BRA... DLICE s Whe volu- xovernor vince of nes and ic gard- t. His Sokolo- ough he 5. Vice over the y is the e there, lecessor, een as- Ufa on sy, who, rg and ame pro- s a stern ppointed ent gov- \ repres- 1sed him fate of volution- by Gen. ns were ninistra- e gover- al of an the sup- monstra- y armed Jewish ce were | to take m which wounded issued a TS, Say- rorkmen. general Russia, ad been ymmittee turn © to v peace- ANS n a Bad made a lave had yorrowed ler com- ne sales. red only vas then nt which took no Early med that 1d that I des that al loss ,000. In s I made d heavy 0,000. I note. A y me on ent New 0 1 have by 3a 0 wishes | not ac- ondition. offer is CHED nges In descrip- Ss given he Craig 1e 16th. r James ’ittsburg ressel Is et beam, a gross nnage of O. Jenk- NValsh of Jenkins, ‘use free his pro- red, Vespas- in com- eview eof members leged in- acancies ee other Or resig- of the , Maine; 2, A. D. it and ia; Mor- Charles Stockton, lain, In- entucky; William and six in the er train, witch at Herbert S. Babb, SS. Evans- etary of lected to strict of Hemen- d States will be concede the cor- Irg train RESTORED TO HEALTH. THANKS TO PE-RU-NA Friends Were Alarmed--- Advised Change of Climate. | Miss Mildred Keller, 718 13th street, N. /., Washington, D. C., writes: “I can safely recommend Peruna for ca- tarrh. I had it for years and it would respond to no kind of treatment, or if it did it was only temporary, and on the slightest provocation the troublé would come back. “I was in such a state that my friends were alarmed about me, and I was advised to leave this climate Then I tried Peruna, and to my reat joy found it helped me from the jirst dose I took,and a few bottles cured me, : “It built up my constitution, I regained my appetite, and I feel that 1 am perfectly well and strong.”—Mildred Keller. We have on file many thousand testi- monials like the above. We can give our readers only a slight glimpse of the vast array of unsolicited endorsements Dr. Hartman is receiving. Woman's Privileges. She can wear her hat on one ear without being suspected of a con- viviai disposition. She can say a thing one day and contradict it the next, and no one will call her a pre- varicator. She can shed tears on the slightest provocation, which will merely prove to people that she is tender-hearted and sympathetic. She can look openly into every mirror she passes without being accused of more thgn a natural feminine inter- est in her appearance. She can spend a good deal of time considering her clothes and prinking up her person, and who shall say that it is not a proper attribute of her sex to be beautiful She can wheedle a man into almost anything by artful meth- ods, and never lose her reputation for artless sincerity. Whereas, if a man did any of these things he would be spelled in capital letters as frivolous, unstable, weak, vain, foppish, hypo- silly.—Chicago Journal. ITCHING SCALP HUMOR Lady Suffered Tortures Until Cured by Cuticura=Secratched Day and Night. “My scalp was covered with little pim- ples and I suffered tortures from the itch- ing. I was scratching all day and night, and I could get no rest. I washed my head with hot water and Cuticura Soap and then applied the Cuticura Ointment as a dressing. One box of the ointment and one cake of Cuticura Seap cured me. Now my head is entirely clear andimy hair is growing splendidly. I have used Cuticura Soap ever since, and shall never be without it. (Signed) Ada C. Smith, 399 Grand St., Jersey City, N. J.” Oyster Shell Windows. In Manila most of the houses and offices have tiny window panes of translucent oyster shells, instead of glass. Arabia has the reputation of being one of the hottest and unhealthiest regions on the globe, but all Northern Arabia has a winter season, with cold rain and occasional frosts. Ack Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease. A powder. It résts the feet, Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous,Achinz Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new ortight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ace ecnt no substitute. Sample mailed FREE, Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. 2,000 Miles of Cars. There are enough freight engines and cars engaged in the traffic of this country to make a string nine thousand miles long. Cheap Newspapers, Chinese newspapers, owing to the cheap quality of paper used and to the low price of labor, both literary and mechanical, are issued at an extreme- ly small figure. The price of the ordinary Shanghai journal is four cash, or about one-fifth of a cent. Peafasiz Cannst 3a Caryl byloealapplicationsas they cannot reach tha diseasod portion oftheear. Thereis oniy ons way to cure deafness, and that is by consti- tuuonal remedies. Deatnessis caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining od the Kustachian Tube. Whenthis tube is ia- flamed you have a rumblinggound orimper- fect nearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam- mation can be taken out and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, hearing wili be destroyed forever. Nine eases out of tea arecaused byecatarra, whieh isnothingbutaa inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars forany caseol Deafness (caused by catarrn that can- notbecured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circularsfree. F.J. Coexey & Co., l'oledo, O. Sold by Draggists, . Take dall’s famiiy Pills for constipation. Swallow Dying Out. The swallow is being annihilated. As the birds cross I'rance and Italy going to Africa in the fall and returning in the spring they are mercilessiy slaugh- tered for the table aud the plume trade. Their numbers are visibly de- creasing. w+ m—— -bered centuries. BURNING THE MIUNIGHT OIL. There’s Liitle Chance of Amounting to : Much Unless You Do. Good for Dr. John M. Scott, Profes- sor of Greek in the Northwestern Uni- versity! He has had the courage, the heroic audacity, to attack the ancient imbecilities about the virtues and re- wards of him who goes early to bed and early arises therefrom, and to tell his students that they have little chance of amounting to anything un- less they burn in considerable quanti- ties the “midnight oil” at which econ- omists, moralists, doctors and other foolish solemnities have been directing their ineffectual lightnings for unnum- It is true that all through those centuries people here and there have followed the rule of early to bed and early to rise, and still have managed to make a fair living and to keep out of asylums, either for lunatics or imbeciles, but they have paid a fearful price for doing what everybody advised and most did not practice. They have missed most of life's higher joys; they have been bit- terly hated by all the neighbors over whom they have claimed an obnoxious superiority, and they have deliberately stuck to the customs of savages and barbarians instead of acquiring those which races invariably adopt as they advance in civilization. An occasional Zleam of almost human intelligence having made them suspect that there was or might be something wrong with their silly argument that it was “natural” to sleep when it was dark and to be up and doing when it was light, they laboriously imagined that there was something the matter with ‘night air,” and that half truth and whole lie has been so well worked that even to this day even the people who sit up latest, to the obviously enormous are wont to be shame-faced about their own common sense and meekly to con- fess, whenever one of the hen-and- Hottentot ‘saints assails them, that they are tempting early death, and will never be happy, wealthy or wise— a confession probably the most foolish evér made by man and contradicted by all of history and experience. It is extremely well to get enough sleep, but it is absolutely immaterial, so far as health, virtue or prosperity are cou- cerned, at which part of the day the leep is taken, and, if there are many Loings that can best be done by day- light, so there are at least as many things, at least as important, that can hardly be done at all except by the lights which civilized man can com- mand at midnight—and after. Nine- tenths, if not ninety-nine one-hun- dredths, of the world’s great problems have been solved after sunset, by men who habitually sat up as late as they pleased and got up in the morning when they felt like it—which was often not till afternoon. So again we exclaim: Good for Dr. John M. Scott, Professor of Greek in the Northwest: ern University! —New York Times. Mrs. Hollow Horn Bear’s Ambition. When Pawnee Bill's show was in Hartford last summer Chief Hollow Horn Bear struck some of the show- men after he had drunk tco much red- eye, and he was fined in the police court. He had no money with him, but he had plenty at the reservation in Western South Dakota, and if his wife could be notified he knew that she would send the money. Iawnee Bili said that he had had a good deal of trouble with the chief and he did not want him with the show any longer. He sent Sheriff Smith money to pay the Indian’s fine and to buy a ticket to send him back to South Dakota. Now it is learned that the Yankton Sioux are in social chaos over ques- tions of precedence that have arisen from the experiences of the tribe's representatives at the inauguration of President Roosevelt. ; x Hollow Horn Bear rode in the inau- gural parade, and therefore asserts that he has been officially designated as the social luminary of the tribe, but David Sypher and half a dozen minor chiefs and braves who accompanied him and were received by Indian Com- missioner Leupp, declare that they were the recipients of greater marks of favor and are entitled to recognition as the 400 of the reservation. Mrs. Hollow Horn Bear is reported to have issued an ultimatum. She pur- poses hereafter to be the social dic- tator and has issued invitations to a roast dog dinner to which Mrs. Sypher is not invited. Mrs. Sypher, on learn- ing that invitations were out for Mrs. Hollow Horn Bear's function, coun- tered by issuing invitations for an in- augural soiree of her own the same day. To this the social leaders of the reservation were invited with the ex- ception of the Hollow Horn Bears. Now a campaign is afoot to deter- mine which function is to be accepted by society as the real thing with the label blown in the water bottle. Natur- ally, the situation is embarrassing.— Hartford Courant. Incubators For Blooded Dogs. Thie Parisian’s most recent contribu- tion toward the happiness of the canine race is a dog incubator to care for the undeveloped offspring of pedigreed dogs. The incubator is in every way like that which enables undeveloped human infants to gather sufficient strength to carry on the battle of life. Like these, the dog incubator is a dou- ble glass case, kept at a uniform tem- perature by artificial heat. Reports from Paris state that in that great city the demand for such a contrivance is sufficient to make profitable its opera- tion in connection with one of the great dog hospitals. More than this, one of the humanitarian societies’ of the zay capital has indorsed the contrivance as a method of educating human moth- ers to a sense of their responsibilities and as a better method -of, exhibiting the workings of the incubator than by gsing buman infants. benefit of themselves and the world, FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW WEATHER CAUSES COMPLAINT Structural Shanes in Great Demand and Orders on Hand Will Keep . Mills Busy. R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Unseasonable weather is the chief cause of complaint, both as to distribution of merchandise and agricultural development. At many leading cities retail trade in spring and summer wearing apparel is falling behind expectations and there is less than the customary reorder business in wholesale and jobbing departments. Although no actual reduction in the crops is yet assured, sufficient uncer- tainty has appeared to render dealers in the farming districts somewhat cautious regarding the accumulation of supplies beyond curreat require- ments. Otherwise the trade situation is satisfactory. Manufacturing activity is fully maintained, the percentage of idle ma- chinery being smaller than at aay re- cent date. The few strikes now in progress cause little interruption and sonte of the July wage scales have been adjusted, but others are still un- der discussion. Railway carnings thus far available for May show an aver: age gain of 8.0 per cent. over last year’s, and foreign commerce at New York for the last week increased $3,957,199 in value of exports, while imports declined $592,312 in compar:- son with the same week in 1904. Structural shapes have taken the position of prominence in the iron and steel industry. Building operations that were retarded by inclement weath- er are now under way aad the ton- nage of steel required will keep mills fully occupied for some time. The industry as a whole is well engaged and the output for May promises to attain a new record. Higher raw materials have given more stability to the textile manufacturers. An ad- vance of over a cent in the average of domestic wool quotations established the highest price level of recent years. Failures last week numbered 234 in the United States, against 236 last year, and 11 in Canada, compared with 12 a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Corpo 2 yellow, ear.. 0. 2 yellow, shelled. . 50 Mized ear............ > 43 Oats—No. 2 white. > 35 No.§ white......... ee 34 Flour—Winter patent..... . 580 Fancy straight winters. 5 45 Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... «1275 Clover No. 1............ «RD Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. =e 21 00 Brown middlings...... «18 BY Bran, bulk........ . 1800 Straw—Whe “ 675 Bburereioersnnranss 675 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 30 Ohio creamery....... vee 20 Fancy country roll.. . 16 Cheese—Ohio, new....... oe 13 New York.new................. 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b.......................! 14 15 Chickens—dressed......... Su 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh 18 19 Frults and Vegetables. Apples bbl .....cepeq000,000 0.000 25) 400 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 30 3, Cabbage—perton...........eee.... 18 00 21 mw Onions—per barrel........ ex "250 "305 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent Wheat—No. 2 red... Corn—Mixed..... 51 2 Eggs see arsaencansennnrin 16 18 Butter—Ohio creamery 21 23 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent......... 3 580 5 ‘Wheat—No. 2 red... 92 Corn—No. 2 mixed 5J Oats—No. 2 white 36 7 Butter—Creamery........... 24 2 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 17 NEW YORK. Flour—Patonts...........+.cr0ves.s $ 60) 635) Wheat—No. 2 red.. 2 01 9:2 Corn—No. 2........ . Hy Ho Oats—No. 2 white... . a7 a8 Butter—Creamery ............. 2 25 Kggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 17 13 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Extra, 1450 to 1000 Ibs .............. $635 650 Prime, 1300 to 1400 lbs .. ee BS 6 39 615 58, 410 Xen, common to fat _.... a Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 433) Milch cows, each 16 ¢ Prime heavy hogs.............. Prime medium weights. ..... est heavy yorkers and mediu Good pigs and lightyorkers.. igs, common to good .... Roughs 375 415 Stags... 325 35) stra. ion uh $510 515 Good to choice .. 49) W310 Medinm .. ... 425 473 Common to fair. 250 40) Lambs, ......... 0... 0 0 550 800 Calves. Neal, extra... on... i iia 450 700 Veal, good to choice... 8.3) 45) Yeai, common heavy.............. 304 375 Reward. A wealthy eastern tourist lost in an electric car at Los Angeles a purse Small containing $5,025. To the conductor, who found and returned it, he gave, after carefully counting the money, a reward of two dimes. NEW PASTRY BOARDS. The newest idea in pastry boards is thick glass. The old-time marble slab is now said to absorb, whereas the glass is quite impervious, hence much more sanitary. Under the glass is placed a thick sheet of felt. A great many kitchen conveniences are now made of glass. Rolling pins and washboards are familiar, but glass rollers for towels are not yet com- on. three weeks. ANOTHER LIFE SAVED, Mrs. G. W. Fooks, of Salisbury, Md., wife of G. W. Fooks, Sheriff of Wico- mico County, says: “I suf- fered with kid- ney complaint foreightyears. It came on me gradually. 1 felt tired and weak, was shortof breath and was trou- bled with } bloating after SEEN = eating, and my limbs were badly swollen. One doctor told me it would finally turn to Bright's disease. I was laid up at one time for I had not taken Doan’s Kidney Pills more than three days when the distressing aching across my back disappeared, and I was soon en- tirely cured.” For sale by all dealers. Price, 50 cents. Ifoster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Liquor as an Ally in War. The details of the Russian retreat from Mukden toward Tai pass, as giv- en by an eyewitness, pictures in the homely but emphatic language of a trader, who had followed the Boer exodus from Pretoria under British pressure, the utter demoralization of Emperor Nicholas’ forces when the in- domitable Japanese concentrated their strength upon the ancient capital of Manchuria. Whether Kuropatkin abandoned the city too soon or not seems to figure less in the story of the retreat than the condition of his inferiors, from high officers down to the plain soldier. This eyewitness states that many of the commanders were maudlin and irresponsible; that they seemed to care little about the fate of the issues for which they were fighting, and that their men in the ranks, discouraged and disorganized perhaps by this condition of their su- periors, threw away their equipment, left their commissary and bolted in disorder in almost any direction that enabled them to escape what was to them then a magnified “yellow peril.” This eyewitness states that, surfeited by the liquor they had taken, officers and men alike threw champagne and brandy into the strees, and in their besotted condition attacked Chinamen, one of whom is described to have clung to a cart wheel until his hands were severed with a sword, his body slashed and finally his head nearly taken off. He was an inoffensive Chinaman, but in their fevered brains the Russian pictured him as a Jap- anese spy. Oil from Borneo. After having been refused permis- sion to use the Suez canal owing to the dangerous character of her cargo, the British steamship Batoum round- ed the Cape of Good Hope in safety and arrived at Marcus Hook last night with 1,125,000 gallons of ben- zine in bulk from Borneo. The oil was produced in Borneo and the by- products extracted there. It is the first direct shipment to the United Sates, similar cargoes having come via Rotterdam, where they were transshipped.—Philadelphia Record. A New Wrinkle. Suit rolls, which are something like enlarged music rolls, come as a new wrinkle to athletes, especially base- ball, lawn tennis and ~olfing, this sea- son. Really they are intended to keep out wrinkles in the clothing. Besides a place for a pair of shoes an outing suit and shirt may be laid flat in the roll and then strapped into a neat bundle. They come of canvas or leath- er, with handles like those on a shawl- strap. * CREAT CHANCE From Change in Food. The brain depends much more on the stomach than we are apt to suppose un- til we take thought in the matter. Feed the stomach on proper food easy to digest and containing the proper amount of phosphates and the healthy brain will respond to all demands. A notable housewife in Buffalo writes: “The doctor diagnosed my trouble as a ‘nervous affection of the stomach.” I was actually so nervous that I could not sit still for five minutes to read the newspaper, and to attend to my house- hold duties was simply impossible. I doctored all the time with remedies, but medicine did no good. “My physician put me on all sors of diet, and I tried many kinds of cereal foods, but none of them agreed with me. I was almost discouraged, and when I tried Grape-Nuts I did so with many misgivings—I had no faith that it would succeed where everything else had failed. “But it did succeed, and you don’t know how glad I am that I tried it. I feel like a new person, I have gained in weight and I don’t have that terrible burning sensation :n iny stomach any more. I feel so strong again that I am surprised at myself. The street noises that used to irritate me so, I never notice now, and my mind is so clear that my household duties are a real pleasure.” Name given by Posturi Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Now why was this great change made in this woman? The stomach and the brain had not been supplied with the right kind of food to rebuild and sirergthen the nerve centres in these organs. It is ab- solute folly to try to do this with medicine. There is but one sure way, and that is to quit the old food that has failed and take on Grape-Nuts food, which is more than half digested in the process of manufacture and is rich in the phosphate of potash contained in the natural grain, wkich unites with albumen and water—the only three substances that will make up the soft gray filling in the thousands of delicate nerve centres in the brain and body. Grape-Nuts food is a sure road back to bealth in all such casca, Caring for Flower Pots. Do not empty pots and put them away dirty, for the chances are that they will never get cleaned, and when cold weather comes plants will be hustled iato them, with all their pores clogged with old dirt, and absolutely unfit for use. When the planis are bedded out, put the empty pots in & tub of water; let soak for a few hours; scrub with an old whisk brecom, and drain dry. It takes but a little time and the plants do enough better in them to pay for the trouble.—National Magazine. Mental Suggestion. A Macon young man took his girl to a show recently and soon after the curtain was raised she complained of feeling faint. The young man took something out of his pocket and whispered, “Put this tablet in your mouth.” She quickly placed it under her tongue, but it would not dissolve. However, she soon felt much better. When the show was over she slipped the tablet into her glove. When she removed the glove at home she found the tablet was a button.—Kan- sas City Journal. LIVING TOO HASTILY Irregularities and Female Derange- Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Owing to our mode and manner of living, and the nervous haste of every woman to accomplish just so much each day, it is said that there is not one woman in twenty-five but what suffers with some derangement of the female organism, and this is the secret of so many unhappy homes. Oo woman can be amiable, light- hearted and happy, a joy to her hus- band and children, and perform the duties incumbent upon her, when she is suffering with backache. headache, nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing. down pains, displacement of the womb, spinal weakness or ovarian troubles. Irritability and snappy retorts take the place of pleasantness, and all sun- shine is driven out of the home, and lives are wrecked by woman's great enemy—womb trouble. Read this letter: Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— ‘I was troubled for eight years with irregu- larities which broke down my health and brought on extreme nervousness and despon- dency. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und proved to be the only medicine which elped me. Day by day I improved in health while taking it until I was entirely cured. I can attend to my social and household duties and thoroughly enjoy life once more, as Lvdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman, without an ache or a pain.” —Mrs. Chester Curry, 42 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass. At the first indication of ill health, painful or irregular menstruation, ain in the side, headache, backache, earing-down pains, nervousness or ‘‘the blues.” secure at once a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound and begin its use. AMERICANWOMENBREAK DOWN | ments Result — Cured by Lydia B. | Proportion of Centenarians. Forty-one men and 112 women out of every million persons horn reach the age of 100 years. FITSpermanentlv cured. Nofiteor rarvonte nessafter firs: day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer, $2trialbottle apd treatise free Dr. R.H. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch S¢., Piila,, Pa. Tn India threshing is done Ly hand or by the treaZing of bullocks. The Hygienic Institute of making war on mosquitoes. Dreslau is Mre. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teetning,soften the cums, reduces infiamma~ tion,allayspain, cures wind colic,25¢.abottle. Tokio is a hundred years older than St. Petersburg. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. Scotch fishermen have introduced fishing boats driven by motors. IG 350 SHOES: &. | | Union Made W. L. Douglas makes and sells more D Men’s 3.50 shoes than_ any other manufacturer in the world. %10,000 REWARD to any one who can disprove ~his statement. W. L. Douglas £3.50 shoes are the greatest sellers in the werld because of their excellent style, easy fitting and superior wearing qualities. They are just as good as those that cost from £5.00 to 87.00. The only difference is the price. W. L. Douglas 3.50 shoes cost more to make, hold their shape etter, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L. Douglas guar- antees their value by stamping his name and price on the bottom of each shoe. Look for it. Take no substitute. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are sold through hisown retail stores in the prin- cipal cities, and by shoe dealers every- wliere. No matter where you live, W. L. Douglas shoes are within your reach. EQUAL $5.00 SHOES. J have worn W. L. Douglas $3.50 shees for years, and consider them equal to any $5.00 shoe now on the market. They have given entire satisfaction.” — Win. H. Anderson, Real Estate Agent, Kansas City, Mo. Boys wear W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes because they fit better, hold their shape and wear longer than other makes. W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltskin in his 3.50 shoes. Corona Colt is conceded to 3 e the finest patent leather produced. Fast Color Eyelets will not wear Brassy. W. L. Douglas has the largest shoe mail order business in the world. No trouble to get a fit by mail. 25 centsextraprepays delivery. If you desire further information, write for Nlustrated Catalogue of Syring Styles. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. WE MANUFACTURE Gas Saving Gas Burners For Boilers and Hot Air Furnaces. Write for Catalogue. STAKDARD HEATING AND RADIATOR CO., PITYSBURG. PA. land, low prices, OLD VIRGINIA Sv Send for catalogue. CASSELMAN & CO., Richmond, Va. J YASHBOARD L useful device ATWATER CO., § FARMS; GOOD NEHOLDER holdslines perfectlys bostoaid, 25¢. Ajents wanted. 11¥ Wlnchester ave., Chicago, Ill, D R oO PS NEW DISCOVERY: gives anickrelief and cores worsg cases, Send for book of testimonials and 1G days’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS Atlanta, Ga PN. U. 211905. Lai -PISO'S CURE FOR Ey CURES WHERE ALL EL AILS. ht Best Cough Syrup. EES E Fal Use Te) in time. Sold by druggists. LN CONSUMPTION - oo in e speak out. Could any amount of mere housekeepers to use tinued and increasing popularity. package. factory. Lion-head on every package. EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE C rom = ON rood BL PR 2 it © iv Conviction Follows Trial When buying loose coffee or anything your grocer happens to have in his bin, how do you know what you are getting ? Some queer stories about coffee that is sold in bulk, could be told, if the people who handle it (grocers), cared to Lion Coffee, the leader of all package coffees for over a quarter of a century, if they had not found it superior to all other brands in Purity, Strength, Flavor and Uniformity 2? This popular success of LION COFFEE can be due only to inherent merit. There is mo strunger proof of merit than cone If the verdict of MILLIONS OF HOUSEKEEPERS does not convince you of the merits of LION COFFEE, it costs you but a trifle to buy a It is the easiest way to convince yourself, and to make you a PERMANENT PURCHASER. LION COFFEE is sold only in 1 1b. sealed packages, and reaches you as pure and clean as when it left our Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS O., Toledo, Ohio. talk have persuaded millions of GUARANTEED CURE fo starts chronic ailments and lon money refunded. booklet free. blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, h pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness, regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all oth Joars of suffering. CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well u right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under abso he genuine tablet stamped C CC. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, CANDY CATHARTIC icitis, biliousness, bad breath, bag eadache, indigestion, pimples, § When your bowels don’t move er diseases together. It No matter what ails you, start taking ntil you get your bowels lute guarantee to cure or Never sold in bulk. Sample and 503
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers