oman Ap dt - MUNYON'S PAW-PAWPILLS The best Rtomach and Liver Pills known p and a positive and speedy cure for Con- stipation, Indigestion, Jaundice, Billousness, Sour Stomach, Head. ache, and all aliments arising from a disor dered stomach or sluggish liver. They contain in concentrat. ed form all the vir- tues and values of Munyon's Paw Maw tonle and are made Paw-Paw frult. I onhesitatingly recom. mend these pills as being the hest laxa- tive aud cathartic ever compounded. Get a 28.cent hottie end If you are not per- fectly satisfied & ‘vill refund your money. «~MUNYO2. Farix-1iRD and JEFFERSON STS. FHILADELPHIA PA IT WORKS BOTH WAYS. “We're going to live in a neighborhood hereafter,” hetter woman. “So are we!” replied Mrs. Pepprey. “Oh, are you going to move, t¢o?™ “No. We're going to stay here." «- New York Journal. WOMEN SUFFER NEEDLESSLY. Are Easily Cured. Bachache, pain through the hips, dizzy spells, headaches, nervousness, bloating, etc., are troubles that com- monly come with sick kidneys. Don't mistake the cause— Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thou- sands of women af- fi'~ted in this way. Mrs. William Jones, R PF D., No. 6, North East, Pa. says: “Inflammation of the bladder kept me in agony for six months, one room into the other. sleep night after night; my ankles were swollen all the time. 1 often reeled and fell. 1 began using Doan’s Kidney Pills. My health began to mend at once. At the end of six months | was as well as ever before in my life.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milnurn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. I had no WORKING IN A POSTOFTICE. As 1 work as special delivery boy in the postoffice, I thought you would like to learn about it. My duty is tc deliver special delivery letters and sort papers. Every day there are letters without proper addresses Great care should be taken in writ 1g addresses plainly and putting your name and address in the corner Millions of letters go to the Dead Letter Office yearly on account of of plain addresses. At Christ- mas time there was a general rush at the postoffice Thousands of cards came daily, with a two hundred packages. I stuck on about $10 worth of stamps every day. The money order system is a good way of sending money, and all valuables id he sent by registered mail. — ‘larence Randall, in the New York Tribune. lack noet- yOsl out COMPLICATI I, Tommy." "Do you believe there's people live on Mars?" “I see no reason to doubt it.” “Well, wouldn't it be a good joke on ‘em if they should find out, after we got to talking to ‘em that they don't know that's the name of their planat?"=Chicag? Trivane. sun 2 MAA Bad Food and Good Health Won't Mix. The human stomach stands much abuse, but it won't return’ good health If you give it bad food. If you feed right you will feel right, for proper food and a good mind is the sure road to health, “A year ago 1 became much alarmed about my health, for I be- gan to suffer after each meal, no mat- ter how little I ate,” says a Denver woman. “I lost my appetite and the very thought of food grew distasteful, with the result that I was not nourished and got weak and thin. “My home cares were very heavy, for beside a large family of my own 1 have also to look out for an aged mother. There was no one to shoul. der my household burdens, and come what might I must bear them, and this thought nearly drove me frantic when I realized that my health was breaking down. “I. read an article In the paper about some on with trouble just like ‘mine being cured on Grape-Nuts food, Grape-Nuts a trial. The first dish of this delicious food proved that I had struck the right thing. “My uncomfortable feelings in stomach and brain disappeared as if by magic, and In an incredibly short space of timd I was again myself, Since then I have gained 12 pounds in weight through a summer of hard work and realise [ am a very different woman, all due to the splendid food, » Grape-Nuts.” “There's a Reason.” Trial will ‘prove. Read the famous Nttle book, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time, They are genuine, true, and full of human interest, — - sp Unknown Assassin At Coaldale, most bru- in this One of the perpetrated Pottsville. crimes ever home of Mrs. Kate Sperenze, at Coal- dale, when she and her 77-year-old fatally stabbed and beaten and left to die while an in- fant child lay between them, ently having never awakened by the although its face and hands covered with the blood of and sister, Sperenze keeps a Coaldale, and has They sleep and her two the first floor, boarders was awakened by groans, with the assistance of anothe: boarder they in the door there found the mother and daughter lving unconscious on the bed Both had their faces beaten an unrecognizable condition, skulls were fractured, while mother had forty wounds her head and body The daughter had been stabbed about a dozen times. Not a scratch found the baby, mother Mrs. house boarding ten men upstairs, daughters One of the at there. while she glept on broke into their the Gl stab was on TO BUY BRADDOCK'S GRAVE. To Erect General, Citizens British Fayette Monument County To Patriotic { Uniontown citizens of Fayette raised County, at a meeting here $1.2 with chase several acres of mountain in the center of mains of General Braddock, who was wounded in the battle of Braddock's Field in the French and Indian War and was carried t tl I= 50 which to pur- land which lle the re. back into the me tains seven miles east of here, where he died and was buried. The resting place of t general was originally marked by an oak but this was bro 3 off by a storm in A fence nov surrounds the The mt was subscribed ground for fear latives of Braddock remove the over them a scene of the general «511 Wii iritish off he iree, 186K, ETave. to es some day the re. might attempt remains and erect monument upon the battle in which wounded Favette monument over to the famous Was County erect a the spot General goclated tarried at way to made a this marker near near Cu dock’s Braddock is with Fort C Western road locality. this mt of RECLUSE JOINS CHURCH. Lived In Win. Converted, Rich Bachelor Who dowless Shanty After living windowless ynesbhoro, recluse in hich very day du Kohler, a wealthy be own Zion boro, by request, was red Lutheran Chur Rev C. H. Kohler, who i8 70 } a resident of Pen-Mdr before came a summer resort greater part of 1e, home has been in the shanty in which his companions were five dogs. that the only New Teachers At State College. At a Commi State Coll of the Board of vania State College the meeting of the Pennsyl- Ofe Executive nittee Trustees of the following ap- pointments were made: E. 8S. Moore, of the University of Chicago. to be professor of geology and mineralogy: G. E. Anderson, of the Government Mining School, in Wuchang, China, to be associate professor of mining: J. B. Hill, of Cornell University, to be instructor in botany: Robeson H Allport, of Philipsburg, to be as- sistant in the mining laboratory; W. G. Ross, of Honolulu, to be assis tant in agronomy; P. B. Bennetch, of Newmanstown, Pa., to be assistant husbandry; E. K. Hibsh- man, of Ephrata, Pa., to be field as- sistant in experimental agriculture. Altoona. An overheated oil stove home set fire to the house, was destroyed. Insurance on In rescuing furniture, Raymond Vaughn, aged 21 years, was gerionsly injured, second story. ————————-————— Writer Gets $1,000 Damages. Norristown.~Mrs. Eleanor Thorn- when her horse took fright at a mo- turnpike company was made defen- dant because it had not provided proper guard rails. Blown To Pieces By Tardy Shot. Ashland.—While starting a bat- tery at Bast Colliery, during the night, Matthew Steiner, 45 years, was caught by a delayed shot and blown to pieces. His two week's pay, which he drew early in the evening, was found intact in his pocket. George Hoffman, of Shoemaker- ville, while helping to repair roads tried to jump from a road machine and landed on a rock, fracturing his left leg twice. — | en" ™ 2 yy Shot Actress Madge Yorke In Phila. delphia, The State Board of Pardons re- commended a pardon for James B. Gentry, the actor, serving a life gen- tence for the murder of Madge Yorke, the actress, ’ The murder of Madge Yorke, for which James B. Gentry was sen- tenced to be hanged and finally sent to prison for life, was committed on the afternoon of February 17, 18985, in Philadelphia. Madge Yorke was playing with the "Baggage Check" Company, in this City. Gentry, who was filling an en- kdagement in Boston, had. his friend: alleged, been seriously 11 with the heavily H« engagement to meet Mise in New York early in Febru- but through a misunderstanding le missed her at the railroad Lin, He who and was drinking an ’ sla- met some friends fn New York Jokingly told him that Miss Yorke was receiving the a tentions actor From t! Gentry was lost the into room occu { ipl Walnut flied the Yorke at a and k to ¢ Siree shat |ctL: £8 ape, ira turing two He made his way to Falrmount where and nights slept and roamed through the wo iand in the cold Being able to the pangs of hun- ger and terrible sufferts Gentry gave up to a park guard and was sent to a hospital He tried and finally onvicted murder in the first He be hanged but on the da which the senten V » carried out the Board of Pare ts for two davs bitter withstand was later of Was entenced to on commended th ) commuted life imprisonms Governor at the sei tings carried of the board efforts have | pardoned ed that 1¢ murder mind iimeelf in » . 1 epenied een the (ien have has always Was Disgraced Man Tries To End Life. York. James Meads, Years STATE ITEMS, filard Constructi Chased Virgin given ron Transit Cou during Folsom Hapi received at the verdict rend largest for personal injuries the Delaware County ing the recorded in Courts One thousand invitations been sent to physicians in Carbon, Northampton, Bucks, Montgomery and Schuvkill attend the annual assembis outing of the Lehigh Valles cal Society at Central Park. Bethlehem, on August 10, Harry Bennet, of Milton. narrowly Lehigh Berks Counties to Medi near and silverware when thieves enter. €d his home and packed up the booty in sight. They were frightened off however, and very little was taken While cutting bread at her home Mrs. George Gumbough, of Gettys. burg, discovered that she had ses er. €d in two the body of an eighteen inch garter snake, which had coiled itself in the middle of the loaf and was sleeping there. The reptile had evidently crawled in after the bread was baked. In a friendly scuffle that followed a baseball game at Boyertown at the school grounds, James Binder dis- located the left arm. H. K. Deisher, of Kutztown. one of the largest curlo and old relic collectors in Berks County, has for. warded to the State Department at Harrisburg a collection of old flax hackles, wooden forks, beehives, oid After the stables of Herman Souey, of Shillington, were robbed and pig sties were destroyed by fire, causing a loss of £1,000, James B. Gresh, of Little Oley, is the first Berks County farmer in the lower end to try raising tobacco. He has set out 13,000 plants. The largest strawberries rafsed in Berks County were grown by Prof, Elias 8. Wise, of Virginsville, meas. uring 6% by 7% inches in clroum- ference. He picked twelve and one- half bushels at one picking. # The Gentlemen's Driving Associa. tiwa, of Carlisle, has decided to hold its annual mid-summer matinee races on the Carlisle Fair Grounds track on Saturday afternoon, July 10, There will be four races, a county trot, county pace, a 2.30 and 2.20 trot combined, and a 2.20 pace and 2.17 trot combined. Weekly Review of Trade anc Market Reports. Bays: “Further progress {8 making to ward business confidence and activi ty and even the vexatious delay ip treatment of the have *he improvement. additional evidence of the better- ment of iron and steel. A signi ficant development is the urgency which many buyers request deliveries, especially trans- porting companies. “Greater ir‘erest and larger vol- ume of actual transactions ave ob- servable in the primary cotton goods market than for a long time past Jobbers are the principal operators, iithough the market as a whole still ‘ontinues to be somewhat uneven.” BAYS: from leading whole favorable of future orders erned. Building trade reports firm earlier predictions of a record pring construction in an enormous otal far surpassing all previous records ever compiled. Re- the ir- distrib- slow Reports that mer- bills more Bradstreeot's “Reports on the 18 booking industries far con- COl~ ire 80 fa if monthl to collections share ‘egularity noted In general itive trade, varying from tood in different sections. ‘tom the Northwes: are chants are discounting to reely. “Busine 'nded June 10 in were 197, against 253 In the | week “ 1886 for the week United States 161 week, of 161 and in 8 fallures the iast 1008, 175 ie 170 in n 1807, ‘805. Wholesale Markets. New York.—Flour——Recelipts, 384: exports, 4,830; quiet, with arices about steady Rye flour juiet Corn meal steady. Rye, irm;: No, 2 99 - Western, 87 % ¢. nominal New York Barley, firm: 87¢. ¢. I. £. New York. mpts, 1 exports, ¥: No. 2 red, $1.51 2 red, $1.51 nom- No. 1 Northern wominal f. o. b. winter, $1.35% 200 .- ’ exXporis, Rée, ele. afloat; No Philadep ntract § ALS » CASPOR, ceipls not mark: Western at mark; do. GY £908 2 cases, Lg <4 New do., higher; creams, 14c.; good. Baltimore—\Vheat The tv Western opened about 1.60; July, 1.183%. Angust Opening prices were not maintained, Western advices being weak, Spot was nominal. At the call July was quoted at to 13@13%. market steady: spot, 1 15%. Corn Western opened dull; spot, SOe.; July, 80 Oates We quote: No. 3, Mixed---No. 61@61%; White—No. 3G 64; No. 4, 3. 620 No. 4, 60 61% @ 62. No. 3, a0, Rye-—~We quote per bu.: No. 2 Western, export, 81% @92¢c.; rye, Western, uptown, 61% G82. Hay--We quote per ton: large bales, 216.50@17; blocks, $16.50@17; as to loeation, $15@ $13@14.50; $14.50@15; small No. 3 timothy, clover mixed, 16.50; Butter-—Creamery, separator, 27@30¢c.; blocks, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virgin- ia, per Ib., 16@17c.; Virginia and 154 18¢c.; Ohio, store packed, per ib, 164 17¢.; nearby, rolls, per 1b, 15@18¢c.; Ohio rolls, per 1b, 176 18c.: West Virginia, rolls, per Ib, 16@ 17e. Eggs ~~ Maryland, Pennsylvania and nearby firsts, per doz, 21e¢.: Eastern Shore, Maryland and Vir ginia, per doz, 21¢.; Western firsts, per doz, 21c.; West Virginia, per loz, 21¢. Live Stock. “attle — Market steady, cows, $4 bulls, $3.95 stockers and 3 teers, 15.3007 33: 5.26; heifers, $3G 6; 5.25: onlves, § 8; Hogs — Market 5@ 100. lower, Choice heavy, $7.706 7.85; butchers’ $7.65@ 7.80; light mixed, $7.208 7.30; choice ight, $7.30 7.35; packing, $7.50@ 7.60; $3.55 @6.90; bulk of sales, $7.35@ 7.55. is £50 Sheep-—~Market for spring steady; sheep 25 @ 600. lower. 83.76@ 6: lambs, sa50@ A ——— "MEMOIRS OF DAN RICE” THE CLOWN OF OUR DADDIES. Brimful of American Humor. Any bookseller will tell you that is for “a book which will meks me The bookman is compelled humorists has run out and comic Iit- erature is scarcer than funny plays. A wide sale 1s therefore predicted for the “Memoirs of Dan Rice,” the Maria Ward Brown, a book guar- i 1 i ter. lie a volume lectures, anecdotes, effusions; wise and the sawdust arena of other dave These “Memoirs” also contain a series of adventures and ing from grave gay, scenes and thrilling events: ord of half a cent: life, in the course ject was most of the national celebrities day. The book abound humorous and fords a clearer mysteries of show life count heretofore published Rice, as the to descriptive of into which brought cont: 8 in anecdotes, otherwise: of than and the inside any Old Dan proprietor of the famous “One Horse Show,” of a national character Artemus Ward, and this volume contains humor which made th laugh even while the great Civil War raged This fascinating book of 500 DREES beautifully illustrated, will sent postpaid to you for $1.50. Address Book Publishing House, 134 Leonard street, New York City. view an. Was more the he nation be The record neat A Bare Good Thing. yot- Ease, been wi “Am using truly say a 3 give my aching fee think il & rare g thing for anyone having we or tird a 2 Providence, R Anh Lo-Cay feet ithorized by batteries - 4 afloat Ag 3 orgered SORE EYES CURED. Eye-Balls and Lids Became Terribly Inflamed —— Was Unable to Go Abont—=All Treatments Failed Cuticara Proved Successful, = About tw yy Or such a about the hall without » family Then i I tried tw advised me after uang econsideral they were given me sxiy-hive prase {uls Wilson, Va Potter Ih Coticura Her The minous mines expected dustry of recent Latest Wali Street book, by J Howell, 34 Now street. New York: bright, full of anecdotes an lustrated ; endorsed by press and Free on application ruiusely prod invesilors Prizes will be offers ing German for a metal but solid. Little children » the vear wit} and barns iH ing these aches s year, the waria A horee census of England, ducted by the government, revealed an alarming lack of animals of able types, suits Teething Children During Hot Weather should tale Dr. Digeers [luck dial, It eared sll Stomach ani Baws] Dis anse Diarrhea ote At Don +o %+ and 503 In 15 years this country has ime ported 25,000,000 bushels toes, teething, softens the gums, teduces intiammn The postal service last year used 925,000,000 yards of twine. A—————— wa s— Whether from Colds. Heat Stomach or stely., Try 6. We, Be and ores ———————————— Americans light matches a year, N. U. 26. One gets it by highway men—Tens of thousands by Bad Bowels—No dif. ference. Constipation and dead liver make the whole system sick — Every. cure Bowel and Liver troubles by simply doing mature’s work until you get well Millions use CASCARETS, Life Saver! Paar pats ary © Bol BOUNTIES For COLDS and GRIP, Hick's Cavepipe Is the Lest remedy relieves the aching snd feverishiness cures the Cold and restores norms! conditions. It's Huuid~ effects immedisiely., ioc, 2c. and $0c., atdrug stores German soll feeds nine-tenths of her people THIR OPERATION PREVENTED By Lydia E.Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound Chicago, 1H. — “1 wa what Lydia E. Pinkhar Compound did for me. that two of the best eaid 1 woul For Your Table Because they are made of the choicest materials and guaran- teed to be absolutely pure. Libby's Veal Loaf makes a delight- ful dish for Luncheon and you will find, Libby's Vienna Sausage Corned Beef Pork and Beans Evaporated Milk equally tempting for any meal, Have a supply of Libby's in the house and you will always be prepared for an extra guest, Yon can buy Libby's at all grocers, °° Libby, afcNolll & Libby Onloago A TOILET ANTISEPTIC ~~~ NOTHING LIKE IT FOR —— li i ni 1 Tel bf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers