SE, 1oUS ection of yfficial h has ns in to the it re- e suf- arded Cross. public ’S rthern erious sands star- S may Na- ever stress, people their t and ecom- S pur- ation- 1 such oss to nment n be easur- lallam Tnited Wash- BIN While on of was near 1at he rning, down ich it ) save n the short reach- trance stand- 1d at- v was and n res- y from the recog- DS Fare ing to 1t per n rail- Hous- rsonal State > Wis- g that sta- road, ts per to be a fair h ser- cents : 'Wis- ny be senger 1ission ly of y to i and hn G. Presi- Judge ounce- Brady known 1d the It is nt will rmerly T ser- mpany e. ant of ot and Belle- he lat- urphy. e Har- n a Pad- x from Ow the t arm. Jurphy | for a 100,000 of - the ank of by the e Cur- de on 11 and little. ortable Ice. ote the tatives opera- le pen- to $5,- eck cident reens- mploy- 5 were Co aaa + fied to testify WHAT NEW ENGLAND NEEDS Cheaper Raw Materials and Open Markets a Necessity. New Englands has ‘two of the fac- tors of wealth—cheap water power and cheap labor, She needs cheap raw material and open markets.” Without them she will see her shoe factories one by one follow her cotton mills in- to the region of the raw materiall— West and South. If any man is quali- and be heard respect- fully upon this point that man is Governor William I. Douglas. He has built up and successfully conducts a big business employing an army of contented men and women, he is a conservative and he says Massachu- setts, needs freer trade both in raw materials and the finished products of her factories and mills. His successor, Governor-e.ect Curtis Guild, equally recognizes the gravity of the situation, Either of these men, if he represented Massachusetits in the United States Senate, would work and vote for such modifications of our trade relations with Canada, as would permit Mas- sachusetts factories profitable to util- ize the hides and lumber and coal! of the Dominion, Senator Lodge it is ex- plained ‘by one of his recent inter- preters, prides himself upon his “statesmanlike” recognition of the fact that Massachusetts ‘‘cannot get what she wants.” What Massachusetts needs first and most is a’'group of men in Congress who will make a fight for Massachusetts’ interests. A states- man is a man who builds a state, not ne whp, holding great power and large responsibility, sits cynically by and watches the state decline for lack of stout fighting that might save it.— National Magazine. ‘RAISED FROM A DEATH-BED. Kr. Pitts, Once Pronounced Incurable, Has Been Well Three Years. E. E. Pitts, 60 Hathaway St., Skow- hegan, Me. says: “Seven years ago my back acted and I was so run down that I was laid up 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 I took heart, kept on and was cured so thoroughly that I've been well three years.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Preserving Cut Flowers. The usual method of preserving cut flowers in a condition of freshness is to dissolve small amounts of ammoni- um chloride, potassium nitrate, sodium carbonate, or camphor in’ the water into which the stems are inserted. The presence of one or other of these drugs keeps the flowers from losing their turgidity by stimulating the cells to action and by opposing germ growth. Flowers that have already wilted are said to quickly revive il the stems are inserted in a weak cam- phor water. A Guaranteed Cure Tor Piles, tehing, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Piles. Diuggists are authorized to refund money if It is said that in Australia there is a regular traffic in lending engage- m®nt rings. Nervous | Women Their Sufferings Are Usually Due to Female Disorders Perhaps Unsuspected A MEDICINE THAT CURES Can we dispute the well-known factthat American women dare ner- vous ? How often dowe hear the expres- sion, ‘I am so ner- yous, it seems as if I should fly:” or, “Don’t speak to me.” Little things annoy you and make you irritable; you can’t sleep. you are unable to quietly and calmly perform your daily tasks or care for your children. The relation of the nerves and gen- erative organs in woman is so close that nine-tenths of the nervous pros- tration, nervous debility, the blues, sleeplessness and nervous irritability arise from some derangement of the organism which makes “her a woman, -Fits of depression or restlessness and jrritability ; spirits easily affected, so that one minute shel aughs, the next minute weeps; pain in the abdominal region and between the shoulders; loss of voice; nervous dyspepsia; a tendency to cry at the least provoca- tion—all these point to nervous pros- tration. Nothing will relieve this distressing condition and prevent months of pros- tration and suffering so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Mts. M. E. Shotwell, of 103 Flatbush Avenue, Brookivn, N. Y,, writes: “I cannot express the wonderful relief I have experienced by taking Lydia E. Pink- kam’s Vegetable Compound. suffered for a long time with nervous prostration, back- ache, headache, loss of appetite. I could not sleep and would walk the floor almost every night. [had three doctors and got no better, and life was a burden. I was advised to try Lydia E. Pinkhand's Vegetable Compound, and it has worked wonders for me. “] am a well woman, my nervousness is all gone and my friends say 1 look ten years younger.” Will not the volumes of letters from women made strong by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound convince all women of its virtues? Surely you cannot wich to remain sick, weak and discouraged. exhausted each day, when you can be as easily cured as other women. Atlas Engines Many prospective purchasers of engines and § boilers are under the i impression that because the Atlas Throttling Engine is of such high grade, and because it is fitted with a balance valve and a main bearing, such as only Corliss engines of other makes contain, it is necessarily of such § price that it is quite outof their reach. This is SEH not truc. An Atlas engine is no higher in price Bi than any other engine, except, perhaps, one that is made entirely in a foundry. 2 For your information, therefore, we give for 8 the present an approximate price upon a 12x16 ® Throttling Atlas Engine, ranze 43 to 60 Horse Power of £0.00 Thisincludesengine complete with band wheel, governor, throttle valve, and all regular trim- 5 fl mings and represents the prite delivered f. o. b. cars factory, or, if in stock at our Agencies at any of the following points. Norfolk, Va. Minneapclis, Anderson, 8. C. Omaha, Neb. Augusta, Ga. New Orleans, La. Montgomery, Ala. Greensboro, N. C. Des Moines, Iowa Memphis, Tenn. Shreveport, La. Birmingham, Ala. Ft. Smith, Ark. Leavenworth, Kas. New Bera, N. C. Joplin, Mo. Jacksonville, Fla. Little Rock, Ark. Athens, Ga. ATLAS ENCINE WORKS [8 4 i INDIANARGLIS 2 Ainn, WE MANUFACTURE Gas Saving Gas Burners For Boilers and Hot Air Furnaces. Write for Catalogue. STANDARD HEATING AND RADIATOR CO. PITTSBURG, PA. That Baby of Yours Joughs, Colds, Croup \branons Croup and Xeeds Hoxsie's Croup r Pneumonia. It preve | to coffee till I left off drinking it. PazoOintmentfdils to cu ein 6 tol4 days. 50c. The Kaiser's automobile is the only one without a number in Prussia. Fortune gives many. too much but no | one enough. God gives every bird ..s food, does not throw it into the nest. but Value of Wool Grease. The grease in the wool of sheep is exceedingly valuable. A great deal of it is lost when the fleece is washed hefore shearing. A government ex- pert says: “It is safe to say that from $2.000, 000 to $3,000,000 worth of wool fat and potash are run down the streams and wasted annually in the States.” United Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as ihey cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrhis a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies, Hall’s Catareh Cure is taken internally, and actsdirectly on the blood and mucoussurface Hall’s Catarrh Cure isnot a quack medicine. 1t was prescribed by one of the best physi- cians in this country for years, and is a reg- ular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mu- cous surfaces. The perfect combination ot the two ingredients 1s what produces such wondertul results in curing catarrh. Send lor testimonials, free. J. CHENEY & Co.. Propz., Sold by druggists, 1 price, 73c. Take Hall’s Family Pills ior gotstipation Advised Against Carslessness. An Irishman and a Swede were caught redhanded in the act of cattle stealing out West, and the usual court of Judge Lynch had arrived at the ufual verdict, Whereupon the court adjourned to the bridge across the Niobrara and prepared to execute its upanimous sentence. The Swede was given the honor of being tnrown oft the bridge—with a rope around his neck—tirst. But by some mistake the knot became united just as the Swede hit the water and he swam to the bank and hit the trail. ‘When they started to put ‘the noose around the Irishman’s neck he said to the master of cere- monies: “Now look here, me bye, 1 want vez to be a dom sight more care- ful wid that rope than ye was on the Swiade—I, can’t swim a sthroke.”— Omaha Examiner. Buried in Glass Coffins The glass coffin in which Tamagno, the great singer, was buried recently was not the first which has inclosed a curious character. There was a mis- erly Sir Thomas Bancroft, who in Lon- don days heaped up great riches. Even when his time came to die he could not bring himself to give his property away and so he left his estate to be improved until he should arise again, which he expected shortly to do. He had a window built in his coffin mov- able from the interior, and windows and and a glazed door to his tomb, and ordered that at {requent intervals these should be openéd and himself inspected by the trustees, But the latter has had enough of the man. They built almshouses with his estate. —Detroit Free ore UNDER WHICH KING “The More Postum the More Food-—the More Coffee the More Foigon.” Toledo, O, The Pres. young giant says: “I did not realize that I was a slave For three or four years I was obliged to take a nerve tonic every day. Now I am free, thanks to Postum Food Coffee. “After finding out what coffee will do to its victims, I could hardly stand to have my husband drink it; but he was not willing to quit. I studied for months to find a way to induce him to leave it off. Finally I told him I would of the W. State Cc. T.U ms in the Northwest i make no more coffee. “I got Postum Foeil Coffee, and made it strong—boiled it the required time, and had him read the little book, ‘The Road to Wellville,” tha! comes in every pkg “To-day Postum has no stronger ad- vocate than my husband! He tells our friends how to make it. and that he got through the winter without a spell of the grip and has not had a headache for months—he used to be subject to iphtheria. Ron: at Druggis A. P, HOXSIE, Buffalo. N. ¥. REGORY’S SEER} i C Catdlonns of tested and warranted seeds wise instruction—sent FREE. 4. y & Son, lLwblebead, Mass, frequent nervous headaches. “The stronger you drink Postum the more food you get; the stronger you drink coffee the more poison you get.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek Mich. There's a reas FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY Demand For Steel Far Exceeds Out- put Leading Industries Falling Further Behind With Deliveries. Weather conditions have continued to stimulate retail trade in season- able merchandise, part of the earlier unsatisfactory results being offset by a vigorous demand for winter cloth- ing and footwear, while household consumption of fuel has revived re- tail trade, so that coal dealers will not carry over as heavy -stocks at the end of the season as was indi- cated by last month's business. Nor has the possibility of a strike unset- tled confidence in the future, job- bing and wholesale sales of dry goods for the spring trade reacning a great- er aggregate than last year, and col, lections are prompt in most instan- eest ® Manufacturers in most leading in- dustries are falling further behind with deliveries, particularly in the steel business, while increased ca- pacity has not kept pace with require- ments. As to foreign trade, prelim- inary statistics of exports in January fell short of the month preceding, but promise to surpass all records for the corresponding month in previous vears, while for the last week at New York exports were $2,911,396 larger than a year ago, but imports declin- ed $1,741,830. Railway earnings in the first of February were 24.5 per cent. larg- er than in the same week of 1905, but prices of securities were somewhat irregular because of the firmer money weex market and heavy new bond issues. Domestic hides continue dull = and weak. Failures for the week numbered 241 in the United States, against 258 last year, and 33 in Canada, compar- ed with 32 a year ago. nA RIZTDTS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. ’ Wheat--No. 2 red......c........3h. $. <3 Ryo—No. 2. 72 73 Co. rn—No 2 yellow, onr 0 hi No. 2 seliow, shelled. 27 48 . 16 47 . on 38 .h 31 a5 Flour—W inter patent. 4 65 4 70 Fancy straight winte 4 00 4 Hay—No. 1 Timothy..... 13 00 32 Clover No. 1............ 9.55 9 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. 19 50 Brown middlings....... i6 50 Bran. bulk. oe 15 50 Sirqav—Wreat. « 708 See Nee Tal vas reams - 70) Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 2 30 Ohio creamery..... . 9 Fancy country roll 15 18 Cheegse—Ohio, new. . 11 12 New York, ROW teers 11 12 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per ID. le addin 14 15 Chickens—dressed.. oe 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, ‘fresh 20 ? Fruits and Vegetables. ADPples DDI cuuviiiiviniinans sanennns 351 500 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu. = 80 Cabbage—perton............ «se 1300 100 Onjons—per harrel............ wre Ea) 2m BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. 2s > & heat—No. 2 red.... i 83 St Tis SL He Jy 21 24 26 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter A EE $50 5 Wheat—No. 2 red.... Sq Corn—No. 2 mixed. 31 Oats—No. 2 Shine : 31 Butter—Creamery....... 2 La Arsis........ 20 NEW YCRK. F lour—Patents es<teerisnrunrscaes ss $ 59 515 Wheat—No. 2 red ul y2 Corn—No. 2....... 59 60 Oats—No. 2 ale. 31 32 Butter -Cream 24 26 Eggs—State A Sena v 20 21 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. i 1,450 to 1.600 1bs. Prime, 1,300 to 1,:00 1bs Good, 1,200 to 1,30) lbs Tidy. 1,050 to 1.150 Jbs. Fair, 90) 10 1,100 lbs. ene 5 Common, 700 10 £00 1bs..... D 3 Common to good fat oxen. 00 4 00 Common to good fat bulls. 00 3 50 Common to good fat cows 50 340 Heifers, 700 to1, 1001bs 1 00 Fresh cows and spoingers Hogs. Prime heavy hogs................. $640 $6350 Prime medinm wei 6 50 Best heavy Yorkers 6 50 Good light Yorker 6 4) Pigs, as to quality...... 570 4 common to 2 800d Fough 1 60 4 Sle ley sansasit i sessteenn 32) 35 Prime wethers 373 Good mixed. 5H 50 Fair mixed ewes and wether 4 50 o MW Cullsand common........... ww 200 4 00 Culls to ehoicalambs............. 5 00 YI Calves. Veal Calves.. carina 8 50 Heavy and thin ‘calv ao 00 Immigration Falls Off. The immigration from all countries for January, 1906, according to a statement issued by the Bureau of Immigration, was 51,127, a decrease of 9 per cent. over January, 1905, but an increase of 79 per cent. over 1904. The total immigration from Europe for the month was 46,269; from Asia, 1,374; all other countries, 3,484. The largest immigration came from Italy, who sent over 11,229 persons. Hun- gary was next with 11,108, while the Russian Empire and Finland sent 10,382. The hifher the average of 1ntelil- gence-among a given class of men, the readier they will be to combine for mutual protection and benefit, de- clares the Coast Seamen's Journal. Lunatics never combine for any pur- pose whatsoever; that is why a great crowd of them is easily managed by one keeper—just the citizens of a great city are managed by one boss in control of a well-organized political machine. g the power of or- like Great i I nervous Great sefrea German Workmen Insured. The German government conducts * Important Vievemant in Advertising. The creation of a General Advertis- FITS permanently cared. No fits o ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Nerve Restorer, g Ibo ier re ing Department for the New York Cen- a WwW orking Man's Insurance company pp. RH. Kx. INE, Arch St. Phila. Paz tral Lines, and the placing in charge |in which membership is not voluntary, | — — = of that department the veteran rail- |but compulsory. All wage-earners| The Javanese population of Formosa must take out .a policy in it ang all | numbers onlv 50.000. road advertiser, George H. Daniels, | government officers with a smaller sal- | who has been for nearly twenty years To Cure a C old in One Dx first great system to create an adver- tising department which covers all the railways in their systems, and the far- premium is a weekly assessment of not more than 4 per cent. age weekly is of no use to himself i$ use to any one, He who of no the General Passenger Agent of the |ary than 2000 Malls a year. Other Fake. Laxative - Bromo Quinine New York Central Railway, marks an | Day come in if they wish, but these yp ggicts refund money it it fails to irs, Be era in the history of advertising in have no choice; the government €n- W. Groves signature op each box. 25c. America. forces providence upon them will} : Tr - The N York Central : a nilly. The insurance is against inca- Senator La Foileite, chain 0 a jours > p *, T : ~ a SSiy 8 4 re, arian. 1e ew Yor entra .ines are the pacity, sickness and accident. The ! nal of gossip, 1s a vege 1 | of tthe aver- wages. two-thirds borne’ reaching consequences of such a move- by the insured and one-third by the | STOPS BELCHING. ment cannot be appreciated at first | empleyer. The government collecits | A — sight, but this action on the part of the | the assessment and holds the funds. Cures Bad Breath—Positive and Tastant Cure Free—No Drugs—=Cures management of these lines emphasizes | Ten million persons are policyholders ganization, greater even than was Di- anna of Ephesus. the value of advertising generally, an d forces the conclusion of a strong belief in the efficacy of railroad advertisin in particular. g Some idea of the importance of this new department can be had when it is understood that it will control the gen-. eral advertising in America and i foreign countries of the New York Cex tral, Boston and Albany. and Michigan Southern, Michigan Cer tral, Cleveland. Cincinnati, Chicago an St. Louis, Rutland, and Lake Erie an ‘Western Railways and their n )- Lake Shore 1- d d leased lines, having their Western terminals at Chicago, St. Louis and Cincinnat i, in this enterprise, and tne payments amount to $50,000,000 a year. When an insured workingman dies the gov- ernment pays his funera: expenses from this fund alloting therefore a sum equal to 20 times his daily wage. In case of sickness payment is made at the rate of » 2-3 per cent. of the an- nual earnings of the insured. al courts for settling disputes between workingmen and employers and these courts have considered 90,000 cases in a year. They have never amounted to much in settling strikes actually! begun, but they nave prevented many ; disputes from growing into strikes.— The | government also conducts 354 industri- by Absorption. A sweet breath is priceless Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will cure bad breath and bad taste instantly. Blare, and bad taste indicate offensive breat which ‘is due to stomach trouble. Mulls Anti-Belch Wafers purify the stomach and stop belching, by absorbin foul gases that arise from undigested food, and by supplying the digestive organs with natural solvents for food. They relieve ea or car sickness and | nausea of any kind. | They if cure headache, correct the ill effect of excessive eating or drinking | They will destroy a tobacco, whisky er onion breath instantly. They stop fermentation in the stomach, acute indigestion, cramps, colic, gas in tha stomach and intestines, distended ab- domen, heartburn, bad complexion, dizzy and “their. Eastern terminals at New Everybody's Bagazine. spells or any other sflictios a¥ising from York, Boston and Montreal, and em- en bracing more than twelve thousan miles of the best equipped railways i the world. d n Mr. Daniels has for many years been s : in India rega g rotection fr a firm believer in newspaper and maga- | Ya egarding prot Chon from | : zine advertisin And therefore. fhe sunstroke. He. had suffered from | Send this coupon with your name | x : SIE. And. TE this several times. Reasoning from | |and address and your drnggist’s name fi organization of the Central Advertis- ing Department of the New York Cen- al Lines is of importance fo every | arsens ST y tral S43 0F JD tance to "ery | arsenal, he came to the conclusion ' | Wafers, and will also send -on a cer- legitimate publication in America, | that the heat rays of the sun were | |titicate good for 23c. toward the pur- daily, weekly or montnly. ! not the cause of the trouble, but the | | chase of more Belch \Vafers. You will In an address before the New Yor State Press Association a few years | body like a photographer treais his MuLl’s Grave Tonic Co.. 328 3d ago, Mr. Daniels made the point that plates, and enveioped it in orange, Ave., Rock Island, ill the railroad is the advance agent of | USing always an orange-vellow shirt, commerce and that railroad advertis- el of il | Puri 3 : : > same <0 wring re ing had been of immense value- to OL ihe samo 20:0 suring five of years of extreme exposure subse- Kk American manufacturers in calling the attention of the whole world to the Protection Against Sunstroke. Dr. Andrew Duncan tells of hav- ing read many years ago of the ex- perience of a gentleman who traveled the fact that no one gets heatstrocke | great heat of furnaces in an | from the actinic rays. Hence he treated his .and lining his coat and hat with flan- quently he suffered fects of the sun. from no bad’ ef- do this, and we wantyou to know it. This offer may not appear again. 2246 "143 | We know Mulls Anti-Belch Wafers will GOOD FOR 2c. and 10c. in stamps or silver. and we will supply you a G7 free if you f~ have never used Mull's Anti- Belch find them invaluable tor stomach trou- | bie; cures by absorpticn. Address Give Full Address and Wriie Plainly. All druggi sts, 5Cc. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. excallent. work done. by our jnventersy 0 on he He That “has no shail, Bas 1b Eons asd jmechanies, as Hlustrated in ne Many Bismark Statues. science . Empire State Express. the Twentieth | : . rd : Es Century Limited, and other great trains! Bismarck. for is sins, has come to} 2 Nk a iby 2...) be about the mast bestatued: figure WILD WITH ITCHING HUMOR. that connect the East with the West: 5, nineteenth century hero worship. the average foreigner arguing that the | The monuments erected in Germany Eruption Broke Out in Spots All Over men who are able to turn out such ina- | to the “man of blood and iron,” are Body — Cured at Expense of Only chines must be able to build almost {not less alarming in number than | %£1.25—=Thanks Cuticura Remedies. govding. and thasihe ann machiners, they are doubtlessly low in any real | “The Cuticura Remedies cured me of my and all kinds of industrial machinery art quality. Up to the Pp nt the | xin dises e, and 1 am very thankful to made in America. must be of the very number unhappily completed is 204, vou. My trouble was eruption of the skin, best quality. Railroad advertising has | and there are still 38 to ‘infiicted | which broke out in spots all over my body, certainly been the means of ema on an already much Bi ked peo-!and caused a continual itching, which thousands of men here from foreign ple. The Kingdom of Saxony leads nearly drove me wild at times. ‘I gob countries to investigate our manufac- with 54 monuments. Germa dawell- | medicine of a doctor, but it did not cure tures and has wonderfully increased |1D& 10 the wild continents are also in | me, and wnen I saw in a paper your ad., ORY Toreimt commerae, | the race. One BI marck statue con- | I se nt to you for the Cuticura book and E ras Ansrititess etistiiriy _. | fronts, in an attitude of becoming de- | studied my case in it. 1 then went to the Hvar feginiphate REAY STP and | finance, the savages of the South | drug store und bought one cake of Cuti- magazine publication in America will | gang. in the Bismarck archipelego.— cura Soap, one box of Cuticura Ointment have a direct interest in the General | London Globe. and one vial of Cuticura Pills. From the Advertising Department of the New | — - first application I received relief. I used York Central Lines. aud every adver- | Origin of the rain Weidht, tne first set and two extra c¢ s of Cutis tising agent on the continent will take | By an English law passed in 1266, | “Ura Soap, and was completely cured. BP a new lease of life because’ of this en- it was provided that a silver penny had suffered for two yoars, ad 1 WN, dorsement of the value of advertising. | called a sterling, should egual in| thank Cuticura for my cure. Claude I It is more necessary to mouth than the chest. Be a= careful of the property others as you are of your own. dealers. therefore be declined. Louisville, Ry. guard the of There is only One Genuine- Syrup of Figs, The Genuine is Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. by men, women or children. effects from actual use and of their own personal knowledge. laxative remedy of the well-informed. Always buy the Genuine— Syrup of Figs MANUFACTURED BY THE fi FIG weight 32 wheat grains, well and taken from the center of From this it seems evident that the grain of wheat was the prototype of | the standard grain. The Tull name of the company, California Fig Syrup Co. {s printed on the front of every package of the genuine. The Genuine- Syrup of Figs- is for Sale, in Original _ Packages Only, by Reliable Druggists Everywhere Knowing the above will enable one to avoid the fraudulent imita- tions made by piratical concerns and sometimes offered by unreliable The imitations are known to act injuricusly and should Buy the genuine always if you wish to get its beneficial effects. It cleanses the system gently yet effectually, dispels colds and headaches when bilious or constipated, prevents fevers and acts best on the kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels, when a laxative remedy is needed Many millions know of its beneficial ‘San Francisco,Cal. PRICE FIFTY CENTS PER BOTTLE SS ce tar EAS HAS KO EQUAL FOR HEADARRE J @ ol I won’t sell Antl-Gripine to a dealer who won't Guarantee Xt. Call for your MON F. W. Diemer, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Meo. EY BACK IF IT DOESN'T CURE. dried. | the ear. | It is the =, ANT I-GRIPINE | (0: R.FD 2 Johnson, Maple Grove Farm, Wainut, Kan. ., June 1905.” A vigorous contest is being carried on between rival manufacturers o2 cigarets at Niuchwang. | g for 50c worth of leading 1%086 novelties in Chofo est Garden See $1's worth of Universal Prew minum a So wit h every order. BOLGIANO’'S SEED STORE, BAL TIMORE. ¥. N. U. 3, 1900. IS GUARANTEED TO 48 . book free. Highest refs 2! GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA, | PATENTS Dini tists If afflicted | FE Thompson's Eye Waler
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers