SUICIDE “rom the into sa, says: ere delib- city dur- veen dusk ellion and 5 by pro- ret police. 1 to be a rebellious on unim- for many especially have been people in ve . that was x sincerity olutionists emkin ar- its declar- ec that the 1ad arriv- only the Black Sea «nd which Potemkin shore. on shore urn early e rioters, set fires, me. began to ons were Two hun- 5 to es- into the dragged and other them ‘into lings. fq designed to crush at least. r YEAR Their De- ear. tee repre- signed the he Ameri- company. e fighting r working was com- > the men paid last agreed to output in 3» one and of three wd if the 2d. The and for a vhich they » working xes were favor the to work IDGE into Lake impending rown into on on the lapse of a owd was ere taken o suffered to their 1sly injur- f Youngs- , of Sugar ies. of Marine telegram e crew of ng Budro- . the cap- ond Lieu- Boatswain he Prout | and the nt. The , the crew heir posts. ed to an- nd an in- )een open- ff. ger, chief issian war 1 minister Lieutenant >cently re- al Palat- ief of the St. Cather- Germany, 1S entirely me of the )sing the in 1634, tory. raphing to ite of July sumed the \y Ooccupy- village of ao-Choupe. er the ar- way, the ns were him for e infantry ricted. vidence in ates Sena- Portland, of guilty. 5 been on t for two accepting re the, de- 1 govern- he United nator John , defended * 3 yet fl ‘warm water, as he went to Pets the Sailors Joy. Anima] pets have ever been joy to the average sailor. There is hardly a ship =2flcat that does not Garry one or more such little favorites, to whom the crew are universally kind. More than this, there is fre- quently developed an attachment be- tween men and animals that is seldom to be seen on shore; and the intelli- ‘Bence displayed by these animals of- ten far exceeds the wonderful stor- ies we sometimes see in print. On men-of-war there is probably more consideration shown the crew in this regard than on merchantmen; at all events, you will find there many more ship's pets. It is by no means un- common to see upen the same deck a dozen or more well-trained animals of various kinds whose natural homes are separated by thousands of miles. i { <n } a great | Followed Directions. “An old man who lived in the back- woods was suffering with chills. His wife sent for the doctor, who gave him some medicine, with the follow- ing directions: “Take a teaspoonful hours in cold water.” Whenever a dose was due the old lady had him get in a tub of cold water and swallow his medicine. When the docter came again she asked if John could take his medicine in “chilling” every time he got in the tub.—Mem- phis News-Scimitar. every two Swells Disappointed. James J. Hill, the railroad -million- aire, has selected a simple ahd inex- pensive summer residence in Lenox, Mass., much to the disappointment of that fashionable colony, which had ex- pected him ti entertain lavishly. Four Facts For Sick Women To Consider Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Has an Uncqualled Record of Cures— Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice Is Confiden- tial, Free, and always Helpful FirsT.—That almost every operation in our hospitals pexformed upon women becomes necessary through neglect of such symptoms as backache, irregular and painful menstruation, leucorrheea, displacements of the uterus, pain in the side, burning sensation in the stom- ach, bearing-down pains, nervousness, dizziness and sleeplessness. SecoNDp.—The medicine that holds. the record for the largest number of absolute cures of female ills is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It regulates, strengthens and cures diseases of the female organism as nothing else can. For thirty years it has been helping women to be strong, curing backache, nervousness, kidney troubles, all uter- ine and ovarian inflammation, weak- ness and displacements, regulating menstruation perfectly and overcom- ing its pains. It has also proved itself invaluable in preparing for childbirth and the change of life. THIRD.—The great volume of unso- licited and grateful testimonials on file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., many of which are from time to time published by permission, give ab- solute evidence of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and "Mrs. Pinkham's advice. FourrH.—Every ailing woman in the United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring you health and may save your life. Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women.--Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to romptly communicate with Mrs. Piniz- ky at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. From symptomnis given, your trouble may be located and the . quickest and surest way of recovery © by MEL advised. Out of the vast volume of ex- erience in treating female ills Mrs. inkham probably has the v ery knowl- edge that will help your case. Surely, any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she'does not take advantage of this geverous offer of assistance. ™ O'Scparpior we son the = FOR coicprated P1280 ois nee ne ound B&8| pounds per pounds ca- W paci y per hoe 0 $29. 500 nds capacity per our for -$34, 0 ouaranteed th ejual of Separators that RE. TAIL SV ERWUERE at from $78. oa to $125. FER. Ore will ship ¥ you a Sepa- than any other Cream Sepa rator made. you can return diately return You, may havepaid yr freight wise. ub 4 ute 2d out hos Se and m < and y: Zon wil receive return mail, free, Ww Es LATEST SPE CREAM SEPARATOR 5 ALOGUE. You will get our offer Shy free trial proposition and you pigs the y ST ASTONISHINGLY LIBERAL CREAM PARATOR SOFFE R EVER HEARD OF. Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK'® C0.. CHICAGO. FOR WOM EN troubled with ills peculiar to “2 their sex, used as a douche is es suc- cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills diseasé germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, curesleucorrheea and mast catarrh., Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for a 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. eyes, 1 humor. .ple all the time, rg Th i i : ie “1 I SOME PERTINENT ADVICE FOR LOVERS. Mabel Wishes to Know How to Rid Herself of an Unweicome Suitor, and Here is the Answer. A girl who: signs herself Mabel asks the Observer to tell her how to get rid of an unwelcome suitor, who is so persistent that no brand of snubs, or even celdness of the polar variety, has sufficed to banish. It should be an easy matter to look a lovesick youth squarely in the eye and tell him that the time has come for him to do his roosting on some other front porch and to carry his lit- tle bag of caramels to some other girl. Perhaps, Mabel, you can’t appreciate the ache that gets into the heart of a young man once in a while. Hc .is insane. His world Dbegzins and ends with you. He writes bad poetry when he should be keeping books for the boss. His appetite fails him, and when he walks the street the birds sing, the dogs bark, and even the breezes echo thie one word, “L-o-v-e.” He knows he is unworthy, that a cen- tury of correct living will not make him fit for you to wipe your shoes on, but he has a hazy sort of an idea that if he keeps on loving, in time he may wear out resistance and that your pity may be transformed into affection. That is why he comes “tripping up’ the steps with the candy and the flowers; why he is kind to your little brother, whom he privately thinks is being reared for the penitentiary; why he listens to stories told by your re- spected father, who has a fine recol- lection of how the battle of Bull Run was waged, and likes io tell about it. Lhat lover would help carry in the coal at your residence, or ties n the wringer if he was asked. He is in love. Snubs, rebuffs, hints, polite refusals are as the singing of the winds to him. There is just one thing for you to do. Be frank. Be brutally frank. Don’t try that old *“I’ll-be-a-sister-to-you” scheme. It was a failure when ameses I. was courting. Make your NO as big as a brick house, and then go upstairs and have your little ery. If he comes again, teil papa to use a club. And don’t worry. The young man will get over it. Several millions of young men do get over it every year. Love is a disease. Sometimes it takes strong medicine to cure it.—St. Josenh News Press. An Antiexpansionist,. A Virginia mountaineer who had strayed to Richmond on an excursion, and who, as his holiday progressed, became rather hilarious, grew overcon- fident of his own greatness. Looking round at his companions, says the Bal- timore Sun, he boasted vainly. “Gentlemen,” he said, “I kin lick any man in Richmond.” N¢ one offered to dispute the asser- tion, and: he tried again. “Gentlemen,” he said, ¥'I kin 1i any man in the whole State of Vir- ginny.” The words were hardly out of his mouth before a tall, sinewy man from his own part of the State entered the game and gave the boaster a good thrashing. The mountaineer had a sense of He slowly picked himself up and faced the group to which he had boasted. “Gentlemen,” he. said, “IL am now ready to acknowledge that I kivvered too much territory in that last state- nrent.” Russia and Her Newspapers. One reform that makes all others possible in Russia is the promised re- moval of the bureaucratic censorship over the Russian press. O the Czar grants that, it will be a longer lever [in the full civilizdtion of his imperial domains than his grandfather's: eman- cipation of the serfs. %t is newspapers which make possible Lincoln's wise statement about not fooling all the peo- says the Chicago Jour- nal. Without newspapers it has been possible. for Russian autocrats to fool the Russian people practically all the time. With newspapers it is impossi- ble to fool any part of any people for very long at a time. Without news- papers it has taken a devastating and profoundly unsuccessful war, the most abject revelations of official incompe- tence and greed, the uprising of a great factor in the population, the revolt of portions of the army, and the sacrifice of many human lives to awaken Russia herself to a sense of her needs. Most Amainy Thing in the World. One day, not so many years ago, 1 helped a man haul a steam engine of 200 horse power a ‘distance of eighty miles, and after many days it was set up near an enormous steam boiler, with quantities of coal and water sup- plied, and finally moved the wheels of a big cotton mill. Nothing amazing about that! Listen: A company put a turbine wheel in the Yuba River, Cali- fornia, and developed enormous power which is carried by a great system of transmission lines, operating at 50,000 volts, long distances, in one case 232 miles. By means of small wires sufii- cient horse power to move the world is scattered along the western slope of the Sierras. You can neither see it nor taste it. To feel it is certain death. What could be 1 more amazing? A Man of Credit. A distinguished Irish lawyer, always in impoverished circumstances, once took Chief Justice Whiteside to see Lis magnificently furnished new house in Dublin. you think,” Le said, with a 1t look about, “that I deserve judge answer dryly 0 have got “and you appear i FINANCE ARD TRADE REVIEW CONFIDENCE IN SITUATION Warm Weather Has Accelerated Trade in Textile Lines—Jobbing Busi- ness Brisk. R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of trade says: Customary quiet com- mercial conditions at mid-summer were augmented by the interruption of a holiday, except that warm weath- er gave impetus to the distribution of seasonable wearing appare}, sport- ing goods and outing supplies. In wholesale and jobbing circles an un- usually brisk duplicate order busi- ness testifies to the freedom from accumulated stocks on the shelves of interior dealers while there is no abatement of confidenc in the fu- ture. Structural steel and all forms of railway equipment are the promi- nent features of the iron industry, but quiet conditions prevail at coke ovens and pig iron furnaces. Sensa- tional soaring of quotations for raw materials threatens the stability of the leading textile markets, although consumption is not yet perceptibly diminished by rapidly rising price lists. Widely varying reports receiv- ed regarding the crop situation, prices rising higher than would be the case if manipulation were less vigorous and exports are adversely affected. Severa] threatened labor controver- sies have been averted by agreement upon wage scales for another year and building operations are unusually brisk for the season. Inventories show a good volume of business for the first six months of the year, and still greater activity is expected in the last half. Railway earnings in June were, 6.5 per cent larger tha last year’s but foreign commerce at this port for the last week shows a loss of $4,167 in exports and a de- crease of $488,758 in imports, as com- pared with 1904: Uncertainty in the markets for cotton goods has resulted from the rise in the raw material, and it is al- most impossible to negotiate for fu- ture delivery. Similar conditions pre- vail in the other leading textile in- dustry, except that raw material has fluctuated less of late. MA FLIZ ETS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. When No pred..... &......000 $ 93 05 e—NO. 2......... .e 85 £5 Cord No 2 yellow, ear. 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled 6) 61 Mixed ear........ 13 45 Oats—No. 2 white 35 33 No. 3 white........ 31 335 Flour—Winter patent..... 5 80 6 00 Fancy straight winters 545 5 50 ay—No, 1 Timothy....... 11 09 150 Clov rues 9 70 10 00 Feed—No, 1 white mid. ton 2050 2100 Brown malings Be..." To 1750 Bran, bulk...... 1800 1850 Straw—Wheat 673 700 Blase . 6 75 700 Dairy Products. Buffer Elgin Creamery........... $s 22 24 \ io creamery........ 20 R = Qnieg country roll. 16 1% Cheese—Ohio, new.... 13 14 Now York. new............... % 13 14 Hens-—per Ib..... c.cecticeccnseis, $ 14 15 Chickens—dressed........ - 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Apples bbl ................, ....... . 25) 400 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu 35 abbage—per ton Onions—per barrel.. BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.............5 505 52 Wheat—No. 2 red . Corn—Mixed. 51 2 Bggs...-.. . 16 8 Butter—Ohi . 20 22 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 550 575 Wheat—No. 2 red..... oo. 99 101 Corn—No. 2 mixed. 50 5] Oats—No. & white.. 36 37 Butter—Creamery . =0 2 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 17 NEW YORK. | Flours Patents $ 60) 65) 16 101 23 00 SE ‘2 white. 37 a Butter —Creamery .......... . 20 = Eggs—State and Yoni ania 17 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Extra, 1450 to 1600 lbs Prime, 1300 to 1400 lbs . Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs. Tidy, 1050 t0 1150. .... Butcher, 200 to 1100. . Common to fair Oxen, common to fat Common togood {at bulls and cows 250 35) Milch cows, each 0) 450) Prime heavy hogs. .- eee$ 3858 50) Prime medium w eights. EE 2 90 6 00 Best heavy yorkers and medium... 59% 600 Good pigs and lightyorkers........ 570 575 Pigs, common to good a 48) Houghs................... "376 415 Stags... ...r. Steers ize iiss avai > 35) 5 80 5 6U 525 400 800 Yeal, extra ice..c. noun urns . 500 YT 0 Veal, good to choice. . - 330 45) Veal, common heavy....... . Sw 37 Small [sland Annexed. Aves Island, in the West Indies, has been annexed to the British Empire. It is rarely visited and little known. Its total length is three-quarters of a mile, and as it rises only about 12 or 14 feet above the sea it is not noticeable, even by day, until closely approached. Instead of being a stench and a scandal, Philadelphia bids fair to take her rightful place among American cities, She has already got her de channel to that breezy and wholesome sea of public approbation, declares ep the Philadelphia Recor The number of timber sleepers. on the rail 3 the world is calcu lated to be 1,491,800,000, and their value imated at ‘in the experimental stage. | Christianity. vancement along progress. $900,000,000. This item mak CONSTANT ACHING, Back aches ail the time. appetite, wearies the body. worries the wind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan’s Kidney Pilisrelieve and cure it. H. B. McCarver, of 201 Cherry St., Portland, Ore., in- spector of freight for the Trans-Con- tinental Co., says: K% “I used Doan’s Kid- LE ney Pills for back [& ache and other § symptoms of . kid- ney trouble which had annoyed me for months. 1 think a cold was respounsi- ble for the whole troubie. It seemed to settle in my kid- neys. Doan’s Kidney Pills rooted it out. It is several months since I used them, and up ‘to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble.” . Doan’s Kidney Pills are for sale by all dealers price 50 cents per box. Fos- ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. Spoils your PERRY'S MISSION TO. JAPAN. The President's Letter in 1853 Courted Japan’s Friendship and Trade. The letter which Commodore Perry bore from our government to the Mikado asked for a mutual treaty The original instrument was drafted in May, 1851, by Daniel Webster, then Secretary of State, and was signed by President Fillmore. There it rested. In November, pan Mr. Webster's suc- cessor, Edward verett, fished it out of the Sovartmeitel pigeonholes, took it to pieces and refashioned it. Three copies were prepared and were splend- idly engrossed in English, Dutch and —first and foremost, the safety of our seamen. Many a hapless crew had been driven into their ports by storm or wrecked on their rocky coast, escaping the perils | of the deep only to be welcomed by those truculent islanders to a dungeon cr a cage on shore. This wrong must be stopped at all hazards. And if, in addition, we could persuade Japan friendship, for Chinese. These were inclosed to- gether in a sumptuous gold case; and, to make the whole presentment still more impressiv to the Ja ore | mind, the gold case was e ined in | a coffer rosewood. The document intrusted to Com- | modore Perry asked of the Japanese | court two things, friendship and trade | | | { | i to enter 'inta friendly relations of trade, the two countries, by mutual interchange of productions, might each promote its own prosperity and the welfare of the other. It was thought that Orientals might see that as well as Yankees. In the end they did. But it cannot be said that Japan, any more than oyster, ever really yearned to be “opened.”—Century. No “Piaeumatics” for London. The plan for a great underground pneumatic tube system in London, for the dispatch of letters and parcels, seems to have been definitely killed for the present by the adverse decis- ion of the committee of the house of commons. - One of the advantages claimed for the plan was that it would relieve the congestion of the streets by dispensing with a large number of vehicles. But it seemed to be held that the scheme was" still too much London had one experience, years ago, with a pneumatic tube delivery, which prov- ed unsuccessful, but it is explained that the general plan was defective, parcels being accumulated faster than they could be handled, so that there was no saving in time. The World Growing Better. We reverence the stern virtues of our predecessors, those who founded our republic, but to-day there is less of sect, and, we believe, more of The Iliberalizing spirit has brought men into more generous, more ‘ tolerant relations; - hands are clasped in good works; selfish or sec- tional or exclusive benefits are not en- couraged. The millennium is not yor in sight, but who shall say that it ° not petceptibly nearer? It is rte world-‘than that of:our ancestors; this | world we live in—better, cleaner, happier, more full or promise for hon- est. endeavor, more inspiring for ad- the lines of human WANTED TO SLEEP: Curious That a Tired Preacher Should Have Such Desire. ‘A minister speaks of the curious ef- fect of Grape-Nuts food on him and how it has relieved him. “You will doubtless unders the suffering with indigestion with which I used to be troubled made my work an almost unendurable burden, and why it was that after my Sabbath duties had been performed, sleep was a stranger to my pillow till nearly day- light. “I had to be very careful as to what I ate, and even with all my care I ex- perienced poignant physical distress after meals, and my food never satis- fied me. i “Six months have elapsed since I be- gan to use Grape-Nuts food, and the benefits I have derived from it are very definite. I no longer suffer from indi- gestion, and I began to improve from the time Grape-Nuts appeared on our table. I find that by eating a dish of it after my Sabbath work is done (and I always do so now) my nerves are | quieted and rest and refreshing sleep are insured me feel that I could not possibly do w e-Nuts food, | now that I kno 1e. It is inva- | riably on our ta foo) that we need it to complete t neal-—and our children will eat Grape-Nuts when they cannot be persuade d to touch any- thing else. ume by Postum c, Mic | New York .and there was no trace of coal er in- A Fishing A recent writer in The National | Geographical Magazine” tells of a tree growing in the Malay archipelago, the Andaman Islands and Ceylon, which produces a fruit used in fish- ing, with results of a remarkable character. The fruit is pounded up into paste and left in bags over night, after which it is sunk at low tide in deep holes along the reefs. The fish soon begin to appear at the surface; some of them lifeless, others attempt- ing to swimr or faintly struggling, with their ventral side uppermost. In this condition the natives have no difficulty in picking them out of the water with their hands. Best Alarm Clock. The young man with the yellow satchel stopped at the cabin of an old colored minister. “Let me sell you an alarm clock,” began the young man. “Automatic, double-action guaranteed timepiece.” The old man lit his corncob. “Dat all sounds very good,” he drawled, “but de only kind of an alarm clock dat Ah want am a rooster. Den when yo’ gits tired risin’ early yo’ kin turn aroun’ en hab de alarm cléck for dinnah. Beats all de auto- matic clocks on earf.” Tale, 1 + No fitearnervonga of Dr. Ktinn’s Great | FITInarmanantlvenred. ress after first ¢ NerveRestorer.$ neo trial bottleand treatise free Lif | Dr.B. H. KuinE, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, | —————— | Efe | Aleohol is coming into considera use | for illumination in France. | Use Allen’s Fooft- | Tt Is the only cure for-rSwollen, Smartine, | Tired. Aching, Hot. Sweating Feet, Corns and Runions. Ask for Alien’s Foot-Ease, anowder tobe shaken into the shoes. Cures while vou walk, At all Drug s and Shoe Stores Don’t acrept anv substitute. Sample sent FREE. Address,Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. A librarian declares there are more than 1.500,000 novels. | ne a hottle In 1750 ment were sold Ir 840 a carat t be too highly spokeno! W. O’Briey 322 Thm Minn., an. 6,1900, t tered in Piso’s Curse aga cough cure. —. Avenue, N., Minne: pol ig, The German flag was 1867. Nicaragua's Soapy Lake. There is a soapy lake in Nicara-| gua. This sheet of water, the Lake] of Nejapa, contains a strong solution | of birarbonate of potash, bicarbonate | of soda, and sulphate of magnesia. | “This water, when rubbed on any | greasy object, at once forms a lather.” | The report says it is used as a hair- wash, and enjoys a local reputation | as a cure for external and internal] complaints. The Nicaraguans are not] conspicuous for commercial enter- prise, but during the year they man-| aged to export “four demijchns” of] this wonderful water to the neighbor-| ing Guatemala.—Chicago Journal. A LOVELY COMPLEXION] Y.ady Proves That Every Woe man May Have It by Using Cuticura Soap. Mrs. R. Reichenberg, wife of the well- known jeweler, of 146 Kuiton St., New York, says: “I had a friend who was just- ly proud of her complexion. When asked : what gave her such a brilliant and love- ly complexion, she replied, ‘A healthy woman can be sure of a fine skin if she will do as 1 do, use plenty of Cuticura Soap and water.” She insisted that 1 fol- low her example, which 1 did with speedy conviction. 1 find that Cuticura Soap keeps the skin soft, white and clear, and prevents redness and roughness.’ Few Minerals in Tibet. The geologist who accompanied the British mission to Tibet reports that the country is strikingly poor in valuable minerals. The largest yield of gold was .28 grain a ton of gravel, digenous gems. | Assisted by Catto Ointment, the great Skin Cure, for preser ving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stop- ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or undue per- spiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic, purposes which readily suggest thémse Ives, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bata, and nursery. £old throughout the world. Potter Drug & Ch Boston. G@-Muiled Free, “A Book for Wome: “I had trouble Tn my owes a ch blood impure. ) Tae h no externa = 1 our Cascarets and g pimples disappeared after a month ve recommended ther 220 all my Se Quite a few have found rel C. J. Pusch, $67 Park Ares New York City, N. XY. Best for The Bowels Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or. Gripe, 10¢, 2c, 50¢c. Never sold in bulk The genuine tablet Jtampe C. Guaranteed to cure or your money Sterling Remedy Co., Chiciga or N.Y. 6oo ANNUAL SALE. TEM MILLION ROXES FLY K ILLER Josroyy all the Ifes and aflords Com 4 home—In dining vom, sleeping room and all places where flies are trouble- some. Clean, neat y en, If not kept if ealers, y SOS Dropaid BR D SOMERS, 149 DeKalb Fog Braok! 7s for. 20e: on age at 62, Civil Var. On disability u es for widows—any war. We have records of service. Laws and advice free. A, W. McCORMICK & SONS, 5618 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, Qhio. being a square : man, will thing else. Is there any stronger pr Say Plainly fo Your Grocer You may not care for our opinion, but What About the Unifed Judgment of Millions of housekeepers who have used LION COFFER for over a quarter of a century ? EE always, and he, er try to sel il you any- 00 of merit, than the Confidence of the People and ever increasing popularity ? LION COFFEE is carefully se- lected at the plantation, shipped direct te our various factories, where it is skillfully roasted and carefully packed in sealed pack- ages—unlike loose coffee, which is exposed to germs, dust, in- sects, etc. LION COFFEEreaches You as pure and ciecan as when it leit the factory. Sold orly in 1 1b. packages. Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable prem ums. SCLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, O WIN “LEADER” AND Carefully inspected sh CHESTE “REPEATER” SHOTG t shot ard waddir anded bs, mac a wr} hot and iding, loaded by machines wh gi variable results account for the superior- i chest d
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers