COOKING VEGETABLES \ A Few Rule. Whose Observance Will 1 A«I«i Materially to the Pleas ures of the Table. 1 1 It is a well-known fact that beans, i lentils and split peas do not boil soft in hard water. The sulphate of gypsum, < the salts of lime, coagulate the casein * which these seeds contain. In some cases, however, the solvent power of pure soft water is so great that it de stroys the firmness, color and skin of green vegetables and allows their juices to be extracted in the process of boiling. It is especially true of beans and green peas. Therefore, hard water, instead of soft, should be employed in these cases. A tablespoonful of salt added to a gallon of soft water hardens it imme diately. Eminent French authorities say use one tablespoon of carbonate of ammonia for producing the same re sults. If green vegetables are wilted, soak them for more than an hour in pure cold water. String beans usually need to boil for 45 minutes. The addition of a small bit of salt pork will generally minimize any rank flavor and will improve them. When done, drain thoroughly, season with salt, pepper and butter. Turnips, carrots, cabbage and onions should be boiled in a great deal of wa ter and taken up immediately and drained when sufficiently done; over cooking destroys the taste, and too lit tle water will allow them to turn dark in color. New potatoes are the best baked. A very little S' gar added to tomatoes, squash, peas. >rn, beets and turnips will improv inein. Turnips' tvill cook more quickly when cut inU" thin slices otherwise they will need to cook a long time. Cauliflower should be tied in a net to prevent Ixiiling to pieces. Summer squash should be steamed and not boiled. Put a piece, of bread the size of an egg into a cheesecloth bag and drop into a pot of boiling greens to absorb the odor. A little pinch of cayenne dropped into boiling cabbage, green beans, onions, etc., will lessen the disagreeable odor. All dried leguminous vegetables, such as dried beans, peas, etc., should be put on in cold water, and when they reach the boiling point should be al lowed to simmer until done. —Phila- delphia I'ress. TWO NEW COIFFURES. Enicllih Women Are Simplifying Tlielr tlendd re**, Hit* French Are Complicating? Their*. Here are two new styles in evening coiffures as they are worn by French and English women. In the first the hair is brushed back from the face a la /n .> THE ENGLISH COIFFURE. pompadour and finished in a soft, loose knot at the crown of the head. Tor toise and jeweled ornaments are used to make the coiffure effective. The French headdress depends upon ! 1 x \ VERY FASHIONABLE IN PARIS. its complicated arrangement for its beauty. The lower portion resembles in effect the popular figure, eight twist, while the upper part is a clever combination of the Psyche and puff arrangement. A Delicious Tomato Snnee. Twelve large ripe tomatoes, chopped and strained through a colander; one large sweet pepper, chopped; three onions, chopped; one tablespoonful black pepper, one tablespoonful all spice, one tablespoonful cinnamon, one tablespoonful cloves, two cups vinegar, salt to taste; stir all together and put in jars. Will keep a year. Do not cork BATHING COSTUME. The Amntriir Mermaid Takes Her Daily Pluukc Inn Jniinl) Suit of Uiikllkli Ser*e. The amateur mermaid of midsummer is not a fabled being, but a charming reality. She gowns herself in becom ing' costumes of English serge, silk poplin or brilliantines; in fact any ma terial at all that does not cling to the figure. No fashionable bathing costume is minus its bloomers. These are of scant proportions and button above the knees in Turkish trouser fashion. The skirt and bodice are. combined in one piece upon a narrow band of cord ed silk ribbon or bengaline silk. A wy/' IS -a. THE AMATEUR MERMAID. very pretty costume, and one that cor<- trasts effectively with the white sand of the seashore, is developed in white English serge trimmed with bands of sea green briiliantine. The skirt drops evenly with the knee line and is factd with sea green wash silk. The waist is cut, on plain lines with a square neck finished with bands of green silk. The sleeves are very short puffs and .are unconfined, many being of the opinion that bands around the arms, even though loose, prevent an absolutely free movement. ODD WEDDING RULES. Characteristic Customs That Prevail at Marrinsres in \ornay, Sweden and Siberia. Every country has its own particular regulations and ceremonies regarding matrimony. Wedding presents in Nor way are not of the expensive but useless kind that they are with us. They con sist of such things as pots and pans, plates and dishes, a feather bed, half a dozen sheep, a sack of potatoes, and so forth. Sir G. W. Dasent says that the Norwegians, in reference to marriage, as to other matters, put their best ioot foremost and try to make the most of things generally. A lad went out to woo a wife. Among other places he came to a farmhouse, where the peo ple were very poor, but they wanted to make him think that they were well to-do. Now, the father had got a new arm to his coat. "Pray, take a seat, he said to the wooer, "but there's a shocking dust in the house."' So he went about wiping all the benches and tables with his new coat sleeve, but he kept the other behind his back. The wife had one shoe much better than the other and she went stamping and slid ing with it up against the stools and chairs, saying: "How untidy it is here; everything is out of its place!" Then they called out their daughter to come and put things to rights, but she had got a new cap, so she put her head in at the door and kept nodding and nodding, first to this side and then to that. "Well, for my part," she said, "L can't be everywhere at once." In this way the wooer was led to believe that lie had come to a well-to-do household. Many superstitions prevail in Sweden with regard to marriage. It is said that if a girl be fond of cats she will not be an old maid, as we should say, but have a bright day for her wedding. The Swedish bride sonfietimes wears a coro -11 net of myrtle, or, when that is not I procurable, of colored paper. Here, as i I in Norway and other countries of north |! ern Europe, there is too much eating j| and far too much drinking at weddings. | In Sweden the repasts on these occa sions continue for hours. When asked lo take your place at the table it is ! considered polite to make as stout a resistance as possible. During the re past a collection is made for the bride | and sometimes aiso for the poor of the parish. In Siberia there is a good cus tom that a bride on coining to her hus band's house has to give a dinner pre ! pared with her own hands as a test of i the education she has received. If she succeeds in gratifying her guests it is taken as a proof, not only of the young womans own excellence, but also as a I recommendation of her whole family, by whom she was instructed so use jj fully. lloct to Test Wheat Floor. The genuineness of entire wheat s j flour may be tested by chewing a small quantity for a few moments. Raw t flour made from the entire grain has a e sweet taste and a rich, nutty flavor, the 1 same as that experienced in chewing a whole grain of wheat, and produces a goodly quantity of insoluble gluten, while a spurious article tastes flat ana ' insipid, like starch, or has a bitter taste ' consequent upon the presence of im ' purities. To Clean .let Omomenta. e With a soft brush remove any dust % and then apply a little oil on a piece of t cotton wool, afterwards polishing with a leather. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1899 COMFORT FOR STOCK. Kubbinic Post Placed Here anil Tlier* In Shadeless Pastures Will Save the Fences. In pastures where there are no trees or underbrush, stock will often rub against fences, causing considerable injury, particularly if the fences are made of rails or boards. If rubbing posts are provided this will be obvi ated to a certain extent, and the stock given considerable comfort. Two con- FORM OF THE RUBBING POST. venient forms are shown in the illus tration. The one at a is simply a post set in the ground at an angle, and the one at b consists of two posts with a top piece. One of these posts must be considerably higher than the other, so that the upper piece will slope. The posts must be s«t firmly in the ground and the top piece mortised in; other wise it will be broken off. —S. C. Millie, in Orange Judd Farmer. THE SPARROW HAWK. In vest teat lon Proves That the Parm er Has No lletter Friend Than This Persecuted llird. In many sections the sparrow hawk is recognized as a true friend of the farmer, though in others it is included in the general warfare waged by farm ers and sportsmen against hawks of all descriptions. The value of the spar row hawk lies in his habit of feeding on small rodents. He is a. rapacious bird, and destroys great numbers of these farm pests; also grasshoppers. Farmers are slow to appreciate the value of birds of prey. If one young chicken is devoured by a hawk a year, the whole race is condemned and no account taken of the 500 mice and young rats he may eat during that period. Mr. W. 15. Hall, of Wakeman, 0., was county clerk while the Ohio hawk law was in force, and he issued 46 bounty certificates for sparrow hawks. He examined their stomachs and found them all to contain the remains of grasshoppers, beetles and meadow mice; not one held any signs of chick ens. The investigations of the depart ment of agriculture are more con elusive yet. showing hundreds of mice against every chicken. STORY WITH A LESSON. now a Tramp's Polltenes* Was Awakened by the Sitslit of a Model Creamery. I will relate an amusing incident 1 saw happen in a creamery 1 visited a short time ago, writes G. 15. Law-son in Creamery Journal. The creamery was ns clean and neat as any could be. There was not a speck of dirt on the floor or about any of the machinery. The door opened and a tramp cams in with muddy boots on. It was rainy at the time. He made one step on the inside and stopped, as soon as he saw the condition of the room, looked at liis muddy feet, took off his hat and apologized for coming in in such a hurry with so much mud on his feet If that creamery had been dirty ajid grimy, as some .-ire, that tramp would riot have stopped at the door and apol ogized, but would have gone in and gotten the buttermilk he wanted with out looking at. his feet. Brother But termaker, do you keep your creamery so clean that a tramp will stop at the door, take off his hat and offer an apology for coming in? If not, try it and see what a difference it will have on the looks of the place, and also on the quality of the product made. Crescent Cnrcnllo Murk. Wherever a fruit is stung by the curculio a creseent-sliaped mark is left that gradually deadens the portion ol fruit inclosed, so that the sap will not flow so freely. This deadening of the fruit will extend to the stem and loosen its hold. Inside this crescent mark the curculio egg will be found. It used to be supposed that the curculio could not lay its eggs without making this mark. It does not at least, but the two opera tions are entirely separate. Instinct teaches the "little trick" to deaden the skin in order to stop the flow of juices, which might flood and destroy the egg she is about to lay. This deadening ol the skin causes the fruit to ripen pre maturely, so that when the egg hatches the worm has ripejied instead of green fruit to feed upon. (■crniM in the Fore-MlllL. With regard to the number of germs present in the fore-milk. Prof. Harrison found that in the first few strains of milk removed from the teats they varied from 18,000 to 54,000 per cubic centimeter; while the numbers present in the remainder of the milk amounted to only from 890 to 4,800 per cubic centimeter. These figures clearly demonstrate how important it is that the first few drops of milk from each teat should be milked into a separate receptacle and subsequently thrown away, and should on no account be mixed with the bulk of the milk. Any land that will grow a good croo Df corn will grow berries. ROADS NEED REPAIRS. % Connecticut Law Wisely Provides Tlmt They Should He Mud« Whenever Necessary. As the state is preparing to spend nearly $200,000 a year for road improve ments, including the salary and ex penses of the commissioner and dep uties, it is not. only fit but absolutely necessary that provision should be made for keeping the roads so im proved in good condition. Experience showsthat many towns will not do this. From carelessness or parsimony they allow what lias been made a good road to deteriorate from the moment the original work was completed, and nothing deteriorates much more promptly than a neglected highway. If the state has paid half or two-thirds the cost of the improvements it has am pleground for requiring that the twwns it has aided shall use proper diligence to retain and continue the benefits of the state's contribution. In this sense the clause in this year's bill which di rects the commissioner to see that proper repairs are, made from time to time is the most important feature in it. It is founded in both justice and economy. That the danger of neglect is no idle fancy is known to all who have looked into the results of road-building in Connecticut thus far. but it is oppor tune to quote a few lines from the An sonia Sentinel on the subject because that excellent paper illustrates the po sition from the experience of its own bailiwick. It says:"This will compel the repairing of the roads which, owing to neglect and inefficiency, are fast be coming worthless, such as the road in Ansonia and Derby, laid two or more years ago." Towns will have to remember that it is one thing to build roads because they can have half or two-thirds or three quarters of the cost paid by the state, and quite another thing to undertake the responsibility of creating and maintaining good roads. The former phrase has described the situation thus far. Towns have been urged to vote roads so as to get "their share of the state appropriation." They could buy a road for half price or less, and so they were ready to do it. Hut every road builder knows that money so spent is wasted unless a contin ual annual outlay follows it. You might as well buy a steam en gine and try to run it without constant care as to build a good road and leave it alone. Under the old system some roads have been built which would not have been touched if the condition for proper maintenance had accompanied the appropriation. No community which will not keep up its roads after it gets them cares enough about good roads to be helped in obtaining them. —Hartford Time®. RELIABLE BRAKE BLOCK. t'sed Willi Success by the Teamsters in tiie Mounliiinons Regions of the Northwest. j A three-cornered block (a) of wood j is fastened by chains or wired to the ' brake beam of a wagon so that it wil? ! drag on the ground about two inches • behind one of the rear wheels of the EFFECTIVE BRAKE BLOCK. wagon. The driver stops to rest his team, and instead of applying the brake, the team is allowed to slacken its traces so the weight of the load will rest on the self-acting chock block. When the team starts again the team merely has to start the load instead of having to pull against the brake un til it can be loosened.- —Orange Judd Farmer. FRESH DAIRY NOTES. When milk is to be taken to the creamery do not mix the milk of the night and the morning even if it will save the use of one can. The milk cow must be kept clean; the milkers must be clean at milking time; and the vessels in which the milk is put must be clean at all times. Do not aerate the milk ill the stable or in the lee of the stable. The air in which the milk is aerated must be j pure, else the milk in being aerated will suffer more harm than the itera tion will do good. Milk for the creamery must be milk in its proper condition. The farmer that has permitted his milk to get into j bad shape had better feed it to his j hogs or poultry than attempt to haul it to tlie creamery where it will be : likely to spoil a hundred other batches of milk.—Farmers' Review. Tlie Hulled llutter Ilnslness. One of the worst and most insidious enemies of good cream butter is process or "boiled" butter. When but ter becomes so bad and rancid as to be absolutely worthless for any purpose, it is melted to its original oil. treated with alkaloids, freed from volatile oil, re-crystalized, and then churned with sour milk to freshen it. This produces ;i thoroughly renovated and it is claimed wholesome butter with a good body which will easily show a buttel fat content of 80 per cent. From a i standpoint too of chemical analysis, it ! cannot oe considered adulterated not an imitation. The only protection the producers of good fresh butter have is I to insist that this manufactured prod- I uet shall be sold as renovated or boiled I butter. —Journal of Agriculture. Modern Fable. A general who was conducting a war in a distant island wrote to the agricultural dei partment of his government to chip him a. ton of acorns. When asked what he in- I tended to do with them he replied: "There is no shade in our trenches, and : the troops suffer from heat. A growth of , large oaks will add much to the comfort 1 of the men in the firing line." lie would have said more, but his atten- I tion was arrested by a burst of song from ' a neighboring jungle. "An," he sighed, "that is a round robin!" And he walked sadly a way.—Han Fran cisco Examiner. HOP SiiKstosl inn. A five-year-old girl lost her pet spaniel, but regained it by means of an advertise ment. Her Sunday school lesson was about the lost sheep, and she was very attentive. When her teacher finished speaking she said: "Miss May, why .dn't the shepherd ad vertise in the pape for the sheep?"— Phi ladelphia Times. Do Your Feet Ache anil flnrnf Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, ['.un ions, Swollen, Smarting, Hot, Callous, Sore, and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsteu, Le Roy, N. Y. A Matter of Tnntc. "I think I shall buy my husband a seat in the I'nited States senate for a birthday present." "How lovely!" "Yes, it's either that or a diamond, and you know jewelry is not in the best taste for a man."—Detroit Journal. Lunt-'a Family Medicine. Moves the bowels each Jay. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick bead ache. Price 25 and 50c. Safe. She —I think Dewey can be trusted to select a new admiral's uniform that suits him, don't you ' He —Oh, yes! It isn't as if he were a mar ried man.—Puck. The Nickel Plate Road, with its Peerless Trio of Fast Express Trains Daily and Un excelled Dining Car Service, offers rates lower than via other lines. The Short Line between Chicago, Buffalo, New York and Boston. Crnshlne the Old Man. Purse-Proud Father —Can you support my daughter in the style to which she lias been accustomed? Complacent Young Man—T could if I were contented with it. but I hope to give her something better. —Somerville Journal. To Care n Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money ll'it fails to cure. 25c. Tile riruKK'iaCii Work. There is a druggist in one of the suburban districts who advertises: "The doctor prescribes; we execute." Such advertising cannot fail to appeal to those who desire to be executed. —Boston Journal. Hnll'i Catarrli Cure Is taken Internally. Price 75c. The \«>l»le Animal. Trader —Don't you want to sell that horse? Farmer—Naw. I keep him extra, to haul broken-down automobiles buck to town. — Indianapolis Journal* Jennie Peacock—"He made the most lior lible threat when I refused him." Jack (ioldbotia —"\\ !:at did he say?" Jennie Peacock (sobbing)—"He »aia he should never propose to me again."—Judge. Sea Terms.—Stout Party (to bathing mas ter) "l.ot a suit to fit me?" Hath Robe Man (looking liini over) —"I guess so. \\ hat's your displacement?"— Philadelphia North American. An Incidental. —Uibbs —"See that strik ing-looj.aig girl there? _ She married mil lions?" Ilobbs —"Who's the insignilicant looking fellow with her ." llibbs- "Oh, he's the man she married."—Philadelphia North American. "Quigbee is a queer sort of a chap. He toid me yesterday that when he feels par ticularly blue and melancholy he always sits down and reads a book of poems." "And when he gets hungry 1 stwpoae he sits down and reads a cook book. ' —Baltimore Jew ish Comment. They were barnstorming in Arizona. "Alas! we must starve," wailed the penni less heroine. "The wolf is already at the door." Instantly the sympathetic audience drew six-shooters. "Let him :n, lady," said the spokesman; "thar's a bounty ov sl2 on wolf scalps in this st.-.ie an' we'll git it fur you."—Philadelphia l! cord. Lariat Luke—"Well, how did I'ilferin' Pete swing off?" Mexican Mike —"Say, there's a cuckoo. lie kicked about the quality of the rope an' about the way the noose was tied- -said he wanted (lowers an' a quartette at the funeral, an' when Cnyuse Charley went near to see ef he wuz dead, Pete tried to kick him."—Ohio State Jour nal. Mrs. Nabor—"Wasn't that your husband I saw running at breakneck speed toward the station awhile ago)'" Mrs. Tartar —"It was; I sent him posthaste to the city for something my dressmaker needs to finish my gown to-day." Mrs. Nabor —"Do vou think he will catch the train?" Mrs. Tar tar—"He'll catch it if lie don't ."—Richmond Dispatch. A Letter to Mrs. Pinkham Brought Health to Mrs. Archambo. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. 42,395] " Dear Mrs. Pinkham —For two years I felt tired and so weak and dizzy that some days I could hardly go around the house. Backache and head ache all the time and my food would not digest and had such pains in the womb and troubled with leucorrhcna and kidneys were affected. " After birth of each child I grew weaker, and hearing - so much of the good you had done, I wrote to you and have taken six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, one box of Lozenges, one box of Liver Pills, one package of Sanative Wash, and to day I am feeling as well as I ever did. When I get up in the morning I feel as fresh as 1 did when a girl and eat and sleep well and do all of my work. If ever I feel weak again shall know where to get my strength. I know your medicine cured me." —Mrs. Salina Arciiambo, Ciiarlemont, Mass. The present Mrs. Pinkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled; for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham. and for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women a year. All women who suffer are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for advice, which will be promptly given without charge. To California via the Midland Routt. Every Friday night, at 10:35 p. m., a through Tourist Car for San Francisco, carrying first and second-class passenger*, leaves the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Union Passenger Station, Chicago, via Omaha, Colorado Springs and Salt laike. City (with stop-over privileges at Salt City), for all points in Colorado, Utail, Nevada and California. The Tourist Car berth rate from Chicago to San Francisco is only $6.00. and the sleep ing car berths should lie reserved a few days in advance of departure of train. Through tickets and sleeping ear accom modations can be secured from anv ngeut in the east, or by applying at the Milwaukee & St. Paul Depot or City Tick et Offices in Chicago. Send for our free illustrated California folders. Address Geo. li. Heafford, Gro eral Passenger Agemt, Chicago, 111. Tommy Tompkins—"l bet my pun kin lick your kitten." Willie Wilkins— Well. I bpf if he does he'll wish he hadn't when my kitty grows up."—Ohio State .Journal. We have not been without Piso's Cure lot Consumption for 20 years.-—Lizzie Fernet Camp St.. liariisburg, Pa., May 4, '94. Aii Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy. SYRUP OF Fins, manufactured by tha CALIFOKNIA I-'IG SYRUP CO., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to tbrt taste and acceptable to the system, it is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from, every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening 1 or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figa are used, as they are pleasant to tha taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, pleas* remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N. T. I'oi sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c. per bottio, lOOOs of UNSOiCiTED TESTIMONIALS SAT. Perraanentlv cures all Itching. Burning. flcaley. Healp ami Skin Diseases, such as Salt Rheum.' I£<y zeuia. S«*a)<l Head. Chilblains. Piles, Hums. Bator Humors. Dandruff. Itching Scaln. Falling Lta/r (thickening and making it Soft. Silky, and Laxart ant). All Face Eruptions (producing a Soft. Clear, licautiful Skin and Complexion). It contain* n& Load. Sulphur. Cantharides or anything injurioua. An easy, great seller. Lady canvassers tnakaSi t«» J825 :t day. Druggists or mail r»Oc. Capillar! 9 Manufacturing Co.. N. Y. Address T. UIJM* MA NMFIKI.D, %gt., OLF.N RIDGE. X. «T. 41 For six y«»ar* i wan a victim of d?«- pepela in its worst form. I could eat notmna but milk toast, and at times my stomach would not retain and digest even that- Last Marck X began taking CASI'ARKTS and since then 1 have steadily improved, until i am as well as 112 ever was in my life." DAVID H. MURPHY, Newark. Q M CATHARTIC paw TRADE MARK REO»»TFR*D Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Dol Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, lOc. ZJC. 50a. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Mlerllair Kvrnedj foupauj, 4'Llengo, Montreal, New Yortt. fit felfi Tfl R/il* Sold and guaranteed by all drng- HU" I U-uWU gists to CI KE Tobacco Habit W. L. DOUGLAS 53&53.50 SHOES t Worth $4 to $6 compared witii other makes. Indorsed by over 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL SIYLE3 TIN: (JKXI'IXK lintp W. L. Dvutlu? name and price stamped on batUrak. Tnkc no substitute clafpietf to be as good. Largest insJterir of ltt and shoes la rbe world. Your dealer should ke«p them—lf not. we will send yo» a patron receipt of price. Stat# kind of leather, size and width, plain or cap Utt. Catiilogue i* Free, W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass. PAT ADIPO-CURA Hfe Will reduce your weight 10 BR 8 la pounds a Month. No j£tt starving. No Social Diet. St Purely Vegetable-Absolute. M DBC&II1 IySAFK and CERTAIN m nil £ II U its Results. SAMPLE, with ■■■■■■"9m Treatise «>n <II esity, NOK'nnV£BT£KX PHARMACOL Ctfc. Jtiox 408. HILWAIKISE, WIS. READERS OF TIIIB PAPER ( DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING ALL. SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS. I CUTTERS INK —None so good, but it costs ns more than the poorest. CITC Permanently Cared. Nofltsornerv ■ II v ousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. S'-i trial bottle and treatio* free. Dr. It. li. KLINE, Lul, iKR Arch St., Phiia., Pa. MOll th|costly outfit free; we want a man or A/n woman in every county; apply quick. M<unu- VI v facturers, :i»4r» Market -• . Philadelphia. A. N. K.-C 1776 Jjli a »i ;i m a:«i Si CUKES WHhKb AH ELSfc FAILS. EI M Beat Cough Syruj*. Testes Good. Uoe !wj E3 In time. Bold by druggists. PHI! 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers