| > en n$ y 1 vanici RAILROAD. PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE HAIL HOAD fIVISION. In effect May 29, 1904. TRAINS LEAVE EMPORIUM EASTWARD fi 10 A. M.-Week diijs tor Suiibury, j Wilkesbarre, Scranton, Hazleton, Pottsville, I Harrisburg sndintermedintcstations, arriving at PhilaiMp lia tt.'-M P.M„ New Y0rk9.30 P. M., Baltimore t> ou p. M., Washington 7.15 P. M. Pullman Parlor car from Williamsport to Philadelphia and passe tiger coaches from Kane to Philadelphia and Williamsport to Balti more and Washington. [®:26 V M. (Emporium Junction! daily for Sun bnrv, Harrisburg an I principal intermediate •taOnns. arriving at Philadelphia, 7:32 p. m.; New ;C:J3 p. m.; Baltimore, 7:30 p. m.; Wellington, 8:35, u. m. Vtstibuled Parlor cars and passenger coaches, ljull'alo to Phila delphia and Washington. L U0 ". M.—daily for Harrisburg and Intermediate stations, arriving at Philadel phia, 4.'±S A. M., New York 7.13 \. M, Baltimore, 2:20 A.M. Washington, 3:30 A. M. Pullman sleeping cars from HarrisburgtoPhil adelphiu and New York. Philadelphia pas lumgergcan remainiu sleeper undisturbed un til ::80«. M. iO 80 P. M. -«Daily for Sunbury, Harris burg and intei cediate stations arriving at Philadelphia 7.17 A. M., New York 9.33 A. M., weekdays, (10.38 A. M. Sunday;) Baltimore 7.15 A. M..'Vashington 8.30 A.M. Pullman sleep ing cars from Erie,lvilialo and Williamsport to Philadelphia and Bufalo, Williamsport to Washington. cars from Erie to Philadelphia and Willia -lsport to Baltimore. 1:2:15 A M. (Emporium Junction),daily for Suu bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:32 a. m.; ■ New York, U:33 a. m., week days: (10:38 Sun days); Baltimore, 7:25 a. in.; Washington, 8:16 a. m. Vestibuled Buffet Sleeping Cars and Passenger coaches, Buffalo to Philadelphia and Washington. WESTWARD, fi 10 A. M.—Emporium Junction— dally for Erie, Ridgway, and week days for Du- Bois, Clermont and intermediate stations. 10 30 A M.— Daily for Erie and week days for Dußois andi ntermediate stations. ®23 P. M. —Week days lor Kane and intermediate stations. iaiDGWAY AND CLEARFIELD R. R. CON NECTIONS. (Weekdays.) louTtiWAKD. Stations, NohTIIWABP t.U A.M. A.M. P.11.1'. M.I-. M. 0 00 4 U2 Renovo 5 00 11 45 a'auil 05 5 -v. Kane 02 25 3 00 H 25 3 30; 11 21 613 .. ..Wilcox 12 02 2 40 8 04 3 4;-|ll 43 tf 25 .Johnsouburg., 11 47 2 74» i 051? 05, 8 50 ...Ridgway 9 20 2 10 , 7 30 'i'isiii'is! 7ot ..Mill Haven... oo'j, i .wi'7 20 4 25 12 24 7 10 .. Croyland 9 00 1 49 7 09 43412 32 7 19 . Blue Hock... 851 140 701 4 38 12 35 7 21 Carrier 8 47 1 37 8 57 448124 V 7 32 .Brockwavvtlle. 837 127 647 45312 50 737 ...Lanes Mills.. 831 123 6 13 4 57i i 741 .McMinns Sm't. 83C j6 38 6 011 1 00| 745 Harveys Run.. 8 25| 1 lfi! 635 5 05' 1 05 7 5i ..FallsCreek... 8 2> 1 10 6 30 ft 201 1 251 8 0. ... Dußois 8 08.12 551 6 10 "ft I(TT 15 7 55' .Falls Creek... 653 1 15 630 627 129 BOS ReynoldsviUe.. 63912 52 615 # 00 1 56 8 35 .. .Brookville... 6 05 12 21 8 39 6 45 238 920 New Bethlehem 11 41 4 50 7 25 3 20 10 03...Red Bank 11 05 4 05 10 lo! 5 30 12 3> .. ..Pittsburg 9 00 1 30 W. M.jp. M. P. M. A. M. | A. M. P. M. BUFFALO St ALLEGHENY VALLEY DIVISION. Leave Emporium Junction for Port Allegany, ! "Mean, Arcade, East Aurora and Buffalo. t'rain No. 107, daily, 4:05 A. M. Train No. 115, daily 4:15 P. M. Traius leave Emporium for Keating. Port Allegany, Coudersport, Smethport, Eldred, Bradford, Glean ami Buffalo,conuectiug at But- 1 Palo for points East and West. Train No. 101, week days, 8:25 A. M. Train No. 103, week days. 1:35 P. M. Train No. 103 will connect at Olean with Chautauqua Division for Allegany, Bradford, falamaaeti, Warren, Oil City and Pittsburg. LOW URADE DIVISION. EAST BOUND. ' . - . STATIONS. 109 113 101 105 107 051 I ' I j 1 'A. m A. m A. M. P. M P. m A. M. Pittsbur*,. LT.I ; 16 15 19 00 {l3O ,05 J 900 Red Bank, 1 980 11 05 4 0.5 7 55 11 111 Lavvsonham 9 47 rills 4 18 8 07 11 23 New Bethle'm 10 20 11 44 4 50 8 37 11 55 Brookville, ■ 16 05 11 10 12 21 539 9 22 12 41 ReynoldsviUe, 639 11 42 12 52 ft 15 950 1 14 Fails Creek 653 11 07 1156 30 1008 129 Dußois, 7 00 112 0-5 125 fi 40 1015 \ 1 35 Habula j 7 12 1 37 C 53 Peunfield, j 730 1 .55 7 15 Bennezette,....; 8 04 229 7.47 Driftwood 18 40 13 05 8 20 »ia P. & E. Ilivi Crlflwood.. Lv. '9 50 13 45 Emporium, Ar. tlO 30 (4 10 ! A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M P. M (P. tlj WESTBOUND. "P|l I I | 1 STATIONS. 108 100 102 114 t 110 952 I ! I , _ Tia P. &E. Div A. u A.M. A. M P. m. P. m P m. Emporium, Lv.! ! 'to 10 13 20 Driftwood, Ar..( ' 19 04 i 4 00 Via L. O. Div Driftwood, Lv 15 80 11110 15 50 Bennezette 1 6 25 11 45 6 25 »*e no field, ; 7 00 12 20 7 01 Kabnla, 7 18 12 39 7 23 Dußois ; '6 05 7 30 12 65 +5 00 7 35 ;4 10 Kalis Creek 6 12 7 55 1 15 5 10 7 42 1 17 ReynoldsviUe,.. 630 808 1 29 527 758 430 Brookville 7 05 8 35 1 56 6 00 18 30 5 00 New Bethle'm ' 7 51: 9 20 2 38 6 45 5 45 Lawsonham, ..j 821 94713067 14 . . 618 Red Bank.Ar.. 8 35 10 00 3 20 7 25 6 30 Pittsburg, Ar...j*ll 15 11235 1 5 30 11010 ,'9 30 A. M. P. M. P. M, P. M. P. M. P. M •Daily. IDaily except Sunday. {Sunday only. fFlag Stop. On Sunday only train leaves Driftwood 8:20 a. tn., arrives at Dußois, 10:00 a, in. Returning leaves DuPois, 2:00 p. m.; arrives at Driftwood, 8:10 p. m., stopping at intermediate stations. For Time Tables and further information, ap ply to Ticket Agent. J. R. WOOD, Pass'gr Traffic Mgr. W. W. ATTERBURY, GEO. W. BOYD, General Manager. Gen'l Passenger Agt. (if , You are not familiar with the excellence of the Cameron County Press as a FAMILY news paper, why not sub scribe for it now. We certain that yoti will be pleased. The cost is nominal, [51.50 Per Year | THIS WOMAN KNOWS WHAT ONE OF THE SEX DISCOVERED TO HER GREAT JOY. Mr«. I><> 1 onu FIIMI* tlint tlio In«lo*ort!»abl# | I'll ins of Hlicuniatlsin Can bo Cured Through the Wood. Mr» K. M. DeLong, of No. 100 Broadway, Council Bluffs, lowa, *ound i herself suddenly attacked by rheuma tism in tlie winter of 1896. Sho gave tho doctor a chance to help her, which he failed to improve, and then nho did •01110 tliinkinguudexperimenting of her own. Sho was so successful that she deems it her duty to tell the story of her escape from suffering: '•My brother-in-law," sho says,"wan enthusiastic on tho subject of Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills as a purifier of tha blood, and when I was suffering extreme pains in the joints of my ankles, knees, hip«, wrists and elbows, and the doctor was giving 1110 ti 1 relief, 1 began to ro flect that rheumatism is a disease of tho blood and that, if Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are bo good fur tho blood, thoy must be good for rheumatism and worth a trial. •' I was in bed half the time, suffering wita pa\i that cannot bo described to one who has never had tho disease. It would concentrate sometimes in one set of joints. When it was in my foot I oould not walk, when it was in my el bows and wrists I could not even draw the coverlets over my body. I had suf fered in this way for weeks before I bo gan using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Two weeks after I began with them I experienced relief and alter 1 had tukoti six boxes I was entirely well. To make sure I continued to use them about two weeks longer and then stopped alto gether. For several years I liavo had 110 reason to use them for myself, but I have recommended them to others as an excellent remedy." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills furnish the blood with all the elements that are needed to build up healthy tissue, strong muscles and nerves, capable of bearing the strain that nature puts upon them. They really make new blood and cure all diseases arising from disorders of tho blood or nerves, fuchas sciatica, neural gia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, St. Vitus' dance, ueivous prostration, amentia and all forms of weakness in either male or female. They are sold by all druggists. RAISE ENORMOUS PUMPKINS. Thirty of Them, Grown by Pennsyl vania Gardener, Weigh Nearly Four Hundred Pounds. Ail feats In pumpkin raising have been surpassed by John Weir, who ; owns a small garden in the farm of | tho Philadelphia Vacant Lots associa -5 tion. in Philadelphia. Several weeks ag;o Weir threw some pumpkin seeds on a steep embankment which borders his farm. There were signs of miniature pumpkins on his vine, and to prevent ' them from interfering with his other 1 vegetables he threw the vine over the top of a tree. Then he forgot all about the pumpkin vine. lie was startled one day to see pumpkins ap pearing among the foliage of the tree. There was a big bunch of them, big and heavy, and they were bearing heavily upon the branches of the tree. In order that tliey might thrive in comfort Weir built a shelf under each ; pumpkin and they grew bigger atid stronger until then encircled the en tire tre«£ All together they were 30 of them, weighing collectively, 350 pounds. They are now getting ready to appear in a large aggregation of ! pumpkin pies. Color of Adam and Eve. A dispute has arisen whether Adam and Eve were not colored. The bur den of all obtaining testimony is that they undoubtedly were, remarks the Buffalo Express. They were green when the serpent led them astray, but they turned blue when cast out of Paradise. SAFEST FOOD In Any Time of Trouble la Grape-Nuts Food to rebuild the strength and that is pre digested must be selected when one is convalescent. At this I time there is nothing so valuable as Grape-Nuts for tho reason that this food is al! nourishment and is also all . (jigestible nourishment, A woman 1 who used it says: "Same *iuie ago I wt»s very ill with typhoid fever, so ill everyone thought I would die, even myself. It left mo 1 so weak I could not properly digest ; food of any kind and I also had much | bowel trouble which left me a weak, ! helpless wreck. "I needed nourishment as badly as anyone could, but none of the tonics helped me until I finally tried Grape | Nuts food morning and evening. This 1 not only supplied food that I thought delirious as could be but it also made I me perfectly well and strong again so 1 I can do all niy housework, sleep well, : can eat anything without any trace of bowel trouble and for that reason 1 alone Grape-Nuts food is worth its weight in gold." Name given by 1 Post urn Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Typhoid fever like some other dis eases attacks the bowels and frequent ly sets up bleeding and makes them for months incapable of digesting tho starches and therefore pre digested Grape-Nuts is invaluable for the well known reason that in Grape-Nuts ali the starches have been transformed : Into grape sugar. This means that the ( first .stage of digestion has been me ! chanically accomplished in Grape-Nuts food at the factories and therefore j anyone, no matter how weak the stom ach, can handle it and grow strong, 1 for ail the nourishment is still there. There s a sound reason and 10 days I trial proves. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1904. HOW SOIL IS STERILIZED. New Jersey Exjiert Describes a Method Especially Adopted for Small Operations. Sterilising the soil was done by hav. lng a steam coil made by a plumber. Mine was made as follows: Five runs cine feet long made of IVi-inch pipe. These were drilled every five inches with 5-1G drill, turning the pipe quar ter way around every time drill was set, and drilled holes all way through. This turning of the pipes makes holes at right angles to each other. These five pipes were then threaded and screwed into crossheads (lVfe-inch pipes for heads) at either end, using right-hand nipples on one end and left hand on tho other; these five pipes j were placed one foot apart, making the ; whole apparatus four feet wide and nearly ten leet long when finished. 1 See cut. In the center at one end a connection is made with three-quarter inch pipe to admit steam. This con- j nection may seem small, but it worked , all right, and will give a ten-horse power boiler a great hustle to keep it 1, PLAN FOU STERILIZING SOIL. going for over two hours. Next in or der is a good eight or ten-liorse power boiler, also a box sufficiently large to be ten inches clear of pipe on all sides and two feet deep. This should not be termed a box, although it is box shaped. Floor should be independent, sides and ends also, so it can be re moved with less labor. Fill half full of soil to be sterilized, lay on your pipe coil, and cover with strips of bur- j lap to keep perforations from becom ing clogged. Now fill box full of soil, cover with canvas or a tight board cover, and weight down. Make con nection with good hose from boiler to coil, fire up till you have not les3 than 40 pounds pressure, and keep it there till finished if possible. Thi3 operation will require nearly or quite 2\'z hours. It should be kept steadily heating till all soil in the inclosure, corners, ends and every particle, is heated to over 200 degrees, and when this has been reached for a short time, say ten or fifteen minutes, I will guar antee that about everything in it Is cooked, even to one's finger nails, should you attempt to try it that way. I know, for I have been there. Soil treated to this process must be, and is absolutely pure; free from all foul ) seeds, inserts and germs. There may be other lid even better ways of do ing this work, but this was the way I did it, and it works well for small operations.—C. C. Hulsart, in Rural New Yorker. OHIO FARMER'S PROTEST. He Deplores Improper Use of Road Graders and Tells How Trouble May Be Avoided. Road scrapers or graders are like ; many other good things; used in the | proper manner they are all right, but when used improperly they are unmit igated nuisances. Two weeks ago, tak ing a drive into a neighboring county, I chanced to drive over a road that was the cause of this article; it was what is known in our part of the state as a mud road, 1 e., one that has never been piked, Just graded by poll tax and regular road tax and then a nar row coat of gravel put on, a little at a time, from year to year, until in the course of time it is all graveled. But by the lime the last is graveled the j first is worn out. Now, on a road like the above some officer who had the authority to do so took a road scraper and went over the road, keeping the outside edge of j the scraper at the line made by the meeting of the gravel and sod along side the gravel 011 each side of the center of the gravel or grade, thus cut- j ting the roadway from two to six inches lower at the edge than the sod along the edge. Not only is the road mad unpleas ant to drive over, but there is a chan nel or gutter cut immediately at. each | edge of the gravel, which at each sue- ; | ceeding rain will widen and deepen and in the course of a few weeks or months badly injure the road and grade. Some may say, what must a road j superintendent do in a case like that ;if not use a scraper? That is very I easy to answer. Take a very heavy | roller and roll the road several times, going on each side of the center of the j grade, leaving it slightly higher than | the sides, thus making a water shed ; like a roof, BO the water will run off on each side into the side ditch at ouce j instead of running along the top of j the road for perhaps 200 or 300 yards I until it finds an outlet to the side ditch; of course the rolling will have j to be done when the ground is soft, : at least soft enough for the roller to ! press the ridges down. 1 think the | government should publish books and plans on road making and compel road J superintendents to study them and fol | low meir instructions; then we would have substantial roads built and re j paired in a uniform way and no coat |ly mistakes to pay for.—J. S. Hill, io Ohio Farmer. WAS A NAIVE COMPLIMENT. Musician Ployed So Well That th» ; Congregation Wouldn't Be Dismissed. "Reginald He Koven was touring tlie country with one of his operas." said a New j York musician, "and a certain Sunday found ! bun in the town of Dayton. "They told Mr. De Koven that an Epis- ; copal cnurch in the neighborhood had a -u --perb organ. Accordingly he went to that church, ascended to the organ loft, and sat beside the organist during the morning's service, " 'You seem to know something about music," said the organist in a condescending way. 'l'll let jou dismiss the congregation if you'd like.' " 'Why, yes,' said De Koven, 'J would like that very much.' "Accordingly, at the end of the recession al, he exchanged places with the organist and began to play Mendelssohn's 'Spring Song.' ile played beautifully. The Dayton people, enthralled by the wonderful music, refused to depart. They sat in rapt enjoy nient, and *fter the 'Spring Song' was fin ished Mr. De Koven began Chopin's 'Fu neral March.' "Suddenly a heavy hand wag laid on his shoulder and he was pushed oii the music stool. " 'You can't dismiss a congregation," said the organist, impatiently. 'Watch and see i how soon I'll get them out.' " GOING TO STAY YOUNG. Even Government Inspectors Couldn't ; Make Her Older Than She Looked. A Brooklyn woman lately returned from Europe was describing to her husband who j had remained at home *er experiences with j the customs inspectors who had taken her declaration in the cabin of the liner coining up the bav, relates the Brooklyn Eagie. | "When he asked me my age, she said, "1 told him 30." "But, my dear," exclaimed the husband, "you're over 30. "I know it," she returned, "but do I look more?" "No, you don't; that's a fact." "Well," she concluded, triumphantly, convinced that mere man was squelched once more by the force of feminine logic, "until 1 look more than 30 I'm going to be 30, and ldon'tcare fortheold United States government and all its customs inspectors and declarations. They can't make me older than 1 look or want to be." Perfectly Simple. Trying to give *n idea of the size of a molecule, Dr. W. Marshall Watts says that if a drop of water were enlarged to the di mensions of the earth its molecules would look like a heap of 9,556,000,000,000,000,000,- 000.000 tennis balls. If all scientific facts can only be reduced to sporting terras this way, the general understanding of the wonders of nature will be tremendously increased. — Boston Transcript. Long Way Round. A new word has been introduced into the Flemish language. It is Snellpaardeloos zoondeerspoorwegpetrolirijuig. The ety mology is: "Snell," rapid; "paardeloos," horseless; "zeendeerspoorweg," without rails; "petrolirijtuig," ariven by petroleum. The w hole word, as can be easily seen, means motor car. —Detroit Free Press. Maps. Robert. Louis Stevenson, one of the most notable English writers known to the pres ent generation, was wont lo say that noth ing interested him more than the perusal ot a good map; aud without doubt, a map that is well made and accurate catches the eye and arrests the attention of many peo ple as lew other things can do. The men in charge of railway traffic pos- : se-s a most positive appreciation of this lact ■ and a large expenditure of time and skill- j fill tho-.icht is made on this feature of rail- ! way publicity, so that such portions of the country as the Black Hiils in South Dakota, - the wonderful mountain ranges compactly rising tier upon tier throughout the central and western portion of Colo rado, the rich valleys and hillsides of California, covered with vineyards, or chards and _ grain fields, Yellowstone Park, the Yosemite, Alaska, and those regions of interlacing lakes and water courses which mark that portion of the great northwest located in upper Wisconsin, ■outhern Minnesota and mat part of Mich igan known as tiie Upper Peninsula, have been mapped in detail and given to tiie pub lic gratis, far and wide. Said an official of the Chicago 4 North- Western Railway recently: "The Amer ican railway map engraver lias carried his art well-nigh to the borders of perfection. 1 do not know of any road maps or other detailed data for the state of Wisconsin, for instance, that equal those published by our passenger department, showing the haunts 01 summer tourists and fishermen. They are on tile 111 public libraries as part of their reference records. Other portions of the western country have been similarly taken up and maps ot a most complete character made for them; in fact, the western lines are iully alive to the value of a good map in the hands of the traveler. The map pub lishing business of the large railway sys tems is to-day reduced to scientific prin ciples and handled in a most systematic manner. The North-Western Line prints thousands of maps, running nil the way from large wall maps of the world, down to the smallest details of sections and quarter sec tions of (iovernment land open for settle ment in the west, and from nil n'las con taining a series of maps of the - ut of wsr in the far east io liic mo-t carefully worked out portrayal of Colorado's mountain re gions, ('alif'-K.l!:*'* winter resorts, or the summering places that abound along ths line throughout the west and northwest." Worrying the Landlord. Clarimla You can't keep a dog in ycur new flat? Florinda -No. we had lo give Fido away, but Frederick had his dear little balk put in our phonograph.—Cincinnati Cominsu ial Tribune. Can You Guess ItP Mike All' ph.at is it ails Kehoe? Pat- Shine, Oi can't mniinber th' name av it, but it's thot thing th' doctors cut out ov ye whether we've got it or not. —Judge, j One hotel in New York las a suite of j rooms for <Vliich it, charg s sl2sa day. which Would make an eight-hour night's sleep cost ?41.6ti. Wouldn't that give you insomnia? —lndianapolis News. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infalli ble medicine lor coughs and told-. -N. W. Samuel, Ocean Urovc, N. J., Feb. 17, 15100. It does no good to talk about conscience to a man with a headache.—l hicago Trib une. When St. Jacobs Oil Ths old monk cure, strong, straight, sure, tackies Hurts, Sprains, Bruises The muscles flex, the kinks untwist, the soreness dies out. Price 25c. and 5Cc. «pf\ 9hk£ ■■pP' X ■w >< r.) ~«....•••* /: 7 ,? ;.} f^WjißS v/ -. I B A prominent Southern Ldy, Mrs. J Blanchard, of Nashville, Tenn., tells how she was cured of backache, dizzmess, pain ful and irregular periods by the use of Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* "DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:— Gratitude compels mc to acknowledge tho ! great merit of your Vegetable Compound. I have suil'ered for four years | with irregular and painful menstruation, also dizziness, pains in the back | and lower limbs, and fitful sleep. I dreaded the time to como which would only mean suffering to me. " Better health is all I wanted, and cure if possible. Lydia E. Pink ! ham's Vegetable Compound brought me health and happiness in a j few short months. I feel like another person now. JVly aches and pains have left me. Life seems new and sweet to me, and everything seems | pleasant and easy. | "Six bottles brought me health, and was worth more than months i under the doctor's care, which really did not benefit me at all. lam sat isfied there is r.o medicine so good for sick women as your Vegetablo Compound, and I advocate it to my lady friends in need of medical help." Mns. 13. A. BLAXCHAUD, 422 Broad St., Nashville, Tenn. When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruo,- tion, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, baclraohe, bloating (or | flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prot-tration, or are beset. iiiiiiHh with such symptoms as dizziness, faintnees, laa |B|V eitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, Sleeplessness, melancholy, "all-gone" and "want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues and hopelessness, they should remember there is one Bgy tried and true remedy. Lydia I£. Pinkham'S fpsSil Vegetable Compound at once removes such I troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for \ \ iJi A Severe Case of "Womb Trouble Cured ] fr * u Philadelphia. FEGMLLLLJK, " "DEAR MRS. PJNKUAM: —I have been cured of severe female troubles by IHWr 1 [T \ the use of Lydia J:. Pinkhani's \ / I J] P Vegetable Compound. I was / J // nearly ready to give up but seeing /~~n, your advertisement I purchased one bottle of your medicine, and it did me so much good that I purchased another, and the result was so satisfactory that I bought six more bottles, and am now feeling like a new woman. I shall never be without it. I hope that my testimonial will convince women that your Vegetable Compound is the greatest medicine in the world for falling of the womb or any other lemalo complaints."— MßS. MAY CODY, 2GGO Birch St., Philadelphia, Pa. Remember, every \rjman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. . Pinkhani if there is anything about lier symptoms she does not Understand, lier address is Lynn, Mass., her advice is free and Cheerfully given to every ailing woman who asks lor it. YOU CAN BUY A HOME IN MISSOURI Kent co.-ts you In your ov*n Slate. Mend for I-lat of Ilargalna in Farms, Orchard, 'limber and (1 razing Lan(i. The Home of the lllic Red Apple, (lora, Olover »Dd Wheat. Special Iturifalna in larjre tracts «»f fine Pine and Oak Timber Land. Come direct or write u« and have aKcul'si-oiimiliMOD. .iUTlll'lt 111108. dr HODti£N, Sitlero, Dcuttouuty, MUaourl. WC lAMIIT vnim y ailC and will send yoa prospectus EL 83 All I TUUtI WAnC. and full particulars of NINE SUCCESSFUL COLD. SILVER. COPPER. LEAD, ZINC AND QUICKSILVER Min ing Companies. If you will send us your name and address. Mining Maps Free. ARBUCKLE-GOODE COMMISSION CO., 325 Olive St., St. Louis, Mo. ' It Curea Tolili, Conghs. Sore Throat, Cronp, Infln- i | en/.a. Whooping-Congo, Hronchitia and Asthma, j A certain cure for Congumption in first Biases, ! mul a sure relief in advanced utagea. U«e at once, j You will ace the excellent effect after taking tha i fir«t done Sold by dealera everywhere. Larue | bottlea centa and £>o cenia. | ill FOR FARMERS' LINES I flEiflr* And \i. aye Exchange*. ISulld i IBV your o* 11 lines inexpensive and KM 8 - i iirr ~ook instruction Hg£%fcTHE NORTH ELECTRIC CO. IMi 91. Cl.ilH f»T., (-I.KVKI.AMt,OIIIO. TS CUHtS WHIRL AIL ELSE FAILS. |H M Rest Cough Hjrup. Tastes Good, t'efc W Cd In time. Bora by drnraiiu. 151 IfIfBTHM 112 t*"' * 1 4 M 112 Wffil A.N. K.-C 52044 Big Four Route TO St. Louis "The Way of the World" to tbe World's Fair For information as to rate 9, hotels and boarding bouses, address nearest Big Four Agent, or WARREN J. LYNCH, G. P. Mid T. Agflnt, Cincinnati, O l Strawberry and Vegetable Dealers j Tbe Puswniier Dcparl-mont. of ihe Illinois Centrf* Railroad Compaq have recently issued a public* i lion known as Circular No. 12. in which Its ; the best territory in this country ! for the growing of early *t raw berries and early vfctfetabfefi. Every dealer In such products should a.ldress « postalcard tot he undersigned at IMIII<JI T:> | iowa, reoncstlug a con? of "«:-r.'ular No. 12." J7V.IIEBHT. uen'i Pass'r Agent. HK,, "THE AMATEUR ENTERTAINER" ar.o-i'ng. Illustrated. Descriptive Catalog with 200 Pages Popular Musio, fullv covers every stylo Amateur Mu •- Si cat and Dramatic Knteriat nmiMir., I ••• 7 Including 100 Tricks In Magic. VVI | Critthig trut Nfud FlvcVc I»UBUKO. I undreturn. Tn» CHEBT T'tftlHNU COMPANY, I (K. No. 3). 14 4 West 37tb St., N»* Turk Ully 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers