Ba ittal ton, arry 1 of san- eive . the srself ould riety stroy was rouch ndrel ver- eased hous- been States 3 city ) rap- 7 that d 300 s the on SO ercen- tment rge of 11d be imber f the 0 are ormer. ES Kongo ed by \ ceking f the sts of , was pelled he for- n{ at was to Ameri- other coun- ‘ubber, 3 made y Will tsch, a xe ave- daugh- ounded st that ughter. . when arding: 1d than such a m and | 8-year- months le.” Se re pre- trict of \bitants xd dogs d week ngs de- Railway lared a ble Feb- Sweden lisccrnt CL United s over- ction in hond of 7 defieit 000, as wer $4, ir. The decrease increase NTANT Crimes, : a mo- t at the , Nolan natically mes, the irticular- ur years stody of taken to THOS. CALE, OF ALASKA, MEMBER OF U. 5, CONGRESS, Well Known on the Pacific Slope, His Washington Address is 1312 9th St. N. W., Washington, D. C. CONGRESSMAN THOS. CALE. Hon. Thos. Cale, who was elected to Congress from is well known on the Pacific slope, where he has resided. His Washi n address is 1812 9th St., N. W.,, Washington, D. C. Washingion, D, OC. Peruna Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen: 1 can cheerfully rec- ommend Peruna as a very efficient remedy for coughs and colds. Thomas Cale. Hon. C. Slemp, Congressman from Vir- ginia, writes: ‘I have used your valuable remedy, Peruna, with beneficial results, and can unhesitatingly recommend Jour remedy as an invigorating tonic and an effective and permanent cure for catarrh.” Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative. mr ee TAIRA CIV By At the Madagascar garages they give you a motor car made of two poles six feet long with a seat and foot rest. You don’t need gasoline. ORL PITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manentiy cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve 4 , trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,081 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa. The Key to the Situation. ~Husband—Darling, I'm too tired to go to that dance tonight. Do you mind going alone? Wife—Why, no. But when I ger home where shall I leave'the latch- key? The very wisest advice: take Garfield Tea whenever a laxative is indicated! Pleasant to the taste, sqigle pure, mild, potent and health-giving. ade of Herbs’ not drugs. How Caterpillars Build. Many clever caterpillars which dwell habitually in company build a common nest for the common benefit. Of these is the famous American tent caterpillar. The tents are really nests of silk spun among leaves and twigs. Ii them the caterpillars dwell when young and to them they resort for shelter in rainy weather even when larger grown. Allied species which pass through the winter in the cat- erpillar state construct winter sleep- ing places which the bookish folk call hibernaculums. These are often conspicuous aniong the branches dur- ing the cold months of the year. If torn open they reveal a surprising thickness of spun silk forming a dense nonconductive wall. At the center of the mass lie from thirty to fifty tightly packed . caterpillars waiting for the return of the warm weather, when they will resume their feeding. Mental Maladies Yield to New Form of Treatment. Paris.-— Some interesting experi ments in ascertaining the effects of colors on various diseases have been taking place at a hospital for mental maladies. Special rooms were fur- nished with blue, red or violet blinds, the walls being painted with the same respective colors. J Extra, 1,450 t 56) 575 The following results were obtain- Prime, 1,300 to 1 540 55) ed: In a blue room a person who rad, 2500 10 15%) 11s $9 an was in a great state of nervous €x- | Common, 700 to 90) 1bs 40) ‘Th citement became completely calm: in Qzen, ensues a 3 & i 8 a red chamber a patient stricken with | Gaps: "iii: rs mld aR melancholia and suicidal tendencies Heifers, 700to 1100,,... ~~ ''»'™ 25) L65 became gay. This is contrary to the | Fresh Cows and Springers...... 15 6Jw effect which the color red produces Hogs. on certain animals, which it drives Primeheavy,.......... $45 455 to savagery. In a violet room a man- faim wedfum eight I 455 457 x ptr 5 Q esl heavy Yorkers ............... 4 55 4 60 iac entirely recovered his calmness Goold Mgnt Forhars. ay of mind. Ign, 4% 13) Roughs.. 47 42 . PANTRY CLEANED gs... St 45 440 7} eep. ome Peo, A Way Som eople Have, Prime wethers, clipped 3 65 =e Good mized...... 77 1" 54) A doctor said:— al zixed ewes and wet 475 : ulls and common. ,.... 25 “Before marriage:my wife observed or Ste bia en 63 in summer and country homes, com- Calves. ing in touch with families of varied 3 2; means, culture, tastes and diserimi- 50) nating tendencies, that the families using Postum seemed to average bet- ter than those using coffee. ‘““When we were married two years ago, Postum was among our first order of groceries. We also put in some coffee and tea for guests, but after both had stood around the pan- try about a year untouched, they were thrown away, and Postum used only. “Up to the age of 28 I had been accustomed to drink coffee as a rou- |} tine habit and suffered constantly | J from indigestion and all its relative yoice, “If you Hr, You're: a dead disorders. Since using Postum all | man! a said. I'm looking for the old complaints have completely | money. left me and I sometimes wonder if I ever had them.” Name given by Pogtum Co., Battle | | Creek, Mich. Read ‘“The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a reg- | t son.” ped many thousands during the early spring. bed, the Pittsburger was awakened by strange signs. the erstwhile speculator, “kindly al I shall deem it a favor to be permit per’'s Weekly. FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW DEALERS ARE CAUTIOUS Outlook In Iren and Stee! Trade Brightens — Stocks Become Ex- hausted. Collections Irregular. R. G. Dun & Company's “Weekly Review of Trade” says: “Seasonable weather and a further increase in the percentage of active machinery combined to improve the trade situation, although there is still a large number of unemployed and dealers proceed cautiously in pre- paring for future business. Prices of commodities have declined on the whole, yet products of the leading in- dustries are fairly well maintained. Mercantile collections are irregular despite the ease in the money market. “More iron and steel plants have resumed and the outlook is brighter, even railway _ equipment attracting more attention. The situation is bet- ter because of the extent to which consumers seek prompt delivery, in- dicating that the recent season of conservatism has nearly exhausted stocks, and suggesting that when con- fidence is fully restored a vast ton- nage of deferred business will be placed. “Textile markets are still somewhat unsettled, cotton goods having to con- tend with erratic variations in the raw material. Consummation of much business seems to be postponed by the question of price. Manufacturers have more confidence in values and are sustained by the pressure for quick shipments. Jobbers’ salesmen on the road have accomplished little, whereas spring business should be about concluded at this time. Many bids are below cost, which prevents sales aud increases the disposition to stop machinery. “Aside from a few bulk orders for men’s wear, the woolen goods market is still conservative and there is no disposition to manufacture beyond the businesg in sight. “Most buyers have left the Boston shoe market without placing custom- ary contracts, manufacturers who have secured even a fair amount of business being the exceptions. Some producers of heavy goods will close shops, having failed to accept the lower prices offered. Jobberg have secured concessions on some lower grades of footwear, but calf shoes and other expensive goods are maintained by the strength of that class of leather.” MARKETS. PITTSRURG. Wheat—-No.2 red.................. $ 9 92 yo—No.2............ 72 73 Corn—No 2 yellow, ear.. ww 78 No. 2 yellow, shelled 69 70 ixed ear 66 67 Oats—No. 2 whi 53 4 No. 3 white..... 59 52 Flour—Winter patent. 49) 500 Fancy straight winters. see 46) 4%; Hay—No. 1 Timothy............... 175) 185 Clover NGi1,..................0 1750 18 90 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton........ 29.00. 3000 rown middlings.. ee 2600 27 00 Bran, bulk.. 655) 2 5) Straw—Wheat.. 95) 100) OB. NN 930 100) Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 2) 30 Ohio creamery............ ta 22 24 Fancy country roll... - 13 20 Cheese—Ohio, new.......... = New York. new...........i..... 16 17 Hens—per 1b Chickens—dressed........ Eggs—Pa. and Ohig, fresh.... Frults and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fandey white per bu.... 7 Cabbage—per ton............ ee N Onions—per barrel BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent $ 55 58) Wheat—No. 2 red. 98 Corn—Mixed......... 7h 73 Eags.....viinveviio. in. oe 3) 32 Butter—Ohio creamery........... s 3) 40 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent......... $ 53D 57 Wheat—No. 2 red os 93 Corn—No. 2 mixed... 71 ©“ Oats—No. 2 white.... 44 £5, Butter—Creamery 31 33 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 33 3 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents.........0. conta i 48) 11 Wheat—No. 2red........... 103 Corn—No, 2............. 0 65 67 Oats—No. 2 white........ .e St. 5 Butter -Creamery ................. 4! 33 Kggs—State and Pennsylvania... 8 4) LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. A Sympathetic Victim. There is a good story going the rounds in Pittsburg of a young man, formerly a stock broker, who drop: in speculation One night, shortly after going tc At his first mo*on to ump up he was greeted by a hoarse “In that case,” rieasantly answered ow me to arise and strike a light ed to assist in the Cows for the Dairy. Some cows of mixed breeds set the dairy marks of the experts at de- flance "and give large yields of good milk. Nevertheless, the good dairy cow should show certain features in size, shape and general make-up. Scrub COWS on scrub farms, fed on scrub ra- tions, cared for by scrub persons, pro- duce milk and butter that is hardly worthy of the name. The best kind of cattle for the dairy are the pure-bred dairy breeds. Very few graded cows equal the fine breeds.—Epitomist. Black Leg in Cattle. When black leg is prevalent in the community, mix pulverized sulphur and salt until we!l colored and place where stock will get it. This is a good preventive. When an animal Is affected, take equ:l parts of sul- phur, charcoal, saltpeter and pow- dered ginger, mix thoroughly and give a tablespoonful twice a day in half'a pint of warm water until cured, drenching the animal from a bottle. This remedy has been known to cure when the animal's legs had become stiff. —Epitomist. Farmers Home Journal. I have had some of my chickens at- tacked this fall with roup. I had some very strong carbolized vaseline made, and rubbed their combs and head thor- oughly with this, following immediately with powdered boric acid all around the eyes, head, and with a little of each in their throats. The result was 80 very satisfactory, I am thoroughly convinced that if taken in the initial stage, fully ninety-five percent can be thoroughly cured of this dreaded dis- ease. I only lost one chicken, a very small one which had gone too far with the disease before discovered. Three applications invariably arrested the dise’s>, and restored ihe eyesigat whi- was very much impaired.—Robert i. Dulaney, in Farmers Home Journal. \ Apple' Pomace, The milkman to whom I sell com- plains that the milk sours easily this time of the year, Nov. 10th. He had the milk all summer and never com- plained of sour milk. I take the best of care with the milk; yet he has “kicked” hard three times within a week, and the last time threatened to quit taking my milk. I have done considerable thinking, and don’t know what can be the matter unless the trouble comes from some apple pom- ace that I have been feeding for about 10 days. The pomace has a rather sour smell and taste; could that he trans- ferred to the milk? The rest of my feed is good hay and grain. I have fed pomace for years and never had trouble before, but always made but- ter. This is the first season I have sold to a milkman. A. D. PI is probable that the sour flavor of the bomace passes over into the milk. It would noturally be much more pro- nounced in milk than in butter. It can be obviated to a large extent, if not entirely overcome, by. taking care that the pomace is fed only immediate- ly after milking.—Country Gentleman. Preservation of Fence Posts. Experimental tests made by the government with a number of inferior woods have shown that it is practica- ble to.subject them to preservative treatment by which they will be ren- dered durable and as lasting as the soundest oak in many cases. This is of the highest importance in connee- tion with the use of fence posts, tel- egraph and telephone poles, cioss ties and constructive timbers of many kinds. It is of special importance to farmers in many parts of the country, with whom the fence post problem is serious. The preservative treatment can be employed more successfully with cer- tain kinds of wood than with others, but it fortunately so happens that the open-grained, quick-growing, quick- decaying timbers, are the easiest of all woods to treat. ‘Among these are old field or loblolly pine of the South, lodgepole and western yellow pine, cottonwood, willow, buckeye, beech, Sycamore, and others in the West and Middle West. Woods which decay most rapidly in their natural state, with few exceptions, are best adapted for preservative treatment.—Indiana Farmer. To Select Clover Seed. When it comes to paying from $10 to $12. a bushel for clover or alfalfa seed, one should be able to judge some- thing of the quality of the stuff he buys. A first rate quality of red clov- er seed should be of fair size, purple and yellow colors predominating and always with a luster. If a sample is small, with many shriveled, brown seeds in it, it should be rejected, with- out hunting for impurities. Many ask how to tell Red clover from Mammoth. It is impossible to distinguish the seed. The buyer must depend upon the hon- esty of tlhe seller. Alfalfa seed has a light, olive green color. It is about the same size as red clover seed. It has various forms, but is quite easily dis- tinguished. The dead and worthless seed are the brown colored ones. Any sample which contains brown seed should be rejected. Shrivelled seed in- dicates that thp crop was not mature GARDEN, FARM and CROPS a4, SUGGESTIONS pas FOR THE UP-TO-DATE AGRICULTURIST (© BS large percentage of very dark seed, it is safe to assume will be an immense help in determining the quality of any seed which may be offered for sale.— Indiana Farmer. Hampshire Sheep. ‘ The Hampshire is becoming very popular and justly so, for I don’t be- lieve there is a breed of sheep in existence today that will bring better or that will turn the food consumed into more dollars than the pure bred Hampshires. I am talking from ex- perience, for I have bred, imported, and sold, pure bred sheep for 35 years, and have tried several of the leading breeds and along with the Hampshires, and have now been breeding and importing Hampshires for 25 years, and find them hardy, prolific, quick growers, well wooled and of large size; and for crossing on other breeds they have no superiors and few that equal them. This has been found out in the past few years by lamb-feeders and by early lamb raisers, until today every Hampshire ram of br eding age has been picked up, and there was not enough to supply the demand. The south and southwest, and southeast is becoming a great country for raising sheep and especially early mutton lambs, and the call for Hampshire rams in those places has been more than doubled in the past year, and it looks good for the Hampshires when Wwe see men that were leading breed- ers and importers of other breeds of sheep, now bringing over large impor- tations of Hampshires and rushing to the front to meet the ranchmen, the lamb feeder the early lamb raiser, the general farmer and everybody who want to improve their flocks by in: troducing a Hampshire ram or a few ewes in their flock. Hampshires are not delicate eaters. But they are geod strong feeders. They will eat almost any kind of rough feed and will do well on ii. What they need is plenty of rough feed of a variety, and outdoor exer- cise. I believe moze sheep are in- jured or diseased by too close hous- ing than by the rains and storms. Hampshire sheep if in fair to good flesh can stand a lot of rain and baa weather, for their wool is so close that they do not get wet to the skin and it rarely goes in the fleece to any considerable distance. A flock of Hampshires in good flesh look very pretty, if they are of the type that they should be. Large well formad, with white wool. Black or very dark face ears and legs, of good strong bone, stand erect, with bright eyes, large soft ears, and are gentle and easily kept in an enclosure. Any- one wanting to raise and keep a flock of sheep on the farm will find that Hampshires will pay a good interest on the money invested.—P. W. Artz in the Indiana Farmer. . Farm Notes. All milk utensils should he clcaned immediately after being used. Cow comfort and good care go a long way toward filling the milk pail. A really good cow will lose flesh rather than gain it when in full flow of milk. Do not expose the cows to a cold rain. There is great danger of per- manecht injury. Stop the churn as soon as the butter eranuiates if you want to work out all the buttermilk. If the heifer calf is to become a good dairy cow she must be fed as though she were a good cow now. With a thoroughly good cow to manufacture it we can always afford to put in feed and take out butter. Dairymen who keep poor scrub cows and keep them half starved steal from themselves twice over. All cows do not like the same kind of focd, neither will they do so well as they would on some other kind. Spots in the butter are the detec- tives that tell on the lazy one who does not work out all the buttermilk. Never scald the milk pails or cans, but rinse well with cold water and scald last. Sunshine and air help to keep them sweet. Cows chew foreign materials like bones, boards, rags, ete, to satisfy a craving for some element lacking in their bodies that is suppcsed to have become exhausted by giving it out in the milk. They are satisfied by feeding them salt, wood ashes and bonemeal in equal quantities, The Roosevelt Coilar? Photographs of 103 members of Congress, most of them newly elect- ed, printed by the New York Tribune. show that fifty-eight are clean-shav en and all save twenty-seven wear turndown collars, The New York Mail concludes from this that the country is drifting away from whisi:- ers and stand-up collars. It may be added that the smooth-face era of a hundred years ago was one also of high collars. Now apparently it is tp be one of low collars.—Springfield Republican. The colonies of Great Britain have when it was harvested; brown seeds search.”—Har- indicate old seed. That is, when eith- er alfalfa or clover seed contains a nearly 100 times more area than the mother country, of France eighteen times and of Germany five times. results when crossed on other breeds, | some of them | Quakers. A doting parent was telling the Mug-House Club on Saturday nigot about the precocity of children. “Par- don me,” he said, “if I mention one of my own youngsters. He was re- quired to write a composition on Qua- kers. This is the way he put it: ‘Quakers never quarrel, never get into a fight, never claw, never jaw back. My pa is a Quaker, but I really don’t know what to call ma.’ ”—New York Press. Only One “Bromo Quinine’ That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. One Way To Break Glass. It is scarcely crediple, but it is a fact. that a glass can be broken by the voice. If you strike a thin wine glass while you hold it by the stem it will emit a certain note—in most cases a pretty deep one. On ap- proaching the glass rapidly to your mouth, and shouting into it the same note is thereby extended, it will be shivered into fragments. This used to be a favorite experiment of La- blache, the renowned singer, who would thus break, one after the other, as many glasses as were handed to him. For 12¢ and this notice the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., in order to gain 250,000 new customers during 1908, will mai! you free their great plant and seed catalog together with pkg. “Quick Quick” Carrot.........$ .10 1 pkg. Karliest Ripe Cabbage........ v 10 1 pkg. Earliest Emerald Cucumber.... .15 1 pkg. La Crosse Market Lettuce..... .15 1 pkg. Early Dinner Onion. ...... serve 00 1 pkg. Strawberry Muskmelon.....,.. .15 1 pkg. Thirteen ay: Radish. ,........ -.10 Goo kernels gloriously beautiful flower seed... .. nu E08 Mata] oe oii iirc iinrn iss 1. Above is sufficient seed to grow 35 bu. of rarest vegetables and thousands of bril- liant flowers and all is mailed to you POSTPAID FOR 12¢, or if you send 16c, we will add a ackage of Berliner Earliest Caulifiower. John A. Balzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. A. C. L. Alabama and South Carolina each has laws prohibiting the carrying of pistols less than twenty-four inches long. That Dry Hacking Cough needs attention. Ask your druggist for Brown’s Bronchial Troches, which will quickly relieve the cough. An Odd Bet. One of the most singular wagers, which might be taken to be the out- come of a growing industrial age, was made and decided in 1811. Sir John Throckmorton at that time bet 1,000 guineas that he could have a coat made in a day, from the first shearing of the sheep to the last stitch of the tailor’s needle. Accord- ing to the agreement, at 5 in the morning Sir John gave two South- down sheep to a Mr. Coxeter. The sheep were shorn, the wool “spun,” the yarn ‘‘spooled, warped, loomed and wove,” the cloth “burred, milled, rowed, dyed, dried, sheared and press- ed.” At 4 oclock in the afternoon it was in the hands of a tailor. At ex- actly 20 minutes past 6 that workman finished his task and the complete coat was presented by Mr. Coxeter to Sir John, who rut it on and appear- ed in it before a crowd of 5,000 ap- plausing spectators. — Metropolitan magazine. The Influence of Environment. “Parker hasn’t been out of a large city in twenty-five years.” ‘““His business must be awfully con- fining. What does he work at?” “He’s a writer of nature and garden books.” ’ The only lot in the older part of New York city which has never had a house on it is a plot 60x90 at the northeast corner of 8th avenue and 56th street. / Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma. tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle An iceberg often lasts 200 years, it is declared by scientists. Tteh cured in 39 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. One sudden death occurs among women to eight among men. More proof that Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound saves woman from surgical operations, Mrs. S. A. Williams, of Gardiner, Maine, writes: ‘1 was a great sufferer from female troubles, and Lydia IZ. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound restored me to health in three months, after my physician declared that an operation was absge- lutely necessary.” * Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Cley= bourne Ave., Chicago, writes : “1 suffered from female troubles, a tumor and much inflammation. Two of the best doctors in Chicago decided that an operation was necessary to save my life. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound entirely cured me without an operation.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female i and has positively cured thousandso: women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear- mg-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to- health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Viclence Doesn’t Pay. It is inevitably the case that vio-* lence adopted as a means to attaim la private end under an organized and just government results in greater losses than it possibly can in gains. It is for that very reason that vio- lence has been suppressed by organ- ized government. It is an injury, a - source of loss, both to those who are its victims and ultimately to those who adopt it.—Chicago Record-Herald. ECZEMA SEEMED INCURABLE. Body was Raw—Discharged from Hospitals as Hopeless—Cuticara + Remedies Curcd Him. 4 “From the age of three months untfi fifteen years old, my son Owen's life was made intolerable by eczema in its worst form. In spite of treatments the diseage gradually spread until nearly every part of his body was quite raw. He used to tear himself dreadfully in his sleep and the agony he went through is quite beyond words. The regimental doctor pronounced the case hopeless. We had him in hos pitals four times and he was pronounced one of the wcrst cases ever admitted, From each he was discharged as incurable, We kept trying remedy after remedy, but had gotten almost past hoping for a cure. Six months ago we purchased a set of Cuticura Remedies. The result was truly, marvelous and to-day he is perfectly cured, Mrs. Lily Hedge, Camblewell Green, Eng. land, Jan. 12, 1907.” A serious problem for the people of Canada to solve is the fuel supply of the future. No coal of any kind has ever been di§covered in Ontario. Eleanor Duse has bought the cele- brated Capponi palace, near Florence, Italy, for 600,000 francs. Miuie <0 rim BORAX All dealers. Sample, Booklet and Parior Lard Game, cents. Pacific Coast Bornx Co., New York. P. N. U. 6, 1908. If aMicted mith weak Thompson's Eye Water THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. 5 EXTRACT OF THE i; PEPPER PLANT : Capsicum-Vaseline. DIRECTLY IN VASELINE NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER | CAYENNE TAKEN a DEALERS, OR blister the most delicate skin. article are wonderful. ache and Sciatica. the best of 4ll your preparations." the same carries our label, as otherwise DON’T WAIT TILL THE PAIN COMES _KEEP A TUBE HANDY A QUICK, SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN.—PRICE 15c. —IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE TIN—AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND BY MAIL ON RECEIPT A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster and will not The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Head- We recommend it as the best and safest external counter- irritant known. also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household and for. children. Once used no family will be without it. Accept no preparation of vaseline unless Send your address and we wlll mail our Vaseline Booklet describing our preparations which will interest you. 17 State St. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. New York City { OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. A trial will prove what Many people say ‘‘itis it is not genuine. f SHOES AT ALL © # PRICES, FOR EVERY EMBER OF THE FAMILY Bes= W. L. D tha Beat 7 Be ; afer valu the world to-day. W.L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Eo CAUTION. OF free to any a. _ MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. as makas and sells more 0, $3.00 and $3.50 shoes “& eos. raat actu Jed inthe == use 0 shape, fit bettor, wear longer, and e than any other - .W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bott 1d by the best shoe d 8 Bole Catal eT everywhere, Shoes m from f * “0 Z I ac Be Equalled At Any Price “elisively. om. Tanke No S hati 2 om yp rid. Pe
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers