RHEUMATISM I want crery chronic rheumatic to throw war all medicines, oil liniments, all plasters, nnd live MUNVON'B IUIKUMA TIHM REMEDY a trial. No matter what your doctor may say, do matter what your friend may any, no matter how c a(aiiinfc nil uvur once to ycnr drnc- &NEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA 3 IIAXC.'S HF.IISIXF FKOSI nKI). MODF.KX mi' VAX WINKLE, prejudiced rod may be against all adver Used remeoiea. do nt once to ynr om rlst and Ret a bottle of tb. KHEUM f lHM HF.MEnY. If It foil to live until faction, I will refund your money. Muoyoa Remember tbla remedy rontnlna no sal IctIIc acid, no opium cocaine, morphine or other harmful drum. It la put up under the fuarantce of the 'Pure Food and Drug Act. For aala br all druggist. Prtea. 23c. 1LMMU WANTED WANTF.D-Acttve, energetic men to repre sent ua. Profitable lxwitlcns. Hustlers Blake big money. Cash weekly advances. Com plete outfit free. Write Immediately for out liberal offer. W. T. Hoon A Co. OLD DOMINION M'KCKRIF.B. Mention this Taper. Richmond, Va. I.ADT AfHCWT WAHT1II, 1VANTEI-Lsdy agents In all parts of thi V United States to advertise and sell "Black-Crow Plockeus" to wearers. Good com tnlnlon. Address. Hi.aoe Crow Ptockik Co.. Newton. N. Q Wire Prepares Fiinilly ItreakfUHt, Then Kills Herself. Reading. Mrs. Amanda McGow an, wife of former Assemblyman Howard 0. McOowan, president of the Berks County Farmers' Institute, ended her life by hanging herBelf to I the headboard of a bed at her home at Gelgertown, this county. She had becu 111 for a year or more, but Sunday was well enough to accom pany her husband on n drive. She arose earl? and prepared jreakfant for her huhband and son, Preston, aged 14 years. Mr. Mc Oowan went away on business and returned about 10 o'clock. Call.ng to his wife he received no response and upon lnvettigatl.m found her body. Sne had fastened one end of a rope to the headboard and the other end clie made Into a loop and thrust her head through It. There were still same signs of life when she was found and a physician was summon ed, but the woman died before he arrived. She was 4 4 years of age and a daughter of Harmon Gelger, of Uelgertown. Somen lint Changed. Mistress (making an unexpected raid on the kitchen) Who Is this Mary? Mary M-me b-rother, please 'm Mistress Indeed! But he doesn'l resemble you in the least. Mary No'm. But we was remark' able alike before e 'ad 'Is beard shaved off. The Sketch. Electrification of the Swedish rail roads will follow an exhaustive search for the most economical meth od of operation. BACKACHE IS IUDXEYACHE. Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will Never Return. Only one way to cure an aching back. Cure the cause, the kidneys. Thousands tell of cures made by Doan'a Kidney Pills. John C. Coleman, a prom inent merchant ot Swalnsboro, Q a . , says: "For several years my kidneys were affected and my back ached day and night. Iwaa laneuld. nervous and lame In the morning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief that fol lowed has been permanent." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. j DISKS LIFE FOR I ItlKXD. AltiM lm Youth I,onc3 Arm In Heroic Attempt At Rescue. Altoona. John Hull, aged 4, risk ed his life and gave one arm to save his friend and playmate, Clare De '.ozier, of the same age, from death at a carpet cleaning establishment conducted by his father. The boys were playing In the plant while It was in operation, and young I IJelozier was caught In a rope and j thrown Into the "racker." Hull, In I trying to rescue him, was caught in ! some btltlng, whisked to the shaft Iiik. whirled around several times and tossed to the floor, his left hand and forearm so badly mangled that it had to be amputated and his rlg.it arm fractured in several places, the bioken bone3 protruding from the flesh. Delczler escaped Injury. OPEX F.Yh'S OF JUSTICE Mean Joke On A Parrot. An ardent golfer, by way of a Joke, dropped a golf ball into a nest hia ancient parrot had built In the cor ner of Its cage. Polly sat with ex emplary patience on her novel egg, and appeared pretty well heart broken when the week went by and she found herself unrewarded. At last parrot flesh and blood could stand it no longer. A terrible screeching brought her owner down stairs at 3 o'clock one morning. "What's the matter, Polly?" he asked, as he noticed the bird's beak was chipped trying to get the egg's Interior. "Matter!" screeched the bird. "Great Scott! I'm bunkered!" Tit Bits. Figure Duck Of Judge's Bench No Longer Blindfolded. Danvllle.-Mn repainting the court room of the Mountour County court house the question arose as to weth er or not the large figure of Justice behind the Judges' bench should ap pear as In the past, -blindfolded, or with her eyes open. The question wan submitted to Judge C. C. Evans, who decided that In the future "Justice" should pre side over the Montour County courts with the time-honored bandage re moved from her eyes. ROMANCE OF ItOF.lt WAIt. Soldier Weds In Pittsburg English Girl Who Nursed lliin.- Plttsburg. A romance begun dur ing tne Boer War was happily con cluded here by the arrival of Mis Louise Holden, of Liverpool, Eng. The young woman was met by Thomas McKee, and an hour later they were married. McKee was wounded during the Boer War and was nursed by Miss Holden. What's- Yours? It was 1:30 A. M. In the cheap, allnight restaurant. "What's yours?" said the "tough" waiter, arms akimbo. We gave our orders about ten min utes the waiter served my friends, but left me nothing. "What's yours?" he asked, ad dressing me. "Why," said I, surprised and re proachful, "I ordered corned beef and cabbage at least ten minute ago!" The waiter's Jaw became a trlffle more aggressive than usual. "Well." ha aiM crrlmlir J t'll stick to It?" The Bohemian M or a lna 'IUqUIiIU! Graduate Nurses At Heading. Reading. The annual commence- ; ment exercises of the graduating j class of nurses of St Joseph's llos j pllal Training School for Nurses i took place here, and unlike former years was private. There were three graduates, namely, M'ss Mary C. I Keating, of Heeklersville; .Miss Nel ! lie M. Purcell, of Pottsvllle, and Miss I Ida K. Deeds, of Shilllngton. "COFFEE DOESN'T HURT ME" Tales That Are Told. "I was one of the kind who wouldn't believe that coffee was hurting me," ays a N. Y. woman. "You Just couldn't convince me Its use was con nected with the heart and stomach trouble I suffered from most ot th time. "My trouble finally got so bad I had to live on milk and toast almost entirely for three or four year. Still I loved the coffee and wouldn't be lieve it could do such damage. "What I needed was to quit codes and take nourishment In such form as my stomach could digest. "I had read much about Poatum, but never thought It would fit my case until one day I decided to quit coffee and give it a trial and make sure about It Bo I got a package and carefully followed the directions. "Soon I began to get better and was able to eat carefully selected foods without the aid ot pepsin or other dlgestants and It was not long before I was really a new woman physically. "Now I am healthy and sound, can eat anything and everything that comes along and I know this wonder ful change Is all due to my having quit coffee and got the nourishment I needed through this delicious Postum. "My wonder U why everyone don't give up the old' coffee and the trou bles that go with It and build them selves up as I have done, with Postum." Easy to prove by 10 days' trial of Postum In place of coffee. The re ward U big. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letterT A mm appears frost time to time. Tbey w avmauiM, trae, mma rail of Utcrect. Acquit Man Accused Of Murder. Pottsvllle. H. A. Conners, a tele graph operator, who was on trial for the murder of Superintendent Cyrus Smith, of the Wilbert Coal Company, was acquitted after the Jury deliberated only half an hour. It was shown that Smith assaulted Conners and the hootlng was done in self-defense. Curries Message Of Bursted Hani. Pottsvllle. Miles of country land were covered by the bursting of the Blackwood Dam at Swatara Creek. The dam contained 5,000,000 gallons of water, and scores of persons es caped drowning by the warning spread by an unknown boy on mule back. Heavy rains caused the disaster. Fire Destroys Lone Woman's Home. Lewlstawn. Fire originating from a defective flue destroyed the residence of Matilda Firth, with its concents. The building was located on the Llllyvllle Road, nine miles east of here. The loss was $1600. The owner U the widow of a Civil War veteran and, bo far as Is known, has no means of support except a small pension. Sutton's Jlondnmun Makes Good. Berwick To relieve the over drawn condition of the borough treasury that resulted from Tax Col lector Sutton's disappearance with 115,000, one of his bondBmen made a payment of $6,000 to give imme diate relief. The Bchoo, Board ha(J no money to pay teachers salaries or othor bills that bad been accumu lating, and the borough and poor ac counts wereaUo overdrawn. Joseph C. Baird. of Washington, treasurer of the Marlanna Mine re lief fund, received a check for li . 000 from the Citizens Relief Com mlttee of Philadelphia. With one exception this was the largest etna-le u7,tr;b2u9t,i6o8n3io2.the fupd-whi !o! Stanley Cescek, Paul Dege and John Dunk were arrested at Du bol by Chief Logan, charged with the murder of Frank Kletacklll, whose J?i y ?l i0Snd ,n Benn"' Creek arier be had been missing for several month Coal Miner Learns After Ten Years His Hank Has Failed. Altoona. A modern edition of Rip Van Winkle was discovered hero when W. A. Porter, auditor to dis tribute funds among he creditors of the banking firm of Gardner, Morrow & Co., of Hollldaysburg, sat to make another distribution. Patrick Mor rlsey, a coal miner, living on the top of the Allegany Mountains, who had $3,050 on deposit, never knew the bank had failed until ten years afterwards, when he came to draw a little money out, and found a cloth ing store where the bank had been. He was dumbfounded when told It was defunct. Ills claim will be opposed. DANCING ENDSIN DIVORCE. Husband Objected To Having Other Men Hug HI Wife. Scranton. Grace C. Markell, of Sornnton, obtained a divorce here. She declared her husband would not let her dance, and In her testimony said: "We have gone to dances and had music at home, and If tho gentle men would ask me to dance my husband would order me not to do so in Btich a way as to attract at tention. His reason for it was not my des re to dunce, but ho did not like to have the men hug me. He stated that in so loud a voice that all the guests heard it." STATE ITEMS. Captain Phaon Sheldy and First Lieutenant Warren Purto, of Com pany G, Fourth Regiment, N. G. P., at. Pine Grove, were re-elected unani mously for another period of five years. The Emails High Sehool graduates have secured Rev. Dr. Madison C. Peters to deliver the address at their annual commencement, May 29. Samuel Reber, of I'pper Tulpe hocken Township, ha3 been appoint ed by the Berks County Court as one of the supervisors to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Adam Sny der. Charles XV. Miller, John A. Schwoyer, Dr. N. Z. Dunkelberger, Arthur Bonner, Jacob F. Zimmer man and Charles A. Stein will apply for a charter for an intended cor poration to be called the Farmers' Hank, of Kutztown. The capital will be $50,000, divided into 500 shares of $100 each. The Carpenter Steel Works, at Riverside, are working overtime, and have the busiest season they have had for the last two years. William Baker, of Earlyvllle caught a carp weighing nineteen pounds and measuring 32 inches In length. Isaac Heydt, of Shanesville, cele brated his 84th birthday anniver sary. He has been postmaster for a half century. Mrs. Anna Mary Snyder, of Yoe, scratched her finger a few days ago with a brass pin. Blood poisoning set In and her arm is now twice its normal size, while her life is in dan ger. George Weaver, after being ab sent from York In Edgeley, North Dakota, for twenty-five years, has re turned to hU home to remain per manently. Caught by a premature explosion of a blast before he could escape to a place of safety at Manle Hill Col- liery, Edward McCong, of St. Nicho las, was killed. The American Steel and Wire Company, at Pittsburg, a Subsidiary of the United States Steel Corpora tion, It is reported, has cut the price on wire nails 10 cents per hundred. George W. Custer, a retail Jewel er of Du Bols, died after an Illness of several months. He was 41 years of age, Lloyd E. Stewart, aged 6, of Al toona, was operating a home-made merry-go-round three weeks ago, when his left hand was caught be tween the pivot and the board. Lockjaw developed and the boy died. Daniel Sheesley, one of the five men named as a member of Harris burg's first Board of Health, has notified Mayor Meals of his disin clination to serve. The positions on the board were eagerly sought. The Firemen's Relief Association of Allentown, has elected these offi cers for the ensuing year: C. H. Cohn, president; O. G. Blumer, vice president; Aaron J. Henry, secre tary; Frank S. Gllck, treasurer; di rectors. M. H. Bernhard and H. F. Welnhelmer, for three years; J. F. Lentz, for1 one year, and J. IL Ber necker, for two years. At the annual meeting of the Berkshire Country Club, held at Reading, the following officers were efected: President, Frank C. Sralnk; vice president, William Seyfert; sec retary, George W. Delaney; treasur er, F. W. Nlcolls. 'Repairs to the cage guides at the big Pine Knot shaft of the Philadel phia & Reading Coal and Iron Com pany, near Pottsvllle, kept the water hoists Idle for three days, the -accumulated water in the working ala lng 25 feet In the shaft. This Is now being removed and the colliery la working. Emanuel Merkcy, of Bethel, was squeezed between one of his horses and a wall o forcibly that his ribs were fractured. York will have a roll-top desk factory by July 1, the capital stock ot which will be $50,000. The new company Is headed by Albert Welsn, president; A. J. Schneider, ot Cul pepper, Va., vice president, and J. George Schneider, ot York, secretary. A barn that stood on the farm of Moses Eptlng, of Berene, Berk County, ever since 1803, la now be ing torn down to make room for ono of the largest barns In the county. To fill vacancies occasioned by the death of Joseph S. Rodenbough, of Easton, John F. Qwlnner has been elected president ot the Easton Cem etery Company, and James W. Wil son, president of the Lehigh Water Company. Charles R. Rodenbough was elected a director of the ceme tery company, succeeding his father. . Thomas Marstellar, 77 years old, a well known resident ot Albums, died suddenly of apoplexy. Twelve freight cars were smashed In a freight wreck on the Reading Ho ad at Ulverscn. They were thrown down a thirty-foot embankment There Was Something Doing. ' In a barber shop the other day I saw a man for whom I felt sorry. Not that he needed my sympathy from :he standpoint of charity, for he was a well-to-do man, having many busl ne.sB affairs. But. I felt sorry for him because of what ho was doing. A barber was cutting his hair; he was hrvlng his left hand manicured; in his right hand be held a newspaper; he was smoking a cigar and a por ter was Bhlnlng his shoes. There he sat, reading a newspaper. Three per sons were busy waiting on him, do ing their best to please him. and he was oblivious to the Joy which his opportunity afforded him. Fort Worth Star. An To Mercy. "Would you have the trusts, Your Honor, placed at the mercy of the government?" exclaimed the attor ney for the biggest of the bunch. "Strikes me that would be a sim ple reversal of present cbndltlonB." remarked the attorney for the other Bide, and calmly watched the case go to the Jury. Philadelphia Public Ledger. SAVING PAINT MONEY. It Cannot Be Done by Using Cheap Material and Cheap Painters.' In arranging for painting, a good many property owners try to save money by employing the painter who offers to do the Job cheapest or try to save money by Insisting on a low priced paint. But no property owner would run such risks If he realized what must be taken Into considera tion In order to got a Job that will wear and give thorough satisfaction. No houseowner will go wrong on the painting question If he writes Na tional Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Building, New York, for their House owners' Painting Outfit No. 49, which Is sent ree. It Is a complete guide to painting. It Includes a book of color schemes for either exterior or Inter ior painting, a book of specifications and an instrument for detecting adul teration In paint materials. Nearly every dealer has National Lead Company's pure white lead. (Dutch Boy Painter trademark). It yours has not notify National Lead Co., and arrangements will be made tor you to get It. Exercise For Sinter. Mabel My dolly cries if you punch her in the stomach. Tommy My little sister does de same thing. They're a good deal alike, ain't they? I try it every day. Cleveland Leader. Deafness Cannot Bo Cured ftylocal applications as the yt-AQuot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness iscaused byau inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tubeis in flamed yon have a rumbling Bound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely clotted Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be tuken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Ninecusesout often are caused byentarrh. which is r.othingbutuD Inflamed condition of the nnicons surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollamforanv ease of Deafness ( caused byoatiirrh ) that ran Botbecnredby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send fot tu-culara free. F.J.Chknkt & Co.,Toledo,0 Sold by Druggists, 75o. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. When Diplomacy Failed. Mistress Bridget, it always seems to mo that the crankiest mistresses got the best cooks. Cook Ah, go on wld yer blarney! Illustrated Bits. Garfield Tea has brought good health to thousands! Unequalled for constipation, liver and kidney diseases. Composed of Herbs. Buy troin your druggist. , Swedish electricians are experi menting with a transmission cable In which a hemp cord takes up the strain uniformly. ! To Every Home as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play when in health and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri ous or objectionable nature, and if at any time a rem2dial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has also met vith the approval of physicians gen erally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, obtained by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially, and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Cal ifornian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy, and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, vho do not approve cf patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna always has the full name cf the Company California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name cf any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the Children tl'hpnpvpr a livativ romrh la rannii-o PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more (rooilii brighter unfl fner color than any other dve. On, Or. package colr all fibers. Thnv ,lc In col.l Mtcr letter tlmn anv .tth. r ilyo. Vot can dye any garineul without ripping apart. Wrllo lur true booklet Uow to lyo. Ulcacn uuU lax Color. MOMtOk l IC I W CO.. Qutncv HnHiM. For IIRADArilK Illcka' VA PCDIMR Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or Korvoua Troubles, t'apudine will relieve you. It's Hutild pleasant lo take acta Immedi ately. Try it, loc., 24c. anil &Uc at drug atoiea If Yellowstone Park bo left out of consideration, California Is first In the number and variety of its springs. Mrs. Winslow'a Soothing Syrup for Children teething, aof tcna theguma, reduces inlinmina tion, allay a pain, curu wind colic. 2ic a bouls. Two Millions Vse Playgrounds. The records of Chicago's special park .commission show how exten sively the public playgrounds are us ed In that city. Five hundred thous and more children took advantage of them in 1908 than in 1907. the at tendance being 2,089,366. Ten new small parks were Improved last year, making the total 4u. It is expected that 16 additional playgrounds will be created this year, ranging In size from one-quarter of an aero to eight acres, All this work was carried on last year with an appropriation of I $180,390 and private gifts ot $3.- 700, and yet there was an unexpend ed balance of $33,311. Chicago is far ahead of New York In providing playgrounds for its children. Gun Shoots Kightccn Miles. The new 12-inch wire breech loading gun (Mark XI). which is to have the highest velocity of any gun yet made, has emerged with credit from Its tests, and has given complete satisfaction in official quarters. It Is understood that orders will shortly be placed for the manufacture of a number of these weapons, and that they will form part of the arma ment of the battleships of the Dread nought type. Shells have already been made In Woolwich arsenal. Compared with the present 12 Inch gun (Mark X), which has a range of, roughly, 16 miles, the new gun has many points of superiorly, the most Important of which Is its greater range. It Is said to be effec tive at 18 miles, and those who have seen it tested declare it to be the fin est weapon in the world. There are some indications that some orders for the new gun wilt be placed with the Royal arsenal at Woolwich, where shrinking pits of enormous size are in progress of con struction. It Is hinted, too, that we have not yet reached finality, and that in the course of the next year wo may see a 13. 5-inch gun, with an even higher velocity, put to tho test. London Chronicle. I'tiO Dogs In Sanitation. The services which can be, and to some extent have been, rendered in war by dogs, In searching for the wounded on battlefields, and convoy ing them to the ambulances, have been frequently described. In Fiance a society, called tho Societo du thicn Sanltalre, has been formed for the purpose of Introducing this valuable auxiliary into the sanitary service of the country. Scientific American. The new "automobile turbine" tor pedoes of the I'nlted States Navy have a range of nearly three miles and cost about $",UOO each. A CUBE FOH FITS. Th.1- Tntment N to Accomplish What Stifiitf Hits Beep Strug gling to Attain for Cciiluricb. The intense interest Hint bus been mani fested turotiuhout the country by I he won derful cures that are lining" nccomplished dai y by epilepticittc still continue. It i really surprising tlie vnsl number of people who have already been cured of dm nml j nervousness, in order that everybody may viiukvc iu u-i me nuinnne, lattre trial bottles, valuable literature, History ol i.nlepsy and testimonial, will be sent by muil absolutely free to all who write to the Dr. May Laboratory, 54H IV-ari Sjireot, New York City. The epili pticide cure ia creating (treat public intu est, as well as among Doctor, ' Students, Hospitals and visitim i'hvsician. 1 I Maryland's senator Is but one of 1 seven Smith's in Congress. j - ! For COLDS and ii:il Rtrk'a rrrniN Is the Ikm rcmdy relieves the aahtnir and fi'veri-.line--cup'S the Cold and restore normal condition. It' Iluuld-i'iTi-ct linniidiaujly. loo., and Uic, at drutr stores. Ll'lr ever This Trade-mark Eliminates All Uncertainty in the purchased J;iint m.iti-ri.ils. t is an absolute guarantee of pur ity and quality, lor your own p rotecti'itl. fee it i on tl." side of r keif ni white .el u buy. MTIOHU IE1D CCWP1KT lii' It, Bii'IOtu TO' ForSaier-? Of 2C5.000 Immigrants to Argen tina In 1908 but 326 were from North America. Throat Troubles Weaken the 6yt tern. A serious illness Is often brought on by a neglected sore throat. All throat troubles Invariably weak en the system and should not be al lowed to go unchecked. A gargle made with twelve drops ot Sloan's Liniment in half a glass ot water will break up a sore throat. Sloan's Liniment Is an excellent remedy for tonsllltis, croup, asthma and bronchitis. Applied freely to the outside ot the throat and chest, it draws out the Inflammation, reduces the swelling and relieves any sore ness. Twelve drops ot this Liniment in half a glass of water makes a splen did antiseptic gargle. Mr. Albert W. Price of Fredonla, Kans., writes: "We have used Sloan's Liniment in the family for about a year, and find it an excel lent relief for colds and bay fever at tacks. Two drops of the Liniment in a teaspoontut of water will stop cough lag and sneezing Instantly." Mr. L. T. Hurst of Coatesvllle. Ind., R. R. No. 1, writes: "I And your Lin iment th best remedy I hare ever tried for sore throat, either for borse or man. I ones cured a case of sore throat on myself the second day and almost the first night, which had con tinued for over three weeks, under constant treatment of three physi cians (I was traveling) and it was get ting worse." Alaska ha been the only self supporting territory under the gor-eminent. DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Taw Taw, Mich." I suffered terri- tnq biy from female ills, including mnani inatlon and conges tion, for several years. My doctor said there was no . bone for me but an operation. I began taking Lydia K. link ham's Vegeta ble Compound, and I can now say I am a well woman." I Emma Draper. Another Operation Avoided. Chicago, 111. "1 want women to know what that wonderful medicine. Lydia . Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, has done for me. Two of the best doctors in Chicago said I would die if I did not have an operation, and I never thought of seeing a well day again. I bad a small tumor and female troubles so that I suffered day and night. A friend recommended Lydia . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it made me a well woman." Mrs. Alvkna Spejilino, 11 Langdoo. fct, Chicago, 111. Lydia . Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and herbs, has proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female Ills, Including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregu larities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it and the result bas been worth millions to many suffering women. False teeth of ivory, wired In place by gold, were in use 1UU0 11. C. lied, Wcuk, Wrury, Watery V.yvs Relieved by Murine "Eye Remedy. Compounded by Kxpcrient oil l'livsieians Conforms to Pure 1-ood nn l Drug l.nws. Murine Doesn't Smart; Soothe j'ye l'ain Wireless telegraphy has driven the carrier pigeon out of the French Navy. Itch cored In 80 minute by Woolford'a Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At drucKuta. scffiu;i: ADVAXCKS IX i:xi LAXD. The Woman's Social and Politi cal Cnlon, one of the mili'ant suf frago societies in England, has Juat brought out Its annual report. This shows a remarkable growth during the last year. The union in one year has increased its office sta!t from 30 nersons to 71). and tho kiiho,. occupied by Its London headquarters from 13 rooms to 19, besides estab- j iisning nruncn offices in 11 oiiit-r cities. Its receipts from the sale of literature have grown from $3,000 in the previous year to J 10,000, and Its annual inrome from J30.000 to 1100,000. The circulation of its newspaer, Votes for Women, has grown from 6,000 a month to io.000 a week. Anil the Woman's Knelal and Political I'nlon Is only one of nan dozen women suffrage societies In England, all actively at work. The fact that It has wild liiionn worth of ita llterture durlnir tlin'li,u year is especially significant. The recent annual report of the New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrairp ahnu-a that rf.ln the whole year it sold only f 31 .90 wortn or literature. Al ce Ston Blackwell In New York Bun. KAISF.lt PHOXF.s PKCTI.IAHLV. The German Emnsmr v,a. hi. way of using the telephone. Despite mistakes, caused bv th fusal to name hlniBelf at the open- iuij vi nis conversation, he Invari ably Introduces his telephoned ordera merely with the words: "I command tint ( . . . . iui( nuu u lorm. as soon as me chief department bears these words he motions that bla subordinates must at once leave the room. The significance of this arrangement Is supposed to be that the chief la hav ing something like an audience with Ills Majesty, and that it would be presumptuous for a person not sum moned to hear the Imperial voice to occupy the room into which Ita tones are conveyed. At the end of the con versation the Emperor walks away without saying "good-by," and the chlof with whom he has convened must listen for five or six minutes afterward to make sure that orders have been completed. Then he calls back bis assistants and the usual etl quet is resumed. tec Karm in 14 sutev Strom's wmnmmummmm New Mi.mMv r.ulietiti l Heal Uar(nini, prnlutclv ilhi lr-e-.l. mulM Jrft ; wep,y voi r R. R. tail-. E. A. STROUT CO.. Rook C I. World! Urtnl Farn llf.lcri, Lind I,tl Bld.. ftula. On January 1. l'.ins. tho Metro politan Mu-eiiin, New York, couia'n cd 0,0 si; objects of art. BABY'S WATERY ECZEMA. Itched nml Si run h I ntil r.lood Dan $."11 Spent on I'selosn I renttiiei-.tM Disease S.'innl Incurable fined by t'iMiitira for $1.30. "When my little boy was two nnd n lia'.f moritliH old In- l.roi.e out on both cheeks with e.vema. It w;w the itehv, watery kind and we had to keep hi little liandi wrapped up all the time, and if lie would happen to Ret them uncovered he would law his faee till the blood nt reamed down on his elotliiiiR. We called in a phyaieian nt once, but lie pave an ointment which v. an ao aevcre that my babe would neream when it wan put on. We changed doctor and medicines until we had npent fifty dol lars or nn re and baby wa.i getting woiae, 1 was fo worn out watching and raring for him nittlit an I day that I ulmont felt mire, the dieiie was incurable. Hut finally rcaditii; of the I remits of the Cutieura Remedies, 1 determined to try tliein. I can miniiuiiy i-ay I win more than mirprined, for 1 bought only a dollar nml u halt's wortn o the t uticiira Remedies (t'utici Soat). 1 hut iiietit an,! IMI i .....I ,i more good than all my dm tors' medicines I had tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perfectly clear of the leant spot or scar of anything. Mrs. XV. M. ( omerer Hurnt Cabins, Pa., Sept. 15, lt).l." ' Potter Drug 4 ('hem. Corp., Sle Props, of Culicura Remedies. HokIoii. Mass. (lid The French are the bread eaters of EuroP- I) N. V. 17. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, Mothftr Gray. Nnrwatn Child R York CUr niomuru irtann liiiorieri Id M boot. Al all f A Ortatn P-ir for f'rTrrtf tanf 4 nnllpllnn. II ea tMomurb Trawhlrft, TriMbUg lrli mm 4 old 1 nnusmtft. Hot. fisunpl mailed FKLIt. AildrvaW, A. i. OLMSTED. L Roy. N. Y DAISY FLY KILLER RSStE S ua. hrsU. oiotn, onMafivnt., at4 nieoc bp, Uato til . Msvt ot sUsKsU, otnaot ftiUurUji ova. uu oQ or Iftur aut IhlfasT OttatrftB tevO -fTstllTV 0 11 J rrHUd (or too. . sVtJ . t. PATENTS rttu row air your BOUNTIES p-aUr as, Ooprnjai roar aVMka, William, fto. turas. Ma. Ms wit as la Mosati Tot autjlsra a2 ibsu taUUrsa, wba wndui iu am vw. issTX ttsv mini om It, km them, fgr buuka sa luatruaUoiu. uani w. at. WOla, atrsZ Law Hourr iMklu, i wuts HuUilUa, IUla4. Xnw Viaakiotou.U. U, Over aj r: Pratt, ItasnnHSMsi i - - - DISTEMPER ru Ui,,, Ommmmmt 9m- V ., tit psadfil!; flTartktaatj Sai mo hih mj uraft wmnmm mA CkMfc 0U. 0-sNfatl lllM Mai. Oaaafs.Lat4 afttM i WttaUsj M4Wat OsZ, I I, Is DROPSY SfiSSPS!!! iummm mm4 mm ' LaU IMMyafeft k sU ttV-Mk, ft Ma aWsafe offlMll ti mtmm m
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers