Tre leted. for er by Police move cinets au of e de- eague ep in f the cClel- the ceess- result d by Re- Muni- crats, this ican clean y and their can- itary ienos out razil- litary m of the with 1s to been reets. said on of ying sting min- 1ands score , and cinct sixty- tele- ~, ~ + = hd - » ¥ € * » - r x L 4 ol ag = > . - - . N r - » . - te ' - . ” Y " - » - . a ; + =, yy rs . “ . ‘EY RAISED FROM A DEATH-3ED. Myr, Pitts, Once Pronounced Incurable, Has Been Well Three Years, E. E. Pitts, 60 Hathaway St., -Skow-- says: “Seven ‘years ago my back ached and Iwasso run down hegan, Me., four months. I had night sweats and fainting spells and dropped to 90 pounds. The urine passed every few minutes with in- tense pain and looked like blood. Dropsy set in and the doctors decided I could not live. My wife got me using Doan’s Kidney Pills, and as they helped me so I took * heart, kept on and was cured so thor- oughly thatT've been well three years.” Sold ‘by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. 10,000 PORCUPINES KILLED. And Demands for Bounty Have Almost Swamped S‘ate Treasurer. Although only seven days have passed since the close of the State porcupine year, November 30, the re- | turns of porcupines killed and paid for by the towns and plantations un- der the bounty act of last winter, are beginning to swamp the State treas- urer’s office rapidly. They come in rolls, some of them as large as a man’s arm. One roll was so big that the postage on it was 40 cents. The State had 20,000 blanks printed, and a Portland firm had as many more. From one to forty dead “porcupines are represt>nted by each blank on which a return is made. An official says that when the returns are all in they will show that 10,000 porcupines were killed in the year. Of the towns and plantations which have reported thus far, Whiting, in Washington county, shows the largest number of bounty paying porcupines, 646, which, at 25 cents each, will cost the State $161.50. The other places which have thus far reported are Med- ford, 196; Prospect, 285; Harrington, 98; the town of Dedham and Planta- tions of Macwahoc, Long and High- land. The appropriations to pay the boun- ties for the year is $500, and it is thought the returns already in will nearly use this up. It is hinted that one of the first acts of the next legisla- ture may be to repeal the porcupine bounty law. The hunters are mostly boys. Many farmers think they do more damage by setting fires than they do good by killing porcupines.— Lewiston Evening Journal. BOX OF WAFERS FREE—NO DRUGS =—CURES BY ABSORPTION. Cures Belching of Gas —Bad Breath and Bad Stomach = Short Breathe Bloating ~Sour Eructntions —l1rregular Heart, Etc. Take a Mull's Wafer any time of the dav or night, and note the immediate good ef- fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, disinfects the stomach. kills the poison germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of the head and throat. unwholesome food and overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint of some kind. Mull’s ~Anti-Belch Wafers will make vour stomach healthy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, pro- motes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching and fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through this process. Discard drugs, as you know from experi- ence they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A soothing healing sen- sation results instantly. . We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want vou to know it. SrrcrAr, OFFER.—The regular price of Mull’s Anti-Beleh Wafers is 50c. a box, but to introduce it to thousands. of sufferers we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of 75c. and this advertisement. or we will send you a sample free for this coupon. 111185 FREE COUPON 129 | Send this coupon with ‘your name {and address and name of a druggist who does not sell it for a free sample f box of Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers to | Murs Grape Toxic Co., 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, IIL @ive Full Address and Write Plainly. Sold by all druggists, 50c. per box, or sent by mail. : ; Map Making. Map making has kept pace with the progress of other arts, though its steps are not so loud and are heard oftenest in the school room. It is really an art to make a map, and has always been so. From the time of the earliest crude affairs to the elaborate and exact pictures of to-day a great deal of skill has always been neces- sary to give a perfected representa- tion. . Map making is now at the height of its excellence and popularity. The man with land to cultivate, houses to build or land to sell must have every- thing set down on his map for refer- ence. Nobody thinks of traveling any great distance without consulting a map. Indeed, it is almost impossible to escape it, for the obliging ticket agent thrusts it into one’s hand with thoughtful kindness, mindful of the “ advertisement with the pages as well as of the convenience of the tourist. Maps are so common now that there i are no more little boys who think the soil of one state is green, another brown, another red, because that is th= way it is colored in the geography.— Worcester Spy. We must go to Indiana to find the most emphatic repudiation of the rights of the negro. A man up there has sold his farm on conditions, one being that if any part of the land is sold or rented to a negro such part shall immediately. revert to the gran-. tor or his heirs.—Mobile Register. Major George W. Evans, disbursing officer and chief of the division of finance in the Interior Department, has just reached the fortieth year of his service in the department, during which time he handled more than $1,000,000,000 without an error. that I was laid up Talking About Shakespeare. In’ my own opinion bookish people who do not often go to the theaté: have a tendency to overestimate the desirability of more frequent repre: sentations of the Shakespearean plays than at the present time. That 2 reasonable number of Shakespearean performances in a year is a good thing for the theater and play-goers general- ly I have always maintained. * Sad tc tell, I have usually found that the people who complain clamorously, de- manding to know why it is that Sha- kespeare is not oftener represented, have generally had prior engagements that prevented them from attending the relatively few Shakespearean per- formances that are given in the course of a season.—Puiladelphia Press. Some of the old Nile lakes, which were formerly dry salt plains in sum- mer and covered with a few inches of alkali water in the wet season, have been reclaimed by the British govern- ment and are now worth from $200 to $300 an acre. They produce magnifi- cent crops. FITSpermanentlycured. No fits orneryouse nessafter first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer, §2trial bottleand treatise free Dr.R. H. KrIxF, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phila.,Pa , French Gulch, Cal.,, has no jail or city prison. : : Paul Jones Relics. C. A. Hereschoff Bartlett, of York; has sailel from Paris for this country, bringing with him a number of relics of Admiral Paul Jones, including the adniiral’s sword and pistol, a lock of his hair, a miniature of him, and his commission in the United States Navy, bearing his signature. Beware of Olntments For Citarrh Thas Contaln Mercury, asmercury will surely destroy the sense o? smell and completely dorange the whole sys« tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Sucharticlesshould never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phy- sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces ofthesystem., Inbuying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine, It is taken in- ternally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. d.Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists; price, 73c, per bottle. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. SUGAR FROM WATERMELONS. Simple Process Said to Be a Lucrative Vocation. ‘Having heard it rumored that sugar was made from watermelons in York county, Virginia, the Yorktown corre- spondent of the Richmond Times-Dem- ocrat made inquiry into the industry. “The operations seem to be quite simple,” he writes, “involving little skill and only a fair amount of horse sense. As a rule, the ripest, sound- est and best melons are selected for this purpose, and are reduced by a very simple method. The prime necessities are a large caldron—the larger the better—and a slow but steady -fire. Before igniting the furnace the ket- tle is filled with fruit, special care be- ing taken to save all the juice, so as not to require the addition of water to start the boil. Right here is where the radical difference takes place. Some folks use the entire melon, properly chopped up; some use the pulp only, and others nothing but the rind. A gentle fire soon heats the contents of the pot to a boiling point, which is kept up until the syrup is gradually pro- duced. The lomger it is cooked the thicker, heavier and darker will the result be. . “It takes an enormous quantity of melons to produce even a very ordin- ary amount of syrup, and when stewed thick the ratio used is increased per- ceptibly. : 3 . “Just as with other syrups. it is very persistently skimmed, the frothy por- tion being either thrown away or given tio the hogs, who are very fond of it. When cooked thoroughly the syrup is differently colorad, as the selection of the stock may be very light, like honey, when the whole fruit is selected, and dark, (a rich amber) and decided- ly the best when the pulp alone is used. ; 48 “The taste is very rich and soft, free from any foreign taint like maple sy- rup, and leaves a delightful flavor in the mouth after tasting. While tue syrup only is usually produced, it is conceded by all who have tried the ex- periment that the rendering of the { sugar is a very simple and easy mat- ! ter, continued boiling and evaporation only being necessary. Taken as a ser- ious business proposition, the produc- tion of sugar from watermelons is con- sidered a lucrative vocation.” FROM TEXAS, Some Coffee Facts Fiom the Lone Star State. : From a beautiful farm down in | Texas, where gushing springs unite to form babbling brooks that wind their sparkling way through flowery meads, conies a .note of gratitude tor delivery from the coffee habit. “When my baby boy came to me five years ago I began to drink Postum Food Coffee; having a feeling that it would be better for him and me than the old kind of drug-laden coffee. I was not disappointed in it, for it en- abled me, a small, delicate woman, to nurse a bouncing healthy baby 14 months. “I have since continued the mse of Postum, for I have grown fond ef it, and have discovered to my joy that it has entirely relicved me of a billious habit which used to prostrate me two or three times a year, causing much discomfort to my family and suffering to myself “My brother-in-law was cured of chronic constipation by leaving off the old kind of coffee and using Pestum. He has become even more fond of it than he was of the old cofiee, “In fact, the entire family, from the latest arrival (a 2-year-old, who always calls for his ‘potie’ first thing in the morning), up to the head of the house, think there is no drink so good or so wholesome as Postum.” Name given by Postum Ce., Battle Creek, Mich, There's a reason. Read the little book “The Road te Wellville” in pkgs. ahead, but I don’t succeed.” Ch orth Row Ort DIE nowing Helene JIorensen, a Copenhagen i dressmaler, seventeen years old, had a | record of having jilted eleven lovers in two years when the eleventh ended her promising career with a dagger. A. ‘RR, Gates, of Curryville, Mo, claims the ehampionship set of whis- kers of that State. His are four feet long, of a brunette shade and just twelve years old. For the exclusive purpose of looking after motorists and motor cars, a corps of 200 policemen is being raised in Paris, who will be required to pass the official examination for motorists’ cer- tificates. A signboard in Chartres, France, bears the following inscription: “E. Pi- chot, dealer in firewood, polisher of floors, undertaker and embalmer, festi- val and wedding dinners and suppers provided. Debtors evicted.” It has been claimed that leather from | old boots and shoes gathered from the streets and scrap piles is chemically treated, mixed with chicory, ground and made into a clever imitation of coffee, the kind that is usually drunk by sailors and workmen in logging camps. Most remarkable wager reported from Victoria, Australia, where two boys made a bet of a shilling that one would go further than the other in cut- ting off his fingers. Each boy cut off-a finger, and one then cut off a second finger.. The other boy was in the act of amputating his second finger when a passerby interfered to stop the mu- tilation. The inhabitants of southern Chile are! said to foretell the weather by means of a strange barometer. It consists of the cast-off shell of a crab. The dead shell is white in fair, dry weather, but, | indicating the approach of a moist at- | mosphere by the appearance of small | red spots, as the moisture in the air in- | creases it becomes entirely red and re- | mains so throughout the rainy season. | THE ART OF “JCLLY" How an Insurance Man Flnally Became a Success. Some eight or ten years ago a young | Englishman replied to a friend wha had inquired how he was getting on: “Not at all, there is something the; matter with me and I think I know what it is, but it isn’t in me to rem: edy it.” He had come over here in the hope of making a fortune or at least of winning for ‘himself a fair degree of success. He had gone to work for a life insurance company and had not been a success; hie had secured a sim: ilar position with another company and barely had been able to hold his position and realized that he was mak: ing no perceptible progress. He was disappointed and his friend had sus pected as much. “You see,” he continued, “you've gol to pat everybody on the back over here to win,. and that is something I can’t do. I've tried my best to gel A year or so later the young Eng lishman and his friend were again dis cussing the same topic. The insurance man was more discouraged than ever; he had lost the second position and had been obliged to begin almost ai the bottom, with another company. His failure he- attributed to the same old cause——inability to ‘‘jolly.” “Why don’t you learn?’ asked the friend; ‘you can do it as well as any: body if you make up your mind ta Lat : ‘You're right,” replied the English. man, “and I've made a resolve—I'm going to pat everybody on the back from now on, no matter, how much if goes against my natural inclinations, Watch me, I'll just put all over everyr body.” He did and to-day he is vice-presi dent of a big insurance company at a salary of $20,000 a year. Calming Him. The other day a careless mason dropped a brick from the second story of a building on which he was at work. Leaning over the wall and looking down he saw a respectable citizen with his hat jammed over his eyes. The mason, in tones of apprehension, asked: “Did the brick hit any one down there?” The citizen, with great difficulty ex- tricating himself from the extinguisher into which his hat had been trans formed, replied, with considerable warmth: “Yes, sir, it did; it hit. me.” “That's right!” exclaimed the mason in tones of undisguised admiration; “noble man! I would rather have wasted a thousand bricks than have you tell me a lie about it.”—Tit-Bits. Biz Ones, Sure ’Nough. Allen Jameson had a trying experi- ence while cutting corn for the Rev. M. A, Wolf in the Osage bottom the other day. He was working away when suddenly something struck him, knocking him to the ground, where he remained for some time in an uncon- scicus condition. He finally recov- ered, and although badly bruised up, he was able to ‘get home. The next day he went back to the field in the hopes of finding out-what had struck him, and was rewarded. There were two ears of corn that had fallen from the stalk he was cutting on. The con- dition of the ground i ated that he had struggled hard to R the nubbins that hele Metz (Mo.) Times. | wholesome conditions are FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY Reports of Wholesale Trade Condi- tions and Good Prospects from all Quarters. R. G. Dun & Co’s “Weekly Re- view of Trade” says: Each week brings a stronger business situation, seasonable weather having removed the last drawback, and pressure for shipment of goods is so great in many lines that the partial holiday put de- liveries still further behind and caus- ed much inconvenience. Reports of now prac- tically unanimous, and improvement in collections is noted in many dis- patches. Retail trade in wearing apparel and food stuffs is the feature, while inter- est is beginning to be shown in holi- day goods, of which very large stocks were accumulated in expectation of a record-breaking season. Manufactur- ing lines constantly establish new high water marks of production, the present output of pig iron being at the rate of more than 2,000,000 tons monthly, "and this is vne of the best known ‘business barometers. . A few smal] strikes are in progress, but, not sufficient to prevent the greatest industrial activity in = the Naion’s history. Railway earning thus far reported for October show a gain of 2.5 per cent. over last year’s, Prosperity is also evidenced by a further rise in prices of commodities, Dun’s iadex number on November 1 being $103,853, the highest point of recent years. The per capita amount of money in circulation is also at a new record of $31.69 Foreign com- merce js fully maintained, exports from New York being values at $3,- 147,998 more than in the same week last year and imports gaining $1,028.- 954. Beyond the fact that former conditions are accentuated, there is nothing new in the iron and steel industry. Demand for all forms of heavy steel is beyond: the capacity of mills, the railroads showing an appetite for equipment and building operations absorbing structural shapes as rapid- ly as they can be turned out. MARTIN TS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Whoeat—No. 2 red.....cvveveneinn.s 5 7 No. : . : ) FO—NO, 3... cversiarsenss orn—No 2 yellow, ear..... No. 2 yellow, shelled...... 5s 5 61 Mixed OBL .oecrerscrrsisnss .s 43 49 Oats—No. 2 white............. : 34 No.3. White..s...connnnic-ss C 30 Flour—Winter patent........ 4 4 30 Fancy straight winters........ 4 10 Heoy—No, 1 Timothy............... ; 13 50 Clover No. Y............... 10 50 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton... 209) Brown middlings 17 5) Bran, balkeee,eeess:- aves 55 16 00 Straw—Wheat..... - vier A 7 50 VEN BETES RR RE 7 50 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery 2 24 Onto creamery. .......... . . 20 RN Fancy country roll......«.q.. 16 1% Cheese—Ohio, neW...cceeenunnnan.. 2h} 12 New York. new................. 1 2 Poultry, Etc. Heng==per Ib. Liab. os nrian $ U4 15 Chickens—dressed..........c....... 18 18 ggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 24 25 - Fruits and Vegetables. Apples bbl ........ oseressusy nese ergs 5). 8:35 3 x 5). 3.25 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 65 75 Cabbage=per ton.......... widies! 1390 1500 Onions—per barrel............ wa 20) 905 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5 593 Wheat—No. 2 red..... ...... 00.0 ue hia ay 83 Corn—Mixed, 51 AD Bogs. ital aici viiiineas 24 2% Butter—Ohio creamery...cce..e... 24 26 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent 84 85 . 50 51 - 31 3% 24 26 Eggs—Pennsylvania fi 2 29 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents... 515 Wheat—No. 2 red. 96 Corn—No. 2. s Butter -Creamery = 2 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 24 206 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 t0 1,600 1bs. ........... $520 $55 Prime. 1,300 to 1,100 1bs 4 90 20 Good, 1,200 to 1,30) 1bs. 4 50 V6: Tidy, 1,050 to 1.150 lbs. 42 10 Fair, 900 to 1,100 1bs.. '3 40 10 =1 CW CO COB Co BA TT OY 1 oa a Common, 709 to-900 1bs...... 3 Common to good fat oxen... 3 00 00 Common to good fat bulls... 2 00 50 Common to good fat cows 5) 40 Heifers, 700 t01,1001bs,.... we 275 oC Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 50 0C Hogs. Prime heavy hogs. $520 $5925 Prime medium we .. 25:10 510 Best heavy Yorke 5 00 5 03 Good light Yorker: 52 5 30 igs, as to quality... 5 10 5 23 Common to good roughs . 425 4 70 Stags..c.oiln. nan a0 . i3'D 37% Sheep. Priméwathory i, [1 '' $3 5 50 Good anized...5.... .c...... 5 00 b 2s Fair mixed ewes and wethe 4 50 50 Culls and common 2.00 4 0 Culls to choice lambs. ... 5 00 v7 Calves. Youll Calves, uyuits nisi ou 33100 v2 Heavy and thin calves...-.......... 3 50 45 Mrs. Susan J." Crane. of Hartford, Conn., has been made poorer by a legacy. She was willed 15 shares of the stock of a bank which failed a few weeks later,-and now a judgment for the face value of the stock, $1,500 has been entered against her. She says she will not pay it. Preventing Cruelty to Animals. The Ulster Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animals, which has its headquarters at Belfast, Ireland was founded in- Belfast in the year 1836. At its late 1] meeting one hundred and fifty prizes were distribu ed for the best essays on “The Right annt AT m Trea bronz metals were award- Royal r ment number cf members of the service in “for } Lynn, Mass. OMANHOOD Mothers Should Watch the Development of Their Baughters— [niaresting Experiences of Misses Borman and Mills. < Every mother possesses information which is of vital interest to her young daughter. Too often this is never imparted or is withheld until serious harm has result- ed to the growing girl through her ignorance of nature's mysterious and wonderful laws and penalties. Girls’ over-sensitiveness and modesty often puzzle their mothers and baffle physicians, as they so often withhold their confidence from their mothers and conceal the symptoms which ought to be told - to their physician at this critical period. When a girl's thoughts become slug- gish, with headache, dizziness or a dis- Boshinn to sleep, pains in back or lower imbs, eyes dim, desire for solitude: when she is a mystery to herself and friends, her mother should come to her aid, and remember that Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound will at this time prepare the system for the coming change, and start the menstrual period in a young girl's life without pain or irregularities. Hundreds of letters from young girls and from mothers, expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has accomplished for them, have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., at Miss Mills has written the two fol- lowing letters to Mrs. Pinkham, which | will be read with interest: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — (First Lotter. “Iam but fift2en years of age, am depressed, ache, and as I have heard that you can give helpful advice to girls in my condition, 1 am writing you."—Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, Ill, Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— (Becond Letter.) |! “It is with the feeling of utmost gratitude that I write to you to tell you what your valuable medicine has done for me. When k wrote you in Togard to my condition I had consulted several doctors, but they failed to understand my case and I did not receive any benefit from their treatment. I followed your advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and am now healthy and well, and all the distressing symptoms which I had at that time have disappeared. ”— Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, Ill. Miss Matilda Borman Mrs. Pinkham as follows: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — ' ‘ Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound my monthlies were irregu- lar and painful, and I always had such dreadful headaches. ‘* But since taking the Compound my head- aches have entirely left me, my monthlies ara regular, and Iam getting strong and well. X am telling all my girl friends what Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me.”—Matilda Borman, Farmington, Iowa. If you know of any young girl who is sick and needs motherly advice, ask her to address Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and tell her every detail of her symptoms, and to keep nothing back. She will receive advice absolutely free, from a source that has no rival in the experience of woman'sills, and it will, if followed, pnt her on the right road to a strong, healthy and happy womanhood, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Coms- writes | pound holds the record for the greatest number of cures of female ills of any medicine that the world has ever have dizzy spells, chills, headache and back- Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Makes Sick Wemen Wella known. Why don't you try it? PRICE, TO CURE THE GRIP / “55 [NONE DAY WTHGRIPIE [HAS 10 EQUAL FOR HEADACHE 5 Call for your IS GUARANT o E ou GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND REURALGIA. o¥ Iwon’tsell Anti-Gripine toa dealer who won't Guarantee Xt, B 3 MONEY JX IF IT DOESN'T CURE. EF. W. Diemer, BL. D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Mo. Sultan Has Wheels. The sultan of Turkey owns more than 200 bicycles, some with gold and silver mountings. It is said that he could earn a good salary as trick rider. He also has a weakness for motor cars and grand pianos. Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething ,softensthegums,reducesinflamma- tion,allays pain, cures wind colie,25¢. a bottle Gladstone cut down trees, rode and walked Piso’s Curefor Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W, SAMUEL, OceanGrove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900, . There are only three national holidays in Japan. One of the fads of 1770 was wearing of two watches. ‘CAPT GRAHAM'S CURE the Sores on Tace and Back—Tried Many Doctors Without Success—CGives Thanks to Cuticura. Captain W. 8. Graham, 1321 Foff St., Wheeling, W. Va., writing under date of Jhine 14, 04, says: “I am so grateful 1 want to thank God that a friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment to me. I suffered for a long time with sores on my face and back. Some doctors said I had blood poison, and others that 1 had bar- bers’ itch. None of them did me any good, but they all took my money. My friends tell me my skin now looks as clear as a baby’s, and I tell them all that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment did it.” Satin charms er than liberty | A.J. TOWER CO. ESTABLISHED 1836 Hi BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO i R CARADIAN CO. Limited TORONTO. (A RTE, TEETER When Baby Has the Crou; Use Hoxsie's Croup Cure. If cur sand prevents and Diphtheria. No opium. No naus-a. dU cents at druggists orn ed postpaid. A. ¥. HOXSIE, Buffaloes N. Y. CATARRH is the mother of CONSUMPTION. | Our CARBOLATE of IODINE POCKET | N IR is a guaranteed cure. Price $1.00, | W. H. SMITH & CG., | ! 1 | | W.L. DoucLAs 3203 SHOES, W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. LISHED Yllyg, 78 IICHE MENS Shi SHOES As . fn ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $10 000 REWARD to anyone who can 5 disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ex- cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe in the world. They gare just as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 — the only difference is the price. If I could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in the world under one roof making men’s fine shoes, and show vou the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they ko’d their shape better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than eny other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. 2 W. L. Douglas Si & Blade Shoes fom Pi . Boys’ School & 2.58,82,$1.75.87.50 Insist upon having W.L.Doug- 10S tizute. None genuine 9 stamped on bottom, s dealer inevery town where s Shoes are not sol Full line of nt fre or inspe: nl upon request. Fast Color Eyelets used; the Write for ! WwW. 10es. ¢ 1 his name a SY. : alog of Fall Styles, UGLAS, Brockton, Mass. . ae _— vith ill = A , used as a douche is marvelously suc- cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs stops discharges, heals inflammation and loc soreness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved i water, and is far more clea y and economical than liquid a 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. P. N. U. 46, 1905. Of Buffalo. N. Y.. Sole Maaufacturers an i-Proprs. PENSIONS, 5.70 is War. Oa disabi IY ana tor widows war. We have records of service. Laws advice free. A, \V. McCORMICK & SO 5 518 Walnut Street, Cincinuati, Ohio. A x AS 1x8} CURES WHEHE ALL ELSE FAILS. Dest Cough Byzup. Tastes Good. Use fi Sold by druggists. | | | | t anity to animals.’—Our WONEY ISLAND . CARDS. 8 8 Coney Islarx ) < SOUVENIR rPoSsST lored scenes for 2c | If afflicted wwesic THOMOSON'S Eve Water
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers