DAILY. : From ers to ing. ng force 5 notice- rike was nt mines or work- | iron po- as been oy ‘junc- were at kesbarre ines for id nearly in shape vill be a en hun- Co., who ery near out on acklisted the col- mployes, ne work- 1d that them un- nsent of ling rail- 1 opera- , of the resident seventh bitration vill con- the com- n cannot vote on be were The Mill Mahanoy 500 men, able pa- r its em- ence the ke place lcan col- unionists ry of the Scranton f a mile rowd of )elaware, ympany's adjoins. other in ne place > use of oad. The unionists beating the fugl- n in the y sought d at col- n during inder or- duty on re quiet, "king un- nd engi- ¥ e by the sh West te in the Russia, e in the ger Em- ia. ill, Lon- cheon of as given 1est was > roof of enadiers, |: India, maliland. 1 of the itry will adiers. on, Eng- t of the s found any out was sen- iment. n corre- ia, after > Monte- to Con- the czar he pope. \merican o killed nany, is > escape the Ger- ) is un- is sanity sity. . a Bul- > official, ultan of ls were would-be arm the t Paris, a wall believed e palace ining an resident ~ French vith the Miners’ greed to 1iners to ittee de- ninimum hours of 1S been the late Tr of the Adolphus cuments re given s father. heir his- court se- establish 8 at all r trains Vietor William Order of rlain, of \frica at will re- will con- the poli- savor to ernment ed from eer da es Hi Tae » . a 3 i — PPE > —— Sty ~ GOVERNOR OF OREGON = transparent to ordinary Uses Pe-ru-na For Colds CAPITOL BUILDING, SALEM, =i His Family 8 and Grip, SRA OREGON. A Letter From the Executive Office of Oregon. Pe-ru-na is known from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Letters of congratulation and commendation testifying to the merits of Pe-ru-na as a catarrh emedy are pouring in from every State in the Union. Dr. Hartman is receiving hundreds of such let- ters daily. All classes write these letters, from the highest to the lowest. The outdoor laborer, the indoor artisan, the clerk, the editor, the statesman, the preacher—all agree that Pe-ru-na is the ca- tarrh remedy of the age. "I'he stage and rostrum, recognizing catarrh as their great- est enemy, are especially enthusiastic in their praise and testimony. ny man who wishes perfect health must be entirely free from catarrh. Catarrh is well-nigh “universal; almost omnipresent. eru-na is the only absolute safeguard known. A cold is the beginning of ca- tarrh. To prevent colds, to cure colds, is to cheat catarrh out of its victims. Pe.ru- na not only cures catarrh, but prevents. Every household should be sup Bed with this great remedy for coughs, colds and so forth. The Governor of Oregon is an ardent ad- mirer of Pe-ru-na. He keeps it continually in the house. In a recent letter to Dr. Hartman he says: STATE OF OREGON, ExEcUTIVE DEPARTMENT, t SALEM, May 9, 1898. The Pe-ru-na Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Dear Sirs—I have had occasion to use your Pe-ru-na medicine in my family for colds, and it proved to be an excellent rem- edy. I have not had occasion to use it for other ailments. ours very truly W. M. Lord. It will: be noticed that the Governor says he has not had occasion to use Pe-ru- na for other ailments. The reason for this 1s most other ailments begin with a cold. Using Pe-ru-na to promptly cure colds, he protects his family against other ailments. This is exactly what every other family in the United States should do. Keep Pe-ru- na in the house. se it for coughs, colds, la_grippe and other climatic affections of winter, and there will be no other ail- ments in the house. Such families should provide themselves with a copy of Dr. Hartman’s free book, entitled “Winter Ca. on Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, io. THE WORLD'S COFFEE SUPPLY. Three-Fourths of All That Comes From Brazil. Coffee was originally indigenous to Abyssinia, from whence it was intro- duced in Ceylon and Java, but since its introduction into the West Indies and South America its original hab- itat has almost been forgotten. Its cultivation in its native home has been completely neglected. Brazil is now the most important coffee pro- ducing country of the world, produc- ing, according to the “Government Crop Reporter,” almost three-fourths of the annual crop. Brazil's position with reference to the coffee market is much like that which this country occupies as regards corn. Similarly, while Chicago is the chief corn mart of the world, Santos, in the State of San Paulo, Brazil, is the chief coffee mart. From this point about one-third of the world’s coffee commerce orig- inates. Is Used How to Prove a Diamond’s Worth. In detecting a false gem from a genuine, the X-ray can be relied on with absolute certainty. Diamonds, as is well known, are pure carbon; and carbon, which is opaque to the or- dinary light, is transparent to the Roentgen light, while glass, which is light, is opaque .to the Roentgen ray. On an X-ray photograph of a real diamond nothing will show but the shadow of the gold setting. An Drugglsts Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in balk, Beware of the dealer who tries to sell ‘something just as good.” BY THE REAKERS SF j SSR SIKTS | OF EXCELLERGE AND GIVE SRN COMPLETE SATISFACTION. Bg | i . L. DOUGLAS $3 &$3:52 SHOES hi! W. L. Douglas shoes are the standard of the world. W. L. Douglas made and sold more men’s Good- yoar Welt (Hand Sewed Process) shoes in the first gix months of 1902 than any other manufacturer. $1 0 0 REWARD will be paid to anyone who j can disprove this statement. WwW. L. GLAS SHOES CAN 2 SY BE 1899 sales, 4 XCELL ED. ¢ 1902 sales, Tore months, $1,103,820 | 3506 montis, $2,340,000 Best imported and American leathers. Hey!’s Patent Calf. Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Vici Kid, Corona Qolt, Nat. Kangaroo, Fast Celor Eyelets rsed, i ine have W. L. DOU ! Caution ! Te Et stamped on bottom, Shoes by mail, 25c. extra. Illus. Catalog free, W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. © LAND’S END SARDINES. How Cornwall Fishermen Net Pil- chards for British Markets. The old debate as to whether pil- chards are not identical with sardines has now been dzcided in the affirm- ative. According to Mr. Afialo, the word sardine must be taken to mean indefinitely a small fish preserved in oil, and not an individual species. This small fish may ne a pilchard or it may be a sprat. That is to say, nat- uralists do not recognize a fish called the sardine; the word merely signi- fies a method of preparation. The point may be disputed, but cannot be controverted. Visitors to Cornwall sometimes deny it or the ground that the pilchards shown to them are larger than the average sardine, but they should remember that the fish are usually packed minus head and tail, which means a considerable dim- inution in size. For centuries this transformation of pilchards into sar- dines has been going on. We read in Moryson’s “Itinerary,” a book familiar to Shakespeare’s day, that “the inhab- itarts of Cornwall make great gain by the fishing of pilchards, which they salt and dry in the smoke, and export a huge multitude of them yearly into Spain and Italy.” This practice of smoking them gave the fish the name of fumadoes, corrupted locally into “fair maids.” . ! ‘Tis the silver fair maids that cause such a strife "Twixt the masierseiner and his drunken wife. {on The fish are not preserved in this manner now, but are piled and pressed in layers of salt. Being thoroughly salted and relieved of superfluous fluids they are taken from the fish cellars and dispatched in barrels to the local or foreign “sardiners.” The difference in size between these Cor- nish “sardines” and those caught on the coasts of France is really a result of difference in netting, not in the spe- cies of the fish. The Cornish fishers use a net with a comparatively large mesh, this letting the smaller and more delicate fish escape, but the French, with a closer mesh, pay spe- cial attention to the smaller fish. The men of St. Ives and Newlyn are very conservative, as will be remembered by their agitation on the Sunday question; but the adoption of a closer mesh would be a nicve in the right direction. Eight young Chinese lady students, aged from 14 to 21, belonging to some of the most wealthy and distinguished families in the province of Kiangsu, left there recently for Japan, to go through a course of education extend- ing over three or four years. This is entirely unprecedented in the history of Chinese education. Bad Coughs “I had a bad cough for six B weeks and could find no relief B until I tried Ayer’s Cherry Pecto- § ral. Only one-fourth of the bottle cured me.” ¥ L. Hawn, Newington, Ont. Neglected colds always § lead to something serious. § They run into chronic § bronchitis, pneumonia, asthma, or consumption. Don’t wait, but take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral : just as soon as your cough begins. A few doses will § cure you then. Three sizes: 25c., 50c., $1. All druggists, Consult your doctor. If he says take it, then do as he says. If he tells you not to take it, then don’t take it. Leave it with him. We are w He knows. i {lling. ; J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. THE MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red.... 68 70 ye—No. 2....... 56 57 Corn—No. 2 yellow. ear. 75 76 No. 2yeliow, shelled. 68 69 Mixed ear........ ; 69 70 Oats—No, 2iwhite. 37 34 Wwhite....... . 2€ 361g Flour—Winter patent... .39 40 Fancy straight winters. .39 400 Hay—No. 1timothy............. 15% 1600 Clover No.1... = 1200 123 Feed—No. ! white mid. ton... 19 00 20 00 Brown middlings........... 16 50 17 00 ran, bulk,.... ....... 1700 17 50 Straw-Wheat ~~ Tie 8060 850 Ost........ nT 8 825 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery. a= Ohio creamery. .... Fancy country rol Cheese—Ohio, new. .... New York, new..... soe Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b......... . Chickens—dressed ... Sasi on 15 Eggs—Pa. «nd Ohio, fresh. ......... 2 Fruits and Vepetables. Green LEeans—per bas.........u.ivesn. 150 Potatoes—Kancy white per bus €5 Cabbage—per bbls... en 10 Onions—per barrel .... 2 50 BALTIMORE. Flour— Winter Patent............... $37) 38) Wheat—No. 2 red 1 714 Corn—mixed.... Sul Hd 24 R3 SE ?5 26 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent 400 Weeat—No, 2 red... 78 Corn—No, 2 mixed 7 Vats—No. 2 white. + 38 Butter—Creamery, ext 25 R514 Eggs-—Pennsylvania first Ble A NEW YORK. Flour—Patents,...... $385 400 WA heat—No, 2 red TT TT Lorn—No. 2.......... 69g ww Oats—No, 2 White 56 6% Butter—Creamery .. 2415 25 kEggs—Stateand Pennsylvania. 22 0 LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. ; Cattle. Prime heavy, 1500 to 1600 1vs.......$ 665 690 Prime, 1300 to 1400 lbs... ....... ..... 625 6 60 Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs... 560 60U Fat helters.,.. 0 00 Butcher, 900 to 1000 1bs 4 50 Common toefaly...... : 3 65 Uxen, common to fat ......... 0." 200 500 4 00 Common togood fat bulls and cows 2 00 Milch cows, each 25¢ Prime heavy hogs 7% 17% Prime medium weights 703 710 Sest heavy yorkers and mediu 710 72 Good to choice packe 760 705 Good pigs and light yorkers 670 640 igs, common to good 6656 700 Common to fair... .... 670 700 Rouvghs...... . 6 00 700 Swgs........... ne 500 600 Sheep. Extra, medium wethers ............ $380 4C0 ood to choice 340 3 60 Mediom.. © 7 32 ‘ommozn to fair 150 250 lambsclipped.......... ...... .. 585 550 awmbs, good to choice, clipped... .. 550 5 65 Lambs, common to fair, clipped.. 30) 450 Bpring Lambs... 5% “oe 60) 62 Calves. Veal, exten,,............. da 650 800 Veal, good to choice. ........ 5 550 ‘eal, common heavy 6 00 Veal, common to fair 500 REVIEW OF TRADE. Railroads Overtaxed—Best Evidence of a Continuation of the Busi- ness Boom. R. G. Dun & Co.’s Weekly Review of Trade says: No better evidence of industrial and commercial activity is needed than present inadequate transporting facilities. Every form of railway equipment has been in- creased and perfected during the past few years to an extent that appeared almost excessive, yet the Nation's business has more than kept pace. Unseasonably mild weather has re- tarded retail trade at many points, yet the movement of goods is fully sustained by undiminished prepara- tions for future sales. Distribution delayed by high temperature is not lost, while the agricultural com- munity will profit materially by the tardiness of frost, increasing their ability to consume the products of factories and mills. Labor is more fully employed than at any recent date, only a few small controversies interrupting. Money market pressure has been removed, and, although se- curities do not respond, legitimate trade is not retarded by quiet specu- lation. Earnings of the railways dur- ing October thus far exceed last year’s by 4.5 per cent, and those of 1300 by 12 per cent. Coke is still the vital factor in the iron and steel situ- aticn. Not only has no improve- ment occurred, but the supply of fuel is falling further hehind and the out- look is alarming. Pig .iron is in great demand, imports promising to continue large, and as the higher duty on steel will not be exacted, there is reason to anticipate a liberal move- ment from Germany, The demand for rails is so great that large purchases abroad are being negotiated, while practically all railway supplies find an eager market. Structural shapes and other heavy lines of steel are in a strong position, but there is evidence of irregularity in wire rods, and actual weakness in a few lines that are now offered freely. Tin plate manufacturers are making a hard fight to secure the large foreign busi- ness done here under the drawback arrangement, and a new method of production is being perfected that promises to cheapen the cost. Fail ures for the week number 232 in the United States, against 240 last year, and 22 in Canada, compared with 29 in 1901. Bradstreet’s says: “Wheat, includ- ing flour, exports for the ‘week ending October 23 aggregate 7,060,317 bush- els, the largest total for 14 months rest, against 5,240,688 bushels last week, 4,952,184 bushels in this week last year, and 4,932,978 bushels in 1900. Wheat exports since July 1 ag- gregate 85,431,317 hushels, against 100,056,051 bushels last season, and 60,235,143 bushels in 1900. Corn ex- ports aggregate 84,564 bushels, against 180,674 bushels last week 1. 188,288. bushels last year, and 3,365, 651 bushels in 1900. For the fiscal Year exporst are 1,642,83 bushels, against 16,133,131 bushels last sca- son, and 53,460,342 bushels in 1900 In cases where bronchitis has become chronic from want of proper treatment in the earlier stages, there is nothing so good as Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Breast Tea, in conjunction with which is strongly advised the use of St. Jacobs Oil as an out- ward application along the front of the throat, from close up under the chin to well down to the top of the chest; the one remedy assists the other, and as intended, they work in complete unison. The won- derful penetrating power of St. Jacobs Oil enables it to reach the adhesion of foreign matter which lines the bronchial tubes and which makes breathing more and more difficult. As these adhesions become inflamed and enlarged, St. Jacobs Oil causes such adhesions to break away, making expectoration easier and more free. Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Breast Tea, drank slowly and very hot, soothes and heals the parts, is comforting and quieting, stops the cough and relieves the breathing. This manner of treatment (and there is no other two remedies that will work together so successfully) reaches the difficulty from the outside and the inside at the same time. St. Jacobs Oil reaches the roots of the adhesion, and assists Dr. August Koc- nig’s Hamburg Dreast Tea in clearing them; then both remedies act in unison in healing and curing. The above remarks apply with equal force in cases of asthma, croup, whooping cough, enlarged tonsils and all bronchial affections. Every family should have St. Jacobs Oil and Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Breast Tea always in the house in order that they may be promptly used in the first stages. Often the maladies develop with wonderful ra- pidity, and complications take place with equal suddenness. The British public use up nearly 800 tons of cardboard yearly in the form of post- cardas, JUNE Tint Burrer Conor makes top uf the market butter. The Press an Americanizer. The progress of Americanization of the thousands of immigrants to this country advances naturally because of association, but another factor is hinted at in the report of the census bureau on the newspapers printed here in languages other than English. In the United States there were pub- lished in 1900, 17,194 papers in Eng- lish, as against 13,848 in 1890, an increase of about 24 per cent. Dur- ing the same period the number printed in other tongues declined from 1,053 to 1,026, although the number of immigrants increased 1,210,538 dur- ing the decade. The inference drawn from these comparisons is that more of the foreign population are reading the publications printed in English, and in this way learning faster the language and customs of the country, and that they are depending less upon the languages with which they are fa- miliar. As to the nationalities that are making the greatest progress in this direction it would appear, from the decline in their papers, that the Dutch are in the lead, notwithstand- ing that they are inclined to settle in colonies, where the tendency nat- urally would be to continue the cus- toms and language of the mother country. Next to these are the French, most of whom are from Can- ada, and are fast becoming American- ized, even in many cases to- the adop- tion of American names. The Ger mans also are quick to learn the lan- guage of the country, and there are 114 fewer papers printed in German than there were 10 years ago. Care in Packing Good Fruit. In a recent report by Secretary cof Agriculture Wilson regarding the re- sults from shipments of fruit to Eng- land he states that the returns from two lots of pears were 60 per cent. more for the lot that was packed after each specimen was wrapped in oiled paper. It may be said that this result was largely due to the fact that our English friends were not familiar with fruit put up in this manner and bought it because of the novel way of packing. Possibly there is some- thing in this, but, on the other hand, it has been demonstrated time and again that there is a market for good fruit put up in attractive form. It would not do to pack inferior fruit in this manner, for it would kill the market, but the very care taken to pack the fruit attractively indicates to the buyer that it is likely to be superior to that packed in the ordi- nary manner, hence he is willing to pray the additional price asked for it. If one has some especially good speci- mens it will cost but a few dollars for paper and baskets to try the plan extensively and prove its value. The Good Woman's Wish. Archbishop-elect John M. Farley en- joys a good story as well as the next, and when passing a social hour some- times recounts his experiences. At a dinner given to the Very Rev. Dean Liags in Yonkers several weeks ago the Bishop related the following to the delectation “of the assembled guests: “It was shortly after I had been made vicar general or monsig- nor—I do not remember which—when an aged Irish woman encountered me on the street. She was a good old soul and had been a member of our parish church for years. Grasping me by the hand, she remarked: ‘Oh, father, and sure the Lord bless you; I hear they gave you a rise’ I re- plied that her information was cor- rect. ‘Well,’ she responded, ‘an’ I'm pleased for that; it's yourself that deserves the rise.’ I thanked the good woman sincerely, and was about to leave her, when, still holding my hand, she remarked: ‘And all I hope is that the next rise they give you will be to heaven.” Web-Spining by Red Ants. A remarkable exhibition of the web- spining powers of the red ant (Oeophila smaragdina) has been re- ported by Mr. E. G. Green, of the bot- anic gardens at Peradeniya, Ceylon. A breach having heen made in a structure of leaves on which they were at work, the ants quickly drew the edges of the leaves together, and about an hour afterward they were seen to be passing back and forth across the gap two white grubs from whose mouths issued continuous threads of silk that the ants were using to repair the damage. The lar- vae had evidently been brought from a nest some distance away. : Mrs. Tupman, a prominent lady of Richmond, Va, a great sufferer with woman's troubles, tells of her cure by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “Dear Mrs. PrngrAM: — For some years I suffered with backache, severe bearing-down pains, leucorrheea, and falling of the womb. tried many remedies, but nothing gave any positive relief. “I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in June, 1901. When I had taken the first half bottle, I felt a vast im- provement, and have now taken ten bottles with the result that I feel like a new woman. When I commenced aking the Vegetable Com- pound I felt all worn out and was fast approaching complete nervous collapse. ; am improving every day. I weighed only 98 pounds. ) AT I gladly testify to the benefits received.”— Now I weigh 109% pounds and Mrs. R. C. TurmaN, 423 West 30th St., Richmond, Va. When a medicine has been successful in more than a million cases, is it justice to yourself to say, without trying it, “I do not believe it would help me” 2? Surely you cannot wish to remain weak and sick and discour= aged, exhausted with each day’s work. You have some derange- ment of the feminine organism, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege= table Compound will help you just as surely as it has others. Mrs. W. H. Pelham, Jr., 108 E. Baker St., Richmond, Va., says: “ DEAR Mrs. Prxkmas:—I must say thet I do not believe there is any female medicine to longer. IS o -. women who are ill that Lydia E. is the medicine they should take. compare with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, and I return to you my heartfelt thanks for what your rnedicine has done for me. » taking the Vegetable Compound I was so badly off that IT thought I could not live much The little work I had to do was a burden to me. menstruation and leucorrheea, which caused an irritation of the parts. one who had consumption, but I do not look Iike that now, and I owe it all to your wonder- ful medicine. “I tock only six bottles, but it has made ne feel like a new person. I thank God that there is such a female helper as you.” . Before I suffered with irregular I looked like Be it, therefore, believed by all Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound It has stood the test of time, and it has hundreds of thousands of cures to its credit. Women should consider it unwise to use any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lynn, Mass., will answer cheer= fully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. Perhaps she has just the knowledge that will help your case — try her to-day — it costs nothing. $5000 FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith pre 1 ab estimonials, which will prove their absolute genuineness. . Ove tes ? eb PikL i Moa on, Lynn, Mass. roduce the original letters and signatures of Silk is considered unclean by the Mohammedans, because it is the prod- uct of a worm. $100 Reward. $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- stitutional disease, requires a constitutiona treatment. Hall's CatarrhCure is taken inter- nelly, acting directly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system. thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faithin its curative powers that they offer One Hun- dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address TF. J. CRENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. There are no less than 3262 different spe- cies of fish mhabiting the waters of Amer- ica north of the Isthmus of Panama. FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous- nessafter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer. $2trial bottle and treatisefree Dr.R. H. Kring, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila. Pa. When a fellow proposes he expects the girl to take him at his word. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething,soften the gums, reduces inflamma- tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25¢. abottle The truth is not always pleasant, and that’s when it is generally told. Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.—War, O. ExpsrEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. American shoes are worn by thousands of Europeans in their native lands. {5 ENS] JOHN W. MORRIS, Washington, D.C Successfully Prosecutes Claims, Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau, 3yraincivilwar, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since D R O P S quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. HE. H. GREEN'BSONB, Box B. Atlanta, Ga. PN. U 44 wo AA Ee, GURES WHERE HERE ALL ELSE FAILS, fl Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. Y NEW DISCOVERY; gives | INVESTMENT The Preferred Stoclc of the W. L. Douglas Skee Capital Stock, $2,600,000, $1,000,000 Preferred Stock. $1,000,000 Common Stock. Shares, SOO each. Sold at Par, Only Preferred Stock offered for sla. W. L. Douglas retain’ all Common Stock. The Preferred Stock of the W. I. Donglas Shoe Com- ne pays better than Savings Di r Government Bonds. the public has ana dollar's ts. W. Ar Every dollar of stock offere to the business, and ie active head «ess is not an un- prospect, It is a oped strated dividend pay- s the largest business 1d prodr 1x Men’s ar Welt (I{and Sewed ) shoes, and has al- been Ymimersely profit- There has not been a 1 st twelve when Amnonnt necessary 7 per cent annual $1 ! NNR he preferred stock $ 3 The annual business now is 0 000, it is increasing very rapidly, and will equal § 000 for th: year 1903, The factory is now turning out 7300 pairs of shoes per day, and an addition to tlie plant is being built which will iner the capaci 0 10,000 pairs per day. 1e reason { am offering the referred Sto :k for sale fs to perpetuate the hy SS. If you wish to invest in the best shoe business in the world, which is and receive 7 your money, y 5 great business. 5 I fied check, made payable to W. L. Douglas. If there is no bank in your town, send money by xpress or post office money orders. Prospectus giving full information abont this great ress rmanent, and profitable business sent upon application. Add: W. L. BOUG LAS, Brockton, Mass. I have been using Ripans Tabules for over two years as a medicine for general ills, 1 always keep a sup- ply on hand, and find they ; come in handy for everyday use in case of headache, constipation or a bilious attack. At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a year.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers