mms \SED Losses ance in > Unit- to en- p ina losses. sed by 1ies on [vances en ap- ce Ex- tion of . of the f com- ith the r San 1S POS- ndoubt- > other al, ap- es and repre- 1d out- ey had r cent. istricts hiladel- ates in of that nerican it had Union re out- rpetual lered a ums of rk and else- prem- Iso re- nt. the brok- NS f Life iti ds ysa the from his un- in the L letter \ngeles shape. + stone of fine broke ght af- ad and se big all of om the bodies sir] in ut very n bur- 1e tim- rotect: e been have if they re first ) ‘great REPLY Miners rators, seven, Ww up a of the lent of te field y their The to re- irs the > Com-+ opera- e Com? as tc » made by the d. The >d this figures sliding e min- in the 5 centd e oper- a ton. AKEN bed to ) miles 3 that Ss were about Aras en felt t have » origi- 0 dam- rted to ong its of the e been be re- th. issued Erich man at rge of weeks Muen- .rsenic. ago on t made rt, State * nomi- vVernor, Jieuten- Chan- | Over: State, rounty; chison; Villiam vernor, Senator ae » SEVEN YEARS OF SUFFERING Ended at Last Through Using Doan’s Kidney Fills. Mrs. Selina Jones, of 200 Main St. ‘Ansonia, Conn., says: “If it had not been for Doan’s Kidney Pills I would not be alive to-day. Seven years ago I was so bad with pain in the back, and so weak that I had to keep to my room, and was in bed some- s times six weeks at a 3% spell. Beginning with N Doan’s Kidney Pills, Bi} the kidney weakuess was soon corrected, and inside a week all the pain was gone. I was also relieved of all head- aches, dizzy spells, soreness and feel- Ings of languor. I strongly recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills.” . Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y, First Printed Almanac. The first known almanac in print was that of John Miller, who lived at Nuremberg in the fifteenth cent- ury, and not only gave the character of the 12 months in advance, but fore- told the eclipses of the moon for the next 30 vears. His almanac sold for 10 crowns of gold—a sum to make Old Moore jealous. And Old Moore was jealous. He went at once to this rival, in the hope of find- ing out the source of his prophecies. The rival saw through him. ‘“This is my system,” he pleasantly observ- ed. “I take your almanac, and for every day that you predict one thing I predict the opposite, and I am as often right as you are!” This did not equal the sincerity of the astrolo- ger, Cardan, who, having predicted his own death, starved himself to. death in order to verify the prophecy. —London Chronicle. Prosperity in Germany. In a report to the State Department at Washington, Consul Edward * H. Osmun, at Stuttgart, Germany, com- ments on a building boom in Stutt- gart and says: ®“Building lots are dear and rents are high. On one of the best residence streets not far from the consulate an “apartment house of four stories has been erect- ed, having apartments of eight rooms, each of which was readily rented as soon as finished at the rental of $1,- 000 a year, without heat.” It is as- serted by others that the average yearly income of a citizen of the German empire is far below that of the average American citizen, which is less than $1,000 a year. 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 pain over the stomach and heart, some- times nausea and vomiting, also fever and sick headache? What causes it? Any one or all of these: Excessive eating and drinking — abuse of spirits—anxiety and depression—mental ef- fort—mental worry and physical fatigue— bad air—insuflicient food—sedentary habits —absence of teeth—bolting of food. you suffer from this slow death and miserable existence, let us sead you a sam- le box of Mull's Anti-Belch afers abso- utely free. Drugs injure the stomach. : It stops belching and cures a diseased stomach by aborbing, the foul odors from undigested food and by imparting activity to the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices, which promotes digestion and cures the disease. This offer may rot appear again. 556 GOOD FOR 25c. 145 Send this coupon with your name ‘and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps “or silver, and we {will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull’'s Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send you a cer- tificate good for 25c. toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for siomach trou- ble; cures by absorption. Address Mvurr’s Grape Tonic Co. 228 3d Ave., Rock Island, Lil. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. No drugs. All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. American Money Lust. It has become a common reproach that is thrown constantly in the faces of the American people that commerciality and the desire to get money exert more influence over them than can be said—of any other race nationality, From the point of view occupied by most outside ob- servers, this charge is true, and yet when the fact is fully examined it develops features that are not so heinous and condemnable as would seem at the first glance to be the case. Certainly there is among the wealthy persons in the United Stated no undue proportion of misers who worship money for its own sake. On the contrary, there is a larger per- centage of spend-thrifts, and as a rule the rich men of our country and race are apt to be generous givers. There is not at the bottom of the American money-grabbing any whol- ly base motive. On: the contrary, there is scmething that is more. or less excusabie, if not admirable, in it. The American struggle for money grows to a great extent from the desire to gain power, influence, rocial position and general personal edvancement.—New Orleans Picay- ine. Graft in Smyrna. Smyrna commercial - circles * are much disturbed by the discovery that a well-organized band of swindlers has been successfully engaged in de- frauding a number of foreign firms purchasing goods there. European firms have suffered losses thus far amounting to $50,000. Only about one pineapple in every twenty thousand has seeds in it, and it is from these seeds that new varie- ties are produced. Ra Forest Reserve in Canada. The government of Ontario is ex- pected to announce shortly a definite plan of forest preservation, the ulti- mate outcome of which will be a forest reserve of 40,000,000 yielding a yearly revenue of at least $30,000,000. Jnder the proposed plan, which applies only to lands not suitable for agriculture, the timber is to be sold omnly as it comes to maturity, and the trees that have at- tained proper size must be marked by government employes before they can be cut. Great Britain's Bread. Twenty-three hundred million bushels of wheat are required annu- ally by the 517,000,000 bread eaters of the world. We each consume a barrel of flour—four and one-half bushels—a year. Great Britain eats in 13 weeks all the 73,000,000 bushels of wheat which it grows, and to have bread during the rest of the year must give $100,000,000 to the United States and smaller sums to India and -Russia.—Chicago Journal. TERRIBLE ITCHING SCALP Eczema Broke Out Also on Hands and Limbs—An Old Soldier Declares: “Cuticura is a Blessing.” “At all times and to all people I am willing to testify to the merits of Cuti- cura. It saved me from worse chan the torture of hades, about the year 1800, with itching on my scalp and temples, and af- terwards it commenced to break out on my hands. Then it broke out on my limbs. I then went to a surgeon, whose treat- ment did me no good, but rather aggra- vated the disease. I then told him would go and see a physician in Erie. The reply was that I could go anywhere, but a case of eczema like mine could not be cured; that I was too old (80). 1 went to an eminent doctgr in the city of Erie and treated with him for six months, with like results. I had read of the Cuticura Remedies, and so I sent for the Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent, and con- tinued taking the Resolvent until I had taken six bottles, stopping it to take the Pills. I was now getting better. I took two baths a day, and at night { let the lather of the Soap dry on. I used the Ointment with great effect after washing in warm water, to stop the itching at ‘once. I am now cured. The Cuticura treatment is a blessing, and should be used by every one who has itching of the in. I can’t say any more, and thank God that He has given the world such a curative. Wm. H, Gray, 3303 Mt. Vernon 8t., Philadelphia, Pa., August 2, 1905.” FLIES PUT TO USE. Shipped from Brazil to and Chickens. Those good souls who have faith to believe that everything ‘in existence fulfills some beneficient purpose will be gratified to learn—now that sum- mertime approaches—that flies have a recognized commercial value as food. It is not the American fly, however, that is so distinguished. The ‘Ay of commerce comes from Brazil, and they are highly esteemed as food for fancy chickens, birds and fish in captivity. These flies are caught on the Amazon river by men who float down stream in boats and use large nets to scoop in the millions of in- sects which circle in dense clouds just above the water. The insects in a dry state consti- tute one of the richest of foods. For chickens they are mixed with other ingredients, such as maize, millet, Feed Fish etc. They are too rich a diet by themselves, but so great 1s their power of nourishment that a small quantity has a most beneficial ef- fect on fowls in captivity. The Brazillian government stopped the exportation of this commodity two years ago, fearing the fish in the stream would suffer from the trade. This ban, however, has re- cently been removed and the flies are again being imported to this and European countries. A Successful Mission. From Sumatra, -the Rhenish mis- sionary society reports a year of har- vvest such as it has never before seen. The number of pagans bap- tized during the year was 4,712, be- sides 136 Mohammedans. The total of Christians is now (1,764. In 307 schools 144,119 boys and girls are under instruction. Havan's Water Supply. Havana has no sewers, but it has a water supply unexcelled elsewhere in the world. Thirty-three springs well up from the coral reef that un- derlies Cuba and supply the city with 150 gallons per capita every da¥ of the purest water possible to find. FOUND OUT. A Trained Nurse Discovered Its Effect No one is in better position toe know the value of food and drink than a trained nurse. Speaking of coffee a nurse of Wilkes Barre, Pa., writes: “I used to drink strong coffee myself and suffered great- ly from headaches and indigestion. While on a visit to my brothers I had a good chance to try Postum Food Cof- fee, for they drank it altogether in place of ordinary coffee. In two weeks, after using Postum, I found I was much benefited and finally my head- aches disappeared and also the indiges- tion. “Naturally I have since used Postum among my patients. and have noticed a marked benefit where coffee has been left off and Postum used. “I observe a curious fact about Pos- tum used among mothers. It greatly helps the flow of milk in cases where coffee is inclined to dry it up, and where tea causes nerviusness. “I find trouble in getting servants to make Postum properly. They most al- ways serve it before it has been boiled long enough. It should be boiled 15 or 20 minutes and served with cream, hen it is certainly a delicious bever- fge.” ; “There's a reason” for Posturn. 5 INNCE IND TOE EVEN acres, |. ot mes nee Plants Working to Capacity—Crop Outlook Bright’ as a Whole. Manufacturing Full response to: the needs of the earth- quake sufferers the American people have not only given further evidence of the vast resources of the Nation, but displayed qualities of heart and spirit that provides new reasons for optimism regarding the future. San Francisco wil] rise from its ashes, greater than before and, aside from some forced selling of securities or temporary pressure in the money mar- ket, the Nation as a whole will re- ceive no setbacks. Weather conditions are favorable for retail trade and building opera- tions. While the crop outlook is bright on the whole, although some sections report delay in planting on account of excessive moisture, and there is much complaint regarding the scarcity of labor. Manufacturing plants are working to their full capacity in the leading inylustries, espectally iron furnaces and steel mills, and there is little idle machinery at footwear factor- ies or textile mills. Railway earn- ings thus far reported for April sur- pass last year’s by 8.2 per cent. and foreign commerce at New York shows a gain of $938,619 in imports and a small loss of $283,619 in exports, as compared with the same week of 1905. Prices of the 60 most active railway securities declined to the lowest average since last August, and money rules firm, heavy withdrawals by the West offsetting receipts of gold from abroad. Mercantile collections are some- what irregular, which may be traced to financial stringency. Bank ex- changes at New York show an in- crease of 10.4 per cent. in compari- son with last year’s figures, while at other leading cities the average gain amounts to 9.1 per cent. Scarcity of billets, sheets and bars is the strik- ing feature of the iron and steel inm- dustry. Failures numbered 215 in the United States, against 204 last year, and 20 in Canada, compared with 15 a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Fiour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 Ped...........0ne:..8- 80 83 ye—No. 2.........c. cnn... 2 73 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear... 60 61 No. 2 yellow, shelled. . 55 5é cose. 53 58 cssne 37 38 36 3% 4 10 415 4 00 410 1500 15 2% 1075 119% 250 230) Brown middlings.... 19 50 20 0) Bran, bulk........ 22 00 2150 8traw—Wheat..... . 750 7 50 OBL. ic steiiivecasiiecertsisee 750 800 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 4 25 Ohio creamery........ 20 21 Fancy country roll 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, new.... 12 13 New York, now...............,. 12 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b..... 14 15 Chickens—dresse . 6 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 18 Frults and Vegetables. Apples Dhlec.iereconrsasens seeennee 85) Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 75 80 Cabbage—per ton............ .-.. 1300 1500 Onions—per barrel.............. e RO00 22% BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5 Wheat—No. 2 red..... cereree 8% In Corn—Mixed...... 46 47 BREgn....., 0 -%.2... 16 20 Butter—Ohio creamery............ 24 28 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 50 52 Wheat—No. 2 red...............-.. 84 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed.........cceeece0s 85 51 Oats—No. £ white............. 85 86 Butter—Creamery............ 29 32 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 16 20 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patonts............x.c00ve $ 50 515 Wheat—No.2red................... 89 90 Corn—No, 2,.....5 0 vienenene .- 67 68 Oats—No. 2 white . 86 88 Butter Gregan our Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 16 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 t0 1,600 1bs. ...... .... $5 60 $565 Prime, 1,800 101,400 lbs, . 5380 5 50 Good, 1,200 to 1,300 1bs.. 515 52 Tidy. 1,050 t0 1,150 1bs.. 4 85 515 air, 900 to 1,100 1hs 4 15 4 65 Common, 700 to Y00 1bs 3175 4 00 Common to good fat ox 275 4 50 Common to good fat bulls 200 4 00 Common to good fat cows 2 00 37 Heifers, 700 to1, 1001bs. ... 250 4 50 Fresh cows and springers. . . 1600 4800 Hogs. Prime heavy hogs......... $68 $685 Prime medium weights .s 0 85 Best heavy Yorkers. 6 75 6 85 | Good light Yorkers. 6 65 6 75 Pigs, as to quality. . 6 50 6 60 Common to good rough 5 2 6 10 tage... EL La 4 00 4 50 Prime wethers ..$49 5 00 Good mized. .,, = . 460 4 80 Fair mixed ewes and wethers. . 4 2 4 50 Culls and common 2 00 3 50 Culls to choice lambs 5 50 6 90 Calves. Veal Calves.... . $4 50 6 00 Heavy and th . 30 4 00 Portugal had 2,483 kilometers of railroads at the end of 1904, of which 1,395 were operated by priv- ate corporations. The vperating ex- penses were 48 per cent. of the re- ceipts. INLAID WOOD PICTURES. A new art is picture-making in in- laid wood. The art itself 1s not new, of course, but the designs are. For over mantels, wall panels, etc. laad- scapes are sketchily but very effec- tively arranged. Portraits are clever- ly made in these woods. Tables, chests and boxes are very handsome- ly inlaid with colored woods in con- ventionalized flowers, boughs aad the suggestion of landscape. ‘LACK. OF SHEET AND BAR IRON R..G. Dun & Co.’s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: By their magnificent | tyrn yp their noses at the ‘heavy trad- Large Oper tions ' of Ten Years Ago Are tl ith etry Deals Now. : “Until last ‘week we had an un- broken run of million-share days, ex- cepting Saturdays, for five months,” said an old Wall street broker: “That is a big change from the old way of doing things. And by the ‘old way’ I | don’t mean to go back before the Civil "War.- ‘Ten years isa long time in "Walki™ = street. Speculators of to-day would ing’—so-called—prior to 1865. In those customer who swung a thousand shares had a client that was much to be desired. His account was one for Mwhich. the average broker would give wine “suppers and theatre parties to get hold of. Now the thousand-share customgr is a small fish in a big pond. - “There are traders on the floor of the Exchange—men like C. B. MacDonald, Harry Content and a dozen others— who will ‘turn over’ a block of fifteen or twenty thousand shares for ‘an eighth.” This makes business active and swells the total of shares done in a day. Moreover these operations, which are conducted merely for a ‘scalp’ are frequently mistaken by the tapeworms for a real ‘move,’ and thus the little trader who ordinarily would keep out of the market gets in—and frequently gets shorn. “The operations of ten years' ago really seem laughable. Why, I can re- member; ‘when the Street used to get excited “over a speculative combat be- tween New York and Chicago. New York would be ‘bull’ on the market and Chicago would be ‘bearing’ it. Operations were a matter of local pride and there was just about the same interest in trading as there would be over the result of ball games be- tween the Giants and Anson's Colts. “Strange as it may be seem, the change has been brought about largely by Chicago—or the operations of the so-called Western crowd. Yes, humili- ating as it may be for the New York- ers to confess it, John W. Gates and his following have done more to put stock market operations on a scale of magni- tude than J. Pierpont Morgan, the Rockefellers and Rogerses and all the other - big fellows, with the possible exception of Keene, put together. “It is all the result of ‘easy money.’ John W, Gates and the coterie with which his name is associated made money so easily that they hesitated no more to risk it than the bookmaker who, after a successful day at the track, goes into a gambling house and bucks the faro bank. Not much more than ten years before he left Chi- cago John W. had been peddling barb wire fences. When he came to New York he had made millions in the Illinois Steel Company, later in the American Steel & Wire, and to swell his fortune still further he made an advantageous deal with the United States Steel Corporation. He is game —nothing small in the way of a plunger —and he and his crowd made things hum when they hit Wall street. On more than one cccasion they have jumped into a quiet markat and turned things upside down by the purchase of 100,000 shares of one stock in a single day. if you don’t think such opera- tions have an cffect on prices and sen- timent just watch the ticker while the buying is going on. “Of course. the Gates buyin ; is not always considered ‘good buying,’ but just the same it has set ©. new pace for Wall sireet, and the magnitude oi the trading has thrown into the shade the ‘big’ operations of a decade ago.”’— New Ycrk Press. Poor Pay For Industry. In Europe many kinds of manufact- uring are conducted in households. Not long ago an exhibition of wares produced in this manner was opened in Berlin. The articles shown were all of German origin. One of the Ameri- can consuls in Germany says in regard to the display that everything which one naturally connects with a great fair is strikingly absent. The products of tenement and sweatshop, small piecework evolved by the needy, are laid bare to the public. Each exhibit is ticketed, setting forth the pay for piece, time employed in making, and the profit per hour. If the object itself does not particularly attract the atten- tion of the visitor, the descriptive tag certainly appeals to him. A few exam- ples may be given: A boy's suit of clothes, three pieces, made for about seventeen cents; artistic wooden cruci- fixes, carved at less than two cents an hour; 144 toy menagerie animals for eleven cents; putting up 1000 needles for less than one cent for the lot; mounting hooks and eyes on 360 cards, with twenty-four pair on each, alto- gether 17,280 pieces, for twenty-eight cents, and an extreme case is that of a bit of lace from Plauen worked at the rate of about one-quarter of a cent an hour. Progress and poverty are noe where more abruptly contrasted than in this pitiful display. Expressions of amazement and sympathy, manifested by the highest classes of society, are echoed throughout the German press. This would seem to beat even Chinese cheap labor!—New York Tribune, Bishops With Big Feet. Bishop McVickar, of Rhode Island, a man of great physical proportions, once visited Japan with Dr. Phillips Brooks, who fell but little behind him in height and breadth. To the diminutive Japs the two stalwart American clergymen were sources of unending wonder. “We did not mind ordinary tribute to our size,” says the Bishop, “but the wonder which the size of our feet elicited was hardly flattering. In entering a Jap- anese house you are supposed to leave your shoes outside, and never did Dr. Brooks and I come out but we found an admiring and wondering crowa either measuring our shoes or gazing upon them in admiration. They were pretty sizable sbees, I admit.” GROWTH OF STOCK TRADING, days-a brokerage concern that-had- ai: ‘Backache, “The Blues” Both Symptoms of’ Organic Derangement in Women—Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief, How often do we hear women say: ‘It seems as though my back would break,” or ‘Don’t speak to me, I am all out of sorts”? Thesesignificant remarks prove that the system requires attention. Ras and ‘‘ the blues” are direct symptoms of an inward trouble which will sooner or later declare itself. It may be caused by diseased kidneys or some derangement of the organs. Nature requires assistance and at once, and Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound instantly asserts its curative powers in all those peculiar ailments of women. It has been the standby of intelligent American women for twenty years, and the best judges agree that it is the most universally success- ful remedy for woman's ills known to medicine. ; Read the convincing testimonials of Mrs. Holmes and Mrs. Cotrely. Mrs. J.C. Holmes, of Larimore, North Dakota, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — : ‘‘ I have suffered everything with backache and female trouble—I let the trouble run on until my system was in such a condition that I was unable to be about, and then it was I commenced to use Lydia Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. If I had only known how much suffering I would have saved I should have taken it months sooner—for a few weeks’ treatment made me well and strong. My backaches and headaches are all gone and I suffer no pain at my monthly periods, whereas’ before I took dia E, Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound I suffered intense pain.” Mrs. Emma Cotrely, 109 East 12th Street, New York City, writes: Dear Mrs, Pinkham: — “I feel it uy duty to tell all suffering women of the relief I have found in Lydia E, Pink- Yor ham’s Vegetable Compound, When I co menced axing the Compound I suffe everything with backaches, headaches, and female troubles. 1am comple raly cured and cnjoy the best of health, and I owe it to you.” When women are troubled with irrege ular, suppressed "or painful periods, weakness, displacements or ulceration, that bearing-down feeling, inflammae tion of the female organs, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general de- bility, indigestion and nervous prostra- tion, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excit- ability, irritability. nervousness, sleep- lessness, melancholy, ‘ all gone” and ‘* want-to-be-left-alone” feelings, blues and hopelessness, they should remem- ber there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound at once removes such troubles, No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. No other medicine in the world has received this widespread and unqualified endorse- ment. Refuse to buy any substitute. FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN. Remember, every woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Pink- ham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, her assistant before her de- cease, and for twenty-five years since her advice has been freely and cheer- fully given to every ailing woman who asks for it. Her advice and medicina have restored to health innumerable women. Address, Lynn, Mass. Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice—A Woman Best Understands a Woman's mis, Bounty for Snake Killers. | The Tyrolese Government still pays for the extermination of poison- ous snakes. It is the one European Government which now does so. > FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free, Dr. R. H. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila, Pa, There are now 803 schools in Canada for Indians, who number 107,637. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle | | In March 1,646 Japanese left the Hawali Islands for the Pacific coast. BR. Ena Dislikes the Spanish Sport. Princess Ena has extorted from the King of Spain, a promise that she will not be expected to appear at the national sport, bull fighting. Like all the princesses of the Eng- lish royal family, she is interested in animals, and anything in the shape of cruelty to them is exceed- ingly revolting to her. When King Alfonso was -in England he admitted to King Edward that he disliked ! bull fighting, but explained that it | was impossible, for the present, at | all events, to abolish it; were he to’! attempt to do so it would cause al-! most a rebellion. He explained that | when he was a small boy, his moth- | er, in order to please the people,’ used to take him to the fights and | for days afterwards she used never to sleep, while he was so weirdly fascinated he always dreamed he was a toreador.—Cleveland Leader. Beware of Ointments For Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derangethe whole Sys. | tem when entering it through the mucous | surfaces. Such articles ee never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phy- siclans,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., Foledo, O., contains Ro mercury, and is taken internally, acting dircotly upon the b ood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catar: h Cure | ba sure you get the genuine. It is taken jn- te:nally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by £. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists; price, 750. per bottle, Take Fall's Family Pills for constipation. Havan’s Death Rate. There is very little difference be- tween the death rates in Havana and New York. In New York it aver- ages less than 20 to every thousand, while in Havana for the last year it has averaged 20.3. The recent forest fires in Austra- lia were the most destructive on re- cord there. Clean Honest Money Now being produced from the New Dominion ship | pens feet solid ore in upper 60 foot tunnel, at Ophir, | olo. Lower tunnel will cut ore inside 200 feet an open great wealth. Stock (0c. a Share. MANHATTAN POOL COMPANY paid $20,000 in stock'for 4 claims in the heart of Manhattan, Nevada. Stock (0c. a Share. The greatest mining offer ever made. Both for 10cC- Cash or installments; early dividends expected. Both promise a life income. Order today. Pictures, references and samples of ore FREE. J. H. FRANK SMOKEY, Sec’y, 1339 Downing Avenpes. DENVER, COLO. Te ERICKSON LEG PATENT SLIP SOCKET. E. ERICKSON ARTIFICIAL LIMB 0. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Come to Minneapolis this summer. Rates on all roads for G. A. R. En- campment. Send name of party with a limb off and we'll mail you a Map of Minneapolis. There js no satisfaction keener ( TIL ten "A:T TOWER 0. BOSTON, MASS. LS A. ) ‘TOWER CANADIAN CO_ Limited TORONTO. CAN. W.L.DoucLAs 3°08 * 32 SHOES W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. ESTABUSHED : July eT 1876. CAPITAL $2 5000004) W. IL. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELLS MORE MEN’S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. $10 000 REWARD to anyone who can 3 disprove this statement. If i could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is 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. W. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes for Men, $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ School & Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.75, $1.50 CAUTION. 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, P. N. U. 18, 1906. 48 p. bo k free. Highest refs, Long experience, tegerald &Co.Dept. 54. Washington, D.Q If afficted FE Thompson's Eye Water
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers