p— BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD EXCELLENT TRAIN SERVICE BETWEEN PITTSBURG. FINLEYSVILLE, WASHINGTON, GIAYSVILLE, WHEELING AND POINTS ON THE OHIO RIVER DIVISION. ——ALL THROUGH TRAINS—— ‘0 AND FROM POINTS ON OHIO RIVER DIVISION RUN VIA BALTIMORE &OHIOR.R. BETWEEN PITTSBURG AND WHEELING ARRIVING AT AND DEPARTING FROM BALTIMORE & OHIO R. R. STATIONS PITTSBURG: Smithfield & Water Sts. WHEELING: South & Main Sts. wor Time Tables, Tickets, Pullman Res- ervations, call on or addres Ticket Agents BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. C. W. BASSETT, B. N. AUSTIN, Gen’l Pass. Agent. Gen’l Pass. Agent. a MARTIN, Mgr. Passenger Traffic. B.& 0. R.R.SCHEDULE. Summer Arrangement.—In Ef- fect Sunday, May 21, 1905. Under the new schedule there will be 14 Aaily passenger trains on the Pittsburg Di- vision, due at Meyersdale as follows: Fast Bound. *No. 48—Accommodation *No. 6—Fast Line................... *No. 14—Through train +No. 16—Accommodation........... 5:31 P. *No.12—Duquesne Limited........... 9:85 P. *No.208—Johnstown Accommo.......7:45 P. West Bound. *No. 11—-Duguense +No. 183—Accommodation .......... 8: *No. 15—~Through train............. *No. 5—Fast Line................... *No. 49—Accommodation ........... *No0.207—Johnstown Accommo.... Ask telephone central for time of trains. D&F=*Daily. H@F—+Daily except Sunday. W.D.STILWELL, Agent. SHIRT WAIST STARCH Send for Catalogue of Premiums. Stronger and whiter than any other starch. It is made by a new process, whereby, more of the strength of the corn is retained than by the old process. . I Jae 15 4 Sark ha DACkaL2 Bure is . 'e Polls ‘ax and four balls of best French EO ry Blue. Price Ten Cents. in using Shirt Waist Starch the linen will never blister; the iron will never stick; re- sul a snowy, white satin finish. It is the best and cheapest starch on the market. We ask you to give it a trial. For sale by all grocers. Prepared only by SHIRT WAIST STARCH COMPANY, Nerwalk, Conn. The reme $ on easesof theUr- fnery . FACTS ABOUT YOUR KIDNEYS. The Kidneys are the most Important organs of the body. Nine-tenths of the sickness Is caused by Impure blood. Impure blood Is caused by diseased Kidneys. Dr. Cole, Ohio. ‘Kindly send me 1,000 Kidney Pellets, QGive this Y earliest at- tention. Am entirely out and cannot do my bis Justice Ou then, They Li the and al n troubles that I ever used.” ey am adder Tr . Kramer, Michigan Cit, Ind., states: “I am gettin ns re 8 m them. One box sells re, er.” Por If your druggist does not keep them send direct to us, same will be sent prepaid on receipt of price. The ANTISEPTIC REMEDY CO. South Bend, Ind. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervous- ness, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kodol cures indigestion. This new discov- ery represents the natural juices of diges- tion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dys- pepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy cures all stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Va., saysi— ** | was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and we are now using it in milk for baby.” Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 23% times the trial size, which sells for 50 cents. Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & 00., CHICAGO. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. Kodol Dyspepsia Gure Digests what you eat. THE JUDGE'S PLAN FAILED. He Trapped the Editor, Who Promptly Made Way with the Trap. A correspondent of “Law Notes” writes of eo administration of justice in a ce insular possession of the United States when the island was un- der Spanish rule. Judge Z. had had a quarrel with an editor. The judge ar- ranged with a hoodlum to insult the editor in order to provoke him to a breach of peace. A policeman to ar- rest the editor was a part of the “plant.” The plot was carried out, but the editor kept his temper. The officer arrested him, none the less. He was hauled be- fore Judge Z., who found there was no case. The Judge took from a drawer of his desk a revolver, silver plated and beautifully inlaid with gold and moth- er-of-pearl, showed it to the prisoner and informed him that the policeman had delivered the weapon to him as one taken from the person of the de- fendant, and asked him what he had to say to the charge of carrying arms. The editor examined the weapon, put it in his pocket, admitted that he had had it in his possession, produced a permit from the Spanish authorities to carry arms, and, with true Castillian politeness, bowed himself out and off with the Judge's beautiful pistol. ee Right You Are, Editor Smith. Three of our young lads and a Salis- bury lad drove to Salisbury Monday and made an exhibition of themselves by getting drunk and driving like fury through the streets of the town ; one of the Meyersdale boys and the Salisbur- ian were pulled in, while the others es- caped. We hope the Salisbury officials will keep these two in mind and salt them good and hard when they get them. It is the only way to deal with smart alecks.—Meyersdale Commer- cial. A TOUCHING STORY is the saving from death, of the baby girl of Geo. A. Eyler, Cumberland, Md. He writes: “At the age of 11 months, our little girl was in declining health, with serious Throat Trouble, and two physicians gave her up. We were al- most in despair, when we resolved to try Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con- sumption, Coughs and Colds. The first bottle gave relief; after taking four bottles she was cured, and is now in perfect health.” Never fails to relieve and cure a cough or cold. At E. H. Miller's drug store ; 50c. and $1.00 guar- anteed. Trial bottle free. 9-1 To Furnish Free Anti-Toxin. Harrisburg, Aug. 24.—Anti-toxin for use by diphtheria patients who cannot afford to pay for it, will hereafter be distributed free throughout the state, through the new Department of Health, of which Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, of Phil- adelphina, is the official head. Distri- bution stations will be established im- mediately in every county, and the dis- tribution will be made on the order of the physicians in charge of all such cases. . According to some medical journals, anti-toxin is a good thing to let alone. A Tramp’s Lecture. A tramp asked for a drink in a sa- loon. The request was granted, and when in the act of drinking the prof- fered beverage, one of the young men present exclaimed: “Stop! make us a speech. It is poor liquor that doesn’t unloosen a man’s tongue.” The tramp hastily swallowed down the drink, and as the rich liquor cours- ed through his blood. he straightened himself and stood before them with a grace and dignity that ell his rags and dirt could not obscure. “Gentlemen,” he said, “I look to- night at you and myself, and I look upon the picture of my blighted man- hood. This bloated face was once as handsome as yours. This shambling figure once walked as proudly as yours, for I was aman in the world of men. 1, too, once had a home and friends and position. Ihad a wife as beauti- ful as an artist’s dream, but I dropped the priceless pearl of her honor and respect into a cup of wine, and, like Cleopatra, saw it dissolve, then quaffed it down in the brimming draught. I bad children sweet and pure as the flowers of spring, and saw them fade and die under the blighting curse of a drunken father. I had a home where love lit its flame upon the altar and ministered before it, but I put out the holy fire, and darkness and desolation reigned in its stead I had aspirations and ambition that soared as high as the morning star, but I broke and bruised those beautiful forms and strangled them that I might hear their cries no more. Today I am a husband without a wife, a father without a child, a tramp without a home, and a man in whom every good impulse is dead. All have been swallowed up in the mael- strom of drink.” The tramp ceased speaking. The glass fell from his nervous fingers and was shattered into a thousand frag- ments on the floor. The swinging doors were pushed open and shut again, and when the group looked up the tramp was gone.—Exchange. — DDING Invitations at THE A niee new stock justre- tf. THE ART OF “DOING” PEOPLE. Under this head Tae Star will from week to week expose some of the fraud- ulent advertising schemes by which shrewd charlatans in various cities and towns gather in the hard-earned coin of unsuspecting persons who are usual- ly on the lookout to get something of considerable value for a trifling con- sideration, or who are looking for easy employment at good wages. Read this column closely, as it may save you from being a “sucker” and foolishly parting with your money. THE RING GAME. It often happens that a fraudulent scheme is based upon the supposition that there is a streak of dishonesty in the person to be ‘“done.” The ring game is a case in point. This scheme has been operated in various parts of the country, the most recent instance having been discovered and suppressed in Chicago. These fakirs do not ad- vertise in the newspapers, but send out circular letters, broadcast, usually to women. Here is a sample of the letter used: DEAR MADAM—In going over the repair department of a large jewelry concern which we have just purchased, we find a number of ‘rings, watches, etc. of whose ownership we are uncertain. One ring bears your name, hence we infer it belongs to you. If such is the case, please send us 85 cents for repair and refinishing charges, together with 14 cents to pay cost of send- ing by registered mail, and we will send the ring to you at once. If the person addressed “bites,” she receives in return for her ninety-nine cents a ring similar to the kind that is sometimes found in pop-corn bags; but the victim usually holds her peace, realizing that except for her own dis- honesty in claiming the ring she would not have been taken in. Among the papers forwarded to the Postcffice De- partment by the inspector who investi- ‘gated the doings of this Chicago con- cern is an amusing letter written on the back of one of the fakir’s imitation typewritten communications. It seems that among the addresses obtained by these people was that of “Horra W. Reed, San Francisco.” A circular let- ter similar to that quoted above was accordingly sent to “Miss Horra W. Reed, San Francisco,” but instead of the expected ninety-nine cents it pro- duced the following reply: GENTLEMEN-—I am not a girl—I am a re- tired naval officer. I never had aring such as you describe. Many thanks for your consideration. (Signed) HORRA WILLIAM REED. Similar to the ring game, in so for as it relies on the dishonesty of the victim to be effective, is the scheme worked until recently by an individual at North Pembroke, New York. This man ad- versised : ONEY—F. A. M. $2.00 bill sent to any ad- dress for 25 cents; will give $25.00 to any one who can detect it. The Easy Mark” who parte with his quarter in the expectation of receiving a counterfeit two-dollar bill receives, as a matter of fact, eight slips of paper each containing the same recipe for making a carbolic acid salve. Accom- panying these printed slips is another reading: KIND FRIEND—The name of the $2.00 bill comes from eight twenty-five cent receipts, which I enclose—total bill of receipts §2.00. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Frank Bowermaster to Wm, C. Ap- pel, in Meyersdale, $157. E. H. Miller to Mfgr’s Water Co., in Jenner, $50. Catharine Cramer to Cora A. Hein- baugh, in Addi-on, $3000. Henry Stahl to Sarah Berkey, in Quemsahoning, $200. John P. Rayman et al. to James I. Pugh, in Stonyereek, $4800. Noah Rayman’s heirs to J. L. Pugh, in Stonycreek, $2800. Morris Cohen to U. G. Grambling et al. in Windber, $2000. Albert McNair to Manoah McNair, in Lower Turkeyfoot, $300. Jacob Kreager to Rachel Marker, in Upper Turkeyfoot, $153. Harry Ratonskey to Harry Slutzber, in Windber, $1000. Albert Werner’s Ex’tr.to P.J. Downs, in Allegheny, $250. Elizabeth Bracht’s heirs Bros., in Garrett, $850. 8. H. Cauffiel to Kennedy Coal and Coke Co., in Conemaugh and Jenner, $500,000. to Fritz Some Snakes. Irvin W. Walter, locomotive engineer on the Bare Rocks railroad, received a letter from a friend in New York City, several weeks ago, in which the Goth- amite said he should like to have several rattlesnake skins to make a belt, as he had been told such a belt is a sovereign remedy for rheumatism. Monday of last week traffic being dull on the road, Irve “hoofed it” up to the Snake Den, which is located near the Eli Walker place, close to the Broth- ersvalley line, and in exactly twenty- three minutes by the clock, twenty- three rattlers were hustled to “King- dom Come,” and the knight of the throttle proceeded to strip off pelts for the rheumatism annihilaton. This is no snake story, but the solemn truth, as we saw the defunct ‘varmints” measured and are willing to testify that they varied in length from 14 to 56 inches.—Somerset Democrat. CAMPAIGN IS OPENED Scene of Activity at the Republican State Headquarters. ANDREWS RUNS UP THE FLAG Oppesition’s Forces Are Divided Over Bitter Rows Among Democrats and Prohibitionists. [Special Correspondence.} Philadelphia, Aug. 29. The headquarters of the Republican state committee were form®ily opened this week, and the campaign for the election of the Republican state ticket has been inaugurated under the most favorable conditions. A large force of clerks have been put to work, and a staff of stenographers are kept busy until late every night turning out the heavy mall, to which Chairman Wesley R. Andrews gives personal attention. Owing to the fact that the prelimi- mary work of the canvass was started unusually early this year, matters are in shape to begin active and strenuous campaigning without interruption of any kind. “We have run up our flag, we have our forces thoroughly organized, we are prepared for a sharp and aggressive campaign and we have not the slightest doubt about the outcome,” declared Colonel Andrews, as he sat at his desk at the state headquarters. “We are eonfronted by the same old enemy,” he continued, ‘although a desperate at- tempt is being made to make {t appear otherwise, and we intend to administer one of those same old lickings which we have been giving them as they con- front us at the polls year after year. The Republican ticket will be trium- phant this fall as usual, and the ma- jorities will be quite up to the average for an off-year campaign.” Fusion Game Fails. The Democrats and their insurgent Republican allies have been making a play for a fusion campaign in Pennsyl- vania this fall, but they have not been successful in their efforts. While they did get the Democrats to put Justice Stewart, the Republican nominee, on thelr ticket for the supreme court nom- ination, this act was not only pleasing to the stalwart Republicans because fit demonstrated the wisdom of their ac- tion in nominating Justice Stewart, but also because it has disrupted the Dem- ocracy. There are thousands of Democrats who will not vote for a Republican under any circumstances. They always resent the placing of a Republican on the Democratic ticket. When this fis done they generally remain away from the polls. If they do not do that, they vote for the Democrats on their ticket and cut the Republicans who may be put on their ticket to encourage fusion schemes. This year the Democracy, what is left of it, in Pennsylvania is in a very bad. way. They not only have a Reépubli- can, Justice Stewart, at the head of their ticket, but they also have a Pro- hibitionist W. H. Berry, running for state treasurer. There are already being organized anti-Berry Democratic clubs by old-line Democrats who can- not stand for a Prohibitionist. Demo- erats of the Jacksonian school in coun- ties like Schuylkill, Berks, Luzerne, Lackawanna Westmoreland, North- ampton, Pike, Carbon and elsewhere resent the nomination of Prohibitionist Berry and propose to assert themselves at the coming election by voting for J. Lee Plummer, the Republican candi- date for state treasurer. They intend that James M. Guffey, the “boss” of the state Democracy, shall be taught a lesson at the coming election, and that it shall be impressed upon him that he cannot command the Democrats of Pennsylvania to vote for either Republicans or Prohibitionists to serve his own selfish purposes. They gay that if they are to vote for any candidates other than Democrats they reserve to themselves the right to se- lect such candidates themselves. Dem- ocratic leaders, they argue, are chosen to elect Democrats to office, not Prohi- bitionists or members of any other party. A Pretty Fight, This. This is a pretty fight that has sprung up among the Democrats. It not only disgusts the Democratic leaders, but it fe a supreme disappointment to the sorehead Republicans or so-called in- surgents who had hoped that the Dem- ocrats would be united in support of Berry, whose campaign they have been counting upon to help them {in thelr local factional games in several coun- ties in which they are fighting the reg- ular Republican nominees. With the Democracy hopelessly di- vided over their state ticket, and with a number of Democratic county leaders up in arms against Guffey’s bossism, there can be no effective fusion cam- paigning in any county in the state this fall. The Prohibition state convention, with its sensational scenesover the bru- tal tactics resorted to in the scheming resulting in the nomination of Berry for state treasurer, furnishes additional cause for alarm and chagrin among the fusion conspirators. When they suc- ceeded in landing Guffey for the nomi- nation of Berry by the Democratic state convention, the next move was to hunt for delegates among the Prohibition- ists. Through insurgent Republican influences in this city, the Philadelphia delegation to the Prohibition state con- vention was lined up for Berry, and this, with other delegations under like control, gave the nucleus for a Berry movement in the Williamsport Prohi- bition convention. The bitter and personal attacks upon Berry which were made upon ghe floor of the Prohibition state convention were not anticipated, and the large vote polled against his nomination was a complete surprise to the fusion crowd. Since the adjournment of the Wil- llamsport convention, hundreds of the most prominentand influential Prohibi- tionists in the state have publicly de- elared that they will not vote for Berry for state treasurer, and others have gone go far as to announce that this year they are going to vote the full : | is an expert in his line and has been Republican ticket. Berry's Coat of Many Colors. They say they have not renounced the cause of Prohibition, but they look upon Berry as an office-seeking jobber, who has successively es- poused the cause of free silver, Bryan- ism, free trade, Parkerism, and now is a Prohibitionist, and no one knows what next he will advocate in order to land in a fat state office. A large ma jority of Prohibitionists of Pennayl- vania sympathize with Republicanism, aside from their views on the prohibi- tion of the liquor ftrafiic. If they can- not get sincere and loyal Prohibition- {sts to vote for, the chances are that they will support the Republican nom- {nees. There has beem mueh indignation expressed at the manipulations by the Democratic and insurgent Republican leaders which resulted in the indorse- ment of Berry at Williamsport, and the returns at the coming election are bound to show a falling off of the Pro- hibition vote for the candidate for state treasurer. Meanwhile, with the Democrats and the Prohibitionists at odds over the gelection of Berry, the Republicans throughout the state are supporting their candidate for state treasurer, J. Lee Plummer, with enthusiasm, and his election by an overwhelming ma- jority is confidently predicted by State Chairman Andrews. STALWARTS ARE TRU Republicans Lined Up Loyally For Their Party Nominees. DEMOCRATIC GAMES EXPOSED Guffey and His Cutfit Have Not the Confidence of the Voters of the State. : [Special Correspondence.] Harrisburg, Aug. 29. It is a noteworthy fact that in the campaign now under way in Pennsyl- varia the Republican newspapers, without exception, are loyally support- fng the nomineees on the state ticket. There are a few so-called insurgent sheets that are working along their well-worn lines in support of the Dem- ocratic candidates, but these journais are no longer regarded as being In sympathy with the Republican party. They have been so long assalling Re- publican nominees in tlie interest of the Democracy that they are now classed as out and out Democratic ad- herents. : On the other hand, the recognized Republican newspapers are all heartily for the Republican ticket. Neighbor of Plummer Speaks. The editor of the Altoona Morning Tribune, in commenting upon the Democracy’s program, among ether things, says: “They hope to elect their candidate for state treasurer this year, and by means of the enthusiasm thus created to open the way for a vigorous cam- paign for the election of a Democratic governor and a lot of Democratic con- gressmen. Yet, in spite of their vague talk, there is nothing about the ad- ministration of the state government which they could better. Every de partment is being vigorously and care- fully administered in the public inter- est by honest men. The state treasury is open always to the inspection of the citizens of the state, and even the Pharisee whom the Democrats have nominated for state treasurer did not dare bring an accusation against the present incumbent. “There is not a human being, friend or foe, who knows J. Lee Plummer who does not know that the money of the state would be sacredly guarded while in his custody. His entire life has been spent in this county, and the only charge his worst enemies can bring against him is that he is a stal- wart Republican and that all his life he has supported Republican meas- ures and voted for Republican candi- dates. He believes in the Republican party and he bas adhered to it with all the enthusiasm of a patriotic na- ture from his boyhood up. It is pre- posterous, therefore, to suppose that the Republican rank and file will vote for Mr. Plummer’s Democratic oppon- ent because the situation is not what it ought to be in Philadelphia or be- cause the Democrats, making a virtue of political chicanery, have nominated the Republican candidate for justice of the supreme court for the same office. “Judge Stewart need not flatter his goul that his pre-eminent ability as a jurist, his stainless character as man, or his reputation for political inde- pendence, moved Mr. Guffey to the action which he prompted his conven- tion to take. Oh, no; it was simply the desperate hope that this bit of down right demagoguery might bring some independent Republicans into the Democratic ¢camp and thus swell the vote of Berry. In view of the general efficiency of our state government and of the Republican purpose to grant everything desired by a majority of the people, we do not think Mr. Guf fey's scheme will work out (nto a brilliant success.” BIRDSEYE VIEW OF SALISBURY. Something that Ought to Interest Salisbury People Who Have ~ Located Elsewhere. Tae Star has for sale a limited num- ber of very fine pictures of Salisbury, size 22x32 inches, printed on extra heavy, smooth paper, from a very fine engraving. The sketching was done by T. M. Fowler, of Morrisville, Pa., who following his business in many differ- ent states of the Union, The picture is very clear and dis- tinct, showing all the streets plainly marked, and those familiar with the town can plainly recognize every build- ing in it. The pictures have sold like “hot cakes” here, and a limited number have been placed with THE STAR tO supply those at a distance, who may desire them. Every former citizen of Salisbury ought to have one of these fine engrav- ings, as they show the progress the old town has been making, which has been very great in recent years. But we cannot supply them all, and those who apply first will get them. The picture ineludes West Salisbury, the surround- ing landscape and some of the farm houses in the immediate vicinity, also a large number of the principal build- ings printed around the margin of the ° engraving, from special drawings. Price, $1.50 per copy, plus 7 cents to pay postage. Address THE Star, Elk Lick, Pa. tf set ened rie PATRIARCHS MILITANTS AND SOVEREIGN GRAND LODGE, PiILADELPHIA, PA., SErTEMBER 16-23. ! VERY LOW RATES BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. Excursion tickets will be sold from points within a radius of 50 miles of Philadelphia at rate of one fare plus 50 cents for the round trip; and from points 50 to 100 miles from Philadelphia the rate will be one fare plus $1.00 for the round trip. Tickets on sale September 16,17 and 18, good returning to September 25, in- clusive. From points more than 100 miles from Philadelphia the rate will be one fare plus $1.00 for the round trip. Tickets on sale September 15, 18 and 18, good returning to September 25, in- clusive, except that upon payment’ of $1.00 to Joint Agent, extension of re- turn limit may be obtained to October 5, 1905. Get full details from Ticket Agents. 9-14 —— 4. A. R. NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT, DENVER, COL., SEPT. 4-7, —VERY LOW RATES— BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. Tickets on sale August 29th to Sep- tember 3rd, and valid for return pass- age to reach original starting point prior to midnight of September 15th, 1905. For details as to rates, routes and extension of final return limit, call on any ticket agent, B. & 0. R. R. 8-31 DEER PARK HOTEL, DEER PARK, MARYLAND. This famous Allegheny Mountain Hostelry will open on June 24, with prospects for the most brilliant season in its history. The hotel and cottages have been renovated and painted, in- side and out. Two of the choicest cot- tages can be secured if application is made at once. Many suites of rooms bave been engaged in the hotel build- ing and both annexes. The popularity of Deer Park is due to its splendid location, 2,800 feet above the sea level, out of range of malaria and mosquitoes. Every convenience is provided for guests. The rooms are delightful and the cuisine excellent. The Hotel is provided with all modern improvements for comfort; with Bowl- ing Alleys, Billiard Rooms, Tennis Courts, Golf Links, Swimming Pools, etc.. for amusement. An entirely new Livery Equipment has been installed. Deer Park is on the direct line of the Baltimore & Ohio between New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Cincinnati, Louisville, 8t Louis, Wheel- ing, Columbus and Chicago, having the excellent advantage of through vesti- buled trains from each of these cities, with through Pullman service during the season from and to Pittsburg. Address W. E. Burwell, Manager, Deer Park, Maryland. 9-1 Fall Term Opening. Tae TrI-STATE BUsiNess COLLEGE, Cumberland, Maryland, September 4, 5, 6. 8-31 THE BLANKS WE KEEP. The following blanks can be obtained at all times at THE STAR office: Leases, Mortgages, Deeds, Judgment Bonds, Common Bonds, Judgment Notes, Re- ceipt Books, Landlord s Notice to Ten- ants, Constable Sale Blanks, Summons Execution for Debt, Notice of Claims for Collection, Commitments, Subpoe- nas, Criminal Warrants, ete. tf Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Cures ail Coughs, and expels Colds from the system by gently moving the bowels. Wes Early Risers The famous little piils. LRG RI wn RR BE Aa ares “3 ces art Is STO Dise falls out. Maid substanc: 2590 No.