lIIKi HIS I A Captain of Indolence i the rm vvianl nuiQMsmit&kA Honored by Women Tied to Horse By a Mob an(1 Dragged to His Death. A TIIRK1BLB REVENQB France-ro VcrR.uil, Who Just He tami-d to HU " ln VaAun From America. Adopt,-., ft Fli-ntlMi Method t runldi III. Fullicr-ess gwpctlioart. 'ttniv Coming from h'.a ln ....i.,o itnly. Coming . m iioBton. determined on Francesco Verganl J n..t the tongue of V -0thart in a vlllngo near LVre and tn few minute a mob to the heels of n horse and iicd in frenzied delight as he was ,'..MH to' death. or.r.ni rfiBiulaed himself as an mnerant dentist to carry out his plot the young woman. He went ...nn ! years ago ? "7.; n be his wife. He was to return here to wed her and then go I . Amorlra. A year bko. the Sri wearied of watting, ww married ? - . ho had been errant 8 rival, Uid she sent news of the wed ding to her old sweetheart. Verganl at once began to plan revenge. He arrived her three weeks ago. and asserting ho bcn Kduated a, a dentist ln Houton, he began to oractlce through the Bmall towns. Me rode in a wagon, using It as an operating place He went to the yll liure Monselice and attracted a large erowd He ottered to extract a lew teeth free and seeing his former .weetneart in the crowd. Induced her to tako a seat In the wagon. He ad dressed the crowd, saying ho was .hn..t to nerform one of the most dellcato operations known to den- ""hc turned and bent over the young woman who had Identified him through his disguise. With a pair e: forceps he tore out her tongue, then, turning to the crowd he un masked himself and shouted he had von the revenge he desired. The crowd pulled him from the wagon, bound him hand and foot, tied him to the horse and whipped up the brute which dragged him through the streets. The horse was urged two miles, the body being battered al most to shapelessr.ess. Fl XGl'S IN STOMACH KILLS IIKK Grows from lMnheiid to Cocounut Size, Cr-lTHliiK Agony to Girl. London. Sprouting from a grain of outs or barley, a fungus caused the death or a girl fifteen years old in Sheffield, und an autopsy revealed that tho fungus; had grown In the stomach to ihe size of a cocoanut. The growth had sent out rootn whica had invaded all the surrounding or gans, and tho girl died In agony. B ... v. nf thfl The case Is held to ue uo - l'n t'rnnlt Sweet. 0-2 OOOWOWCftXwX'OOO'W'X O'W ('.aha wns lying upon b;u'k- 0,3 hands clasped iintlcr ms ne.ui. gnf.tng unthinkingly at the sky. Ho wna twenty-five years out ami urn footed. Timoa linil horn eotng somewhat hard with him of late. r or m. thing, he hnd to tblnlc, and the pros- pei:t was that noiore ion n have to do. Coonr-rs aaugnwr . now of ago. and the understanding between tho families had been mni some tlmo after Mary Ret was on .... Vt tknun t 1" n niinuld marry. In vm'tiRM in-nvj i. - v order to save tho seven acres on mm Bide of the slop" '"'InK sepnraien from the nine acres which poini.cn and crept over and down tne oiner side. Cooner was arbitrary, and C.abo's father under the Influence oi Cooner. would be Just as despotic. Then Mary Hot was prenj, was no denying that. nut Mary net did not like work herself. He had found tho ax lying beside three or four uncut branches which her father had dragged ln. and the seven or eight chickens pecking about without a sign of coop or shelter. Hut alas for plans. A buzzard floated slowly beyond view, and the unthinking eyes following it began to grow dreamy and heavy, there came a sudden rasping Interruption. It was Cooner mii""' father. "I tell yo," the strident voice wu saying, "this thing's goln' on . too slow Fust we know somebody 11 bo teppln' In, an' then where'H our two estates be? Divided. There a that Dill Tanner, already comln' up to see Bet an she 'lowln' him. Pshaw! He'd be for carryln her way down to his cabin ln tho val ley, an' Hkely's not they'd be for o un acres more some " ... ....... Iw. day. I tell ye, mow, jo stirring up Gabe. He's a good boy an' If he's got a single wicked habit I've never heered on It. I'll seo tho preacher this very day. an' have Mm come up In two weeks." Gabe had forced himself as deep ..im. into the loaves, and he i with bated breath until and footsteps had died away cabin. Then and removed his .lowly and despairingly from be .v hi. He must think, and think quickly and hard, or he would be lost. . . Bill Tanner was peeling bark in the valley. -Ki "Hullo, Bill." he began affably. -Gettln' quite a heap, ain't ye?" i.u..nn he responded, but l low ye'd better come some other day. I'm too busy to talk now." "That's all right." graciously. I don't mind seeln' folks work. Comln up to-night?" "Where?" "Conner's, of course, with a erln "Hut there's no need to git ivftd' Bill," at the look on the other f u.e "I ain't here to plague ye. I come down to sell my tater patch. Vve l" 'bout that tater ...i, - i,. k1i1. "It's two acreB, an bid Cooner plowed It with his mule. the jay ho hands THING l0S IN WAKPAUE. Trained Dors Mlgl.t Save the Live of Mmiy Wounded Men. In 1890 a field trial of dox from the German Society for Ambulance Dogs was made by tho Eighth Army Corps at Coblentz. In connection with the hospital corps exercises. ,r iM. hnn'son. a well-known dog nu-t.nr. of Carnoustie. Scotland, for merly of the British Army gives mo following description of these trials In the Army and Navy Gazette of No vember 23. 1901: "At dusk the keep er brought out four ambulance dgs. Previously two hundred soldiers had i.n nut out to represent the wound ed, and five hundred stretcher bear ers set. out In tho darkness carrying torches and lanterns. It was an in teresting piece of most difficult work nnJ numbers of officers, mounted and on foot, followed to watch the pro ceedings. The work commenced In the Coblentz wood, and a more diffi cult task could not hare been found for the dogs. "Two dogs worked on the right and two dogs on the left, and. notr w thstanding the noise and crowd, recovered all the casualties in pitch darkness without lanterns. i hundred more soldiers had also been niarml in various parts of the glac iers of Coblentz; the stretcher-bearers were sent out first this time, and after having scoured the ground thoroughly, reported eighteen men mlHsing. The four ambulance dogs and keepers were then called for, and in twenty minutes the eighteen men were recovered from the most Impossible hiding places; these men in actual warfare would nave uu without a doubt, left to their fate. This trial was considered highly sat isfactory by the staff of the eighth Army Corps, and demonstrated that as. owing to the Introduction of smokeless powder all ranks are obliged to take cover and casualties will chiefly occur in cover where they are most aimcuu mr buck ers to find, the dog's scenting power come as a most valuable auxiliary. The report of the director was favorable; but it Is apparently the Intention of the German government to free the army of work of this na ture and leave It to the volunteer ambulance companies. Further ex experlment in this line have not, a far aa is known, been undertaken m the German army. lllii I I fw At tfM H Aom t". N'Ef j.. When woman speaks ol her silent secret suticnng trusts you. Million have be stowed this murk ol confi dence on Dr. H. V. Pierce, ol Buffalo, N. Y. Lvery. where there are women who bear witness to the wonder working, curing-power of Dr. I;..rn-'i Favorite Prescription -which saves the suffering yx (mm tain, and successfully , i. ith wnman's weak nesses and ttubborn ills. IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONO IT HAKES SICK WOMEN WELL. . i .i.r misdirected or her con- No woman P c. - - ...- I.., nHvice. to ill nMnvv vs I. Columbia & Montour El. hy. timi: r June I 1904, T A lll.i: 1 V.WVALT nnd until urthtr uce. f 1 M .n when snc nun- ?r.HUU'. DSNSASVi MrmCAL A..OC.AT.ON. R V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, IN. 1. n,.....nt MM. torfur. mild Mtural bowel mov.mm --; ir f-crv - Dr. J . ....... t il lflS. I AFRAID in i " SWISH FARM CX)IX)NTKR. strangest In medical records In this . ur llild planted it all b him ountry About a month ago the ( a. yoll w to do the hoein an ;irl complained 0: pains In her atom- ,,. ,. x don-t believe ye re atrick Kill VUUll'lBM.-.. w- . rtnzen nhyalclans diffurea lr their diagonals. As It turned out all were wrong. The girl equally crew worse, each day adding to ner suffering, until she died. The au topsy was performed and four doc tors testllled to what was found. The doctors said that when a grain nr hnriev was eaten a tiny vegetable parasite known as ruj . wmter P ) . . us was Kiowlug on it. This para- ..Ve8i 1 heered him say that my site was not imed by being eaten. elf. BmUod Gabe. "But see here, site a noi kui u , untn the 1 Bin-t a henderln' of nobody. I c,it. t a.a-. ot air'in ye Is that ye d Basket, tor He don't want her to A pleasing vanat on W. ten acre8 that - ,1.1. It. It Vft." I do.i t believe I have." ttnw, t.,led Cu'.ie, frankly. "But what U l "Vhy, I thought they was your ,veddtn' taters," saia mu. lniily "I heered Cooner say there d be forty buahcla an' that ye could ...11 twenty an' have twenty for a The King's Prompter. A traveller ln Italy, Mr. Ashton R. Wlllard, quotes the painter, De An gells. as saying that the "gift of princes," that of remembering names and face, often depends upon some one who stands conveniently near, to supply the required Information. If .n n.,t-nf-tha-w&v nrovlnce is to be C.U w u . w& - visited, the prompter Is sent on in advance, to inform himself in regard to the notable. Then, on the great occasion, he keeps close to the king, and disgorges facts at the required moment. So the King compnnio"i each man appropriately and every hodv is hanoy. The same thing is done at tho opening of an art exhibi tion with Borne artist as prompter. "Once," said De Angells, "I failed to prompt quick enough and destroy ed my official reputation. There were several artists in the suite but i .llrln? nearest the king. We suddenly turned a corner and came upon a canvass of the new sonooi. 11 was an atrocity. I knew 1 ou8uv v say something, but I hesitated too long. Possibly I was munoeu, t rsnvprnrl mv Wlis iv wo UVIVIO A " ' . too late." "What happened?" The king saw It, and before there was time to put him on hia guard, he blurted out an emphatic condemna tion." "Why should he have been put on his guard?" ' "Tho young man who bad paintea the picture was walking directly be- hind us. He was a nice io..w. one if alone." proposition I pon Which Their Snc cess Depends. The success of the ctwlss farm col onies depends upon a few simple propositions: That although It Is difficult to make money out of land, It la easy to secure a living from land; that everybody wno i firm, can, under direction, soon be fitted to do remunerative work on ....1. i,ot thanks to recent Improve- inents in agriculture many more men r:.n be supported per ncre of land to rity than a few years aso; that work on land If. phyi lmlly r.nd morally re pe::.'ratlng. Tho HwIsm hare adopted a syKtem or tunall farms, each fnrm occupying no more than S00 n.en, thus making ,t possible for the director to be ac quainted individually with every one of them. The inciusirie uu rarms are relatively Insignificant, and are only there for the purpose of rlvlnp; emplyomfnt to those who are unfitted for agricultural work, and n-.'Hng those months of the year w'en llle work can be done ln the fleM. The surveuisnre umvcou -be'nt: confided to tn expensive foI 1r.n confined to farm-hands, who" not only exerrlaa a sound and moral Influence over the inmate, but lncldc-itally earn their wages by the work they do on the land. Moreover, the Swiss have discov ered how Indispeiislble It Is that by the side of every forced labor colony for tramps there Ib also a free-labor colony for the unemployed. Noth ing Interferes more with the discl i!,. nf a tramn colony then the there of innocent unemploy ed who tend to relax the discipline ne'eea-.ary for the tramp, and nothing Is more unjust to the unemployed than to put them in ('ally and hourly contact with the tramp. AIbo, the character of the discipline necessary In the one case Is totally different from that needed ln the other. The tramp needs some severity and even r-norcion: the unemployed, on the contrary, needs only just such regu lations as Is lndliipensible ln every factory or farm. In Switzerland, therefore, the colonies where dlacl r.n.iP nnd coercion are used are con- Kmlnent Men Ift yueer Provisions for Dlnpofal of IVmIU's. Many eminent persons In the realms of science and literature have i.,i,,iirit instructions as to tne 4w..n.Hi of their bodies after their demise. Tor Instance, Franca 1, o tim irreut antiquary, request ed in "his will that Sir Anthony Cni iti fh minroxin. should kever his huud from Ins body or take out h.s w.,t. HHliou Berkeley. Dnn.tl O Cmir.e:! und ihe late Lord l.yttor., all left Instructions us uj . luoiit of tl.elr bodies. f'f.llin always left Carsleave BloomforEsy.AIn..r-i a Ridge, Berwick and intermedial t poitiua follows: A. M.ioo, 5:40,6:10, 7:00, 7:40, fe:JO 9.00,9:40, 10:20, If.oo, 11:40. P. M . H :io, I :oo, 1 140 , 2. 20, 3 :oo, 4:20,5:00, 5:40, 6-20, 7 100,7:4" ,8 -.20,0 10:40) 10:20 (1 1:00) Leaving depart from TicruScV one bat m aiinv rommenciti c iroin iinic U9 s"" " "w 6:00 a, m, for Catawissa A.M. 5V" b:I5, t7:oc, 8-.00, 9:00, tlO:co, tin." 12:00. , p. M. 1:00, t:oo, 3:o. 4:00, 5:00, ti-o . t7:oo, 8:00, 9:00, 10:20, (lt:oo) Carsreturningdepart from Cptawissa mlm-teffrom timeasgivenabove. First car'leaves MnrketJSquare for HerwitH on Sundays at 7:00 a. m. First car for Catawisa nunimyn , ,y . First car from Berwick for Bloom Surrttys leaves at 8:00 a. m . .... First car leaves Latawissa ounun- 7 30 a. m. f From Power Houe. Saturday night only. f-P. R. K. Conncctioe. V.'x. Tkrwiulicki, Superintendent. Utlon metnoas o. from a '"':lm on the other side, an ,U1I,. a basKet - fof tMrty dollari. PrT,l VarT oFthe fruit U oar. the owner say . W 7- , fuliv cut away leaving a hollow case Ise thirty dollars f eyef stuK with a Ladder. S? "nS: freed from re and t e best fellow thjt ever . eeds. are then returnee. w.-. - rve ever said or or water pails on their haaaa ar. ..w.ni and flavored with liquor it gorry for anjinmg 1 Bnolieh among Maine and . . mimr ana 1 Jtnnn 1 11 De yuui 1 tvui ...... " . . .. desired. A sprinK.inB - -,, ve take for the taters?" Adlrondack guides, but it is fined to tramps and misdemeanants, and the free-labor colonies are open to the unemployed, who, in lieu of discipline and coercion, find ordinary factory regulations and encourage ment. At Wltzwyl, too, a very In teresting experiment has been tr ed. forced-labor colonies Is a collection of farms to which the ln Tr,t of the forced colonies are en couraged to go when their term una ovntrp i. At these farms a fair wage im and. being removed from the temptations of town-life, the in the forced colonies have an opportunity of doing work under vir tually free conditions, ana mu. pletlng the self-dlscipnne nece--. to fit them for restoration to the com munity at large. The forced-labor colonies have in Borne cantons been eo adroitly managed as to De sou sunnorting. This cannot be claimed for the free-iaDor cuiuium, a kt- . 1 .,I,U In vkh.ch ter on n s Qiebiui; bu so.emuly enjoined Uls people mat If he wore found dead In tha morn ing, he should be at once carefully examined by a doctor, liana Chris tian Anderson earned ln his pocket a note to the effect that when the time came his friends were to make sure that he was dead before burial. Harriet Martlneau left her doctor ten pounds to see that Iier head was amputated before burial. mi- Ada Cavendish, the actress, left a clause In her will for the sever ance of the jugular vein. Edmund vtM lpft similar instructions with a provision that a fee of 20 guineas should be paid ror ui "i""" ?aa mrrled OUt Willi,!! - , JI,J ihn Rnse of New York, wfc.o died In November. 1895. left instructions h. eoffln should not be closed but laid ln the family vault at Rose . .h o-imrdod day and night by tuu o " 1 j v .... ft.t a u nr ivuu ) uuw"i air Ktrhard Burton, provided that her heart was to be pierced with . and her body to De-auum. ted to a post mortem examlnat.on 1 ftru.nrlB embalmed by experts. Sir Benjamin Ward Richardson, who study of aoparent and real death ordered Ms body to be cremated, which was done, a wen known Boston lawyer has bad con structed In connection with his resi dence a comfortable room In whloh. without annoyance to anyono, w member of his family can death be kept until the beginning of decay. .,.. Now then, reader, asas la the Detroit News Tribune, why were those more than ordinarily In telligent people o solicitous to make aure that they were actually and pos ..! HooH hefore their bodies were burled or otherwise nnauy uiy of The reason was this: They knew very well that fam lllarity breeds carelessness, If not Indiffer ence, and that undertakers and doc tors are no exception to the rule. They knew that both undertakers and doctors have pronounced and certified people .to be dead who act ually lived for yeara after. They knew that many of the so-called "InfalllbU testa" are wholly unre liable and they determined not to take any chances. Blooinsburg & Sullivan Railroad. Taking Effect Feb'y 1st. 1908, 12:05 a. m. NOKTUWAKD. Bloomsburg D t ft W BlooiBBOurtf r n... Paper Mill t.lifht Street Orantcevllle Forks zaners Htlllwater Bon ton Edsons o esi'rees Laubachs urass Mere Park Central Jamison uw A.M. It . 900 . 9 02 .. 9 14 9 1H 9 2S 9 81 r.M. t t m 1 89 g 52 2 5 03 8 13 f.i 40 18 17 ., 9 48 8 Vi .. 9 6H 8 83 ..in 08 j o n i ..10 08 8 4!S 7 8, .. tioio j 47 n ' ...10 15 SM 7 41 10 18 8 55 7 45 P.M. A.Nf t 6 15 17 20 84 6 48 58 A 57 7 08 7 13 J 1' Jamison City. BOt'THWARD. A.M. A.M. P.M. A.M. t t t 5 50 10 48 4 85 7 00 central .. .. M 10 61 4 8H 7 m l.aubacns no Coles Creek, Bdsons nonrnn Btiuwaier - - - -.. - rt n 4 Zaners '.o, , (9 7 08 11 58 5 42 818 r 8.28 J SO 1210 6 00 8.80 BUB II V ' ' 'IIS fa 1.3 ill OA 58 7 22 irTCR n 14 til 09 f4 68 17 94 -6 8 11 13 5 00 7 IN . 1121 2 i?? 0 6 8 5 7,08 7U 7 8 10 8fl i 22 A. St. t 113 Utt 11 K 12 12 M liU 12 a II ss 10 18 14 15 IN ill Light Street..... l'aper mi 11 Bloom.P K.... Bloom. U L W. trains No 21 and 22 mixed, second class, t way except Sunday, t DW only. I Flag Mop. W. C. 8NYDKR, Supt. 44 T v 1 pi in mL-TaJ All A which of the nicest fellows In the world 1 eontaln too large a proportion of in- he would omy ieav in.uv flrm t0 permu or meir imms - . 1 .. , . n rriA rrcH nenses: Dut me eximuo u. colonies Is relatively small. lloueur add to the flavor ol we now. wu.; . - - tQ for6 wltu a " - . rxnl rta muKn 1 w l HI. luav - ' 1 - fitraurhnrr ps ana pinjFv- I -aA ' anttled UD I Crtm hunters near inuv- uwwni-v.. - nn,An nam i KWhan vn re umi i - i variuuv. . , riAtutAi.i romb nation. w" ' A wv ohnrAH when I imnn Htaic wltn a iaa UVI1XWUV . . . .trm I YT m I I'll U4 1 XM 11 U 11IJ - " nrill'K I. IX 111 U M.'w.. ihnaa T r U I L u(Voi- 1 . nA(hln' 1 to Cooner, hut work. Gabe went directly .nuinir n. lone face. .rw mil Tanner's too smart for i, crumbled. "I went down tbe're thlnkln' I could make a trade. L... k.. nt mv taters an' I ain't got . .V.;; T .how." He waited long enough for his words to have their ! then added: "I b'lleve I'll go out to Mexico or Maine or some- v .h,t wav. The only thing Is WliCl O .M" W . I. It'll be hard fur Bet to go so fur, but aha nnn klh.hu i ' ..Bet-go to Mexico or Main.! almost shrlekea sooner der on his antlers. In apite oi tn great handicap it maae on t sped on seeing the man, leaping .nri flashing through the un- ucue,v. . - dergrowth as If quite ummpcuu. i noropr was stoppea, i . ,fc ...i iho enrls Of tne IViasr Its struggles ueiwco" vw g were so frantic at tne appro u .u- ,(omun'B doK that It broke off llltJ " - - . . A r Its antlers ana, mu noUu, . . n-v. 1ottr , ,. .1 a wnnrt Its escapo. proved to belong to a farmer who . . . i. ..ilriD- aealnst one or liou 'v 7. ..,...k.l. i.i. h.v.l.rkit. Wniie eating iuo hurt evidently upset the lad- 1,115 Pt-WB m h had thus oecome u uw " .... . . T-,it i inn nan iiiub uowai -Why. you you Plumb laioi. . . -. - - t0 prove that inner's wuth a dozen or ye. . . h best nollcy. even for . . . K'mi. vnn ne ceLLiu i iiuiicni-j honesty stags. Ills rirst Bicycle. MiBchlef Is the crow's occupation .A lt.k nar- The crow of lnaia appemB tlcularly malicious, ne oeugi tcrrr.ent other birds, ana win w... only pull a nest to pieces. Mr. A. J. llamford. In "Turbans ana describes the crow as having admir able self-possession, and usually a most perfect control over ma comp liance. . I have only once seen a crow. i ufo a raminar caw--"-- aback forced to own 111111.. comforted. It was one morning before breakfast and I was speeding aero the maldan on my blcycie. a crow to which the machine was a perfect novelty, for at that time tne , ,ut many- ln use In Calcutta, came 1'ylng toward mo to sausry ni u.. or ty. Tho bright steel spokes were. of course, invisible to numau rJC and, as U proved, to nis. In the spirit of lmpunemo rrolic cxhllaratea, purnnV. early 'morning freshness, h made a dash to go througn wnai him to be simply a noop on Tiitfhsed by Acetylene. Th. BraaUlan minister of marine . T.:... himself in the subjoct f"'.7 acetylene buoys for . on th. eo..t. The type of buoys hv acetylene which "... v continuously for six WV" v. Th- largest of the buoys U situated at the mouth of the Ama " " -ih. comDlete about 20 "1" Th;Tse of 26 light, of thU I ' .... .mi varvlng in sl 1 con umplated at different poiaUi alon the ocean coast. Trade Mark n..tAMS r4rO Copyrights 4c . .u.trh and danerlptlon mat lnniitlon Is Pro'r,, unNDBOOK on Patent n,,ii.trlotlroonfldntlal. HRNUDUUR , . "Scicniilic flmcrienn. "'MLVch Zuffi V BU W..h.ngtoo. D. t 12-10-iy PHICHESTER'S PILLS Bur f ymmr Uraast. Aik I ill- ? V'T l..Z DuVlND BRAND PIU-K , fot Bet. Sttort. AlMyt R!lbl SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE 3 DiDIER'S U1ID BALSAM Never Tall r",. r..T. uir to i """"."f.rsv Cuu icalp dUewe. !!l,1'I 1ndJIW. i....l, in the tabl luncheon or tea. The King of Slam recently P1J 162.60 for a pair of aoek. in -. r a-ht bee. Now you be gettln' off-" ... , "5.ut 1 .nllv. "OK - Afraid of tho Turkey Tnougiii. w , . . . t0 " rMt.A along with ye." A genu. - - - . my tw he dW Oabe went with -. a iarmyra - " fo ft , ,OOKed back. Uo until he got beyond view w t- - the p ace. t0 :n, evldently mueb ,nMuchnofe thenexT "week. h, J 1 a her", pu'raued b7 a turkey c.ck. hi. caw' expressed uj-rpl Mrnon hi. back with hla face to " ..what, my boy." aald th tath.r. mln jled with disgust. His l.ead .pent upon hli weH(llM ..: ''" . B, a turtoyt m. feather, ruffled; and the sky. ,;."UMtr: 7ou "Vt f . T-frdy. r L" 'JZ and went away to cams no w. - wny you tMa wn'" . "J v. innv.d more like ..ninr and h8DD'. HBO wnu u. "Ya.. DftPa. n in honor of th moment. occw nna cooked." fiOB. . .1 J ted W Wasn't in Politic. ..My good man, ' .omethlng?" "Why should It de manded Tired Tiffins. ' I ' "J no constituents to kick about my In activity." DR. HllrlEYS' SPECIFICS. Fnallih. German, Spanisn, rru FOR 1. Fev.ra. cons"""-,! Worm Dl. ' 9. Worm.. ""''"I Vaiefulnoai ot lnlauti k. Uvaenmrv. """.T... 2S . Couh. OIU. " Nmiralaia i!i a. Heaaacn.. ,..w Ktomacn riioumatW Pain. ! .Vr ... Wk or inflamed Br- in. v.'"; .-.... Cold in noao.... an Whuuulnf t oun. "I'". .,h, 1 Prloo ....23 4.1 K.md model, LL.riJ.t.u. 1M ILL COUNTS- .. ii direct , liW"- Fner.t end Infrlngeme rrasuw -Writ or cornl to Ui at MH WHA8HIN3T0N ,0. WIMIH I JDuicult Bre-tHUu, It Chr.nl. ";J,sf Cld....25 iw" . . A Rcliabie Remedy Ely's Cream Balm ii quicKiy """" Civet Roltel at Once. It. ideanse-s. soothes, heals and protect the disc:is'd luein briiuo rfsultinu from CivIiutU and drives awiiv a Cold in tho GATARBi! 1W4W t'LY meow L 7 vJ Medical Book sBt wj. CO., Core Brothers. tua hi- v - -- - - . DnM. I'-ate and m . """'.Vr, ; V5 cenU. 'jutbu Street. New York.. . . ... i. .n Tn liiinia lorm, 1 ir.Mta or 1; . ... t waa a aockdologer for mm,