INED. in Want ,on- cesbarre , unit in strikers’ [his be- ich the ed from s of the ginning miners’ e situa- e while in the ere just unless ke was National at there e strik- no pri- any for ses dur- 1 strike ormous timated Loss to ormal), kers in nployes by the usiness sion as , were by the rnsend, a ma- papers ted to llector red to Ss an. ral pa- ger. > great the ill- lied by pathy S pre- ssocia- h pow- 5 from yperty. court > flim- uit so- 46,000 nment razine miles ) men 10uses royal many backs he at- lation 1ts to hurch s and nister diplo- ld not vn up he re- au- $y a& 4 ‘What About Your School Houses? You may not thisseason be able to build a new one, or make the radical changesin thes old one that you had in contemplation, bu: is. no school district in the United States that cannot afford to tint with Ala- bastine the interior of their buildings, thus ing them more attractive, getting colors made with special reference to their effects on the eyes of the pupils, getting a sanitary and rock base cement coating that will not harbor disease germs. The closely crowded school rooms need all the safeguards to the health of the pupil that intelligent officials can surround them with, and all sanitarians unite in saying that Ala- bastine is the only proper material to be used on such walls, The London school board has just opened a school for cripples in White- chapel, London. Use Allen’s Foot-Ease. It 1s the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25¢. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. It’s generally the lazy chap who feels that he is too good for his job. Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write for testimonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. CaexEY & Co., Toledo, O. _ It’s funny that a girl in society to keep in must be continually going out. FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous- ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer. #2trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R.H. KLINE, Ltd., 981 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa. Jo much pride is nothing to be proud of. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. abottle It’s the fellow with a pull who 1s gen- erally pushed to the front. Tam sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mgs. THOMAS RoB- BINS, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17; 1900. In 1901 the Siberian railway carried 72, 000,000 pounds of butter. Helpful Galactose. A hitherto unknown element in milk, a new ferment, has been discovered, called galactose, which is proving of value in the ripening of cheese. The properties of this ferment are similar to the secretion of the pancratic or- gan in the human body. Old cheese is a predigested food, and the diges- tion is wrought by the galactose. It was found that the galactose would go on working at very low tempera- ture, temperatures at which bacteria were practically inert. Cheese was put into refrigerators and kept frozen for months. Other cheese was kept just above the freezing point. It was found that the first cheese is cured at from 40 degrees to 45 degrees Fah- renheit. Practical cheese manufactur- ers have maintained that 50 degrees was the lowest temperature at which cheese could be worked without be- coming bitter and worthless. The new discovery, will, it is believed, rev- olutionize cheese manufacture, doing away with the curing rooms the cheese being sent directly to the re- frigerator. : The St. Bernards at Work. The military authorities in Batavia are employing specially trained dogs to carry letters and provisions to the spowed-up garrisons among the Ba- varian Alps. These dogs are of the St. Bernard breed. The mountain gar- risons are often snowed in three or four weeks at a time, cut off from all communication with the outside world. A regular bi-weekly post has been established, #10 dogs traveling tcgether. All provisions of a heavy kind are in store in the garrisons, but lighter delicacies are often lacking, and these, together, with letters, are carried round the dog’s necks. When the snow is frozen hard enough six dogs are hitched to a small car piled with things. The authorities on the whole are satisfied with their experi- ment. OIL-CARRYING FLEETS. Will Be Largely Increased—Are Their Cargoes Dangerous? In connection with the mercantile marine, nothing can be said to be more certain than that the oil-carry- ing fleets of the world will be con- siderably increased in the course of a very few years. A growing demand for crude and refined petroleum, the discovery of new oil fields, and the all-round development of the trade will necessitate the building of new tankers. At the present moment there must be nearly a score of these vessels on the stocks in British and American shipyards. It is a new branch of the shipping industry, and cne which ought to attract a great deal of attention. The tanker has a more expensive and complicated equipment than the ordinary. freighter, and this demands the display of engi- neering and scientific knowledge quite unique among specialist work in the art of shipbuilding. Oilfield steamers, both cargo-carrying and passenger, will also become more numerous during the next four or five years. Oil as a fuel and cargo is one of the most promising liguids of com- merce; it has a future that is both interesting and important. There 18 a certain unaccountable antipathy to petroleum. Some practical men think it constitutes a dangerous cargo. Ten years ago there were between 60 and 70 petroleum tank steamers, and of these “many carried from 3,000 to 4,000 tons of oil;” now there are three times that number of tankers, and the largest, trading and building, are de- signed to carry from 9,000 to 10,000 tons. RACE WITH A CYCLONE. Train Ran Fifty Miles an Hour—Ahead Fifty Feet. Passengers on the Santa Fe flyer from Kansas City to Wichita, Kan. bad an exciting experience in a mad race between the flyer and a cyclone, end the former came out about 50 feet ahead, after a flight of 12 miles. North- bound passenger No. 406, due at Wichita at noon left Arkansas City at 10 o’clock. The cyclone which came from the southwest, started on the right of way and the race com- mwenced immediately. Conductor Strain says that he locked all doors and windows to keep passengers from leaping out. Many women were half crazed and tried to jump out. The heat was unbearable. He stood on the rear platform and could feel the suction’ of the cyclone as it drew nearer. Engineer Watts pulled his train at 50 miles an hour, barely keep- ing out of the storm’s clutches. Fire- man Johnson was so exhausted when the train reached Winfield, where the cyclone cloud shot upward and dis- solved, that he had to be carried from his cab. The engineer continued his run to Newton. The cyclone swept a path of about 50 feet, destroying farm property. Brought the Steak. Seven years ago Simon Eustace, of Ararat, near Susquehanna, Pa., left home one morning to obtain a beef- steak. He did not return, and his wife firally gave him up for dead. After three years she remarried. A vear ago she become a widow. Sunday morn- ing Eustace returned home with the Beefsteak. He said his mind had been a blank until a month ago, wher he fcund himself peddling washing ma- chines at Fort Wayne, Ind. From pa- pers in his possession it is shown that he has been all over the United States and Canada. The Duke of Devonshire possesses as an heirloom Claude Lorraine's “Book of Truth,” which is said to be one of the rarest and most valuable books in Europe. It is, at any rate, worth six times as much as the famous “Mazarin” Bible, the most costly book in the British museum. The late Duke refused $100,000 for it. Mrs. ’ nt German Woman's Club, Grand Pacific Hotel, Los Angeles, Cal, Relieved of a Tumor by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. « DEAR Mas. PinkuaM : —I suffered four years ago with a tumor in my womb, and the doctors declared I must go to the hospital and un- dergo an operation, which I dreaded very much and hesitated to submit. « My husband consulted an old friend who had studied medicine, although he was not a practising physiciaf, and he said he believed that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound would cure me. That same day I took my first dose, and I kept it up faithfully until twelve botties had been used, and not only ‘did the tumor dis- appear, but my general health was very much improved and I had not felt so well since I was a young woman. « As I have suffered no relapse since, and as I took no other med- icine, I am sure that your Compound restored my health and I believe saved my life.”—DMRrs. D. ARNOLD. $5000 ¥ORFEIT IF THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GENUINE. When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhee womb, that bearing-down feeling, in a, displacement or ulceration of the flammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous pros- tration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, “all- gone,” and “want-to-be-left-alone belney blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried anc true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. TELEPHONES IN THE COUNTRY. They Are Putting an End to Isolation on Farms. “Old Western plainsmen say that the barbed wire fences have done away with the old life of the prairies,” says a resident of Rochester. “So, too, in the farming country of Western New York has the telephone wire brought a change which would be astonislting to the householders who occupy the homesteads and cottages in the valley of the Genesee and along the south shore of Lake Ontario even a decade ago. People who live in crowded cities, where distance is reckoned by the time it takes a rapid transit car to whirl from one block to another, do not un- derstand what such an apparently slight innovation means. There the grocer, the doctor and the caterer can be summoned or instructed at a mo- ment’s notice. Conveniences, these little things are called. In the coun- try, distance is anywhere beyond the front door that only a horse can cover with satisfactory rapidity. It is true that electric railways are joining vil- lage to village with steel bands, but electric cars run only on stated sched- ules, and sometimes not even then. Besides, only ‘main traveled thorough- fares’ are followed by fhe ‘lines,’ and crossroads are an unavoidable neces- sity. “Suppose, then, that John Smith lives on a crossroad miles from the nearest village. John’s baby, on a dark and tempestuous night, suddenly develops unmistakable symptoms of croup. What did John do ten years ago? He left the baby with its terri- fied mother and hitched old Tom on tha road cart and plunged through the storm and the darkness to the village after Dr. Squillem, and then back again, three hours later, wet, weary and woeful. Or, suppose that John’s house caught fire or was broken into by burglars. Again, he had to ride miles for assistance. If he had an important business engagement which he couldn’t keep that day in the city, something about paying off the mort- gage or reducing the note or any of those little matters which farmers sometimes find themselves forced to bicker with, he had either to trust to the mails or take the train to ‘town,’ just to return again. : “That was in the old days. What does he do now? Just steps to the phone, calls up central, and in a min- ute is connected with whomsoever he desires to converse with. The doctor comes on the jump, the groceryman brings the flour, the lawyer receives the explanations, all for a small ex- penditure. John understands this pretty thoroughly now, as is to be seen from the remarkable increase in the thickness of the subscribers’ books of the telephone exchanges. “Another evidence of the rapid ex- tent of country service is noticeable in the institution of scores of so-called ‘independent’ companies, which sup- ply service for certain districts, gener- ally in the neighborhood of a large central city, from which radiate in all directions, like the threads in an im- mense spider’s web, the suburban con- nections to small villages, which in turn connect with the farmhouses in their vicinity. It is a weak and unen- terprising part of country these days that cannot boast its telephones by the dozens, with ‘urban connections.’ In many cases this system is extended by a scheme of co-operation, whereby half a dozen independent companies combine their lines, so that the service may stretch half way across a State. “This assimilation by the ‘rural dis- tricts’ of what have hitherto been con- sidered purely city conveniences is rapidly changing the condition of the countryside. The people are becoming more closely knit in their relations. the characteristics of the community and the benefits which spring from such association of interests are slowly taking shape, and, little by little, the old-time insularity, if the word can be used in such a connection, is disap- pearing. It will not be long, at the present rate of progress, before the country as a separate feature of mod- ern life will disappear. Every city will have its ‘Attic plain’ and the clover meadow will be the dooryard of the department store.” His Version of It. During the trial of a street railway damage suit in one of the circuit branches of the Supreme Court of the District of Colvmbia a few days ago an important eyewitness of the acci- dent took the stand in the person of an elderly colored man. The plaintiff had been injured while the:ear was at a street crossing, and one of the at- torneys was endeavoring to elicit from the witness just where the latter was standing at the moment the plaintiff was struck by the car. “As I understand you,” remarked the attorney, after a number of ques- tions had been asked, “you were stand- ing at the street corner diagonally op- posite the point where the accident occurred.” “No, sir, I wasn’t,” declared the wit- ness. “I guess I was standing kinder sort er on the bias from the spot.”’— Washington Star. New Zealand Geyser. A new giant geyser at Rotpmahaua, New Zealand, is attracting attention. A mass of boiling water half an acre in extent rises in a great dome, from which a column of water and stones rises to 300 feet, while immense col- umns of steam ascend as far as can be seen. A Real Free Church. No stipends are paid to the clergy of St. Luke’s Church, Cobham, England, while the choir, the organist, organ- blower and bell-ringer all services free. The church was built by voluntary contributions, and the cost of carrying it on is only $7.50 weekly. give their} THE MARKETS. th PITTSBURG. “= Grain, Flour and Feed. risaeiion rain 24 75 33e—No. L.......... ae Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear i 7 7 No. 2 yellow, shelled 0%. 71 ixed ear........ 68 T 69 Oats—No. 2 white 60 61 No. 3 white......... 58 59 Flour—Winter patent...... 390 39% Fancy straight winters 3.90 40) Hay—No. 1timothy............ ..1450 1500 Cloyer No. 1...................0 10 00 1025 Feed— No. ! white mid. ton........ 2150 2200 Brown niiddlings. ........... ....2050 2100 Bran. buls,...................... 19 00 19 50 Straw—Wheav ....... .. 000... 700 730 UBL. Cai res res 700 7 56 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery............ 8 24 244 hio creamery. ... 2114 22 Fancy ccuntry roll 1514 16 11 114 11 11g Poultry, Etc. Eens—per 1b........... a. 8 Chickens—dressed ....,..... ee 16 100 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, Fruits and Vegetables. Green Beans—per DOX.......cvcereeerennes 8125 150 Potatoes—Fancy white per bus. 90 10 (abbage—per crate... ... 18 200 Unions—per barrel 375 BALTIMORE. Flour— Winter Patent ................$390 415 Wheat—No. 2 red..... oe su Corn—mixed.. rave 6634 67 ERRB oe vn es 1758 8 Butter—Ohio creamery.............. RL Nig PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent 23 50 400 Wreat—No, 2red.... 82 8214 Corn—No. 2 mixed. 9 0 Oats—No. 2 white. ..... 52 53 Butter—Creamery, extra “Re W Eggs—Pennsylvania tirsts... 17% 18 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents,............ e+:53.05 410 Wheat—No. 2red. 8014 811g Corn—No. 2......... 6% 681 Oats—No, 2 White, 58 o8ie Butter—Creamery ...... 19 2 Eggs—Stateand Pennsylvania... 18 183% LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. Cattle. Prime heavy, 1600 to 1600 lbs $715 750 Prime, 1500 to 1400 lbs. . 600 65 Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs 6 60 UW Yavbhehters....... 375 6W Butcher, 900 to 1000 1ts 22 575 Common to fair...... 300 4.50 Oxen, common to fat. ....... 300 5350 Common togood fat bulls and cows 370 6 00 Mildhcone,each.................... 500 BU Extra milch cows, each............ IBY EW Hogs. Prime heavy hogs.................. 780 795 Prime medium weights............8 72 760 Best heavy yorkers and medium... 7 45 750 7 Good to choice packers............ 10 TL Good pigs and light yorkers........ 23 740 Pigs, common to good b 730 Common to tair.. 7... ............. 6 59 Roughs .................. 785 Sage... ln 65 Sheep. Extra, medium wethers, 4.40 Good to choice. ........... 415 Medium .,................... 375 Common to fair..........0........ 250 Lambs. lambseclivped............. hv. 600 65) ambs, good to choice, clipped... .. 400 575 Lambs, common to fair, clipped... 300 60) Spring Lambs... 0.00.0 500 75) *- Calves. Nealestra....... 0. ......0.. 0% 70) 750 Veal, good to choice. . 400 575 eal, common heavy 35) 500 Veal, common to fair.. 250 40d TRADE WELL MAINTAINED, Domestic Financial Conditions Are Exceptionally Satisfactory—For- eign Markets Disarranged. R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly Review of Trade says: Foreign maudkets were badly disarranged by the sud- den illness of the king, and there was much liquidation prior to the clos- ing of British exchanges from Wed- nesday afternoon to Monday morning. Domestic financial conditions are ex- ceptionally satisfactory, and trade is well maintained, although low tem- perature interfered with the distribu- tien of midsummer specialties. Man- ufacturing operations have increased in activity, especially in the iron and steel industry and textile production, while the constructive work on new buildings and bridges is very heavy. Labor difficulties have not improved in the anthracite coal regions, but numerous settlements have been ef- fected elsewhere. Railway earnings thus far reached for' June exhibit an average increase of 4.6 per cent over last year and 17.7 per ent over 1200. Most of the blast furnaces that were stopped by the scarcity of anthracite coal have resumed with coke, of which the ovens have estab- lished new records of output, and shipments have been still larger owing to the stocks accumulated during the car shortage. Despite the vigorous pig iron production numerous contracts have been placed abroad, and still the machine shops, manufacturers of stoves and imple- ments and consumers generally are seeking deliveries. Structural shapes of steel and other forms of railway equipment continue to lead the mar- ket, orders in these lines running tar into next year. Bars and sheets are the least active divisions of the market, but even in these there is no tendency to weakness. Eastern man- ufacturers of footwear report a larger volume of contracts, mainly for de- livery in August and September. Leather has accumulated, and some tanneries are closed, but belting butts continue in demand at full prices. More activity occurred in cotton goods, although at some’ concessions in ‘prices. The changes were a nat- ural result of recent declines in the raw material, buyers having delayed orders on that account. Woolen goods have been taken more freely, especially the better qualities, and clothing manufacturers are preparing for a large fall trade. Raw wool is in better request at eastern markets, but the new clip is held at a premium that limits trade. Agricultural pros- pects are far above the average, and rapid progress is made wit} wheat harvesting. Injury in hag partially offset the splendid out- look in other cotton states. while the strong statistical position, together with liberal consumption and cover- ing of short contracts at Liverpool, combined to cause a sharp rise in op- tion prices and a moderate stiffening of spot cotton, but the advance was not maintained. Fai 3. for the week numbered in the United States, against 204 last year, and 20 in Canada, against 2% a year ago. Bradstreet’s says: Wheat, includ- ing flour, exports for the week ag- gregate 3,328.701 bushels 0 | product is exported. il MEDICAL EXAMINER Of the United States Treasury Recom- mends Pe~-ru~na. TheWomen AlsoRecom- mend Pe-ru-na. Miss Blanch Grey, 174 Alabama street, Memphis, Tenn., a society woman of Mem- phis, writes: “To a society woman whose nervous force is often taxed to the utmost from lack of rest and irregular meals I know of nothing which is of so much benefit as Pe- runa. took it a few months ago when I felt my strength giving away, and it soon made itself manifest in giving me new strength and health.”—Miss Blanch Grey. Mrs. X. Schneider, 2409 Thirty-seventh Place, Chicago, Ill., writes: . “After taking several remedies without result I began last year to take your valu- able remedy, Peruna. was a complete wreck. Had palpitation of the heart, cold hands and feet, female weakness, no appe- tite, trembling, sinking feeling nearly all the time. You said I was suffering with systemic catarrh, and I believe that I re- ceived your help in the nick of time. I fol- lowed your directions carefully, and can say to-day that I am well again. I cannot thank you enough for my cure.” Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. Peruna is not a guess nor an experiment— it is an absolute scientific certainty. Pe- runa has no substitutes—no rivals. Insist upon having Peruna. A free book written by Dr. Hart- man, on the subject of catarrh in its different phases and stages, will be sent free to any address by The Pe- runa Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. Catarrh is a systemic disease curable only by systemic treatment. A remedy that cures catarrh must aim directly at the depressed nerve centres. This is what Pe- runa does. S If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. . Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. Dr. Llewellyn Jordan. Examiner of the U. 8. Treasury De- partment, graduate of Columbia College, and who served three years at West Point, has the following to say of Peruna: D® LLEWELLYN JORDAN, Medical “Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from your wonderful remedy. Onc shoré month has brought forth a vast change, and I now consider myself a well man after months of suffer- ing. Fellow sufferers, Peruna will cure you.”’ Peruna immediately invigorates the nerve-centres which give vitality to the mucous membranes. Then catarrh disap- pears. Then catarrh is permanently cured. Two-thirds of the German sugar Court Sustains the ¥Foot-Ease Trade-Mark. Justice Laughlin, in Supreme Court, Buf- falo, has just ordered a permanent injunc- tion, with costs, and a full accounting of sales, to issue against the manufacturer of foot powder called ‘Dr. Clark’s Foot Pow- der,” and also against a retail dealer, re- straining from making or selling the same, which is declared, in the decision of the Court, an imitation and infringement of “Foor-EAsE,” the powder to shake into your shoes. Allen 8S. Olmsted, of Le Roy, N. Y., is the owner of the trade-mark ‘‘Eoor-EAsE.” The decision in this case upholds his trade- mark and renders all parties liable who fraudulently attempt to place upon the market a spurious and similar appearing preparation, labeled and put up in envelopes and boxes like Foor-EAsE. Supreme Nearly the whole of the Central Ameri- can indigo crop is gathered in San Salva- dor. A NEGRO COLONY. Former Congressman White Head of a Land Syndicate. . Henry C. White, the last colored man to sit in Congress, a member from North Carolina in the Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth congresses, is at the head or a syndicate which has purchased from Senator Robert E. Hand, 957% acres of land near Burleigh, N. J, near Cape May. It is intended to es- tablish a colony of negroes from North Carolina. The name of the town 1s to be Whiteboro. Already several avenues have been laid out. Each colonist is to buy a house on the in- stallment plan and is to have 10 years in which to pay for it. It is to be an agricultural colony on the same plan as the Jewish colony at Wood- bine, founded by the Baron de Hirsch fund trustees. Unprecedented Cendition. A curicus discovery has been made in connectiop with the veterans of the Italian war of independence. Instead of dying off gradually, as might be ex- pected, they are actually increasing! Forty-two years ago Garibaldi sailed with 1,000 men from Querto. Of this gallant band there are to-day 1,200 survivors. Again, Italy | paying £60,000 a year to 18,421 pensioners of the 1848 campaign. According to the average rates of mortality four-fifths of them ought to be dead. Dark Hair “I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor for a great many years, and al- though I am past eighty years of age, yet I have not a gray hair in my head.” Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have. If it’s gray now, no matter; for Ayer’s Hair Vigor always re- stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops falling of the hair, too. $1.00 a bettle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us cne dollar and we will express you a bottle. De suroand give the name of your nearest express oflice. Address, J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. No Color in Oleo. Commissioner Yerkes, of the inter- nal revenue bureau, has settled the contested question as to whether but- ter or any other ingredients, artifically cclored, may be used in the manufac- ture of oleomargarine without increas- ing the tax from one-quarter of a cent to 10 cents a pound, by issuing a regu- lation which holds in effect that no artificial coloring matter whatever can be used in any way in the manu- facture of oleomargarine without in- creasing the tax. BIG MONEY Salesmen The largest Tailorin House in the worl wants men In every town and county in U.S. to take orders for made- to-measure clothing. ‘We teach you the busi- ness and start you Free. 8 readymade” or fake scheme. We offer $10,000 to anyon Oo can prove that any garment we send out is notcut and made to measure. None but Union Labor employed. Union Label in every garment. The enormous volume of business enables us to sell Fine Tailoring at lowest prices ever known. Our salesmen aye no Sompstiuion per week. Can refer you to hundreds doing it now. A grand opportunit for energetic men. Lven a part of your time wil bring you from $10 to $20 per week. Experience unnecessary; We tell you how and guarantee success. Our garments are worn by all classes in every part of the Union. Taking orders is easy, pleasant and profitable. Being the largest corporation of the kind, we easily undersell all competition. Only one man employed in each locality. Don’t delay. Send your address with references and we will explain how hundreds have escaped from drudgery at starvation wages and now earn from one to three thousand a year. You can do the same. Our references—The National Bank of the Republic, any LE Co., or reliable mercantile firm in Chicago. Write at once ILLINOIS CUSTOM TAILORING COMPANY 147.151 Fifth Ave., Chicago, Ills. I would feel bloated after eating the plainest meal. I would suffer with headache that nearly drove me crazy and would be so nervous that if any one spoke a little quick to me I would cry. I could not help it. I was not fit for any kind of work. Since I have been taking Ripans Tabules the neighbors and my friends notice the change and inquire the cause. I always say Ripans did it. I take one after each meal and one before retiring. At druggists, The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a vear. Agents Want d—T argest real estate firm in the world is establishing agencies throughout the United States for the sa'e of its New York City prop- erties on instalments of § to $10 per month, carry- ing'a life insurance. te~-ides an enormous local business the outside demand for an opportunity to share in the growth of the Imperial City of the World has been so great the past year aud a half that we have sold nearly $2,000, 000 worth of property from Alaska to South Africa. Our agents are making from $1, 000 to $25, 000 100 g : All 25c. 500 tia Genuine stamped C CC. Never sold in bulk, Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” Druoggists | Hatlicted with Thompcon’s Eye Water a year. A business conducted as honestly and conserva- tively as ours is capable of as great development as the National Life Insurance Company with infinite- y ater ease, with a compensation five times as t and the opportunity for en rgetic, honest, in- gent and responsible men to build up a perma- nent business for themselves and share in the subse- quent growth which is sure to cometo us. We want no representative who is not willing to work ener- etically, or who has not ng ¢ A s ew York to see our p riy and be taught the most effective method of doing business; to all wio meet these requirements and can give references as to probity we will make most liberal terms, spend- ing more money in instruciion and equip the work than their New York trip ar neni Address WOOD, HARMON & CO., Dept. Y-1, 256 Broadway, New York City. ay apital to visit relief and cures worst D ROPS NEW DISCOVERY; stro s. Book of testimonials sud 10 rs’ ni § days treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. P.N. U 27 02 tu PISO'S CURE FO H GURES WHERE ALL ELSE FALS. EL Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. § f i i § I i i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers