In the Cloak Department A Most Unusual Caracul Coats, Black Coats, Long Covert Coats, Chil dren's and Misses' Coats. We have too many of these coats on hand. Our determi nation to reduce these stocks at once is responsible for the ex treme price reductions which bring to you these tremendous bargains: 15 caracul coats now $ 9.50 20 caracul coats now 12.50 $25 caracul coats now 15.00 35 caracul coats now 22.50 Children's coats, special, at . 2.00 Children's coats in red, white, green, navy, curly bearskin, gray Astrakhan and a variety of other cloths, ages 1 to 4 years, value 3.50 and 4, now 2. Girls' 5 and 6 coats, now 2.50 Long ankle length, of fine wool mixtures, heavy, servicea ble materials in medium and dark colors, in plaids and plain colors, ages G to 14 years, for 2.50. Women's Long Coats Women's coats of very fine cheviot, in navy blue and red diagonal, oxford coating 50 inches long, half fitted 20 coats now 10.00 15 coats now 7.50 The Smart & Silberberq Co. OIL CITY, PA. Oil City Trust Company. Report to the Commissioner of Banking, (condensed) At ( lose of Kiisiness December 10, 1007 Time loans $1.392,221 1)1 Real estate, lurniuiie and fix ture 89,650.4!) Slocks and bonds (06,241 00 Demands, loans up on collateral 634. 486 II Overdrafts 4.1H2 85 Due from banks 358,722.(19 Cash od hand 141 679.08 Total quick asstts M,205.I2i),7J 12,087,193.13 Trust funds not included in above f 176.1S9.06 An After Christmas Sale. All II tne Ciata, Smoking Jack ets, Baib Robes aud St .dy Gowns ooe fourth off id price from original plainly marked prices as follows: AH So Jackets and Robes, now 83 75 All S6 Jackets aud R ihea, uow 4 00 All SH Jackets and Robes, now 86 00 All (10 Jackets aud Robes, now $7 50 Our entire Btnck of Overcoats and Rain Coats at one-fourth off the reg ular prices at which the coats have been sold: 810 O.ercoata and 812 Overcoats aod 815 Overcoats aud $20 Overcoats and 825 Overconts and Raincoats at 87 50 Raincoats at 8!) 50 Raincoats at 11 25 Raincoats at 15 00 Raincoats at 18 75 We give you good values here for your money, not hot air. THE McCUEN CO. 2i AND 29 SENECA ST.. OIL CITY, PA. WHITE PINE Flooring, Siding, aod material for Window Casings and Iuftide Work. A good supply to select from always in stock Call on or address. JAS. J. LANDERS, TIONESTA, PA Sale of Women's Capital Surplus and proti.s . K"vb for interest., DEPOSITS . 300.000 00 . 390,587 98 7.875 63 1,988,729.52 $2,687,193.13 Dress Footwear. We're now upon the threshold of the social season, with balls, parties, receptions aul entertainments of all sorts. Lverv society man and worn u will waDt handsome and correct dress footwear. For Women We've choice dress shoes, fancy eve uing slippers and ties. Many d-.ioty bow and strap and pump effects in wbite, dull and patent leathers. For Men We've a Goe line of dress shoes, hut too or lace, gun metal, colt or patent calf in all sizes and numerous styles JOE LEVI, Cor. Center, Seneca and Syca more Streets, OIL ITY, PA. vf 50 YEARS' tr EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Hrk. j '0 Designs Copyrights &r.. Anyone "ending a nketoh and description may quickly Hacprtnin our opinion free, whether an liiTtMillnn Is prnhnMy fmtentahle. fnniniuntca. tlimaatrlctlyoontlileiitlal. Handbook on Patent sent fren. OMeHt nifency for aeciirlnx (interna. I'ntenta taken throuirh Munti & Co. rewire lrfi n'ttw, without uhnree. In the Scientific American. A handaomely Illustrated weekly. I.nmest rlr. .'ulatlon of any sclent ino Journal. Terms. 1 Kir1!.r""r n,"nl. t Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co.3618'- New Yorli DiuutM om. u, 031 " Ht.,AV(uhmk'U.u, (MSB EVADES WIFE AND NURSE. jump. From Window, Rum Onto Railroad Track and It Killed by Train. Pittsburg, Jan. 7. Evading his wlf. and the nurse who had been employed to attend him, O. W. Groom leaned IS feet from the second story of his home fn Quaker Valley, near Sewickley and ran onto the Fort Wayne railroad tracks in front of a freight train. He was instantly killed. Groom, at the time e his death, was suffering from nervous prostra tion. He was 35 years of age and mid was employed by the Rlter-Con-ley Manufacturing company at that concern's Pittsburg office. About a weok ao ftrooni was stricken with nervous prostration and his mind became temporarily un balanced. Last Friday midnight ha evaded his wife and nurse and, clad only in his night clothes, left the house, lie was found later in Sewick ley, suffering intensely from exposure. Owing to this incident a closer watch was kept on the patient. Sun day morning he was sleeping soundly with his wife and the nurse in the room. Awakening with a start. Groom sprang out of bed and rushed toward a window. .Mrs. Groom and tJlie nurse attempted to stop him, but he fought like a maniac. While the two women hung onto him. the frenzied man, who was of powerful build, cast both of them aside and, unlocking the catch of the window, sprang to the ground. The Jionse is not far from the rail road tracks and Groom, heading in this direction, went onto the "tracks fust as a freight train came along. He was struck and instantly killed. Mrs. Groom and the nurse, who had taken up the pursuit, appeared just too late to witness the accident. They found the body, still warm, however, and had It taken home. Groom was born 1n Franklin, O., and had lived in the Sewickley Valley for ten years. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church and wa3 well known socially. Besides his widow he leaves a young daughter. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kelsey Groom, live In Franklin, O.; as do two sisters. Chile: Drowned and Another Poisoned. Binghaniton. .Tan. ".John Kaich, four years old, while playing on the ice on a small pond in this city, broke through and was drowned. About the same time Fern Dunbar, the three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Dunbar, living a short distance from the Kalrh home, obtained some strychnine pills and swallowed several of them supposing that they were candy. She died during the after noon. Bend In Pipe Threatens peath. Ely, Nev., Jan. 7. Late yesterday the six-inch water pipe through which air is fanned to the entombed miners became bent by the pressure of rock and earth at the COO-foot level and no air could be sent to ithem. Rescuers by redoubled efforts reached the break in a few hours and repaired the pipe. MARKET REPORT. New York Provision Market. New York, Jan. 6. WHEAT No. 2 red. J1 08V, f. n. h. afloat; No. 1 northern Duluth, $1.24. CORN No. 2 coin. 65c f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 white. U9c. OATS Mixed oats, 26 to 32 Ins., 54c; clipped white, 32 to 40 lbs., 50 '52 '6 c. PORK Mess. 114.o0!fi 13.23: familv. 17.50iffl8.00. HAY Good to choice, $1.00 1.03. CHEESE State full cream, fancy. BUTTER Creamery specials, 30c; extras, 29&291,c; western factory, 15 (BlS'c; state dairy life. EGGS State and Pennsvlvania. 30fi38c. POTATOES State and Western $l75ffl2.10 per sack; Maine, $1.73 &2.15. Buffalo Provision Market. Buffalo, Jan. 6. WHEAT No. 1 northern carload. ,1.19; No. 2 red, $1.05. CORN No. 2 yellow, 64c; No. 3 yellow, 62V4c- OATS No. 2 white, 53c f. o. b. afloat; No. 3 white, 5253c. FLOUR Fancy blended patent, per bbl., $0.2O(fi7.00; winter family, patent, $3.65fj ti.45. BUTTER Creamery, prints, fancy, 30',4g31c; state and Penn. cream ery, 2i'329Hc; dairy, choice to fancy, 2C27c. CHEESE Kmicy full cream, 16c; good to choice, new, 14gl5c. EGCCS Selected white, 33?34a POTATOES Home grown, fancy, per bu., 70c; fair to good, GSifjOSc. East Buffalo Live Stock Market. CATTLE Choice export steers, $3.40 5.75; good to choice butcher steers, $4.23 ifj 5.25; choice to extra fat cows, $1.35(54.50; fair to good heifers, j 1 1.00(3 4.4!) ; choice heifers. $4.50(ij 5.00; bulls, common to good, $3.00 3.73; choice veals, $9.25 9.75; fair to good, $9.U0(f?9.25. SHEET AND LAMBS Choice spring lambs, $7.63(3 7.75; choice yearlings, o.i?rn (i.;0; mixed sheep, $4.2' (ft 5.00. HOGS Light Yorkers. $4.70(fi 4.80; medium and heavy hogs, $4.70Ca4.80; pigs, $4.7u& 4.80. The Invention of Spinning. The invention of the art of spinning was nscrilied by the ancients to Miner va, tbe goddess of wisdom. The date 1300 n. C. is given as that of the be ginning of the art In Greece,- under the direction of the king of Arcndla, but pictured Inscriptions on Egyptian monuments show that the use of the spindle and distaff was known in that country much earlier. The first distaff was Rlmply a stick, around which the filler to be spun was loosely colled, held In Hie left hand; the spindle was a sort of top set In motion by a twirl of the hand, the fiber passing between the finger aod thumb of the right hand. This Invention was improved upon In the course of time by placing the spin dle In a frame and making it revolve by mechanical action of the hand or foot in connection with a wheel or treadle, thus giving the true spinning wheel. The first recorded use of this was In the early years of the sixteenth century, but it was probably made and used long before this. The first spin ning Jenuy, a machine working eight swindles, was iu.veu.ted Lu 1,707. A Mislsks. Not one of us, even the most good natureil, likes to have bin mistakes pointed out. M'e may appear not to mind corrections anil accept them with a smile, but it Is human nature to unrt under correction, although some 9f us may be clever enough to conceal the smart; hence the fewer mistakes we call attention to in others the bet ter. Two-thirds of the mistakes we make are trivial. Their correction is unimportant. Why, then, notice them? Yet some people do, and do so con stantly. A Hrson sMnks of having :loue a certain thing on Thursday, when In reality It was done on Yediies liny. If no Important point Is involv ed, why cull attention to the mistake What good docs it do to have the ex ict day set right? It Is a matter of to Importance, so why Insist upon cor recting the trivial error? . , Stanch friendships have often lieeu pricked by this needle of useless correction. It Is a great art. this art of learning to allow others to- be mistaken when the mistake Is unimportant. Few fesru It, but those who do are among the most comfortable friends one can have. Arbiters of Hairdressing. "I want to learn the latest thing In hnlrdressing," said the visitor as soon as she lauded lu New York. "Take me to a hairdresser's establishment, ho I can look things over." "No, indeed," said her New York friend. "We will go there after you know what you wish to buy, but the place to lenru how to dress your hair is in the dry goods shops. All you have to do is to study the salesgirls' hair. It is always done in tbe latest mode, aud they all do it alike, so you cannot mistake. Some) lines it Is badly exaggerated, but, of course, you don't have to copy that." "I didn't know the shopgirls were your arbiters of fashion in New York." "Not in all respects, but, you see, hnlr dressing doesn't cost anything. To have the latest styles in clothes or jewelry is expensive, but one can lie a very bowling swell in the matter of hair without Its costing a cent. Be sides, they are usually restricted in the matter of gowns to plain black or possibly white blouses, so they take It all out In doing their hair." New- York Tress. What It Cost to Feel and Think. Every throb of pleasure costs some thing to the physical system, and two throbs cost twice as much as one. If we cannot tlx a precise equivalent It Is not liccause the relation is not detl uite, but from the dithVulties of reduc ing degrees of pleasure to a recognized standard. Of this, however, there can be no reasonable doubt namely, that n large n mount of pleasure supposes a correspondingly large exiienditure of blood and nerve tissue, to the stinting. perhaps, of the active energies and the Intellectual processes. It is a matter of practical moment to ascertain what pleasures cost least, for there are thrifty aud unthrifty modes of send ing our brain and heart's Mood. One of the safest of delights, if not very acute, Is the delight of abounding physical vigor, for, from the very sup position, the supply to the brain is not such as to interfere with the general Interests of the system. Alexander Cain. Nothing Doing. A playwright discussed at n dinner in New York tbe art of acting. "I believe," said he, "In subtlety and restraint. A nod. a shake of the head, a silent pause these things are often more effective than the most violent yelling and ranting. "Life is like that, subtle and silent. What, for Instance, could be more ex pressive than this scene, a scene with out a spoken word, that I once wit nessed iu the country? "An undertaker stood on a corner near a noble mansion. He elevated his brows hopefully ami inquiringly as u physician came from the house. The physician, compressing his lips, shook his head decidedly and hurried to his carriage. Then the undertaker, with a sigh, passed on." Mary Knew All About It. Little Mary's father had been teach ing her to walk properly. "Walk slow ly and turn out your toes," he admon ished her. While she was undergoing this teach ing she attended Sunday school one day. The golden text was. "Teach me to walk honestly." After reciting it several times tbe teacher asked: "Who knows what that menus?" "I do," replied little Mary. "Walk slowly and turn out your toes." Hit Poetic Imagination. "Doesn't the delay at the telephone Vinoy you?" "No," said the slow spoken person, "I kind of like silence and solitude, and I never feel more alone than I do with tbe receiver at my ear and no sound save that of a low sad voice now and then in tbe dark distance that Highs, 'Waiting!' "-Washington Star. Not Guilty. Employer (to his clerk) Is It true that when the clock strikes t! you put down your pen and go, even If you are In the middle of a word? Clerk Cer tainly uot, sir. If It gets so near 0 as that I never begin the word at all. Rlre. The Flax Expert. rarvenue (going over bis estate with his stewardl The flax Is very short this year. Seems to me they will only be able to make children's shirts with It. Fllegende Blatter. Laziness Is the deadliest of nil dis eases, for the disease Itself prevents one from tiikirw the remedy. .lint Hoaallil. "I waited fifteen minute on the corner for a car this morning." said the landlady as she poured the tea, "and wbeu one dually came along tho motorman wouldn't stop for me." "TTad he ever boarded here?" asked the man at the pedal extremity of the maiiogony. "Not that 1 know of." replied tho landlady. "Why do yon ask?" "Oh," rejoined the other as he con tinued to saw away at bis steak. "I thought perhaps he recognized you and didn't want you to board his car." Chicago Daily News. It Would Improve It. clergyman r-ponklug on charity held that charity which was not grace ful aud clean was bound to fall, bring ing to the donor scorn Instead of grati tude. "Thus," he once said In a Sunday school nddress, "a rich landlord while making the round of his tenants' cot tages collecting rents met a littie girl Whose beauty much impressed hliii. "In the shabby front room of tho cottage the landlord talked for awhile with the little girl, and as he rose to go an unwonted feeling of kindliness warmed ills heart. "'Let ino see." he said, fishing lu his pockets 'let me see If I haven't some thing to give to this dear little girl.' "And, smiling and chuckling, he went through pocket after pocket. Finally In his hip pocket be found a pepper mint drop, a white pcpicrmlnt drop, lie dusted the Hull' and lint from It and extended It gnyly to the little girl. "'Here we are.' he cried. 'I thought we had something. Here Is n ulee peppermint drop for you. And now,' lie entleiL 'what will you do with It?' "'Wash It.' said the little girl grave ly." Beginnings of Baseball. The history of the American game dates from the first National Associa tion of Baseball iu New York lu ISoN. The first scries of important match games was played I .el ween picked iiiues of Brooklyn and New York, at Flushing, in the saiiie year. Nearly IMttXt persons-n large crowd for those days paid their 30 cents n head to eo the contest. The rules of baseball were very crude lu those days. The pitcher's position was simply limited to a twelve foot line forty-live feel from the home base, behind which lie could take any uilinlier tif slips he wished. All he was required to do was to pitch the hall as near as possible over the home base. There was no penalty for wild pitching or for refusing to strike nt fair balls. I once saw a pitcher de liver sl.xly balls to a single batsman In one Inning before there was a strike. Not n in i I 1X7 J were there any para phernalia for defense. Old time Caleb- ers' hands were a sight with their cracked joints ami bruised palms. Harry Chatlwick In Outing. French Bulli. The number of phrases of the class called "bulls" to be found In polite works are not all the product of the Irish brain. A novel that was crowned by the French ncadeniy as possessed of un usual merit contained a sentence of which tbe following is n translation; "It was midnight, A man who lay in aniliusb listened to their conversa tion, but suddenly n dense, dark cloud passed lu front of the inoou and pre vented lilin from hearing more." Another phrase, written iu down right seriousness by a master of French criticism, runs something like this: "It was one of those duels In which one of the blades literally buries itself in the heart of the other." Minneapo lis Journal. Their Little Surprise. They were elopers, ami the stern par ent was sitpiaised to lie lu pursuit. But he wasn't. On the contrary, a tele gram awaited tliem at the next town. "Is It forgiveness?" asked the agitated youth as he handed It to the angelic one. She read it through and burst Into tears. Then the startled youth took it and rend it aloud. "Your moth er ami I offer congratulations. Your hasty action meets with our approval. We can now carry out n plan that we have long contemplated and that was delayed only because we had you with ns. In other words, we are nliout to break up housekeeping and go into n fiat!" Argonaut. Helpless! A city man had a friend in from a north country farm on a business mut ter the other day. and they lunched to gether at a restaurant. The Cork man ate his meal entirely with his knife. When he was near the end he discov ered that be had no fork. "Look here," he said to the city man, "that wailcr didn't give me a fork." "Well, you don't need ohe," replied the city man seriously. "The dciii e I d n't!" came from the farmer. "What am I going to stir my coffee with?" I.oiitlon Opinion. A Graceful Withdrawal. "Do you know who that old iimu Is talking to our hostess?" asked Mrs. Blunderer of the lady sitting beside her. :That." answered the woman cold ly, "Is my son." "Oh," gaspetl Mrs. Blunderer in con fusion, "he's a good deal older than you are. Is he not?" LippincoU's. Concentration. The Servant Professor, there la a thief In the dining room! The Astron omer (deep in calculation) Tell him I'm too busy to see biin! Translated For Transatlantic Tales From II .Motto per Uidere. Not Improbable. "I understand in France a fine is imposed when a train is late.". "Do you believe they tine tho train?'' "As to that 1 can't say. I know they always dock the boats." St. Louis Republic. Why He Was Happy. Brlggs Hudson seems to be happy. Griggs Yes; he has little money, but he possesses a philosophical tempera ment mid simple tastes. Brlggs I see. He Is Independently poor. Judge. It Is not your duty to so live that you will be satlslled with yourself, but to so live that your wife will lie satis fied with you. Houston Post. , Jos. M. -SsiVBr PRACTICAL BOILER MAKER, Repairs Hollers, Stills Tan km, Agitator. Ruy and Nells Second - hand Boilers, Etc. Wire or Setter orders promptly at tended to. End ofSuspensinn Bridge, Third ward, OIL 4JIT1, PA. f , , Muslin Underwear Exposition. Display and Sale to Last One Week. A display particularly attractive by reason of the exquisite beauty of the uudermuslins ehuwu and the exceedingly moderate prices that rule. No slightest indication of the very radical ad vances in price of all materials that go into ladies' lingerie. These undermuslio expositions are no small affairs here All the center aislo tables set aside for exclusive display of undermug lins. All side display racks cleared of other merchandise aod used entirely for lingerie display. Aside from tbe beauty of the display, which we leel sure you will greatly appreciate and admire, the one particular element which we know will appeal lo you are the prices Knowing that prices, after all, determine the success of these annual uudermusli i sales, we have provided a lot of special merchandise merchandise that you will easily recognize the exceptional value of. If wide assort ment, beauty of design and extremely moderate cost appeal to you, don't miss this sale. All have been carefully arranged and grouped according to price, each separate lot ticketed. WILLIAM B. JAMES, Babes at Bait. "Wot do je think." said the sailor, "of usln' live babies for bait? YVe done It in Ceylon." "Babies for bait? Fishing for shark?" "No. Crocodile. Baby bait Is the only thing for crocodile, and every Isiily uses it. Ye rent a baby down there for hall' a dollar a day. Of course," tin1 sailor went on, "the thing ain't as cruel as it son mis. No harm ever conies to the babies, or else.'o' course, their uiolhers wouldn't rent 'em. The kid Is simply sot on the soft mud bank of a crocodile stream ami the hunter lays li Id near him, a sure perlectlon. The crocodile Is lazy. He basks lu the sun In midstream. Noth In' will draw him iu to shore where ye can pot him. But set n little fat naked baby on tbe bank and the crocodile soon rouses up. In he conies, a greedy look lu his dull eyes, and then ye open tire. I have got ns many as four croco diles with one baby In a morning's llsbln". Some Cingalese women wot lives near g.iod crocodile streams make ns much as $J a week reginr out o' rentln' their babies for crocodile bait." Cincinnati Kniiilrer. Hai Job Waiting. "1 hear you're gelling to be a real sport," a veteran iu that line remarked to a youthful iieiiunlntance of the con servative sort recently married. The young mail repudiated any such intention. "Just placed a little Ut among the boys In the olllee. you know." ho add ed. "Put in ifl.M) and won $H in a trilling pool." "Well, that's a good beginning, any how," saltl the veteran. "You'll grow up after awhile. What did you do with the $10- put It on the races or open wine?"' "Bought n ton of coal nud a set of false teeth for my wife." was the re I'l.v. When the veteran revived his young friend had disappeared. "Oee," ho soliloquized, "that's n new oue In sport: If I win tomorrow guess I'll buy my mntlier-in-law a new cork leg and some darning cotton." New York J lobe. Given Her Choice. Little Harry's experience with death was limjtod to the decease of a pet canary which hail liocn sent to a taxi dermist and now adorned the parlor inanlcl. Ills grandmother, of whom he was very fond, was taken suddenly ill. For Rome time after he learned of her con dition lie sat In a brown study. Then, as if coming lo a sudden resolution, he tlptoetl Into the sickroom and. Am tlously approaching the lied, fixed his serious big brown eyes upon his dear relative and said, with a little quiver iu his voice: "Say, grandma, If you die, which would you rather lie hurled or stuff ed? 'Cause If you're burled we can't see you no more, but If you're stuffed wo can set you In the parlor." Grandma Immediately began to mend. London Scraps. Matter of Fact. A visitor from London found lu a cafe at Itotterdam a Dutchman who had been about a bit and who spoke English perfectly well. This Dutchman was smoking a china pipe of remarkable size and beauty, and the Londoner, an admirer and col lector of such biic-a-brae, took the lib erty to comment upon it. "You could not stumble upon a pipe like that every day," said the English man. The Dutchman took three or four whiffs at the pipe and then slowly re moved It from his mouth. "Certainly not without breaklug it," he said, gravely. London Chronicle. Soft and Light. A latly famed for her skill liwcook lug was entertaining a number of her friends at tea. Everything on the ta ble was much admired, but tbe excel lence of the sponge cake was especial ly the subject of remark. "Oh," exclaimed one of the guests, "it is so beautifully soft nod lighl! Do tell me where you got the recljie!" "I am very glad." replied the hostess, "that you lind It so soft ami light. 1 made II out of my own head.'' Illus trated Bits. How It Affected Him. Mrs. Myles When are you coming to call ou us? Mrs. Styles oh, I really don't know! "But you salt! you'd come soon and bring your husband?" "I know 1 did, and I asked him last night to come over, and he said he'd Ilk eto tlreani over It, and, do you know, dear, he had mi awful nightmare last uight!" Yonkers Statesman.. OIL CITY, PA. TTtTTTtT f III I I I I I I T T T w T T T The best place for your money now-a-days is in this strong sound bank. Safe from fire and theft besides Paying your bills by check not only gives you standing but keeps yoiir finances straight. We can give you advice or assistance on any financial matter. It is no trouble and we charge nothing for answering questions. The Franklin Trust Company FRANKLIN, PA. L IMS DON'T EXPERIMENT 6UARANTEE YOUR HEALTH If you suffer from Stomach, Kidney or Liver Trouble, Rheu matism or other blood dis orders, correct them now, PERKINS' NATIONAL HERBS 300 TABLETS FOR $1.00 Cuannltrd under Food and Drug! Act ol June 30, 1906. Certificate No. 2518 For Sle by W. HE. CROPP Gen. Agt., Tinnesta, Pa. Ps. sXuGusr Mqqck OFTICIAK Office ) 7K National Bank Building, OIL CITY, PA. Eyes examined free. Exclusively optical. PromptlT obtained, or FEC RETURNED. SO YIr IXPIRIINCI. OurCHARGIS ARK THE LOWEST. Bend model, phulo or ktkh lor eipert gear-ch and free, reltort on patentability. INFRINGEMENT nuits conducted belnrm all court I'atenta otttatned llmnrh lid. ADV1R. TIB-ED and SOLD, free. TRADE-MARKS, PEN. IONS and COPYRIGHTS quickly obtained. Opposite U. 8. Patent Office, WASHINGTON, D. C. A BEAUTIFUL FACE Send aitmp for I'arliculari and Testimonials ol the r-mcdv Ibal clrars thr Icmi'texion, 8-movet Skin l'nperfeclicns. Makes New iilsod and Improves the heltd. If you Inlu BEAUTYSKIN beneficial results are guaranteed or t loney refunded. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., Madlsoo I'lsce, Philadelphia. Pa. mm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers