yyy Fos | & ies Senna Cl Tes th t- wally. ispel otek and oe ad y Cons fiipation; acnes due t ts ay acts ruly as B Em, and Child: T - Young and Ao det A Effects Alay enuine whic hash | name of the Com- Zoi c Srrup Co. by whom it is fetta, printed on SOLD YALL LEADING D cohoas one size only, regular price 50¢ per UNBEATABLE EXTERMINATOR Tux Oro Retiante Tuar Never Fars Being all poison, one 15¢ box will spread or make 50 to 100 little cakes that will kill z00 % more rats and mice, and thousands of coaches, Ants and Bed Bugs. 16¢. 35¢ & 75¢ boxea stall droggists and country stores FREE Send for our comic postal cards and lithograph which have con~ulsed the world with laughter, E. 8. WELLS, Chemist, Jersey City. N. J. Five hundred Cubans who went to Brazil to work on a new railroad mutinied at Para. Hicks’ Capudine Cures “Headache, Whether from Cold, Heat, Btomach, or Me ntal Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous drugs. It’s Liquid. Effects immediately. We., Z5¢., and 50c., at drug stores. Felled By Cigar Store , Indian. H. B. West touched a bunch held by an Indian squaw of the Maheckemo cigar tip of his umbrella during a shower here the other after- noon, and she knocked him uncon: scious in the gutter. Dr. West was senseless more than ten seconds, and it was an hour or so before he really realized what had occurred. He is willing to swear tuat this Indian squaw has a punch that would put out John L. Sullivan in his prime. Through a short cir- cuiting of wires the metallic sigan bad become charged with the 2.500 volts of the electricity, and but for his having rubber heels on his shoes and gloves on his hands, the doctor might have been killed.—New York World. ’ Lv. of cigars in {front with the store Thought Uncle Sam Owns Washing. ton, In spite of all the illuminating in- formation that is sent out of Wasgh- ington by the newspaper correspond- ents and magazine writers, the pub- lic, somehow, can never be made to understand the exact relations of the government to the citizens of the District of Columbia. A business man from Indiana, who was here the other day and thought he knew all ten miles square and leased inhabitants what was not needed for government buildings. Must Be Interesting. A French visitor remarks that “The Frenchman makes 30,000 francs and keeps it until he dies The American has $50,000 one day and the next he is a street car con- ductor.” This is a start that piques -8t Louis Globe- Democrat, travel. - A yoman takes more joy out of finding a withered flower that one of th children pressed in a book than a man does in finding a ten- dollar bill in an old suit of clothes. FIT THE GROCER Wife Made the Suggestion. A grocer has excellent opportunity to know the effects of special foods on his customers. A Cleveland gro- cer has a long list of customers that have been helped In health by leaving off coffee and using Postum Food Coffee. He says, regarding his own exper- ferce: “Two years ago 1 had been drinking coffee and must say that I was almost wrecked In my nerves. “Particularly in the morning I was so Irritable and upset that I could hardly wait until the coffee was served, and then I had no appetite for breakfast and did not feel like attend- ing to my store duties, “One day my wife suggested that Inasmuch as I was selling so much Postum there must be some merit in took home a package and she pre- result was a very happy one. My nervousness gradually disappeared, and to-day I am all right. I would advise every one affected in any way with nervousness or stomach trou- bles, to leave off coffee and use Pos- tum Food Coffee.” "There's a Rea- son.” Read "The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time, They are genuine, true and il of human interest, ———————————— HE TIED SELF IN HIS BED. Coatesville (S8Special).—The tery surrounding the gagging and ty- ing in bed of J. home on East Main Street, was clear- ed up on the arrival here of United | States Postal Inspector 8. U. New- hard, to whom Harry made a full] ‘onfession that he was the author of | the threatening letters addressed to and to his sweetheart, Miss Ellis, From the Swing suspected start Postmaster A. H. that young author of his life, the supposed attempt ington. rived here he went to the At first charge, in bed denied himself man ing the in the “1 hereby state under oath that 1 Barton Harry hand letters; same letters postmark- ed at Coatesville, May 4 and 8, 1908, (Signed) *J. Barton Harry.” ly relieved the of created by solution of nervousness the affair. Harry's strange Lllis, pathy. and he aimed to win her sym DISPOSAL PLANT. Norristown (Special). the Norristown borough declared that they claim the right to feel aggrieved at the tained by State Dr, Samuel G. Dixon and toward this borough with refer to the poliution of the Rive affecting Philadel ro H. AVE - Some ees CNnee kil as water supply. It borough's continued use of the river as the receptacle for its sewage that Norristows has been for to otherwise mal that cannot be days or months, behalf of the t« is show; at its Seatutly constructed truni carries all ts te t of where plant has al- disposal In ywn it th line sewer the lowest point the town, ground for a filtration ready been acquired was made known for the Thursday as it had to be I¥ gs0 that the sellers of would not become aware of 1 purpose. in explain n ing a di {sposal pl: { Counciim; All USPS SOME very words. He says on this until a stn Lia diag sewage first the is intend. 4 lay the in estab- line that not and reasonable disposal plant a8 to cost found by the local authori- ties, numbers that were inspected be- ing costly bevond limit in outlay as well as in operating penges. The city of plant proves so reasonable respects that the same ready planned here. it is no longer a money appropriated cll by recent ordinance poses was intendad to in system is al- secret that the Town Coun- by furnish ——— A AO STATE HOLDS AN AUCTION. | Harrisburg (Special)— Over $1500 was realized by the State from 8 { sale of old furniture, rich in political but no longer serviceable { The auction took place in the rotun- da and corridors which were turned | into 4 market place and the sale | lasting all day, was attended by hun | dreds of bargain lLunters, | Some of the articles sold were bid | entirely too high, especially carpets. { On the other hand, the executive mansion, made of ma- hogany, but painted white, sold at $300 and $155. They cost $300 and $1500 when new some years ago. Desks bought for the Legislature when it met in Grace Church, at $18, were sold at $5 and $8. ture from the former room was sold singly scattered. THREE BURNED TO DEATH. Williamsport (Special) .- sons were burned and in a hospital later and a another fourth is renzo, at Castenea, near here, fire followed an explosion of a lamp. The dead are: Pasquale Bonady, a boarder, and i two of the Lorenzo children, one six years. A boy of eight years is mis- sing and is believed to have been in- { cinerated. Mrs. bly burned in { her children. i iy ling to save one of the children BOY KIL LS MOTHE R. Mahanoy City (Special).— Mrs, bert Major, of Lanigans, near city was shot dead with a rifle let intended for a eat, The shooting was an accident, cording to the two sons, George Willlam, who had been handling the rifle from which the fatal bullet was fired. * The boys were stationed at an { open window watching for cats after the young chickens. The rifle lay on i table close by. When Mrs Major entered the room, William, “who is mly 5 years old, had the weapon in his hands, and it was discharged. {| Mrs. Major died in a few moments, the bullet entering her heart. {| Veteran Railroad ( sonductor Dead. Easton (8pecial).—~Thomas Calla- a retired passenger conductor on the Lehigh Valley Rallroad, died {aged 64 years. He was a Civil War veteran, serving as a private and later corporal in Company E, Forty- seventh Regiment Pennsylvania Vol- unteers, of which J. P. 8. Gobin was He was employed by the Le. high Valley Raliroad Company near i ly forty years an attempt to rescue The father of the fam- Al- bul- ac- | han, { colonel. Money Expressed To Bank Lost, Williamsport (S8pecial).—A pack: press Is strangely been lost here, and the local agent { I. J. Kantner, i8 conducting an in | vestigation to determine where it has ! disappeared to. STATE ITEMS posal plant, fo be decided TO MAKE THEIR OWN C EMENT. itteburg (Special) .—~Angered on this umme Tr. by harged for cement by independent concerns in the past few years, the sniered the self, and cement now threatens to drive the ness. A new cement osting $1,000,000, and with a capac: ty of 3,000,000 barrels per was opened between the Homestead ind the Duquesne mills of the cor- poration, on the Monongahela River, ibove Pittsburg. Through a recently liscovered process the eorporation will be enabled to convert mense slag piles into marketable ment. The plan of establishing cemeni- en Chicago was evolved, oped to make 5,000,000 barrels per to flood the market after such a big | ACQU IRES BIG ( OAL FIEL DS, Pittsburg (Special).—The exten. give property of the Federal Coal and Ww. a., has been purchased by the New Boston for a spot cash consideration of $1,250,000. The purchaser, which The purchase includes 5,600 acres situated 12 miles south of on a. branch of the Bal- The field has 300 acres of surface, containing a nine<foot vein of coal. The selling company was controlled by Pittsburg capitalists, Onee Prominent, Dies A Suicide. Lancaster (Special) .~~Joseph Her- zog, who was formerly a prominent business man in this city, was found hanging In a stable dead. He was 67 years of age. About 18806 Her zog, who was then in the grocery business, was convicted of note for. geries aggregating in the neighbor- hood of $40, 000, He was sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment, and since his release made a recarious lying. Despondency over the late loss of & position is supposed to Rave induced the suicide. fields, Fairmont, James Parker, of Danville, | Linnwood, near Philadelphia, i turning home for a vacation. Mrs. Michael Rinko, aged 25 vears deliberately threw herself beneath train becatise she was { over the treatment she is said to have ! received from her husband. killed instantly. Jeremiah F. Werner, at. Reading i brought suit against Rev. M. H. slander, said to have been uttered by the minister during a funeral sermon { The defendant was arrested several weeks ago on a similar charge, Because he gave a check for a large sum of money when he had | not sufficient funds in bank, C. N. MeCarthy, a theatrical manager of New York, was arrested at Pottsville. McCarthy claims that he gave the | check in good faith. Miss Virginia White, who for sev- enteen years®' was superintendent of St. Luke's Hospital, South Bethle- | hem, and principal of its training school, resigned. Her temporary suc. cessor Is Miss Marie 8. Brown. memo i bt oDDS AND ENDS. le mole will starve to death in a day Fishhooks have been made on pre- cisely the same design for 2.000 years, The one hundredth anniversary of the opening of the port of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to international commerce is to be celebrated next year by a national exhibition of in- dustrial, pastoral and art products from June 15 to September 1. The most remarkable clock weight in Maine is that of the Baptist Church at Cherryfield-—an old smooth-bore cannon. The old cannon was one of the old scmooth-bore type, and was brought by Gleason R. Campbell from Boston on one of the return trips of lumber vessels, A German not long ago invented a horseshoe of paper, prepared by saturating with ofl, turpentine and other ingredients. Thin layers of such paper was glued to the hoo! till the requisite thickness is attain. , ij oes thus made was sald oS rable. and The. oldest Roman Catholic Col lege in the United States is town College, Georgetown, D. C. Hasheesh, whish in ae effects is uch the um, th game aa oiltron emp Hap FOUND THE CAUSE. After Bix Years of Misery and Wrong Treatment, John A. Enders, of Robertson Ave- nue, Pen Argyl, Pa., suffered for six years with stinging pain in thé-back, vio- lent headaches and dizzy spells, and was assured by a specialist that his kidneys were all right, though the secretions showed a reddish, brick - dust sediment. Not satisfied, Mr. Enders started using Doan’s Kidney Pills. “The kidneys began to act more reg- ularly,” he saps, “and In a short time 1 passed a few gravel stones. 1 felt better right away, and since then | have had no kdMney trouble.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Real Philosopher. “I have bad news, Henry,” the wife of the millionaire, “What {8 it, my dear?" ; old man cooly. ‘why, our daughter | with the chauffeur.’ The old millionaire glasses in meditation “Oh, it might have he yawned “Worse? worse?" “Why, she might have eloped with ‘ the chef and then we would have | missed our dinner, my "Ch cago News, STATE oF ome, CITY oF loLkvo, | as Lucas County, . | Fraxx J. Cne~xey makes cath that Le is senior partner of the firm of F. J, CHexey & Co., doing busimess in the City of Toledo, County and Stave aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of OXE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of CATARRN gaid asked the has eloped twirled bis worse,” been How could it have been dear.’ | Catanrnit Conk. Feaxx J. Cuexey. | Bworn to befose me and subscribed in my f3tsence, this 6th day of December, A. 1, A. W. Greasox, fim). Notary Public Hall's Catarrh € ‘ureistaken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testim onials, free. F.J. Cuexey & Co., Toledo, 0. Bold by all Dregzists, 75¢ Take Hall's Family Pills for ¢ nstipatio: Bricks made of sand and lime and hardened in the air are used largely in communities where there {sg no clay from which clay brick can be made, but where an abundance of sand can be found. Hicks' Capudine Cures Women's Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness, { and Headache It's Liquid. Effects imme i diately. Preserfhed by physicians with best results. 100, 2%. and 50c.. at drug stores. the year 1908 under construc Altogether during there will have bee 1 tion buildings directly or indirectly connected with Princeton University representing an expenditure of mear- ly 2.000.000, To Drive Out Malaria and Baild Up the System Take the Old Standard Gnove's Tasre tess Cmiee Towmic, You know what you are taki The formula is plainly priate) on every bottle, showing it is =i imply {Qui- uine Iron in a tasteless form, and ths most effectual form. For grown people and children, 3» People spend all their money keep- ing up appearances make the world think they have plenty left. Bt, Vitas Dance: Nervous Disaases per. ost rnd by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, 82 trial bottle and treatise free, Dr. HR Kline, La4..981 Arch St. Phils , Pa to Some people are truth as others arg with money. ec —— { Garfield Tea, Ne tures mild Hert inxative, constipation, Fide the blood of impurities and oars the eminplexion. All druggists Be careful when it comes to lend- ! Ing money or ‘borrowing trouble. . H, Gaazw's Soxs, ot Atianta Os, wr only susoesstul Drog pay Kpecialists in the ment in another eclumn of this paper, —————————— un living than it is to get it, lie o—— gp el gg A Most of the things we do for fua are anthing but funny. SEVERE BLEEDING HEMORRHOIDS, Sores, and ching “Ecsema~Doctor Thought an Operation Necessary ~Cuticara’'s Efficacy Proven. piles (hemorrhoids). bleeding and protrud. ing. The doctor said the only help for me was to go to a hospital and be operated on. I tried several remedies for months but did not get much help. During this time sores appeared which changed to a terrible itch. ing eczema. Then I began to use Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills, injecting a quantity of Outieura Ointment with a Outi: cura Suppository Syringe. Tt took a month of this treatment to get me in a fairly healthy state and then I treated mysel! once a day for three months and, after that, once or twice a week, e treat ments I tried took a lot of Oe. and it is fortunate that I used Cuticara. J. 1! Henderson, Hopkinton, X.Y, Apr. 28,07." it's easier to be a college graduat. than it is to earn a living, A YEAR ON TRAINS, The ordeal of spending a year on trains has been gone through with by an American in Europe for a weg: er of $6,000, His route was from Vienna to Luiz, Salzburg and Luns- brueck, repeated without missing a train. : He was at first loath to fake the wager because experience had taught him how wearisome rallway train life wag, but the prospect of winning the money for his family enticed him to accept. He soon realized that he had underrated his troubles, Nervous at- the train, and he felt weeks of although After some and he read, slept, he of his freedom. going mad so that he felt his will constant struggle not felt like The specter of his tortured him undergoing a to gO near the Worst of all was the hot si Ines when only iron energy and comple abstinence from smoking and Ing—excepting fruit juices- him going. He ate little food Most Popular Name For Brides, Ann was the popular for brides in 1907. The Maggies, Marys, the Kates and the Rosies, all of whom have in past years carried off the honor, must now bow to Ann Thomas C. Smith, the application clerk of the marriage license bureau, } for years kept a record of popular names of brides, and records for 1807 show that there been more brides with Ann as to thelr names and sur- than any other, carries off second once so popular, to the seventh pl name the most most his Katie honors, and Mary, away back 1906 Mage ace, In 10 most ir respeci- Kate, Carrie, lara.—Phil- the in the Ann, Mr. Smith places pop- ive standing as follows: Maggie, Elizabeth, Sarah Mary, Rosa, Emma and C adelphia Bulletin, The Mathematical Mind, A literary’ do a large amount of proxy advertised for an capable of digesting the contents of a tremendous quantity of books in a very short while, While weighing each applicant's qualifications for rapid, assimilative reading he in- quired carefully into the mathemat!- cal acquirements He finally choos the man who was most gkiliful at un. tan; gling arithmetical problems “On the surface that seems necessary accomplishment in case,”” he sald, “but experience taught me that anybody is ex- pert in figures can read any literature put before ¢r accuracy and speed than son Jacking in mathema men." —New York Times, worker who reading an un- this has who A girl calls it a romance when 2a man likes the way tomato soup made. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Curtain jon for eas Cone: Ee inor Earew in bv] rons Wome, ar Kew York Clty. NEW DISCOVERY: 3 DROPSY glen guleh pole! and are Bored spmen. Book of Loviimoninis snd $0 Baye’ treatment Free. Be. MH. HB GREEN'S SONS, Bex 8, Allert, Gn, a PLES - tured thowss 8s: fol} > santos weil 4 os t roller. send Sime today JOHN GEOVESR Boring Garden Street Lilodeiphis. Fa ideas, Reg. a= 5 BOUNTIES Trade Marks, Copyright your Books, Writings, is tures, *io, aw 8ct a8 10 Bonsty or soldiers ani roubles, Food sed Pes OLMSTED, UREN v Wonder's! cure, so do tore Aruggisie Patent your Have secure i over $1000.00 for them, For asks std inviractions, Address, W, H Wills, Ati'y.s Law, (Notary Pablie,) Wills Building, Hilal Avs, 1 ‘Thousands of American women in our homes are daily sacrificing their lives to duty. In order to keep and pretty, the eb well dressed and tidy, women overdo. A female veakness or displacement is often brought on and they suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, the home neat aches which daily make life a burden. t is to these faithful women that LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, 0 Mayville, N. Y,, and to Mrs. W. P. Boyd, of Beaver Falls, Pa., who say : “1 was not able to do my own work, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound helped me w onderfully, day's work as I ever did. man would try it. I wish every For thirty years Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, Po been the standard reme dy for female ills and has positively y cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- i i pe riodie pains, backache, that bear- ing-down feeling, flatule ney, indiges tion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. Ww hy don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to Address, Lynn, Mass. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean snd free from une besithy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin- fecting and deodor- izing toilet requisite bh ol exceptional ex- celience and econ omy. Invaluable | for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH "MESLTH AND BIAVTY BOOK SENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET 80., Boston, Mass. WIDO WSnser NEW LAW P—— Ww. MORRIS, PENSIONS "voir 5 MBER oF Foe THE FAMILY Ew, BOYS, We WOMEN, MISSES pa WL, pa W. Ll $4 and $5 Bit TE anes gis Sr PUTNAM the the genuine article. of the dealer to, sel genuine, beca Jo con gt he gene by FAD not advertised, but depend SR SA 0 er Sh NS A 1 AAA NAN * genuine -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers