PARALYSIS CURED Case Seemed Hopeless but Yielded to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mr. Kenney has actually escaped from the paralytic's fato to which he seemed a short time ago hopelessly doomed. The surprising report has been fully verified aud some important details secured in a personal interview with the recent suf ferer. "The doctor," said Mr. Kenney, "told tne that if I wanted to live aiiy length of time I would have to give up work al together, aud he told my friends that the paralysis which bad begun would in time involve my whole body." "Just how were you afflicted at this time?" Mr. Kenney was asked. " Well, I had first hot, and then cold and clammy feelings, and at times my body felt as if needles were being stuck into it. These sensations were followed by terrible pains, and ngaiti I wt uld have uo feeling at all, but a numbness would j come over me, and I would not be able to move. The most agonizing tortures came j from headaches and a pain in the spine, j " Night after night I could not get my ! natural sleep and my system was wrecked by the strain of torturing pains and the 1 effect of the opiates I was forced to take 1 to indnco sleep. As I look back on the terrible suffering I endured during this period I often wonder how I retained my 1 reason through it all. " But relief came quickly when I was induced to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. The very first box I seemed to help me, and seven boxes made | me entirely well. There can be no doubt ] about the thoroughness of my cure, for I ! have worked steadily ever since and that is nearly four years." Mr. Kenney is at present employed by the Merrimac Hat Company and resides j at 101 Aubiu street, Amesbury, Mass. 1 The remedy which he used with such | satisfactory results, is sold by all drug- ! gists, or direct by the Dr." Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N Y. i FROM FOREIGN SOURCES. Nearly everybody in Abyssinia ear- j ries a Robinson Crusoe straw umbrella, j which cannot be closed. The first notes of the "Marseillaise" i are being used as a popular form of whistled greeting in London. Malodorous automobiles and motor cycles are not allowed at Pontresina, the fashionable Swiss resort. Because of the dust raised by automo biles, it is getting to be difficult in Eng land to rent houses on roads used by motor cars. Owing to the Insufficient supply of apothecary clerks in Germany there is an insistent demand that women should be educated for places in drugstores. Helene Lorensen, a Copenhagen dressmaker, IT years old, had a record of having jilted 11 lovers in two years when the eleventh ended her promising career with a dagger. The porters of the market place In Paris carry, strapped on their backs, great baskets full of garden produce. Often you see a man with a load of cab bages that is bigger than himself. For drinking a glass of beer in a rail way refreshment room at Frankfort, in the presence of an officer, a German sol dier has been court-martialed and sen tenced to 15 days' imprisonment. In order to aid the police in maintain ing order on the occasion of a recent motor race, the authorities of the town j of Rezemburg. Germany, compelled all j local cyclists to enroll themselves among the police. YOU MAY NOT KNOW. A good ostrich is worth S3OO. Diamonds have been found in me teorites. Most deaths occur between sunset and sunrise. The robin is the last bird togo to bed at night. Prussic acid 13 the most rapid poison a human being can take. Cremations can be watched by the public at one dollar a head In Italy. The mountain spider of Ceylon spins a net of yellow silk ten feet in diameter. A Chinaman cannot be partial to his eons in his will. All must share and share alike. One million dollars a year in stones Is stolen from the South African dia mond mines. Imprisonment In childhood is the chief factor in the creation of ha- i bitual criminals. biting the nails Is called "onchyo page" in France, and is regarded as a symptom of degeneracy. FUNNY People Will Drink Coffee When It "Does Such Things." ■"I began to use Postum because ths oil kind of coffee had so poisoned my whole system that I was on the point of breaking down, and the doctor warned me that I must quit it. My chief ailment was nervousness and heart trouble. Any unexpected noise would cause me the most painful palpitation, make i uie faint, and weak. I had heard of Postum and began to j drink it when I left off the old coffee, j It began to help nil* just as soon as ! the old effects of the other kind of •coffee passed away. It did not stimu- j late me for awhile, and then leave i me weak and nervous as coffee used ' •to do. Instead of that It built up my I strength and supplied a constant vigor to my system which I run always rely i on. It enables me to do the biggest j kind of a day's work without getting tired. All the heart trouble, etc., has passed away. "I j:lve It freely to all my children, from the yuunc-st to the oldest, and it kfeps them all healthy and hearty." Name given by Post iw Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Tin re's a reason Head the lit' 1 o look, "Thf Ituad to Wellvllle," iu pkg*. RIOT REIGNS IN RUSSIAN CITIES HUNDREDS OF LIVES LOST IN ENCOUNTERS BETWEEN THE MOBS AND SOLDIERS. A GREAT SLAUGHTER AT ODESSA I Reports from Many of the Larger Cities Show that as Usual the Jews Were the Especial Vic tims of the Spirit of Mur der and Pillage. St. Petersburg, Nov. 2. —Though j yesterday passed in comparative quiet \in St. Petersburg and Moscow, dis- j j patches from all parts of the empire j j report disorders in many cities, with a j j heavy total of dead and wounded. The ! people while celebrating their now i j found freedom were in many instances j set upon by Cossacks and police, while 1 sometimes the spirit of mob violence s broke forth and the lower elements | of the population gave themselves up I to pillage and destruction. The most serious disorders appar ently occurred at Odessa, where hun- j | dreds of persons are reported to have j ! been killed or wounded and where the ! rioting is expected to flare out in a ; 1 repetition of the slaughter of last July, j and at Kazan. A deplorable feature-of the news 1 ' from the interior is that anti-Jewish I uprisings have occurred In many j | places, especially, in South Russia,' j where the populace vented its hatred of the Jews by sacking their stores : and clubbing the members of the race, lln some cases resorting to the torch, j Warsaw, Nov. 2. —Twenty persons ' were killed and upwards of a hundred j I wounded in the encounters last night j | between the mobs and the troops. At | | 10 o'clock a crowd gathered'before the j town hall and demanded the release of j i political prisoners. The chief of po- i ! lice liberated 300 who had been arrest- I ed during the last few days, but re. ! fused to release 12 who were arrested ! by order of the central government. 1 The crowd then commenced to smash the doors and windows of the town ' hall, whereupon the chief of police i telephoned the barracks for assistance j and a force of hussars and Cossacks with a battery of artillery galloped to the scene. The hussars charged the : mobs, killing 10 persons and wound- | ing 73. Later there was an encounter \ between infantry and a mob in the Bank Square, when the troops fired into the crowd, killing four and wounding 30. London, Nov. 2. —The correspondent of the Daily Mail at Kieff in a dis patch dated November I.says: "Jew baiting started at midnight. Strong patrols passed frequently, but I hey looked smilingly on and gave no help. "The Jews fired from the blaconies of their homes on the troops and on the processions of loyalists, the sol diers returning the fire. The resi dences and offices of many weaM'Ty Jews were wrecked. The Jews now threaten to massacre the Christians." CLARK'S LAST STATEMENT. Cashier of the Enterprise National j Bank Laid the Blame for His Ruin Upon W. H. Andrews. Pittsburg, Nov. 2. —The following statement of T. Lee Clark, cashi?r of the Enterprise national bank of Alle gheny, written a few hours before he | committed suicide, was made public j last night: "Dearest Wife and Children: In ten j [ hours or less I will be in the other j world. You have been a dear good j wife to me. Andrews has worked my j ruin. Dear wife, keep all, the insurance [ for yourself and babies. How hard it j is to leave you all. I have made a des- j perate effort to keep things going un- j til I would get the road financed, hut ' it has been too slow. The examiner is here and I am ruined. Do forgive me; j it is not my fault. I have been shame- j fully robbed. The bank will get every- ' thing but the life insurance. "Your husband, Lee." Clark committed suicide on the morning of October 18 and the above letter, written in pencil on one of the bank's letter heads, was found in the j dead man's home by his 14-year-old daughter and turned over to his at- | j torney. It was evidently written at ! ' the bank the night before the suicide, i Lee Clark, the deceased cashier, was treasurer of the Santa Fe Central rail- ! road, of which W. H. Andrews was president. MURDERED BY CHINESE. Five Members of a Presbyterian Mis- j sion are Slaughtered at Lienchow.' 1 Hong Kong, Nov. 2. —Five American missionaries have been murdered at Lienchow. Lienchow is a town of 12,- i 000 people, situated in the western ' portion of the province of Kwan;; Tung. Dr. Eleanor Chestnut, Mrs. E. C. ] Machle and children and Mr. an.l .Mr.), j Peale are the victims of the disturb ance at the Lienchow mission. Chicago, Nov. 2.—Dr. Chestnut la j weil known in Chicago, having been j sent out as a missionary by the wesi ; crn branch of the board of foreign j missions of the Presbyterian church. Two Men Killed by an Explosion. Washington, Nov. 2- William White ard Clarence Whitqley, the latter a ■ negro, were killed by an explosion in j tin |i< wor house of the Potomac Klec ; trie Co. yesterday and Georve Tram i bh», William llali and Luther Uuticr, 1 all white, were injured. A Big Deal in Coal Lands. Vnlontown, Pa., Nov. 2. Joseph V 1 i impsun has sold 1 ,:*<;•> am s of coal lands in the central p irt of the Cm tieiu. iile coke regions to Hoy 11. and Paul J. Hal nay, of New York TU« purch iac price wj* $1,50u,000. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1905. SETS DAY TO GIVE THANKS. President Roosevelt Issues His Thanksgiving Proclamation. Washington.—President Roosevelt on Thursday, November 2, issued his Thanksgiving proclamation, saying: "When nearly three centuries ago thp first settlers came to the country which has now become this great re public they fronted not only hardships and privation, but terrible risk to their lives. In those grim years the custom grew of setting apart one day in each year for a special servlco of j thanksgiving to the Almighty for pre- I serving the people through the chang- I ing seasons. The custom has now j become national and hallowed by im memorial usage. "It is eminently fitting that once a year our people should set apart a ! day for praise and thanksgiving to ! the giver of good, and, at. "the same I time, that they express their thank- I fulness for the abundant mercies re -1 ceived should manfully acknowledge j their shortcomings and pledge them j selves solemnly and in good faith to j strive to overcome them. During the | past year we have been blessed with j bountiful crops. Our business pros | perity has been great. No other peo j pie has ever utood on as high a level I of material well-being as ours now I stands. We are not threatened by I foes from without. The foes from j whom we should pray to be delivered | are our own passions, appetites and , follies; and against these there is al j ways neiMl that we should war. "Therefore, I now set apart Thtirs ] day, the 30th day of this November, as a day of thanksgiving for the past | and of prayer for the future, and on that day I ask that throughout the j land the people gather in their homes and places of worship and in render ing thanks unto the Most High for the j manifold blessings of the past year ; consecrate themselves to a life of i cleanliness, honor and wisdom, so j that this nation may do its allotted | work on the earth in a manner worthy j of thosa who founded it and of those j who preserve it. "In witness v.hereof I have here unto sot my hand and caused the seal ' of the I'nited Slats to be affixed. "Done at the city of Washington ! th!s second «iji/ of November, in th year of our Lord, one thousand nin< ; hundred and five, a.id of the independ | i 1 nee of the '"uiled States tho one hue- ! j died and thirtieth. "THEODORE ROOSEVELT." COILS DRAW TIGHTER. Evidence Against Men Held in COiinec tion with the Suit Case Mystery Accumulates-.Doctor Arrested. Now York, Nov. -1. —Superintendent | Pierce, of the Boston police, and Cliict ; Watts, »>f the Massachusetts state po- I lice, arrived here Friday, accompanied by the witnesses in the suit case mys- ; tery who left Boston with the police i officials. When the Boston party ar- i rived at police headquarters the pris j oners were brought out for inspection, j When the cab driver saw Crawford i Tie identified him as one of the two | men who were in his cab with suit j cases on the night the girl's body wa.- j thrown into the harbor. He also ideii I tified Howard as Crawford's compan ion that night. After this identification had been completed the two pawnbrokers and the pawnbroker's clerk were admitted to the prisoners' presence and identi fied them bofli. The prisoners were arraigned in the Tombs court and were remanded bacli to police headquarters until Monday. The men were held on an affidavit i charging conspiracy, based on How j ard's confession. Boston, Nov. 4. —Dr. Percy D. Mc | Leod, of IST Huntington avenue, this j city, was arrested Friday on the ; charge of abortion in connection with I the suit case mystery. The arrest was on information furnished by Chief I Watts. Dr. McLeod is held on the | charge (hat he was the person who ; dismembered the body of Susan | Geary. A conference between Dr. McLeod j and officials lasted until 5 o'clock. At I its conclusion Dr. McLeod was locked j up. i A telephone message received here from Superintendent Pierce at New York said that a confession had been obtained both from Crawford and Howard. In this, it is alleged, (he men stated that the bag containing tho head of the victim had been dropped • from the East Boston Ferryboat. REVIEW 0, c TRADE. Cooler Weather Has Improved the Totte of Business i:i Many Lines. New York, Nor. 4. —R. C.. Dun & | Co.'s Weekly Review cf Trade says: Cooler weather in most sections of I the country has stimulated retail de j maud for seasonable merchandise, irii ' proving tile tone of business where i there has been more or 1. .ss irregu larity, but reports are still somewhat I mixed as to collections. Supplemen- I tary orders are coming to th > primary ! markets for wearing apparel. Industrial conditions are little dis turbed by labor controversies. Thus far work is scarcely interrupted and more cases of advances in wascs are reported. Commercial failures this week in the I'nited States are 202, against 22f» the corresponding week last year. Failures in Canada number I! I, against 27 last year. A Doubly Fatal Explosion. Peti rsburg, fnd„ Nov. I. —By the ex ! plosion of the boiler in a saw mill yes terday, William Casey, the proprietor and Jacob Delman, an employe, were killed and Lemuel Morton and Clelaud Bird were Inlured. It is not believed : Morton will recover. The force of tho j explosion damaged I 'llldltigs it hall I mile aw ay. Bank Robbers Escaped vith $4,000. Sedalia, 'lo, Nov. I. Itobberf wrecked the vault of the bank ut Creis-hton yesterday and escaped wilt $4,000. POPULAR SCENIC ROUTE. Buffalo & Susquehanna Railroad Company. Condensed Time Table in Effect June 4, 1905. Read Down. Read Up. tun- j i| Say Week Days. Daily 1 Week Daya. Only I i 112. M. |A.M.A. M. A. !*. jP.M.P. M. STATIONS. IA. M.j A. M. P. M. P.M P.M ' | 5 18 8 t» 11 is' 5 18 Lv AdtHson Ar 10 13 4 « 8 50: • 00, 900 12 00 600 Knoxville j 930 400 8 OA. •14 917 12 14 614 Westtield ( 917 347 7 55j • 47j 947 12 47 647 Gaines Junction 841 3 11, 725 >0 00 100 Ar. > ILv 823 7 14! 700 10 20 500 700 Lv. J uaieion, . j Ar 8a „ 8 00! 07 | 740 11 00 540 Cross Fork June ... 739 623 800 11 20 602 Hulls 718 602 •20 11 40 620 Wharton \ 656 , 5 401 12 15 Sinnamalioning.,..| | 5 00' 12 20 < Driftwood I i 4 52 i I<>2 ' Media ltun I 4 08 | 12?, I Tyler 3 42! j 131, j I'enfleld 3 33! : 2 00 Duttoia ! 3 00: I P. M. P. M. p. M.j ! A.M. P. M. P.M. A. M. ' P.M A. M P.M 8 20i |ll 45 620 1 Wharton 656 |5 20 1110; 8 29: |l2 00 629 ! Costello | 641 15 08 1058! •38! 42 15 I Art I Lv 6 35: 5 00 10i0! 100 638 800 Lv | - Auslln JAr | !3 10 950 805 200 705 845 Keating Summit .... A.M. 220 910 740 '■ >'• I A.M.I | | I IA. M. P.M. A.M. jA. M. P.M. i 330 3 30i Wellsville 806 2'.W 858 3 52| Oenesee 741 218 909 4 01' West Bingham 730 2 06! i 927 4 15! Newfield Junction.. 713 150 ; 10 10 4 55j Oaleton 630 105 llt 05; 6 25j Cross Fork June...'., 7 So| *' "'i j6«s' 11 55 710 Cross Fork ! 6 30| j 4 40 ! 11JI I 1 I I CONNECTIONS. Additional trains leave Qalcton at 8:15 a. m.and 6:25 p. m., arriving at Ansonia at 9:21 a.m. and 7:00 p. n>. - Returning leave Ausonia at 9:35 a. m., and 8:39 p. in., arriving at Galeton at 10:03 a. mand 9:05 p. m. At Driftwood with P. R. R. At Dußois with B. R. It P. Ry. At Keating Summit with B. fc A. V. Div. of Pennsylvania R. R. At AnsoniA with N.Y.C.& H R. R. for all points north and south. At New Held Junction with O. <fc P. A. Ry., Union Station. At Qenexee with N. Y & Pa., Ry. Union Station. At Addison with Erie R. R., Union Station. At Wellsville with Erie R. R. for points east and west. At Sinnaiuahoning with P. R. R.—P. &E. Div. it. J. MCMAIION, Div. Pass Ag't.,Oaleton, Pa. W. C. PARK. Oen'l Bupt., Galeton. Pa. E. A. NtEL, Traffic Mgr. Buhalo, N.Y. C. PETER CLARK. Oen'l Mgr. Buffalo, N. Y. 'JBLM M M g.POLKA.QOT.CANS.M mOD I DfiWlS THE TIMETOPAINT.D Slmporh.nl » U p.ai.»«)oo Üb«». Imi T»art Tki uaipt.H }NI •rr'-*-' "112 • <••*'' & "t-" iw o> r•■ «). •ji ia« <*l, t. u MWt . Ik„ * U* pftiaiu'a m SU»-tk« , .. fiMMl'l. tX> » * *3 'Above all. USE GOOD PAINT! H r* _ The oil! linseed oil I Just pure linseed is the "life"—the one great requi* W ite of good punt for which there is no substitute—and the ture w?y to eet the | pure, Fresh linseed oil i) to buy the oil ind /WW* separately." For every gallon of Kinloch Paint buy one gallon of linseed oil. W This makes two gallons of-paint, ready for use. You then know that the paint' HI ■I you're putting on your house is alive—"the genuine oil is in it,"and paint is not paint unless it contains 50* ol really pure oil. We will further explain Jie virtue* of Kin!och Paint if you will call ana sec us. DFOR BALF BY Ij HURTEAU& FORBES 0 jssrlffl 1 MM inrTrwi G.SCHMIDT'S, MRADQUARTERB FOR FHESH bread, || popular p '" ncv " E " cr E „. 1 # "" V ' CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. All order* given prompt and ikillful attention. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY Th«r ha<r*ateod th. test of r«» CTOnUO AN _ - and bar« cured Ihouiaoda M 112 A I HIINh iIJ 0 /wV ycaiet of Nervoui Diicaiot, neb «? : -rerm- IIUIIV# - f/TTfl D«bHity, Disxiams* Sieepleat> B (K IAIIM I Varicocele.Atrophy.kc. v» ftmrf 112 Chilli 1 Thr j rlrar Ihf hi Bin iinn|lhiß \ V th« circuiatioa, make digetdca vigor to tba whole belnv. All drains and lottaa »ra chcckeS ftrmaufntly. patieua ar« croperlr cored, their condition often worries them ioto Insanity, Coatumption or Death, Mailed sealed. Price $i per boa; 6 boxes, with iron<lad legal guarantee to cure or refund t)M money, $5.00. Send for free book. Address, PEAL lIEDICINfi Vn saJe b/ E. O. bods*a« Druggist, Kmporlt&m, Pa« THE Windsor Hotel I Between t2th and 13th Sts.. on Filbert St. I Philadelphia, Pa. Throe minntca WALK from the Reading I Terminal. Five minutes WALK from the Penn'a R. ■ • European Plan SI.OO per day and upwards. M American I*.an $2 00 per day. FRANK M.SCIIEIBLKY. Manager. fjfiafia in ''^lDeaii'slj 3 A kh lf, certain relief for Hupprearfcd B 1 Menstruation. Never known tofatl. f'afe! D I Mure! Speedy! Hat'sfai-tton (JunriinUsed K| B or money Refunded. Sent prepaid for M S9l .CO per tut x. Will nend them on trle-1, to B 9 tie puid for when relieved. Samplcatree. H | IWITtt KSIMteO., 74, tMMim e» Q Hold in Kmporiuui by L. iTaifyari ant R. C Dcdaon. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bludder right M JT~ 1 DYSPEPSIA CURE ra §1 digests what you eat H H Rfl BB IBM M 9 Q ha $1 00 bottla contain* timet thai! «tz*. which •«!!* lor *0 cent*. B □ E. C. D#WITT & COMPANY. CUICAGO. IT T- HolJ by K. C, l>od«>on, Druggist. t Vo|ir<imi.i!y ot.taln 112. S n.:i«l Foreign J K(. ad model, sketch or photo of invention fori' j i free report on patentability. For free hook, <[ j Patents and S The Place to Buy Cheap J ) J. F. PARSONS' ? DTLSUUM'SCIMPOUI. "Info. ap*e<ly r*milatnr: imiffglflrN op maU. buufclsi free. DH. LAFUA.NCU, I'ULLTUR'LIIHLN, l'a. TIMB TABIiH KMI «T. COUDERSPORT &. PORT ALLEGANY It Hi T»kln> effect Its j Btt, IMI. j urrwiu. " I 10 ~ • « i r* STATIONS. —j r. « V. M. A. M. A. mJ Port AH»f»ny,.. LT. 5 IS 7 05 11 SR Qoleman »J as *° »11 M Burtvtlle *3 80 Til 11 «T Roulette, 3 40 ?»L.,.. 11 IS Rnowlton' 5 •• ..... «11 M Mi"*, 3 69 7 §5 12 OP Olmsted U 05 *7 88 I*l2 0* BSmmonds, 00 00 "12 l# Oetdersoort lAt1 At *#>>■*• T 46! 13 Ul Decaereport. | L?< | # , # 18 00 1•« North Coudersport, |"6 IS. ! 00 j *1 W Frlnfc's 8 2>! »6 10 «1 If Ooleeburg, .|«8io! *6 17 1» Beven Bridges, *6 'ill *1 8< lUvmonds's. »7 00 *6 30l 1 U Gold. 7 05 e 30' 1 ii Newfleld 00 ! j l » Newfleld Junction, 737 #45 ISO Perkins «7 40 *C 4-f «1 St Carpenter's, ....I 746 | OO *1 Ct Crowell's 7 50 »8 511 "1 M Cljsses Ar.i ! 8 05, !7 05 »1# j" iTVT" 8 - i STATIONS. 1 ' A. M P. M A M. .... Clysses ..Lv. 7 20 2 2-5, # It .... Crowell'i,. «7 27 »2 32> 9 19 ! Carpenter'! ! 00 |»2 81 • 9 '22 Perkins »7 82 37i* 9 2fl ...» NewfleldlJunctlon, 7 87, 2 421 932 ...i Newfleld I*7 41, 2 46 1 °° ...*< Gold I 7 44 2 431 9 401 ... J Raymond's "7 49 2 64 * 6 47;....# Be»en Bridges, «8 01 »3 06 *lO 02 Colesburg *8 04 309 *lO 10 ...4 Frink's, »8 12 «3 17 *lO 30j ~..J North Coudersport, 00 *8 26 *lO 351 .. . ( Ar. 825380 10 4.5 { 4 Coudersport, < J P.M. . ( Lv. 828 8 00! 1 aol ....rf Hammonds,... 00 j OO j 00 ~..* Olmsted, •8 83»«0S *1 81 ....4 Ulna 837 810 187 ....,1 Knowlton's, 00 »6 17 00 1... .4 Be ilette, 8 4716 21 161 ...... Burtville, 8 54 1 828 2 011....,} Coleman, *° ;•« 81 00 | Port Allegany »08 840 2 251.... 4 (*) Flag stations. (°°) Trains do not step ♦t Telegraph offices. Train Nos. 5 and 10 wfl* carry passengers. Tains 8 and 10 do. Trains run on Eastern Standard Time. Connections—At (Jlysses with Kali Brook R'K for points north and south, At B. A S. Junc tion with BaQalo & SusquehannaH. R. north fM WellsTllle, south for Qaleton andAnsonla. Al Port Allegany with W. N. Y. & P. R. R., nortk for Buffalo, Olean, Bradford and SmethportJ south for Keating .Summit, Austin, Emporium end Pean's B. it., point*. B. A. MoCLUKE Gen'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa. i I Who is | Your Clothier? ! If it's R. SEGER & CO,. I you are getting the right I kiudof merchandise. There I is no small or grand deeep- | tlon practiced in their store. I Sustained success demon- I strates that there is | "growth in truth"in the retailing of NEW AND UP-TO-DATE CLOTHING AT POPULAR PRICES. R. SEGER CO. For Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Fine Commercial Job Work of All Kinds, Get Our Figures, Q nTT n n A •*" C«r«»«"4 If JOH D i PILES SupposKoiy | gj D. Will, Tborapaon, Rupl. ■ fj o;odsd Brhoela, StataaTlllo, y. C., writs* " I can any H fj thsy -*• all roa elmn for thtu." Dr. 8. 11. I>a*ors, H m| Bock. W. Vn., wrltta : " Thay flv# unlverial aaita H u| faction. l»r H. D. MoQIU, CUrkabarg. Teno., vrlua: H | H" In • prncilc* of 33 jsnra, I ha»a fuuad no r«mn4* to R ■ equ-l youra." Pnica, M Cum f>ntnplM Fi—. Soli M i £| '' BrawliU. mart lN BUOY, L*NC*»TtB, PA. |] Hold la Euiporlu3> by L t Tasc ul sjiH &. 4' - Dodaou. EVERY WOMAN Sk~-Sometimes needs a reliable '*f mouUily regulutint; medicine Srfl 1 DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL piLLS, ! Are prompt, safe and certain In result. The ftonia ine (Or. l'eal's) novor dlsai>[H>int. >I.OO per b«v Sold by R. G. Oodson, druggist . Klodol Dyspepsia Gura Digests what you eat. ! Foley 9 s Kidney Curo makes kidneys and bladder right. BAN NER HALVE the most healing salve In the worldl 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers