CARREY, =PS UP ve Report yunded. Japanese | of Sak- rmy July south of d Palero 1ssians re- raphed to r date of ently pub- was com- says the dangerous ever been ose sought n “Times” at another re warlike y the Rins- e “Official replying habarovsk, mendation the enemy >t to think labor slug- a place is mete g displeas- st come to of William an army the recent agent for company. was held 1 was then i’ and sO en able to f his cap- a friend near the nd Adams his homs9 's physical h that he { the time nough still rey. show that savy cords. y have had 1, who saw army in and held a sutenant in v bold, outs gloried in ke care of sand sing 00,000. illiam Zieg- ,000 to the Ziegler, tha as settled. e Supreme d an order r, executor atilda Zieg- 5,000 shares r Company 14-year-old or, consent- ich is a re- ler's dower against the ity of which t to Mrs, y and coun- | and an in- The remain- t $18,000,000 son. small skiff os ‘north of inn., Edith or, Everett Pogue were N MINE Explosion ractice. »d and eight explosion of ing mining roads near yoat contain- 1e mine and Disaster. . >, it may be \t the naval i that boiler xploded, not gh pressure, ce and fail- yurt will not » Bennington, tter and the authority. Joyce. of the Meth- died at Min- 1t of a hem on camp at a i upon the ca- ties of Colon e et . gging of ry considera- leading peace Russia, is in iter on peace apanese °om- Ff . - - v “3 of - a. fport, N. Y., says: ¢ For sale by all dealers. TWENTY YEARS OF IT. ated by Diabetes; Tortured With Gravel and Kidney Pains. mack | Henry Soule, cobbler, of Hammonds- “Since Doan’s Kid- cured me eight years ago, , I’ve reached sev- enty and hope to live many years longer. But twenty years ago I had kidney trouble so bad I could not work. Backache was persistent and it was agony to lift anything. Gravel, vhirling headaches, dizziness and ter- Pills irible urinary disorders ran me down from 168 to 100 pounds. Doctors told me I had diabetes and could not live. I was wretched and hopeless when I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills, but they cured me eight years ago and I've been well ever since.” Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Price, 50 cents per box. Some Strange War Bets. Some extraordinary bets have made on the Japanese-Russian A number of Japanese officers bet that they would be killed in battle. The money was to go to their widows. One officer, on start- ing for the front, made the following wager: If he were killed within a month his heirs were to receive $500. After that date he was to pay his opponent 10 yen ($5) a day until he had survived 100 days, after which the bet was to cease... He undertook to expose himself to danger only when military conditions demanded it; in other words, he would not wil- fully let himself be killed.—Kansas City Journal. . Trap for Auto Scorchers. A photographic police trap for the apprehension of scorching automobil- ists has been invented in England. By the pressing of a button a pho tograph is made of any passing car with the time and date. A pair of these instruments with synchronized timing arrangements used at each end of a measured piece of ground would, it is believed, give absolutely accurate data as to the speed of automobiles. GRATEFUL TO CUTICURA For Instant Relief and Epeedy Cure of Raw and Sealy Humor. Itching Day and Night—Suffered For Mouths. “] wish you would publish this letter so 4hat others suffering as 1 have may be helped. For months awful sores covered my face and neck, scabs forming, itching terribly day and night, breaking open, and sunning blcod and matter. 1 had tried many remedies, but was growing worse, when 1 started with Cuticura. The first application gave me instant relief, and when 1 had used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment, 1 was completely cured. (Signed) Miss Nel- lie Vander Wiele, Lakeside, N. YX.” Japanese Favorite Tune. “Marching Through Georgia” is gaid to be the favorite tune of the Japanese soldiers. Native music has no marches, as it is without “time.” Patriotic composers have, however, since the war began, remedied this defect by adapting various foreign pieces. The soldiers have picked up the new zirs and sing with great de- light the Japanese words fitted to them.— Kansas City Journal. Iigo’s Cure is the best medicine we ever usea jor all affections ot throat and Jungs. — Wo. 0. NDSLEY, Vanburen, {nd., Feb. 10, 1900. dE or Labor organization has until lately made slow headway in Spain. Mre. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children tecthing, soften the gums, reduces inflamma- tion,allays pain,cureswind colic, 25¢.a bottle Dy Books were not bound in cloth until 1828. . sy £2.00 Cream Separator 7 FOR $ we sell the ! ED, 2O%DEE CREAM ISEPARA 9 B00 pounds capacity per 34. Guaranteed equal of Separators that RE- TAIL EVERYWHERE at from 25.00. “4 We will ship =El8 you a Sepa- days’ free trial ‘by comparison, PD test and use that it will skim closer, skim colder milk, skim easier, run lighter an gkton one-half more milk than any other Cream Sepa- r made, you can return the Separator to us at our expense and we will imme- ' diately return any money you may havepaid for freight charges or otherwise. Cut this ad. out, at once and mail n postr Ur LATEST SPECIAL return mail, free, 5 d, our DREAM SEPARATOR CATALOGUE. You will get our big offer and our free trial proposition and you will re- ceive the MOST ASTONISHINGLY LIBERAL CREAM PARATOR OF D OF. SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO.. CHICAGO. 13 FOR WOMEN X troubled with ills peculiar to wy LH) ibcir sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc- cessful. Fboroughl cleanses, kills discase germs, gtope discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water. and is far more cleansing, i, ak _ 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 8o0sSTON, Mass. WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195 To introduce. ference. Easy terms. tell you all about it. HOrFMANN'S MUSIC HOUSE 537 Smithfidld Strect. Pittsburg, Pa Write us and we'll d3=to) LE SR Ao) CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS f Bost Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use In time. Sold by druggists. P. N. U. 3%, 1905. teamed Thompson's Eye Water eyes, Ws€ Buy direct and save the dif-, MEANDERING MIKE'S CONCLUSION. Now what’s the use of sittin’ down An’ agitatin’ of my mind An’ tryin’ hard to win renown An’ leavin’ other folks behind? The neighbor boy that reads a book - *Cause he gits licked unless he’do, Has made me take another look : And kind 6° changed my point: of view. He says that Shakespeare never wrote Them pieces that the boys recite, And lots of sayings that we quote 1s plagiarisms left and right. An’ folks we call the real stuff An’ put up in the museum hall Was nothin’ only jest a bluff An’ sometimes never lived at all. This world is sech an envious place! It doesn’t seem worth while to try To benefit a human race That is so quick to pass you by. So what’s the use o’ sittin’ down An’ struggle-in’ for pomp or fame? They'd only take my laurel crown Of’n my forehead, jes’ the same! 4a —Washington Star. “Yes,” said the veteran of niany wars, “I have participated in scven- teen engagements.” What!” | ex- claimed the pretly crass-widow. “And you are still a Lacheior?’—Chi- cago News. Mrs. Quiverful— Tommy, did you give your littie brother the best part of that apple, as I told you?’ Tommy Q.—“Yessum, I gave him th’ seeds He can plant em an’ have a whol orchard!”’—Cleveland Leader. He selleth best who writeth best All things both great and smai; Yet ev'ry scribbier hath o.ie gem That will not sell at al. — Life. “That man,” said the proud friend. “went into politics a poor man and came out of it a poor man.” “Well.” answered Senator Sorghum, “all I cap say is that there must have been coil tributory negligence on his pari.’ — Washington Star. Mamma—**When that na ty hoy threw stones at you wby didn't you come and tell me instead of throwing them back at him?” Little Willic— “Huh! What good would it do to te’ you; you couldn't hit the side of’ house.”—\Washington Life. “I want to complain of the flour you sont me the other day.” said Mrs Newliwed, severely. “What was thy matter with it, ma’am?’ asked th: grocer. ‘It was tough. My husband simply won't eet the biscuits I maaGi with it!”—Philadelphia A study of men rather clearly reveals Of truth this significant sprig: A man may be fully “as young as he feels, But it’s seldom he’s truly big. —Saturday Evening Post. Physician (looking into his auteroon where a number of his patients arc waiting)—*“Who has been wailing the longest?’ Tailor (who has called {ic present his bill)—"I have, doctor; 1 de livered the clothes to you three years ago.”—Glasgow Evening Times. “80 they smashed your laundry and looted your cash drawer,” said the po lice judge. “They did,” answered the intelligent Chinaman. “And what aid you do?’ ‘Nothing. They followe? the usual custom and convinced me that it was to my interest to remaiy neutral.”—Washington Star. Mrs. Brickrow—'How do you man- age to persuade your husband to buy you such expensive bonnets?” Mrs, Topflatte—"1 take him shopping with) Ip Tess, me, walk him around until he can’t stand, and then wind up in a bounel store. He'll buy anything to get home.” —New York Weekly. Lecturer (enthe I rench Rovolution)— “It is impossible to imagine the chaos that reigned—confusion and anarchy everywhere. In our more peaceful cons ditions we can not even imagine suck a state of things.” Man (at the back of the hall)—"Yes, we can, mister Come up to our house; we're movin’. -- Pick-Me-Up. Pacinotti’s Invention. Some time clapsed after the develop ment of the self-exciting' machine be fore the marvelous characteristie of re versibility of function was discovered with the necessary corollary, the elec trical transmission of energy by the us¢ of two similar machines, one to DL! driven by power and to generate elec tricity, and the other to receive elec tricity and to develop mechanical power. It is claimed that this vital fact was discovered and described by Pacinotti in 1867; but, if so, the dis covery remained dormant until 1873 whon Messrs. Gramme and Fontaine independently demonstrated it at the Vienna Exposition. The exact circum stances of this discovery will probably never be known, b me account says that it was accidental, and was due te the mistake of a workman who coupled a machine to a live circuit and was astonished to see it begin to rotate This is a quite natural possibility, as a similar thing has happencd many times in recent years.—Century.' Gothic Type Again. According to the Berliner Tageblatt the short-sightedness of recruits is be ginning to cause grave anxiety to the German War Office. “Bismarck him- self,” comments the London Chronicle, fore he was of this « of patrioti abolition of riably refused the printed in Roman characters. party is now several on, thot .he w the Go d not hear of the type, and inva- of any book But the gift anti-Gothic and grou newspapes numer 3 . FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY Leading Industries Receive Large Orders and Less Idle Machinery is Reported. Business continues to expand in a wholesale manner that promises well for the future. Reports from the leading branches of manufacture are unanimous in telling of an increasing volumns of orders and the percentage of idle machinery steadily diminishes. Textile plants make.the best returns, closely followed by footwear factor- ies, and some divisions of the steel industry are engaged so far ahead that capacity is extended. Better ptfospects for the crops removes the only handicap that impeded the re- vival of trade and favorable weather for a few weeks will assure unprece- dented production in the aggregate, although the yield of cotton will fall considerably behind last year’s. The month of July made a most encourag- ing exhibit in so far as statistics are available, liabilities of failure being smaller than in any month since April, 1901, and railway earaings surpassing last year’s by 9.1 per .cent. Foreign trade at New York for the last week shows gains of $1,776,184 in exports and $1,608,564 in imports, as compar- ed with the same period of 1904. Quiet conditions in the leading iron and steel markets do not prevent ac- tivity at the mills, which operate freely on old contracts, and are pre- paring for a vigcrous fall campaign. Prices of minor metals have risen still further, tin selling six cents high- er than it did a year ago. Output of coke is moderate, but the market is quiet and prices are steady. Leather is more active, especially hemlock sole and oak backs, with prices sustained. Prospect of still higher prices for materials necessi- tates conservative action by manufac- turers of boots and shoes! New En- gland producers of footwear are fully occupied on current delivereies. Fail- ures last week in the United States are 232 against 230 the corresponding week last year, and in Canada 26 against 18 last year. MARIE TTS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Fleur and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red.... $ 93 96 Rye—No.2.......... . 85 £5 Corn—No 2 yellow, ear... 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled.. 6) 61 Mixed ear........... 43 49 Oats—No. 2 white Hi) 34 0.3 whiie........ 84 35 Flour—Winter patent.... 5 65 575 Fancy straight winter 6 40 6 50 Hay—No. 1 Timothy.. 1100 "1150 Clover No.1........... 9:0 1000 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton 2050 2100 Brown middlings...... «3710 3750 Bran, bulk....... . 1800 1850 Siraw—Whoat..... . 675 700 Oat....cooeee nia siraer canine . 675 700 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery. $ 24 Ohio creamery....... . 20 22 Fancy country roll. 16 1% Cheese—Ohio, new...... . 13 14 New York. new................. 13 14 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per I1b........c.ccooveeennennn $ 1 15 Chickens—dressed....... i 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh. 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Apples bbl ... . 251 400 Potatoes—Fancy . 30 35 Cabbage—per tON......ccesieesnes «+ 1800 2L uw Onions—per barrel... 2 50 0u BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 505 5 Wheat—No. 2 red... 9 94 Corn—Mixed..... 51 52 Butter—Ohio creamery.. 20 22 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 55. 5D Wheat—No. 2 red.. 99 101 Corn—No. 2 mixed 50 51 Oats—No. 2 white. 36 37 Butter—Creamery.. 20 22 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 17 NEW YORK. ElQUr—Patents. .comnzes-2sreerenss $§ 60 6 50 Wheat—No. 2 re 102. 104 Corn—No, R........ 55 26 Oats—No. 2 white. 7 38 Butter —Creamery h hia nite «ve 2 22 —=~ tate and Pennsylvania.... 17 18 LIVE STOCK. Eggs Union Stock Yards, Cattie, Pittsburg. Extra, 1450 to 1600 lbs .. 0 Prime, 1300 to 1400 Ibs . 525 Medium, 1200 to 1800 1b; 4 80 510 Tidy, 1050 to 1150. .+ 440 4 80 Butcher, $00 to 1100. 400 470 Common to fair....... 3 50 375 Oxen, common to fat ...... ree 27 400 Common togood fat Lulls and cows 250 350 Milchecows,each.. .. &.. ......... 1600 4500 Prime heavy hogs Prime medium weights. . Best heavy yorkers and me Good pigs and lightyorkers........ 57 igs, common to good .... 47 Hougns,....oouus: aia in Stags.....-.chevees.. 0 S00 hae. .s 325 Sheep. Extra....... 00.00 5g... on. 5 50 Good to choice 52 Medium ...°.... . 500 Common to fair. 2 4 03 Lambs... irate: ores nsiessn 550 800 Calves. Neal, extra ...;......0..0.......c0u0 5008 73 Veal, gooa to choice. . Veal, common beavy.. Wil] Add to Museum. An enormous addition will be made to the entomological collections in the British Museum by the bequest of the late Mr. A. Fry to the museum ; of his collection of coleopterous in- sects, undoubtedly the largest collec- tion of the kind in the United King- dom. HIS VIEW OF IT. Prudence—I short skirts are just horrid! Fred—So do I. No woman who re- spects herself w be seen in a skirt too short to need holding up.— Life. think ACCOMMODATING. The Landlady—WIill you have cof- fee, tea or cocoa, Mr. Slopay? Slopay—Anything you wish to ma’am!—Puck. FEAR FOR NIAGARA. | | IMMENSE VOLUME OF WATER oe VERTED FROM FALLS. Commercial Enterprises Are Heavy Drains on This Famous Shrw- Place—1ts Tremendous Electrical Pow 1 { | er the Inducement. | | Making | Niagara Falls, August 7.—The vol- ume of water being diverted from the historic Niagara Falls is reaching such proportions that the people of the State are trying to pass laws which will pre- vent the possibility of a’practical wip- ing out of this sublime natural spec- tacle. Water sufficient to develop nearly five hundred thousand horse-power continuously, twenty-four hours per day, for industrial purposes, is now be- ing taken from the river above the Falls, and further cevelopments Tre- quiring more water are centemplated. Probably the largest user of the elec- tricity, produced by the waters of the mighty river is the concern which by the five or six thousand degree heat of the electric furnace brings lime and coke into unwilling union, thereby pro- ducing what is known as Calcium Car- bide. Dry calcium carbide is lifeless as so much broken rock, but in contact with water it springs into activity and be- gets abundantly the gas Acetylene. The light resulting from the ignition of acetylene is the nearest approach to sunlight known. These facts, though of comparatively recent discovery, were soon seized by men with an eye to the commercial possibilities and to-day calcium carbide is being shipped everywhere and used | for dispelling darkness in buildings of | all descriptions, from the ordinary barn i of the farmer to tha country villa of | the wealthy, as well as for lighting | the streets of a large number of towns. Acetylene can be easily and cheaply | installed, and the manufacture and sale of acetylene generators has become a business of recognized standing, has | assumed large proportions and is stead- | ily growing. To Ward off Stings. | Hornets and bees are not so apt to sting a person if he keeps absolute- ly still, but this is not necessarily due | to the fact that they do not see readi- | ly, but simply that they do not | recognize an enemy in a perfectly | stationary body. The accumulated in- | telligence of generations has shown | them that still objects, like posts, | stones, or trees, are not enemies, and | that disturbance of their nests is: al- | ways occasioned by objects having | power of motion. It thus follows that if a hornets’ nest be disturbed or if a wild bees’ nest be agitated, dang- er of stinging is much less if the per- son keeps perfectly still.—St. Nicho- las. ad | | Beat the Machine. A father, with his three children, was in a waiting room in the north of England, and stopped before one of the weighing machines placed there. Lifting his children he placed them one by one on the machine until all three were on it. Then he put one penny into the slot. The figure indi- cated was 125 pounds. Lifting one of his children carefully off he found the {labor expended on the various Bibles IN S8TONE. Buddhiste Carved Their Hcly Words on a Hundred Temples. Great as has been the amount of BIBLE of the world, the palm for execution must be given tc the Kutho-daw, which is a Budhist monument near Manda- lay in Burma. It consits of about 1¢) temples, each containing a slag cf white marble on which the whole of the Buddhist Bible, consisting of more than 1,600,600 syl- lables, has been engraved. The Bur- mese alphabet is used but the langu- age is Pali. This wonderful Bible is absolutely unique. The Kutho-daw was erected in 1857 by Mindcn-Min, the last king but one one Burma. The vast collection of temples together forms a square, with a dominating temple in the: center. Each of the marble slabs on which the sacred texts are inscribed is surmount- ed by an ornamental canopy in pag- oda form. Prercgatives of Jack Tar. Uncle Sam is a tolerant old gentle- man... He permits the sailors on his battleships and cruisers to keep pets. No ship in the navy is without its mascot. The other day a big cruiser came into Brooklyn Navy Yard and the sailors proudly displayed a big moose for a mascot on board ship! Within the last three months. ships have come into the navy yard with all sorts of curious animals for mas- cots. One had a jackass from Brazil, another a monkey from Algiers, still another a game cock from Liverpool, while a fourth had a stray dog res- cued in port from the waters of the harbor at Southampton. Meteor for a Tombstone. One the oddest tombstones in Amer- ica is above the grave of T. B. Lane, at Akron, O. A dozen years ago a meteor fell upon the Lane farm, at Talmadge, burying itself 16 feet in the earth. It was dug out, and on the death of Mr. Lane was utilized as a tombstone. The metoer; which re- sembles a mass of iron ore, is mount- ed on an oblong pedestal of polished | granite, and is in marked contrast to! the crude sculptures found in other | parts of the cemetery where the grave is located.—New York Herald. | | Foreign Circus Performers. | Although the circus is an institution peculiarly and typically American, over 90 per cent. of the circus perform- ers and specialists are foreigners. Mr. Bailey calls attention to this in his A WOMAN'S ORDEAL DREADS DOCTOR’S QUESTIONS Thousands Write to Mrs.Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and Receive Valuable advice Absolutely Confidential and Free There can be no more terrible ordeal to a delicate, sensitive, refined woman than to be obliged to answer certaim questions in regard to her private ills, even when those questions are asked by her family physician, and many if T CWilladsen 4 : ~~ A continue to suffer rather than submit to examinations which so many physi- cians propose in order to intelligently treat the disease; and this is the rea- son why so many physicians fail to cure female disease. This is also the reason why thousands upon thousands of women are corre= sponding with Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. To her they can confide every detail of their illness, and from her great knowledge, obtained from years of experience in treating female ills, Mrs. Pinkham can advise women more wisely than the local physician. Read how Mrs. Pinkham helped Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning, Ia. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — “1 can truly say that you have saved my life, and I cannot express my gratitude in words. Before I wrote to you telling ye how I felt, I had doctored for over two yea.t steady, and spent 10%: of money in med cin: basides, but it all failed todo me any good. had fema'ie trouble and would daily have faint ing spells. backache, bearing-down pains, and my monthly periods were very irr and finally ceased. I wrote to you for your ad- vice and received a letter full of instructiorg ust what to do. and also commenced to tal i ydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound, and I have been restored to perfect health. Had it not been for you [ would have been in my grave to-day ” Mountains of proof establish the fact that no meacine in the world equalg Lydia E. Yinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound for restoring women's health. prospectus, stating that in Europe the struggle for existence is so snarp that people will attempt things in which failure means death, and wuich no American would think of undertaking in order to fit themselves for the trapeze cr the ring of some American circus, where they are certain of a gocd salary.—Century. Sieep and Death. An animal deprived of sleep dies more quickly than from hunger. One of the cruelest of Chinese putish- ments is to kill a man by preventing sleep, he dying insane about the fourteenth day. All animals sleep for some period of the 24 hours; | how and when they do so depends] upon their natural habits. But they | all have this in common, that after | any unusual exertion they sleep! longer. ! — { other two together weighed io pounds. The difference, therefore—47 pounds —was the first child's weight. In ths same way he discovered the weight of the other two. and then went off highly gratified with his success.—Tit- Bits. Pneumatic Tire Armor. Dr. J. A. Vansickles, of Jefferson City, has filed application for patent on a pneumatic tire armor. The The armor is composed of light steel plates which overlap each other in such a manner as to render the rub- ber tire of an automobile or carriage puncture-proof. The parts of the armor are small and are held to- gether by rivets, rendering it as fiex- ible as the pneumatic tire itself. Kanras City Journal. Japs are Gymnasts. Every Japanese barracks has a gymnasium, and the Japanese sol- diers rank among the best gymnasts in the world. In half a minute they can scale a 14:foot wall by simply bounding on each other's shoulders, one man supporting two or three others. ’ Preferred Algiers. Once the late Bishop of London was ordered by his physician to spend the winter in Algiers. The Bishop said it was impossible; he had so many en- gagements. “Well, my Lord Bishop,” said the specialist, “it either means Al- giers or heaven.” “Oh, in that case,” said the Bishop, “I'll go to Algiers.” BABY'S INSTINCT Shows Ile Knew What Food to Stick To Forwarding a photo of & splendidly handsome and healthy young boy, a happy mother writes from an Ohio town: “The enclosed picture shows my 4- year-old Grape-Nuts boy. “ince he was 2 years old he has eat- en nothing but Grape-Nuts. He de- FITSpermanently cured. No fits or nervos- ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’ CGeeat iliousness “I have used your valuable Cascarets and find them perfect. Couldn’t do without them. 1 have used them for some time for indigestion and bil- jousness and am now completely cured. Keecom- mend them to everyone. Once tried. you will never be without them in the family.” Edward A. Marx, Albany, N.Y. Best For The Bowels Pleasant. Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25¢, 58c. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCC. Quaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 6oz ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES NerveRestorer, patria! pottleand trea free Dr. R. H. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch St, Phila. Pa. Buhl work is said to be very popular now in England. irich Justica. An Irish judge stated that if any women were brought before him on a charge of slapping or scratching a man’s face because had attempted to kiss h he v d at once dis- miss the case. 1 however, ‘only awarded one ling damages against a man had sgsed’' al g SC widow wi atched. ! SLITS rut nT % f 18 wd Your grocer i you that Le lmows very little sells you. how it LION at our In each mands and gets this food three times a day. This may seem rather unusual, | put he does not carve for anything else after he has eaten his Grape-Nuts, | which hie uses with milk or cream, and | then he is through with his meal. Even | on Thanksgiving Day he refused tur- | key and all the good things that make | up that great dinner, and ate his dish | of Grape-Nuts aud cream with the best | results and none of the evils that the | other foolish members of the family experienced. “He is never sick, has a beautiful complexion, and is considered a very handsome boy. May the Postum Com- pany prosper and long continue to fur- ish their wholesome food.” Name system of loading, given by Postum Co. Battle Creek, chest Mich. fit excellence There's a reason. Read the little | book, “The Road to Wellville,” in THEY SHOOT every pkg. | ul a | | | | § —or when roasted? coffee loose by the pound, how can you expect purity and uniform quality? LION COFFEE, we tease: or ALL. PACKAGE COFFEES, necessity uniform strength: and flavor. QUARTER ¢F A CENTURY, LION COFTEE §@& has been the standard cecffeec in 8 millions of homes. destroys all the ILLER liies and affords comfort FLY E DAISY en dealers, sentpr al “i Xo ¥ dD HAROLD SOMERS, 149 DeKalb Ave., Breookly 1or 20e. On age at 62, Civid N War. On disability ® and for widows—an war. We have records of service. AWK | i advice free A, w. McCORMICK & SUNS, 518 walnut Sireet, Cincinnati, Ohio. {hat Sirike Home is honest and—if ho cares to do so—can tell Bt about the bulk coffee he How can he know, where it originally came from, was blended—or with what If you buy your is of in quality, w For OVER A COFFEE is carefully packed factories, and until opened in your home, has no chance of being adul- terated, or of coming in contact with dust, dirt, germs, or unclean hands. F package of LION COFFEE you get one full ) pound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting the genuine. #1 (Lion hecd on every package.) 5 (Save the Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) 0) €0LD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE i 2 WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Chio. Ra Tae TE ROR a at HR ES WiNC RIFLE.AND P! e loaded 0 nN Yt ey ot 0 +1 0 m 51) -. and seats Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges of all supplies r first-class materials and this up-to-date er Cartridges for accuracy, reliability and i is maintained. HESTER STOL CARTRIDGES by machinery which sizes the exact quantity of the bullets properly. By the reputation of Win- Ask for them. WHERE YOU HOLD ETN EER
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers