11 |up / I A PROMPT, EFFECTIVE | REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OF '-{ Lumbago, Solatia*, Hauralgla, Ktdnay Troubla and Kind rati Dlaaaaaa. | GIVES QUICK RELIEF 83 Applied externally it affords almost in m sr.mt relief from pain, while permanent reimlts are being effected- by taking it in -55 finally,.purifying the blood, dissolving 5 l^ie poisonous substance and removing it vR crom the system. gj DR. S. D. BIjAND 6 Of Brewton, Ga.» writes: SKI • I'had been a b-utlVrer for a number of fears £f with Lumbago aud Hbouraatißm In my Mini* and 5$ It*:.?*, and tried all tbo remedies tliat 1 could 2a anther frojri luedloul wurks. and also consulted P.J Ith a number of the bent phyblrlans. but found He in.tiiliitf that f?avo tin* relief obl«lncd from L3 t, DUOPS." I il prescribe it in my practice Se r »r rliounmtiam and kindred diseases." DR. C. L. GATES £ Hancock, Minn., writes: fcy :9 "A little gtrl here bad Huch a weak ba» keaosen M £3 |,y Ktu-umatlsm and Kidney Trouble that she ■■ i c-.'U!d not stand on her feet. The moment thev 3 put tier down on the doore lie would scream with 2* I-ains. 1 treated her wij,h "M>Koi J S M and today £9 »Ml- runs around as well and huppy aw can be. 2? 1 pi escribe "11- DROPS" for u.«y patients aud uee Hit mmy practice." I FREE si* If you are suffering with Rheumatism. 3 Lumbago, Sciatica. Neuralgia, Kidney m Trouble or any kindred disease, write to 9 us for a trial bottle of "5-DROPS." PURELY VEGETABLE 0. "5-DROPS" is entirely free from opium. b| cocaine, morphine, alcohol, laudanum. and otherj>similar ingredients, i>3 Large size Kottle l *5.»|{«PS M (800 Doies) #I.OO. iur Male by Drugglnta K SWAHSON RHEUMATIC CURI COMPANY, M Dept. 43. Ki Lake Street, Chicago ISHMBEHHI !Sew Rotary Sw Idea Sewintf ichines iw (0 etmlpped i to produce an ly to meat th e I for our high lead pa sawifie ma ffared at any Damtictu stitch nnd doai ovorythlnf any othar tavlof ma cl.l'io will, and dcas It Jiatter and oaalar. shipped on 90 day. Trial. WairaaUd for a term of yoara. (We Are The First tc offer tha people the new type Rotary Savtnc Machine at less than $65.00 to $76.00. High prices must slve way before oa. You Must Have our new, elaborate Sawing Machine Book ar.d Illustrated catalotue In two colors, about 40 laifje pagea. 11x14 In. Tba finest sewing machine bock ever published. Fully describes tha newest Rotary and other atandard machines at 'trices aarer equaled, h U hraa to you. Write I* I \ 1° PATENT Good Ideas 112 1 . Mil m may be secured b/ l 1 ; \ 5 j\B §5 our aid. Addroas, 1 | WE PATENT RECORD, Baltimore, Mrt. ' i l»c ? *wnt Record ®l.(X)i>cr annum ifli 'ilia in i in i rifc 112 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS 3 M EJ es t Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. jU - > Use in time. Sold by druggists. pi FAIRBANKS CAS or GASOLINE E N G I N E S. I here are t many Gas and Gasoline Engines and ONE "FAIRBANKS" Some resemble it in construction, others in name BUT THERE IS ONLY ONE FAIRBANKS ENGINE. that excell in quality and moderate in cost Vutical from one to ten horse power. thref horse power up- THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY, 701 Arch St., Philadelphia. CHARLES L>. WING, Agent, Laporte. THE STATE TREABURERBHII* Republican Nominee As Viawed By An Editor Frorri His Home County. In commenting upon the contest for stiite treasurer, the editor of the Holll» daysburg Register say a: "Hon J. Lee Pluinnier, the Republl j can candidate for state treasurer, has ' the ability to lill that office with | credit. This fact cajinot be success fully contradicted; besides, he is ■ known by the people with whom ha | lias lived all his life to be perfectly ; honest and reliable and a man of tba l strictest Integrity. While not a Pro hibitionist, lie is a man of the strictest temperance habits. These are facta which cannot be controverted. He was regularly nominated in a Republican state convention, composed of dele gates who were chosen by the Republi. ; cans of the various counties of tho state. "There was every opportunity for any man in the state to contest the nomination with him. He was nomi nated fairly as the candidate of his party. Now. what Republican can havo ; n vulid excuse to vote against him* Is it better that tho Republicans as ; sist a Democrat into one of the best offices of the state, or vote for their . candidate, who Is In every way worthy? The opposition is trying hard to raisa a respectable tight against him, hist the only possible show they will have will be through the votes of Republi cans. Why should we aid them In their work?" A Word to State Republicans. "The Kepulilicau party is not re sponsible for (be misuse that has been made of It In Philadelphia," says the editor of the .luniata Herald. "The truth is that it deserves credit for cor recting the wrongs that have been com mitted bv soran of its faithless mem bers. The corruption that has existed In Philadelphia is wholly of a loca", character and the party in the state has no connection with or relation to it. Why should the party elsewhere suffer on account of it? Why should state candidates be defeated because of what hits occurred in a single city? If tho sins of a few were to be visited upon the party when could it ever be suc cessful? The Republican ticket is com posed of honest men, was fairly nomi nated and la entitled to the support of every member of the party, be »ure to vote for it." Msonlficent Malsrlrv la Pr«dl*ted. fOLEYSHONEY«®TAR Cures Golds: Prevents Pneumonia To Cure tuunlipiitUiii IVoretcr* •< -aiscuicis Cu.iui.\ * .ithurjic. 10c or 250 'ft?. 0 f;ito eiiro, (intiffisfs r« fund nioiu* r ww—bi 112 Gapiul Bit J Su: plus. $450,000.00 I It MaKes 1 No Difference A where you live, you can avail of the security and l account in this Cotn -1 by doing your We pay 3 per cent, compound interest on Savings. Write for the booklet, "Banking by Mall/* LACKAWANNA COMPANY 404 Lackawanna Avenue SCRANTON, PA. V SOUTH LONDON. Mt Waltar Hrtanl MM DOOM Ilitraft luff Sketches of That AnoUnt Por tion of Ike City. Besides being a novelist, Sir Walter Besant in a historian, particularly the historian par excellence of Ixmdon. For the last few years he has written ! articles on historic London for The i Pall Mall Magazine. The last series jto appear were oa South London; these, kke the others, are now present ed in book form under their original title and with the elaborate and artistic illustrations which so enhanced their value when they were printed in the magazine. The publishers of "South I-ondon" In this country are Frederick A. Stokes Company. "The chief difficulty in writing 'South London,' " said Sir Walter in his pre face, "has been that of selection from the great treasures which have accum ulated about this strange spot. The contents of this volume do not form a tenth part of what might be written on the same plan, and still without includ ing the history proper of the borough." The author courteously acknowledges his obligations to tte artist "Mr. Perry Wadham, who has ro faithfully and so cunningly carried out the task commit ted to him." "My South says Sir Walter, "extends from Battersea in the west to Greenwich in the east, and from the river on the north to the first rising ground on he south. This rising ground, a gentle ascent, the beginning of the Surrey hills, can still be observ ed ou the high roads of the south— ( Claphain, Brixton, Camberwell." At first London had no communlca ■ tion with the rest of the world, 'xcept i>y water. Then a causeway was built across the Southwark marshes. The second road connected with the high road to Dover; it is now called High Street Borough. It formed an entirely open and broad communication; it be gan not far to the west of St. Saviour's Church, opposite the Roman Trajectus, the mediaeval ferry, now St. Mary Overies Dock. Ferries were soon es tablished across the Thames, and at length the marshes were drained. Pre historic remains prove thai all this was done during the stone age and the bronze age. Centuries passed by. "High Street of South walk is now a crowded thor oughfare, because it Is the main artery of a town containing a population of many hundreds of thousands. In the last century it was quite as animated, because it was one of the main arteries by which Ixjndon was In communica tion with the country. An immense number of coaches, carts, wagons, and 'caravans' passed every day up and down the High Street, some stopping or starting In Southwark it self; some going over London Bridge to their destination lu the city." Among the relics of the bygone aces stands to-day the remains of the p.Uace of the Bishop of Winchester. As en* of the Bishops of Winchester would have made a very good modern Police Court Judgs and District Attorney combined, it may not be Inappropriate at this place to tell something about the punishmeuts of the tim» That were ordered by the church. "There was whipping, but not tne terrible, mur derous flogging of the eighteenth cen tury; there were hangings, but not for ev#rything. Mostly to the credit of *he church, punishment was designed «otto crush a man, but to shame him Into repentance and to give him a chance of retrieving his character. A man might be set in the stocks or put in pillory, and so made to feel the heln ousness of his This punish ment was like that which was inflicted on a schoolboy; the thing done, the boy is taken back to favor. The eighteenth century branded him. imprisoned him, transported him, made a brute of him, ] and then hanged him. Did a woman ; speak despltefully of authority—pre- ! sumptuous quean—set her up in the , cage beside the stoulpes of London ' Bridge, that every one should see her j there and should ask what she had 1 done. After an hour or two take her down: bid her go home and keep hence forth a quiet tongue in her head. This leniency was only for offenses moral and against the law. For freedom of tnought or doctrine there was Bishop Bonner's belter way. And It was a way inhuman, inflexible, unable to for- i give.'' Sir Walter Besant, In showing how ! the. palace either contains or has at ' some time contained the work of nearly every archbishop in succession, Inci dentally remarks, in speaking of some of the improvements executed by the various prelates, that the Chicheley Tower, commonly known as the "Lol lard* Tower," "never had any connec tion with Lollards, and that all the talk about the unhappy Lollard prisoners is Without foundation." And, in a word, which will explain why I have given an apparently dispro portionate space to Lambeth Palace, iauthoi thtio «ii<is his chapter on the sc;> al houses of ?cnth London; "Lam beth Palace, the only palace in the \\ hole of South London, is a monumeiv of English history from the twelfth century downward. Kenulngton «i>- l.eara at intervals! Eltham Is a holiday liot:se; R ecnwich practically begins with the Tudois. Lambeth, like Wesi tniuster or St. Paul's belongs to the long history of the English people." From the fragmentary "lives" of .-Shakespenre we have learned consider able about the Globe Theatre, but 'in South London" we find a great deal more and also much about the Bear Garden, Biat kniars, anil Paris Garden the Hope Theatre, the Swan Theatre, and the Rose. It is all very interest ing. And of the South London of to-day. there u. much that is of interest, much thai is fascinating, albeit the tourist to Lorxlor. can see it all if h« only take* the trouble. l«ni|»«riaK Ktael. T.ie tempering of steel with uniform results is a feat hardly to be achieved by the most expert artisan. A German Inventor had devised a process for ac curately obtaining any desired degree of hardness, the variations being effect ed by changes in the liquid used, and depending on the fact that graded re sults may be produced by the use of wilk In varying forms and dilutions hat is, by frei-h and skimmed milk sweet and sour whey, fresh and old butters: "k, c.nd different mixtures with water. The various stnges of acidifica tion of milk are also said to give all the effects of hardening in oil and oth •* fat mixtu/ca. I lIIF * mg -1© to 112 I and look in the glass— u will see th •; .. • t • You can ' s help pock .-ring—it makes you pucker P JI ) X to think of tasting it. V | I J J jj By the use of so called cheap Baking J \j\ /f\ fc Powders you take this puckering, injurious Alum fi J 112 I \ right into your system—you injure digestion, \\\ 1 y P and ruin your stomach. vL Ijj AVOID AF Vl* V I Royal is made from pure, re ' Ov: s more I u a v ' e the profit oi qu <f - irinm NcCa II Pattern ■•old In tkeTynfte4 , . Q C? A Btat*« tfcaa of uif at her m»k« of pattern. This is Ml I • i , f\ MMgnt 0I tktir St?la, accuracy and simplicity. • McC«l]'« Ma*«*lne( The Queen of Fashion) ha» - sabsrAbars rtia« Ladies'Mafatine. One mares phcphi diet« pr*Mmw&m W | AMTMS'TUI McCALLCO,XtmYe* J ,I#SLM i fioiev'.S Jhfonsv aurf 7V< » HCa N.- y r' ; > / '* f ' ;r <! " n ,lL * rt heals lungs aadstops the cough < • •' 3 2 SU!"C fCSOURfi Let an EXPERT BUGGY MAKER "T.TL'T INSIDE FACTS of oar vehicle interests, bought two buggies from the same house the other day. One cost <Ji3.oo more than the other. Then he took the buggies •11 apart to see just why one was higher priced than the other. Here is what he found out : JBoth buggies had exactly the same seat and back, same size body, siime \vhcc!-i, shai'.s and everything else, except th« the higher priced one had 14-oz. cloth trimmings instead of Kerato!, found in the cheaper ; a leather boot, mTteTd of rubber j ■ better axle, and the finish on the woodwork was slightly bcttvr, but not very much. Read the difference—and learn how easily price can be raised without changing the grade, in a buggy. SIDE BY SIDE: Difference in Cost $3.30. Difference in Price to You SIB.OO. /"" N > What do they give for the l a exceed $3.80, yet On their Cheap Buggy On the Best Make and sellin B these bu 8" Seat and back (see fllustratious). Same ®' eS house Mr. Shaw ant°rattler. sSme! from, was fooling the house, or the house was fool- Ste?| m .o?k™? CheS ' lafne! y° u - In « ther CMC « y£i! Hickory add elm wheels (low grade). Same. . were r , 3V ini» <IBOO for ComnwnMle Lone distance. Were P a > ln S » la '°° lor WheeJa p* n«ed by dlppla*. Same. *1 80 worth 6-om. bead llnlnr In top. Same. BO v\ortn. 112 4 a oTcio th We teD x° u Leither <u»rter top ' r a^ er BooU because we believe in a square Tinlah, cheap Slisht'ly bettei. [ " There isn't one parchaser of a buggy in a hundred—no, nor in a thousand—who can tell of his own knowledge the c*uie for the difference in prices between one buggy and another. 1 "W; walte our own buggies. A WELL BRACEDJEAT Wetre the only general merchandising concern in the world that does. /" n R """"N Hie prices to you on our different buggies are based on the Jam 112 I j-l j j «BL manufacturing costs. /; f| j j | i'i \|A We make the samt small percentage of profit on a £70.00 rig that we do on a £4.0.00 outfit, and you get full value for every dollar you pay. v The difference in our buggies is not merely in <he price. It's If you are • judge of bnggy values we ask you to compare our vehicle! with «njr make you know of, price for price. USED ON ALL OUR WORK. If you are not an expert judge ot buggy values, you are safe to order from us, for we give honest value foi. every dollar you spend. And we guarantee you satisfaction. The thousands who have purchased vehicles of us write us of their perfect satisfacton and of SIO.OO to jjo.oc WHAT OTHERS SAY savcJ on cach one - Ward Pi" - New Vehicle Catalogue tells the truth without exaggeration. I . A. U TATLOR, Albion. 111. describes in detail just the rig you want. Safe rig, safe price, safe house "The tt»ber in yoorwork stoortour ujuun- , , .. , , -r—• tataroeai well. Used IL4 years." to ciea! with. Let us send vou tins vehicle catalogue, free. Remember, P. H. HAWKINS, . . _ r ' Cashier Bank Columbus, Mont Mr. r. L Shaw, an expert vehicle man, looks after your interest. . "M; WH lob Is far ahead of the S6O to S'.O A H,.„ baaanes sold hern." JNO. T. Carter. Address, . Montgomery Ward & jCo., Chicago
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers