YOUR BACKACHE WILL YIELD To Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeiauie vouipuuiiu nioomdale. Ohio. "I Buffered from t.;rihle hr-artarhea. pains In my back J5 latid right side, and F J Y:'i3P! was tired all tho time and nervous. I could not sleep, and eTery month I could hardly stand the pain. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vcgctcv. ble Compound re stored me to health l 5v-. rlaffain and mado mo feel like a new wo man. I hone tlilr letter will induce other women to nvail themselves of this Tamable meuicine. ira. j. zi. ,Fbedeick, Bloomdalo, Ohio. Iiackache is a fymptoni of female weakness or derangement. If yoi; 'bave backache don't neglect it. To eet permanent relief you must read; the root of the trouble. -Nothing wo knowof will do thi3 eo r r.fely nnd surel;1 as Lydia E. l'in'.cham's Vegetable Com pound. Cure tho cause of theso dir. trosoin? aches r.nd pai;is and you wil; become well t:ul Btronp. The fjreat volume of unsolicited tcr . tininnyconrtantly pouring in prove:: conclusively that I.ydia E. Tinkharn'r Vcsetablo Compound, made from root:; and lu-rb3, has restored health to thor.. :ul3 of women. ' If j-ou have the nl.'prMcst rtoul:'. that Lydia E. Pinkham's Yorx" taltlo Compound will help yoc vcrito to Mrs. Pinkhnn nt Lynn. Mns.1., for n'lrlc". Your leftc; wi'l bo p'1"-"' ''r,witn'' THE NEWS Domestic Engineers of the Interstate Bridge Commission let contracts for borings to determine the nature of the Hud Bon River bottom opposite One Hun dred and Seventy-ninth and One Hundred and Ninth streets, at one ol which sites it Is proposed to swing the new Hudson River bridge be tween Manhattan Island and tho New Jersey Palisades. Theodora Elwell, grandnlece of one of Brooklyn's great philanthropists, James E. Elwell, and daughter of J. D. Elwell, a member of a New York Stock Exchange firm, and a gradu ate of Radcllff College, hanged her self In an abandoned gymnasium In Brooklyn. As the British steamship Highland Monarch was proceeding down the Schuylkill River, bound for Auck land, New Zealand, seven members ol the Chinese crew leaped overboard In an endeavor to escape. Four wer drowned end the remaining three were captured. Commander Robert E. Peary sayi he prefers traveling in the Arctic to the Inconveniences of a hasty trip through Europe. Victor Herbert, the composer, Khis wife, daughter and son and Mrs. Rita Johnson Young, the dramatist, who is the guest of the Herberts at their camp at Lake Placid, had narrow escapes when tho Herberts' boathouse was burned. William J. Kellher, accused ol complicity with Georgo W. Coleman, the young bookkeeper of the Nation al City Bank,- of Cambridge, Mass., in looting that institution of about $240,000, was found guilty. Charles K. Hamilton, the famous aviator, presented to Mayor Gaynor tho message of Mayor Reyburn, ol Philadelphia, given to him on hit his flight from New York to the Quaker City. Grace Lame, the actress, won n suit against George V. Hobart, the playwright, in New York, for $250, wb'ch she paid him for a sketch he didn't write. The Individual and Social Justice League of America was organized in Ner York by clergymen of many I den minatlons, publicists and labor leaders. A card entitling the lucky finder World Growing Hotter? Those who believe that the world 1s growing better may find statist l0 R nve.acre farm ,n Missouri will cal encouragement for that opinion he donned from the aeroplanes in in a forth-coming publication of thv the St. Louis to Kansas City flight. Census Bureau the , special report on the census of religious bodies for 1906, which shows that between the years I900and 1906 the growth of church membership in the United States was greater than the increase of population. The report will show that out of every 1,000 persons in the 160 prin cipal cities of the country, that Is, those with a population of more than 25,000, there were 469 church mem bers, while for the area outside the3o cities there were 363, and for the entire country there were 391. As compared with 1890, the report shows a gain of 90 communicants in each 1,000 of population for the principal cities and a gain of 51 outside of them. Another fact which the census sta tistics of church member3hlo dis close lg that in the continental I'nited States women ehurc'j mem bers exceed men by 32 per cent. The proportion of men church mem bers is larger in the cities than in the country. The excess' of women ;memlers In the principal cities ag gregates 960,526, which is only 25,4 :per cent. Washington Star. Forty And A Bank Balance. Writing of a popular artist of the day who happens to be unmarried, a contributor to one of the current magazines says: "In these days a man doesn't indulge in matrimony until he has achieved 40 and a fat! bank balance.'' What folly! When will writers stop attributing to mankind in gen eral the thoughts end habits which: ;pertaln only to an insignificant mi nority? The average man, if be marries at all, "indulges In matrix mony"' long before he is 40 and stlll (longer before he has a "fat bank bal-l ance." It matters comparatively lit tle to him. or to his wife, if she) ;ls as sensible as she ought to be,' i whether the fat hank balance ever .matures. And both of them are un-; Tortunate if marriage Is postponed,) unnecessarily till either reaches the! l&ge of 40. i At 40 a man ought to have chlH "I'l'-uttcuiug graauation rrom. dren m anyway? !ine nigh school. He may even have a son in college; the better for ihimj if he has. A comfortable balance J the bank Ib an admirable attribute to any home, but it 1b not bo im-i Portant as that the home be estah-' i shed. If men postponed matrimony1 I'lll they were 40 and were listed in street's well, what sort of -una would this be, Cleveland Plain Dealer. A DETERMINED WOMAN Finally Found a Food That Cared Her. "When I first read of the remarlt-, iol8 effects of Grape-Nuts food, I deJ itermlned to secure some," says a woman of Salisbury. Mo. "At that ;time tbers was -Bona kept In this ,town, but my husband ordered some' .from a Chicago traveler. -: "I had been greatly afflicted with, udden attacks of cramps, nausea; ,na vomiting. Tried all sorts of rem- , nl Physicians, but obtained ionly temporary relief. As soon as I egan to use the new food the cramps disappeared and have never returned. My old attacks of sick stomach were a little slower to yield, but by jcontlnulng the food, that trouble has' "sappeared entirely. I em to-day perfectly well, can eat anything and l"erytblng I wish, without paying the' penalty that I used to. We would ot keep bouse without Oraps-Nuts. ' . husband was so delighted w!th: the benefit! I received that he baa wen recommending Grape-Nuts to his customers and bas built up a ?ery: large trade on the food. He sells them by the case to many of the lead.' "6 physicians of the county, wbo "commend Grape-Nuts rery general, jr There Is some satisfaction In us- 5ood" rlly clenllnc,n WM4. Read the little book. "The Road Jp Weiivino.. j pUgg- -Tht., a lleaton." Kvrr rood the above letter? A new one ei.pcnr frnm time to time. . Tliey are Kfi.uliic, Hue, aud full of hutuau lUlCH'aU Prince Hlroyasu Fushlml, a cousin of the emperor of Japan, ac companied by his wife and a con siderable retinue, arrived in Chicago. The explosion of a dynamite bomb in the hallway of a New York tenement created a panic among the 1C0 occupants. John Austin Stevens, founder snd first president of the Sons of the Revolution, died at Newport, R. I. Dr. Herman Marcus, of Atlantic City, committed suicide by drinking cyanide of potassium. President Christopher C. Wilson and Vice President Samuel S. Bogart, of the United Wireless Telegraph Company, were taken in custody by United States Marshal Henkel, at the company's office, No. 4 2 Broadway, New York, a.nd taken before United States Commissioner Shields to an swer a charge of misuse of the malls. President Daniel Wlllard, of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, de clares that If the Interstate Com merce Commission does not permit the railroads to raise freight rates the transportation lines will be in a bad fix. The degree of Doctor of Civil Laws was conferred upon President Taft by Marietta College, O. He made an address there at the celebration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of the college. The Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company, the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company and the Bethle hem Steel Company were found guil ty of rebating. The Pennsylvania Democratic State Convention nominated Webster Grim for governor end assailed the Repub lican administration and the tarlB law. Mrs. Nathan Jasper, of New York, saved her husband from the grip of a burglar by dashing vinegar into the eyes of the intruder. Dr. O. L. Mahoney, of Phoenix, Ariz., who has volunteered to get. licenses for all stray canines, paid out $100 on his first effort. A fireman was saved by air tanks and a woman stenographer rescued from a window during a fire in St. Louis. Legal authorities of Chicago are puzzled over the method of serving a writ of attachment on Judge Chet lam. The widow of Charles T. Yerkes will receive $163,362 from the es tate left by the traction millionaire. Foreign Monslgnor Bonomelli, Roman Catholic bishop of Cremona, Italy, in e, letter read at the World Mis sionary Conference, at Edinburgh, said: "We are united in the con viction that a universal religion it necessary." ' A bomb was exploded in a squad of gendarmes at a station on tb Vienna Railroad, 30 miles from War saw, Poland, and one gendarme was killed and four mortally wounded. The High State Court at Copen hagen acquitted former Premier Christiansen of complicity with for mer Minlstor of Justice Albertl in extensive frauds. A Russian fired shot at M. de Segesser, first secretary of the Swiss Legation in Paris, but missed htm. The Russian was arrested. ' United States Ambassador Hill It at Weimar, attending the anniver sary of the founding of the Uoetbe Eoclety. The . Italian police are exerting every effort to find Porter Oharlton alive, having failed to find him dead. It is reported that the attempted meditation between Peru and Ecua dor has failed. Emperor William is still confined to his palace by bis lame right knee. A strike of 15,000 railway en gineers and conductors of the Grand Trunk and Canadian Paclfie Rail roads, In Canada, is threatened in the event of the report of the board of counclliatlon going against them. . American Baptist ministers who were attacked by panic-stricken Italians In the Province of Anellino, Italy, at the time of tho recent earth quakes, complained to the Premier of Italy. , The Earl of Beauchamp was ap pointed Lord President of the Brit ish Council in succession to Viscount Wolverhampton, who resigned. COMMERCIAL Weekly Revitwof Trade ana Market Reports. Bradstreet's says: Unseasonably cool weather still arrests retail trade and retards crop progress in the northern halt of the country, and trade is quiet In the southern districts, though cotton and fruit crops there are making prog ress. Jobbing trade reports reflect quiet in consumptive demand In a moderate volume of reorders, which are classed as fairly frequent, but small In the aggregate. Fall trade as a whole still hesitates, pending clearer views of crop and price out come. Industrial reports point to considerable curtailment of output proceeding from uncertainty as to 'the latter. Collections range from slow to fair. The temporary settle ment of the railway rate troubles and the postponment of advances In this Item of cost of business opera tion have given a brighter tinge to feeling in some basic Industries. Tho week's price movement 1b toward a slightly higher range reflecting largely crop uncertainty as regards the cereals and bullish operations in tho remaining old crop cotton months, but the monthly returns of price movement' point to a continu ance of the readjustment of com modity values on a lower level, where high cost will .not, as In the past, automatically check consump tion. Future trade In cotton goods is backward, with opernt'ons cautious. There is considerable shopping iround for lower prices, with a rath r light business in the aggregate re lulting. Curtailment of operations !s still In evidence, some estimates Df tho reducod volume being In the leighborhood of 30. per cent. In woolen goods trade Is also backward, ind there Is some idlo machinery. Sole leather is steadily bought on local and export account. Upper leather Is quiet, and tanners are re ported curtailing operations. Bad weather restricts trade In shoes. Pig iron is more active, but prices ire weaker. FIVE YEARS OF PAIN. Jl Tale of Terrible Kidney Suffering. Mrs. .1. F. Kibble, 62 Stevens St., AVellsvllle, N. Y., says: "1 cannot de scribe the suffering 1 endured from kidney trouble for over five years. : My back was so lame and painful I could not turn In bed without assistance nor ralaa my arms above my head. I often be came so dizzy that I fell. The kldnev se- ,ere dark', thick and ornM. Id. I received no relief until I began using Dunn's Kidney Pills. My m. provemem was so rapid that my fam lly did net think It would be lusting. In six weeks I could do bard day's work with eace." Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a box. FoBter-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. cretions His Changing Culling. Dr. Harvey W. Wl'ev, the govern ment fond expert, was talldnp: of a 'new'1 sort of food preservative. "They are all the same. thing under different names," he fair! It re minded him of the old caretaker of an Episcopal church, of whom he onre heard. This old fellow, ns he frit on a tomb In the churchyard, dismissed as trivial the question of his Proper title. "The good old creed l;ep5 the same for all," he said, "though they may change the words thev use. Look at me, here. I used to be the Janitor. Then we had a paraon w'o called me the sexton. Dr. Thirdly five me the name of virgin And the young man we've pot inw avs I'm the sacrilege." Youth's Com-nanlon. For foi.ns kh.i ;, .!''',i,, .rcfnixit I tic l,t rrm-rtr-Ki'f-V',", ""; l"e.l.i,n-,.uro, lim,wf 5r"'. !'"nn:i1 "'"iow lf lIuuKI-enwta Iti.m.d.uu.ty. .. j Wholesale Mark New York Wheat Spot steady. No. 2 red, 105c. nominal c. i. f. ; No. 1 Northern, 1.13 4 nominal f. o. b. Corn Spot steady; No. 2, 67c. nominal elevator, domestic basis, to arrive c. 1. f.: export No. 2, 66', 4 nominal f. o. b. Oats Spot, steady: mixed, 26 fT 82 lbs., nominal: natural white. 26 f? 32 lbs.. 43(ff4Sc; clipped white, 34(3)42 lbs., 4347. Butter unsettled: receipts, 12.812 packages. Creamerv specials, 28 ffi29c; extras, 28f?28H; creamery firsts, 27; seconds, 27. Poultry Alive Irresular; West ern boilers, 25c; fowls. 19; turkeys. 1014; dressed firm; West ern boilers, 30; fowls, 15(5)20; tur keys, 15 18. Philadelphia. Wheat steady. Con tract grade, June 101 3 104c. Corn firm. No. 2 yellow, for lo cal trade, 67ff67,4c. Oats unchanged. Butter steady. Extra Western freamery, 30c; do., nearby prints, 61. Eggs steady. Pennsylvania and other nearby firsts, free cases, 21V4C. It mark; do., current receipts in re turnable cases, 20 at mark; Western firsts, free cases, 21', a at mark; do., current receipts, free cases, 20 at mark. Cheese lower. . New York full creams, choice, 14 c; do., fair to rood. 14 14. Live poultry lower. Fowls, 19 iff 19 c: old roosters, 13l4514; boil ing chickens, 2327; ducks, 14(f)! 15; geese, 12 13. Baltimore. Wheat No. 2 red Western, 100c: No. 2 red, 1.00; teamer No. 2 red 90. Corn Spot, 62 Uc nominal; July, 63 nominal. Oats We quote, per bu.: Wrhlte is to weight No. 2, 4445: No. 8, 43f?44: No. 4, 415)42. Mixed No. 2, 43; No. 3. 4242. Hay We quote per ton: No. t Itmothv. $20.50; No. 2 timothy, $19 019.50: No. 3 timothy, $15.6017: choice clover mixed, $18,50; No. 1 clover mixed. $17.50 18. Butter Creamery fancy, 29c; choice. 2828; good, 2527; Imitation, 21 23; prints, 29 30. Cheese We quote Jobbing prices, ped lb., 16 17c. Eggs The market is steady. We nuote, per dozen, loss off: Maryland, Pennsylvania and nearby firsts, 20c; Western firsts, 20; West Virginia firsts. 20; Southern firsts, 19. Guinea eggs. 10 to 11c. Live Poultry We quote, por lb.: Chickens Old hens, heavy. 19c, do., small to medium, 19; do., old roosters. 11: do., spring, 1 lbs. and over, 24 25; small to medium, 20 ??22. Ducks Large 13c; small, 12; Muscovy and mongrel, 12 13; spring, 3 lbs. and over, 20. L;ve fetocte. Chicago. Cattle Market steady to 10c. higher; steers, $6.25 8.75; cows. $4.506.75; heifers, $4.25 fij) 7.25; bulls, $4.606.25; $3.00 9.00; stockers and $4.75 6.50. tfntra Mnrlrpt 10(H)15c. choice heavy, $9.65 9.70; butchers'. i.65(3.75; light mixea, in.otx'e 9.65; choice light, $9.669.75; packing, $9.669.65; pigs, $9.25f b.60; bulk of sales, $9.609.70. Sheep Market steady; sheep, $5.156.00; lambs, $7.609.00; spring lambs, $9.00 9.75; year lings, $6.75 7.50. Kansas City. Cattle Market steady to strong, top, $8.50. Dress, er beef and exports steers, $7.80 8.50; fair to good, $5.35 7.40; Western steers, $2.25 8.10; stock ers and feeders, $4.25 6.40; South, em steers, $4.50 8.00; Southern eows, $2.75 5.60; ratlve cows, 3.25 6.25; native heifers. $5 00 7.60; bulls, $3.756.25; calves, $4.00 8.75. Hogs Top. $9.50; bulk of sales, $9.40 9.60; heavy, $9.459.50; packers' aud butchers', $9.87 9.60; light, $9.809.45; pigs, $9.00 9.16. Sheep Lambs strong; sheep, IS 02 6c. higher; lambs $7.40 7.90; yearlings, $8.00 7.76; wethers, $5.006.00; ewes, $4.505.76; stockors and feeders, $3.00 6.60. j Pittsburg. Cattle Supply light; choice, $8.25 8.40; prime, $8.U0 8.20. , Sheep Supply fair; prime weth ers, $6.605i76; culls and common, $2.503.50; lambs, $4.008.00; -veal calves, $9.00 9. SO. Hons Receipts light; crime hea. les, $9.76; mediums, $9.00; bear nd light Yorkers, sio.uo; pus, $10.00; roughs, $8.00(1.75. Many toilet soaps are scented with the oil of petltgraln, which is distill ed In Paraguay Irom the loaves of the wild bitter-orange trees. Thf finot fabric !o oh r..e rompured with lining of tbo Uowt-1. vVben irnuiwd troru any aiu.-te, take fuuikillrr terry Davis). Use of tobacco is universal in the Orient, and the word cheroot and 'its use come from Madras. The first cigars seen by Columbus were wrap ped with corn shucks. buy "Battle Axe" Shoes. Perfectly Easy. 'See here, my man," said the philanthropist who was doing an In vestigating stunt on his own ac count, "you are an interesting puz zle to me." "Is that so?" queried the other. "Yes, It's so," answered the party of the philanthropy part. "You are too honest to steal, too proud to ibeg, and too lazy to work. How do you manage to live?" Man Who Worries. The lnte George W. Chllds, of this city, gave utteranrj in at least im philosophic thought that should bej cherished. He said: "I hear of men' being 'overworked,' of being 'work ed to dcAth,' Don't believe It, No man was ever 'worked' to his grave, but many thousands are driven there by 'worry.' " That ts the thing to avoid. It Is the very Important thing that par-' ents of children, Inheriting a neu-: rasthenlc tendency, should keep lnj mind. We can't, all of us, put aside by sheer effort of will the anxious or distressing thoughts which follow; upon the rising to the setting of the sun, but we can cultivate or be' taught the habit. And to learn not to worry Is well worth while. ' A good way. Just now, for the man of frowning brow and dark some mind, Is to take himself and I his suitcase in hand and go back to the scenes of his earlier and unso- ' phlstirnted life. We advise him to go penltcntially and in modest, sober I mood, to take his way alone through the woods to the meadow where tho cowpnth winds the. route that has I mint and pennyroyal all along It, and the InefTable and indescribable Rroma of the pweet, clean animal life that has traversed and made It. He may suddenly come to a stream that widens into a swimming "hole." If that should be, let him, by all means, doff his worry with his clothes and renew his youth. Phil adelphia Pre?s. A l'lo:iMiio-Si'!'klng Ape. Tho American rrnplp have travel ed a Ions; way Finre the day when Puritan Ideas prevallc:! a:rj pleasure was looked upon nskanre and with distrust and Indulgence in it for its own sake as a sin. These Puritan ancestor took life too seriously, but1 the pendulum has swung so far in the other direction that no one can make that charge agnlnft the pres ent generation. It is a lingering survival of that old-tiino feeling which leads some to wonder if It lias not swung too far and if the univer sal and insistent demand for enter tainment and amusement Is not x wider dennrture from a safe and proper balance than even the olrl at titude of stern condemnation oil thesf- things? For the common cry is, every where, "What shall we do to bo nmcsed? How shall we best gain for ourselves a good time?" To have a "good time," that Is the kev. note. Whatever In the way of di version and pastime or merry-making will secure this, that thing is engerly sought. Some find it In travel. Almoft It seems as If half the population were continually on the wing. The poet's assurance that "home-staying hearts are happiest" meets with little response In thee days. Nearly every one, when not restlessly flitting about outside of home, and often far distant from it. Is planning or hoping to do so. Indianapolis Star. A new electric desk lamp has the fUair.ent stretched out In a long line 10 distribute the Light over a greater area. A Poor Weak Woman Al the Is termed, will endui e (iravrly snd patiently goniel which a strong man would (live way under. The (act is women are more patient than they ouht to be under auch troubles. Every woman oulit to know that tho may obtain the most experienced mciiicul advice free of charge nd in absolute confidence and privuey by writing to the World's Dispensary Mcdiccl Association, R. V. fierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce bas been chief consulting physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Inctitutc, cf Buffalo, N. Y., fcr many years and baa had a v-idsr practice! experience in the treatment of women's diseases than any other phyi'cian in this country. His medicine are world-famous for their astonishiog efficacy. The most perfect remedy ever devised for weak and deli cat women it Dr. Tierce's I avorite Prescription. IT MAKES. WEAK WOMEN STRONG. SICK WOMEN WELL. The many and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are fully set forth in Plain English In the People'a Medical Adviser (1008 paf!es), a newly revised and up-to-date Edition of which, cloth-bound, will be mailed fret on receipt ri 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing nly. Address at above. calves. feeders, higher; Russia produces more hemp for export than all other countries: but Italy, Austria-Hungary, Germany, France, Belgium, Turkey, China and Japan grow It commercially for fiber. Try Murine Eye Remedy For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Evelids. U Soothes Eye Pain, Marine Eve" Remedy Liquid. ?5c. and 50c, Murine Eve Salve. 2oc. and kl.00. A natent has been granted for an I attachment to rocking chairs to op erate a fan to cool the occupants. rr II IT AD Aril l( Hick a CA PIDIXK ?: Whether from Colds. Hest. Btnmarh or erCDUs Troubles. ('BDudlne will rrUr v rou. t'a llguld-plcsksnt lo tke-.-i immeOI acWy. Try tt, luc., 20c. aud Auu. at aru ;SU) es. About one-fourth of the men In the Navy at the present time have been re-enllsted. ! Conxtinntion causes and aggravates many iserious diseases. Jt is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet. The favorite ifaniily laxative. Oil and coal are successfully burn. f' d together under boilers in Eng-and. Ten thousand French vines yield only 400 gallons of wine a year. The same number of vines In Cape Colony will produce 2,800 gallons. 1). N. U. a.i. iiuy "Battle Axe" Shoes. Eggs of wild birds are smaller than those of the same species of !blrds when domesticated. I Mr. Wlnslow's Soothing Byrnp for Dill dren tlon, allays palo.eures wtnd eolln.DSo a bottle ' Lavender and rose perfumes are said to be fatal to microbes. , Buy "Battle Axe" Shoes. i - , Some 60,000 cancer experiments are made every year in England. Skin neanty Promoted. In the treatment of affections of the skin and scalp which torture, dis figure. Itch, burn, scale and destroy the hair.. as well as for preserving, purifying and beautifying th com 'plexlon, hands and hair, Cotlcuia Boap and Cutlcura Ointment are well olgb Infallible. Millions of women throughout the world rely on these purs, sweet and gentle emollients for 'all purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery, and for the sanative, antisep tic cleansing of ulcerated, Inflamed mucous surfaces. Potter Drug A Chem. Corp., Boston, sols proprietors of Us Cutlcura Remedies, will mall free, on request, their latest 32-page Cutlcura Book on ths skin and hair. A burn immediately covered with butter will not blister. Food Products Libby's Vienna Sausage Is distinctly different from any other sausage you ever tasted. Just try one can and it is sure to become a frequent necessity. Libby's Vienna Sausage just suits for breakfast, is fine for luncheon and satisfies at din ner tor supper. Like all of Libby's Food Products, it is carefully cooked and prepared, ready to serve, in Libby's Great White Kitcbga the cleanest, most scientific kitchen in the world. Other popular, ready-to serve Libby Pure Foods aw: Cooked Corned Beef Peerless Dried Beef Vet Lotf Evaporated Milk Baked Beau Cbew Qow Mixed Pickles Insist on Libby's at your grocer's. lUibf, McNeill & Lilly CLicAf Did You Ever Try Shopping By Mail at Macy's Great New York Store? , New York shoppers know values and logically flock to the store that gives the greatest values. As many an a quarter ''''jAwJ'e iSh grral Ma7ytiorijn a iil''fJ"'- Thit b liie best "reason "In the worid yhy youVho "live swiylrbm New York should di is much of your buying is possible by mail it Macy's. You will not only get better jockIs tlian ordinary stoies carry, but you will ret them much cheaper. ' W e want you to become acquainted with this toacy store's mall order shop, plm; service. To get you to do so promptly we offer these special mail orjer Bargains in Women's Suits and Skirts. Buy them, and If they ar: not satisfactory in every way send them back tnd we will promptly refund your mun;y. a mo i ictiv Two-Piece Suit at 4'98 OellnnS rati Is ur PmI OtflM Is th Ualtii State. 21 C.L.231 Mr.del.is illustrated, made of fine quality cotton crash, in white, tan or pinki three-quarter-length coit, sinRle-hreasted. senii-ti(tir with notched collar and revers inlaid with plain lint-n in contristirg colors and turmonizinK with cuff triinminif on the ln? full sleeves; coat fast en? with buttons in contrasting clor. bk rt is full gored, with fancy wide side ple.ils It low hips, and a deep inverted ho pleat in hack, under which the skirt closes invisibly. Sizes 32 to 44. $ Women's alking Delivered Fri? o any Post Offite in ihs United Sutes. 1 .74 21 C.L.202 Mad? of white or dark blue linon, as illustrated, with a deep yoke tittiiiK closely over the hips; s c a 1 1 o ped in front and plain in back: deep side- pleate I flounce; skirt fin ished with deep hem, ornament d with pearl but tons. 5b& Records, 19c Each. As you perhaps know, the fixed nrice of Zonanhon nisr Srmr.U heretofore bas been 60c. each, the country over. Now you may buy them of Macy's at 9c. each, and choose from over 1.500 different titles. Every Record perfect; may be used on any Disc Record Talking Machine. A booklet with t complete list of the selections will be mailed to you upon request Mention when you write us if you want your name on our mailing list for copies of our big catalogues. We want you to become one of our mail order customers, and we know you will be delighted with your buying experiences uith this celebrated New York store. R. H. Macy & Co. rta.; NewYork, N.Y. 60c Zonophone gM,--arv n-v - B SPALDING'S ATHLETIC LIBRARY BASE BALL SERIES No. 231 f How to Or, How to On How U) Via. j Ho Ho I Ta No. 1 Spalding's Official . Baa Ball Guldo. No. 202 TTow to Play Base Hall. No. 223 How to Bat No. 2H2 How to Run Bases. No. 230 How to Hitrh. No. 22) How lo Catrh. No. 225 How to Play First Bom. No. 221 How to Play Second Unae. No. 227 How to Play Thinl Haw. No. 2.'8 How to Play Shortstop. No. 224 How to Play tha Outfiel.i. OTHER SEASONABLE No. 15 Spnlilin aOolflal Atlilotlo Aliniuaa i No. J No U1 Nf-hlvanl Athletic. j No. ft Ko. 4 feliaiduitf tOmclul 1 WD Tennis UuMr No. 177 HVVrV cv 'Official ( yfationaljQeqgue j A. C No. 1A Spalding's Bat Ball Record. rfft.in.-e a Ha PnMCIuU anuit? a Xiaap Bui I Club, How lo Train a Fnll Titm. nwtoCuptuin a Ram1 Ball 1 earn, ow to IJmolrt? a Gume. Tftchniriil Ran Bull Term. No. 219 Ready TUckonerof Bate Bull rprccnUcta. PRICE OF EACH BOOK IO CENTS BOOKS. Aptlrllnaf -inl CrtfrH-Pt tVllft Hu&idtnkr'B oni,'ia,i Golf ujiiiu. Hw Co SW.IJL UaoruM. Spalding "Official National League" ttea v. t rT orft Ball Official Itnll ot the (anme lor over Thirty Years . SPALDING & BsOS. NF.W YORK PHlLADtLPHIA, fA. FITTSBUKii, PA. bUFFALO.N. Y. SYRACUSE, N. Y. NEWARK. N.J. INDIANAPOUi, IND. TORONTO BOSTON, MASS. CHICAGO BALTIMORE, MD. ST. LOUIS. MO. WASHINGTON. D.C. CINCINNATI. O. ATLANTA. OA. CLEVELAND, O. NLW ORLEANS. LA. COLUMBUS. O. ULTa.lIT Ul.'U ftlll ffll i i tv VffATTtr UitJ LOS ckli.S. CAL PALLAS, IkX. ' MILWtUKKt. WIS. MONTREAL, CANADA. LONDON, ENGLAND. strad your nnme aud udriVraa to any al the Above stpnld. tbc sturea aud get h usw uiblrtlo irooila caiuiogus trse, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL KANSAS CITY, MO. DENVER. COL. MINNEAPOLIS. MINI bT. PAUL. MI.V. Yule And Harvard ' "How can you tell a Vale man from a Harvard man?" "Well, a Yale man always acts as If he owned the world. "Yes?" "And a Harvard man always acts as If he doesn't know what vulgar person owns the world, and further more, he doesn't care to know." Cleveland Leader. f' WE BUY WOOL .HIDES and E. yi Bctij PnUrs. 14 ws us aa , hettrn fat rta (an stub ar asaa' tita nkiU. Ktawrsc af tuM la Usinillt. Wl latsua Waal Bi( Vnt U tat taiffCI. TriUUryi". i Jt SjLBEL ft SONS 7fS2? Uriifilk. l. , LET ME DO YOUR I00K-IUYINQ IN NEW V0XK. Any ao.S I lbs World auspllad st lwet Prlia. prompt, nraonal altmlloa Wnla lo A. R. NORTHIllP, Huuui tul. Jtv. t"l fill aur. Ntw Vaik OIlJ. rABIEBV-WASHrtfAH uM alothoa wttho i tlx um o waahbnad or marine, bend foul nam anrt aldrsat and wa will arad ou a Mckattt ira. MXU, DUobll'S CO.. Huuutius. aU yoooooooooooooooooooooooexH Bw"Battle Axe" Shoes W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES 5, 4, -3.50, 3, 92.50 & 2 THE STANDARD FOR 30 YEARS. Millions of anaa waar W. L Douglaa ahoaa be cause tha it ara tha low sat prices, quality caa aidarad, in tba world. Made upon honor.ef tho beat leathera, bjr the moat skilled workman, la all the hue faabiona. W L Dou.Ua IS M snd S4.00 aboea equal Cu.loru Bench Work coatina SH OO to la.00. OiiiSott,l3.$2.$otn w i tv.,.. """W 11 PATFNTS Ird,-"r. Naili.Bounly 1 Alfll.lO. ray. CUimi .filoU to Coy. oaratnC UllclUnt Address W. l WlLLi H2 lad. Ave., WaahiattoO. tr a YRMIM.1 I'M ATI ! . XOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOt00000004 lKBattleAxe"Shoes PATEriTSS2KuH DAISY FLY KILLER esiZOSJS hen. ( l.aa. mmmmm SO, caaaH. O j Iaata a X. at oamN mUI at labia an- (imimmI aw ' 4f ad a ikaa at Mssotas". vn-a.fcl
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers