Weak Stomach Sensitive to every little indiscretion in eating, even to exposure to draughts and to over-perspiration—this condition is pleasantly, positively and permanently overcome by the magic tonic touch of Hood's ° Sarsaparilla, which literally “makes weak stomachs strong.” It also creates an appetite—makes you feel real hungry, and drives away all symptoms of dyspepsia. Be sure to get Hood’s Sarsaparilla America’ 's s Greatest M Medici ine. All Arugeicle, Hood's Pills c cure all liver ills. = 25 cents. Bicyclists and Tons It frequently happens that a bicyclist would like to drive off an annoying dog, but doesn’t want to kill the beast, run the risk of a bullet hitting a bystander, nor attract the attention which a cartridge explosion is certain to do. The dog is consequently encouraged to try his trick on the next rider. A soundless pistol, shooting water, ammonia or other liquid, is now mailed postpaid for 50 cts. in Sams oy the Union Supply Co. 135 Leonard St., City. One of these will drive off the SALT vicious animal, and still not really injure it. A few drops of ammonia in the eyes, nose or mouth of any animal give it something to think of other than bothering a cyclist. Itis a boon to wheelmen and wheelwomen. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H.K LINE, Ltd. 931 Arch St.Phila, Pa Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma~ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottie. Rev. H. P. ‘Carson. Scotland. Dak., says: “Two bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure complete- 1y cured my little girl.” Sold by druggists, Te. We have not been without Piso’s Cure for Consumption for 20 vears.—LiZ FERREL, Camp St. Harrisburg, Pa., May 4, Among every 1.000 bachelors thereare 38 criminals; among married mea the ratio is only 18 sper 1,000. F OL No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobaccohabit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. Hc, $l. All druggists. Steamboats are displacing gondolas in: Venice. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take & ascarets Candy Cathartic. 10¢ or? HC.( : fail So erive; druggis sts refund ny imexpensive anu mHectunl, When the cycling season is ever, the gay Parisienne, seeking a safe retreaf in which she may store her wheel untis the springtime comes again, simply pawns it. The “Mont de Piete’” affords an effectual and inexpensive means of storing one’s bicycle when not required for use. Effectual, because the insti tution is under State control, and the authorities bind themselves to keep the machine safely; inexpensive, because the cost of storage for four months. is ‘only two to three francs. Lucky peo ‘ple. those Parisians, to be able to hous: itheir wheels on such terms. Talking 1t Uver. Miss Maecfall-I wouldn't marry 1 man who was less than 80 years old. Miss Kittish—ADh, selfish to the last, ! see. Miss Macfall—What is there selfil about that? Miss Kittish—Why, you wouldn” want, when you died of old age, tt leave gour husband in his prime anc have a chance to get some young gir and be happy. A LIVING WITNESS. Mrs. Hoffman Describes How She Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advice, and Is Now Well DEAR Mgrs. PiNknAM:—Before using your Vegetable Compound I was a great sufferer. I have been sick for months, was troubled with severe pain in both sides of abdomen, sore feeling in lower part of bow- els, also suffered with dizziness, headache, and could not sleep. I wrote you a letter describ- ing my case and asking your advice. You replied tell- ing me just what to do. 1 ¥ followed your direc- tions, and cannot praise your medicine enough for what it has done for me. Many thanks to you for your advice. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has curcd me, and I wild recom- mend it to my friends.—3} rs. FLORENCE R. HOFryAY, 512 Roland St., Canton, O. The condition described by Mrs. Hoff- man will appeal to many women, yet lots of sick women struggle on with their daily tasks disregarding the urgent warnings unid overtaken by actual collapse. The present Mrs. Pinkham's experi- -ence in treating female ills is unparal- leled, for years she worked sido by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometimes past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year. BAD BREATH a mild and efoctive laxative they are simply won- derful. My d d 1 were bothered with sick A gan our vod, was very bad. After a few doses of Cascarets we have improved oy They are a great help in the family.” ILHELMINA NAGEL. N37 Rittenhouse 8t., Cincinnati, Ghlo. CANDY “CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Pater, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken. or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. ««« CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chleago, Montreal, New York, 315 NO-TO-BA ANTED—Caxa of bad health rhat R-I-P-A-N-S will not benefit Send bs cts. to inane A Co., NewYork, fur 10 sawplss sud 1 fold and guaranteed by all arug- gists to CUIL £ Tobacco Habit. The manure, testimonials, yn FARM AND GARDEN. Land to Clover. All land sown to wheat should be sown to clover. If but one season’s growth is to be expected, this short growth will be worth quadruple the cost of the seed.. A clover sod of one season’s growth is much superior to wheat stubble only for plowing under for corn. VV Sowing Tufted Pansies. The pansy is a species of violet—vi- ola tricolor. Some thirty years ago some Scottish nurserymen crossed a wild violet = of Scotland, violet amoena, with a garden pansy, and the result was a beautiful hybrid. Other species of wild violet were sub- sequently tried, until the distinct race, known as tufted pansies, was pro- duced. —Meehan’s Mouthly. Protecting Orchards From Frosts, To protect orchards and gardens from frosts, have plenty of ‘‘smudges” prepared, i. e., piles of sawdust or other material that will give much smoke, then one hour after sunset, if air is still and dry, sky clear, aud the temperature under forty-tive degrees, look again at nine o’clock and if thir- ty-eight degrees or less, watch closely, and if thirty-five degrees 1s 1egistered fire the smudges at once. Good Results From the Garden. Tt does not require an expert to ob- tain good results in the garden. Select a good, rich it well with eitlfer good, old, well- rotted barn mannre or commercial fertilizer, have the ground well plowed and thoroughly harrowed, then piant the seed, each variety in its prover season. Then he sure to keep the weeds down,and you can but reap good results. The garden can be made to produce something new and fresh for the table for almost every day, from early in the season until late fall, if we only take tage of what may be grown in our eli- mate.—New York Ww Fectily Witness. Cream Ripening. The vessel should be so kept that the cream will ripen evenly, thus avoiding loss in churning. The tem- perature should be kept between sixty- two and sixty-eight degrees until the cream is ripe, and it should then be cooled before churning. Well-ripened cream should be so thick that it will run in a smooth stream like oil, and when the paddle is dipped into it and held up the cream should stick all over it like a thick coat of paint, and have a satin gloss of surface. The churning should be continued until the gr anules are the size of wheat kernels, then draw off the buttermilk and wash through two or three waters, whirling the churn around a few times. From a pint to a quart of water to the pound of butter should be used, and this water Should be at a temperature forty to forty-five degrees in hot weather, and {rom fifty to sixty degrees in winter, depending upon the solid- ity of the butter, size of granules and warmth of room. Air in the Soil. The importance of the thorough cultivation of the soil is recognized by all who experiment to an extent suffi- cient to show results. Air is as neec- essary to the soil as moisture, for by its admission the chemicals of the soil are put into active operation and brought into condition to be made quic kly available by the growing crop. the remains of plants and much of the humus of the soil is converted into saltpetre, that valuable chemical. When the soil stirred with hoe ov cultivator a forma- tion of nitrates is promoted and an increased state of fertility bronght about by the aclion of air on ganic matter in the soil. on a larger scale, therefore, fail to increase: the fertility by the admission of iucreased air and mois- ture to the soil the dire t feeding of the plants, as well as the action on the elements in the soil, and the strneion of noxious weeds which the 1s Cultivation for cultivated plants of needed food. Raixing Poulwy Foods, The profits in poultry raising depend guite as much on obtaining the food a sniall cost as any thing at on else. warm, early piece of land, en- advan- | worms or larvae which of pupate in earthen cells under | many of them. | overcrowding and poor ventilation are | among chicks. | Chicks will old aen frequently do the for these pests to again secure cover- ings, and after many years’ close eb- servation of the habits of cutworms I doubt if a single one can be destroyed by simply stirring the soil. In my experience I have found two distinct species of cutworms, one cut- ting the corn on the surface of the ground and being readily found and caught in the act of destruction. The other is out of sight and cuts the corn about an inch below the surface, and the mischief is not detected until the corn begins to wilt. Corn cut below the surface of the ground is irretriev- ably ruined, but when cut above the ground, when small, with the excep- tion of being retarded in growth, it is seldom injured. Corn planted on sod that has been pastured the preceding year is more liable to be damaged by cutworms than if no stock had been allowed upon the ground. —John Cow- nie in Towa Homestead. Losing Young Chicks, Many complaints are heard this year, mainly from those who have had their first experience with an incuba- tor, regarding the large proportion of the chicks hatched which die during the first two or three weeks after hatching. In most cases the fault is laid to the incubator, which is hardly fair. - The cold, wet weather which has prevailed has been hard on the little chicks and caused the loss of Overheated brooders, also responsible “for many deaths It is safe to say, how- ever, that the main trouble, not only this year, but all years, is due to in- hevited weakness, and when thisisthe case no amount of care or attention in feeding will overcome the trouble. tor before time, on time, or a little | and be extremely lively for a few days | or even for two or three weeks, then Chicks hatched by the same thing. There is more’in the proper selection of stock for hatching than most peo- suddenly die. ' ple are willing to believe, and it pays every time to know something of the ancestry of the embryo chick in the egg you intend to hatch even if the breed is pure. In the majority of cases where a male runs with forty or even more hens, the proportion of fer- tile eggs laid by the hens will be small and even the fertile ones will produce weak chicks. Other well-known causes are responsible for weak chicks, —At- lanta Journal. Some Common Strawberry Pesfa. The one which has been most abun- dant this season is the strawberry root worm. The mature insect is a beetle about the size of radish seed with a shining black or brown surface, and two antenn:e resembling a pair of its legs. It is quite active on its feet, but when disturbed it ‘plays the 'pos- sum’ and rolls into the ground. I have found as many as five at a single hill of plants. These beetles are, of rourse, the consequence of the root last fall were feeding npon the fibrous roots of the plants. The worms are small whitish grubs, which when they are full grown the sur- | face of the ground and therefore are { berry crown, borer, | stage resembles a weevil, ! not oue, |-the merely | the oz- | | larly destructive in old beds of cannot | | berry ground w out of sight while doing their greatest damage. The other insect found is the straw- which in the beetle though it is The larva or borer is a whit- ish, yellow-headed grub resembling the root worn except in being footless. It is one-fifth of an inch long, and lives in the crown of the strawberry plant, weakening it so that it cannot survive the winter. The crown-borer pupates within the cavity formed in the crown of the plant but emerges as adult beetle, which gray in color, one-fifth of an inch long, about September or October, remaining in the fields until spring, when eggs are laid for the new brood. Both these insects become partica- straw- beds on old straw- vhiere no other crop has Maither travels far from fotation is berries, or in new its birthplace,” therefore j crops is the most practical preventive de- | rob | fruit is off. | retained / pos i about the young i next Every raiser af poultry on the farm | should devote a portion of the soil to this purpose. The plau of picking up the leavings after the harvest for the use of the poultry is well enough as far as it goes, bat bruised vegetables will last only a short tune, and one is left, at the period when green food is valuable, with nothing of that nature to feed. Wheat, oats, millet, bar ley, corn aad rye shonld Yo raised in small use. Died clover hagis unsurpassed as a winter food for fowls, and it 1 avs to feed it even when it must be bongit, but it can be easily 1aised and cured and fed chopped at great protit. Such vegetable crops as cabbage, potatoes, turnips, onions and the like should not be neglectel. They are easily kept throu oh the winter and when fed will add greatly to the egg production. The expense necassary to grow these foods is small and the return on the investment very large. Cutworma and Corn. Some writers on this subject advise the cultivation of the ground, believ- ing that the stirring of the soil and ex- posure of the cutworius to the sun will destroy them. While thorough culti- vation is undonbtedly of great benefit to the soil no amount of stirring. and exposure to the rays of the sun will destroy cutworms, for when exposed it requires but a brief space of time | Gn : quantities, as well as a fair amnoant of | clover, timothy, or sorghum for winter | treatment. Old fields should be plowed under as soon as the crop of If a small section is to be for plants, their removal should be accomplished as early as If the beetles are found plants intaqded for fruitaze, spraying with lat 10 sian will kill as areteeding upon the foliage at that season.—George C. Butz in New England Homestead, (ible, your's aris gree: 1 sueh : The Carcer of a Hat. “The life of a Panama hat, that is, if it 1s a good one to start with,” ex- plained a hat dealer, ‘‘compares some- what with the life of the owner of it. cau run through either ina hurry ha 1g on for a iong time if it is de- sired. If carefully kept a Panama bat should last all the wdy from ten to forty years. I know a gentleman who resides in East Washington whe has owned and steadily worn during the summer months a Panama hat for nearly forty years. It has been bleached every couple of years since and trimmed and relined, and it is to- day to all intents and purposes as good as when I first saw it thirty years ago. I know of another Pana- wa hat now worn by a physician in this city, which had almost as long a life. Tong before he got it his father wore it. [I know dozens of them which have been in use from ten to twenty wears. The lining wears out, but the body of the Liat keeps good. Of course, care has to be used to keep them such a long time, bus the Panama itself -is almost indestrue- tible. The ouiginal cost of the hats that 1 refer to was not exorbitant, none of them costing over $14.”— Washington Star. hag als often hatch in the incuba- “prosperity of of | THE MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. WHEAT—No. lred......... ...8 No. CORN-—No. 2 yellow, ear, No. 2 yellow, Shelled, seinen Mixed ear. OATS—No. 2 ‘White. HAY No. 1 timothy Clover, No. 1 Hay, from wagons FEED—No. 1 white mid., Brown middlings Jean, bulk —C lover, "60 hs. Timothy, prime Dairy Froducts. BUTTER—Llgin creamery Ohio creamery . .. Fancy country roll. CHEESE—Ohio, new. New York, new Fruits and Vegetables. BFEANS-—Green, ? bu. POTATOES —W hite, CABBAGE~—-Per te ONIONS-—New Southern, i bbl Poultry, Etc, CHIC KENS -Per pair, small... $ 50@ 2 00 75 200 60@ 14 EGGS—Pa. and Ohio, fresh. 11 CINCINNATL. 3 B5@ 4 41 24 12 FLOUR WHE: COR N No. 2 4 30 4 71 37 I OATS-~-No. 2 whi 34 BUTTER Creamery, extra... Pennsylvania frstee, NEW FLOUR -Patents \N HEAT--No. 2 CORN--—-No. 2 OATS BUTTER- EFFS EGGS- YOR K. LIVE STOCK, Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. CATTLE. Prime, 1200 to 1400 Ibs. ....... 3% : 90@ 4 95 . 4 ¢ Good, 1200 to 1300 ths Tidy, 1000 to 1150 Ibs Fair light steers, 900 to 1000 ibs Common, 700 to 900 Ibs. ... 4 80 470 . 4 425 4 370 4 Medium Heavy Prime, 95 to 105 hs Good, 85 to 90 hs Fair, 70 to 80 ibs. TRADE REVIEW. The Promise of General Prosperity This Year Is Un- usually Bright— Large Crop to be Moved. R. G. Dun & Co's weekly review of trade reports as follows for last week. Big business in January is expected, but big business in July means more. It is the month of all others when trade is naturally light. New engagements are ordinarily deferred, and men wait for the outcome and movement of Crops. Sut more business is being done this year than in any previous July of which there are records. The rayments through clearing-houses have been 5.8 per cent larger than in 1892, the year of greatest prosperity heretofore, and for the month thus far 6.5 per cent larger than last year and 8.4 per cent larger than in 1892. ' But these records and others have to be judged in the light of heavy decline in prices since 1892, so that the volume of business transacted is about 20 per cent larger than the volume of pay- ments indicates. Considering that the nearly half the people success of agriculture the interest is materially size of crops to be moved, it may be said with reason that the promise of general prosperity this year is unusu- ally bright. Wheat receipts for the year thus far have been 7,993,333 bu- shels, against 10,652,074 last year, but prices have declined 11 1-2 cents, and farmers are holding back their wheat in the hope of higher prices. The ex- perts for the week have been 1,307,815 bushels from Atlantic ports, flour in- cluded, against 1,718,738 bushels last Year, and from Pacific ports 112,117 bushels, against 429,291 bushels last year, making for the month 8,833,192 bushels, against 7,342,467 last, year. Corn has a little advance in prices ow- ing to reports of injury to the crop and also because exports for the month thus far have been singularly well maintained, amounting to 6,767,963 bushels, against 8,009,616 bushals last year. Wheat, on the contrary, has dropped about 9 1-2 cents, with pro- spect of further decline, The sales of wool show increase im large transactions, for which no prices are named, four being quoted at Boston covering 2,600,000 rounds, ard the aggregate at the three chief markets has been 7,039,300 pounds tor the week and for four weeks 19,- 919,200, of which 12,511,400 were dom- estic, against 46,019,200 ‘last year, of w hich 21,538,500 were domestic, and 32,- 689,950 in 1592, of which 21,448,900 were domestic. The demand for goods is rather better. The official report of iron production far the flrst half of 1898S shows an in- crease of over half a million, as com- pared with any previous half year, and what is far more important, the con- sumption in manufactures appears for the half to have exceeded the output. Istimating the exports for June, only five mont having been officially re- Ported the consumption has been 5.- 48,643 tons, against 5,909,703 produced, an do1, 391 tons monthly, against 984,950 tons produced. It is well to re- member that in June, when production declined because of stoppage for re- pairs, the decrease in unsold stocks was 4,216 tons weekly. The new orders received are surprisingly large for the season, covering 5,000 tons at New York for rails and 10,000 pending for Russia, and 5,000 for Japan, with 10,000 taken at Chicago, and a noteworthy demand for structural forms at Phila- delphia, and Increasing for bars, with enough to keep the plate mills busy for a long time, a larger demand for bars at Chicago, Including one order for 000 tons implement stuff, and an exceal- lent structural demand for plates ever known at Pittsburg. Sales of bessemer iron have been heavy, reaching 25,000 tons at Pittsburg, without change in prices. : Failures for the week have been 22; in the United States. against 236 last year, and 26 in Canada, against 28 last year. purchases of depend on the and that the entire transporting affected by the a remarkable wv, Profit from Waste. A novel scheme has been adopted in the public schools of Brussels. Some time ago the teachers requested : the children to collect and bring to school such apparently useless articles, found on the streets, as metallic bottle cap. sules, tin foil, old paint tubes, and any refuse metals. In ten months the joint collection represented about three tons weight. Out of the proceeds of this apparent rubbish five hundred children were completely clothed, and fifty sick ones sent to convalescent homes, while there was a balance which went to the slck poor. The scheme has been so suc cessful that it is being adopted in other towns on the continent. Her View and His, She—What an imposing figure Maj Borrows has. * He—Oh, yes; naturally so. She—And why naturally? He—He's always imposing on som one. Couldn’t Eat It, Friend—I suppose you've hard experiences? Returned Klondiker—Oh, I've seen times when we hadn't a thing but money.—Tid-Bits. had some ves! Beauty is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathartic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving a1 from the body. Begin to da to banis pimples, boils, blotches, blac The and Djse gickly bilious complexion by taking Cas- carets,- beauty for 10.cents. All druggists, gatistfaction guaranteed. luc, 2e, 25¢, dlc. Soldiers and sailors accustomed to lost their for abit. and who have in action; continue to smoke while, but soon give up the say. it gives them no pleasure they cannot the smoke, and have said that they cannot taste smoke unless they see it. smoking, see the To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quin Tablets, ERRRRRERREREREER BUY OF THE MAKER. $3.39 Buys this (exact) 5 drawer polished solid oak Soifinnter, in. lon 55 in. hi 2 18in. deep. Retail price $8.00. If you are paying retail prices for your household goods, it’s your own fault. We will sell you direct from our factor: es and save you the middleman’s profit. Our mammoth general catalogue is yours for the asking. Write for it today. Carpet Catalogue in hand-painted colors is also mailed tree. This month we sew Carpets and furnish wadded lining free, and pay freight on $9 carpet pth and over. Samples of carpets or mattin mailed for 8c For $9.85 we will make to your measure a regular $20 Black or Blue Serge Suit, express paid to your station, Cat alogue and Samples Free, Address exactly as below, JULIUS HINES & SON a Public drinking troughs for forses are condemned by the ex-President of the Royal College of Veterinary Sur- geons, on the ground that they prooa- —- = PERE EPE ERE PE EERE PPE Erie Impurities ' | sight | All | Druggists refund money if it tai Is to cure. 25¢, | The mostly costly Soiib in existence is that which was erected to the ory of Mohammed. The diamonds and rubies used in the worth $10,000,000. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FiG SyRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CarnirorNiA Fic Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other. -par- ties. The high standing of the CALI- FORNIA FiG Syrup Co. with the medi- cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families. makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneticial effects, please remember the name of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. LOUISVILLE, IIR a NEW TORE, N.Y. mem- | I 1898. If afflicted with decorations are | a short | They | when | some | | | gate certain diseases peculiar ta horses. a Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yoar Life Away To quit tobacco ea ily and forever. be mag- netic, full of life, ner ake No-To- Bae, the i, makes weak men strong. All d rR. Adure guaranteed. Booklet a: le free, Address Sterling Remedy Col, Chicas r New York. t ta plants Tobacco seeds are sq thimbleful will furnish for an acre of ground ra ‘ Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy C ph artic, « \2he. I =O Suree ons ion forever 10¢ money Jdruggi The Marisa: s of minors.in this try are 6 per cent. coun=- r HARTFORDS Next Best. Other Models at Low Prices. fj Catal ogue Fr Free. [STANDARD OF THE WORLD) POPE MFG (0. HARTFORD. CONN ART CATALOGUE OF COLUMBIA BICYCLES BY MAIL TOANY ADDRESS FOR ONE TWQ CENT STAMP. UNIVERSITY of NOTRE DAME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. Classics, Letters, Science, Law, Civil, chanical and Electrical Engineering. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Ecclesiastical students at special rates. Rooms Free, Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate Courses. St. dwards Hall, for boys under 13, The Me- 108th Term will ope n September r 6th, Catalogue sent Free on apn! on to A. MORRISSEY, C. NS, C., ot ient. Thompson's Eye Water Jo 31 REV. sore eyes, use 98 ih Tastes Go in time. Sold by druggis BICYCLISTS NEED A LiQuiD SHOOTS WATER, AMMONIA, PROTECTION AGAINST DOCS OR MEN, OR OTHER WITHOUT KILLING OR MAIMING. LOTS OF FUN TO BE HAD WITH IT. 1t is a weapon which protects hicyelists against vicious dogs and foot-pads; travelers against robbers and toughs; homes against thieves asad tra: ups, and is adapted tu many other sitnationus, It doer not kill or injure: or sinoke: breaks no law and create: It simply and aiuply tion to himself toc: It1s the only real weay lots of 1t; it snoot : once, but many ) i tine of danger, althoug i: does uot got out of or is durablo, handsome, Sent boxed and post-paid 1 hy mail with full direct in 2¢. Postage Stamps, Post-otfice Money Order war rebal lity, reter to KR. «. Dun’s it ix perfectly safe to no lasting regrets, as does the bullet pistol. sinpeiling ths toe to give undivided atten- A of to the mtended victim. yon which protects andaiso makes fun, Jaughter and tiuies without reloading; and will handle; makes no noise 4 Joaded only with Yiquid. plated. to use for 5e Express Money Order. As to or Bradstreer’s mercantile agencies. NEW YORK UNION SUPPLY CO. i356 Leonard St., New York. ** Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, But Quick Witted People Use SAPOLIO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers