RT for the st week ition of warmth southern insuffi Jorthern ingland, er Ohio is not unfav- perature in the upper leys the and, as improve: tral and uld be middle re prov- 5 begun portions 1 South- gress in - , where sappoint; portiofis t States re wall, and in- ons, and ‘Wiscon- the Pa- ontinues n Wash- the con- [innesota ted, al- d States 1 weedy. well on outlook best in 1 heavy ion and Southern rts re ally fav- in the bpointing ma. roughout tton belt : » cultiva- consider- continues Indicate sing and hen the initiated perations vhich are ing the Reports Russian ovements pparently 1t which n Europe e are ad- with the he Rus- seem to t. of the 90 miles ht point bf Fengh- tendency at pres- tet.. The. \s far as are con- 2 enough that por- at good in small ry wools moderate. hio and 34@35¢c; > wNo. 2, 26@27¢; 3d4@35¢; 5¢; half n an ad- a woman f United NCE cline to 3 the pow- rid con- to the re- orocco to rence un- tisfactory aken the being in ch a con- way of Morocco. RAIN ly Killed atally y Mr. and nglewood, as struck hen. Mr. tly killed 0 the side . expected saved his ince. d the ad- ft beyond occupying iver. A ehind the Oyama is lve move- the Alle- nvicted of n for the disorderly Diaz Will Travel. President Liaz of Mexico intends to £0 to Europe before his term of office as the executive of the Mexican gov- ernment expires, and is desirous of visiting the United States officially. He will be accompanied abroad by ‘his wife. FITSpermanently cured. No {its ornervous- ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer,$2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. R. H. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, One of the great pyramids cf Egypt has been struck by lightning. Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sora, Hot, Calloys,Achin ; Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails, Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new ortightshogs easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ae- ecpt no substitute. Sample mailed FrEg, Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. A Parisian complains that kissing is out of fashion in 1 France. Tragical Poverty. Dr. N. Lueccock in his address at the anniversary of Carleton College, while speaking on the “Fundamentals of Christian Education,” said: “A man’s supreme achievement in life is himself, not what he may know, possess or do—but what he is. Tragical poverty is not so much an empty pocket or even an empty head, but an empty heart. We meet them every day, men with souls entombed, having much to live on and nothing to live for, no far-reaching purpose connecting them with God?’s kingdom on earth and eternal life beyond.” Greenland Cure for Consumptives. Since Dr. Sohon’s experiments seem to have demonstrated that it is im- possible for tuberculosis germs to live in Greenland, and since his theor- ies are substantiated by his own ex- perience, the outcome of the present venture will be awaited with much interest by physicians as.well as vie- tims of this disease. The method out- lined has been tried in Europe, but not on a sufficiently comprehensive scale to afford conclusive data.—At- lanta Constitution. Nervous Women Their Sufferings Are Usually Due to Uterine Disorders Perhaps Unsuspected A MEDICINE THAT CURES Can we dispute the well-known fact that Amerfean How often do we hear the expres- sion, ‘‘I am soner- vous, it seems as if 1 should fly; ” or, “Don’t speak to me.” Little things annoy you and make you Jrrisable: you can't sleep, you ‘are unable to quietly and calmly perform your daily tasks or care for your children. The relation of the nerves and gen- erative organs in women is so elose that nine-tenths of the nervous pros- tration, nervous debility, the blues, sleeplessness and nervous irritability arise from some derangement of the organism which makes her a woman. Fits of depression or restlessness and irritability. Spirits easily affected. so that one minute she laughs, the next minute weeps. Pain in the ovaries and between the shoulders. Loss of voice; nervous dyspepsia. A tendency to cry at the least provocation. All'this points to nervous Brostratien. Noting will relieve this distressing condition and prevent months of pros- tration and suffering so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Mrs. M. E. Shotwell, of 103 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: “I cannot express the wonderful relief 1 have id by takimg ¥rdia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound.’ I suffered for a long time with nervous prostration, back~ ache, headache, loss of appetite. I could not sleep and would wudk the floor almost every night. “1 had three doctors and got no better, and life was a Warden. 1 was advised to tr Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it has worked wonders for me. ‘I am a well woman, my nervousness is all ; ten years gone snd my friends say I Ik younger Will not the volumes of letters from women made strong by Lh ydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound * g¢onvince all women of its virtues? Surely you cannot wish to remain sick and weak and discouraged, exhausted each day, when you can be as easiiy cured as other women. © FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to 7 their sex, used as a douche is TT suc- cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness , cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, axting is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all ‘ TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. THE R. PAXTON COMPANY BosTON, MASS. E TRADE-MARKS N DESIGNS and T COPYRIGHTS... SECURED OR FEE RETURNED Send postal for our new book, just out : ** What te Invent, How to Invent, How to obtain a Pat- ent, How to sell your Patent when obtained; with instroctions relating to assignments, shop rights, county and state rightsand royalty contracts. JOHN S. BUF S. DUFFIE & co. Pat. - Attys. - Washington, D. C. OME TU MONTAN thinking of chang ing location? S<nd nos ior full info® mation as to soil clim oD rice cf farm land and in- ducements to home-ses! or 8. Ws s en 43 von grain sam- les and Liable statistics. Address, Jones & Kelly, Jozeman, Montana. Reference Com: 1 Nat'l Bank. et ee ns DI RO Ps Y NEW DISCOVERY; given quickrelinf and cures worst cases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. HE. H. GREEN’ S20NS, Atlanta, Ga P. N. U. 25, 1905. ill MAEDA Ss Li FOR CONS TE Bile EARLY INVENTIONS. Primitive Man Understood Principles We Use in Mechanics. Today. The first knife was, of course, a flint flake, and the earliest spoon a shell, to which primitive man learned in the course of ages to fasten a han- dle of wood. : Such articles as these, together with hammers, axes and needles, are easily recognized as having come down to us direct from savagery. It is, how- ever, more startling to find that such a comparatively modern invention as the lift has been used for ages by tribes which we designated as savages. The application’ of principle of the modern vertical lift may be seen to- day among the bee hunters of the island of Timor. To get a honeycomb seventy feet overhead, with nothing between it and the ground but a smooth and branch- less trunk, seems at first sight impos- sible without ladders or ropes. It is a simple matter tg the Polynesian. He cuts a few yards from the tough stem of a creeper and forms of it a rush rope. With this he makes a loop around the trunk and his body. Jerk- ing the loop a little above his head, he leans back and begins walking up; his bare feet pressed against the trunk. Repeating the operation he gradually gains ‘the top. The whole ascent is made without exhausting use of mus- icles by tilizing the prinkiple of frie- tion. Cotton weaving has done more for Great Britain within the last century than any one other industry. The In- dians of Central and South America have for centuries used a loom so elab- orate that ours is comparatively speaking, but a slight improvement up- on it. ‘We should never have had the Pan- ama hat but for the quick-fingered In- dians of the Isthmus of Panama. Even today their secret process of season- ing the grass blades used in weaving these hats remains unrivaled. Basket matters of the same region make bas- kets which hold water without leak- ing—another invention which is quite beyond us, ; Felting was invented by Polynesian savages, and brought by the Hawaiian natives to a perfection we have never excelled. They not only make cov- erings for their houses and blankets out of the feit, but by pounding the inner bark of certain trees succeeded in producing soft and comfortable seamless garments of this material, such as sleeveless coats and cloaks. Mostar was made by the people of Tahita when our ancestors were shiv- ering in holes in the rocks. They dived into the sea, brought up lunips of coral, burned them in pits, using wood as fuel, and mixed the lime they got in this fashion with sharp sand and water. With this mixture the in- genious savages plastered the walls and floars of his house, and a better mor- tar could net be obtained. Another purely savage invention, which is perhaps®the most familiar object of modern life, is the tobacco pipe—not only the common clay which the North American Indians moulded centuries ago out of the red sand stone of Colorado, but the. wooden pipe, the prototype of’ the everyday brier.—London Answers. — ‘A Mean Trick. It was a meean trick, of course, and some day she will doubtless get even with him. She saw him take a piece of paper fromm his pocket, carefully fold it up, and put it in an envelope, and then place the envelope in one of the far corners of the drawer of the library table. “What's that? she asked. “Oh, nothing of any consequence,” he replied. Now, if he had simply thrown it carelessly into the drawer she would have thought nothing of 1, but the care he took to put it clear to the far corner, and the fact that he seemed ill at ease after he found that his ac- tion had been observed, aroused her curiosity. She wondered what it was, and: she reasoned with herself that he had said it was “nothing of impor- tance,” so he would nave nobody but himself to blame if she looked at it. Siie was justifted in inferring from his words there was no reason why she should not. And this is what she read scribbled on a piece of paper: “I'll bet you a new hat your curiosity will not permit you to let this alone.” It was a terrible predicament in which to place a woman. How could she claim the new hat without giving herself away Advantages of Good Temper. There is always good policy in keeping one’s temper. As often as temper is lost a degree of influence is lost with it; and while the former may be recovered, it will be found much more difficult to recover the lat- ter. The politician who allows him- self to get angry—whatever may be the provocation—does his cause an in- jury which his soundest argnment will hardly repair. Just so with men of all professions, and with men of no profession; if they would be able to exert a sway in their sphere they must learn to keep cool. ‘Who ever listened to a discussion in which one party went raving mad, while the other maintained his com- posure, without having his sympathies enlisted with the latter, even though, in the beginning, his prejudice might have been in favor of the former.— Christian Work . No Apology Needed. Mrs. Puffer—My daughter is to wed a real English lord. Mrs. Lamb—Oh, well, I don’t think you have any cause to apologize. Hus- bands are not so plentiful these times that a girl can afford to be too partic ular.—Boston Transcript. FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY Steel Mills Busy—Little New Busi- ness in Pig Iron—Railway Earn- ings Are Higher. R. G.-Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Moderate improve- ment is noted in commercial condi- tions, although progress is along con- servative lines, and thére is no evi- dence of speculative excesses. Seas- onable weather has stimulated] retail sales of light-weight wearing apparel and jobbers report more disposition among dealers to place orders for fall and winter goods. Mercantile pay- ments’ are also more prompt, the brighter crop outlook having a salu- ary effect on all commercial opera- tions. Although little new business is noted in pig iron, the steel mills are busy and ‘confidence is expressed in developments next month. Tex- tile manufacturing is in better condi- tion is in better condition than at any recent date, high prices for raw material exerting no retarding in- fluence as yet. Railway earnings thus far available for June average 8.7 per cent. higher than last year’s, and foreign commerce at this port for the last week shows gains of $1,397,312 in exports and $2,636,896 in ‘imports. In every de- partment of business the past week makes a strikingly favorable com- parison with the corresponding week of 1904 when prices were tending downward and there was much com- plaint of the- early summer dullness, vet ‘there is no indication at the pres- ent time of the unreasonable enthus- iasm that ‘threatens stability through reckless purchases in excess of whole- some consumptive requirements. Irregularity continues in the hide mar- ket. Many divisions are nominal and foreign .dry hides have declined an- other fraction, making a loss. of. a full cent from the recent top point. Better reports are received regard- ing the leather situation, particularly Hemlock sole. Conditions in the foot- wear industry are without material alteration. Failures this week numbered 229 in the United States, against 25% last year and 25 in Canada compared with 16 a year ago. MARNE ETS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. ‘Wheat—No. 2 red..........ceuunnns $ 93 95 Rye—No.2...,........ 90 93 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear. 52 51 No. 2 yellow, shelled. 50 59 ixed veviais sr evasais 48 46 Oats—No. 2 white 35 31 0.3 white....... 34 35 Flour—Winter patent...... 5 80 6 00 Fancy straight winters. 5 45 5 50 Hay—No. 1 Timothy........ 127 1300 Qlover No. 1............. 127 13 00 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. 21 00 Brown middlings..... 18 50 18 2% Bran, bulk.. 1800 18% Straw—Wheat 67% T0600 Ont, a ni el 6 75 7680 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 2 24 Ohio creamery....... . 20 22 Fancy country roll.. 16 18 Qheesea—O0hio, new..... 13 14 Now York. new................. 13 14 : Poultry, Etc. Hens—perlb....................... $ 1 15 Chickens—dressed . . 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, ‘fresh...... 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Apples: bbl ©... or ae 59 0 Potatoes—Fanc¢y white per bu. .. ? 30 1 2 Cabbage—per ton. 21 10 Onions—per parrel 3 00 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. 3 505 52 Wheat—No. 2 red...... . 93 94 Corn—Mixed...... 51 52 Eggs.. . 16 18 Butter—Ohio creamery. . 20 x PHILADELPHIA. . Flour—Winter Parent. $ 550 57 =r 99 101 50 51 . 36 37 : 20 2 . 16 17 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents 6 50 at 104 26 Oats—No. ¢ 338 Butter—Creamer 20 22 Eggs—State and Y nisyiv ania.. 17 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Extra, 1450 to 1600 Ibs .............. $5090 600 Prime, 1300 to 1400 lbs . 51H 5 85 Medium, 1200 io je 1b 350 550 Tidy, 1050 to 1150... .. 520 5 50 Butcher, 900 to Ty 37 4 10 Common to fair. 3 50 375 Oxen, common to fat ......... 27 400 Common togood fat bulls and ¢ ows 250 350 Milchcows,each.................... 1600 4500 Hogs. Primeheavyy hogs...,.............. $5060 57 Prime medium weights... .. we DOO 570 Best heavy yorkers and editing. . 260 570 Good pigs and lightyorkers....... 5 40 550 Pigs, common 10 good 470 480 Regegs'" 2 nr 37 415 Stags...... % 325 350 500 515 4 85 5 00 425 5 250 400 550 800 450 50 / eal, common heavy .. 30 A Vacation Hint If you have some duplicates of books you are fond of rereading, take one of those with you to the country, and it may be you will find an oppor- tunity to leave it with an appreciative friend who has not read it. Then you will bestow a kindness and make room on your shelves for some new friend in covers.—St. Nicholas. The average frui has been putting off lem from year to expense a farmer year, dreading the little, but disliking still more to learn a new process, says the Massachusetts rioughman. But the tim® is right at hand when many of us will have to buy a spraying outfit and learn to use it r t, or make up our minds to get out “ot the orchard busi- ness. The new scale insect and the brown-tail moth have added the finish. ing touch to an’ already threatening situation. . made my ALL DONE OUT. Veteran Joshua Heller, of 706 South Walnut street, Urbana, Ill, says: “In the fall of 1899, after taking Doan’s Kidney Pills I told the readers of this paper that they had relieved me of kid- ney trouble, dis- posed . of a lame back with pain across my loins and beneath the shoul- der blades. During the interval which has elapsed I have had occasion to Te- , sort to Doan’s Kid-§ ney Pills ‘when 1 noticed warnings of an attack. On each and every occasion the results obtained were just as satisfactory as when the pills were first brought to my notice. I just as emphatically endorse the preparation to-day as I did over two years ago.”* Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., proprietors. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. Bluebird OCccupies Mail Box. A bluebird which took possession of a mail box on the South road in Weodstock, Vt. last year “and suc- cessfully raised two broods: of little omes, premptly returned this spring rebuilt her home, deposited: her eggs therein, and is nowgwaiting. patiently for the appearance of her little fam- ily. The owners of the box have ab- dicated in her favor, pusting up an- other box for their own accommoda- tion. AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR Covered Ifead, Neck and holler fered Agony For Twenty-Five Years Until Cured by Cuticura. 2 “For twenty-five years I sufferéd agony froma terrible humor. completely covering’ my head, neck and shoulders, discharging matter of such oftensiveness to sight and smell that I became an object of dread. I consulted the most able doctors far and near, to no avail. Then I got Cuticura, and in a surpisingly short time T was com- pletely cured. 1 advise all those suffering from skin humors to get Cuticura and end their misery at once. XN. P. Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.” . Industrial Progress in China. In the last consular reports an American consul at a Chinese port presents a brief and interesting ex- hibit of the ‘industrial and commer- cial development’ of the Chinese em- pire at this time. There are at pres- ent more than 1,246 miles of railway in operation in China. But to a Chin- ese capitalist, accustomed to a 12 per cent. legal rate of interest in China, and who is in a position to invest his money in other enterprises, which will insure him 20 per cent., railway construction offers mo ‘inducements. In spite of this peculiar condition, however, it is quite possible that within a few years’ time 6,000 miles of railway will have been _constructed and many inland cities brought in touch with the sea coast, and open- ed to the trade of the world.—Pitts- burg Post. Stonewall Jackson's Locks. His form was tall, gaunt and angu- lar. His feet and hands were large, and his walk was singularly ungrace- ful. He always spoke quickly, in 'shert sentences, devoid of ornament, but tg, ‘the point. A habit of “bat- ting his eyes added no little to the peculiarity of his appearance. His eyes were gray and ordinarily dull and expressionless;. but when “excited by drill, which always seemed to rouse him, especially when charges were fired, the whole man would change, as if he were transported by the roar of the guns to the exciting scenes of an actual field of battle.— Century. FOOD IN SERMONS. Feed the Dominie Right nnd the Sermons Are Brilliant. A conscientious, hard-working and eminently successful clergyman writes: “I'am glad to bear testimony to the pleasure and increased measure of efficiency and health that have come to me from adopting Grape-Nuts food as one of my articles of diet. “For several years 1 was much dis- tressed during the carly part of each day by My breakfast, usually consisting of oatmeal, milk and eggs, seemed to turn sour and failed to digest. After dinner the headache and other symptoms following the breakfast would wear away, only to re- turn, however, next morning. “Having heard of Grape-Nuts food, 1 finally concluded to give it a fal Ir trial, I quit the use of oatmeal and eg ge, and breakfasts of Grape-Nuts, cream, toast and Postum. The result was surprising in improved health and total absence of the distress that had, for so long a time, foliowed the My » morn- ing meal. digestion became once more Ss vy. the headaches ceased, and the old fecling of energy returned. Since that time, four years ago, I have always had Grape-Nuts food on my breakfast table. “I was delighted to find also, that whereas before I began to use Grape- Nuts food T was quite nervous and be- came easily wearied in the work of preparing sermons and in study, a marked improvement in this respect re- sulted from the change in my diet. 1 am convinced that Grape-Nuts food produced this result and helped me to a sturdy condition of mental and physical strength. “I have known several persons who were formerly troubled as I was, and who have been helped as I have been, by the use of Grape-Nuts food, on my recommendation, among whom may be mentioned the Rev. —, now a mis- sionary to China.” Name given by Postum Company, Battle Creek, Mich. ‘There's a reason.” Read the little book, “The Road to ‘company comment at nething a line. MEXICAN DISCOVERIES. Relics Dating Back to the Time of Cortez’s Conquest. Laborers, excavating trenches for the underground cable system of the telephone company, near Cinco De Mayo street, in Mexico City, have un- covered a number of clay utensils, concrete foundations of temples and pottery covered with hiaroglyphics, also Spanish coins whdse dates are undecipherable, but which minging with the pottery induces the supposi- tion that the antiquities found apper- tain to periods of the conquest, when Cortez razed every building in the Aztec capital. A wall uncovered shows evidence of having been built on the ruins of another city lower down. The wall is covered with hiero- glyphics which were partly effaced by the drilling of conduit holes through the solid mass. Prof. Batres is eager to obtain gov- ernment permission to excavate be- low the present level for older re- mains, which he is satisfied exist underneath, especially in view of simi- lar discoveries made in 1900. The Licucr Cure in Denmark. “The Danish method would do away with a great deal of drunkenness,” said a woman with .a white ribbon fixed to her breast. . “The Danish method? What is that?” oe : “In Denmark,” was the answer, “when a drunken man comes forth from a saloon or cafe he is at once put in a cab and driven home, and the cabman’s bill is paid by the liquor dealer from whose house the man issued. Any liquor: dealer who al- lows a man to depart from his estab- lishment in an intoxicated condition is compelled by the Danish law to pay that man’s cab fare home.”— Philadelphia Bulletin. : Artistic Trolley "Poles. There comes from a manufacturing an announcement sufficient- ly notable and ‘encouraging to merit This is the production of -an artistic trolley pole. The crude bare poles in general use are among the most notable dis- figurements of American city streets, marring many a handsome building and mocking the expenditure put upon rich facades, against which they show conspicuously in all the immedi- ateness of an essential foreground.— Architectural Record. -_y SADIE ROBINSON. = Pretty Girl Suffered From Nerv« ousness and Pelvic Catarrh--—- | Found Quick Relief in a Few Days. NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-HA. Miss Sadie Robipsen, 4 Rand street, Malden, Mass. ,, writes: ““Peruna was. recommended to me abous a year ago as an excellent remedy for the Epos 1bles peculiar, to our sex, and as I found, that ‘all’ that was said of this medicine was true, I am pleased to endorse it. “1 bejan to use it about seven | months ago for weakness and nmeprv= ousness, caused from overwork and sleeplessness, and found that in a few days I begat to grow strong, my appetite increaszd and [ began to sleep betier, consequently my nerv- ousness passed away and thr weak=- ness in the pelvic organs soon dis- appeared and I have been well and strong ever since.’ Address: Dr. "S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0., for free medical advice. All corres. vondence stric ‘tly confidential. Serve Your Soup fastidious. (Natural Flavor) Libby's Corned Beef Hash Ox Tongues Tomato, Fulienne, Consomme, Chicken, Mulljgatawney, or Oxtail will please the most They are quickly prepared—delicious to eat—always satisfactory. Food Products Boneless Chicken Soups Your Grocerihas them Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago Vienna Sausage Ham Loaf coffee without good material. counters won't do. the coffee that for over | for a king in this way: The Secret of Good Coffee Hven the best housekeepers cannot -make a good cup of blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their But take the pure, clean, natural flavored LION COFFEE, the leader of all package coffees— § 8 a quarter of a century has been daily § M8 i | welcomed in millions of homes—and you w ill make a drink fit Dirty, adulterated and queerly extra for the pot. t = add white of an egg (if egg i ist. WITH BOIL ING WATER. THREE MINUTES ONLY. mimnies fo seftie. Serve 2d. WITH COLD WA brimgy it to a boil. minutes it’s ready to serve. X Bont boil it too long. TWO WAYS TO 1st. With Eggs. COFFEE before bo 2d. With Celd Water instead of eggs. HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. Use LION COFFEY, Because to get best Grind your LION CO¥F ERE rather fir 2 it with a little co 1d to be nzed as a settle r), th Add boiling water, and let it boil Add a iitile cold water and set aside five romptly. ER. Add your cold water %o the paste and } Then set aside, add a little cold water, and in five } Don’t let it stand more than ten min utes before serving. #1 DBONT’S {Don’t use water that has been boiled before. Use part of the white of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION After boiling add a dash of cold water, and set aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve through a strainer. 126 the SPIRIT resal Its you must t est coffee. l se tablespoonfiu! to cach cup, and one ater, enough to make a tf ck paste, 2 ud n follow one of the following rule SETTLE COFFEE. LION COFFEE in future. (Lion-head on - (Save thes Insist on getting a package of genuine LION COFFEE, prepare # according to this recipe and you wiil only use e Lion-heads for valuable SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOCLSON SPICE CO., (Sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) every package.) premiums.) Toledo, Ohio. right Take our advice, start monoy refunded. The : Bovis: esc Addreas Sterling Wellyille,” in each pkg. Remed Comp Ran enisage Néw York. 02 CANDY CATHARTIS GUARANTEED CURE for ali bow el troubles, dopendicite: biliousaess, bad breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, pains ‘after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. regularly you are sick. Constipat tion kills more people than 3ll other diseases to starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowals th Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure of enuine tablet stamped CCC. Wher your bowels don’t move ether. It No matter what ails you, start takirg Never sold in bulk. Sample and
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers