TEL MARK fect of Cor- ge. ighest price . Louis in 31 il 14, when 1ade at $1.47 nce of these our industry ally, several while others Export busi- ioment here, ally nothing. ly, the hest 7. Recepits an unusual cal of the tary of State 'h George S. g that steps the “manip- - res in wheat had been re- een referred tment of jus- jurisdiction any law cov- ES WAGES > Return the ut. Haven Rail- formally an- of the wage 10 per cent of the heavy eipts. This de it neces- erly dividend oad. is so bright er wages has railroad’s di- very employe of $2,000 or ident Mellen. 1th of March, ors’ meeting, raging. ARING ster—Commo- layed. The United nied the mo- 1e case of the ny, in which ed a decision posing a fine any and oust- of Tennessee the supreme involving the 1 Company to e, which was Court of Ten- ny. “commodities ced by the su- CLOSED eim Interests Mines. e largest cop- 's was closed the Bonanza yf the richest passed to the osed of the 1d J. P. Mor e located in the Alaskan pany. It is d was nearly at at which he recent de- ade. arket. he local wool 'rease in new gn wool con- terest. ' The ions range as )Is—Ohio and X 34@35¢; X @39c; No. 2 nwashed 23@ ing - 30@31c; quarter blood ae washed 39 d, 30@31c. S : Wake. en telephone e-established wn near here, persons were ved fatally, in at place. Two her buildings Beloit, an- ard M. Walls, from a Mis- ain and was Approved. or Campbell d. at the reg- slature, which ty for violat- f the State at naximum pen- The bill was eral Davidson, heavy penalty ts from oper- pe Valley. ire destroyed rin office, ma- use of the thy Machine : house owned damaged six main street. $290,000. The NnoOWI. ies Eighty. celeration of y of the hirth ith, which Dhe- as announced mas BIE Iistill ‘of B e Sal- trip aud Can- 1cer Hermort hite Star line ADVISED OPERATION CuredbyLydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Paw Paw, Mich.—“1I suffered terri- bly from female ills, including inflam. mation and conges- tion, for several years. My dector said there was mo hope for me but an operation. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound, and I can now say I am -a.well woman.” EMMA DRAPER. 2 a en Opcrafion Avoided. Chicago, Ill. — “I. want ‘women to know what that. -woriderfyl medicine, Lydia E. Pinkham’s: Vegetable Com. pound has done for me.: Two of the. est dortors in Chicago:said I would die if I did not have an operation, and I never thought of seeing a well day again. Ihada small tumor and female ‘troubles so that I suffered day and night. A friend recommended Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it made me a well woman.”’—Mrs. ALVENA SPERLING, 11 Langdon St., Chicago, IL Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- poi, made from roots and herbs, as proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregu- larities, periodic pains, backache, bear- ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges. tion, and nervous prostration. Itcosts but a trifle to try it, and the result has been worth millions to many suffering women. Bride’s Pie Joke. Her—Richard! Why on earth are _ you cutting your pie with a knife? Him—Because, darling, now under- stand, I'm not finding any fault, for I know that these liftle oversights will occur—because you forgot to give me a can-opener.—Cleveland Leader. \ "Throat Troubles Weaken the System. A serious illness is often brought on by a neglected sore throat. All throat troubles invariably weak- en the system and should not be al- lowed to go unchecked. A gargle made with twelve drops of Sloan’s Liniment in half a glass of water will break up a sore throat. Sloan’s Liniment is an excellent remedy for tonmsilitis, croup, asthma and bronchitis. Applied freely to the outside of the throat and chest, it draws out the inflammation, reduces the swelling and relieves any sore- ness. Twelve drops of this Liniment in half a glass of water makes a splen- did antiseptic gargle. Mr. Albert W. Price of Fredonia, Kans., writes:—“We have used Sloan’s Liniment in the family for about a year, and find it an excel- lent relief for -colds and hay fever at- tacks. Two drops of the Liniment in a teaspoonful of water will stop cough- ing and sneezing instantly.” Mr. L. T. Hurst of Coatesville, Ind., R. R. No. 1, writes:—“I find your Lin- iment the best remedy. I have ever tried for sore throat, either for horse or man. throat on myself the second day and almost the first night, which had con- tinued for over three weeks, under constant treatment of three physi- cians (I was traveling) and it was get- ting worse.” For Culinary Purposes. Shoe Dealer—Here are a pair of boots that will suit you exactly in your next dash for the pole. How did you like that last pair I sold you? Arctic Explorer (reminiscently)— The best I ever tasted.—Chicago News. : Don’t Cough, But Live Long. If every cough were cured before it got a strong hold, human life wculd be length- ened by many years. If every coughing sufferer knew that Kemp’s Balsam woul stop the cough in a few minutes. he would be glad to escape the serious conse uences. If any medicine will cure a cough, {emp’s Balsam will do it. At druggists’ and déal- ers, 25c. 1 Arguments for Peace. Armaments designed to overwhelm others are ruining ourselves. At the present rate, the money-pinch . will soon make powerfully for internation- al peace, and some means of guar- anteeing it less costly and less futile than armor plate and high: explosives. The moral and Christian arguments for disarming are reenforced today as never before by economic reasons. Taxes may do what texts cannot.— New York Evening Post. -3 -BACKACHE IS KIDNEYACHE. Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will "Never Return. Only one way to cure an aching back. Cure the cause, the kidneys. ‘ Thousands tell of } cures made by Doan’s Kidney Pills. John C. Coleman, a prom- inent merchant of Swainsboro, Ga., says: “For several §/ years my kidneys were affected ‘and my back ached day and night. Iwas languid, lame in the morning. nervous and Doan’s Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief that fol- lowed has been permanent.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. I once cured a case of sore | 2 OCCCIOTCOCOOOTCOOOOOCC $3 ¢ ) erry Side g OT Life | OX OO0000KC > JO00000K Q \4 £4 po 4 vs A HARD LUCK STORY. If TI was a squirrel I’d have nothin’ much o do, Excep’ to scamper roun’ de tree when peo- ple come in view. If T was a catfish or a shiner or a bass, I'd simply have to swim aroun’ an’ let de seasons pass. IX Ty a bird I'd go a-floatin’ thro’ de y A-pickin’ out de climate dat I thought would satisfy. If I was a bulldog or a setter or a spitz, I'd romp aroun’ an’ bark an’ scare de strangers into fits. If I was mos’ any critter dat I ever sees I'd spend a heap o’ time in doin’ mos’ly as le: se, A-livin? in de ‘sunshine or where leafy shadows lurk; But ’ LA T's human folks, doggone! I's got to ge to work! —Judge. SELDOM D DOES. “His last merger was an utter fail- ure.” J 1; ! “How 50?” % “He tried to combine business with pleasure, but it wouldn’t go.”—Kan- sas City Journal. NOT VORACIOUS A BIT. “Is your husband voracious in his appetite, madam?’* ; “I can’t say as he 1s, doctor. He'll eat anything and everything as long as there’s anything to eat.”’—Balti- more American. UNANIMOUS RESIGNATION, Deacon—‘‘Are you willing to go?” Unpopular Citizen (dying)—Oh, yes, I am.” Deacon—‘ “Well, I'm glad you are for that makes it unanimous.’ Judge. YOU CAN'T PLEASE SOME. “He is more disgusted with churches than eyer.” “How now?” ‘“He visited one, expecteing to be snubbed, and| was made welcome in- stead.”’—Houston Chronicle, BOOT ON THE WRONG LEG. The Constable—‘ ‘Yes, your wor- ship, the prisoner is a most suspicious character.’ |. The Accused (indignantly)—‘It’s him that’s suspeecious. Aw'm no suspeecious 0’ onybody!’’—Punch, NO LAUGHING MATTER. “Cheer up, old man,” said the con- soling friend. ‘You know love laughs at locksmiths.” ‘Yes, I know,” replied the dejected lover. ‘‘But her father ain't a lock- smith; he’s a boilermaker.”—Detroit Free Press. WHEN ALEC FAILED. . “Alexander the Great conquered the entire world.” “Yes,” answered Mr. Dustin Stax. “He conquered it; but some of us moderns could have shown him a thing or two about making it pay dividends.”’—Washington Star. HOW HE KNEW, “So your daughter is improving in her piano playing?” “Yes,” answered Mr. Cumrox. “¢You enjoy it?” : “No. But it doesn’t make me as nervous as it used to.”—Washington Star. Sm— THE. AUTOMATIC SOUBRETTE. “I suppose your play starts with a housemaid dusting the furniture and soliloquizing about the family af- fairs?” ? “No; we’ve cut all that out. In- stead, we have a vacuum cleaner with phonographic attachment.” — Pitts- burg Post. A DEFINITION. Lawyer (examining juror)—‘Do you understand the difference be- tween character and reputation?” Juror—‘ ‘Reputation is the name your neighbor gives you; character is the one they take from you.”’— Pick Me-Up. READING THE SIGNS. Wigg—“So you believe in signs, eh? Well, when a man is always making new friends what is that a sign of?” Wagg—“It’s generally a sign that his old friends are onto him.”—Phil- adelphia Record. IN NEW YORK. - “All our tables are engaged two years in advance.” “That’s all right. I have subleased a table, and here are the documents. Now, can I get an option on a steak, with trimmings to match?”—Louis- ville Courier-Journal. or CARING FOR THE CAT. Mrs. X. (away from home)— John, did you leave out anything for the cat before you started?” Mr. X. (who dislikes the beast) — “Yes; I left a can of condensed milk on the table, with the can opener be- side it.”’—Boston Transcript. BOTH DETERIORATING. “Yes,” said Mrs. Nexdore, ‘‘my daughter is very persevering in her piano playing. Do you notice that she’s improving?” “No,” replied Mrs. Peppery, ‘‘and I also notice that my husband’s tem- per isn’t.”’—Philadelphia Press. “« AS IT USUALLY IS. asked little Willie, looking “what a ‘mis-an- Pa,” up from his book, thropist?’ >’ “A minanthropist,” replied his pa, ¢js the sort of fellow who after catch- ing himself cheating at solitaire de- cides that all men are liars and ’ frauds.”’—Philadelphia Press. L board. FINANGE AND TRAUE REVIEW TRADE MOVEMENT SLOW. Broader Demand Noted for Structural Shapes in Iron and Steel—Rail- roads Are Buyers. , “Weather; crop and industrial re- ports are still very irregular, rendering; general characterization difficult. Taken as a whole, there is, however, a slightly larger business doing, this being particularly true of retail trade in sections where weather permits and in bookings for fall and winter deliv- ory at wholesale. . In portions of the- South and in the East generally there, is’ more confident purchasing, higher prices for cotton aiding in the former: instance, while the advance, of the sea- son helps trade-along the Atlantic sea- Business on the Pacific coast has expanded slightly, particularly in California. * In the ‘Central... West’ trade at retail is expanding slowly and a rather “better business is re- parted. with: country merchants, but jobbing activity is not as. pronounced as it was some weeks ago. “Industry is in a rather spotted condition. There is more doing in iron and steel, but largely, it is claim- ed, at the expense of prices. The im- provement nofed in the cotton goods industry is ‘maintained. = Prices of staple goods are firm. There is more doing in silk manufacturing, Women’s wear woolen goods are in good re- quest, and" worsted" goods and yarns are strong, reflecting the continued firmness in raw. wool, which is more active for foreign grades. Present contract prices for domestic wools are higher than at any previous time this season. ‘While reports of immense activity in the leather mar- ket seem rather premature, it is evi- dent manufacturers are buying more freely. Eastern shoe manufacturers have about come to the end of their orders. Shoe shipments are 24 per cent heavier than last year to date, but 11 per cent behind 1907. “Business failures in the United States for the week ending with April 15 were 201, against 227 last week, 261 in the like week of 1908, 167 in 1907, 167 in 1906, and 183 in 1905. The week's failures in Canada number 27, which compares with 38 last week and 25 in the like week of 1908. MARKETS. PITTSBURC. 98 Ryeo—. Corin. 0 oi, ear ; 79 No. 2 yellow, shelled : 73 60 by 5% 58) 14 50 0 1250 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton........ 265) 0 00 Brown middlings. 270) R80) Bran, bulk 700 28 00 Straw—Wheat 00 830 at 800 35) Dairy Products. BuflermBigty Creamery........... $ 32 33 io creamery....... 28 3) Polos Sopniny roll 19 22 Cheese—Ohio, n 14 15 Now York. 14 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b... .....crevneese cnnend $ 16 1614 Chickens—aressed........ceveesiie 17 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh........ 21 23 Frults and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fangy white 2 poz bu.. 100 105 Cabbage—per ton. creas. ee B50) 6) 00 Onions—per barrel... iiiir. So 140 1.50 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.. 7 59 Wheat—No. 2 red. 18 Jorn=Mizad gscsrsees 70 71 BEBB...-.oovt nee 381 .. 33 hn rd creamery. 31° PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent Sa ae ¢ 59) 600 Wheat—No. 2 red..... Corn—No. 2 55 Ny 63 70 Jats—No. 2 white... 53 54 Butter—Creamery . 33 31 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts.......s 22 2 NEW YCRK, Plour—Patents.......ccceqrrsionn sd $ 59 500 Wheat—No. 2red.. . 129 “ Corn—No. 2.. 71 72 Oats—No. 2 white. ok 25 Butter--Creame 33 34 Eggs—State DE TaLnuianio NR 23 LIVE STOCK." Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Extra, 1450 to 1600 poundS.......... 650 @ 5 Go Prime, 1300 to 1400 pounds.......... 6 35@ 6 50 Good, 1200 to 1300 pounds .610@ 63) Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds, LOT @6.0 Fair, 900 to 1100 pounds . .500@ v7 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. .440@ 49 Bulls.............\... oe. . 356 @ 5 50 COWH.,,...crerrecisenrvrsnrrenvoennes 20J) @5504 HOGS Prime, heavy.. .. in 6) Prime, medium weight. 38 @ 700 Best heavy Sores. . 750. @ 7 55 Light Yorkers.. .680@ 700 2650 @ 6650 . 600@ 0 75 50085 50 5:20@ 535 .500@5 2) 45 @475 , R35) @ 35) Spring lambs .500@ 700 Yeal calvos.............: nee. 550 @ 775 Heavy to thin calves.............. . 43) @ 53) In England the patriotic play, “An Englishman's Home,” seems likely to awaken an enthusiasm for the army as Charles Dibdin’s sea songs did foy the navy more than a hundred years ago. It was said of their author that by writing such songs ds “Come, Cheer Up, My Lads,” “Tom Bowling” and “Blow High, Blow Low,” he brought more men into the navy in war time than all the press gangs put together. And in his autobio- graphy he boasted truly that his songs had been “the solace of sailors on long voyages, in storms, in (battle, and have been quoted in mutinies to the restoration of order and disci pline.” ES ——— Mrs. Willian K. Vanderbilt has giv- en $1,000,000 for the building of four model sanitary tenements for the housing of 350 families. It is not a charity, thinks the Boston Post, but a humane investment, It is a popular clinic. [It is a sanitarium where fam- ilies can be assured of cleanliness and fresh air at the most reasonabla prices. © © © bottles of one size only. diet of which they should partake. To Fvery Home .as, with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and , how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they ; “enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and. the wholesome How tenderly their health should be preserved, io: by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of am injuri- _ous or objectionable nature,“and if ‘at any time a remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be uséd; remedies which. are pure | “and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, ~ Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Ce. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has come into general favor in many millions of [§8 * well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon |§ personal knowledge and use. a . . Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has also met with the approval of physicians gen- -erally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, obtained by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially, and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Cal- ifornian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy, and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.— plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial ‘for the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. ooo — A =r + oo @ e ® Every family PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. Write 10r free bookiet—How to Lye, Bleacn and Mix Anti ye any garmeut without ripping apart. One 10e, package colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. Yom MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy. iHfineis BABY'S WATERY ECZEMA. Itched and Scratched Until Blood Ran —850 Spent on Useless Treatments —Disease Seemed Incurable— ‘Cured by Cuticura for $1.50. “When my little boy was two and a half | months old he broke out on both cheeks with eczema. It was the itchy, watery kind and we had to keep his little hands wrapped up all the time, and if he would happen to get them uncovered he would claw his face till the blood streamed down on his clothing. We called in a physician at once, but he gave an ointment which was so severe that my babe would scream when it was put -on.- AVe changed doctors | and medicines until ‘we had spent fifty dol- | lars or more: and baby was getting worse. I was so worn out watching and caring for | him night. and day that I almost felt sure the disease was incurable. But finally | ‘reading of the good results of the Cuticura Remedies, T determined to try them. I can | truthfully say 1 was more than surprised, for I vbought only a dollar and a half’s worth “ef: the; Cuticura Remedies (Cuticura | Soap, «Ointment and. Pills), more god than all my doctors’ medicines I had tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perféctly* clear of the least spot | and they -did | | experimented on FINDS CURE FOR COLDS | Chie Professor Declares He Has Dis- covered Serum Which Will Eradicate. Suffering. Columbus, O.— William:iB. Morey, | professor of bacteriology in: Ohio | State university, announced that he has conquered colds. After yéars ‘of |investigaticn Prof, Morey says he has | discovered the cold bacillus and with lit a serum which, when‘injected into a patient, will render the cold suffer- er forever immune. nt : The bacillus, Prof. Morey says, is a germ that enters the nose. A cold |is: never contracted from a draft or {wet feet, as has been supposed for | centuries, he announces. Prof. Morey his wife, who for | years had been seldom free from a cold. The "serum is put or scar of anything. Mrs.- W. M. Comerer, |tube and cold bacillus propagated and | Burnt Cabins, Pa., Sept. 15, 1908.” Potter Drug & Chem. Corp. ., Sole Props. of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. |then reduced to the serum that spells cure. into a culture | Garfield Tea has brought good health to | “METALLIC HEELS AND COUNTERS Made of Steel For Miners, Quarrymen, Farmers, and All Men who do Rough Werk. Can be attached to your old shoes, and will make them as good as new. You cam new shoes fitted with them. They will acver wear out. Lighter than leather, say to wo attach. Any cobbler can put Write for booklet that tells all hur Tog : Explained. thousands! Unequalled for constipatio: . “What's: this survival of the fitt- liver and kidney diseases. Composod of UNITED SHOE MACHINERY co, est?” Herbs. BOSTON, MASS. Buy from your druggist. “It’s this way. Some wimmen git through the winter in spite of their | Reafism. i open-work clothes.”—Louisville Cour- | The author—Well, how did you like | ier-Journal. {my play? a mt The Critic—Oh, it was very nice. The Author—Didn’t you think the | church scene realistic EERE TER Ze MOTHER GRAYS & Nb SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Oure for Feve He rirbnou ~ Rheumatism Cured in a Day. | Dr. Detchon’s Relief for Rheumatism radi- | ally curesinlto3days. Its action is remark- | The Critic—Intensely 50. "Why. al# A 7 : SIomath Trou SO. Y, £ WN § nach Troubles, able. It remaves at once the cause and ai | erent many of cs actaalivs went. to Re Besiesy disease imiffediately disappears. First dose | Sleer. vhite it wa i a Mother Gray, | Ww Worms. “Fey Break ap Cube 1 1 was ~——lleve’s At a ul greatly benefits. 75c. and $1. At druggists. Se roa Hh Caobimnbu yists, SR alan | c I. | New York City. A S. OLMSTED, ieRoy. NM. ¥ * Detected. Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocal applications as theycannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only ona way to cure deafness, and that is by consti- tutional remedies. Deafness iscansed byan inflamed condition of the mucous lining of | { the Eustachian Tube. When this tubeis in- | flamed youhave a rumbling sound orimper- | | fect hearing; and when it is entirely closed | Deafnessis the result, and unless the inflam- | mation can be taken out and ‘this tube re- | stored to its normal condition, hearing will bedestroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten arecaused byecatarrh, which is nothingbutan inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. e will give One Hundred Doflorasos ny case of Deafness (caused bycatarrh) th not be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. rs se | circulars free. F.J.CHENEY & Co.,Toledo,O. Sold by Druggists, 5c Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. WANTED Young men to learn automobile business By mel and prepare for positions as chauffeurs an repai men. We make you expert in ten weeks Sod you to secure position. Big pay; work de Se or men great; reasonable, ticulars and sample lesson. E mpire wemvsliila, Institute, 41S Daker Bldg., Rochester, M8, * “Mébbe you'd like to put a piece about me in’ yer paper,” quavered the old man, hobbling up to the city edi- tor’s desk. “What “have you done?” demanded the. arbiter’: of: publicity’s ‘destiny. “Nothin! -mueh, but I was a hundred year old yesterday. , “A hundred, eh? But can you Ww alk without’ a stick, and réad fine print without glass os) #N—10.%! “You ‘are :an: Hnrostop!™ ; The oldman broke: down and con- | fessed ‘that he was only 97.—Cleve- land. Leader, - ESTABLISHED 13892. C0 5% EUGENE HEARD & CO. Optometrists, 705 Penn Ave., Pgh. “Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes | Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. | Compounded by Experienced Plissivians, | London Has Stopped Growing. : Conforms to Pure ¥ood and Drug Laws. | While the statistics of New York's | Ti Muritie Doesn’t Smart; Soothes Eye Pain. | growth continue to startle the world | \ND Ganist Lu London has stopped growing. With- WATER) J Cat. in the last seven years, the annual | wy pra 0 Him—How does ‘she manage to birth rate has dropped eight per cent, | Bey keep her looks? the number of children in school has | CLOTHING rot Her—Keep her looks? Why, she declined about two per cent, and the | will give you full value Sa can’t get rid of em or she would, I number of paupers in the city has in- for every dollar s pont suppose.—Cleveland Leader. creased 15 per cent. In the mean- | and keep you ao \ re tine, the assessed valuation has ad-| " Do not force yourself to take offensive | vanced only 17 per cent, while the the wettest weat en (and harmful) drugs—take Garfield Tea, a bt has iner Nature's Herb laxative; it corrects consti- World's Work pation, purifies the blood, brings Health! Raney —_— 16 . Te TET The North German Lloyd steamship | Had SUITS 83902 sed 110 per cent.—The No Fear. profits dropped so much in 1908 as Superi SOLD EVERYWHERE to be only a little more than a quart- | Right v CATALOG FREE oh er those of 1907. a little A.JTower Co. BOSTON, U US ha " n° - ToweR CANADIAN CO. Limited es 4 : Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Banitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. I IN] a are more han 2,000 distinct : ant rations in the worl astembling | mon livin’, be he a watch. sor! There Ope Kk of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers