every town a country seat, and every man a liar. Beverly Citizen. A Domestic Eye Remedy Compounded by Experienced Physicians. Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs Laws. Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Irug gists for Murine Eye Remedy. Try Marine. According to a recent report of the Smithsonian Istitute the mammoth was no larger than the elephant of the present dRy. WmtWm DISTEMPER CATARRHAL FEVER AND ALL NOSE AND THROAT DISEASES Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid flven on the tongue. Pafe for brood mares and all others. Best idney remedy; 50 cents and $1 a bottle; 5 and f 10 the dozen. Sold by all druggists and horse goods houses, or sent, express paid, by the manufacturers. EPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, GOSHIN, JKDIANA FADELESS DYES other dye. One 10a, package eolort all libera. They dye la eotd wafer better than any other dye. Tee) for re booklet-How to Uy BlaacH eo4 Mix Colon, MOM ROB DKUU CO. (Jalney. lUlaola. 1? AFTER FOFJRYEARS OF JjSERY Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Haiti more, Md. "For four years my life was a misery to mo. I suffered rrom irregulari ties, terrible drag ging sensations, extreme nervous-, ness, and that all gone feeling In my stomach. I had given up hope of ever being well when I began to take Lydia E.I'Ink. ham's Vegetable Compound. Then I felt as though . new life had been given me, and I am recommending it to all my friends." Mrs. W. H. Kokd, 1 0.18 Lansdowne St, Baltimore, Md. Tho most successful remedy In thlt country for the euro of all forms of female complaints is Lytlla K. I'lnk lnim's Vegetable Compound. It has stood the test of years and to-day Is t more widely and successfully used than any other female .remedy. It has cured thousand.1) 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 tailed. Jf you are suffering from any of these ailments, don't give up hope until yon have given Lydia E. J'lnkham's Vege table Compound a trial. If you would like special advice writ to Mrs. J'lnkhain, Lynn. Mass., for it. 8 he has pumed thousands to health, free of clmrgc. Investigation shows that the opium hnblt is growing In New York City. Ilesldes about 000 Chinese who use the drug, there are '6,000 white per sons addicted to Its use. For Irritation of the Throat, Coughs jr Hoarseness, flrown's Bronchial Troches are exceedingly beneficial. In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. John I. Brown ft Son, Boston, Mass. While the great zoological garden of Ixndon has 1,021 birds, there are 2,5.10 In New York's Bronx Zoological Park. Nnharmful drugs In OnrfleldTco.Natnrc's laxative it. is rompowd wholly of clean, wet, health giving Herbal For constipa tion, liver and kidney trembles. Headwear made of straw was al ready In use among the ancient Greeks, hut straw hats, like those we wear, did not come into use In Eli rope until half a century ago. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'e Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggist. A mixture of tar and Iron slag Is used In Germany for paving. For 16c. KrarrNMlT loTeeenrllettTetetnbleej And brilliant flowwe. Therefore, to" uln lonut eeetomer wm offari 1000 kernels Fine onion seed. Rich liarrot saa. Celery. 100 Partley. ..i... b...k c i BuUervLettueASeerL TenderTurnlp Seed. I, Sweet Rutahaga S'd. 4 Melon. 10 Tomato. 1 MMaatflwkl lease II 10,00 kernel! tt warranted It.OOoftnTiMii'l m m r (luoliKll nf J Bif ttetftiof).! poiuior m in taunpe. And if vrm Mnrl I6 waVM moot Earlictrt rp i'uri nrn. m Big PImI. Tool MtJ Caa 2 free to lniendlA !. Writ (of tmmevwxMy. TIE JOHN JL SALZEI SEED uotoscK, mm. mi Th Beaaon I Make and Sell More ICen'i $3.00 It, $3.60 Shoot Than Any Other Kanufaetnrei to tweaast I gtr ttw wtartr tbt btnflt of Um tmpliti nantsattoei tniMt txptrt n4 iklU4 hosntvaUn 1b Um osrantry. Thai MiACtion Ol ttM tMttMTf Ibf Mk frt f M (iMM tBtl T4TT dtU srf tht BUkUBff t VfWTJ etoputBMt. Is) looked ftftor r Um b)t .bora alter, ta tkva thw iidmartrf. If I toaitl them yoa aow earsrfally W L. Daaclaa taosf art ud, roa woald Uwt. ruadarttaad why bT hold tfasY hapa, it battar, and atu lonfar Ua" aay etbar ak. tfy Method of Tanning 1 tit 8ote mak them Mor Ftexibtmand Longer Wearing than any othere. Mhiaea IW Kvtrv Mathr mt th Family. Mats, Boy,WMHea, M Uaea mm Cblltare Ynr aal by fho dealer trvrrwhenk PfltlTinM I Nona Kenalne wit hoot W. 1. Danffla bnUIIUll t naiiM and price at ampul on bottom, rati Color BrUata Vied Iselutot?. Oatatoff mallad fro W. L. DOUQLAS. U7 Soar St, BreUtM, Mam, The envelope was Invented In 16S3 and was In disfavor for a long time. UMBUIHID ic F. H. u. a. Moa Itli i i i r :tt an if fir Ft? Ml u V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers