HI v 1 I .--7- Dangerous Kidney Diseases. ."clery Kins: bM cored me of kidney dls line The doctor feared lirlght'i diseaa, and tried many remedies that gave bm no help. Celery King bM mndo me an well M ever In my life, mxl It seems nlratiit as though a miracle had lren wrought In my case- Jen Die O. Retcnard, Bpringtinrn, la. Celery King rures Cotwtlpatlon and Nerve, Stomach, UVT and Kidney disease, t $900 Yearly SIUII Men nn I Woman of good iwldreen to represent as, Mnie to travel inH""N',T agent., othc ra for ImmI work looking after our hitvre-U. ttHOO wilnry Kuaruntect yearly; extra commliaionH find IX pen MM, rapid ilvuncement, old etal li.licri lioiue- (trend chance for narncat emu or woman to wecurr pli'iNAnt. permanent pool tion, liberal income ami future. New, brilliant 111) OS, W rite at once. s i 1 1 iti pitr.KM j:i rtinrta .St., Haven. Conn. a-si-ist WRITERS CORRESPONDENTS or REPORTERS Wanted everywhere. Stories, news, ideas, poems, i hint rate i urtiele advance news, drawings, photo graphs, unique articles, etc., etc , purchased. Articles revised and pre pared for publication. Books pub li-hed. Head for particulars and full information before sending ar ticles. U The Bulletin Press Association, New York. LONDON'S BIRD TRADE. There I a Inrprletng Kiptrt of Hah- tna ana a Large lmnrl of Oajuerloa. " Th bird to which IB majority ol people or devoting their ette tlon at this ft stive aeaaon of the year are those which are hung" up or laid out attract Ivory la tha windows of poulterer' hops. There arc other kinds of bird however, that cause a considerable turnover in Money la tha count of a year. Vsat numbers af robins, for in stance aro e aught and sent abroad. Tha number of robin redbreast (Ery thaee rubcettla) that are exported from this country to the United States, CsUMslfj and Australia during tha year reaches a total of nearly 25,000, and they fetch about 11,000. A few ster ,lings ar included in thes figures, as It has been found impossible to obtain separate statistics; but the great roa jority are robins, enys tha London Mail. Amour tinging birds, at least 500,000 canaries find purchasers in this coun try in the oourte of a year, representing in cash 120,000. Fully a quarter oi these come from the Tyrol and certain parts of Germany, where In some little villages canary breeding it practically the only industry. The largest number of canaries bred in England ieby a firm In the neighborhood of Norwich, which .disposes of 20,f)0f per year, the value oi which is about fi.000. Piping bullfinches are slso largely ol German Importation, the best districts lor these being Hesse and Fulda. About 40.000 trained bullfinches come into this country every year from Ger- many and Russia, nntl their value, tak ing one wit!- another, is over 100,000. The chaffinch is a very common bird 'In England, to eottimon that it can be bought in the streets for sixpence, but 4n Germany there is a variety whoa aong is very highly esteemed. A few 'have been brought over here and told et 4 each, but the climate does not apparently suit them. Larks and linnets are actually to be tbonght for twopence each from the men who net them, but a dealer usually charges at least a shilling for them. Blackbirds, thrushes and goldfinches usually cost more, about a couple ot shilling, although they may be got for sixpence first hand. The largest price obtained for a Brit ish wild bird is 10, for a perfectly white specimen of a blackbird. The Bachelor's Idea. Mr. Xewpop You haven't seen onr bsby pet. He's only three months old, but I tell you be't bright. Joe liaeheller That's soT Can he ar sit up on bis hind lags and beg? Philadelphia Press, Land and Water Center. If the world be divided into ltnd ami water hemispheres, London is the center of the laud, New Zealand of the muter. Science. Unknown practical jokers created a sensation in Rich wood, N. J., one even ing lately by bringing to town and turning loose a swarm of atrauge cats, which have been making life miserable for the resident ever since. Good luck simply thrusts itself upon some people. A New York society girl got married recently to a man who claimed that he waa a French count and who now turna out to be a horse doctor. In the schedule of a New York bankrupt recently filed in court it ap pear that ho owes $3e) for beer and $20 for pew rent. TRUE GREArr. . sS. The wisest mnn I ever knew Had neither wealth nor fume; Few people In this busy world Have ever hoard his name; He never wrote n book nor led An army In the fray. Nor nuked men for their votes aer mourned Because they said him nay. He may have known his Bible and His Shakespeare through and through If so he never tried to let The world know what he knew; He tolled, and Fortune sweetly smiled. And still he tolled away. And stopped to rest and found himself A millionaire one day. This was tho greatest, wisest man I ever knew, berauae. Although he never wrote n book Nor won the world's applause. He took his million and withdrew From all the rush and roar. Instead of starting In anew To win a million more. -S. E. Klser, In Chicago Times-Herald. : THE WIRE TAPPER'S ERROR. ; o Miscarriage of an Attack on i Big Roll. II'T'HE corralling here the other day 1 of that real smooth and glossy boy, Chappie Moran, the phony wire, tapper, on a charge of extracting 1.000 bucks, actual currency, from the apparel of a moonface who ached to got rich right quick, be didn't care how the nailing of the Chappie makes me think of n wire tapper I once knew who made n heart-breaking failure of one of his jobs," re marked an old-time Headquarters de tective, now retired. "I refer to Lamplighter Rarrett, who quit plough ing these fruitful fields about five years ago and died in 'Friseo from an excessive use of the bop toi In '99. "The mnin difference between Mo ran and Rarrett lies in this, that Mo ran, although an expert telegrapher, never really tapped a race wire in his whole money-making career, whereas Rarrett, in the old days when wire tapping was possible which it dis tinctly la not now actually turned that trick once in a while when he found the coin hard to gain on the mcrs pretense of wire tapping. But Lamplighter Rarrett worked the imi tation tapping dodge with enough skill to keep him in Turk cigarettes, the best hop made in Chink land and choice raiment, for a good many years around these and neighboring parte that I, he stamped between New York and Chicago and took in such intermediary points aa Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington, Detroit, Buffalo and other unassuming little places like those. "Although, M I say, he really knew how to wire-tap and to do It right, and polled off a number of1 those tricks, be preferred the eaaier phony method, and he waa one of the pion eers at It the simple scheme of tak ing the come-on to a quiet room, show ing him a lot of wires and clicking keys, putting up the talk that it was all fixed to take the results right off the main wire, and thus coaxing the dough out of the come-on's clothes. "The little incident that I'm going to tell you about, however, so preyed upon Barrett's mind he was dubbed Lamplighter, by tho way, because he once achieved a hog-killing on that good animal and touched his pride so hard that he never lifted up his head any more around here after ward, and it wasn't long before he streaked for the Pacific. "Barrett was standing in the bar room of one of the Broadway hotels much patronized by graftera and sure-thing men, on a fine forenoon in June, '95, waiting for a good one to come his way. His pal, Ed Fellows, was with him. "Presently there walked Into the barroom from the hotel lobby, a tall, lanky man who looked uncomfortable in his store clothes. By the looks of him he was obviously from Painted Post, or Three Forks, or Ipswich, or soma place like that, and it waa the easiest thing in life to put him down aa one of 'em on his honeymoon tour. He looked like a new husband from the woods who had excused himself from the new wife for a minute and had just sneaked down to the bar to throw one in for the purpose of reviv ing his flagging spirits. He wore a dead new black sack suit, new black derby hat of the up-ceuntry block, new and aqueaky shoes and a white string tie. He walked like he was stepping over furrows. "Barrett and his pal exchanged grins when they saw him walk up to the bar, but, of course, they had no idea that he waa good enough for them. Simply out of habit they watched him when he paid for his drink, just to see what he had. When they observed him pull out of his right trousers' pocket a wad of the yellow kind that would've clogged a four-inch waste pipe they exchanged glances of a different sort. " 'Get next,' Ed, said Barrett, giving his pal a dig. 'D'ye think there's a ball of yarn or a turnip inside of that bunch?' , " 'Not in a million,' replied Fellows. 'It's the goods. Go after it.' "The tall, lanky man in the store clothes peeled off a fifty and hurled it on the bar, remarking that that waa his smallest, and then he leaned on one prop and gazed dreamily at his reflection in the bar mirror while the barkeeper was making change. "Well, Fellows was sure there when it came to butting in. and two min utes later he waa purchasing a drink for the lanky man in the shell raiment, who, although gawky and shy, seemed rather glad to have some one to talk to. Then Barrett intro duced his pal, and soon the three were in an alcove, touching the but ton, and engaged in much discourse. "The man in the store clothes, II seemed, wss the propriety of n gen eral store in some nnchnrted Iowa township and he was on for his first visit to New York. He warmed up pretty well under the influence of three or four drinks. "In paying for one of the rounds he hauled out that roll again, and Bar rett and his pal, experts as they were '.n assaying any man's wad by one flash at it, saw that it waa all right. There were fifties and hundreds nough, and nice new ones, at that, to cause any sure thing man to imagine himself in the land of dreams. "Hating much fun?' inquired Rar tett, around sixth drink time. 'Been down to see the horse-flesh prance?' "No, the general store proprietor hadn't. He was willing to, though. Only races he'd ever seen had been trotting rnces ont In Ioway, and he'd had a lot of luck betting on them, too, b'gosh. "Well, that opening made it easy enough for a grafter of Rarrett's ca pacity. He worked it up gradually, and was at length rewarded by see ing the general store keeper's pale irray eyes light up with avarice. Then Itarrett sprung the game in detail, watehing his man like a rat. "'If you don't get their coin, they'll get yours, won't they?" said he, elo quently. 'They put up plants to trap vour dough, don't they? You don't get t square run for it once in ten times.do you? All right it's a case of dog eat dog, is this pony game. It's do them or they'll do you. It's perfectly nn the level to go after their gilt nny old way and as a sensible mnn I think you'll gibe with me on that.' "Doggoned if he wouldn't, re marked the store clothes man. ne'd always thought those hoseracing fel lers were thieves. But was Mr. Rar--ett sure that there couldn't be no slip In the scheme? "Was Mr. Rarrett? Well, it was like collecting on a money order, that was all. " 'The only renson I haven't put it over long ago,' said Barrett, 'is be- eause I've been without sufficient funds, and there's no use piking at a thing like that. Of course, I've got enough to haul down a few hundred, but my Instruments and plant have cost me more than a thousand and it's a ease of the big dough or nothing with me. "The Iowa man reflected. If he could only see beforehand how it worked he might " 'That's just exactly what I want you to do,' said Barrett, convincingly. 'Come right around now and we'll be able to get action this very afternoon. My friend and I will prove to you how it works.' "Well, of eonrse, there's no use In going over how Barrett and hit pal took the good thing around to the lit tle back room in Sixth avenne, showed htm the telegraphing layout and the wire lsadiur out of the win dow, explained bow they could get the results off the wire and hold them un til one of them went to a neighbor ing poolroom and got the money down, and all the rest. The thing made a. hit with the Iowa man all right, and Barrett and hia pal had tha satisfaction of seeing his pale gray eyea glow some more with de sire. " 'Well, I'll go in pardnera with you,' said tho Iowa man, and Lamplighter Rarrett kicked Follows under the table In sheer lightness of spirit for it had been some time since they'd nailed one who looked so promising. " 'Now, about how much would you care to invest?' inquired Barrett. 'As I told you, it's a case of putting down the right kind of money, for of course there's a certain risk and we want to soak 'em for a good roll before we close up this plant and open up somewhere else. Got a couple thousand to put in, say?' "Well, the store clothes man had something like $3,500 with him, he re marked, pulling out the roll and rif fling over the new fifties and hun dreds, but he wouldn't like to put in so much as $2,000 without be had a chance to see beyond a doubt how the thing waa going to work. " 'Well,' said Barrett, 'there's noth ing mean about me, and I'll sure give you a chance to see what a cinch we've got. We'll each you and I, for my friend Is not in funds just now put in a hundred on the first race, and if we don't get the money I'll just hand you another hundred and send you on your way. How'a that?' "That suited the store clothes man all right. It suited him ao well that he pulled off a hundred from his roll on the spot and handed it over to Barrett, who added his hundred in nn off-hand way he nlways held out a roll for working purposes. "Then Barrett explained that the first race at Sheepshead Ray waa due In about an hour, and that he would attend to the tapping in the room, while hia friend and the Iowa man waited down in front for the signal aa to which horse had won. As soon as his friend got the signal he waa to make off for the poolroom with the $200, and the Iowa man waa to come back to the room to wait for hia money with Barrett. "Everything waa agreeable to the general storekeeper, and thua it was arranged. Barrett produced a bottle and they had a few drinks and talked until the time for the first Sheepahead race drew on, and then Fellows and the come-on walked downstairs to wait for Barrett's sig nal as to the winner. "After they had waited for about 20 minutes Barrett gave a 'Past!' from the landing, and Fellows ran up the stairs to him and inclined hia head to Rarrett's whisper. Then he leaped down the stairs. " 'I've got it! he whispered to the come-on. 'Run upstairs now to Bar rett, and I'll be back in a few minute with the dough.' , "With an exulting look the good thing went upstairs wV Fellows took off down the Mrret to the pool room. The lows man seemed to he in such a maae over the prospects that he apparently forgot to inquire of Barrett which horse had won, and. anyhow, Rarrett talked such a stream that the come-on had no chance to get in a word. They shook hnnda and lad a drink, and about ten minutes later Fellowa came hounding in with triumphant expression on his face. ",'lt is like getting money from your bank president pa!' he ex :laimed, throwing two five-hundred tnd two one-hundred bills in a roll n the table. 'Is it? And who'd ha' thought that that bum filly Tender ness would have beat Sebastian, and Sebastian at four to five? I wouldn't linve played Tenderness in a hundred years. This Is the only way to beat em. I got five to one for the $200, nd yon two cop out $300 each the first rattle out of the box.' "The Iowa man's countenance wore l broad grin aa Rarrett handed him Dne of the five-hundred and one of the one-hundred-dollnr bills, remark ing: " 'Well, what d'ye think of us? D'ye think we're pood enough?' " 'Well, yes,' drawled the phony countryman, as he stuffed the $t00 in his vest pocket. 'You're the yappiest pair of tin horns that ever worked in j paper box factory.' "The imitation countryman, as he spoke, suddenly leaped back about live feet, so that his shoulders touched the door, and the amazed ind disgusted Rarrett and Fellows, with gaplnp mouths, observed that they were under a gun nbout a foot long, which their transformed come on was gently waving in hia right band. "'You're the bulllest pair of bum lelling platers that ever kicked the mud in each other's muzzlea on a half-mile track. I'd like to meet a xmple like you three times a day. I was laying for you, and I got you. If you' addressing Rarrett, whom he fixed with his pale gray eyes 'will take a look at that hundred I handed fou, you'll observe that it's aa com mon a piece of bogus rag aa was ever turned out of a fiber worka. It's a kind o' queer that I wouldn't try to pass on a blind melodeon player on a dark atreet. I could make better with i carpener'a pencil and a piece o' blotting paper.' "Barrett bad reached Into his pocket and pulled out the MH that the man who had him under the gun had given him, and was staring at it gloomily. "I'm six hundred to the right.' continued the tall, lanky man, 'and that'll get me a that and a ahine. rhe next time you think you've nailed a mark, take the trouble to pipe off the color of hia dough, and you wont get switched to a siding. That'll be all.' "The tall, lanky man, who hap pened to be Jerry Rathbone, who'd made hia mark on two continents aa a queer-ehovrr, backed out of the door after removing the key, locked the door when he got outside, and Barrett and Fellowa sat and atared at each other while they listened to his retreating footfall die away on the stairs. It took them half an hour to kick the door down. " 'It broke the old man' heart,' said Fellows, who told me the story while I was taking him on a little journey a year later. 'It cut him deep for a fact. It wasn't the copping out of his six hundred that seared him to the bone, but it waa the way it waa done. He got ao'a he'd talk to himself about It while he was awake and in bed he'd mumble in his sleep about it. It was that turning off that made the poor old guy pull for the slope." N. Y. 8un. The American Way. After the duel had been fought be principals repaired to a cafe and ordered lunch. Not exactly gourmands, but hearty eaters were they, which caused an American, who had gone to the expo sition and had not yet earned suffi cient capital for the return voyage, to remark that it takea more to sat isfy a Frenchman's appetite than it doea hia honor. No sooner had the words left hie Hps than Count de Boozleane struck him in the face with hia open palm. But lol Instead of challenging the count and wiping out the inault in mortal combat, the American simply smashed him between the eyes, caught him with a right-hand hook aa he was going down and then stepped on his fsce with his bulldog shoes, evil the while asking the count if hia honor was satisfied. The count finally admitted that it waa. Moral: That'a why we have no dueling in the land of the froe. In dianapolis Bun. Sewed Bp for the Winter. This Is a true story, and it waa told to the reporter by a prominent work er in one of the East aide settlements. The other day a woman living in Riv ington street brought her little bay to the settlement house and expressed a desire to have him enter the kinder garten. The child had a bright face, but it waa woefully dirty, and one of the aettlement rules is that all pupils must present at leant a clean exterior. So the teacher looked at the little boy and said: "Why, certainly he can come to the kindergarten, but we want all the children to be clean. Give him a good bath to-night and send him to us in the morning." "Bath!" gaaped the mother. "How can I bathe him? I've sewed him up for the winter." N. Y. Mall and Ex press. la the West. First Tourist They say the Indiana of this region were fierce warriors. Second Tourist Yes; they didn't smoke the pipe of peace often enough to get a tobacco heart. Punk. In answer to an advertisement which offered, free of charge, a "two- dollar book on the secret of aucceias- Irhrmri of 5prf- utatssa. fu, 8pcuiatiOII a Boston man a year ago forwarded hia address. A package of attractive circulars came promptly from u New Vork "investment broker." Since that time the Hostonian has received from the some person 23 letters and two telegrams, all advising biiu of special opportunities in the stock market. The New Yorker's propo sition sounds very fair. He does not want to handle any money, and argees to pay himself with a per centage of the profits made in trans actions which he advises. He tells t.hs investor to send his money to any one of several firms, members of the stock exchanges. The investor is to authorize these people to "buy and sell stocks for my account when ordered to do so by" the agent, who claims to have peculiar facilities for forecasting the course ot tho mar ket. Many persons yield to the agent's artful and persistent solicita tion, says Youth's Companion, and conclude to risk a little. In the course of a few days the man who has parted with a hundred dollars or more is informed that the stock bought for his account has unexpect edly fallen in price, and his money is lost. As a mntter of fact, the In vestor has been swindled. The agent and the broker are in collusion. No stock wxis cither bought r sold. The broker pave the agent a certificate of purchase end sale, to make the tran saction look "regular;" then the two thieves divided the victim's money. The stock exchanges can sometimes discipline such brokers, as they late ly tried to do; but it is almost im possible to bring the law to bear on the "advisers" and "agents," who are as adroit as they are unscrupulous. The only way one can get the bet ter of them is to let them alone. The man who has any dealings with them will lose his money every time Dr. Wiley, the government chemist, who is authorized by congress to make . an Investigation of Ad.lt.ratl.- ol preervtitlTe, and coloring mat tera to determine their relation to dl geation and health, and to establish the principles which should guide theii use, saya that from a discussion ot thin matter the general public ia like ly to think there ia no pure food to be obtained in the United States. Noth ing, it ia aald on good authority, could be farther from the truth than this. In fact, most of the goods offered for sale in our marketa are perfectly pure and wholesome. Less than five per cent, of the purchaae from a reliable firm would be found to be adulterated. "But," aays Dr. Wiley, "with 30,000,000 wage-earners in this country, who spend three-fourths of the $25,000,000 a day earned by them for food and its preparation, too much attention can not be given to the aubject. All adul terants are not harmful, and if the workman wants to buy oleomargarine, labeled as such, because It ia cheaper, he should be allowed that pleasure. In the same manner, he should be given glucose instead of honey If he wanta It, and Is not deceived in the buying. If some esthetic folka care more for the delicate green tint of their peaa and such other vegetables than they do for the good of their digestive organe, they should be humored with the dose of zinc and copper salta that ia required to give it, but every can should be la beled as containing zinc and copper salta, as well aa peas, so others, who do csre, may avoid it. In fact, it ia only when the law compels a merchant to sell goods with the nam of adulter ant, preservative and coloring matter used in putting up the goods printed in plain letters on the label that this traf fic can be 'stopped. Allow people to know what they are getting, aa a pro tection to the innocent, and the othera can choose for themselves." Experienced oratora are cautious of interrogation as a figure of poach. "In the four quartera of the globe," i wrote Sydney Smith. 75 years ago. "who reads an American book? or goes to an American play? or looks at an American picture or statue? What does the world yet owe to American physicians or surgeons? . . . What have they done in the mathematics? Who drinks out of American glaaaes or cats from Amer ican plates, or wears American coots or gowns, or sleeps in American blankets?" The gibe was no doubt deserved at the time, but the rev erend joker'a queations and the laugh which accompanied it have been echoing down the ages. Just at present the laugh emanates from America, and haa in it a note of triumph. Partridges feed as soon as they wake in the morning, and an unscru pulous 'inventor is showing how they can be fattened by putting them in a dark cellar with electric lighta. Ev ery time the lighta are turned up the birda think it ia morning, and ao eat breakfast five or six times in the aft ernoon. Why not add akylarka to furnish music at the meals? Rabies are now sent to aleep by a lul laby trilled forth by the phonograph. Sort of a lulloby ograph, yon know. POTTERY IMITATIONS. are la e Way la w hick Cleva, Annans ivr mm lion, t Paaay. If the peddler calls upon one any tt. and offers at counter-bargain price J ceramic antique, he ahould be shoe. the door politely out nrmiy. ilei,, humbug and his goods are bopus. Th? demsnd for specimens of early ceramj art ie so much larger than the ;ivaj;at aupply that unscrupulous potteri th, world over are finding profitable wtrk in counterfeiting the wares of t h e early civilizations. In this field the Japante, are by far the cleverest. They can 3 tate not only their own earthenware but alto those of Corea, China and Ctt bodia. Ihey do It so well that theyde. celve experienced buyers and htri been known to lead astray the bestEj, ropean experts, says the New York Some admirable counterfeiting m done in Staffordshire, Kngland. but thua far it has been confined to earlr English productions. One concern hat turned out some capital copies of the 1 old Roman pottery, and by some chfn,l ical proeets has succeeded in pi vinp the! exterior the grimy and honeycomb sjl pearance which comes normally froal long burial In wet soil franc, ItM and Germany hnve turned an honwtl penny in this line of work, hile thtl kilns of Egypt and Asia Minor are uktl to produce relics of the Pharaoh fl considerable success. American not. ter. It ia admitted, have yielded to H temptation, but thus far with but little-1 success, atrange to soy, their workhtil been so good that it has sold on account I of its beauty rather than its rfscu-l blaace to ancient models. A popultrl type of this kind of workmanship l found in a small dark-red earthntnM dish, which is Etruscan in styll tail Japanese in ornamentatiun. H mil imitated in Trenton from a Japuajfl Imitation of an Etruscan original. The! oddest in Kioto had upon the circua-l ferenee of the major swell of the boiyl a few flying birds and comentiu fishes, which gave a very pleaaing t I feet to the whole. In Japan it is iolfl aa tha copy of an ancient Human del sign. The Trenton artisan makes it si a genuine Japanese curio, and sells itl aa auch. In the last few weeks these j genleua men have taken up the repnj duetion of Zunl ceramics. Her thtyl have scared quite a hit. The wareiml exceedingly simple and require , kill ar labor. They are mad in 1 qusntitise, and can be purchased si New York and other cities for ten nil fifteen cent apiece. The latest cornel Is the Mexican potter, who now pre duces Aztec antiques. As he Hr lineal descendant af that ancient pl pi, hia offense is, perhsps, exes His normal workmanship ia almost t bad aa that of hia ancestors, sotiill la possible his counterfeits are natt, unintentional reproductions of A coarse and ugly wares, which went uae ia the balla of the Montezumu The two bank officials who wn the Vancouver bank and comn uicide were victims of a pusiol desire to "pet rich quickly." It si too common fsilinp in the Unit States, and suicide is not the penalty. Even they who sua must pay a price. Sometimes H I added worries, and often, alas! ill the gradual breaking of old ties, ' loss of higher ambition, the hti lng of kind hearts and loss of I In human nature. Wealth is not! of life, nor even the better part oil istence. So say the sages of all 1 and all ao-ew. ... ' . . Too Maeh Baslnesa. Mrs. Jaggs (the next morning you know what time you got last nlsrht? Mr. Jatnre It must hare been I ty late, but an important bus transaction detained m at th flo nnrl hv the wn v. dear, 010 I see anrthlnr of my shoes? "Yes; you'll find them hnrlif the hatrnck in the hall, jm you left them." N. Y. Wor when you --- ... 1 when M "TJ end the heai hourly tofe strong; and healthy of body tim of tho woaaanlj disease m ruMMilklt for ffauuin Women who have used V'JjM vorite yreecription for th of the womanly onxn, don't tire thtsn aay """Ij-jU Preriptie leguUt ttjj eafaablW drain. hU '",fflfil ulceration, aad re fctIe TtS make week women strong a ThM.Ua. slcohol In Jen," maimer opiate, cocai" 01 Thefjoor hfatth i fer Ei th UMkef say ehiW , wrrt mSr uataU saitanr. fur a sh t coed mi 1 cood veil, on wa jvmr ,-Unr If- hat wiMB var letter rescan it-. !woa atasaih, 1st SSSLe.'ft' eonN"',ri rTcrMW.'' MOa Medical DtSeorrry' s1 rvtieu.'" a, or. nmri rew flfi 1 EAST won WSSatty -mi l a1i 1 1 m
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers