LIC the 1a of tholic g Al- el of Se- oman S. ry 10 Reyes t the e. xd to ntion » col- 3, at 0. S an- 1d to! e an rdage ining nner Rus- nces- ts in lic in icism offic- for- bank- ented ns of h. was , her gas lows’ with Loss, S ar- 1 a ount- ciras Rus- ol of rocco Spain nent. Says: that estly press the ecen- ot an nd of reign rath- inese ts. TL f the out- nasty npire here wife came he. n is- nen’s dead ng. or of burg, given n by mally ch is con- made or in , and court | Se — A - How He Happened to Burn It. Many interesting neighbors drop in end chat with Mark Twain when he is at “Quarry Farm,” his summer home near Elmira. A small boy turn- ed up not long ago with his hand wrapped in a bandage. Mr. Clemens expressed concern and asked the cause. t “I.aid it on a red-hot stove and for- got to take it off.” was the terse re- ply. AND CONSIDER THE ALL- IMPORTANT FACT That in address- p : ing Mrs. Pink- 24 bam you are con- fiding your private ills to a woman— a woman whose experi- ence with ‘women’s dis- eases covers a great many years. Mrs, Pinkham is the daughter-in-law. of Lydia E. Pinkham, and for many years underherdirection, and since her de- cease.she has been advising sick wo- men free of charge. Many women suffer in silence and drift along from bad to worse, knowing full well that they ought to have immediate assist- ance, but a natural modesty impels them to shrink from exposing them- selves to the questions and probable examinations of even their family physician. Jtis unnecessary. Without money or price you can consult a wo- man whose knowledge from actual ex- perience is great. Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing invitation, Women suffering from amy form of female weaknessare invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. A woman can (reely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus has been established the eternal confidence between Mrs. Pinlkham and the women of America which has never been broken. Out of the vast volume of experience which she has todraw from, i¢ is more than ained the very nowledge that will elp your case. She asks nbthing in {the wall. ossible that she has | return except your good-will, and her advice has relieved thousands. any woman, rich or poor. is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. If you are ill, don’t hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink- ham, Lynn. Mass., for special advice. When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health so many women, you cannot well say, without trying it, “I do not believe it will help me.” W. L. DoucLAS $3208 322 SHOES i: W. L. Douglas $4.00 Ciit Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. W. L. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELLS MORE MEN’S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. . $1 0 000 REWARD to anyone who can 5 disprove this statement. 111 could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes 1s made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, ' fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. Ww. IL. Douglas Strong Made Shoes for Men, $2.00, $2.01 . Boys’ School & Dress . 50, $2, $1.75, $1.50 A N insist upon having W'L.Doug- las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. That Delightful Aid to Health Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic Whitens the teeth— purifies mouth and breath — cures nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes, and by direct application cures all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions caused by feminine ills. Paxtine possesses extraordinary cleansing, healing and germi- cidal qualities unlike anything else. Atall druggists. socents LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass Drill for Water Prospect for Minerals Coal G Drill Testand Blast Holes. ‘We make DRILLING MACHINES For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. ates Traction Machine. LOOMIS MACHINE CO, TIFFIN, OHI0. for 80¢ worth of leading 1906 novelties in OChoio est Garden Seeds. 81's worth of Universal Pze- ium Coupons ree with every order. = BOLGIANO'S SEED STORE. B LTIMORKE, Hoxle’s Gough Disks Check a cold in done hour. 25 cents at druggists or mailed.’ A. IV. HOXIE, Buffalo, N. ¥. 48 p. book free. H ghost Lots Long experience. Fitzgerald : 01 _r PAT ENTS &Co.Dept. 64, Washington, D.C | mer, 531-534. Surely ' Man of Many Promises. Abdul Hamid, the Sultan of Turkey, always expresses the greatest aston- ishment when told that reforms have not been carried out, and declares that it is the fault of his ministers and other subordinates who have neglect- ed to obey his orders. He then prom- ises that there will be no further de- lay, and expresses profound sorrow and mortification that anyone should suspect him of insincerity. Nothing happens. The ambassadors go again and again to the sublime porte and are told that their wishes will be imme- diately complied with. They know that they are simply being played with and that the promises of the Sul- tan are intended to delay action and to avoid it if possible. Denmark’s Army. Denmark has 187 soldiers to every 10,000 of her population, possesing the largest in proportion to size in the world. —_—e ee ‘FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness alter first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, $2trialbottleandtreatisefres Dr. B.H. KLINE; Ltd. 931 Arch St. Phila., Pa Smallest of all the armies in Europe is that of the principality of Monaco. Power of a Locomotive. The average locomotive will pull 200 tens cf goods a mile every three minutes. ‘ten tim:z a: long would be repuired by a man and his team to haul a single ton one mile. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’s signature on each box. 2bc; ' The coldest city in the world is Yakutsk, Eastern Siberia. An Amusing Trick. Stand against the wall with the left side, the cheek, hip and foot touching it. Then, try lifting the right leg without moving the body away from It is laughable to see chil- dren trying to perform this feat, for it is one of the things that are im- possible to accomplish. How's This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac- tions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WEST & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To- ledo, O. Warping, KINNAN & MARVIN, Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Cureistakeninternally,act- ing directly upon the biood and mucucussur- faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Tale Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Wholesale Chinese Humility. A Chinaman wearing his finest gown of silk, called at a house where he happened to disturb a rat, which was regaling itself out of a jar of oil . standing on a beam over the door. In 1 wise: its sudden flight the rat upset the oil over the luckless visitor, ruining his fine raiment. While the man was still pale with rage his host appeared and after customary greetings the visite accounted for his appearance in this “As I was entering your hon- orable dwelling, I frightened your hon- orable rat; while it was trying to es- cape it upset your honorable jar of oil over my poor and insignificant cloth- ing. This explains the contemptible condition in which I find myself in your honorable presence.” 1 BOX OF WAFERS FREE—NO DRUGS —ZURES BY ABSORPTION. Cures Belching of Gas—Bad Breath and Bad Stomach—Short Breathe Bloating—Sour Eructations— Irregular Heart, Etc. Take a Mull’s Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good ef- fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, disinfects the stomach, kills the poison erms and cures the disease. Catarrh of $he 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 your 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 fermencation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through t 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 wantyou to know it. ‘This offer may pot appear again. 3176 GOJD FOR 25c. 142 Send this coupon with your name and address and your drugg.st’s name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used ull’s Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send yon a cer- tificate good for 23c. toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. | You will find them invaluable for stomach trou- ble; cures by absorption. Address MuLL’s Grape Jloxic Co. 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, lil. Give Full Address and Write I'lainly. All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Complete Gesture Language. Gesture language still exists in parts of Australasia. Some tribes possess so excellent a cede that it is almost as efficient as a spoken language. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. Ttching, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Piles. PDruggists are authorized to refund moneyit PazoOintmentfails to cure in 6 tol4 days.502 The year 1905 broke the Patent Office record. H. H. GREEN'S Soxs, of Atlanta, Ga., ar3 the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world, See their liberal offer in advertise- ment in another column of tais paper. The pay of the Chinese soldiers figures exactly eighteen cents per week. Gunderic. The first King of the Vandals was Gunderic, who ascéended the throne in 406 A. D. Their last king was Geli- i they didn’t use. | | | A school of wireless telegraphy has | been established at Brest for the pur- pose of educating chiefs for the special | service. i — Professor W, D. Taylor, professor of railway engineering in the University of Wisconsin, has resigned to become chief engineer of the Chicago and Alton Railroad. ey The fishery steamer Albatross will soon start on an extended cruise to the Western Pacific to conduct scientific and fishery investigations in the in- terest of the Bureau of Fisheries. The principal work will be done in the Japan seas. The Institute of Archeology of the University of Liverpool has dispatched an expedition to make explorations and excavations in the vicinity of Esna, in Upper Egypt. The « funds have been privately subseribed by Liv- erpool citizens. Some men just returning. from _ Alaska find that they had been greas- ing their boots with ambergris, a se cretion of the whale, which is highly valued as a base for perfumes and which is worth $20 an ounce. They had picked up some of the stuff on the shore, supposing it to be ordinary grease, and had thrown away what Dr. Bullock Workman, whose high mountain climbing in the Himilayas is well known, has recently brought out the point that very high ascents may be rendered impossible by loss of sieen due to the difficulty in breathing while lying down. He notes that while in camp at 19,358 feet his party was kept awake by lack of breath, and when the members dozed off, they would awake with a start, gasping for breath. Gold has been easily distilled by Henri Moissan in the electric furnace, its boiling point being higher than that of copper, but lower than that of lime. In a cold tube, the vapor condensed partly in the form of moss gold, partly as microscopic erystals, the general properties being those of a finely di vided gold. In alloys with copper and tin, the gold distills over last. On dis tilling an alloy of tin and gold, a pur ple of Cassius is obtained in the dry way, ee. THE CHAIR HABIT. Sitting Declared by Dr. Noble Smith to Be One of Our Greatest Faults. Information calculated to prolong life, even if it does not make it more tolerable, is being received daily. Dr. Noble Smith, a surgeon of repute, de- claves, rather tardily, perhaps, that sitting on chairs *‘is the cause of near- ly all our evils in regard to the spine,” and Dr. Gowers, one of the greatest authorities on diseases of the nervous system, asserts that “if one habitually sits on a hard chair the pressure of the edge is likely to give rise to sciatica.” If these two authorities are correct there seems to be no good reason why the chair habit should not be aban- doned, alunough there is no denying that it has become a fixed habit. Al- ready considerable has been done tc discourage it. Look at the fashionably furnished parlor, for instance. It con- tains chairs, to be sure; but nobody, at least no man of average proportions, has ever contracted spinal trouble or sciatica by disposing himself in the spindle-legged, hand-painted damask- covered things. If he attempts to use them as chairs, instead of regarding them admiringly as bric-s-brae, his wife shoos him out .f ne room; and if she doesn’t shoo sim out of the room they let him down to the floor with a crash that scares him out of three years’ natural growth. And, in- asmuch as this same man, left to his own devices, is accustomed to sit on his back in a padded cheir, it is pos- sible that this warning is no. meant for him. is mucn to be said against sitting. It is expeusive, particularly in theatres and at the ringside; in many house- holds adorne. with attractive daugh- ters it keeps the gas burning long after hours, even if it is turned low, and it aids and abets gossip, frivolous con- versation- and lectures, addresses, and concerts which are unintelligible. It may be that the world would be bet ter, brichter, happier, and more active if it afforded standing room only. — Providence Journal. Exasperated Mr. B, John Thomas Brady, of St. Louis, blew through the capital a few days ago, looking for a Government market for his horse salve. It was John Thomas who, when re- turning to this country .after a trip to England, where the Britishers got his money, was halted at Ellis Island. Cir cumstances had compelled his return in the steerage. “Who are you?’ answered the in- spector. “John Brady. of St. Louis.” “Are you a voter?” “No!” shouted John Thomas, wild with rage, “I am a repeater.”—Wash- ington Correspondence in Str Paul Pi- oneer Press. Useful Guides. However, on general principles, there | | FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Activity in Building * Materials, With Contracts for Future Delivery Being Freely Placed. Some irregularity is noted in trade reports for the past week, but not more than is seasonable, and mercan- tile collections are generally prompt. A little conservatism regarding for- ward business in some industries may be attributed to high prices, although fhe greatest strength - appears in building material, and preparations for structural work are beyond prece- dent. The few minor strikes do not ser- iously interfere with progress and thus far the only noticeable effect of the coal controversy is the unusually large demand for. this season of the year in all fuel markets and the dis- position of small merchants in the im- mediate vicinity of the anthracite mines to allow stocks to become de- pleted. Should an amicable result at- tend the meeting of March 19, these dealers will provide wholesalers and manufacturers with much urgent busi- ness. . There is little idle machinery in any of the leading manufacturing indus- tries and contracts for distant deliv- ery come forw- 1 freely, except at the textile mills, where purchases are chicfly for immediate require- ments. Prices of commodities rose slightly during February. Dun’s In- dex number being $104,204 on March 1 against $104,011 a month ago, and $101,939 a year ago. Railway earn- ings continue to make striking com- parisons with last year’s figures, the increase during February amounting to 24.3 per cent. Forcign commerce at New York for the last week showed an increase in exports of $926,216 over : the same week last year, while imports de- creased $71,665. Leather is quiet, but steady, sup- port constantly appearing as consum- ers require shipments. New Eng- land shoe shops are concluding sup- plementary spring contracts. Fail- ures numbered 221 against 244 last year, and in Canada, 24 compared with 25 a year ago. MEARE IRTS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red.........eenuurens $8 BD <3 Rye—No.2........... .- 3 74 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear. - 49 50 No. 2 yellow, shelled. . Qats—No. 2 white.................. 35 36 No. 3 white..... 31 35 Flour—Winter pate 4 65 470 Fancy straight winters 4 00 4 10 Hay—No. 1 Timothy 1275 13 00 Clover No. 1...... 9 00 950 Feed—No. 1 white mi 2:00 2250 Brown middlings i950 R00) Bran, bulk.. : 20 00 20 50 Straw—Wheat 700 7 30 OBL... isssrsvivieininane 70) 750 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery... 32 32 Onio creamery....... 8 29 Fancy country roll.. 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, new..... : 14 15 New YOrK, DOW... .....ovcnennnnn 13 14 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b 14 15 {hickens—dressed... 16 1 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fr 20 4 5 Frults and Vegetables. Apples bbl....... see 25) BO Potatoes—Fancy 7 Cabbage—per ton. . 15 00 Onions—per barrel. 200 22 BALTIMORE. Fiour—Winter Patent............. $ 5 5395 Wheat—No. 2 red...... seve s - > 2 a Corn—Mizxed..... 3 > 46 av Hegs....... seveeeessaiaians ; 16 00 Butter—Ohio creamery....c........ 24 “8 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $50 5D Wheat—No. 2 red........... oo 84 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed...... 46 7 Oats—No. 2 white... 35 36 Butter—Creamery.......... 29 32 Egge—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 20 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patente.......coeiarerananes $500 515 Wheat—NO. 2red......coeneenrennse 86 89 COrn—NoO. 2....ccvrerennrsansnnnneses 47 48 Oats—No. 2 white... .e 34 35 Butter -Creamery .........cce-cesee 28 30 Bggs—State and Pennsylvania... 16 21 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. ! Extra, 1.450 101,600 1bs....... .... $550 $57 Prime. 1,300 to 1,400 1bs,.. 5B 5 50 Good, 1,00 to 1,300 lbs... 510 5% Tidy. 1.050 to 1,150 1bs. 4 75 4 Fair, 900 to 1,100 ibs... 4 00 4 45 Common, 700 to $00 1bs.... 3 4 00 Common to good fat oxen 20 4 25 Common to good fat bulls. 2 50 4 25 Common to good fat cows. 2 00 37 Heifers, 700 tol, 1001bs...... 250 4 30 Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 50 00 Hogs. | Prime heavy hogs....... @ o =) =] * z Prime medium weights. 6 60 6 60 Best heavy Yorkers....,. 6 60 6 60 Good light Yorkers. . 6 35 6 40 Pigs, as to quality....... 6 30 8 35 Common to good roughs . 5 60 570 Brags... ......... ssnres 3 30 495 Sheep. Prime wethers...... Good mixed.. Fair mixed ewes Cullis and common Culls 10 choice lambs......... Calves. YeslCalves .....e.............. ¥600 8 50 Heavy and thin calves.......ce...... 3 0) 5 00 It is no more a sin to hear these whispers of evil in our souls than to hear the wicked talk of bad men as we walk along ‘the street. The sin comes only by our stopping and join- ing in with them. —H. A. Smith. Down at Ormond Beach they have an automobile that travels at tae rate of 127 miles an hour. "Most people, observes the Philadelphia however, r, would rather stay where 1an go some place else 0 neq they are sud denly. it is to conduct travelers from the tick- e% office, in the London station, to the trains they want to take. The London & Northwestern Rail way Company has established a ser- vice of youthful guides, whose d | | H i i i { | Motorists Rewarded and Punished London motor-bus drivers who avoid accidents for a week regeive | a bonus. They are fined for acci- dents. FROM CATARRH OF LUNCS SAVE SO COMMON IN WINTER BY TAKING PE-RU-NA. Sore Throat Develops Into Bronchitis. z Mrs. Addie Harding, 121 W. Brighton Ave., Syracuse, N. Y., writes: “I have been a user of Peruna for the past twelve years. With me it is a sure preventive of colds and many other ills. “Two or three times a year I am i Mrs. Virginia Caviana. 1 . | Chronic Catarrh of Throat and Lungs. Mrs. Virginia Caviana, room 32, bridge Block, Portland, Ore., writes: “I was a sufferer with catarrh of the throat and lungs for a long time before Peruna was recommended to me. 1 gave it a trial, zlthough I thought at the tyme it would be just like other medicines and Jo me no good. I was pleased to find that my improvement began in less than two weeks and continued u- til I was entirely well. I gained nearly 75 pounds, have a splendid appetite and am grateful for what your medicine has done for me.” ANTI-GRIPINE iS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD SOLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. I won't sell Anti-Gripine to a dealer who won't Guarantee Xt. Call for your MONEY BACK IF IT DOESN'T CURE. ¥. W. Diemer, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Ho. Cam- Mrs. Addie Harding. troubled with my throat, a kind of raw feeling, turning to bronchitis. 1 have had the services of my physician in each case. Two years ago, when I ‘elt & svell coming I tried Peruna to check it, and to my delight was not troubled with the smoth- ered and choking feeling and never have been since. I can check it every time with Peruna.” “From the cradle fo the baby chair” |; HAVE YOU A BABY? If so, you ought to have a More Stoam Engines Used Now Than FKver Before. The use of the steam engine is in- creasing faster to-day than ever before. Many mammoth industrial plants are | exclusively engaged in building steam } boilers and engines, and it is the proud boast of one of these, the Atlas Engine Works, of Indianapolis, that it aver- ages a complete boiler and engine outfit of fifty horse-power every thirty min- utes of the working day. When the visitor to their plant has gone through two or three of their great warehouses, and emerges upon a boiler yard of twenty acres, he won- ders where upon earth use can be found for all the boilers and engines. But, if he will watch the loading process, he will see some ten or twelve trainloads per day go out, labeled for destinatipns all over the world, and will gain some notion of the magnitude of the world’s work. Then, when he is | told that this one concern, leviathan of the trade though it is, does not produce ten per cent. of the world’s output of steam boilers and engines, he will be- gin to realize how vast is the produc- tion and consumption of steam power throughout the world. The product of this one plant, which builds every type and size of horizontal i (PATENTED) “AN IDEAL S8ELF-INSTRUCTOR.” UR PHOENIX Walking Chair holds the child securely, pre- steam engine, affords an interesting . ¢ study of mechanical evolution. The venting those painful falls and balanced slide-valve, the shaft gov-! bumps which arc so frequent when baby learns to walk. "BETTER THAN A NURSE." The chair is provided with a re- movable, sanitary cloth seat, which supports the weight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; italso has a table attach- ment which enables baby to find amusement in its toys, etc., with- out any attention. . “As indisponsable as a cradle.” It is so constructed that it pre. vents soiled clothes, eickness from drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. ernor, the rotating, or Corliss valves. | § seif-oiling devices, compound cylinders | A and direct connected shafts are only the more visible improvements. The | built-up connecting rod, the removable | bearings, improved piston construction, | stronger and lighter designs of bed, | more intelligent designing of ail recip- rocating parts, better selection of ma- terials and more accurate workman- | 8 ship throughout are some of the things that differentiate the engine of to-day from that of half a century ago. | The changes in boiler construction | have not been so numerous, but they | have been quite as marked. In the out- | put of this one concern can be found | every size and type of boiler, from the | little horizontal tubular of fifteen horse-power, to the new Atlas waiter- tube, which purifies its own water, | superheats its own steam and gives the | highest efficiency yet accomplished in boiler construction. | ——— aA MANUFACTURED ONLY BY PHOENIX CHAIR CO. SHEBOYGAN, WIS. & Can only be had of your furniture dealer. RE Fen : WE There is no satisfaction keen How Auto Speed Has Increased. The great object sought by this rapid development of the motor has | been attained in a sensational degree. | thanbeing dry and comfortable’ The increase during the past ten years | when out in he hardest storm: would be almost incredible weer there | |, _ > not figures to prove it. In 1395 the | NEA eo \ Paris-Bordeaux road race was won by | > IBY AR average speed of 15 miles an hour. In 1897 the winning automobile, and 8-| horse power machine, covered the 950 | miles of the Paris-Amsterdam race | at 28 miles an hour. In 1899 the | Paris-Bordeaux race was won by a 12- | horse power automobile going at 30 | miles an hour. In 1901 the Paris-Bor- | deaux race was won by a t44-horse | power machine with an average hour- | ly speer of 50 miles an hour—the same i a 314-horse power automobile witli an | | AJ TOWER €0.BOS course that was covered six years be- | TON. MASS_{J.SA. fore at 15 miles an hour. The in- | } TOWER CANADIAN CO. Limited TORONTO. CAN. crease in speed since that time, though great, has been more gradual. The winning car in the Vanderbilt Cup race the most important held in Amer- DR Vwi ica, averaged slightly less than, 62 | P. N. U. 11, 1906. NEW DISCOVERY ; kives quick relief and sures worst eases. Book of testimonials and #@ E¥ays’ treatment miles an hour for the 283 miles; it |Kree. Dr. M. M. GREEN'S SOKS, Box E, Athnta, @s. was of 80-horse power, but in the | JOIN W. MORRIE same race there were cars of 120- ENSIO Wasnmiton 0. horse power and one of 130.—Amer- | ? Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ican Magazine. i 3yrain A Ee ae 4000090000000 G9 660044 3 THE EXTERNAL USE OF z . @ St } 3 QaCODS 11 § & ® % 4 $ & is the short, surc, easy cure for z It penetrates to the seat of torture, and relist promptly follows. Rheumatism and : Neuralgia Price, 25¢c. and 50c. POV OVI IIIV OR PVITIveYVeT VE 20000000 v ved td ttt ttt NINE OPO 000