A Package Mailed Free on Request of HUNYON'S PAW PAW PILLS me oen cioraacn ana, Liver Pills known and positive end speedy j re lor constipation. adlgettlon. Jaundice. Biliousness, Sour Stom- I ach, Hendnche, and all I ailments arising from a I disordered stomach or I sluggish liver. They contain In concen trated form all the virtues and values of Munyon's Paw Paw tonic and are made from the iulce of the Paw-Paw fruit. I on hesitatingly recommend these pllle at being the best laxative and cathartle ever compounded. Send us postal or letter requesting a free package of Munvon't Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa tive Pills, and we will mail same free of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEO PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 63d and Jefferson Sta., Philadelphia, Pa. jxwj tr ci If you but knew what harsh cathartics do, you'd always use Cascarets. Candy tablets, vegetable and mild. Yet just as effective as salts and calomel. Take one when you need it Stop the trouble promptly. Never wait till night as Vssl-poeket txn. 10 cents at drngHitores. Bacb taHM of the gvnaloe Is marked C C C. Pin in To Be Seen. A Denver man who visited the museum at City Park recently, tells of a firrer he saw there. The ru Tallst stepped In front of a portrait which showed a , man sitting In a high-backed chair. There was a rmall white card on the picture read ing: "A portrait of E. H. Smith, by himself" The farmer read (he card and then chuckled to himself. "Regular fools, these city tellers are." he said. "Anvbody who looks at that picture 'ud know Strath's by himself. They ain't no one in tho paintin' with htm." Denver Post. A PRACTICING PHYSICIAN Gives Valuable Advice to Kidney Suf ferers. Dr. R. Frasher, M. D., of Fort Gay, W. Va., has used Doan's Kidney Pills personally and prescribes them In his practice. Says he: "I consider Doan's Kidney Pills the finest remedy on earth for diseases of the kidneys and blad der. I have pre scribed this medicine in many cases, and at the present time several of my patients are using it with excellent results. I have taken Doan's Kidney Pills personally with entire satisfaction." Remember the name Doan's. For tale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. FoBter-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Worth Of Fat. fat people will yearn with tatis facllnn that they have a champion In a Georgia physician, who says that turplus flesh Is a natural armor against colds and sudden falls., lend ing the body "warmth and security, and the mind peace and good cheer." cheer." The psychic effect of being fat, according to this doctor, manifests It self in Its Influence over the tem perament and disposition, from the earliest childhood, or from the mo ment when, under the subtle urging of certain food and tonics, the body begins to grow In bulk of fatty tissue. As fat la acquired the mind that rules and Is ruled by matter acquires t rose-colored outlook, a tunny geni ality and a patience with the small Irritations of life. Nervous. thJn people who actually tuner became of lack of fleah should remember that sleep It one of the greatest fat producers. Obesity Is tint desirable, but the individual who plump ts often stronger physically than his thin neighbor and has more endurance. The fat man Is usually good-natured, has strong reslstiince 'o disease and. Is a good citizen, as is generally proved by his large circle or frlBnds. Botton Globe. Mmh Better. The following was told of the pa tient of a well-known physician: The patient, an elderly gentle man, became quite 111 wblle the doc tor was absent upon a holiday, the indisposition being the result of too Sequent potations. A female nurse at once engaged to care for htm Jo mb hotel. . A lady residing In the same hotel perme aware of his illness and in terested herself to the extent of one morning Inquiring concerning his condition of the chambermaid. Rhiire, ma'am," replied Maggie. " I think he do be geitln' along ry well. The nurse waa sitting' on Jls lop ib.lt niornio'!" Western druggist. A Happy Day m 1 Follows eTBreakfast that U pleasing and heatbiulj Post Tcacfci in WW ArVpleaeing and healthful oTTTring smile of afttiaf ac tion to the who! family (Postum Cereal Cn.7 COMMERCIAL Weekly Review of Trade and1 Market Reports. Bradstreet'a says: , "Trade advices are irregular, vary-' Ing soniewhnt with the sections on Hues reporting, but with quletnesaj the prevailing feature. In the, Northern half of the country unsea sonably cool weather is a bar to ex-', pension in retail trade, which at'i many cites Is classed as disappoint-, Ing. At these centres reorder busi ness Is light, and Jobbers' operations are consequently restricted. Prob-: ably the best reports as to trade, come from the Northwest and the Pacific Coast, while the Atlantic Coast reports are of current retail trade being unsatisfactory. As the week advanced action by the Govern ment against higher railroad freight rates resulted in rumors of suspen-' sions of Improvement work by rail roads, some of which were, however,' dented. These reports injected an additional element of uncertainty. Into the Industrial situation. "Business failures for the week ended with June 2 In the United States were 160, against 200 Inst week, 191 In the like week of 1909, 225 In 1908, 155 in 1907 and 162 in 1908. i "Wheat, including flour, exports from the United States and Canada1 for the week ended June 2 aggregate 2,970,663 bushels, against 3.594,144 last week and 2,128.199 this week last year. For the 48 weeks ended June 2 exports are 136,502,017 bushels, against 160,913,011 in the corresponding period last year. Corn exports for the week are 238,740 bushe's. against 345,364 last week end 36,193 in 1909. For the 48 weeks ended Juno 2 corn exports are 23,257.783 bushels, against 23, 955,741 last year." Wholesale Markets. New York. Wheat Spot weak; No. 2 red, $1.04 nominal c. i. f.; No. 1 Northern, 109 nominal f. o. b. Corn Spot firm; No. 2, 66ic. nominal elevator, domestic basis; export No. 2, 66 nominal f. o. b. Oats Spot quiet; mixed, 26 32 lbs., nominal; natural white, 26! 32 lbB., 43 45c; clipped white, 34 42 lbs., 4347H. Poultry Alive firm ; Western broilers, 30c.; fowls, 20; turkeys, 1014. Dressed firm; Western broilers, 25 32c; do., fowls, 14 19; do., turkeys, 16 18. Philadelphia. Wheat firm ; con. tract grade, June, 101104c. Corn flrm.'lc. higher; No. 2 yellow for lo cal trade, 66 67c. Oats firm, Vic. higher; No. 2 white natural, 45 45Hc. Butter firm; prints, lc. higher; ex tra Western creamery, 30c; do., nearby prints, 31. Eggs firm; Pennsylvania and other nearby firsts, free cases, 21 c. at mark; do., current receipts, in re turnable cases, 20 at mark; Western firsts, free cases, 21 at mark; do., current receipts, free cases, 20 at mark. Chees firm; New York full creams, choice, 16Vi15c; do., ' fair to good, 14 15. Live poultry firm; fowls, 19 20c; old rooster. 1314; broiling chickens, 28084; ducks, 1415; geese, 12 13. Dressed poultry firm; fresh-killed fowls, nearby 1919e.; do., West ern, 19 19; old roosters, 15; broiling chickens, nearby, as to quality, 2640; do.. Western, 24 35; aprlng duckt, 20 22. Baltimore. Wheat No. 2 red Western 99c; No. 2 red, 99; steamer No. 2 red, 90. Corn Contract, 62 c. Spot 62c nominal; July 63 bid. Oats White, as to weight No. 2, 4546c; No. 8, 4344; No. 4, 42 48. Mixed No. 2, 44 nomi nal; No. 3, 42 43. .Hay Timothy No. 1. S20.50; No. 2, $1919.50; No. 3, $15.50 17. Cloved Mixed Choice, $18.60; No. 1, 17.6018; No. 2, $1416. dover No. 1, $16 16.60; No. 2, $14 015. Meadow grass and packing hay. ?121S. Butter Creamery, fancy, 30c; Creamery, choice, 29 29; Cream, ery, good, 25 27; Creamery, imita tion, 2123; Creamery, prints, SO 31. Cheese We quote, jobbing prices, pen lb., 1 17c. Eggs We quote, per dot., lost oft: Maryland, Pennsylvania and inearby fUsts, 20 c; Western flrstt, 20; West Virginia flrstt. 20; Southern firsts, 19; guinea eggs, 1011. Live Poultry We quote, per lb.: Chickens, old hentv, 19c; do., small to medium, 19;,. jid rooster, 11; spring, 1 lbs. 'and over, per lb., 30 32; do., IK lbs., 28; do., 1 lb. and under 25. Ducks, large, IS 14; do., small 12; do., muscovy and mongrel. 12 13: do., spring, 8 lbs. and over, 20 22. Live Stock. Chicago. Cattle Market 1 Oo. higher. Steers, $6.25 8.60; cows, $4.5006.50; heifers. $4.256.75; built, $4.5004.90; calves, $308.60; blockers and feedert, $4.75 6.50. I Hogs Market 15c. lower. Choice teavy, $9. 4509. 65; butchers, $9.45 B.66; light mixed. $9.3609.46; choice light, $9.45 0 9.55; packing, $9.4009.45; pigs, $9.2509.60; bulk of tales, $9.4009.46. Cheep Market 1015o. lower. Sheep, $5.2506.40; yearllngt, $6 6.75; lambs, $7 0 8.40; spring lambs, $8.6009. Kansas City. Cattle Market steady to strong; guaranteed cattle 25 to 40c. higher than Monday. Choice dressed beef and export steera, $708.25; fair to gooj, $8 7: Western steers, $5.50 0 7.60; ttockers and feeders, $6.7006.25; Southern steers, $4 0 6.50; Southern rows, $3 0 6.60; native cows, $3 6.60; native heifers, $4.40 07.35; bulls, $406.85; calves, $4.8508. Hoge Market 15 to 25c. lower. Top. $9.60; bulk of sales, $9.30 $.40; heavy. $9.85 9.46; packen and butchet, $9.8509.40; light, J9.20.60; ptgt, $8.7509.10. ' Sheep Market tteady to strong. Larabt. $7.250 9; yearlings, $6 :.26; wethers, $4 6.60; ewes, $4 '6; stockers and feedert, $2.7504. ! Pittsburg. Cattle Choice, $8 0 .8.25; prime. $7.76 0 8. I Bheep Prime wethers, $4.76 5; cullt and common, $2 03; lambs, 44 I; veal calves; $8.60$.' . Hoga Prime heevlea, $9.76; m Idlumt, heavy Yorkers, $9.80; light Yorkers, pig. $9 0; roughs, $8 0 8.75. , The Touring Club of France hat apant $4,000,000 n pubflo roads. CLEANSES THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY; DISPELS COLDS. AND HEADACHES DUE TO CONSTIPATION. BEST FOR MEN, "WOMEN AND CHILDREN Y0UN0 AND OLD. TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS -ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE. MANUFACTURES BY. THE SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS Ore she only. Regular price 5QABoni A man In North Carolina was fin ed $100 for driving cattle through counties quarantined on account of Texas fever Into a county outside quarantined area. For IIKADArilR-llIrk' OA PI7DINH ?. Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach or wnui Troubles. Cavmllne will relieve you. t's liquld-plpakftnt to take-sets Immedi ately. Try Its luc, ito, and Mo. at drue aloiet. Laying Good Foundations. A man of mediocre capacity and equipment can stand only so much and no more In the struggle for exist ence. He may be able to go on steadily with his work, moving In the same old ruts, accomplishing-the tame results and doing just precise ly the quality and quantity of work that he has always done, hut let a little new blood be infused Into his task, a few new ideas be Introduced Into Its management, and he will probably find It such uphill work to keep pace with modern methodB that he will be far outstripped and felt behind to his narrow, roped-ln, unprogresslve existence. An article In the current number of Success Mapszlne compares men In such a condition to buildings which . have either fallen down or been taken down because their owner "tried to build one or more stories on the top of an old building which did rot have sufficient foundation to carry the new structure." Men who have but insecure foundations upon which to build will find their houses topling about their ears when the tests of strength and endurance comes, and that tremendous test is made in these days of increasing power and unceasing advancement is not to be questioned. Charleston News and Courier. Living On Nerve. A enterprising individual in New York has filed a petition In bank ruptcy and the schedule shows that he has liabilities of $24,000 and as sets of $25. The list of creditors shows that the bankrupt was a good liver and enjoyed a goodly portion of the luxuries of life, although he had no viable means of support. A man must be a genius at bilk ing to be able to travel so far In debt with no capital except cold nerve. There is a considerable num bers of such men In the world and to their fellows who labor arduous ly and regularly they are a source of constant wonder. How can they do it? To the mind of the man who be lieves in personal effort and in hon orable dealings with the rest of man kind, it is simply incomprehensible. It may be that swindlers, like poets, are born, not made. Undoubt edly it must require no small de gree of capability to buy food and clothing and jewelry and flowers and books and automobiles and station ery and golf outfits and paintings and hundreds of other articles, as this man did, on mere assurance and with no prospect or expectation of paying for them. What a happv time he must have had dodging bin collectors! Louisville Courier-Journal. A Description. "What kind of a man is Wither ington?" "One of these fellows who depend upon their whiskers to lend them distinction." Chicago Record-Herald. MOTHERS WHO HAVE DAUGHTERS Find Help In LydiaE Pink ham's Vegetable Compound lludson, Ohio "If mothers realized the good your remedies would do deli, cate girls I believe there would ba fewer wean ana ail ing women. Irreg ular and painful periods and such troubles would be relieved at once in many cases. Lydia E. rinkham'a Vege table Compound ia fine for ailing girls and run-down wo. d. Tbeir delicate ans need a tonic 1 the Comnound gives new ambition and life from the first dose." Mrs. George Sthickler, Hudson, Ohio, K. No. 6, Box 82. Hundreds of such letters from mothert expressing their gTatltude for what LydJa B. lnnkham't Vegeta ble Compound baa accomplished for them have been received by the Lydia K- llaknam Medicine Company, Lynn, UJI&8 v Young; Girls, Heed This. Olds who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, head ache, dragging-dowa sensations, faint ing tpellt or Indigestion, should take Immediate action to ward off the sect, out consequences and be restored to bealth by Lydia . Flnknam'a Yeft. table Compound. Thousands bare bwa restored to health by lta use. : If yoawoald like spcllr4vtce about four ettae write wl.. lest tUI letter to firs. PtakbiAt at Lynn, liaaa. I rr advls 1 $fC4 ad always Jbcif&l OIL DISTRIBUTION AN EXACT SCIENCE Fully a Million Dollars Week In Foreign Geld Comas to This Country to Pay For Standard's Product That Is Poddltd td the Doors of Hutanri Pnlo, Aooord Ing to th Rockefeller Plan of International Barter. This Fockefeller Fonndntton, to make n story of It. Is In rentlty Just this It Is the dream of a poor hoy come true. It is tho hnppv ending of nn American novel of real life. It Is the climax of one of the most dra matic and Impressive careers that this country, or any other, hat ever known. The dream or the novel or dra tra. whichever you like hee.in moro than half a century apo. It bonan In n shabby little bnnrdlnjr house In Cleveland,' In the brain of s Ind of elshteen who was clerking for A rlilprilng and renl estnto company. There were at that time about a million other American bovn of the Fame age, and not mnny of them had received fewer privileges thnn this one. He had been educated pnrtlv In the public schools, hut mnlnlv at homo, by his mother and father. 'His ray, at this time, was sixty cents a day. His hours of labor were from breakfast until bedtime. For his room and meals he was pnying $1 a week, so that his net Incomethe basis of his dream of fortune and phi lanthropy was not more than $135 n year. Even at this time, and with this Income, he built a tiny little founda tion of his own. Out of the sixty conts a day, he st asldo a few pen nies for the church, nr for some hun cry family, or to drop into some hat that was passed around in the office. The notebook in which tlnse little philanthropic entries were made Is rtill in existence. It Is known by the name of "Ledger A" In the Rock efeller family, it Is a completely worn out little notebook, with bro ken cover and tattered pages of faded writing, but It is one of the most precious treasures In the Rocke feller vaults. It has more than a personnl Interest now. It has sud denly become historic, because It re cords the orlqln of "the most com prehensive scheme of benevolence in the whole history of humanity." The managerial Instinct was so strons'ln this boy that he was not satisfied with merely paying his share Into the contribution boxes. By the tlmo he was nineteen he had ripened Into an organizer of benevolence. He was a member of n mission church, which was fasi breaking down under the weight of a $2000 mortgage. This sixty - cent - a - day youth undertook to collect the monev, and he did It. "That was a proud day," he said in later years, "when the last dollar whs collected." Little as he knew it, the boy was then at work upon tho fulfilment of his dream to become perhaps the greateht getter, and tho greatest giv er, of his generation. Later, when be became a prosper ous man of business and large af fairs, he still retained the habit of organizing his giving as well as his getting. He even went so far ns to organize his family Into a sort of foundation. At the breakfast table he would distribute the various ap peals for help among his children, requesting them to investigate each case and make a report to him on the following day. In this way his children, and especially his son and namesake, who Is destined to distrib ute the revenue of the Rockefeller fortune, received a Spartan training In "the difficult art of giving." The whole bent of the Rockefeller mind seems to bavo been inclined from the first toward the working out of this problem of distribution. The business of the Standard Oil Company itself Is much more a mat ter of distribution than of production. It was unquestionably the first com pany that undertook to sell Its prod uct directly to the users on a world wide scale. For the most part, it de livers its oil, not to wholesalers and middlemen, but to the family that burns It, whether it be in the United States or in the uttermost parts of the earth. It has, for instance, no fewer than 3000 tank wagons travel ing from door to door in the twenty countries of Europe, telling pints and quarts of liquid light to whosoever demands It. Fully $1,000,000 a week, in foreign gold or its equiva lent, -comes to this country to pay for the oil that Is peddled to the doors of but and palace, according to the Rockefeller plan of international dis tribution. Consequently, both by natural ap titude and business experience, Mr. Rockefeller was well prepared to work out the problem of distributing . the turplus money of :he rich In a systematic and efficient manner. His new foundation Is no afterthought It Is no sudden change of mind or change of heart. It Is the natural re sult of fifty years of experience and experiment. What he began to do as a poor boy in a Cleveland boarding house, be is now about to complete on an international tcale that is the explanation of the new plan that bat excited to much comment and so much curiosity. Consul General John L. Griffiths, of London, writes that British manu facturers are forming an association to prevent the sale in the United Kingdom of foreign-made as Brit ish eoodB. ' The Bangkok Manufacturing Com. pany (Limited), making ice, aerat ed waters, etc., earned $15,150 gross profits, the total dividend for the year being .14 per cent.- A Modern Education. Fond Mother How did you gev along in school today, Suslot Tired Child (wearily) Oh, I missed my geography again. I for pot whether the Putamayo Joined the Amazon east or west of the con fluence of the Maranon and Ucalaya Rivers. . , , Eame Child (years later; wife and mothei) What is it you want to known, petT '-. Mamma (after a long reflection) I think its' somewhere in Africa or Asia, I forget which. New York Weekly. Giving It Away. "A woman Just can't keep a -rret," be declared, opposing a state m9Ktt "Oh. I don't know," contradicted the flutterly lady. "I've keot my age a secret ever since I waa twenty four.'' . "Yes." tie replied, but one these daye you will give it way. Ia time you will Just simply have ta "Well," she replied with eonfl deuce. "1 think that wbea a womaa has kept a secret tor twenty years the cornea pretty uear knowing how to keep H." Public Ladjer. ror COLDS and ORIP. fftrfc'i CAPFntirs Is th best remeflT relleves the achln and fererWhneM-cu'ret tlie Cold and restore normal condition. H'l llrjuld-enVcMj! Immediate!. Nju,. uIkj. and (Oc., at drug atortsa. Charley No Shirt Is the name of the chief of the Walla Walla Indians In the Umatilla reservation. For Kod, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes, Falling Eyelnhes and All Eves That Need Care, Try Murine Eye Stive. Aseptic Tubes, Trial Sue, 25c. Ask Your DrunRiat or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. "Walk tlowly! Eat less," are Dr. Osier's directions for middle-aged persons who want to live lung. Buy "Battle Axe" Shoes. The average annual death rate of the armies of the world In time of peace is less than one per hun dred. fn-) Drtrtif rafnMntr. the hent remedv forrrnmpe. colic, diarrhea, nn well as for wonnrts, sprains. 'J5c., ;c., 50c. Japan's postal service is the cheap est In the world. Letters travel for 2 sen about seven-tenths of a pen ny. Dr. Tierce's Pellets, small, suuar-cooted. easy to take as candy, regulate and invig orate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not sriDe. There are about 275,000 automo biles owned by individuals In the United States, or one for every 400 population. Saved Old Lady's Hair. "My mother used to have a very bad humor on her head which the doctors called an eczema, and for It I had two different doctors. Her head was very sore and her tatr nearly all fell out In spite of what they both did. One day her niece came in and they were speaking of how her hair was falling out and the doctors did it no good. She says. 'Aunt, why don't you try Cntlcura Soap and Cutleura Ointment?" Mother did. and they helped her. In six months' time the ltchlni;.bnrnlnR ndscallnof herhend was over and her hair bepnn growing. To-dt y she feels much In debt to Cu tleura Soap and Ointment for the fine head of hair she has for an old lady of tfventy-four. "My own case was an eczema in my feet. As soon as the cold weather came my feet would Itch and burn and then they would crack open and bleed. Then I thought I would flee to my mother's friends. Cutleura Soap and Cutleura Ointment. I did for fonr or five winters, and now my feet are as smooth as any one's. Ells worth Dunham, Hiram. Me., Sept. 30. 1900." Porcelain was discovered by an al chemist, who was seeking a mixture of earths that would make the most durable crucibles. Buy "Battle Axe" Shoes. Calendars And Poetic Fire. From time to time, a man who writes things for the current prints especially the weekly magazines which make a specialty of comment and criticism on literary matters thinks it is his duty to discover something which may show that he is very modern quite the opposite to an antediluvian fossil. Such a man In such a mood was he who lately In the Literary Digest stated that all art, to prove endur ing must be based on the contempor ary life of any land in which it sees the light: that poetry, for instance, cannot gain "respect and admira tion" if it lack such a national and present-day basis.. Surely, this statement must have been written for some other purpose than mere truth or art; because, unless the writer be the versiest tyro, he Is sure to know that it is quite untenable. Is Goethe's "Faust" of any age or land? Is Shakespeare's "Hamlet" grounded on "contempor aneous national life?" Is our own poet's lyric masterpiece, "Annabel Lee.'' a poem "of the present?" No, Indeed! And yet the three have gained beyond a doubt and held for many years the true "reelect and admiration" of all reading folk. The Literary Digest writer's phase seems too absurd for contravention. But the very contrary of what he says may be laid down with justice as a rule. Chicago Inter Ocean. He Were. A prominent Western attorney tells of a boy who once applied at his office for work. "Now my son." I said, "If you come to work for me, you will oc casionally have .to write telegrams and take down telephone messages. Hence a petty good degree of school, ing Is essential. Are you fairly well educated?'' The boy smiled confidently. "I be,'' he said. Harper's Magazine. A DOCTOR'S EXPERIENCE! Medicine Not Needed in This Cate. It it hard to convince tome people 'that coffee doet them an injury! Tbey lay their bad feelings to almost every cause but the true and unsus pected one. I But the doctor knows. His wide 'experience has proven to him that, to some systems, coffee it an lnaldloua . poison that undermines the bealth. Ask the doctor If coffee It the cause of constipation, stomach and nervous, troubles. .. "I hive been a coffee drinker all ni life. I am now 42 yeart old and when, taken tick two seart ago with nervous prostration, the doctor said that wy nervous system wat broken down audj that I would have to give up coffee. "I got to weak and tbaky I couldl not work, and reading your advertise ment of Postum, I asked my grocer if he bad any of It. He said, 'Yet,' aud that he uted it In bit family and u; wat all It claimed to ba "So I quit coffee and commenced tt use Postum tteadlly and found In about two weeks' time 1 could tleep aoundly at night and get up In the! morning feeling fresh. In about two raontht I began to gain flesh. I weighed only 148 pounds wbea I com-) mencei on Postum and now I weigh 1C7 and feel better than I did at to yeart of age. "I am working every day and tleea well at night My two children were great coffee drinkers, but tbey have not drank any since' Postum came ,lnto the house, and are far more healthy than tbey were before. Read "The Road to Wellvllle,". 'found la tkga. "There's a Reason. Kvar read the above letter T A tew 'one appears front time ffb time. Tbey are teaaiae, tree, aad fall of baaaaa V The Fountain Head of Life Is The Stomach X men who hat a week and impaired stomach end who doc not properly digest hie food will soon find that hit blood has become week end impoverished, and that hit whole body is improperly tod insufficiently nourished. Dr. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY tnakea the ttomach atroni, promotes tfi tlow of d I teat lr laic: rettorta tho loat appetite, makeo tiaalmllatlon perfect, InvlAormtea tho liver and parities ana enriches the blood. It Is the fireof blood-maker, Utah-builder and reatoratlvo uervo tonic. It makes mem mtroni in body, active In mind and cool In lud&cmenu This "Discovery" is a pure, glyceric extract of American medical roots,"1 absolutely free from alcohol and all injurious, habit-forming drugs. All ita ingredients ere printed on its wrappers. It has no relationship with secret nostrums. Its every ingredient is endorsed by the leaders in all the schools of medicine. Don't eccept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this time-proven remedy or nowm coMrosmos. As voun NrtoHtom. They mut know of many cure made by it during past 40 years, right in your own neighborhood. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pre., Buffalo, N. Y. Cool Kilchcn Perfect Cooking The housewife with years of experience the woman who knows how to cook finds, after practi cal tests and hard trials, the New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove is her idea ol what a good cook-stove really ought to be. She finds it requires less attention, costs less to op erate, and cooks all food better than any other stove she has ever tried. She finds the New Per fection oven bakes' and roasts perfectly. The Oil. Cook-stove tias a Cabinet Top with a shelf for keeping plates and food hot. There are drop shelves for coffee pot or saucepans, and nickeled towel racks. It has long turquoise-blue enamel chimneys. The nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the etove ornamental and attractive. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners ; the 2 and 3-burner ttoves can be bad with or without Cabinet. CAUTIONARY NOTE : Be sere yoo set this stove tet thai the name-plate rridt " NEW PE8FECT10HI." Evcry tiealtr everywhere; If not nt ycurs. write for Descriptive Circular to the ncmrr.t t nncv of the THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY (incorporated) I A FLA VOB. tut la nM tne an. u .k4 or moiIlaV Br dinftolruif (ran nU led auigar la i watortviid atia Ing ilaplalLa, delicoaa iyrop La 1 marie and a trrup bnttor than map lev. Mapleim . la sold br irroeera. Send o stusp tat BmanpW I ac-d recipa book. Creftosot TUfg. Co.. flMTUaV BUY" BATTLE AXE"Shoes CIiiBuifled. "That," said the distinguished author, pointing to a little red-headed Impossibility, aged six, who was standing on bis head in the middle of the drawing-room during the nmsicale "that is my second edition." "Not an edition do looks, evident ly." suggested an acrid old maid to whom he had made the confession. Harper's Weekly. A Colorado man has invented n tool for removing wire stitches from magazines. Ask For Allt-u's I oot-Kuse. "1 tried Allen's Foot-Kate, the Antiseptic Powder, and have just bought another sup ply. It has cured my corns, and tbe but, litimiiiK and itching sensation in my feet which was alinnt unbearable. 1 would not be without it now. YV. J. Walker, Cam den. N. J." Suid by all Druggists, 25c. In the matter of density of popu lation, Paris and Berlin lead all the European cities. SOUPS Tomato Chicken Vegetable and ten otner kinds. Delight ful natural flavor and made from the very best materials, with the care of experienced chefs, in the great White Enam eled Kitchens. Libby't Scape are ready for immediate use by adatin aa equal portion of hot watt. Ask yottr grocer for Libby's Soaps liby, tlclfeffl Some 50,000 cancer experiments are made every year In England. Mrs. Wlnslow's Hoothlng Syrup for Children tmthlnigoftrns theiru ma, red ii oep Inflamma tion, allays pain. mires wind eollo .25o a bottle In the month of May there wera 30 suicides lu Philadelphia. Buy "Battle Axe" Shoes. The use of autos saves the Brttisti Postal Service $300,000 a year. B. N. U. 24. wm ee mm wm tsena postal ior at iHh I" Free 1'ackage I 1 1 It bl of l'axtlne. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOB ALL TOILET USES. Gives one a tweet breath ; clean, white, germ-free teeth antiseptic I ly clean mouth and throat purifies the breath after smoking dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors much ap preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for tore eyee and catarrh. A little Paitine powder dis solved ia a glut of hot water makes a delightful antiseptic se luboa, possessing extraordinary jkfi I cleansing, germiciaal ana neat (vfl fr I ing power, and absolutely harm. K 11 less. Try a Sample. 50c t large boi at druggists or by eaaiL The Paxton Toilet Oo., Booton, Maes. aj c nnv V V mm mm m I WOOL IDESAHoTURi ltiif Dotal. vtcaaet Vctto lor roa Uui if tits sr eomaNtea swtittLs. i Kilerrac: sit slat at Leamilla. Wt Isrsbi Wssl B Firsts set Itnjraa Write avs!tt. JL SAB EL k S0MS InHh, Ij. PATENTS, J.? rade-ntarkt, reatlsa,aualr , Claims Afeuut the Gov. aarmanL Soliciting. Address W. a WILLS. AlfyI.Uw. 312 lad. Ava. Wosblarttm,'. a. tSTCARH- fSACnilfc. rAOiaa WASHCUiAH wsXim etotteM wiiheot , thr UM.nT WMhlMrd ur iMehlae. eed youS a.ms '! vlilrra nd wi tend Jrou a uckae btMb tuxoal, buufciut 4 CO.. Uwoa'Uie. ho. PATENTS KPiHrlH 9OOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Blff"BATTtlAxE"S'.:OES ioewKMJOOOiaoc'caetfijaierii DAISY FLYKlLlil'I rLTr v av . vwTt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers