The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 16, 1904, Image 3

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Price, 75c. per bottle.
‘Miss Gannon, Sec’y Detroit
Amateur Art Association, tells
young women what to do to
avoid pain and suffering caused
by female troubles.
‘“ DEAR MRS. PINKkHAM : — I can con-
scientiously recommend Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
to those of my sisters suffering with
female weakness and. .the troubles
which so often befall women. I suf-
fered for months with general weak-
ness, and felt so weary that I had hard
work to keep up. . I had shooting pains,
and was utterly miserable. In my dis-
tress I was advised to use Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, and it was a red letter day to
me when I took the first dose, for at
that time my restoration began. In
six weeks I was a changed woman,
perfectly well in every respect. I felt
so elated and happy that I want all
women who suffer to get well as I did.”
— Miss GuiLA GAXXNON, 359 Jones St.,
Detroit, Mich., Secretary Amateur Art
Association. — 85000 forfeit if original of above
letter proving genuineness cannot be produced.
When one considers that Miss
Gannon’s letter is only one of the
countless hundreds which we
src continually publishing in the news-
papers of this country, the great virtue
of Mrs. Pinkham’s medicine must be
admitted by all.
Reason Enough.
Father— “You know how necessary
it is that I should get you married and
off my hands. Why did you refuse
that handsome young widower ”
Miss Mainchance— ‘Because he
basn’t any relatives to whom I can
send his children.”
Consumption is a rare disease in Ja-
pan. Even in winter cbughs are of
rare occurence, and this despite the
fact that the real Japanese do not heat
their rooms with anything more than
anhibachi—a tiny charcoal stove.
¢ Government Pays Low Wages.
The British Government continues
to be denounced by the workers’ union
for the low wages paid at Government
work shops, shipyards, arsenals snd
gun factories, but all denunciations
and resolutions seem to have no effect.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
F. J. Crexey & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigred, have known F.J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
erfectly honorable in all business transac-
ions and financially able to carry out any
obligations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To-
ledo, O,
WALDING, KINNAN & MARvIN,
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Wholesale
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ]
Ing directly upon:the blood and mucoussur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Swiss Law Little Observed.
The killing of birds is forbidden in
the Swiss Canton of Tessin, and last
year the rural police confiscated over
20,000 traps and nets. Nevertheless,
the birds are offered for sale in the
markets with impunity.
Fishermen Bleed Shad.
“Speaking of Shad,’ said the club-
man, “the Susquehanna fishermen
have a practice that they believe
makes the fish more palatable. Each
shad, as soon as it is taken out of the
water, is bled by bending one of the
sharp gills and forcing it into the
opening it covers. In this way a
quantity of blood is taken from the
fish as it dies.
lieve, helps to make the meat whiter
and does away with much of the
‘fishy’ flavor that spoils it for the epi-
cure. 1 don’t know how much there
is in this manner of killing the shad,
but the Susquehanna species is ad-
mittedly greatly superior to those
taken from other waters.”—Philadel-
phia Press.
TOLD IN CALIFORNIA:
' Helping the kidneys is helping the
whole body, for it is the kidneys that
remove the poisons and waste from the
body. Learn-
ing this sim-
ple lesson has
made many
sick men and
women well.
Judge A. I.
Felter, of 318
So. E St, San
Bernardino,
Calif., says:
“For 18 years
my kidneys
were not per-
forming their v X : 3
functions properly. There was some
backache, and the kidney secretions
were profuse, containing also consid-
erable sediment. Finally the doctors
said I had diabetes. Doan’s Kidney
Pills wrought a great change in my
This, these men be-!|
! pounds for the entire outfit.
condition, and now I sleep. and feel
well again.”
A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney
medicine which cured Judge Felter
will be mailed to any part of the
United States. Address Foster-Mil- |
purn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. old by all!
dealers; price 50 cents per box.
THE PEACH AGAIN.
The time is to come when we are to
have the peach again, as in the old
days when we were boys. We know
how to treat the trees now; so let us
set to work and put in a few peach
trees every year, on some northern and
eastern slope, where a warm spell in
winter . will not be apt to start the
buds. Get the best sorts, and take
care of them, and we will have peaclies
of our own raising.—F. H., Sweet,
BLACKBERRIES PAY.
Perhaps it is safe in asserting that
in proportion to labor and capital in-
vested no crop pays so large a profit as
blackberries. Growers who complain
that blaekberries do not pay should
first estimate the expense. There are
blackbenfy fields that hava borne crops
for ten’ years, which have never re-
ceived a pound of fertilizer or manure,
and outside of cutting away the old
canes, with. rough cultivation in the
spring, have received no labor. What
blackberries would do for the grower
if treated like strawberries is yet to
be demonstrated by some.
NOT TOO THICK.
It is not well fo have the plants too
thick in the hot-bed. Those removed
may be transplanted in flower pots,
egg shells, old fruit cans or small
boxes, and if well cared for they will
grow fast and be of fair size when: the
time arrives for planting them in the
garden. Tomatoes and early cabbage
may be thus treated, and it will be
found of great advantage.
greatly in hastening the bearing period
of tomatoes, and by giving the plants
care in the beginning, such as covering
them at night, they may be grown out
in the open air withouc fear of danger
should “the nights become cold. The
same plan may be pursued with many
other vegetables.
PRUNING ROSES.
Everblooming roses, the trees, are
benefited by a good pruning. If cut
back to about six inches of the old
wood, strong new shoots start out and
furnish abundance of bloom. In the
more northern States the plants are
usually winter pruned, i. e., they freeze
down quite closely to the ground; in
that case all that is necessary is to cut
away the injured portion. Further
south, where the wood is not frozen,
the bushes should be cut back about
one-half. Hardy roses bloom better
for more moderate cutting. Yellow
roses scarcely ever need any pruning.
The whole matter must be regulated
by habit of growth. Trim to neat
shapely appearance, taking out all
dead of diseased wood just before
growth starts in spring.
STRAWBERRIES.
Are you arranging to set out a new
patch this year? It will pay to do it,
and will also pay ®™ set the very best
plants obtainable. “Blood will teil,”
and it is true of strawberry plants as
well as of everything else. Were the
strawberries mulched last fall? If so,
all right, if.not it will pay to mulch
close around the hills and thoroughly
between the rows after they have been
out. The berries will be much cleaner,
and far less liable to rot if the season
strawberry grower attributed much
of his success to his management of
the vines when in blossom, never al-
lowing the sun to shine on them three
days in succession without thoroughly
sprinkling them. If you have-a hose,
sprinkler or sprayer, try it and note
results. : x
‘A COMBINATION LADDER.
‘A new ladder especially adapted for
fruit growers’ use has been brought
to our attention by one of our sub-
scribers in Colorado, and from the fact
that it appeals to us in every way we
are glad to call our readers’ attention
to the same and illustrate the same
herewith. As will be noted from the
illustration it is a combination of the
step ladder, top picking ladder and
scaffold. The three combined in one
and with a weight of only thirty
COMBINATION LADDER.
In the il-
lustrations you will note that Fig. 1
the ladder is in use as a step ladder
in picking from low limbs or around
the tree, while Fig. 2 the same ladder
will be seen fully extended for top
picking. No. 1, 2 and 3 combination
form a scaffold, which is handy for
variogs purposes and is complete by
using extension in Fig. 4. We consider
it one of the best inventions that has
come to our notice.—National Fruit
Grower.
Occupation and Character.
It is curious how every man’s char-
acter in India seems to be determined
by his occupation. Bricklayers are al-
ways active and energetic, swineherdas
vy and immoral, shoemakers poor,
rant and despised, goldsmiths clev-
r and plausible rogues and Dblack-
smiths gossips of the first water,
Age assists |
|
FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW
IS FOR DULL TRADE.
Crops Make Excellent Progress Ow-
ing to More Seasonable Weather
in the Southwest.
Reports to the International Mer-
cantile Agency from special corres-
pondents throughout the country in-
dicate some improvements in general
business during the last week. This
has been most noteworthy in. the
south and southwest, where excellent
sales have brought the volume of or-
ders above last year’s total.
Hats and caps are active, but boots
and shoes in certain sections have
not done as well as usual.
The St. Louis district reports in-
creased prosperity in most lines of
trade’ owing to the inrush of exposi-
tion visitors. Increased travel to St.
Louis is also helping business in con-
"“tigous territory. Jobbers in many
sections report improved business, .al-
though country merchants in some
instgnces hate been prevented from
visiting trade centers, owing: to in-
creaged business at home, since farm-
ers have finished planting.
Retail trade is strong and if fall
business turns out as well as advices
now.indicate the total for the year to
September 1 will average fully. as
“mich as that reported during the cor-
‘responding period. of 1903. .
Labor _ difficulties on the Great
Lakes appear to be nearing solution,
with the prospect that most of the
‘congestion’ in traffic will be relieved
within a fortnight or so. At Milwau-
kee the strike has already been par-
tially broken and negotiations at oth-
OUTLOOK
er points are progressing satisfactor- +f
ily. wii. Rhos :
Iron is still stagnant, most branches
of the industry being virtually at a
standstill. "The only exceptions are
structural materials and raw pipe,
where a. large business is .reported.
sHalf the merchant, furnaces in the
Pittsburg district are likely to, be
out of blast by July 1, which will ma-
terially lessen coke production. The
‘outlook is for dull trade: during the
summer. : : . :
Crops have made excellent progress,
owing to the prevalence of more sea-
sonable weather in many sections of
‘the "southwest. ‘Corn has been to an
extent retarded by too much mois-
ure, but the present acreage ranks
Dbrobably as the largest ever planted,
so that the actual harvest.may exceed
expectations,
Business throughout New England
is still depressed by unsettled condi-
tions in manufacturing, due to the
shutdown of the cotton mills. Wool
prices are uncertain and mills run on
orders only. Some activity is report-
ed in leather goods, but the tendency
everywhere manifested is to “go
slow.”
MAREE ETS.
i PITTSBURG.
Grain, Fleur and Feed.
Wheat—No. 2 red. 1 00
Rye--No. 2 L 82
Corn—No. 2 vellow. ear 60 61
No. 2yellow, shelled 59 5
Mixed ear... 56 7
ate--No, 2white 46 +7
No, 3 white... 45 46
Flour—Winter patent... 53) 5 35
Straiglit winters .. 510 520
Hay—No Itimothy.......... 14 50 1540
Clover No. 1.0... ...... i250 1300
Feed—No ! white mid ton.. 2500 2600
Brown middiings........ 23 00 23 50
Bran. bulk .. 2200 2300
12 00
11 00
Butter—FElgin creamery 20 21
hio creamery. ... ww 18
., Fancy country roll 8 14
Cheese—Ohio, new... . Ss. 8
ew York, new.. 8° 9
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per Ib....... aster sone snare sun 8 14 15
Chickens—qressed ... ee 10 17
Turkeys, live... ............. .ee 20 23
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh. ......... 18. 19
Fruits and Vegetables. .
Potatoes—Fancy white per bus...... 12% 13)
Cabbage—per bbl... ........... R25 20
Onjons— per barre .. 832 350
Apples—per barrel, ............uue 30) 3 5)
BALTIMORE. ; .
Flour— Winter Patent ...... tries $190 52
Wheat—No. 2 red.. ned U3 TX Ud
Corn—mixed... a7 og
Hus .ocvees ures 17 18
Butter—Creawe he <W 21
PHILADELPHIA .
Flour—-Winter Patent $515 535
Wteat—No. 2red....... 104 106
Corn—No, 2mixed. 50 51
Oats—No. 2 white 3 ay 49
Butter—Creamery, extr: 21 =
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 17, 18
NEW YORK.
Flour—Patents... 5 5¢
Wheat—No, 2r 10
Corn—No. 2....... 58
D ats—No, 2 White.. 44
Butt er—Creamery ........ 20 ey
Eggs—»Stateand Pennsylvania.
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle,
Prime heavy, 1450 to 1606 Ibs.......$5 80 6 00
Prime, 150010 1400 bs... ............. B65 58)
Medium, 1200 to 1300 1bS.cces.n...... 50 563
Yathellorsy... oo. Ln 4 00 50!
Butcher, 900 to 1000 lbs... . 480 309
Commeon to fair... .... ........ 300 37d
Oxen, common to fat. ...........,. 200 400
Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 35v
Mijchcows,each.................... 250) 8B
Hogs.
Primo heavy hogs...........v. .. 510
Prime medium weights G o 05
Best heavy yorkers and medium... 500 503
Good pigs and lightyorkers........ 4 96 500
Pigs, common togood 470 48
Houghgs. 0... ...00 ......... : 40) 440
Btags........... Falennn sa sit anaes 3 00 325
Sheep.
Extra,medium wethers ............ 515
toed to chojce “............. 4 90
Medium... | iad 460
Common to fair............. A 850
Bpring Lambs... oo 8 G0
Calves,
Nealextra........ ........... 5... 875
v eal, good to cholcn. .......... oo O93 425
eal, common heavy 354
The Democratic national convention
of 1852 was in s ion for six days and
forty-nine ballots were taken on the
nomination of a candidate for Presi-
dent. Franklin Pierce did not receive
a vote until the fortieth ballot, when
29 were cast for him. On the forty-
ninth ballot he was unanimously nomi-
nated.
Almost all
cut of our re
ple.—Schopen
3422, 1. 0. O. F., 205 New High St.,
writes:
taken. But what the climate could n
conld and did do.
a well man.
members of the lodge to which 1 belo
through the wse of Peruna, and
Catarrh of the Kidneys a Common Dis-
ease---Kidney Trouble Often Fails to
Be Regarded as Catarrh by Physi-
cians.
Catarrh of the kidneys is very common
indeed. It is a pity this fact is not better
known to the physicians as well as the
people.
People have kidney disease. They take
some diuretic, hoping to get better. They
never once think of catarrh. Kidney dis-
ease and catarrh are seldom associated in
the minds of the people, and, alas, it is
not very often associated in the minds of
the physicians. Too few physicians recog-
nize catarrh of the kidneys. They doctor
for something else. They try this rémedy
Samuel R. Sprecher, Junior Beadle, . Court Angelina),
Los Angeles, Cal.,
“I came here a few years ago suffering with ca-
tarrh of the kidneys, in search of health. I thought
the climate would cure me, but jound I was mis-
Seven weeks’ trial convinced
me that I had the right medicine, and I was then
I know of at least twenty friends and
been cured of catarrh, bladder and kidney trouble
it has a host of
friends in this city.”’--SAMUEL R. SPRECHER.
Troy
al affections, whether of the head, lungs, ston
1t cures colds quickly,
Otficer A
health
ot do Peruna
ng who have
CAPTAIN
and that remedy. The trouble may be
catarrh all the time. A few bottles of
Peruna would cure them.
Pe-ru-na Removes the Cause of the
Kidney Trouble.
Peruna strikes at the very centre of the
difficulty, by eradicating the catarrh from
the kidneys. Catarrh is the cause of kid-
ney difficulty. Remove the cause and you
remove the effect. With unerring accuracy
Peruna goes right to the spot. The kid-
neys are soon doing their work with per-
fect regularity.
Thousands of Testimonials.
Thousands of testimonials from pegnie
ach or petvic organs.
and a few doses taken after undue exposure
prevents illness.
‘‘Some of the patrolmen under me have also
Jound great recief from Peruna.
chronic cases of kidney and bladder troubles,
restored men sujjering from indigestion and
rheumatism, and I am fully persuaded that it
is an honest, reliable medicine, hence, 1 jully
endorse and recominend it.’’ %
Swansoh.
CATARRH IS THE CAUSE
F MOST KIDNEY DISEASES.
CURES CATARRH. :
Captain James L. Dempsey,
Captain 2nd Precinct
Police’ Force, writes from 198 Ferry St., Troy,
, as follows.
“From my personal ecperience with Peruna 1
am satisfied it is a very jine remedyfor catarrh=
It has cured
Wh --JAMES L. DEMPSEY.
. C. Swanson writes from 607 Harrison St.,
Council Bluffs, Ia.; as follows:
‘““As my duties compelled me to be out in aH kinds
of weather 1 contracted a severe cold from ‘time to
* time, whieh settled in the kidneys, causing severe
pains and trouble in the pelvic organs.
“lI am now like a new. man, am in splendid
and give all ‘praise to Peruna.”—A. C.
Cha.
JAMES L. DEMPSEY.
are received hy Dr. Hartman every year,
giving Peruna the whole praise for mar
velous cures.
Pe-ru-na Cures Kidney Disease.
Peruna cures kidney disease. The reason]
it cures kidney disease is because it cures;
catarrh. Catarrh of the kidneys is the
cause of most kidney .disease. Perunai
cures catarrh wherever it happens to be Jo-|
cated. It rarely fails.
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.
who have had kidney disease which had
gone beyond the control of the physician
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
CHILDREN AND CANDY.
Physician Blames Sweets For Young
Folks’ Deterioration.
In the course of a lecture delivered
in London recently, Professor Ogston
‘said that after many years of medical
experience among children he was
convinced there were many ‘in whom!
the tendency to sugar gluttony had be- |
come so Strong that their infatuation
for it resembled the craving, of a
drunkard for liquor. Such sacchar-
omanjacs showed early disappearance
of the teeth and other grave troubles.
He thought future scientists would:
place the evils of sugar gluttony cn
a pedestal as conspicuous as the drink
question, as causing deterioration of
individuals and races.
No. wonder Professor Ogston spoke
so strongly; it is a terrible evil. The:
children, of course, buy where they |
can get the most for their money, and |
get these goods, every line of which, !
it is not saying too much, is poison-
ous or dangerous and injurious to|
health. Not only the question of in-|
gredients, but the conditions under |
which these ‘sweets are made, ought
to be closely inquired into.—London!
St. James’ Gazette. |
King Gay.
“One of the tiny islands of the Ha- |
waiian group is owned outright by an |
American named Gay,” said Mr. E. T.|
Cornwell of San Francisco. “As a!
matter of fact, this little domain of
0p acres is a monarchy over which |
Gay 1s king, but he is one of the kind-|
est and most philanthropic despots
ever known. Instead of oppressing!
his subjects he does them the great-|
est good and pays them well for the
service they render him. “His prin-
cipal business is the raising of sheep,
and from it he derives a revenue
that supports him and his wife royal-
ly. The other inhabitants, to the
number of 100, are a very good people,
and are absolutely loyal to King Gay,
whose slightest word is their law.”—
Washington Post.
Fine Manuscript Bible.
The most beautiful volume in the
Congressional Library at Washington
is a Bible which was transcribed on
parchment by a monk in the sixteenth
century. The general lettering is in
the German text, each letter is perfect
and “there is not a scratch or blot
from lid to lid. Each chapter begins
with a large illuminated letter, in
which is drawn the figure of a saint, |
some
tells.
incident of whom the chapter |
is said that when the tomb of
rie, a king of the st Frankish
sty in the fif entury, was open-
the seventeenth tury hun-
AONE LLLOLLLLLL604A000
. England's Little War.
England is constantly at war with
some portion of the world. The Ti-
betan socalled mission is a warlike ex-
pedition, quickly following the close
of the little war against the “Mad
Mullah.” In the series of conflicts
with the Mullah 352 Britons were
killed and 224 were wounded. The
little war cost England $9,000,000.
The poorly armed dervishes fought at
great disadvantage in every conflict
with the English. In one engagement
twelve Britons were slain, while the
enemy had 1,000 killed. This war has
been proceeding in a desultéry fashion
for nearly three years, and is likely to
begin anew at any time.—Philadelphia :
Ledger.
FITS nermanentlveured. No fifteor nervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great
NerveRestorer.$2trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. R.H. KLINE. Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
During some recent explorations at Pom-
peii an ancient kitchen was unearthed.
Aak Your Dealer For Allen’s Font-Saxs
A powder, It reststhe feet. Cures Corns,
Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, al lous,Aching
Sweatirg Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s |
Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At
all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ace
ecpt no substitute. Sample mailed FREE,
Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
The grav wolf is very destructive to
cattle in Montana.
Mre. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle
_ In Dundee, Scotland, the trolley sysiem
is used to clean and sprinkle the streets.
Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we everused
for all affections of throat and lungs.— Ww.
O. ExpsLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
A floating electric crane is used for the
loading and .unloading of ships at Kiel.
Bertha and Elsie Kinney, two
young girls, have started to walk
from Lamar, Mo., to South Carolina,
where their father has bought a farm,
They expect to get food from the
farmers along the road.
A sheep eats seven hundredweight
of grass in a year, a cow 60 hundred-
weight.
aad
od
Ex ve
8 B. BLOOD BALM
The Great Tested Remedy for the speedy
and permanent cure of Scrofula, Rheuma-
tism, Catarrh, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores, Erup-
tions, Weakness, Nervousness, and all
BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES.
It is by far the best building up To
Blood Purifier ever offerzd to the wo
makes new, rich blocd, impar x
tality, and possesses mir ous
healing properties. Write for Book of Won-
derful Cures, sent free on application.
If not kept b al d
almost
TYCLSOPVPSYITYYCYIVOS
VOOPPIIVIIPVIPOVPIVIVPRNY
>
e
Weak era mate Thompsen’s Eye Water
'FREE to WOMEN
A Large Trial Box and book of ine
structions absolutely Free and Poste
paid; enough to prove the value of
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
water — non-po ous
and farsuperior to liquid
Sfitiseptice containing
alcohol which irritates
inflamed surfaces, and
8% have no cleansing pro;
# ertics. The contents
of every box makes
more Antiseptic Solu-
tion — lasts longer —
goes further—has more
(2 uses in the family and
Pp doesmoregcodthanany
antiseptic preparstion
you can buy.
and used with great successas a Vaginal
Wash, for Leucorrheea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts,
and all soreness of mucus membrane.
Inlocal treatment of female ills Paxtineis
invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we
challenge the world to produce its equal for
thoroughness. Itisarcvelationin cleansing
and healing power; {it kills all germs which
cause inflammation and discharges.
All leading druggists keep Paxtine; priee,50c.
sbox; if yoursdoesnot, send to us for it. Don’t
take a substitute — there is nothing like Paxtine.
Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day.
R. PAXTON C0., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass,
BAD BREATH
‘For months I had great trouble with my stomach
and used rll kinds of medicines. My hha has
been actually S i
a bad odor. Two weeks ago a friend recommende
i
| The formula of a noted Boston physician,
therefore let you know that I shall recommend
them to any one suffering from such troubles.”
Chas. H. Halpun, 10) Rivington St., New York, N.¥.
Best for
The Dowels
i CANDY CATHARTIC
rere
Pleatant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good,
Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25¢, 50¢. Never
gold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCC,
Guaranteed to cure or your money back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 598
ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
Revolvers, Seines, Nets, Tents, Ammunition,
Tools. B® Send stamp for Catalogue te
Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh, Pa,
J PAY SPOT CASH FOR
soon. LAND WARRANTS
issued to soldiers of any war. Write me at once
FRANK H. REGER, Barth Block, Denver, Coio
D RB oO P SY NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cures worst
eases. Book of testimonials and 10 dnvs’ treatment
Bay B. Atianta. @a.
1904.
Free br
P.N.U. 25
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