SR —— ALAMITY 1 No Time g Vzl's thothand nd [lczgio 5 in South- he entire te—this is ») far as it he reports slowly on mplete de- munication - na ranges of Reggio, t villages, 1cludes al- At Pal- , ‘at Cassa- id half the ut 4,000. TOWN and Guard nk, obbers dy- ton, Okla., xchanging escaped art. 1Iston aft- a barbed bank, and the gang afe others rs the lat- bay while he bank’s he money ring their and heavy GOLD lade Goes ‘Mint. 225,500,000 ncre ‘than t or with- feat just ‘by -the f the San me filled eemed de- tional ac- rn vaults t transfer > treasury ,0C00¢ nt $10,000 uake suf- Morgan's ted to nbassador the Duke tional re- ’ tion. The prompti- - . has con- Dry.” al option were vic- 96 votes. ill be the of forty- der liquor ague has enforcing re closed he bitter- Bomb. 0) was ex- e of An- s saloon- rth End. jured and as slight. n anoym- , ger. vate dis- of Texas trated by 1ilroad is ise 7,00,- 5,000,000. said, has lorado & cer of the unt Boni dy of his , mother, was de- the chil- of their formerly rk. hed. rthur 'S. Messina, 1eir lives vhich de- ed by an the state Lupton, 3sina. FS. 1g of Pa- 1cisco. ent ‘Wall made as- OFS. d by the Company. , stations n Paris. value of rom Mrs, formerly The po- } conunec- S, ertilizing 3 Nelson lestroyed ,000. The he work. LS = . testimonial in any De ato, “everywhere. COUGHS AND COLDS. I Took Pe-ru.na. Peruna Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen: —I can cheerfully recommend Perna as an effective cure for coughs and co You are authorized to use my photo with Mrs. Joseph Hall=Chase. 804 Tenth St., Washington, ‘D.C. Could Not Smell Nor Hear, Mrs. A. L. Wetzel, 1023 Ohio St., Terre Haute, Ind., writes: “When I began to take your medicine 1 gould not smell, nor hear a church bell rin, Now. i can both smell and hear. When 1 b egan your treatment my head was terrible. had buzzing and chirping “noises in my head. “1 followed your advice faithfully and took Peruna as you told me. Now I might say 1 am well. I want to go and visit my mother and see the doctor who said I was not long for this world. I will tell him it was Peruna that cured me.,”’ - Pena. del manufactured 3X The Peruna Drug M , Columbus, Ohio Ask 2 uty ios, a Free Pe- runa Almanac for 190 True to Principle. “I believe in making the little things count,” remarked the kindergarten teacher as she called up the class in’ arithmetic.—Philadelphia Record. Piles Cured tn 6 fo 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is’ guaranteed to cure any caseof Jiching, Blind, Blesdingor Brot ming Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded The inscriptions ‘on an old coin which has been worn smooth may be -- often deciphered by. placing ‘it on a red-hot iron. : - Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays; pain, cures wind Solic, 28 25ca bottle. It isn’t enough to pay as you. go. You ought to save enotigh to pay your ‘way, bag’ ~ Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Banitary Lotion. Never fails, At druggists. - Advance ‘of Forestry. The announcement’ that the largest owners of pulp wood forests in this ‘ country have applied to Chief Pinchot of the federal bureau of forestry for advice and aid indicates the advance which. scientific foreststion has made. It also suggests: the possible work- ing out of the problem of state reg- ulation of privately owned forests. * There has been question of the con- stitutionality of such regulation. But if the value of forestry can be demon- strated so that private owners volun- tarily subject their wooded lands to the supervision of the state bureau the end will be accomplished. The action of a great paper company in seeking Mr. Pinchot’s services may be followed by other forest owners.— Boston Herald. Scholar or Athlete. The athlete or the scholar? Which type of man does the world want. That is the query suggested by Presi- dent Hadley of Yale in an address to the Harvard winners of scholastic honors. “Two generations ago the intellectual idol of the graduates and students at most of our colleges was the leading debater. Now it is no longer the debater but the athlete * who occupies the center of the stage.” The fact thus stated is apparent The scohlar has small ~ place in college life. The one who "thinks of the debater’s platform as a *,. field of endeavor is counted amiably eccentric by the average student. As for earnest work with books in the “== 'guiet of the room. or in the library, that is laughable. - “The “midnight oil” idea has a different - meaning nowadays. —Chicago Tribune. ’ THEN AND NOW Complete Recovery From Coffee His. “ “About nine years ago my daugh- ter, from coffee drinking, was on the _ — verge of nervous prostration,” writes “a Louisville lady. “She was confined for the most part to her home. “When she attempted a trip down Jaws she was often brought home in ‘cab and would, be prostrated for dave afterward. “On the advice of her physician she gave up coffee and tea, drank Postum, and ate Grape-Nuts for breakfast. ‘She liked Postum from the very “beginning and we soon ‘saw improve- ment. To-day she is in perfect health, “the mother of five children, all of whom are fond of Postumni. “She has recovered, is a member of three charity or-anizations and a club, holding an oiitce in each. We glve Postum and Grape-Nuts the credit for her recovery.” ‘“There’s a Reason.” ~ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to Waellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. The most productive insect known which has been known to lay eggs at the rate of 80,000 a day for a month, Although there are over a million specimens of insects in the British museum, scientists say the largest part of the insect world has not yet been discovered or named. A gift of 11,877 volumes of histor- ical, biographical, scientific, classical and other works. from the library of the late Richard Ashurst Bowie, of Philadelphia, has been made to Hare vard Collége by Edward D. Brande= gee, of Brookline. - The gift is to be known as the Weld Memorial in meme ory of Mrs. Brandegee’ s grandfather, William Fletcher Weld, a benefactor of the college. “- ued Tn Science, Professor J. W. Spencer defends an opinion advanced last year, but recently disputed by other geologists, concerning the length of time during which America’s best known cataract has existed. His esti- mate of the intervals is 39,000 years, which is considerably more than that of Professor George F. Wright, who makes it 7000 years, but far less than Professor Grove K. Gilbert's estimate of about 150,000 years. : Baths of oxygen, in which the pa- tient half reclines for ten to twenty= five minutes, are being employed by Dr. Oskar-Franki, a German physi- cian, for female nervous troubles as- sociated with increased pulse tension. From twenty-five to thirty quarts of oxygen are generated each time. The baths reduce the excessive blood pressure, and exert a sedative action, each bath having been followed by quiet. sleep in a severe case of sieep- lessness. . ert) In the Schaap oxy gas welding pro- cess is used a special burner, in which a blast of air at a pressure of one and one-half pounds per square inch is combined with coal gas, and which has a second blast from which air at thirty to fifty pounds per square inch can be turned on when the flame has been regulated. The combination at once raises the heat to.about 45002 F. In this hot flame. metals. are welded without remarkable facility, and pieces of cast iron joined togeth- er prove to be stronger at the joint than on either side of it. *Why 4d gas flame with two blasts of unequal ve- locity should have the observed ef- fects on metals is not yet explained. In place of.coal gas, acetylene, naph= tha and hydrogen have. given equally good results, and natural and pro- ducer gas would probably serve quite as well. ‘How Women Are ‘Educated in Turkestan By ELLSWORTH HUNTINGTON. Dismounting before the‘ uprolled felt door of one of the round tents, I peered into the smoke-blackened in- terior, and found an old white-tur=- baned “khoja” teaching three rosy= cheeked little girls to read. “How is this?” I asked in Turki, surprised at such a reversal of Mo- |" hammedan customs. “Aren’t there any boys in this camp?” “Oh, yes,” answered the. teacher, with a shrug of his shoulders, “but ‘what can we do? We are poor. The boys must be off tending the sheep.” The pretty, black-haired little girls were evidently a rich -man’s daugh- ters, for the broad brims of their caps were made of imported fur, and their shapeless gowns were. of red, green and yellow silk, woven in pre- posterous flowery patterns. I asked one of them to read where I pointed. She did not even glance at the book, but began reciting something as fast as possible. It. was the day’s passage from the Arabic Koran, which neith- er she nor her teacher understood. That was the extent of her education. —Harper’s Magazine. ’ Illustration of Form. James Ten Eyck, great oarsman and great coach, discussing rowing one day in Syracuse, said success de- ‘pended on form. He explained what he meant, by form. Then, by way of k illustration, he added: : “Everything, everything, goes by form. ~Thus, out West in: the old days, it was the essence of form to be informal. My father used to tell about a squire who would marry the young couple that came to him in |. some such form as this: fF “ ‘Bill, do.ye take this gal whose ful wife, in flush times an’ skimp?’ L ‘Mame, do you take this cuss ve've j’ined fists with to be yer yard thru thick an’ thin?’ .* ‘Ye're right fer once, old man.’ * ‘All right, then.’ Kiss in court, an’~I reckon ye're married about as tight as the law can jine ye. I guess four bits’ll do, Bill, if I don’t have to kiss the bride. If I do, it’s six bits extry,”’—Syracusé Herald. Omitted.” & The two old neighbors had met on the street. ‘Mornin’, Sam,” said the first.” “I hear your son, Bill, has got through college successfully.” “Yep,” said the other, “Learn anythin’?”’ “Yep.” “What's he got out of it chiefiy?”’ “He can speak seven languages.” “Fine.” “Oh, I dunno. Trouble is they for got to teach him any idees tc express with 'em.”’-—Pittshurg Post, to science is the termite,-or white ant; hand ye’re a-squeezin’ to be yer law- Etymological. — When one sits lonely on a log And talks, ’tis called a monologue. If there were two folks by a log They’d call their talk a dialogue; et no one’s known, To call a phone, ~~ Cee ‘As it should be, a wirelogue, Nor is a feline spatologue Referred to as a catalogue. ; The sailors when they check a log Ne'er call the thing a deckalogue, Wherefore be it. my ipilogue . To finish up this dippylogue, And say our etymology Is no more certain than a fled? : ~Horace Dodd Gastit, in rie 8 Wesky: Pardonable Crime, “If 1 were to kiss you now, would you have me arrested?’ “What would be the use? Any jury would acquit you?”’—Meggen- dorfer Blaetter. Bad Reputation. Little Ella—I am never going to Holland when IT grow up.” Governess—‘ ‘Why not?” ‘’Cause our geography says it’s. a low lying country.”’—Tit-Bits. Misplaced Sympathy. : Benevolent Old Gent—‘I am sorry, Johnny, to see you have a black eye.” Promising Youth—‘‘You go .home and be sorry for your own little boy— he’sgottwo.”’—Philadelphia Inquirer. Violent Conversation. The American — ‘You say your brother dislocated his arm talking through the telephone?” : The Frenchman—‘ ‘Oui, Monsieur; he make too violent gesture!”—Yon- kers Statesman. More Than Likely. Mrs. Tubs—*Now, I want to skim over the country like a bird!” Mr Shaffer—‘ ‘All right; we strike a rock.”—New York. - Tele- gram. No Danger. Iixcited Woman—‘ ‘Are you going to run away with me?” - Reckless Driver (slightly intoxi- cated) — ‘‘Sorry, mum; but—but I can’t oblige you. I'm mar-married already.”’—Judge. In a Melodrama. “What would happen if thé hero didn’t save the heroine in time?” “I shudder to think of it,” answered the manager. ‘‘That expensive pile- driver would probably be wrecked. 1, -—Washington Herald. A Pity He Won. Hewitt—‘ “Where did you get that sui?’ , Jewitt—*"I won it on the election.’ ~ Hewitt — “I should think Ho keep out of politics after that or ask for a reccunt.”—Philadelphia Bulle- tin. S——— A Practical Jest. “What! No promenade. deck on your old tub?” indignantly exclaimed one of the latest captives—a bluster- ing Britisher. ‘Where do you expect a man to stretch his legs?” “Don’t worry, your ’ighness,* chuckled Captain Kydd. ‘After lun= cheon I'll show you the boardwalk!” ~—Puck, Ha, Ha! “If the human race was evolved from monkeys, it-at least has the sat- isfaction of knowing that its ances- tors were intelligent,” said the thoughtful thinker. k ‘“How’s that?” queried the dense party. “They were educated in the highest branches,” explained the t. t.—Xan- sas City Journal. Fatal Objection. Uncle Ned—“I've bought you a nice little dog, Johnny—the best one you ever saw.” Johnny (looking at the dog some- what dubiously)—“I don’t think I'll like him ”’ Uncle Ned (astonished) - — “Why, what’s the matter?” Johnny—*‘‘There ain’t enough tail to tie a can to.”’—TIllustrated Bits. Cancelling the Obligation. “You have saved my life,” said the old man, whom the tramp had saved from drowning. ‘As your reward, you may have my daughter there.” The life saver glanced at the daughter, then bent again over the old man. “What are you doing?’ asked the perplexed father. ‘‘Going to drop you in again.'’—= Judge, Ba wait tiil- ii AND TRADE REVIEW “REVIEW OF YEAR'S BUSINESS Belief That the Country Se Passed hrough the Worst State of Depression. Bradstreet’s Review of the business year says: Nineteen hundred and eight partook of most of the phen- nomena of an after-panic year with its full quota of early weakness, doubt and unecrtainty, but guiding forces and ultimate results were toward re- cuperation and repair. This at first very slow, later hdstened to a point where conservative optism ruled gen- eral business.. Its early months wit- nessed a.yvery heavy volume of in- solvencies , the aftermath of the financial storm of 1907; saw business sharply reduced in volume, an im- mense amount of transportation facil- ities of the country unused, public buying ability greatly reduced, low levels touched for most securities, a vast number of idle operatives in all lines, a glut of money in the banks, and a feeling of weakness akin to that felt by the human patient after a wasting fever. Later, particularly in the last half of the year, a marked recovery of strength developed, confidence was largely restored, money was easier to borrow, industrial wheels revolved faster, idle cars decreased in number, buying became more confident, larger crops sold at good prices helped to swell collections, employment was more plentiful, wage reductions and ruinous strikes were largely avoided, labor proved more efficient, and al- together the contract between .the early and late months of the year was very striking. All things considered, the country really is and, what is equally impor- tant, really feels in far better shape than a year ago, and this gain in op- timistic sentiment, with the knowl- edge that we have been partially spared one of the worst effects of previous great panics—Ilong continued and acute depression, with the .conse- cuent sacrifice. of business life and c.aughter of capital—is in itself a great gain for trade confidence. There is a sense of deep relief that the com- munity has passed so safely througle a ; great crisis. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 Bre... ccrsovonive «8 85 9) yo—No.2.............. oY Corne=H0 2 yellow, ear...... .s 95 93 No. 2 yollow, shelled. .... 87 83 Mixed ear..... 77 48 ©Oats—No. 2. white 54 53 No. 3 white AR 53 Flour—Winter pate 580 59) Fancy straight winters < Hay—No.1 Timothy.... .... 1303 14 00 Clover No.1 115) R35) Feed—No. 1 white nid. ton 295) 80 00 Brown middlings 260) 270) Bran, bulk.: 240) M435) 8: traw—Wneat 70 ‘80 Ca 73 8 00 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery. . 20 82 Ohio creamer, 24 26 Cheese—Ohio, new.. 14 15 New York, new.. 14 15 Peutisy, £ Etc. Hens—per 1b.. site ward 14 15 Chickens—dressed. eerie y raven 18 20 : Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 2 27 Fruits and Vegetables, Potstess-Panoy white per bu.. 8) Cabbage—per ton............ . es 137 159 Onions—per barrel. ......... Tee es 200 2:95 BALTIMORE. Lm Posen; 5 90 Wheat— 2 11 Cori axed 4 76 esr iisniean ran 13 Butter—Onic creamery. . 28 32 PHILADELPHIA. 380 57 97 38 38 53 54 30 31 26 29 NEW YORK, Flour—Patonts.../...cecaseuvsese i$ 580 59) Wheat—No. 2 red.. = ITH Corn—No, 2.. 9) 9) Oats—No. 2 white... 54 9 Butter--Creamery : ‘ Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 7 33 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg, CATTLE Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds esas sss 650 @ 3 73 Prime, 1300 to 1400 pounds.. .6'5@ 65 Good, 1200-to 1300 pounds .h9r a 615 Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds, S385 @ 8 Fair, 0) to 1100 pounds . .40@525 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. L855) @ 4w Bulls,...co.ih. coi inivn . 25 @ 45) COW ec cress trina sssssaisonsinrnd 160) @55)) Prime, heavy .62)® 625 Prime, medium weigh .615@ 610 Best heavy Yorkers 58)@ 600 Light Yorkers....... LD 608575 PIES ce iiienainse .525@5 4) Roughs .49083> 6) BEARS. , cleaves ir nnenisgincs 400 @t DH 65@! 9 15@ 4 5! 350 @ 40) Luis and common 00@ 30) ring lambs..........., 0) @ eal calves.............. 0) 100 Heavy to thin calves 0) 3° 0 CODFISH A LA COCOTTE. Pick cold boiled cod into bits, tak- ing care to remove all bones; place a piece of butter the, size of an egg over the fire in a clean saucepan; when it bubbles, add 2 tablespconfuls of butter; mix thoroughly, then add 1 pint milk, 2 slices of onlon minced fine and 1 sprig of chopped parsley. Cook, stirring constantly, until of the consistency of thick. cream. Have ready a sufficient number of butter- ed cocottes. (If these useful little individual baking hand, use a buttered ramekin). Fill the cocottes with alternate layers of fish, sauce and cracked crumbs, fin- ishing off with crumbs. Dot with Serve without re-dishing. Garnish with sliced lemon and parsley.—Bos- ten Post. The office hunter, observes the Philadelphia Record, knows no game laws. dishes are mot at! butter and brown in a steady oven. KEY TO INSCRIPTIONS. Stanford University Educator Says His Discovery Will Be Most Valuabie. Prof. George Hempl, a professor at Leland Stanford; Junior, university, is quoted as saying that he has discover- ed a key to ancient inscriptions on tombs and columns that he regards as more important than Etruscag, his solution of the inmscriptions,..on. Ger. man Runijcs. Prof. Hempl declares that his find will have far reaching results on an- cient Latin history ‘and on disputed \ | pid facts of Latin grammar and etymol-. ogy. ‘While only 50 Etruscan in- scriptions, out of a. mass of. 8,000, have thus far been deciphered by Prof. Hemp], the translation of these, he says, indicates .that the history sof ancient Italy, as written at present, must be ‘greatly modified. The theory that the Etruscans and the Latins were different peoples is exploded by these readings, declares Prof -Hempl. As interpreted. by him, the _ lan- guages of these neighboring tribes are alike in all important respects save the writing. The conclusion he reaches is that the two nations sprang from the same primeval race. Dr. Hempl says that the Etruscans, were descendants of the Trojans after the fall of Troy, thus corroborating the story of Virgil’s Aeneid. “There is more Catarrh in this section of the ‘country than all other diseases put to- gether, and until the last few years was sup- posed io be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by con- stantly failing to cure with ocal trea ment, Preounced it incurable. Science has proven tar be a ¢onstitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hali’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured b Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the L by 3d con- stitutional cureonthe market. It is takenin- ‘ternally in doses from 10 drops 108 teaspoon- ful.. It acts directly on.the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hun- dred dollars forany caseit fells to cure. Send for circularsand testimonins, Address F.J. CHENEY % Co. leo, Ohio. ~ Bold by Dru Rite Take Hal 's Fa ir Pills: for ‘constipation. Internal Vaccination. The head and front of the offend ing of ordinary vaccination 18s in the fact that it introduces a living dis- ease germ into the blood and tissues of the patient. It is not a dead germ or a modified poison. Now homeopa- paths have a method of preparing the virus of Any disease by -graduated at- tenuation,. which robs it all of its vital- ly. dangerous: :powers and &onverts them into curative or protective pow- ers. During the last epidemic of smallpox in London hundreds of hemeopaths were “internally vaccin- ated” in this way. In the State of Jowa this form of vaccination is prac- ticed and is accepted as valid by school and State authorities. ==Setur day Review. : Philosophy of. Forgetfulness. “Forget it” is the maxim of the German emperor and the Governor of New York. “For a thousand bitter hours to console oneself -with one that is beautiful,” is the way William puts it. Charles uses similar lauguage, with the game of golf as his text. “What is more , delightful,” he ex- claims, “than the = memory ‘of one long drive and the forgetfulness. of a thousand foozles!’’ Which is proof enough of what Mr. Hughes protested in the campaign, that .he was no enemy of German ideas.—New York Mail. HURT IN A WRECK. Kidneys Badly Injured and Health Seriously Impaired. William White, R. R. man, 201i Constantine St., Three Rivers, Mich., says: "In a railroad collision - my kid- neys must have been hurt, ‘as. 1 bloody urine with paifi for a long time after; was weak and thin and so I could not work. Two years after 1 went to the hospital and remained almost six months, but my case seemed hopeless. : The urine passed involuntarily. Two months ago 1 began taking Doan’s Kidney Pills and the improvement has been wonderful. Four boxes have done me more, good than all the doctoring of seven years. | have gained so much that my friends woader at it.” Sold by all dealers... 50c. a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Caucasian Tunnel to Be Longest. The longest tunnel in the world will be that which is to pierce the Cauca- | sian mountains as part of a new transmontaine railroad between Mach- et and Vladikavkaz. It will be more than 14 miles long, beating the Simp- lon tunnel’s record by nearly two miles. The construction, which will probably be begun next spring, will occupy 10 years and cost about $33,- 000,000. Only* One “Bromo Quinine That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of EK. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25¢c. The area covered:by the National Capitol is 153,112 square feet. » Garfield Tea, tho Herb laxati ve, agree ably stimulates the liver, corrects consti tion and relieves a clogged system. Write for samples. ‘Garfield ‘Tea Co., Brooklyn, N, Y, A Suagested Change. The house" could. not materially weaken the power of the speaker while presiding over ‘its deliberations with- out impairing its efficiency. But pre- siding is the business of the speaker, and legislation is the business of the house. A change in the rules which would give to the members in general the selection of their own legislation would be in harmony with the present tendency to do away with the arbi- trary political power of individuals.— New York Tribune. Scientists say that kissing must go, but in spite of that it doesn’t go with some girls. passed: Kemps Balsam Will stop ‘any choo that can . be. stopped by any medicine and cure coughs - that cannot be cured by any other. medicine. - “it. is. always thé ‘bEst cough cure. You cannot H afford to take chances on any other kind. © > S_ BALSAM cures ‘coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, asthma and consump- tion in first stages. ar dbey ‘mot contain aleo-. i hol, opium, morphine, or : ‘any other narcotic, poison. ous PE:harniu). dru Fiayls Cure and A EEE REA CO..DEPT.B. 4 INE MINN. Sam; {mens Sample “tréatmont Lord’s Prayer on Pin's Head. William L. Stuart, a young man en-* gaged in business in. New York city, has performed the seemingly” impos- sible feat of engraving .the ‘entire Lord’s prayer on the head of an or- dinary pin, to which he has added his name and the year, making ak together 276 letters and figures. Mr. Stuart did the work at pdd times dur- ing his regular employment and with very ordinary. tools, which seemingly are not adapted to such fine engrav- ing. The pin was set in a block of wood, and a ¢ommon engraver’s tool was used. A simple microscope, cost- ing only about 25 cents, and known as a “linen tester,” furnished the neces- sary magnifying. Airship Like Insects. , A Belgian inventor has obtained a patent on a flying machine modeled on the insects. of the -locust species. With a 100-horsepower motor the ma- chine weighs a trifle less than 870 pounds. HANDS RAW AND SCALY. Itched and Burned Terribly—Couild Not Move Thumbs Without Flesh Cracking — Sleep Impossible — Cuticura Soon Cured Eczema. “An itching humor - covered both my hands and got up over my wrists and even up to the elbows. The itching and burning were terrible. My hands got all scaly and when I scratched, the surface would be covered with blisters and then-get raw. The eczema. got so bad that 1 could not move my thumbs without deep cracks ap- pearing. I went to my doctor, but his medicine could only stop the itching. At night I suffered so fearfully that I could not sleep.” 1 could not bear to..touch my hands with water. This went on, for three months and I was fairly worn out. At last I got the Cuticura Remedies and in a month IT was cured. Walter H. Cox, 16 Somerset St., Boston, Mass., Sept. 25, 1908.” Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props. of Cuticura Remedies,” Boston, Mass. Cement is used for. roofing in France, especially near Lyons. CASHEYOUR FU no matter where youare. If you trap or buy fur write to-day for our new plan to make ex- £785" 135: CURRY HIDE & FUN CO,CORRY,PA 0Y'S “HOES - $1.00 T0$3.02 The Keaton I Make and Sell More Mew’ s $3.00 & $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer is because I give the wearer the benefit of the most complete organization of traised experts and skilled ghoemakers in the co untry. The selection of the leathers for each part of the shoe, and every deal] of the making in every department, is the best shoemakers Pe the Ele industry. ow you how c¢ y are made, you would then understand why the heyhold 4 old nei shape, fit better, and wear longer than any e. My Method of Tanning the Soles makes pon More Flexible and Longer Wearing than.aiy others. = | - o S —£ a Shoes for Every Member. of. the Family, Men, Tey %, Women, Misses nnd Children. sale by shoe dealers everywhere. CAUTION | None genuine without W. ope Douglas « name and price stamped en bottom. Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St., Brockion, Mass. REGORY’S Seed Book of tested wa to anyone. Itis full FREE a7 wise and practical instructions. N J... H. GREGORY & SON, MarsLEUEAD, Mass. BILLIARD TABLES PooL TABLES Bar Fixtures Bowlinz Alleys Supplies Low Prices. Easy Payments. You cannot afford to experiment with un- tried goods sold by commission agents. ATALOGUES FREE. THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO. 20 WOOD ST. PITTS2I'RG. PA. : ranted oe Tce nsist HELP Br. MARIEL'S Preparafion WOM EN The sinndard Remedy. send for book, “Reliet tor Women,” FRENCH DRUG CO., 30-W. 32d St., N, Y. City. LN U2. 19 an cer THOMSON sEyeWater Throat a Ings. need just the Protestian 84 against cold at is obtained from . If you have a cough ot cold, slight or serious, begin, tak- ing 's Cure today and continue until you arc well. Cure the cough while it is , when a few 5 Piso’s Cure may be all that you : willneed. Famous for half acen- § I tury. Pleasant to taste. Free from § BE opiates and harmful ingredients. 3 At all druggists’, 25 cts,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers