LE ER :d Gas ank 1 Lou- othet Satur-" LP. J. balloon ied by up in ff Piz- fective 0 keep eir bal- Mohe- in dan- accom- miles, yossible ir any r.- “The port. hat all ze. e were re than Our ve man- the sun ur gas We got I could t. We nd- fell cold air ain con- on was i warmi- balanced steamer the big- mbus in ree and Fletcher Counter oon fluec- the gas » balloon . Colum- ‘eet was SHES "oo Long ers. mmunica- N. M., isolated n creek shed and es in cir- scores of pounded. dies had >» persons of "the bly muti- the water pe wide in s located. isted rall- telephone fe :in the their es- he stayed ng alarms d a tele- as cut off ESTED nt of $18,-. Ago. ce was ar- from New 5, charged f - $18,000 head, Ky. New York who is to » a serious ted imme deficit was the bank, at he was ed to Cuba Rico, and was taken ft Allen of - examining ENTS. resent aver- 9.5 against last year. port an in- house busi ing side In s, who was Jr., on the y when he he assailant man. he columns aph that a is about fo on by Rev. with Father seven years ri estimates at 72,000,000 res, and the ,000 bushels. is estimated ro 20,000,000 The Oklaho- ted at 1,000, )00,000 bales. Off. official order coal miners trict was is- this section. ident Lewis, nd Seeretary- United Mine it Roosevelt the proposed and Utah, au- ssion of eon- is being formed under “hand of J. Pierpont Morgan, the past + “common people” very much. THAT MAN FROM WALL STREE BEATS THREE WEEKS.” “THE YOKE. Regular Price I-20 iy Price By Mail $1.00 &. R. HUSTED, 400 MARMATIAN AVE., NEW YORK CITY Strengthening the Army. Army men are re-enlisting, and new recruits are coming in because of hard times, and because the law increasing army pay became effective last May. The first enlistment means $15 a month for the private, instead of $13 as formerly, and a clothes allowance. For his second. and third enlistment the soldier gets $18 and $21 monthly, with further in- creases up to and including the sev- enth enlistment. The corporals and first sergeants fare yet better, the salary of the latter being increased from $25 to $45 a month. These bet- ter salaries, together with a horizon- tal increase of 20 per cent to men serving in foreign parts, will strength-- en. though they will not strengthen sufficiently, a somewhat demoralized regular army.—New York Times. 2 Prehistorical Corn. The earliest mention of corn in Kan- sas is found in the account of Coron- ado’s expedition in 1541-42. Profes- sor Williston found charred Indian pueblos in Scott county, estimated by him to be at least two and a half cen- turies old. A “TEXAS CLERGYMAN Speaks Out For the Benetit of Suffers ing Thousands. G. M. Gray, Baptist clergy- Whitesboro, Tex., says: “Four years ago 1 suffered misery with jumbago. Every movement was one of pain. Doan's Kid- ney Pills removed the whole difficulty after only a short time. Although I do not like to have my pame used publicly, 1 make an exception in this case, so that other sufferers from kidney trouble may profit by my experience.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. HAS NEW ANAESTHETIC. South German Professor Declares Physiciasn and Patients Will Be Able to Joke. Prof. Bier, the distinguished South German who succeeded the late Prof. von Bergmann at the head of the sur- gical faculty of the Unitversity of Berlin, has devised a new and remark- able anaesthetic treatment for use in operations upon the extremities of the. human body. By the application of this treat- ment, which is described as a venous transfusion, surgegns who must oper- ate upon the legs or arms will no longer need . to administer general anaesthesia for the purpose of render- ing the patient unconscious, but will be enabled” to work in a perfectly bloodless and painless area, while the mind and the rest of the patient's body retain an entirely normal state. Surgeons will be able to talk poli- tics or crack jokes with the patient Rev. man, of ~ who will be totally unaware of any- thing being done to him. Another Trust. Something new in the way of trusts the guiding master of organizing gigan ic combi- nations, according to dispatches from New York. It's nothing less than an automobile trust, with a capitalization of $25,000,000 to start off with, This will Le in the nature of a “good” trust in that it will not .worry the They are only interested in automobiles to the extent of watching them pass by and wishing for a ride in them, and also dodging them on divers oceca- sions. MOTHER AND CHILD Both Fully Nourished on Grape-Nuts. The value of this famous food is shown in many ways, in addition to what might bz expected from its chemical analysis. Grape-Nuts food is made of whole wheat and barley, is thoroughly baked for many hours and contains all the wholesome ingredients in these cereals. It contains also the phosphate of potash grown in the grains, which Nature uses to build up brain and nerve cells. . Young children require proportion- ately more of this element because the brain and nervous system of the child grows so rapidly. A Va. mother found the value of Grape-Nuts in not only building up her own strength but in nourishing her baby at the same time. She writes: _ “After my baby came I did not re- cover health and strength, and: the doctor said I could not nurse thé baby as I did not have nourishment for her, besides 1 was too weak. “He said I might try a change of diet and see what that would do, and recommended Grape-Nuts food. I bought a pkg. and used it regularly. A marked change came over both baby and IL “My baby is now four months old, is in fine condition, I am nursing her and doing all my work and never felt better in my life.” “There's a Rea- son.” Name given by Postum Co., Battie Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. Positive, Quiet Speech. Some things have to be done by main strength, but talking to horses and cows is not one. of them. Speak in a positive yet quiet tone. The stock will know what ¥ mean and will obey better than if you yell and tear around. Don't do it.—Farmers’ Home Journal. To Get Rid of Groundhogs. The groundhog, or woodchuck, can be easily trapped at the mouth of his burrow, or he can be easily killed by using bisulfide of carbon, the liquid being poured on a handful of any ab- sorbent material and pushed down the burrow, closing all openings. They usually have two or more open- ings to the burrows. The vapor that comes from the bisuifide of carbon is heavier than air and will settle to the bottom, killing all that are present. —Mrs. A. C. Palmer, in the Indiana Farmer. Vermin Remedy. The following recipe for carbo- lated kerosene emulsion, it"is said, is not only a vermin killer, but also im- parts an odor to the hen house that is effective in the cure of cases of bad cold and discharges of mucuous sub- stance from the nostrils: Half pound ordinary laundry soap, one gallon water, one quart kerosene oil, four ounces crude carbolic acid; cut the soap in small pieces and drop into the water and boil. When it comes to a boil remove from the fire and add the kerosene. Shake or stir the mixture until nearly cool. Put away in a well covered vessel until wanted, at which time add about twelve to fourteen quarts of hot water and the carboli¢ acid and mix well. Use a spray once a week.—Correspondence Farm Magazine. Buttermilk From Skim Milk. The best and most palatable kind of buttermilk can be made from skim milk in the following way, writes Prof. 0. F. Hunziker, of Purdue Uni- versity, Ind.: Allow the skim milk to sour and curdle, either by adding good starter or by letting it sour naturally, at a temperature of about seventy degreas F. When the curdling has reached the stage where the milk begins to whey off, put it into a churn (any kind of churn will do for this) and add about one-fourth to one-third of its bulk of buttermilk to it. Even smaller amounts of buttermilk will answer the purpose. Now churn the mixture until the curd in the skim milk is completely broken up. The churning should be continued until all the lumps have entirely disappeared and the mixtur? has become homogenous. This is usually accomplished in from ten to fifteen minutes. The contents of the churn are now ready for consumption. This preparation is by far superior to buttermilk made in the crdinary way. It has more body, is smooth and velvety, and has a mild, rich and agreeable buttermilk flavor, which is highly relished by the consumer. Upon standing, the curd does not separate out and whey off as readily as is the case with the ordinary but- iermilk. Fall Pigs For Spring Market. The subject of feeding fall pigs though the winter is an important one. Of course, to begin with, one wants a good, dry, warm place well ventilated for the pigs to lie in, and then see that they are well fed. I fed two last winter. I butchered them the last day of February, and as dressed hogs were $7.25 per hundred- weight, they brought me $24.36, weighing 172 and 176 pounds dressed. The butcher I sold=them to said they would have weighed about 220 pounds on foot, but I think about 200 pounds would have been about right. They were six months and four days old when butchered, and I consider 200 pounds for summer pigs at six months old. pretty good. Of course, there are lots of winters more severe and harder on stock than last winter was, but I believe it was as cold as sixteen degrees below zero. ‘When I begin feeding pigs I like to give them all they will eat of dif- ferent kinds of feed from the time they are taken from the sow. To feed pigs on ¢brn alone they will not thrive as well. I like to have ground cornmeal mixed with wheat bran cooked in a mash, occasionally, for them. Ground wheat would be bet- ter for them, I think, and I also have found ground oats a splendid feed for pigs, as it is a bone and a muscle pro- ducer. I also like to give them bran slops quite often with the feeds most- ly warm, as they will relish it much better, I also like to feed them shelled corn in their trough, as it is a much better way to feed it than to throw ear corn on the ground or even on a. board floor made for that pur- pose, as they will wallow it around in the dirt and waste some of it, and of course what dirt they eat do=zs not help them along any faster. I always aim to feed my pigs and also give them drink three times a day. 1 am feeding four for the spring market, for which I am expecting a good little profit unless the price goes below ths average to what it has been in the spring for the past few years.—Thos. A. Davis, in The Epitomist. Number of Eggs in Year. Prof. Graham, of the Ontario Ag- ricultural College at Guelph, says: “I find it a very difficult matter to get an accurate idea of the number of eggs that the average hem in tLe province of Ontario produces in a year. I am very much inclined to be- lieve that the average ben does not produce eighty eggs in twelve months. I believe the average hen at the av- erage experiment station does not produce 110 eggs per year. One would expect that at the various ex- periment stations and colleges which are scattered over the United States and Canada they would get, probably as good an average production as on the poultry farm. They have many conditions present which are not pres- ent on the average. farm, and they have other conditions that are prob- ably more favorable. Considering all things, we should get somewhere near the average production at the experi- ment station. ; . “I have come to the conclusion that the average production is somewhere about 100 eggs. At the Maine station they had a production of 120. eggs per hen on an average. They have been working on the trap nest sys- tem for a number of years, and as far as I know, their record last year was 134 eggs per hen which means that they had a gain of about fourteen eggs per hen over earlier records. I think that you produce a wonderful improvement by selection in the firsj one or two years, and after that prog- ress becomes slow. You must have a great many conditions favorable to make advancement. From what Prof. Gowell has told me, they had not used any.maaites in their breeding pens that have .not been produced from hens that produce 200 eggs per hen per year.. All the hens, in their breeding pens have béen bréd from hens that laid 160 eggs per year, sO they might be termed strong pro- ducers. No hen is used for breeding purposes uLtil after her egg record has been known for twelve months.” Market Demand For Hogs. Before the annual meeting of the National Association of Expert Swine Judges J. J. Ferguson, of Chicago, gave an illustrated lecture on the market demands for swine. In part he said: “Of necessity packers can have no choice as to breed or color, since there is a place and use for every grade of hog coming to ihe Stock Yards. The market almost any day will show a range from the heavy sow or stag weighing 700 to 800 pounds down to the light shipper pig of forty to fifty pounds weight. The demand for hogs of various weights and the prices paid depend upon the market for lard and pro- visions. When the supply of lard is short the price of lard advances and consequently heavy lard hogs are in demand, with prices correspondingly advanced. If at any time the market for lard is slow and the supply ample the light-weight hog suitable for pro< ducing high-class hams and bacon will bring top prices. “Under average conditions the hog worth the most money in the open market will weigh from 200 to 250 pounds. He should be smooth and, evenly covered, without any excess of fat over the shoulders, along the back or on the hams. Good length and depth of side is desirable since the side mat is cured into bacon, which sells for more money. than any other part of the hog carcass. “Those qualities most desirable in pure-bred hogs for breeding purposes are also in demand by the packer, viz., smooth, even quality, with even fleshing, and an absence of coarse- ness of any part or surplus develop- ment of bone. “The tendency of the time is stead- ily toward lighter and. leaner cuts of meat. Farmers will find it much more profitable to produce the early maturing middle-weight packer hog above mentioned. : “In this connection it is interesting to note the leading experimental sta- tions ‘have clearly demonstrated that the gains made by hogs up to this weight—200 or 250 pounds—are made much more economically than thoss put on after the hogs have passed this weight.” © To Increase the Yield. Here are some suggestions from Hoard's Dairyman to the farmer hinting at the course that he must follow if he is to improve his dairy herd and derive greater profit. The farmer must make up his mind to read more and know more than he has known about the true meaning of hig business. He must breed better, stop buying poor, cheap bulls and the production of poor cows. The fountain head of better quality in the cow is the char- acter of the sire. Create better conditions in the stable. Give the cow better air to breathe, better food to eat, geod wa- ter to drink and cleaner conditions to live in. Weed out the cows vigorously. Don’t be slow about it. Dry them off and sell them to the butcher. Buy the best heifers of the best cows you can find and start the making of a good cow on your farm. Don’t think fifty or sixty dcllars is too much to pay for a first-class cow, provided you are sure she is healthy. The men who come around to buy your geod cows pay these prices, and ten to one if they don’t get them away from you. A cow that will earn in gross fifty dollars a year pays big interest on her cost above the cost of keep. It amounts to thirty-three per cent. if you pay sixty dollars, as- suming she costs thirty dollars to keep her, and it ean be done for that easily if you have a silo and will grew THE IMMORTALS. Ten little painters standing in a line; One went to illustrating, then there were nine. Nine Little Painters, very up to date; One founded a correspondence school, then there were eight. Eight Little Painters, greatest under eaven; One burst his head, then there were seven. Seven Little Painters, up to all the tricks; One lost his model, then there were six. Six Little Painters, biggest men alive; One married money, then there were five. Five Little Painters, for whom the public roar; One became a chalk-talker, then there were four. : Four Litle Painters—Art’s epitome; One invented a patent churn, then there were three. Three Little Painters, apostles of the New; One sucked his brush, then there were two. Two Little Painters, sitting in the sun; One starved to death, then there was one. One Little Painter, a trifle shy of “mon;” He went to work, and then there was none. —B. T., in Puck. Clara—*I dread to think of my thirtieth birthday.” Stella—"Why, did something unpleasant happen then?’—Judge. Passenger (on stranded steamer, as lifeboat approaches) —‘‘Hi! Save me first. /I’m a regular subscriber to your fund.”’—Punch. “They are quite ordinary people, aren't they?’ ‘Yes—keep their en- gagements, eat plain food, pay their bills, and all that sort of thing.”— Life. ’Tis each man to his liking, But, oh! the place for me Is mashed-potato mountain Beside the gravy sea. Brown (watching ship) — “Ah! They've just dropped the anchor.” Mrs. B.—“And serve ’em right. It's been dangling outside all the morn- ing.”’—Punch. Waiter—*‘Did_ you order a beef a la mode, sir?” Grouch (impatient- ly)—“Yes. What's the matter; are you waiting for the stylestochange?”’ — Philadelphia Press. Saphead—*‘Doctor, if I was to lose my mind, would I be aware of it my- self?” Doctor—*You would not no- tice the difference, nor would any of your friends.”’—Judge. Stella——*‘‘I suppose you have had many hairbreadth escapes?” XKnick- er—‘‘Yes; a woman’s coiffure was all ( that kept me from seeing a play, once.”’—Harper’s Bazar. Chicago Man—‘Tell me about El- lis Island, the Museum of Art and the Bowery.” New Yorker—‘‘I've never seen ’em. We have no out-of-town relatives.”’—Harper’s Bazar. Landlady—'‘My other tenants com- plained of the noise last night. You assured me that vou retired early.” New Tenant—“So I do, so I do— early in the morning.’ —Judge. “Doctor, I fear that I have klepto- mania.” ‘Do, eh? Well time will cure that.” ‘‘How much time?” “If the magistrate were to consult me I'd say about sixty days.”’—Philadelphia Ledger. I've drawn a blank in lotteries, I’ve suffered blows from fate; But thank the Lord 1've never been A thrown-out delegate. —Judge. Lady of Uncertain Age—‘ ‘Ah, Ma- jor, we're none of us as young as we were.” Major (absent mindedly, but vaguely aware that a gallant answer is *indicated) — “My dear lady, I'm sure you don’t look it!”’—Punch. “Bigsbuy is right up to the times.” “What has he done now?” ' “Why, he's been looking ahead a little, and in a day or two will finish the con- struction of a patent aerial roost for airship pilots who want to tie up for an hour or two.’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Has Memorized 40,000 Dates. E. C. Laston, who has just issued a challenge to the world for the mem- ory championship, although only a young man of twenty-three years, is a veritable walking encyclopaedia, for he has memorized 40,000 dates of the principal events in the world’s history since the creation. It was quite by accident that he discovered that he had an exceptional gift of memory. He was being trained as an army officer, when an attack of rheumatic fever dispelled his hopes in that di- rection. At the time he happened to meet the Zancigs in India, whe, no- ticing what a remarkable memory Le had for dates, advised him to culti- vate ‘it. He then purchased a copy of Haydn's “Dictionary of Dates,” and sought to commit to memory the dates of the most important events in the world’s history by writing fifty to 100 dates on a piece of paper, and rewriting them three or four times until he had fully grasped them, with the result that he ‘has a repertoire of thousands of dates, and can give the correct answers without the slightest hesitation.—Tit-Bits. : remove the Hat. In reply to the question, “Please tell when and where are, or is, the correct time for a gentleman to lift or remove his hat,”” we reply: With- out consulting authorities of eti- quette; in fact, giving it to you off- hard, so to speak, we should say at the following times and on the fol- lowing occasions, respectively, the hat should be lifted or removed as circumstances indicate: When mop- ping the brow; when taking a bath; when taking up a collection; when having the hair trimmed; when be- ing shampooed; when standing on alfalfa. the head.— Wichita (Kan.) Beacon. Cotton in Barbadoes. The cotton-growing industry of Bar- bardoes, which was started in 1903 with only 16 acres, has now an acre- age of 6,935 acres, with an estimated yield value of about $500,000. A con- ference of Barbadoes cotton-growers was recently heud for promoting the interests of the industry. a $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will bepleased to learn that there ‘is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure’in all its stages, and that isCatarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cire is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cureis taken inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving. the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature mm doing its work.” The proprietors have so much Bi in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F..J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Horse Meat in Demand. Owing to the steady increase in the consumption of horseflesh in Vienna the municipal authorities have erect: ed new slaughter houses for horses. They comprise a fine block of brick buildings, "covering an area of 3,300 square yards. Land and .buildings together have ‘cost over $200,000. THREE CURES OF ECZEMA. Woman Tells of Her Brother's Terri- ble Suffering—Her Grandchild and Another Baby also Oured— Cuticura Proved Invaluable. “My brother had eczema three different summers. Each summer it came out be- tween his shoulders and down his back, and he said his suffering was terrible. When it came on the third summer, he bought a box of Cuticura Qintment and gave it a faithful trial. Soon he began to feel better and he cured himself entirely of eczema with Cuticura. A lady in In: diana heard of how my daughter, Mrs. Miller, had cured her little son of terrible ecgema by the Cuticura Remedies. This lady's little one had the eczema so badly that they thought they would lose it. She used Cuticura Remedies and they cured her child entirely, and the disease never came back. Mrs. Sarah IB. Lusk, Coldwater, Mich., Aug. 15 and Sept. 2, 1907.” School Teachers in Germany. It is not only in American cities that school teachers are somtimes so scarce as to make the school author- ities wonder how all the school rooms are to be supplied. In many of the states of Germany there has been an even greater lack, due mainly to the exceedingly small salaries paid. Sev- en years ago statistics for the entire German empire showed an average of 61 pupils to a class, although educa- tional expects hold that not more than 30 in a class should be permit- ted. Today in Saxony, which has the reputation of having the best schools in Germany, more than half the schools have classes of 80 and over, while almost 10 per cent of them have attendances from 130 to 174. In Prussia in 1901, 1,828 teachers’ posi- tions were left unfilled, while by 1906, the: number had grown to 3,049.—Chi- cago Record. Herald. Electric Heart from Stoves. The ordinary parlor stove is used by Herr Gutzah of Berlin, as a recep- tacle for an electric radiator—con- sisting of a wire or carbon of suitable resistance—and in this way is con- verted into an electric heater more satisfactory than those hitherto tried. Too great local drying of the air is a usua] fault of electrical heating. With the new arrangement the air circula- tion produced by the stove rapidly distributes the heat and at the same time gives ventilation and revents excessive drying. The ordinary cur- rent consumption warms an average room in about an hour. With the large tile stoves so common in Ger- many the heat is retained a long time, and the cost of keeping the room com- | fortable is moderate. Greatest Head for Water Power. The six turbines of a Norway fac- tory are to receive water through a seven-mile tunnel from a lake 3,536 feet above sea level, ihn total head being 3,287 feet, or seventy-two feet greater than the highest hitherto. Study of weather charts is now gen- eral in the elementary schools of Hanover and Schleswig-Holstein with the object of making their value in agriculture better known. The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known | value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com- ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptéble to the system and gentle, yet |° , prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with its ex- cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and | Tlixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup | Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for itsremark- | able success. That is one of many reasons why | Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. | To get its beneficial effects always buy | the genuine—manufactured by the Cali- | fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale | by all leading druggists. per bottle. x Trice fifty cents WIDOW Sunder NEW LAW obtained by JOHN W. MORRIS, PENSIONS Washington, D. Gs PN. U. v7, 108, DROPSY [VD worst cases. Book of testimonials and © Days’ treatment Gree. Dr. H. lH. GREEN'S BONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. Thousands of American women in our-homes are daily sacrificing their lives to duty. In order to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dressed and tidy, women overdo. A female weakness or displacement is often brought on and they suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, knowing well that they ought to have help to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. It is to these faithful women that LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND comes as a boon and a blessing, as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, of Mayville, N. Y., and to Mrs. W. P. Boyd, of Beaver Falls, Pa., who say: «I was not able to do my own work, owing to the female trouble from which I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound helped me wonderfully, and I am so well that I can do as big a day’s work as I ever did. I wish every sick woman would try it. 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 thonsandso women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera~ tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear- “ing-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 ad She has guided thousands te health. Address, Lynn, Mass. IF YOUVE NEVER WORN MADE FOR —— HARD SERVICE eee AND GUARANTEED WATERPROOF 8300 AT ALL GOQD STORES CATALOG FREE AJ TOWER CO. BOSTON. USA. CANADIAN CO. LIMITED. TORONTO. CASS § row Duff's College A post card will bring illustrated cataloguze and “The Proof.” 6th Street and Liberty Avenue, PITTSBURG, PA. WL DOUG 7 5300 SHOE! W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s $3.00 and $3.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, be- cause they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Childres W.L.Douglas $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes canmeft be equalled at any price. W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes are the best in the world Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. uF Take ©o Substitute. W. L. Dougiaa name and price is stamped on bottom. “Sora everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Catalouue free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockian, Mass. EEA EAE rs Arosa drosaenras Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from wu=- healthy germ-life and disagreeable odor, which water, soap and tooth preparatioss alone cannot do. germicidal, disin- fecting and deodor- izing toiletrequisite of exceptional ex- celience and econ- omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and Hii uterine catarrh. At {i drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or Hi by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH ‘HEALTH AND BEAUTY’ BOOK SENT FREX THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers