f — A COLD BROUGHT IT ON, Severe Congestion of the Kidneys Soon Cured by Doan’s Kidney ills, Richard M. Pearce, a prominent busle ness man of 231 Orange St, News ark, N. J., says: “Working nights 3 during ad weather brought ou a heavy the the New No, cold, aching of Hibs and pain in back and kidneys, vere congestion of the kidneys followed, Be- sides the terrific anche ing there were whirl 8 ing aud 1 ’ N became exceedingly weak. My doctor could help me, and I turned to Doan’s Kidney Pills, with the resuit that the kidney conges- tion disappeared, and, with it, all the other symptoms. What is more, cure has lasted for 8 years.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.,, Buffalo, N, Y. headaches not “MEAN THING” MADE APOLOGY. And Still It Is Doubtful if Telephone Girl Is Satisfied. She has bright eves, and an awful estimate of the proper confines of propriety. It is an invarl able rule of hers to observe that sub- tle barrier of modesty which all well ordered young women should observe, and, better still, she prides herself on making the sterner sex observe this barrier in all its invisible but nice dis tinctions. Then how shocked her. Being a telephone girl, it is noxious duty to hold converse with the “mean things” of the world—oth- erwise known as men. The other aft ernoon a& subscriber called for a cer taln number in Germantown “What number did cooed. “Germantown “1 can’t it." “Blank, blankety, blank, “Well, if you don't say what num ber you want I can't give it t I'm 10t going to fool here al “Mow, keep your shirt on keer your shirt on—" faut the subseriber got she slammed up ha the oversees wifu flaming ch ported the s T s «ghtly i that su right to comm should ard apologize or seriber was girl with the “Are 3 Just told to keep “Yes,” was the “We il poOsgil 13 It may be i you Teleg rosy cheeks, this incident must have her ob you say?’ she aannn winle oddod-Z, QUIK k understand; please repeat ' xyz!!!” Sam, ibserib treat demand you 5 *$ narry that the en O make ad 2; 16'1l hye ¢ 1 mad s thi el ak jt In get suing for dim that way she'll have a chance ting his money an breach of promise The Rock of Refuge. In Hawaii, one of the Sandwich Is lands, there {3 a spot called the Rock of Refuge. If a criminal reaches this rock uncaptured he is safe as long as he remains there. Usually his family supply him with food until he is able to make his escape, but he is neve: allowed to return to his own tribe. ’ Of FITS permanentiy cured. No fits or nervous- ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, #1 trialbottisandtreatisefres Dr.R.H. Kriwz, Ltd. 91 Areh St. Phila, Pa. As trade now stands, inere is not enough gold out of the earth Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Eyrup for Children teething softens thegums reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain cures wind collie, 25¢.a bottle The Vieuna police are about to experi ment - “ith a phonograph. Catarfh Cannot Be Cured With rocar arrLicATIONS, as they eannot reach the seat of the disease, Catarrhisa blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and actsdireotly on the blood and mucoussurfnee Hall's Catarrh Cure snot a quack medieine, It was prescribed by one of the best physi- clans in this country for years, and is a reg- ular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mu- cous surfaces. Tha perfect combination of the two ingredients 18 what produces such wonderful results in curing ecatarrh. «Send jor testimonials, free, F.J. Cuzxey & Co., Props., Toledo, 0, Sold by druggists, price, 75¢. dake Hall's Family Pills for constipation False teeth will not be in demand i» Germany. ————— NO REST NIGHT OR DAY. With Irritating Skin Humor Halr Began to Fall Out-Wonderful Result From Cutiours Remedies. “About the latter part of July my whole body began to itch. I did not take much notice of it at first, but it began to get worse all the time, and then I began to get uneasy and tried all kinda of baths and other remedies that were recommended for skin humors, but I became worse all the time. My hair began to fall out and my scalp itched all the time. Especially at night, just as soom as I would get in bed and get warm, my whole body would begin to itch, and my finger nails would keep it irritated, and it was sot long be- fore I could not rest night or day. A friend asked me to try the Cuticura Reme- dies, and I did, and the first application helped me wonderfully. For about four weeks I would take a hot bath every night and then apply the Cuticura Ointment to my whole body, and I Sept getting better, and by the time I used four boxes of Cu ticura I was entirely cured and my hair d falling cat. D. E. Blankenship, 819 N. Del, Bt., Indianapolis, Ind. Oct. , A, 1908.” ———————————— Friends of Jon Mack declare the Philadelphia & Western is built for steam { road oroposition. RR. CG. “Weekly Review of Trade” 3 Total distribution of Spring merchandise received a check be- cause of the heavy snowfall and severe storms in many sections of the country, but some offset is noted in renewed in- quiry for Winter goods, and there is no interruption to the activity of shipping departments. Confidence in the future 1s remar } the outlook would be better than ever before at this fuel uncertainty were ‘turing plants operate capacity in the lead- ing industries, and it 1s an evidence of no little significance that many mills cannot undertake deliveries before 1007. While those are extreme cases, it is a common thing to find production engaged for several months in advance. One of the best features of the iron and steel indusiry is the steady demand for steel rails, No decrease is of textile mills, producers confidence in the Wheat, kably far if the Man maxim season - ' in the activity exhibiting future, including noted Bradstreet's says: are 2,203,012 bushels, against last year, 1,044,595 this week week 2,010,237 in 1903. Corn exports for the week are 3,173,820 inst 2,335,282 last week, 2,- year ago, 1,527,670 in 1904, and 3,618,210 In 1903. WHOLESALE MARKETS. Baltimore,~FILLOUR—Firm and changed. Receipts, 3,783 barrels; ports, 22,729 barrels WHEAT-—Firmer. 8314 @83%; March, 83! bushels, ag un- CX~ 3 contract, 33%4; April, steamer i; steamer Receipts, 14,970 360,505. ern 1 [@49% ; Southern yel- bushels; wile ¢ 2 white, 37@ Waj30%; No. 2 t 10,340 busih- Western, 05@ B Receipts, ir refining, 31-16; centrif ; molas- ses sugar, 234; refined quiet. Live Stock New York, ~BEEVES- 3 ) and hight steers, and 10@1sc off; 4 firm. Medium and ly; fat cows, strong. @s5.067%4; oxen, 450; bulls, 1.25(@4.00; cows, 2.10(M4.20 CALVES—Market steady, and prime heavy, firm. Common to prime veals, 400@o.00; few choice, 9.50. Dressed calves, strong; city dressed veal, o@ 13%4c per pound; country dressed, 8 viil4e SHEEP AND LAMBS~-Sheep, nom- inal; very little inquiry for lambs: B cars held over. Medium to good lambs, 7.00 @7.40; choice natives would sell at 7.50 or upward, but none here, HOGS—~Market steady; hogs sold at 7.00 Chicago,~CATTLE —~Market common to prime steers, cows, 3.65@460; heifers, 275@s5.35; bulls, 260@4.25; calves, 3.000607.00; stockers and feeders, 2.75@4.75. HOGS—Market sc higher. Choice to prime heavy, 6.50@6.52%4; medium to good heavy, 6.45@6.50; butcher weights, 6.45@6.5214 ; good to choice heavy mix- ed. 6.45@0.47% ; packing, 6.10@6.45. SHEE P-—Market, sheep steady; lambs, best, 1oc higher; others steady. Sheep, 4.50@6.25; yearlings, 5.75@06.40; lambs, 4.75@6.8s, MUCH IN LITTLE good State steady ; 38s5@b.40; The adverse vote of Bath, England, on Carnegie’s offer of $65,000 for a public library was taken by means of postal cards sent out by the city council. Queen Wihelmna of Folland is bear. ing the cost of concerts given by well known singers in the slum quarters of The Hague. Only the poorest people are allowed to attend. Vice Consul General Westacott, of London, reports that, with its extensive tramway lines as feeders, the Under. round Electric Railway Company of ondon, when ils present schemes are perfected, offer new accomodation for 600,000,000 passengers annually over more than 100 miles of trackage. A woman who appeared in a London police court the other day was described as a "pawning agent” She makes her living pawning things for her neigh- bors, who pay her a commission because they believe she can secure larger lo ns thay they could. WORTH_QUOTING Only a few years ago William Wal dorf Astor landed in England an ob- scure multimillionaire, the Kansas City Star. Now His Gracious Majesty, Edward VII, has conde scended to appoint Mr. Astor's son a second lieutenant There is no- where in the wide world where sturdy American pluck cannot succeed, muses Lecturing before a London audi ence on the importance of house cleaning, an English scientist ed that as much dust as can be placed on a pin point yields no fewer than 3,000 of living germs. The majority of these germs are represen. tative of disease. acs Pi asseri- colonies Notwithstanding the anxious inquiry as to what is to become of the edu- cated woman, the women of America seem to be pursuing the paths that leads to the higher edu cation. The degree of doctor of juris. prudence has just been conferred on a woman for the first time by the University of Chicago, Miss T. Breck. en! of Kentucky, the suc- cessful candidate steadily dre, being The Chinese boycott upon the trade of thi « it has been represented Monthly Summary » the 1 in the sven mol is not =o serious as According te of Commerce United the ountry the exports of the ings, bor dust that Whe a pin was sufficient a 600 colonies of gerne, mm ngs reigns Our hard of Mary washed bath nocuous to human be forefathers of the Elizabeth and face, hands, was unknown. James fined his personal ablutions to the tips of his fingers with a damp history horrors of life in the Mid It was almost inconceivably never and a con wiping napkin. Only students of knew the die Agen dirty Macninery is the cornerstone of modern soclety, the foundation on which law, science, ethics, the arts. even the State itself rests de clares the Reader. It is so new that we do not yet know its poetry We do not yet understand. Only two gen. erations have lived beside the high- way of steam, only one has seen the Bessemer converter transform the blacksmith into the master builder of ships and towers. The sewing ma- chine, the far speaker, the typewriter, are common things of today, accepted as a matter of dally convenience, and yet are thoy teachers of the people, Machines that come close to our lives and homes insensibly teach truth, pre cision, the adjustment of universal laws to human needs, respect for that wise American {dea that labor saved is labor released for higher and nob ler toil. The maghine is the head master in the high school of the race, A world’s famine In iron within the next eentury ls the prediction of United States Consul General Mason of Paris, in a report in which he dls cusses the subject exhaustively, Mr. Mason says it Is well known that the high-class ores of the lake district of America will, at the present rate of consumption, become exhausted with. in less than fifty years. The Mesaba deposits, with the present annual out put of 12,000,000 tons, or thereabouts, will not outlast twenty-five years, It requires only a simple calculation to demonstrate that a continued yearly consumption of 35,000,000 tons of ore by the fron and steel industries of the United States, will, within the lifetime of persons now living, eat away entirely the 1,100000,000 tons which, according to the report of Swedish experts, constitute this coun. try's entire workable supply as at present known, Mr. Mason holds that there is but one remedy, and that is for American iron masters to secure by all practical means the largest possible supply of ore from other countries. very in the ten per cent. than highest quality. planta, wrown Inthe o thouana acres truck farm ed Celery ready inst of Des i tiene or earlier 7 i] will give us 5 per orn E 81.50 per thousand, lar Arlington gotte, 8 The of vegetabios especial! give you at any time. ~ Cabhages eyes, ae Must Have Been a Sight, A magazine editor was sadly prals ing Willlam Sharp, recently in Sicily, who achieved no little as a poet under the pen Fiona Mcleod. “Sharp,” he choly, sonally a was one da) talent that humbie, often show in conversation. “He said that in londonderry one afternoon he was seated In a shop when a farmer entered to get his hair cut. The farmer's locks had ap ragged look and the barber, after regarding 1 “*Who cut your deceased fame name of gald, things of cheery, TOUS “wrote melan it he was per soul He » real literary Aros fit dreamy praisin uneducated people barber them = My wife’ the with an awkward “The barber sn do it with? he ask« fork? Matter of Relative Risk. wl The published statements of on non ' Briers ng roasiers ber of coffee tug feeling towards us dicate a “waspy”’ for daring to say that coftee is harm to a percentage of the people A frank public discussion of the sub us and ean on the contrary ject 4s quite agreeable io certainly do no harm when all the facts on both sides of any question are spread before the people they can thereupon decide and act In- telligently, will take care of themselves, We demand facts in this coffee die cussion and propose to see that the facts are brought clearly before the people. A number of coffee importers and roasters have joined a movement fo boom coffee and stop the use of Pos tum Food Coffee and in their news paper statements undertake to deceive by false assertions. Their first is that coffee is not harm ful. We assert that coffee users has some form of incipient or chronic disease; realize for one mo- ment what a terrible menace to & na- tion of civilized people, ‘when one kind of beverage cripples the energies and health of one-thirll the people who use it, We make the assertion advisedly and suggest that the reader secure his own proof by persosal inquiry among coffee users, Ask your coffee drinking friends if they keep free from any sort of aches and alle. You will be startied at the percentage and will very naturally seek to place the cause of disorder on some- thing aside from coffee, whether food, fuherited tendencies or somothing else. Go deeper In your search for facts, It your friend admits occasional neu ralgia, rheumatism, heart weakness, stomach or bowel trouble, kidney com- plaint, weak eyes. or approaching ner- vous prostration induce him or to make the experiment of leaving off coffee for 10 days and using Postum Food Coffee, and observe the result. It will startle you aud give our friend something to think of. Of course, if the person is one of the weak oues and Ed Plants! Kinds of cabting wil stand grest wid r Me use the sume plants on OO inted oUr farms 40 test al pirased t« MEGGCETTS, 8 C Few Australians There in America. are only a few Australia: mit” ron wil the siavoes ¢ kind pow eriess to destructiion £ th porter ireat such seen Bg usoinie.s gradual bhnl sure and health. has 8 way of des! the people to make ro It is the old law of fhe fittest” at work, victims are many. We repeat the assertion that coffee Natare army large enough to appall the inves tigator and searcher for facts, The next prevarication of the coffee importers and roasters is their state- ment that Postom Food Coffee is made of roasted peas, beaus or corn, and mixed with a low grade of coffee and that it contains no nourishment. We have previously offered to wager $100,000.00 with then that their state ments are absolutely false. They have not accepted our wager and they will not, “We will giadiy make a present of necept that wager. Free inspection of our factories and methods is made by thousands of peo- ple each month and the coffee impor. ters themselves are cordially invited. Both Postum and Grape-Nvig are ab solutely pure and made exactly as stated, The formula of Postum and the an: alysis made by one of the foremost chemists of Boston Las been printed on every package for many years and is absolutely accurate. Now as to the food value of Postum. it contains the parts of the wheat berry which carry the elemental saits such as lime, fron, potash, silica, ete, ete, used by the life forces to rebuild the cellular tissue, and this Is particularly true of the phosphate of potash, also found in Grape-Nuts, which combines in the human body with albumen and this combination, together with water, rebuilds the worn out gray matter in the delicate nerve centres all over the body, Jad throughout the brain and so. lar ploxus, Ordiuary coffee stimulates in an un. natural way, but with many people it slowly and surely destroys aud does not rebulld this gray substance so vi- tally important to the well-being of every human being. These are eternal facts, proven, well authenticated and known to every prop: W.L. DoucLAS $3505 32° SHOES SH W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. pPpye— i nol al WADE, $l! - SHOES i * Al £ PRICES rr MEN'S $3.50 SHOESTHANARY MANUFACTURER IN THE wore $10 000 REWARD to anyone whe ome § Cisprove this statement. HI could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass. and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is sesde, you would realize why W. LL. Douglas $3 50 shoes cost mere to make, why they hold thelr » fit beller, wear longer, and sre of intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shee. W. L. Pouvgline Strong Made Shoes for Men, $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ £ Dress Shoes, $2.50,62,.81.75, $1.80 CAUTION, —lnsst upon having Wl. Doug. Ins show i one gesuine # pod on beaten, rt Eyelets used nol wesr brassy. ite for Tliustras W. L. DOUG LAS, Brockton, Bass. ” ¥ » tit te ¥ th nging Retort Dessrved. Yam es nnmander WEE Con appear to regard a disgrace LE DOn-Oom- iors in the stawrant ¢ i 1 or £2. A. RH. ¥ the weleran, ruling ser in Rich ginning of man's soa SER Lc New on the Ri Carlo It is cautifel town. Iu ore of the and the umerable sTlernoon the £ o tld the ined of 2 that he ng lishiman taro ch a on EY 1 Page, “but traveling ber we never say ordi 18 STPrYOND, use it rerularly and thstard its ig misery amd disense ! wien or woman whe £ use whe saiure pho Leart wenkness, stomach sod mibles, kidney disease. weak ii nervous prostration. yvlonge. The drog eaf- in all ordinary coffee, seontinued absolutely or the enough to ks. but there 3 $ ne and will grow worse. It ix easy to leave off the old fash- joned coffee by adopting Postom Food for in it oue finds a plesving has the dep seal brown color, rhang- ing to a rich golden brown when goed cream i= added. Wien bolled long enough (15 minutes) the flavor is not that of rank Rio coffee hut very like the milder. smooth and high grade Java, but entirely lacking the drug ef- fect of ordinary coffee, Anyone suffering from disorders set can abeo utely de pend upon some measure of relief hy quitting coffee and using Postums Fees! Coffee. If the disease has not become 90 strongly rooted, ane can with good rem gon expec! it to disappear entirely in a reasonable time after the active cause of the trouble j= removed and the relly lar tissue Las time to naturally rebmild with the elements furnished hy Pos tum and good food. It's only just plain old common sense. Now, with the exact facts before the reader, he or she can decide the wise course, looking to health and the pow er to do things, If you have any doubt as te the cause of any ache or all you may have, remembes the far reaching telegrams of a burt pervons system travel from heel to Lead, and it may be well worth our while 10 make the experiment of aving off coffer eutirely for 10 days and using Postvum In is place. You will probably gather some pool solid facts, worth nore thas =» pol mine, for healtli can make gold and sickness lose It. Hesides there's all the fun, for it's like a continnous Sater nal frolic to be perfectly well, There's a reason for POSTUM Postum Cereal Co, Ltd. Battie Ureck. Mish.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers