Permit VY. lished resont . which ill ba neeting nmictee at the eni tha Prol itiee. me3.ing mn need be pat- » rid of elieved, to the 1S pProv- » stand- life.” IR Throligh ng piercing 1), yards wrmored nch ar- . nearly 1strated ‘naval d.' "The nection he new ILE dachine a, wifa is’ Buar- as kill- 1 auto- 12 with ‘rancis- own a Vv when caused scott of Crock- 2. Yale s. Har- Scott: is in a s rend- Fas re- ed, and Mrs. fill De- mbined Admiral ied by led to ed an At 1 sailors ns and Presse” nstanti- through inister, Calice ungary, emands finan- of the y, and number at his 8y, Pa.; nia. ENT Moder- in. began 1ational ty and e with- Gomez med by quiet v light interest n. 1s from eld for oderate ‘esident ilors. bad has : and 12gotia- weeks. hood of 2k and rland to bout 47 rs were nd Coal st. Yeung- ‘for the test at suming minister om the instruc- France minis- n’s as- npanied nd that ently, RSE Every person’s feel door arg a side d mzy be entered, on the street. open, some keep it latched, some locked, some bolted with a chain that will Jet x Sacred Keys. | ng have a front oor by which they The front door is Some keep it always you peep in but not get in and some nail it up, so that nothing can pass its threshold. This front ELECTRICITY IN THE KIYCHEN. Joos eads into a passage which Not yet can the busy housewife turn ig oh iy anteroom SR4, this "| on the cold in her refrigerator by twist- 2 apartments. & Side ing the same switch which controls the door open at once into the secret chamber. mezns of it. right to one. with it! for . years hidden in s0 universally, géide door.—0O. W. Holmes. foo Trae With a view to getting cheap wheat - from Argentina Japan will establish & line of steamships to South Ameri- ca. There is almost always coe key to the side door. carried mother's bosom. This 3 put on the market an electric refriger- Father's, brothers, 8isters and friends often. but by no have duplicates The wedding ring conveys a Alas, if none is given Be: very careful to whom you trust one of these keys of the electric lights, but that is only Dbe- cause inventors have so far failed to ating plant of small enough capacity. The principle is well established and it has been demonstrated that a one horsepower plant can be operated at a cost nearly fifty per cent. less than the price of 800 pounds of ice daily, which is its equivalent in refrigerating power. MARKING THE LINEN. How many women adhere to the old- fashioned method of marking linen JOYS OF MATERNITY A WOMAN'S BEST HOPES REALIZED Mre. Potts Tells How Women Prepare for Motherhood The darkest days of husband and wife are when they come to look for- ward to childless and lonely old age. any a wife has found hen pable of motherhood owing placement of the womb o; “strength in the generative organs. Mrs. Anna Pot Should seli inca- to a dis- +lack of ts Frequent backache and distressing pains, accompanied by offensive dis- charges and generally by irregular and scanty menstruation indicate a dis- Placement or nerve degeneration of he word and surrounding organs. The question that troubles women is how can a woman who has some fe- wale trouble bear healthy children? Mrs. Anna Potts Hot Springs, Ark., writes : My Dear Mre. Pinkham:— ¢ « I were v me, 1 felt like me the mother of a n child, the joy of our home. Lydia E. Pink- bam’s Vegetable Compound is certainly a wish every woman who wants to become a mother would try it.” Actual sterility in woman is very If any woman thinks she is ster- fle, let her try Lydia BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free to expectant or would-be moth splendid rare. ’ During the early part of ray married life was delicate in health ; both my husband and anxious for a child to bless our home, but I bad two miscarriages, and could not carry a child to maturity. A who bad been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound advised me to try it. I id so and soon felt that I was stronger, my headaches and backsac & new woman, stro: remedy, and Drill for Water Prospect for Minerals Geal HB Drill Test and Blast Holes Gas [ Many kinds and oe o3 rere Y Drilling Machines For Horse, Steam or Gesol Results Guaranteed LOOMIS MACHINE CO. i TIFFIN, OHIO ine Power ,of 510 Park Avenue, neighbor rowing es left ad no more bearing-down pains, and Within a year I 8s ny €rs, A FEW }.. CUTTING ¢ times. tough. and does rfect. one their sex. The pur It shoul end cut with every movement. I prafer an Atkins Saw, is ‘Silver Breel”, world over as the fines steel ever made in ancient or modern It is bard, close-grained and It Lolds a sharp cutting edge longer than any other Baw. blade tapers perfectly from thick to thin, from handle to tip. Thus it makes leeway for itself. runs easily «The AtkineSaw cuts—suddoes it bestafa We make a!l types and sizes of saws, but on he bert Knives, Perfection Floor Atkins Baws, Corn Knives, Pe Scrapers, etc., sre sold by all good hardware .dealers. Catalogue on recuest. - . E Cd Saw Manufacturers in the World. Factory snd Executive Offices, Indianapolis, Indiana. ‘BRANCTER: ew York, Chicago, Minmesgolts, : ( 3 hruat, it springs into shape without siatant Memp! | 9.001, Be | . TOILET ' 2g | ZN aise # FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to a ; 1 used as a douche is marvelous. eessfel. #roroug, . stops discharges, REM ARHKS\&: ge of a saw is td out. cat easily, cut cleanly, recognized the cruicible Its not buckle... dts temper.is- . When Hie by a crooked ¥; ATHINS @. CO., Inc. ) regon), Seattle, San ncisco, 8, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada). or y suc- y cleanses, kills disease germs eals inflammation and local gorcness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh, ine is in powder form to pe dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal . and economical than liquid antiseptic for a! = TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For ealeat druggists, 50 cents a box. = Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. I THE BR. PaxTON COMPANY Boston, Mass. @ 48 p. book free, Highest refs NT Long experience, Fitzgerald &C 2.Dept.54. Washington,D.C PATE P. N. U. 49, 1905. : gether a few minutes, drop it into hot 4 dissolved in one pint of warm water, with a new steel pen and marking ink? It is the simplest thing in the world to mark linen with a stencil and a brush. Each member of the family should have his ewn stencil, which does not cost much if only initials are used. The boy or girl at school will need the full name, which costs more | An entire wardrobe may be marked in half an hour's time by means of sten- cils, and the danger of the ink spread- ing if reduced to a minimum. HEMMING TABLE LINEN. Table linen should, of course, be hemmed by band. That is “the correct thing,” but the hemmer of the machine can be made very useful for this pur- pose in the following manner: Place the edge of the cloth beneath the hem- mer. Do not thread the needle, but as you thread the hem let it run through the machine. Turn and press, thus, the full léngth of every side. Then take from the machine and hem in the usual way. The neat turning of the hem is the main work. This accomplished, the rest is soon over. SOME LEFT-OVERS. Housewives are often in a dilemma as to what to do with left-over corn- bread, gems, biscuit, ete. They hate to throw them away, and to serve them cold savors too much of cconomy. Sprinkle them with cold water, plice them in a deep baking dish or pan, cover with a-tin and set in a moderate oven, letting them remain there for about fifteen minutes. They will come from the oven alinost as good, if not quite as good, as new. Only enough fer a single meal should he heated at one time, as all warmed over breads and cakes dry quickly. > CARE OF BRASS WORK. A housekeeper who lights her dining room and bedrooms with candles smiled at a request to explain the exquisite neatness of her brass candlesticks. “You do not serateh your brasses when you scrape the wax off,” said the in- quirer, “and I should like to know how ' you avoid doing 50.” The answer was that the wax was not scratched off at all. The brasses were merely plunged into hot water long enough for the bits of wax to melt and run off of their own accord. The polishing of the brass was-the work of the man who took care of the furnace, since polishing brass is a matter of more muscle than the average maid pos- Besses, i > RECIPES: F Se pinmme— BS IRR Graham Gems—Use two cupfuls of sour milk, three cups of Graham flour, half a teaspoonful of soda; beat to- greased gem pans and bake in a quick oven for ten or fifteen minutes. Cornmeal Bread (Creole Recipe)— Rub ‘a piece of butter the size of an egg into a pint of corn meal. Make it a batter with two eggs and some new milk. Add a spoonful of yeast. Set by the fire an hour to rise. Butter ‘little pans, fill them and bake, Swan Pudding—Half box of gelatine When cool add three-quarters pound sugar and the whites of two eggs and juice of two lemons; beat all together Monkey Pudding--Take about half a loaf of stale bread. Let it soak in as much good milk as you would use for a bread pudding for several ‘Hours. Add a little cream. * Put in “three heaping spoonfuls of brown .gugar, two heaping spoons of powdered cin- namon and a few stoned raisins, Cook in the oven with a slow fire until it looks like an old monkey. Serve with a stiff sugar and butter sauce. Mutton Cutlets — Have the butcher | except in small quantities. When cut what are known as English ehops; | given the bread should be cut as have them neatly trimmed. Broil on a thinly as possible. Gravy or beef gridiron (not too much); before remov- } tea may be g'ven with vegetables for ing from the fire pour over melted | dinner to children under two, but butter with parsley minced finePlace | they are better without any meat. on a large hot platter and on the end | C of each bone place a little cap; those made of white paper can be had at any house-furnishng store, or they are easily made by folding paper and Flour—Winter Patent............. 3 Wheat—No. 2 red.... Prime wethers. . Good mMxed..... . Fair mixed ewes and wett Cullsand common. Culls to choice lam YealCalves......... ... yoda Heavy and thin calves... en to infants under 18 months of age eat between meals. ses ‘with FINANCE MWD TRADE EVEN DUNS WEEKLY SUMMARY Feeling of Confidence in Future of Business in ‘All Lines—Manufac- turing Plants Busy. R. G. Dua & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Business conditions cer- tainly warranted a day .of gratitude this year more than ever before, but in many industries it was difficult to take time for a holiday without falling still further behind orders and increas- ing the complaints of importunate purchasers. An idea of the volume of trade in November is shown by a daily average of bank exchanges that exceeded last year’s figures by four per cent., which in turn surpassed all previous monthly records. Yet un-| seasonably mild weather in Novem- ber has postponed retail business in winter goods. : Christmas trade opens with a vol- ume that promises to eclipse all earl- ier records, and the feeling of confi- dence in the future is strengthened by the encouraging statement that the strike of structural iron workers may not become general. : rops supply the foundation of this country’s commercial prosperity and the value of all farm products, accord- ing to the anaual report of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, was .even great- cer than estimated. Manufacturing plants snake most satisfactory re- turns, despite the high level of prices for raw materials and inadequate transporting facilities. Railway earn- ings thus far available for November were 6.5 per cent. larger than a year ago and foreign comerce at New York for the last week shows gains of $4.286,535 in .exports and $2,874.507 in imports as compared with last year’s figures. \ Progress is fully maintained’ in the iron and steel industry: Quotations of all forms, from ore lo finished steel, are firmly maintained, several small advances being noted and all available statistics testify to unprecedented ac- tivity. In the primary market for cotton goods it is rather a matter of delivery than of price, the upward tendency of quotations having little effect on the attitude of purchasers. Conditions are unchanged in woolens and worsteds, the raw material being strengthened by the London auction sales. Quiet conditions in the packer hide market have become so pro- nounced that the tone is less firm al- though no definite change in quota- tions can be recorded. pain over the stomach and times nausea and vomiting, also fever and sick headache? > stomach undigested food and hy to the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric Juices, which promotes digestion and cures the disease. . Muil's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a ox, b to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of send you a sample free for this coupon. THE EGYPTIAN FAMINE. Anh Important Monument Found Cor- roborating the Biblical Account. Among the most important of the finds atound ihe great city of Thebes or Luxor, in Egypt, is a great rock on the Island of Sehel below the first cataract. This, has the hieroglyphics fn a fairly good state of preservation, and they set forth that in the reign of King Zoser the Nile failed to rise for seven consecutive years, and that in consequence a terrible famine prevail- ed in the land in which innumerable people perished of hunger. This famine was finally broken and a great inundation followed the prayer of tha King to the God of the Cataract, whose name was Khnum. New Us2 for Glass. The use of glass for the dressing of wounds as put in practice by Dr. Ay- mard of Paris, is so sensible and simple a proposition that the wond- er is it was not invented ages ago. This glass may be curved in ‘any fashion to suit the shape of the wounded part, and, when applied, gives the physician opportunity to see the condition of the hurt without re- moval, as is necessary with a band- age of cloth and lint. Dr. Aymard as- serts, moreover, that the wound heals more rapidly under glass than when dressed with lint, as he has proved by many experiments. If this be true, and there is no reason for doubt, it will soon be a matter of genera] prac- tice and will revolutionize the wreai- ment of wounds—Baltimore American. STOPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION | —=NO DRUGS—A NEW METHOD. A Box of Wafers Free—Have You Acute Indigestion, Stomach Trouble, Ir- regular Heart, Dizzy Spells, Short Breath, Gas on the Stomach? Bitter Taste—Bad Breath—Impaired Ap- | petite—A feeling of fullness, weight and | heart, some- | What causes it? Any one or. all of these: Excessive eating and drinking—abuse of ! spirits—anxiety ; fort—mental worry and physical fatigue— | bad air—insufficient food—sedentary habits —absence of teeth—holting of" food. and depression—mental ef- 1f you suffer from this slow death and miserable existence, let us send you a sam- le box of Mull’'s Anti-Belch Wafers abso- utely free. No drugs. Drugs injure the stomach. It stops belching and cures a diseased by absorbin the foul odors from imparting activity SPECIAL OFFER.—The regular price of | ut ! 5c. and this advertisement, or we will Tnis OFFER MAY NoT APPEAR Agar, Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... 24 2 Ohio creameory........ 22 24 - y 4 Fancy country roll... . 16 1+ .The persistent use of the musclar Chessepui, NOW sa snes . 4 Lh system is well calculated to relive the - 408, NOW. .......00vvinnan < : : : ! Poultry. Ete brain and nervous system of their ten- Ys 2 « i J sion. It is also true that manual work paride ® I 1 plessis and suiehor the wind vain Egzgs—Pa. and Ohio, tresh......... 26 37| its results are good. All this becomes Fruits and Vegetables. clearer when we realize how vainly Apples bbl .......00 0... 0. 351 55] We may seek relief from mervous fa- rotatoes—KFancy white per bu.... S0 8: | tigue in physical rest or even in re- Cabbage—perton............ ee 1300 15 W : ti f th di a[0Tr Th Onions—per barrel.........., eee Tz) 209} Creations of € ordinary sort, 8 quiet room or the quiet hillside, so BALTIMORE. suggestive of rest and peace—these Si LIVE STOCK. A} Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. . es Extra, 1.450 to 1,600 Ibs. ..... ....$520 $5 50 with an egg beater until stiff; put it in | pyjpa 1,300 to 1,400 1bs,. 5. 490 5 2 ; 5 : : Ta erved, | Good, 1,200 to 1,26) 1bs.. 5 350 473 the dish in which it is to be s > | Tidy. 1,050 to 1.150 1bs... re and set on ice or in a cool place. To be | Fair, 630 to 1,100 Ibs... L840 a3 : a . Common, 709 to 400 1bs...... . 90) 3 4c eaten with soft custard. : Common to good fat oxen. . 3 00 ye Toasted Graham Gems—Split the Common to good {at bulla......;, 2.00 3 5c} bl Thi ‘ommon to good fat cows........ 15) 3 4C gems, toast carefully, and While they. Heifers, 700 t01,1001bs....... 0. 275 40 are toasting heat some rich milk to the | Fresh cows and springers..... | 16 00 50 OC boiling point, add a little salt and Pu Hogs. ter and thicken with fiour maoistene Prime heavy hogs............... $5 10 $517 with cold milk and pour over the toast- {rime med iin weights. 5 10 oy TOT 1a est heavy orkervs....,. 5.10 5 ed gems Gems left over from the day | Jost hoavg yorkies. 15 before may be used for the next morn- | Pige, as to quality... .... 470 4 ae gi : : Common to good roughs . 4 23 4 | ing’s breakfast. Stags tT gem 9 3 1639 “Thi TON ES OC 7 Calves. Bread and butter should not be glv- > MARIE FITS, ¥ — ‘ PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. Bred... .............. $7 77 Rye—No.2........... 2 73 Corn—No 2 yellow, ear. 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled. . 6) 61 Mixed ear........... . 43 45 Cats—No. 2 white. 3 24 No:3 white, ......... 25 El Flour—Winter patent.... 4925 4 30 Fancy straight winters. 400 4 1 Hay—No.1 Ti Su 1300 13 5¢C lover N 1000 1035) Foed—No, 1 white m 1950 $9a. Brown middlings i650 17 5» Bran, bulk.. 1350 16 0 8. raw—Wheat. 700 75) OBE eer seins setae es 700 750 gent by mail, are too often important in the pre- five times.—Brooklyn Eagle. Boston, kad before him a couple of 1:| girls charged with stealing ribbons 8 | from wreaths on graves. & dence of their guilt was not satisfac- 75] tory, he ordered their discharge, ac- long as you can.” “Girls, keep out of the cemeteries as worth $100,000. 1295 FREE COUPON Send this coupon with your name and address and pame of ‘a druggist who does not sell it for a free sample box of Mull’s, Anti-Beleh Wafers to 128 MroLr’s Grape Tonic Co., 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, Ill. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. Sold by all druggists, 50c. per box, or Relieving the Brain. ence of carking care. One reason for 5 at 83 od x 3d x x : Corn—Mixed.... Hl 5: | this failure is that the brain and the YBBR... i Na > 07 $ + : Butter--Ohlo Greamery.... 2 = body are commonly not tired in what = ony is called nervous exhaustion, but are only irritated, while the sense of fa- L ; te SE a oi PHILADELPHIA iia tigue, which is so misleading, is finer Winter Patent :$ 505 523] merely the result. of that irritation bball rR Le 5 5: and may be termed a physic fatigue. Duis Net white 31 ai] Under these circumstances it is easy } utter—Creamery. 24 | to understand that it is change, not lggs— lvania first % J : 4 i; rik ¥gg3—-Fennsyivanis firsts, 2 2] necessarily physical rest, which is so ei sorely needed —Good Housekeeping. NEW YCRK. Ye Gog Homselieening Flour-—PatoniS...c- </saesenunnses. 50 50 A Modern Touch. J iseat Ne 2¥ed; 35 of] Northern hotels “of the first-class 0ats—No. 2 white 31 #2] are admittedly planned with a view Butter -Creamery Lent 2 %| to providing the maximum of com- Eggs—State and Pennsylvania 24 2¢ p g ? fort for guests whose ‘purses permit of their patronizing ments. however, incidentally shows a mighty keen ap- preciation of feminine needs in this age, for in addition to the regular t (| information concerning bells and at- - 4 4 | tendance on each room door appears this notice: ¢ such . establish- One Southern hotelkeeper, goes them one better and f “Ladies desiring ‘assistance with ouses, buttoning in the back, ring CR CER Judge's Kind Admonition. On one occasion Judge Dewey, of As the evi- mpanying it with this admonition: ‘William Ross, a farmer at Chaplin, | wife. He is She was a widow. than 600 seed. farms in .the United States—fafms, that is to say, devoted crop and flower séeds to be sold to plantations are very extensive, com- prising as much as 1,000 acres.. ULCERS Painful Eruptions From Kaees to Feet Cuticura, after doctors and all else had failed, is testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss, of Gainesville, Texas, painful ulcers and an knees to feet, and could find ngither doe- tors nor medicine to help me until I used Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, whieh | _ W.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Conn., who has had the reputation of area Te SY mont. being a woman-hater for more than half a century, refusing: to have a woman under his roof, has relented at last, and, at the age of 73, has taken glad to write this so that others suffering - | as I did may be saved {rom misery.” i Austria-Hungary to extend building industry. > CAYITOL BUILDIN Peruna #8 known from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Letters of congratulation and commendatjon testifying to the merits of Peruna as a catarrh remedy are pouring in from every State in the Union, Dr. Hart- man 18 receiving hundreds of such letters daily. All classes write these letters, from the highest to the lowest, The ontdoor laborer, the indoor ar the clerk, the editor, the statesman, the preacker—all agree that Peruna ie the catarrh remedy of the age. The stage and rostrum, recognizing catarrh as their great- €st enemy. are especially enthusiastic in their praise and testimony. Any man who wishes perfect health must be entirely free from catarrk. Catarrh is ‘well-nigh universal. Peruna is the best safeguard known. isan, = E WINGC oe RIFLE AND P the shells, powder, and scats using first-class m chester Cartridges excellence is ma THEY SHOOT PRICE, GRIP, BAD Call for your F. W. Diem Value of Cheerfulness. | There are some salesmen whose entrance into the presence of pros- pective customers is like the advent of spring after a hard winter. They bring a burst of sunshiny weather. The tired and ill-humored enstomer who has heen sitting on the mourner’s bench all day, aursing his troubies, nln loosens. his hold vn his grouch in the . presence of that insistent optimism. It is as if someone had opened a win- dow in a stuff house; he feels the in- vigorating effect of ozone.—Success. Irish Buy Homes. The inhabitants of the village of Castlemartyr, in County Cork, have bought the fee simple interest in their dwellings and premises from the Earl of Shannon on favorable terms. The population of Castlemartyr is about 0. IN CONSTANT ACONY. A West Virginian’s Awful Ulstress | Through Kidney Troubles. | W. L. Jackson, merchant, of Park- | ershurg,- W, Va., says: “Driving about ! in bad -reather | brought kidney trou- bles on me, ad 1 suffered twenty years with. shawn, cramping pains .n the hack and urinary disorders. I often had to =et up a dozen 8 nate, il in, and I wus obliged : to use the catheter, I took to my bed. and the doctors fail ing to help, began using Doan’s Kid- ney Pills.~ The urine soon camie free- ly again, and the pain gradually dis- appeared. I have been cured eight Years, and though over 70, am as ac- tive as a boy.” Ask Your Druggist for Free Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges of ali calibers are loaded by machinery which sizes supplies system of loading, the reputation of Win- NT IS GUARANTEED C times at night to uri-+4: Refention set 1-3 OF OREGON Pe-ru-na in For Colds. GC, py OREGON, : A Letter From the Ex-Governor of Oregon. The ex-Governor ot Oregon is an arden§ admirer of Peruna. He keeps it contin ually in the house. In a letter to Dm Hartman, he says: ; STATE OF OREGON, } | EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT, The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.¢ Dear Sirs--I have had ocedsion te use your Peruna medicine in ng Family for colds, and #t proved to be an excellent remedy. 1 have not had occasion to use it for other aliments Yours very truly, W. M. Lord, It will be noticed that the Governos says he has not occasion to us: Perung for other ailments. The reason. for this is, most other ailments begin with a cold. Peruna Almanac for 1906 HESTER ISTOL CARTRIDGES the exact quantity of the bullets properly. By aterials and this up-to-date for accuracy, reliability and intained. Ask for them. WHERE YOU HOLD ED TO CURE : R COLD, KEADACHE AND NEURALGIA, I won't sell Anil-Gripine to s dealer who won't Guarantee Xe MONEY BACK JF IT DOESN'T CURR, er, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, ie WEBSTER’S {INTE GHRISTMAS CIFT Useful, Reliable, At- Lasting, Up Ww ary, edited by W . .D. U. 8. Commissioner of Education. Grand Prize, World’s Fair, St. Louis. Get the Best. Webwter's Collegiate Dictionary, Largest of our abridg- ments. Regular and Thin Puper editions, 1116 pages sud 1469 illustrations. Write for * Dictionary Wrinkles "Free, LC & C. MERRIAI CO., Springfield, Macs. W.L.DoucLas *B208 IC SHOES W. L. Douglas $4.00 Ci!t Edge Line cannot be equalied atany price. ready |i Sold by all dexlers. 50 cents a pox. | X= OUGLAS MANES AND SE Foster-Milbuia Co, Buffalo N. Y. “| any Omen oAnvEs iy iOEs THA RE ey yp REWARD one who cam Seed Farms. $10,000 " disprove this sfatement. ‘There are at the present time mora, o -the production of vegetable, fleld armers and gardners. Some of these FOR THIRTY YEARS | Beemed Incurable—Cuticaura Ends Misery, - Another of those remarkable cures by in the following letter: ‘For over thirty years 1 suffered from eruption from my ‘They helped me he very first time I used them, and 1 am | are being taken by: its _ saip- Active steps . qualities, achieved the largest s mak $ ‘greater ‘intrinsic value ‘thin shoe on the market torday, las shoes. without his name and price stamped on bottom. | W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. The Life Saver With Croup, Conghs, Colds sn zie’s Cr: Cu postpaid DROPS Yr tacos. og W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by thefr em cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing ec of any $3. shoe in the world. They are just as good ng those that cost you $5.00 to $ .00 — the onl difference is the price. If I could take you int my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest the world under one roof making men's fin ou the care with which evr pair of Douglas shoes is made You would realiz why W. L. Deucias $3.50 shoes are the be 111 could show you the difference between t shoes made in my factory and those of oth es, you would understand why Dou J . shoes produced in the wor] 3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they ho their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are any other $3. W. L. Douglas Strong Made as F Men, $2.50, $2.00° Bays’ Se hoo! 8 Dress Shoes, $2.50,82) $1.75,81.8 CAUTION.—Inzist upon having W. L.Douge Take no substitute. one genuing WANTED. Athoe désler frievery town whe Full line 3 Jamples sent {ree‘tor fnspection upon request. ) Fast Color Eyelits used; they will not wear drassm Write for Fasiraied Catalog of. Fall Styles Teac of Children d Pneumonia is Ho ios Cro p-Cure’ it prevents Diphtheria 2 And Me > Pp. Nooprmum. No nausea. bog. A. P.HUXSIE, Bofinic, N. ¥. aes. Send for book of testimemials amd 10 Day \reatment Free. Dr. 7.8. GREEN'S SONNE, Atlanta, Oa, hildren should never be allowed to in Africa the German trade dispen- the services of a commis- fringing it. ' Cut the size of the bone. They will last three or four times. sioner as much as possible. for that market ' manufacturer in Germany. He buys direct ' from the St. Jacobs is the short, sure, easy cure for THE EXTERNAL USE OF DED TD OD Oil Rheumatism ans Neuralgia It penetrates to the seatof torture, and relief promptly follows. Pric PPODBBED OD e, 25¢. ahd 50c. BRB OBDBDDODE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers