(leant? la Hiooa Deep. Clean blood means a clean akin. No beauty without it. Cascareta, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Caacarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Little Prince Edward Island had 55,000 milch cows in 1898. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannnt reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only ont way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tlonal remedies. Diafneesis caused by an >n flamed condition of the mucous lining of tli« Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in (limed you have a rumbling sound or Imper feet hearing, and when it is entirely closec Deafness is the result, and unless the inflnra matlon can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearlm; will bj destrovrd fori-ver. Nine cases out of ten art caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed ( ondition of the mucous surfaces. We will (five One Hundred Dollars for anj oase of Deafnes-t (caused by catarrh) that cat. not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7flc. Hall's Family Pills are the best. New York City has twelve times as many churches as Berlin. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Syrup forcliildrpr teething, softens the gums, reduceslnllanimiv lion, allays pain, cures wind colic. !!sc.abotUe The first newspaper advertisements ap peared In 1652. * 4 An Empty Sack Cannot Stand Upright. ' can poor, 'weak, thin blood \ nourish and sustain the physical system. For strength of nerves and muscles there must be pure, rich, 'vigorous blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla is established as tht standard preparation for the blood by Hi many remarkable aires. Novel Way of Leveling a Cliimner. An engineer recently made an in teresting report to the British Insti j tution of Mining Engineers on the felling of a huge chimney which wai so high and constructed so strongly I that the prospect of demolishing i ( ! by the slow and expensive means of j breaking it down from the top was i appalling to the owners. The engi- | neer who -was intrusted -with the task I of devising a better way of taking it i down decided that he would try to fell it as one would fell a tree, with the exception that, of course, so situ i pie an expedient as chopping it down 1 was out of the question. He had tho problem, also, of making it fall to; the south, as it would wreck build ; ings if it fell in another direction. The chimney was two hundred and ! twenty feet high, with a base of twen- i ty-one feet. The workmen were set | to work cutting away the brickwork j on the south side. As fast as th« i bricks were taken out they were re j placed with wooden supports, whict j had spaces left, in ihem. After about i forty feet had been cut out the spaces ! were filled with tar and parafin, wooc J was piled high up around it and the fire was set. Six minutes after ward the chimney fell exactly on the line marked out for it. The cost ol the work was only a trifle compareo ■with what it would have been had the old-faehioned method of throwing the material down, bit by bit, from the top been employed. And, in ad dition, many thousands of bricks wertf saved for further use. nwwrrrrtirnw n niiiini M—N 1 1 mm I■ I IIHIHII ii M If you will I return this coupon and three one cent stamps to the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass., you will receive in return a copy of the 20th Century Year Book. This is not an ordinary almanac, but a handsome book, copiously illustrated, and sold for 5 cents on all news-stands. (Wc simply allow you the two cents you spend in postage for sending.) Great men have written for the Year Book. In it is summed up the progress of the 19th cen tury. In each important line of work and thought the greatest living specialist has recounted the events and advances of the past century and has prophesied what we may expect of the next. Among the most noted of our contributors are : Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, on Agriculture; Senator Chauncey M. Depew, on Politics ; Russell Sage, on Finance; Thomas Edison, 011 Elec tricity ; Dr. Madison Peters, on Re ligion; General Merritt, on Land War fare; Admiral Ilichborn, on Naval making a complete review of the whole field of human endeavor and progress. —iili—iiai'ii 11 n i»w *»a—hot Each article is beautifully and appropriately illustrated, and the whole makes an invaluable book of reference, unequaled any where for the money. Address J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. i Thompson's Eya Water IFOR WOMAN'S BENEFIT.;; a, Mnking Amulets t'kefnl. One of the uses of tho new fad for amulets is to have the medallion fitted with a brooch pin and hook on the back and wear it with the kimona,now so popular in the place of wrappers, tea gowns and other negligee gar ments. The medallion is nsed to pin the kimona together,leaving the neck lace hauging loosely about the neck. Style In Wedding TUngfi. "It is generally supposed that women regard their wedding rings as sacred," remarked a Chestnut street jeweler, "but as a matter of fact they don't. Superficially they may give you this impressiou, but when you come right down to it they don't let a little matter like sentiment stand in way of style. "Style in wedding rings? Why, to l;o sure. The ring that is now used in a narrow circlet of gold which looks like little more than a guard for the other rings on the finger. But that isn't the point. What I want to em phasize is the fact that women who were married years ago and whose wedding rings are the old style, mas sive affairs, are coming in every day to have them altered to conform to the present style. "Even elderly women with married danghters of their own seem to have little sentiment in the matter and have their heavy bands shaved down to the size required by the present fashion." —Philadelphia Record. Aprons for Ornament* The daintiest of aprons are shown in the shops where frills are made a science and a fine art. They are made of silk,of muslin and of bolting cloth, nnd all are trimmed with velvet rib bons, lace insertions and frills of pale lined silk or soft muslin. For the woinau who loves to preside over the tea table, for the girl who is a devotee of embroidery or fancy work, or for the young woman who simply likes to wear anythiug ostensibly useful, but undeniably coquettish, becoming and pretty, these aprons are things of beauty and joy as lon* they last. Very pretty ones are of bright lined silk with bordering frills of finely-pleated silk headed with narrow bands of black or colored velvet ribbon. The pockets are always odd and orna mental. In some of the muslin aprons the pockets are made of lace and adorned by rosettes of looped bebe ribbon or knots of crisp taffeta silk. Velvet strings are a French notion and a monogram embroidered on the pockets is considered very chau'e claire—as they say in Paris. ICave and Kxqui*lt*» Shawls. The Duchess of Northumberland has a shawl eight yards square which is so fine it can be folded into an or dinary coffee cup. Jt is made of the hair of a species of Persian cat, and thousands of the animals lost their beautiful coats t;> obtain the material for this particular shawl. The spin ning, weaving and fashioning of the shawl reqnired many years of labor. The wool from which the Bokhara shawls are made is cut from the breasts of the camels while the hair is fine and growing. Great care is taken that not a hair shall be lost audit is stored carefully until enough has been accnmulat :d to spin. The wool is ex quisite and soft, the yaru spun from it being dyed in the most beautiful colors. Lovely Oliudda shawls are as fine as those of the famous fairy godmother's, and, like hers, they, too, can lie drawn through a finger ring. Some people buy them each year for undergar ments. A coat which was owned by Louis XIV was made entirely from cobwebs and cost years of deft labor. A gown which was worn by Mme. de Montesuap was ma le of spun gold. Handsome Winter Skirts. There seems every reason to hope that common sense will be allowed to prevail and that the grotesque tight ness which lia-i disfigured a great many of the recent skirts will not be allowed to play havoc with our winter dresses. In the very nature of things, tho skirts are bound to be narrow and tight fitting, but there is absolutely 110 reason why we should submit to wearing those ugly and ungra-efnl skirts, in which it is ditlicult to walk, except in the mincing gait peculiar to China, and impossible to sit down with any reasonable hope of ever be ing able to get up again. Quite the newest gowns in Paris and Vienna, although they are fre quently made with tunics and draped double skirts, have none of them that exaggerated tightness which prevailed during the summer months, and there are some really charming gowns iu fine cloth, which have been made by a very well known Paris modiste, iu which the skirts hang with quite a graceful amount of fullness from be low the hips. One of these, for instance, is ma le in nut brown cloth, very fine in tex ture and light in weight. The under skirt is plain and fairly full, while the tunic is cut in vaudvke points and edged quite simply with some six or seveu rows of tine stitching. The upper part of this tunic, although it fits the figure beautifully just below the waist, has the iudescribable full ness and freedom which mark the gown at once with the chic distinction of novelty. The coat bodice which is very smartly trimmed in front with double rows of tiny gold buttons, may also be said to mark a new departure. In place of the jaunty little basques which havo biea so eminently characteristic of the smartest coats this season, the jacket in question has basques which are of some seven or eight inches in depth and which slope in front in a downward direction. Several stitched strappings of cloth )rim the upper part of this coat and the sleeves, as well as the rounded revers, while in front it shows, when open, a very pretty under bodice of smocked and gathered surah in a soft shade of green, which harmonizes to perfection with the brown of the cloth. A Pretty Woman'* Plaint. "Do you know I think that plain women have the best of it, after all," remarked a woman who is so unde niably pretty that she can afford to talk despondently about it. "Take the woman in business, for instance. Who would worry about a pretty wom an's success? A man admires her for her appearance, or else doesn't think abont her. His sense of chivalry isn't troubled, because he thinks every one else will be nice and considerate to a pretty girl. As far as business is con cerned, he doesn't think about her at all. He considers, on principal, that a pretty woman isn't useful o • clever. On the other hand, a very plain woman, who has neither beauty, stylo nor manner, is apt to rouse his sympathy. She may not want it, of course, but he unconsciously thinks, 'Well, here's a girl with odds against her. I'll give here a chance.' If she proves clever it doesn't come as such a surprise as when the pretty woman proves that she is not entirely devoid of intelli gence. Then men distrust the pretty woman and women envy her, aud she always gets credit for being designing and vain, whether she is or not. All of this does not render her position in life very genial, if she is poor and comparatively alone in the world; and if she adds graces of mind aud charm of maimer to beauty of face and figure she is not apt to make many well meaning friends." "Seems to me you are rather bitter this morning," observed the pretty woman's friend. "Which 'spiteful cat' has been criticising you now, I won der?" "None. They don't bother me very much. I was just thiuking of the trials and woes I have had which are directly traceable to what people call my 'piquaute face.' If I were hand some it would be different. I could be majestic and awe-inspiring then, but I'm only just ornamental enough to look useless in an office or a school room and not sufficiently dazzling to pose as a professional beauty. I don't care to be a typewriter or goon the stage, and in all other professions good looks seem to be a drawback. I mean it. They niav enable one to get positions easily. But do they help one to keep them? 1 tried teaching smull children once. Their mother accused me of flirting with her hus band—a short, stout, apoplectic man of fifty—because he remarked in her hearing that 1 was a tiue looking girl. Men —tho most of men whom my sis ters have married—don't marry really pretty girls. They marry plain girls with pretty points, girls whose looks depend a great deal upon the way they dress their hair or put on tlieir clothes. The average man fights shv of a beautiful wife. I shall probably end l>y marrying an old gentleman who wants an attractive person to preside at his dinner table." Aud then she sighed aud put on her hat— withont looking in the mirror.— New York Commercial Advertiser. riicnninc* from the Shoj»«, Ladies' cashmere golf gloves in bright shades. Graduated fringes in all colorings with knotted headings. Bath robes, house gowns and dress ing jackets in great variety. Long and short coats of broadtail fasteued with large rhinestone but tons. Satin-trimmed coats for men's wear iu all plain colors and dark mix tures. Fur toques trimmed with pompous or long plumes of tulle or chiffon and flowers. Large and small crystal pendant? in which violets and other flowers are incased. Newmarkets of double-faced chevio' melton cloth or kersey, with fui trimmings. Evening wraps with hoods attached of pink chiffon garnished with widt cream lace. Rich cream color laces having theii designs traced with small spangles oj rhinestones. Panne in white aud various light shades, showing hand paintings, foi evening wear. Superb collections of ermine capes, coats, colla 'ettes and neck scarfs, with muffs to match. Bonbounieres representing various devices set with mock jewels or en ameled designs. Many fichus of net or liberty edged with frills, showing rows of baby rib bon, fringe or lace. Boxed waist lengths of silk or satin marked at one half the original prices when sold by the yard. Fur wraps of every variety with long stole ends showing many heads aud tails arranged singly or in cluster. Many tastefully boxed dress pat terns including silk, wooleu materials and rich transparencies for evening wear. —Dry Goods Economist. Defences of l're'oriu. The latest reports of the armament of the circle of forts defending Pre' toria is that they are mounted with 24 and centimetre guns besides a number of guns of smaller caliber and quick-firing. The supply of projec tiles and explosives is said to be ample for a prolonged siege, and the small arm ammunition that was laid in before the war began amonntqd to 6,000,000 cartridges. SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. The use of silicate of soda in refin ing hfravy petroleums has been rec ommended. It is useful in making from spindle to cylinder oils. The silicate is used as a neutralizing agent after treatment with sulphuric acid, and it is said to be highly efficacious. It may be used either alone or in con nection with caustic soda. A cyanide leaching vat made of wood which had beeu in use for four years was recently t sted as to the percent age of values absorbed. A hole was bored one half inch deep the bot tom, and the shavings therefrom as sayed 813 per ton. Thus the absorp tion by wooden tanks is shown not to be as great as has beeu claimed. Professor Koch found during his recent trip in German East Africa that the natives fear calves as if they were lions. Cue day he got four natives to hold a calf for him while he inoculated it with the germs of malaria. When he cut the skin the animal kicked, whereupon the natives let it go, howled in terror, and climbed up trees. The trees on one side of an avenue in Brussels, Belgium, have developed the singular habit of shedding their leaves in August and budding and even blossoming again in October. On the other side, the trees retain their foliage until late in autumn. Botanists are inclined to see in this an effect of current leakage from the electric railway. The curious fact has been noted that the nitrifying bacterium, which ren ders such service iu purifying sewage aud other matter is the greatest de stroyer of the works of the water en gineer. The gradual crumbling and the turning to mud of cement mortar, an effect formerly attributed to the carbonic acid and other mineral sub stances of the water, proves to be the work of the nitrifying organism, and is a difficulty not yet easy to over come. In this case we have helpful bacteria that also do great harm. A Frenchman, named Faber, pro posed to build an electric road up Mont Blanc. In order to avoid the glaciers, he suggests tunnelling just below a ridge which extends along the side of the mouutaiu. The upper station will be located upon a rocky promontory some eight hundred feet below the top, which is simply a mass of ice. The load will be of the rack aud pinion type, and about six miles long. Power will be derived from a waterfall. Two million dollars is the estimated cost. A German paint for giving to wood great resistance to acids and steam under pressure consists of two parts by weight of gypsum and one part of asbestos stirred together with ox-blood into a thick liquid. The paint is ap plied evenly to wood perfectly dry. After a few hours another coat —with the addition of liuseed oil varnish— is given, and the work is dried several days in the open air or more quickly over a wood lire. The paint is then steamed slowly aud dried for a con siderable time. The coating adheres firmly, is cheap, harmless, odorless and tasteless, and therefore does not affect liquids in vessels covered with it. CETTiNC THE NEWS- Not lipstrictf>l by Any (luention of the Coat of Obtaining It. The collection of news is not re stricted by any question of the cost of obtaining it. Fifty years ago it was considered a remarkable feat for one newspaper to obtain information of an important event iu advance of com petitors. Today it is a matter of com ment if any paper fails to publish all the news desired by its readers. If a war is fought on any part of the earth there are reporters uu the firing line, and no expense is spared in collect ing aud transmitting by the quickest method avuilable full reports of any event of world-wide importance. To day the hiring of special trains, the stringing of a special liue of telegraph wire, the charter of a ship, the tittiug out of au exploring expedition, or any other great enterprise in the way of collecting information for the papers of the United States,is so much a part of the every day business of journalism that such things are accepted as a matter of course, or cause no more than a passing comment. Half a century ago the result of a national conveution or election was not known all over the country for weeks afterward. In the case of a national conventiou today telegraph wires lead from the convention hall into the offices of all the newspapers in the larger cities. An operator sits near the platform of the presiding of ficer, and with a muffled key he sends over the wire a full report of the pro ceedings, with a description of every incident of interest. At the other end of the liue is an operator at a type casting machine receiving the report aud putting it into lines ns fast as received. When a candidate for president has been nominated, ex tra editions of the daily papers are selliug ou the streets of cities a thou sand miles away almost before the ap plause for the winniug man has died out in the convention hall. The peo ple of every city and town in the United States where a newspaper is published would feel themselves cheated of their rights if they fuiled to receive news of the result of an election by midnight of the day on which the ballots were cast.—Walter L. Huwlev in Appletons' Popular Science Monthly. The cultivation of fruit trees along the highways of France is being ex tended each year. JL 1 ) r , f<9 11 (JH* > I >V The "Ivory" is a favorite shaving soap because it makes a profuse rich lather, which softens the beard to be removed and leaves the skin unharmed. It costs about one-fifth as much as the so-called shaving soaps and many who have used it for this purpose for years, will not have any other. The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made, fit it foi many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe or unsatisfactory. COPYRIGHT IB6C BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI Joe Jeffernon'R NH|». A good story is told of an experi ence of Joseph Jefferson, the great actor. A number ot years ago he played a one-night engagement in a small Indiana town, appearing in his favorite part of Kip Van Winkle. Iu the hotel at which he stopped was an Irishman "recently landed," who act ed as porter and general assistant. Judged by the deep and serious in terest which he took in the house, he might have been clerk, lessee and proprietor, rolled into one. At about G o'clock iu the morning Mr. Jefferson was startled by a violent thumping on his door. When he struggled into consciousness and real ized that he had left no "call" order at the office he was naturally very in dignant. But his sleep was spoiled for that morning, so he arose and soon after appeared before the clerk. "See here," he demanded of that individual, "why was I called at this unearthly hour?" "I don't know, sir," answered the clerk. "I'll ask Mike." The Irishman was summoned. Said the clerk: "Mike, there was no call for Mr. Jefferson. Why did you dis turb him?" Taking the clerk by the lapel of the coat the Hibernian led him to one side and said, iu a mysterious whisper, "He were shnoring loike a horse, sor, and Oi'd heerd the b'ys saying as how he were ouct afther shlaping for twiuty years, so Oi ses to mesilf, ses Oi, 'Moike, it's a coomiug onto him agin, and it's yei juty to git the cray ther out o' yer house iustautly!'"— Leslie's Weekly. The Bicycle 111 France. Everybody in Paris will soon be run ning on wheels. There are in France —chiefly iu Paris—over half a million registered bicyclists. Iu 1894 the number was 203,026, and last year 483,414. Each one pays a tax and carries a license. The above number does not include motor cycles aud motor cars, which are far more plenti ful in France than in England. Mo tor cycles are to be used by postmen for collecting letters in Paris. Don't Tobicco Spit and Smoke Yonr Lire iffif. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No To- Bac, the wocder-worl'cr, tliatnjakcs weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address SterliDe- Remedv Co.. Chicago or New York. In France thetheatres hire men to laugh at comedies. To Cora Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartio. 10c or Sse. U&C.C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. VITALITY low, debilitated or exhausted cured by I Jr. Kline's invigorating'lonic. FRE : 81 trial bottle for 2 wei ks' treatment. Dr. Kline, Ld., U3l Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 1871. Type are slightly less than one inch in length. Not a single infectious disease is known in Greenland. Educate Yonr Bowels TVttn cascareo. Candy Cathartie, cure constipation forever. 10c. 26c. If C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money. About 20,000,000 false teeth are manufac tured annually in the United States. What do the Children Drink ? Don't give them toa or coffee. Have you tried tho new food drink called GRAIN-O ? It is delicious and nourishing and takes the place of coffee. Tho tnore Grain-0 vou give the children the more health you distrib ute through their systems. Grain-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee but costs about as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. Try Crain-O! ■ Insist that your grocer gives you GRAIN-O ■ Accept no imitation. CARTERS INK Scientifically made— ►- Therefore THK BEST. Had Been 'J liere Before. Mrs. Gillian—"Now, Mrs. Wyckoff. we really must say goodby. Dear, while you put your overcoat on, I wan* to tell Mrs. Wyckoffa secret." Mr. Gillian—"All right. I'll just go and get my hair cut and meet yon at the corner." Piso's Cure is the meilieine to break tip children's Coughs ami Colds.—Mrs. M. <jr. BLUNT, Sprague, Wash., March s, 18'Jl. The first balloon ascent was made in 1783. now Are "Your Kidney* T Dr. Hobbs' Sparagus Pillsoureall kidney Ills. Sanji pie free Add. Sterling Rented" Co.. ChinacoorN. Y. Immense coal ilelds have been discovered n Zululnnd. TDtßuffsN Cures all Throat and Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP Get tliejreuuine. Refuse substitutes. Vis SURE/ Dr. Hull's Pills cure Dvstepsia. Trial, so for St, DYSPEPSIA " For six years 1 was . victim of dye |ie|»sla in its worst form. 1 could cat no thine but milk toast, und tit times my stomach would not retain and digest even that. Last March 1 began taking CASCAKETS and since then [ have steadily improved, until I am as well as I ever was In my lire." DAVIU 11. Muitpnv, Newark. O. H CATHARTIC wmwum TRADE MARK RCGtSTZRCO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Gccd. D« Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2oC. M)e. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Stirling Herat dy Company, < hlcag", Montreal. 3mm York. lift TO DAP Sold ami guaranteed by all drug flU-IU-DAb K jst* to CTJRE Tobacco Habit. j BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR the grandest and fastest itellingbook ever published, ' Pulpit Echoes [>R LIVING TJiCTnS FOR HEAD AND HEART. ontaining Mr. MOODY'H bent Sermons with 60# drilling Stories, Incidents, Personal Experiences etc., as tolA By D. L. Moody With a complete history of his life by ISev. CIIAR.F. fciOHN, Pastor of Mr Moody a Chicago Church for five yean* ind an Introduction by Rev. LYMAN AIiHOTT.It.B. brand new, flOOpp.,ft« , aufi/Wfy if/wra'*'*/. £"7*1,000 inoew ACJICNTB WANTiCD Men and Womon. CC7' Sak* immense a harvest time for Agents. Send for terms Us A. D. WOUTIIINGTON & CO., llurtloU, Uaa. •MttfNSetMUMMNMN > 1 Q FOR 14 CENTS ! ® We to ff a > n this vear 200X00 ( > # »evv customers, and hence offer I I j) 1 Pkg. City Garden Beet, l<<e i I H Pkg Karl'et Emerald Cucnmberlfic | > 2 %W\W\iwß 4 " kaOroaao Market Lettuce, luc , , Z rmiwlßta 1 " Strawberry Melon, 150 , 5 fIRKw 1 M Radish, 10c 1 ' 0 fii 1 " Early Ripe Cabbage, 100 I • 1 *' Early Diuner Onion. 10c I I 1 fwH Worth SI.OO, for 14 eente. sl.uU i | # mm Kfi Above 10 Pkgs. worth SI.OO, we will < 1 A mt/i M mail you free, together with onr I ) mmi MM great Catalog, telling all about i \ 5 ff/ M SALIER S MILLION DOLLAR POTATO i > 18l H npon receipt of this notice A 14c. ( . XMM JM stainpa. We invite your trade, and ' [ ▼ Hb know when yon onoe try Sal zcr'v 1 [ " you will never do without. 1 > A aißPSwP'iuoo Prizes on Salter's 1 tar- I > m eat earliest Tomato Giant on earth AC— i ) 2 JOHN A. BALUR SEED CO., LA CUOSSX, » 18. , > T rem ßedy 8 edy fl?P^^^o^ MALARIA,CHILLS&FEVER Crlppe and Liver Diseases. •,< KNOWN ALL nitt'CGIITI. 35 Cl ARNOLD'S nasi?,, COUCH Prevent. WOLDS KILLER I ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED.! CIWSBV'.S SV\ iIDISII ASTHMA C'L'KE I does this. A trial pa.-kage mailed free. I COLLINS BKOS. MKIHCIKE CO., ST. Louis, Mo ■ MTATTTfYNT TUIS PAPKK wuen KKI'LY IJtLLIII -LIUIN INU TO AUVIVS. NYNII— 1. nDODQV NEW DISCO VERT; fin. Ul4 W n O I quick rali.f and eon. won. •UM. B»i*i of tMtiniooi.l. and lOdkjre'trMtsMn. Tree. Dr. ■. U. »lIU I »0««. In ■. iiiuu. taj Bm Ccush *rup. Taste* Good". CaeM Dd la time. Bold br druyfiM. |H i g|s I 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers