rove utmost was no cream- every- relief f Sum- ed by ale at years, eworks renoms- ncerats na dis- mb, of ‘hwest- osident ly, W. rats of ct, s, wife > same > - Rock, ums, of st him. ters of rtland, it Chi- / to re- water, t Bos- old, of ook on 1 after 1 a fire Army Villiam hurt. 0 pas- west- vie and Consul vi that to emn- of the xleton, partiy sity N. ange, ramer, eda partic- w, ‘has esenta- fxposi- y were nonga- aWest- by:the je was ‘obbing heir 6- hot to rk city. led the led his in Vet- Julius elected ’a., re- “onven- 84. Pa. 18 untary county struck ith his tner of Rome, irs oid, harged > West- ny, at h Men- mpany Central Gopher mpany, n com- ne and npanies le Pan- ylvania t work ir fully on that y have xpected yea in e large ne and en 2LL3 o 3 nen Doan’s Kidney Pills Brought Strength and Health to the Sufferer, Making Him ¥Vecl Twenty-Five Years Younger ; B. Corton, farmer and lum- berman, of Dep- pe, N. C..«says: “1 suffered for years with my back. It was so bad that I could not walk any distance nor ride in,an easy buggy. I do not believe I could have raised ten pounds of weight from the ground, the pain was so severe. This was my cor- dition when I began using Doan’s Kid- ney Pills. They quickly relieved me. and now I am never troubled as I was. My back is strong and I can walk or ride a long distance and feel just as strong as I did twenty-five years ago. I think so much of Doan's Kiduey Pills that 1 have given a supply of the remedy {o some of my neighbors, and they have also found good results. If you can sift anything from this ramb- ling note that will be of any service to you, or to any one suffering from kid- ney trouble you are liberty to do so.” J. B. CORTON. A TRIAT, IP'REE—Address Foster- Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Kor sale by all dealers. Price 50 cts. Eighty-Seven Miles of Cable. A cableway, which will be the long: est in the world, and will have the highest engine station yet existing, is shorily to be installed on the Argen- tine side of the Andes by a German engineering firm. This cableway will extend from Chileetio, on the Argen- tine Northern railroad, which is 3,430 feet above the sea, for a distance of 22 miles, to a point 14,933 feet above the sea level, or 1,300 feet higher than the summit of the Jungfrau. It will cross a chain of rocks and. preci- pices, spanning, in some places, chasms nearly 3,000 feet wide and more than «600 feet :deep, while at other points it will be supported by iron towers 130 feet high. All the material will have fo be taken.to its destination on .the backs of mules. The length of the cable rope will be 87 miles. The line is intended to have a carrying capacity of 44 tons. of ore an hour—a ‘car holding 1.100 pounds Being ‘dispatched every 45 seconds. | The Versatile Cowboy.’ The question of what became of the cowboy suggests itself. That the old West is a thing of the past no one dis- pute A combination of unseen ab- stacles, sueh as successive severe winters, entailing serious losses in cat- tle, coupled with wire fences and rail- roads, killed the trail in a single year. Where, in ’84, over: 700,000 ¢attle cross- ed the northern boundary of Texas at three fords on Red river, six years later not a single herd passed over the trail. Then the cow tcwns of the West became way stations, and the range man disappeared. But when the cow- boy unsaddled for the last time it was not his intention to turn from the range which he knew and loved. There were numergus occupations inviting him, and whether he opened a saloon or started a bank, he possessed an advantage in knowing the country, and its people. While many of them can be feund following the occupaticn of the small ranchman of the present day, the greater majority turned to other pursuits. But they are scattered wide and can be found among the staid citizens of nearly any Western community. Rcflections of a Spinster. A man wouldn't feel so sorry for the girls to whom he doesn’t propose if he realized just what: those girls think ef him. it’s an awful shock for a married man to find cut that a girl to whom he has been paying compliments knew al] the time that he was married. Very few girls bother much. over a broken heart. They always remem- ber that if a man broke it there are other men who can repair it. The meanest sort of a man is the one who tries to kiss a girl when he knows her mother is so near she will hear if the girl protests. The sensible girl will marry the man who consents to give her a regular allowance; net the one who is wild to Jay the world at her fect. Grip the Cause. - Dr. l.ucas Championiere of is quoted Paris as saying that grip is the original source of appendicitis, and that the latter disease is more fre- quent according as meat forms the larger proportion of one’s diet. o SCROFULA, Cures *GECERs. SALT RHEUM, EC- ZEMA, every form of malignant SKIN ERUPTION, besides i efficacious in toning up the system and restoring the cen- stitution, when impaired 2 from any cause. It is a fi fino Tonic, end its almost supernatural healing 8 properties justify us in guaranteeing a cure of #} sll bicod disesses, if directions are followed. Price, 1 per Bottle, or @ Bottles for $5. FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS. SENT FRE BONK OF WONDERFUL CURES, together with valuable ipformation. § BLOOD BALM CO., ATLANTA, GA. | —— ——— and wooden box to keep the Blue in. fame quantity as vou regularly pay 6 c fr. Save money and get the old reliable Tweed Blue. WM. H. TWEED. 1125 Penn Ave, Pittsburg. Fa D Rr oO PS NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst cases. Look of testumonmls and 1U days’ treatment Tee. Dr. BE. H. GREEN 88SONS, Box B. Atlanta, Ga. P. N. U. 36.1904. Ze away without a queen. HOW THE BEE SPENDS ITS Swarming Day the Only Day of the Year---Fealty of Worker to Queen --- Drone Pays Terri- ble Penalty For Gay Times, ook BEES, in a way, are some- os XX thing like children—they < * 1 B % hate to feel lonely. A bee 5 X will die of sheer loneliness ¥ if you take it away from its friends. It never does any work for itself, but works only for the sake of the hive. And bees love their work, they love the busy stir in their home, and above all, they love their queen, who is the mother of them all, and hardly ever stirs out of the hive. Fancy being the queen and the moth- er of the (0,000 busy, buzzing bees who live in our hive at the bottom of the garden! , No queen is more lovingly attended by her subjects than the queen of the bees. They would do anything for her, but they can do nothing without her. Day and night she is surround- ed by a ring of ladies in waiting, who always stand with their faces toward her, so that some of them must walk backward wherever she moves. -She is fed and she is washed, and nothing is ever allowed to disturb the one work that she is busy upon day and night —the work of layirg eggs. If anything should happen to her all the bees will nearly go off their heads in their sorrow, and if she should be lost and her bees can’t find her, all her unhappy children. will soon die of distress. If any accident happens to the hive the bees protect their queen ard the young bees with their lives, and if there should be a famine they give her the last drop of food. The queen herself is the busiest of all in the hive. But she never enjoys long days of sunshine spent among the flowers. It is her duty and her joy to keep on laying eggs without stopping in the darkness of the hive. She lives three or four years so that she may do this work properly, . but the common bees who have been born in the spring only live to see a little of one bright summer, six or eight weeks, perhaps. These who are born late in the year live longer, for they have not to work day and night, but sieep through the winter. You can see how eager the bees are to get on with their work, as they fly In streams’ in and out of the hive, all through the summer days. If you watehed a bee as it arrived at the hive you would see it hurrying, without stopping to talk or play, to the little cell where the honey it has gathered must be stored; and then it would go to empty out the stores from its leg baskets into other separate cells. Each load must be put away in its proper place; and then at once out it would fly again to the sunshine and the fiow- ers to bring back another Ilcad. WAY BLOCKED BY DRONES. If you kept a very careful watch on the busy working bees as they hur- ried about in the hive, you would soon notice that their way was often blocked by the larger bees than them- selves, who never seem to have any- thing {to do but to hinder the others. These larger bees are the grand gentle- men of the hive—drones they are called—and drones they are. for they never do a stroke of work for thein- selves, but simply live a lazy life of luxury. In the hive that I am telling you about there were quite 400 of these grand gentiemen. They werz very big and fine, and each one had 13,000 eyes on cach side of his head, which seemed rather a sheme considering that the poor workers only had 6000. But then the drones had no stings. All day long they did nothing, but were fed by the working bees on the food tat they had so carefully stored up. i They slept in snug corners, sunned themselves at the hive's door, and per- haps now and then flew out to see how the world was. looking, but never to do a stroke of work. They were al- ways treated with respect and allowed to passed as they pleased into any hive they cared to wisit. The most important part of the nur- sery, indeed the most important place in the whole hive, was the spot where five wonderful cells had been. built, larger than any of the other cells, look- ing something like acorns. In these special cells were the grubs of royal bees—beautiful princesses of the fu- ture, who might some day reign as queens themselves. With hundreds of little bees coming into the world every day, it is quite easy to see that soon the hive would be too small to shelter all the bees. This is what happened in the hive that T am telling you about—the hive grew too small to hold all the bees, or rath- er the bees grew too many to live in the hive—and so nearly all the wis little bees went away to. find a new home, so that the old home night be left to the rising generation. But, of course, it would gever do to So this is what happened: From oune of the royal! cells there stepped cut a beautiful princess. Now, seventeen days before, this princess had been nothing but an cgg. The egg had lain in its little ceil for three days, and then a grub had emerged. For five days this little grub was fed by the nurse bees, not on the ordinary food that is given to little bees, but on food that is kept only for royaity. And then the nurses had covered in the cell with wax, and left the little grub to itsclf, to spin a cocoon. This took one cay, and then, two days later, after it had had a good rest, the grub was transformed into a real baby bee, and on the seventeenth day stepped out from the cell a beautiful princess. QUEEN MOTHER IN RAGE. The princess uttered a loud cry—a long, piping note—and at once all the hive was thirown into the greatest state of excitement. The bees stopped work- ing and flockéd to see the new prin- cess, flying about in the maddest way, now rushing in a body out of the hive, only to stream back again a moment later—but maddest of all was the old queen mother. ; Directly she heard the piping note of the young princess she threw her- self into a violent temper, and doubt- less she would have fallen upon her poor daughter and stung her to death had not so many of the other bees blocked her way. Old queen bees are always furious when princesses step ott of their cells, for they hate to think of any one else ruling in their places. The excitement of all the bees was so great that soon the hive became very hot, and at last the old queen bee, feeling uncomfortable, and finding her- self unable to kill the princess, deter- mined to fly away and find a new home, And so she made her way to the door of the hive, and then sprang into the air, and at once a great cloud of bees streamed after her, and the cloud float- ed away—away from the dear old home that they had filled to overflowing with treasure, to come to rest beside their queen, who alighted on the bough of a tree near by. Wave afier wave of bees alighted beside her, great cluster hunz from the bough, a golden, shimmering mass. : Now, the bee keeper had watched the bees swarming, and © had made ready of them a new clean Live. Di- rectly he saw that the swarm had set- tled, he took an empty box and placed it on the ground just below the clus- ter. And then, knowing well that all the bees were far too happy to think of Lstinging any one, he gently shook the bough from which the cluster hung, and the great ball of bees dropped down into the empty box: and though some of them settied on his hands, his arms and his face, not one thought of stinging him, but from all the bees came a buzzing song of happiness. The day of their swarming is the happiest day in the life of the bees, the one day when they make holiday. The old hive must have scemed very deserted to the few bees who remained with the new princess, after the old queen and her swarm had departed. for only a few thousand bees had stayed behind with her, to care for all the baby bees in the nursery cells. OFF ON THEIR HONEYMOON. They set to work at once to tidy up the hive and to put things straight, and the princess, who was to become their queen, married a handsome drone gentleman, and on a beautiful suminer mornin~ went away for a honeymoon fiight in the biue sky. Then her hus- band had died, and she had returned at once to the darkness of the hive to settle down to her work as queen, and to pass the rest of her days laying eggs. Soon work went on as merrily as be- fore, some of the bees cleaning the hive, some of them flying out to the flowers, others busying themselves in the great nursery, where thousands and thousands of baby becs were al- most ready to leave their little cells. And the bees knew that in a few days thie hive would be filled again with a new stock of little bees. For quite 60,000 little bees would come out from the cells cf the nursery. But the new queen knew that anong these 60.00 babies would be four prin- cesses, and killed in turn cach of the princesses, for it is a law of the little bee people that only one member of tic royal family may live in the hive. But all the other baby bees wko were born were brought up with the most loving care by their nurses, and when two wceks old each of the new bees had grown wise enough to be able te fly out to visit the fiowers, and forage for honey. And so it was nct long before the old hive was filled with a new race of little people, who were just as clever in working for their queen as those thousands cf older bees who had flown away. It was just before autumn bega2, in the menth of September, that the loug suffering bees had their revenge on the great, stupid, lazy drones, who had lived such luxurious lives while they had toiled so hard. Early one morning, while the croaes were still sleeping, the working bees, who had quite lost their patience with the drones, and were ncw very aiagry with them, set upon them and dragged them to the floor cf the hive, and be- gan to tear off their wings. Three or four cf the little angry working bcees set upon each great stunid Crone, and the drones were too helpless, having no stings, to offer any resistance. One by one they were carried. winz- less to the door cf the hive and thrown down to the ground, where death soon came to them. And so the bees mas- sacred all the idle drones, ground was sirewn with the corpses of the giants. Then work went forward azzin, and i the honey of the autumn flovers -vas | gathered.—Royal Magazine, until a; and the’ | Longfellow, one TIME FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW! - REVIEW CF TRADE. Better Crop Prospectz Heips Trade, but Laber Controversies ls 3 a Drawback. R. G. Dun. & Co.'s "Weekly view of Trade” says: Trade has improved chiefly hecause of better crop pros- pects and the fact that last week's variations in prices of steel products failed to demoralize that industry. The industrial atmosphere is still dis- turbed by labor controversies, how- ever, and it will be impossible to fully restore National prosperity until the proportion of voluntarily unemployed wage carners is greatly reduced, but there is increasing confidence in the future. Prospects are considered bright on the Pacific coast because of the high prices paid for farm pro- duets. Foreign commerce at this port for the last week was unfavora- ble, exports showing a loss of $1,091,- 905 as compared with the same week last year, while imports decreased $3,- 267.773. Price uncertainty still dom- inates the jron and steel market. Va- rious constructions are placed upon the recent reduction, but, whatever the object may have been, the result has certainly militated against recov- ery at a most critical time, and the hope that still more attractive quota- tions may prevail causes postpone- ment in placing contracts. While business is decidedly quiet, on the whole several contracts have been placed covering a large tonnage, which tends to avert the threatened demoralization. New business is re- ported in steel rails for both domestic Re- somewhat, and foreign account. Structural steel feels the effect of labor contro- versies in the building rades, but there is encouragement in large pur- chase for railway bridges and ele- vated roads. The pig iron outlook has been brightened by the restora- tion of several blast furnaces to the active list, and Southern producers have been compelled to purchase large quantities of coke on account of the bituminous coal strike, which has proved more stubborn than ex- pected. Instead of increased activ- ity with the proximity for abundant raw material the manufacture of cot- ten goods has experienced a further curtailment. Activity has continued in jobbing circles, but this busines has had no appreciable effect on the primary market. Boot + and: shoe shops of New England have received sufiicient additional fall contracts to give practical assurance of activity well into October. Sales of sole leather are of moderate’ proportions a firm tone prevailing because of small production. Failures this week numbered 205 in the United States, against 176 last year, and in Canada 30, as compared with 33 a year ago. MARK EITSS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat: No. 2 red.. J; 0, . yeo--No, 2....... 82 Corn—No. 2 vellow. ear. 6 No. 2yellow, shelled. Gt Mixed ear....... . 3 white Flour—Winter p 1. Straight winters . Hay—~No. 1timothy... Cicrer No. 1 .... No Iwhite mid. Brown midclings Bran. bulk Dairy Products. Butter— Elgin creamery............ s 20 3 jo creamery. .. .. 17 18 fancy country roll. 13 14 Cheese—Ohio, new. .... Ss 9 Now York, new. :............; 8 9 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per Ih Aaa 8 14 15 Chickeng—a 16 17 Turkeys, live.............0.. 20 23 Eggs—Pua. and Ohio, fresh ... 13 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—New per Lb] .... 2 00 Cabbage—per bbl ..... ean 1 35 Onions—nper barrel . 3 50 Apples—per barrel. os 29 BALTIMORE. Fiour—Winter Patent................8530 375 Wheat—No. 2 req...... 1035 10) Corn—mixed.. 65 645 Eos oi... conitiinss ane Ix 2 Butter=Creamerv... ............... 19 &o PHILADELPHIA . Flour—W futer Patent... . $5 15 5 Wreat-No, 2red... 1 06 107 Corn—No, 2mixed . . 38 38 fe uaaeny 46 47 amery, extra 18 2) Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts... , 19 24 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents.... i. 6 50 W heat—No, 2 re 11 Corn—No. 2 : St 60 Qats—No, 2 \Wiite 44 44 Butter—Cleamery 17 18 Eggs—........... 35 e718 x LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Prime Leavy, 145010 1606 lbs....... 573 Prime, 1560 to 1400 ibs. .. 540 Medium, 1200 to 1800 1b 510 Fat heiters........ Rg 450 Butcher, $00 to 1000 ibs. 42 Common to fair. .. ... 37 Oxen, common to fat 400 Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 3350 Milehcows,each.................... 25 J) Hogs. Prime heavy hogs.............. Prime medium weights... Best heavy yorkers and med Good pigs and lightyorkers. Pigs, common togo Howghs. .... ~~"... . “ Stags ............. 0... A... Sheep. EXtra,medlum we'hers ............ Good to choice Bedium............ Common to fair.... Spring Yambs .... ....... 0... Tos bw Calves. Veal, extra......... 500 50 Vea, good to choice. . 350 40) Veul, common heavy.. 35) 1 Some American Products. Prof. Webster Davis says in a maga- article that Fen | 1 | i i 1 zine “America one Washington, Webster, Powderly one one and one Roosevelt.” It has also produced one Dowie, one Debs, one Mother Jones and onc Carrie Nation. Smoked Glasses for Hay Fever. In Worcester, Mass., there is a doec- the name of Stowell. This doctor has long been subject 10 hay fever. In studying his own case he noticed that hay fever came and went in a very capricious manner, and he reached the conclision that it was mostly a nervous disease. Somehow or other he reasoned himself into the belief that the sun’s rays produced hay fever by acting in some way upon the eyes. So he thought to try smoked glasses for the eyes, to see if that would not prevent his hay fever. He reports that the smoked glasses gave instant relief. But if he went out in the sun without the glasses he was sure to have hay fever again. So now he wears smoked glasses and is happy. He has no more hdy fever. He says he has tried the glasses on two or three other patients, and claims that the same relief is obtained. We like to report such cases, be- cause it is seldom that doctors ever admit that anyone is cured by any- thing except the action of drugs. So harmless a remedy as smoked glasses should he welcome, if it be found to contain any virtue.—Medical Talk. Seagull Weatherwise, The seagull makes a splendid living barometer. IM a convoy of seagulls fly seaward early in the wmorning, sailors and fishermen know that the day will be fine and the wind fair, but if the birds keep inland—though there be no haze hanging out toward the sea to denote unpleasant weather—in- terested folk know that the elements will be unfavorable.—I.ahore Tribune. FITS permanently cured. No fitsornervous= ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer,$2trial bottle and treatise roe Dr. R.H.KLiNE, Ltd., 931 Arch St.. Phila. Pa. English cotton workers are rushing to Canada. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of ag a cough cure.—J. W. O’Briex, 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900, The penguin’s wings are useful only un- der water. Features of the Century. The Midsummer Holiday Number of The Century promises great riches pictorially. In this issue will be seen ten views of the St. Louis Exposition made by Andre Castaigne, whose pictures for The Century of the Chicago, Paris, and Buffalo exposi- tions are well remembered. The eight color plates of the number will include four of “Maxfield Parrish’s Italian villa scenes, two Bermuda submarine scenes by Knight, a view of one of the Utah natural bridges, and, for frontispiece, “The New Game,” by Miss Betts, who drew “The Faster Bonnet.” Other contribu- tors of drawings are Charlotte Hard- ing, W. J. 'Aviward, F. CC. *Yohn, Florence Scovel Shinn, Sydney Adam- son, Arthur I. Keller, John Cassel, Orson Lowell, Frederic Dorr Steele, and Otto IL.ang. W. $5.00 % Su : Ei Es bas re GUARANTEED CUR blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, regularly you are sick. money refunded. booklet free. ickens Earn Money ! If You Know How to Handie Them Properly. # Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to = do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by the experience of others. all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man who made his living Poultry, and . in Siamps. know on the subject tomake a success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT GF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. ————— ETERS EES PE RIE R EES BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, : . 1 34 Leow4 mt $3.50 & $3 SHOES $2.50 PoLICE, THREE SOLES. $2.00 WORKINGMEN'S, BEST IN THE WORLD. $2.50, 82.00 AND $1.75 Boys, FOR ‘ing his name and pr ce on the bottom. it — take no substitute. everywhere. BEST FOR THE BOWELS E for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. Constipation kills more people than all oth i § starts chronic ailments and long years of sy D Srer Siscesos together, It CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay w. . ’ ell ti right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today ae peor I Sn ree he genuine tablet stamped CCC. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. that to experiment and spent much money to learn the best way to conduct the business—for the small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late General Roger Hanson, C.S.A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accom= plished by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “ DEAR MRs. PINEHAM : —] cannot tell vou with pen and ink what good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for me, suffering from the ills peculiar to the sex extreme lassitude and that all gone feeling. I would rise from my bed in the morning | feeling more tired than when I went to bed, but before I used two bottles of | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, I began to feel the buoy- ancy of my younger days returning, became regular, could do more work and not feel tired than I had ever been able to do before, so I continued to use it until I was restored to perfect health. It is indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it. Yours very truly, Mrs. Rosa Apams, 819 12th St. Louisville, Ky.” — 85000 forfeit If original of above [etter proving genuineness cannot be produced, FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN. Don’t hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understand your case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice s free, and the address is Lynn Mass. No woman ever regrette baving written her, and she has helped thousands. explaining our sys- tem. We guarantee to teach any ball room dance selected or re- turn tuition. We refer you to Second Nation- al Bank, Akron; Cen- tral Savings Bank, Dancing Send 6 2-cent stamps for first lesson and de- Akron, or Western Re- vq | serve Security Co., Ak- ron, as to our responsi- B MN ] bility. Address THE BARRON CGRRE- scriptive matter fully SPONDENCE SCHOOL —- | AKRON, 0. ENSIONWYR Ness Succe lly Pro Hoo: Dal Wey {ner U.S. jtes Claims. yraiu civil war, 15 adj adieating claims, atty since L. DOUGLAS FOR MEN AND $4.00 Custom BENCH WORK IN ALL THE HIGH GRADE LEATHERS. $2.50 AND S AND ScHooL WEAR. y Xs Douglas makes and sells more men’s and $3.00 shoes than any other manu- rer in the world. The reason they are ac the greatest sellers is, they are made of the best leathers, hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and have more value than any other shoes. W. L. Douglas guarantees their value by stamp- Look for Sold by shoe dealers Fast Color Eyelets used «.rolusively. ‘“AS GOOD AS $7.00 SHOES.” ‘“Heretofore I have been wearing $7.00 shoes. I purchased a pair of U0. I. Dougias $3.50 shoes, which I have worn every day for : four months. They are so satisfactory I do not intend to return to the more expensive shoes.’’ WM. GRAY KNOWLES, fsst. City Jolicitor, Phila. Brockton Leads the Men’s Shoe Fashions of the World. W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltskin in his $3.50 shoes. Corona Colt is conceded to be the finest Patent Leather made. Send for Catalog. giving full in- structions how to order by mail. W. L. Douglag, Brockton, Mass. 2 CANDY CATHARTIC foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, When your bowels don’t move No matter what ails you, start taking ute guarantee to cure or Never sold in bulk. Sample and 502 We offer a book teiling for 25 years in raising time necessarily had ROST,N.Y.CITY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers