CLEANSES THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY; DISPELS COLDS, AND HEADACHES DUE TO CONSTIPATION. BEST FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN-YOUNG AND OLD. TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS-ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE. MANUEACTURED. BY THE ) A SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS ONE SIZE ONLY. REGULAR PRICE 50°A BorTiE A man in North Carolina was fin- ed $100 for driving cattle through counties quarantined on account Texas fever into a county quarantined area. For HEADACHE Hicks CAPUDING Whether from Colds. Heat, or Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you, It's Hquid—pleasant to take— acts immed) ately. Try it 5¢, and 0c. at stoi cs. A Colorado man has tool for removing wire stit magazines. Stomach 10¢., drug invented 1 1 ches from ASK “I tried Powde ply. It lle wh be without den, N. For Allen's Foul-lose, Allen's Foot- Ease, the Antisept density In the matter of 3 lation, Paris and Berlin lead European cities. Saved Old Lady's Hair, “My mother used to have a very bad humor on her head which the doctors called an eczema. and for it | had two different doctors. Her head Was very sore and her Fair nearly all fell out in spite of what they both did. One day her niece came in and they were speaking of how her hair was falling out and the doctors dig it no good. She says, ‘Aunt, why don't you try Cuticura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment?’ Mother did, and they helped her. In six months’ time the itching, burning und scaling of her head was over and her hair began growing To-d: y she feels much in debt to Cu- ticura Soap and Ointment for the fine head of hair she has for an old lady of seventy-four. “My own was an eczema In my feet. As soon as the cold weather came my feet would fteh and bu and then they would erack open and bleed Then I thought 1 would flee to my mother's friends, Cutlcura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. 1 did f« four or five winters, and now my feet are as smooth as any one's Ells- worth Dunham, Hiram, Me., 30, 1909.” case rn ir Sept. A Description. "What kind of a ington?" “One of these fellows who depend upon their wi lend them distinetion.” Record-Her- ald. Wither- man is Porcelain was discovered by an al- chemist, who was seeking a misture of earths that would make the most durable crucibles. MOTHERS WHO HAVE Hudson, Ohio.—*1f mothers realized the good your remedies would do deli- ing women. Irreg- qular and painful viperiods and such troubles would be P {relieved at once in cases. {E. Pinkham’s ftable Com organs need a tonic 4 the Compound : bition and life from the lirst dose.” — Mrs. GEORGE STRICKLER, Hudson, Ohio, R. No. 5, Box 32. pahdreds 2 Such liters om others expressin t for what Lydia E, ¥ nkham's V ta. ble Compound has accomplished for them have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Young Girls, Heed This. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, bac head. ache, dragging-down sensations, faint. ing spells or indigestion, should take immediate action to ward off the seri. ous consequences and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s ke. table Compound. Thousands have restored to health by its use. If you would like special advice COMMERCIAL Weekly Review of Trade and Market Reports. Bradstreet's says: ' "Trade advices are Irregular, vary« ing somewhat with the sections or lines reporting, but with quietness the prevalling feature, In the Northern half of the country unsea- sonably cool weather is a bar to ex- pansion in retail trade, which at many cites is classed as disappoint- ing. At these centres reorder busi- ness Is light, and jobbers’ operations are consequently restricted. Prob- ably the best reports as to trada some from the Northwest and the Pacific Coast, while the Atlantic Coast reports are of current retail trade being unsatisfactory. As the week advanced action by the Govern. ment against higher railroad fraight rates resulted in rumors of suspen- sions of improvement work by rail denied, These reports injected an additional element of into the industrial situation. “Business fallures for the week ended with June 2 in the States were 160, against 200 week, 191 in the like week of 5 in 19v8, 155 in 1907 and 1 1906, “Wheat, including flour, from the United for the week ended June 2 2.971 i against 04.144 2.128.199 week 48 weeks ended are 136,502,017 ls, against 160,913,011 in the corresponding period last year. Corn the week are 238.740 against 345,364 week 26,183 In 1909 For the 48 ks ended June 2 corn exports 1.257.783 bushels. against 28.- last oo In ag 1,663 bushels, and For the exports last wenk this Inst vean June o° bushe sxports for ant ia {1 last year.” Wholesale Markets. wenk: Snot rn i sominal elovat export No. 2, Oats Spot nomiral; quiet Ihs., p42 Ibs. 42 @ Poultry natural Western turkeys, 104 1 irm; Western L4@ broilers, 30¢.; broilers, 16 tur rs, 154 18, Philadelphia.—Wheat firm; tract gride, June, 101 @ 104¢ firm. le higher: No. 2 yellow for lo- al trade, 6634 @67c Oats firm, hizher; No. 2 white natural, 45 3 i ¢ 3: do., CON Corg utter firm; : BX. do., prints, 1 Western creamery, v 31 : Pennsylve free nia and other 21%ec at urrent sstern, 3 2 sx Ak aH IP an Ez ICR E, 20 4 No laltimore. — Wheat tern 993 NO ight . No, 440%: « 42% Timothy $19@ 19.50: 1 Cloved Choice, $318.50; No. 1, $317.50@ 18: No. 2. $144 186. Clover -Ng. 1, $16@ 16.50; No. 2, $14@ 15. Meadow grass and packing hay, S12@ 13 Butter Creamery, fancy, 30c.; Creamery, choice, 20@ 20% : Cream. ery, good, 25@ 27; Creamery, imita. tion, 21@23; Creamery, prints, 30 ‘31. Cheese-—We quote, jobbing prices, pen Ih, 16% @ 17¢ {| Eggs-—-We quote, per doz. loss off: Maryland, Pennsylvania and nearby firsts, 20% ¢; Western firsts, West Virginia firsts, 20%; Southern firsts, 19%; jro@i. { Live Poultry—We quote, (Chickens, old hens, 1%¢.; do., small to medium, 19; old roosters, 11: spring, 1% Ibs. and over, per Ib, 30@32; do, 1% Ibs. 28: do. 1 gand under 25. Ducks, large, 13@ fold: do, small 12: do., muscovy dna mongrel, 12@ 13: do., spring, 3 Ibs. and over, 20 22. Live Stock. Chicago. = Cattle — Market 10¢ higher. Steers, $6.25@ 8.60; cows, $4.50@6.50; heifers, $4.25@ 6.75; bulls, $4.50@ 4.90; calves, $3@ 8.50: stockers and feeders, $4.75 @ 6.50. Hogs-—Market 15¢. lower. Choice heavy, $9.45@ 9.55; butchers, $9.45 @9.65; light mixed, $9.35@ 9.45; choice light, $0.45@ 9.656; packing, $0.40@ 9.45; pigs, $9.25@ 9.50: Hulk of sales, $§9.40@ 0.45, Sheep-—Market 10@ 15¢. lower. Sheep, $5.25@ 5.40; yearlings, $6@ 6.75; lambs, $7@ 8.40; spring lambs, $8.50@09, Kansas City. — Cattle — Market steady to strong: guaranteed cattle 25 to 40c. higher than Monday. Cholee dressed beef and export steers, $T@ 8.25; fair to good, $60 7; Western steers, $5.50@ 7.50; stockers and feeders, $5. 70@ 6.25; Southern steers, $4@ 6.50; Southern cows, $3@5.50; native cows, $2 @ 6.50; native heifers, $4.40@ 7.35: bulls, $4@ 5.85; calves, $4.85 8. Hogs «Market 15 to 250. lower, Top, $9.60; bulk of sales, $9.30® 9.40; heavy, $0.35@945; packers and butches, $9.35@ 9.40; light, $0.20@9.50; pigs, $8.75 @9.10. : $20.50; 1 No, 3. $15.50@ e h £1 Mixed 90 LL - 120% ; per 1b.: OIL DISTRIBUTION AN EXACT SCIENCE Fully a Million Dollars a Week in Foreign Gold Comes to This Country to Pay For Standard's Product That is Peddied to the Doors of Hutand Palace, Accord ing to the Rockefeller Flan of International Barter. This Rockefeller Foundation, to make a story of it, is in reality just this—it fs the dream of a poor boy come true. It is tho happy ending of an American novel of real life. It is the climax of matic and impressive careers this country, or any other, has ever known. The dream--or the novel or dra- ma, whichever you like—begand mora than half a century ago a shabby little boarding house Cleveland, in the brain of a lsd of eighteen who was clerking shipping and real estate There were at that time about a million other American of the same age, and not many of them had received fewer privileges this one He had been educated partly in the public schools, but mainly at home, by, his mother and father His pay, at this time, was sixty cents a day His hours of labor were from breakfast until bedtime. For his room and meals he was paving $1 a weelk, that his net fncome—the basis of his dream of fortune anc phi. lanthropy—was not more than $125 a year. Even at this income, he In tion of have than 850 time, and with 3 $ . little this founda- sixty a tiny his own Out pens » hun- hat most preci feller wa mal {x become “rR ! Aawt gen cords the 0 prehensive scheme the whole hi The m strong in this fled wit} the cont satis inte time he wae into an He was &a church nineteen ha 4 ¥ Lie organizer of at of was fast weight of memt which the This undertook down under morigage youth money, and he did Ww "That in later was collected.” Little as he then nt foundatio he woul peais for requestin case the followi hildren, an mesake, wi the revenu rece dard itself iz much more a Oil mat- was unquestionably the first com. pany that undertook to sell its prod. uct directly to the users on a world- wide scale. For the most part, it de- livers its oil, not to wholesalers and middlemen, but to the family burns it, whether it be In the United States or In the uttermost parts of the earth. It has, for Instance. no fewer than 3000 tank wagons travel. demands it. Fully $1,000,000 a week, in foreign gold or its equiva lent, comes to this country to pay for the oil that is peddied to the doors Rockefeller plan of international dis. titude and Rockefeller was well prepared work out the problem of distributing the surplus money of Lhe rich His it is no sudden change of mind or It is the natural re. sult of fifty years of experience and house, he is now about to complete on an international scale-—that is the explanation of the new plan that has excited so much comment and so much curiosity, is Consul General John LL. Griffiths, of London, writes that British manu- facturers are forming an association to prevent the male in the United Kingdom of foreign-made as Brite ish. goole. The Bangkok Manufacturing Com. pany (Limited), making ide, serat- ed waters, etc, earned $15,150 gross profits, the total dividend for the year being 14 per cent. A A RNS OO A Modern Education, Fond Mother-—How did Jou got along in school today, Susie Tired Child (wearily) —Oh, I missed my geography again, 1 for- pot whether the Putamayo Joined the Amagon east or west of the con. fluence of the Maranon and Uealaya Rivers. Eame Child (years later; wife and mother) What is it you want to . ?’ : RO after a long refleetion) «<1 think its’ somewhere in Africa or Asia, 1 forget which. New York Weekly. ne A Fixuure, ““Phat's a beautiful girl you have dn your store.” sald the man ac- quaintance, ‘I've geen her in the window several days as 1 passed.” ""Bhe isn't an employee,” the mil- liner answered wearily, “Bhe's a woman trying to decide on a new hat,” Buffalo Express. Those Questions. Absent-Minded Professor (meet- ing a friend unexpectedly on 8 moun- tain peak)-——Hello! Did you elimb up from below?-—Fliegende Blaet- ter. For COLDS and GRIP, Mick's CAPUDINE 1s the best remedy— relieves the aching and feverishness “CU Pes the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's lquid— effects immediately. 0c, 2c and tc. stdrug stores Charley No Shirt is the name in the Umatilla reservation, Falling Eyelashes and All Eves That Need Care, Try Murine Eye Ealve. or Write Murine Eve Remedy Co., Chicago "Walk slowly! Eat less * Osler’'s directions for middle- to live long Dr Buy "BATTLE AXE” Snogs The the peace average annual dea armies of the world in less than one peor of of dred is Ferry Davis® Painkiller, the be ve fon cramp i, Colic, diarrhea, ax w wounas, sprains, Se, S5e., Se, Japan's postal service ig th in the world Letters t about seven-tenths « ns the noe res wir AXE SMOES Calenflars And Poetic Fire, time to for the cure he weekly a soeclialty on it his duty ing which y modern—quite the dilavian in such a mood 3} the Literary to prove time Hterars may sho fossil man WAR lately Digest that all Fased any land in that pe " 4 wy 4 ge stated art, enaus on the item por which 18! be C01 for instance admirs Digest writer's urd fi Ty contrary o Iaid d« w iicago Inter Ocean ahs I OORiravets r wn He Were, nent Western boy who of work my son, 1 work for me, have to write down telephone A promi of a office Now Come casionally and take atiorney tells oe applied at his for said, "if you will io OC Messages ing is essential Are you fairly well educated?” The boy smiled confidently =] be.” he said.— Harper's Magazine A DOCTOR'S EXPERIENCE Medicine Not Needed in This Case. that coffee does them an injury! They lay their bad feelings to almost every cause but the true and unsus- ‘pected one. { But the doctor knows. Fis wide experience has proven to him that, to some systems, coffee is an insidious poison that undermines the health. Ask the doctor if coffee Is the cause of constipation, stomach and nervous troubles, “1 have been a coffee drinker alt my life. Iam now 42 years old and when taken sick two years ago with nervous prostration, the doctor sald that my nervous system was broken down and {hat I would have to give up coffee “1 got 80 weak and shaky | could not work, and reading your advertise. ment of Postum, | asked my grocer if he had any of it. He said, 'Yes,’ and that he used it in his family and ut , was all it claimed to be. “80 1 quit coffee and commenced td use Postum steadily and found in about two weeks’ ‘ime 1 could sleep soundly at night and get up In the [morning feeling fresh. In about two months I began to gain flesh, | weighed only 146 pounds when 1 com. menced on Postum and now | welgh 167 and feel better than I did at 20 years of rge. i "I am working every day and sleep well at night. My two children were great coffee drinkers, but they have not drank any since Postum: eame (nto the house, and are far more {healthy than they were before.” i Read “The Road to Waellville,* found in pkgs. “There's a Reason.” | Ever read the above letter? A new ‘one appears from time to time. They are genuine, trues, and full of homan Intewest, Ee J ————— ————a. oh A man who has n weak end impaired properly digest his food will soon find weak and impoverished, insufficiently nourished, Dr. PIERCE'S stomach and who does not that his blood has become flesh-bullder and restorative This ** Discovery” absolutely free from alcohol and «ll nostrums. Its every ingredient medicine. Don’t accept a remedy oF ENOWN COMPOSITION. many cures made by it Asx Te — ———————————— ———. ——————— a” iz Is tho great bleed. maker, nerve tomle. It makes men in judgement. All ize It has no relationship with secret for this tUme-proven They must ksow of . V. Pierce, Pres. Buffale, N.Y. ————— ; Perfect Cooking The housewife with years of experience—the woman who knows how to cook—finds, after practi- cal tests and hard trials, the New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove is her idea of what a good cook-stove really ought to be. She finds it requires less attention, costs less to op- erate, and cooks all food better than any other stove she has ever tried. She finds the New Per. fection oven bakes and roasts perfectly. The stove bright blue of the chimneys, makes without Cabinet, CAUTIONARY NOTE : Be sure you got this Every dealer everywhere: if not at Saucepans, and nickeled towel racks. The nickel finish, with the ornamental and attractive. stoves can be bad with or the stove agency of the ———————— A FLAVOUR that 1a mend the or vanilla Ry disslving gn water and adding Mapdelon, ad made and a ryrup befor than apie. Maggeina in sold by grocers Sound Zc shams Rr ee and vocipe Cescent IMs. Co. Scars, rnd "oe oS uted supar in fonts wy yp in Ie ln A — * Tomato Chickei. Vegetable ful natural flavor and made from the very best materials, with the care of experienced chefs, in the great White Enam- eled Kitchens. Libby's Boups are ready for immediate use by adding an equal portion of hot water Ask your grocer Jor Libby's Soups Libby, McNeill & { rE 7 E EF Send postal for Free Pakage of Paxtihe. Betier and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES. ” i Ta tt ME ANTISE Gives one a sweet breath jelean, white, germ-free teeth —antiseptically clean mouth and throat— purifies the breath after smoking — dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odory— mech ap- preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. Bethe ar yon Can afunta ay com i pork ls, Relereser: ay ia Lusisville, We foreid Wonl Free lo our shoppers. Weile far rive "at, Trade-Marks, Pemsions,Bounty y Pay, Claims Againg! the Alt*y-nil- 312 ind. Ave, MW sahington. 5. % 0 YEARS PRACTION. [ATES WARKCLEAY washes clorngy wt NEW DISCOVERY DROPSY mv pm, Broo. Br in, o nd HOR enna — Bo Barn Axe Stoes
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers