Near Manantoddy, Intl., a man, while fitting In his compound with a trlpcd blanket wrapped round bit body, wa mistaken for a tiger by janother man, an Inmate of his own ooubs, and ahot dead on the ttpot. One discovery made by an exploring party In Abyssinia recently Is that the river Gelo nklrti tho aoutlicmmnst ex tremity of l.nko Tain Instead of flow ing Into the lake, as was hitherto believed. A Subway Supgeetcd. A Kanens mnn Is going to sell his drug store bemuso he cannot be a druggist anil a Christ inn. He might compromise by having his aorta foun tain endorsed by lliuhop Potter. Washington Tort. A peacemaker In Pennsylvania has Juxt hnd 21 bullets picked from his anatomy. Peacemaking always was a thankless Job except when one of the combatants Is scared and tho other Is glnd ol It. liirmlnghani Age Herald. FITS permanently cured. No (If. or nervous. jips after llrst day's iih- of llr. Kline's (ireat KervneionT.titr1nllinttlenail treatise fren Dr. B. II. Kj.iNr.I.t 1., '.-.'II Areh t t .. Valla., 1'a. Pittsnuru has n'ready expended ?'-o,00J,-000 in the ekysi-ruprr boom. Dso'sCiiro for Consumption Is -in Infallible medieltie for coiiflm mid coll. N. W, bavorl, Oee-in ir.i-, N. J., !'. 17.130). Teleornpli prT.e along a raihvuy are ar ranged thirty to the nine. Russian Tax On Oil. Notwithstanding the largo produc tion of petroleum In Russia the use of illuminating oil in the country Is small. It has been limited by a tax on refined oil. Recently the Baku refiners have petitioned the Government to abolish this tax on refined oil for home con sumption, and to substitute for It a tax on all crude oil produced. A Thoughtful Girl. The social philosophers who com plain that women are heartless must make an except icn In favor of the Peoria girl who moved her piano a mile and a half In tho woods to do her practicing. Philadelphia Inquirer. There are lots of people to whom the chief Joy of a country vacation consists In nn opportunity to eat corn off tho cob, watermelon and huckleberry pie without having to keep up their dignity during tho pro cess. Washington Times. A QUICK RECOVERY. A ITiMiilnrlit otllerr of ttif lieherras Writes toTliiuik linan'e Klilm-jr I'llle For It. ' Sirs. C. T;. linmijtirdiier. a local officer of tlio lteieee:M, of Topekn, Kmii.., Kdoiii 10, 812 Ktitisiif u ve nue, wrlles: "I used Doiiii'h KUtnc) Tills during the mst yciii', for kidney trouble uml kindred ailments. 1 WflH suffering loin i t... i.. .i... i i 1 I'ltiMB iii me imi i uiiti lieud.'ielies, but found after the use ' one box of the remedy tbnt the troubles gradually dlKiiioeiuvd, 80 that before I liud finished a epcoud package I was well. 1, therefore, heartily endorse your reni'.-dy." , (Signed! MRS. E. tiCMCARDNER. A rilKK Ti;iAI-Aldrens Foster Mllbtirn Co., Uiiffalo, N. Y. For sale by all deulers. Price, SO ee-ts. Nothing Wasted. Nothing about a sawmill goes to waste these days. Ten years ago the sawmill owners would pile tbelr saw dust until they had a largo heap, and then they would burn It, getting no return whatever. The moat of .thorn now have Dutch ovens for drying tho dust, and they burn It in their fur naces, making the refuse pay for tho operation. Still others have establish ed paper mills, and use their sawdust for making paper. In the olden days great logs were taken and squared and the slabs wero thrown away. Now a very thin slice is taken oft. Then a board Is sawed and edged, and In that way hardly a perceptible fraction la lost with the bark, aud even the bark has Its uses. WTilfN 'For owning yum T iiiffmrad with ehranln too filiation and during till. Hint, 1 had to uki aa Injection ot warm watur nam evnrr If buur. bafore ?" 'i ''n etuiii on air bow.L. Happllr I trl.d Ca.tanitt, nml tn.Ur I atn wull nin. Uorine ike nlna yi an bfom I ni.d Curumi I aufferaU unt.ht ml. rr w till tiitnrual pll.t. Tharika to rnn 1 uin frw from nil th.i tin. tnnrnina. Von Can una lull lu bouaK ul Kuir-rlnit humanity." it. jr. iiaiiar, lUiaueae. 111. P1Btnn. Palatable, Potent. Tuta Ortod. lo OoM, Wvir ttickon, Wni.ken or (irtpf. Wc. ittfr, Wr. Ntner old hi bulk, 'lite an nn i no uolii Mtnraptd Ct'C. UuarauUieU to cure or four tuouur Lac it. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 603 AMSUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES DUCfnMC I'll quo At fijf, - lvl Wart or on filar. rcnalUllO 11H v.ony wnr.uiHi f r w!l.w. Uu record or incut lnnl itoMUTa' Nervier, ))) of Ohio irt'n, i yearn Mrncri.'. Uwm iiii1 nflvU VXKY.Y. A.W-M '-Coiimu-k & Koxf, &IM WlnutSrCJncluu.4ti.O T t AVK YOI! ANY THon,I,K IV .1 X M'ttliif( h iin I.auniry liluf? Aiuuriiiftt win uut utrvuK or .ot llio rloltutH-ir , unt out tht(i'l, fill to It u llp f imuer kWIiik ytuir ittlrt'Mi, eiHti with 4 (Uim'b uit get hy mill, h bx cuiiialiiintr lihnvt ad wiMMtf it nx to keep the Hi no In. Knmn iiuitndir yuii reiiulitrlv imv fnv. Hftve infiny ml uet lite olil reliable J weed Hlue. M, H. TWEED. 1126 Penn At. Plttiburg, Pa 011 ultmt III jlfffiPfa Beat For ft The Dowels Icanov cTiwmc l I Bt (Mum Brun. Tuta Uuuif. llM I I . J 1 In Quia. Sold by drmfl.it. t I To Keep Tool Bright. When yoti get through with tools on the farm, before putting away, give a good coat of mica or any other good axlo grease, and when they are analn needed they will be entirely free from rust and ready for business, says Charles L. Haker In Tho Epltomlst. Selecting Seed Corn. In selecting seed corn In the field tho vigor a'.d growth of the stalks should be observed, as well as tho, ears. If a stalk produces two or three good ears, mark it. Hy using seed from the most prolific stalks the ten dency will be to produce more cars every year, until as many as four and fivo enrs per stalk will bo tho result. Cure for San Jose Scale. There Is a cure for tho scale which ProfeRfor Troop highly recommends, and It has been us;'d to great advan tage by orchard owners. It Is a mix ture of a whale oil sonp and soap solu tion, with which tho trees should bo lowed to go undisturbed for a sprayed regularly until the rca7c has disappeared, b'hould the pest bo al short tlmo the insect will spread to surrounding orchards and cause great damage. In rr.ost places where the scale has had fu:l eway the entire or chards are burner! and tho field used for something elt-c In tho future. Getting Stand of Clover. Many failures to secure a catch of clover are wholly due to the attempt being made on soil that contains too much acid, sour soil, as we call it. The remedy Is, of coutne, lime, and this may be applied after testing the soil with litmus paper, as advised In this department many times. That there ought to be more clover grown on farms than there Is no one will deny, and If this Is admitted why not get the soil In the necessary condition to make the crop. It is true that the soil acidity may not be tho only rea son for falling to mako a catch of clover, but It can do no harm to lime the soil if It needs It and then look for the other realms why clover will not grow on it. Indianapolis News. Cleaning Milk Cans. An Interesting test of the. effect of cleaning milk cans and making them germ free by the use of steam before milk is poured Into them has been made in Germany. Some timo during hot summer weather two milk cans wero selected; one was thoroughly well cleaned in tho ordinary way by scrubbing with hot water, tho other was subjected to tho action of steam for half an hour. In tho first the milk went sour In 3 hours. In the second in IS 1-2 hours, and tho contents of tho first can were found to contain 26 times as many bacteria as the oth er. The same experiment, repeated in tho winter, showed that the steri lized milk can will keep the milk sweet for nine hours longer than tho other. Massachusetts Ploughman.' Sorghum Refute. Sorghum cano after running It through the mill has generally been thrown away as useless, or used to mend tho roads or stop washes. Sev eral years ago some experimental farmer concluded to try It for silago, so it was run through tho cuttor and packed in a eilo. Tho result was a success. Tho crushed stalk mixed with the leaves and tops proved to bo whole plant. Sinco then many others have tried it. The refuse from the beet sugar factories has been put up In this way for a long while, and it ia this cattle food whlrh Is most excel lent for milch cows, that has made beet sugar such a formidable rival to cane sugur. This discovery has caused quite a revival of the sorghum molasses Industry. Tho attempts to mako sugar from sorghum, while suc cessful, have not paid in the past. It Is probable that this new uso to which the Immense amount of waste stalks can be put may revive that. A Succession of Vegetables. The garden should hold a very Im portant place on every well regulated farm. Not only are good fresh fruit and vegetables desirable from a health standpoint, but they aro more eco nomical than meat and canned goods. City people pay out largo sums ot money for fruit and garden truck and then cannot secure it so nice and fresh as the farmer can have It If he will. At the Epitomist experiment station we huve planted at. Intervals lettuce, raillBhes, onions, peas, beans, corn, cucumbers, cabbage, etc., and wd are now using fresh peas, lettuce and rad ishcK just as nice ns those grown ear lier In the season. Late plantings of ull these are now coming on, that aro looking flue, assuring a liberal supply of vegetables until frost or later. It is not yet too late for planting peas, radishes, lettuce, turnips, aud lu euue you have good strong plants, cubbugo may be transplanted. Try a crop of fall vpgtublcs once and you will like ly follow it up in tho future. Horti cultural Editor in Thu Epitonilst. 6tay In Thi Country. Several letters have been rocoived from readers of this department ask ing about possibilities lu Cuba, Mexico and other countries, mainly those in the tropics, says the ludlauapolia News. It happens that .the writer knows considerably of Mexico, Cuba and Pont. Hieo, heuco can advise on tbene countries, and what Is said here holds good with any other country, at kast eo far as farmers are concerned, aa a body. While there are undo ibtei opportunities' In the countries named, there are Just as good opportunities In om'on' country, and Ihe American farmer should consider the matter well before he leavea hl own country or even his omti section ot the coun try. If the northern farmer wishes to get Into a more congenial el I me he wilt And ns many and better opportunities in the southern United States as In any tropical country. Bo with tho southern farmer and tho eastern farmer who wishes a change. Going trt the tropics one has to unlearn many things in agriculture which were learn ed at home. It Is more profitable to make better uso of tf.io farm one has than to go to an unknown section and among people who would have but lit tle in common with you. Fighting Roadside Weeds. In some states there aro county laws which mako It obligatory for thoso In ehnrgo of the roads to see that roadside weeds are cut twice dur ing the growing season, first before July and the second tlmo before the first of September, says tho Indian apolis News. It would be well It such a law was In force In all sections, and. yet tho fighting of obnoxious weeds seems to be ono of those things for which no law should bo required. Farmers ought to be more than will ing to combine among themselves for mutual protection, even going so far as to cut the weeds In front of tho farm of any man who will not do the work himself. This would not need to bo done very often, for shame would soon compel such a man to do his duty. Tho main trouble with weeds, how ever, la with such as are allowed to grow InBldo the fence line, for few farmers are willing to spend the time necessary to rid their farms of these. Combine with each other to rid the roadside of weeds, and then let every man take care of those Inside the fence and elsewhere on his farm. It this weed fighting was done system atically Instead of spasmodically, It would not require many years to de cidedly lessen the weed crop and ma terially increase the valuable crops as well as save much labor. Saving the Wild Flower. The arbutus plant Is a slow grower, very dlllicult, practically impossible to cultivate. It is tho most national of wild flowers, picking its habitat with dainty fastidiousness and refusing to grow elsewhere. Its slow growing runners are pulled up bodily, and the flowers afterward pulled off and shipped In vast qunntltlcs. Once abun dant all around New York, arbutus now Bold here comes from New Eng land and New Jersey, especially from Iakewood, where It will be very soon extinct. Any flower which has ever been shrined in verse and legend is doomed. It has been advertised, and therefore must die. So many poems havo been written about the arbutus, It Is so interwoven wltn tho stories of the earliest colonists, that it has been done to death In the house cf Its friends. In tho near future the may flower, which welcomed the Pilgrims, will llvo only in song and story, Con necticut hns taken stern measures ,for Its preservation. It has a law provid ing a $20 flno for any ono who takes an arbutus plant from tho land of an other person without permission. Connecticut also protects three rare and famous ferns, the Hartford, the walking fern and the maidenhair, by a fine of flOO or imprisonment for six months. Massachusetts has long tried to get tho same legislation, but has succeeded only recently. The New York society has not yet attempted any legislation, but it is probable that it must como to that, if the arbutus is to be saved from extermination In this state. Protection of flowers ia no new thing across tho water. In England they aro "preserved" like game and fish, and rigorous penalties are meted out to thoso who steal wild plants from private grounds. Switzerland, alarmed at tho danger threatened to a source of Its tourist income, has pro tected tho eldelwelss, rhododendron aud some other Alpine fowers by stringent laws. In France one must pay to enter certain preserves where tho scarlet enemoncs grow, and may then gather only a specified quantity to carry away. New York Tribune. Goldfish Farm, A goldfish farm has been established at Waldron, Ind.f Mr. Slioup could not make ordinary arming pay, eo he went in for -pel stock and stocked a pond with goldish as a pastime. He soon found theAwero multiplying sc. quickly as to cnVd each other out of their preserves. IHo put some of hie better specimens on the market and soon received a prompt request for more, until he decided that It would bo worth while to devoto additional farming space to his fish. So from a mere pastime sprang the largest gold flH.li industry in the world. At a rough calculation he has 150,000 fish. diameter as one's thumb, and a good crop ot blossoms in addition. Tho new growth of Avood is nearly or quito a foot in leng'Jh, aud each twig is tipped with a bunch of flowers The-blossoms aro not so largo as the earlier ones and seem to be dropping off, Instead of Betting fruit. More than (750,000 worth of artifi cial milk, was reported 1 last year from Germany and Franc to the United States, A Curious iPear Tree, In the garden oiM'harles P. Still, In East Manchester, a H., there is a curiosity In tho sllipe of a pear tree that has a crop or pears as largo in r9fiOt FARM TOPICS. ) PAVING FOH THElll KEEP. Because shep will destroy more than fs)0 varieties of weeds Is no rea son that they need nothing else to eat; Angora goats, It Is said, will destroy over ViO varieties of plants n nil weeds, but they require more nutritious food to mako good mohair; and so sheep need better food than Wfeds to turn off good marketable fleeces. Sheep and gnats are both good scavengers to clean up the fnrm, and they limy both got some nutrition out of weeds titid shrubs, but the flock-keeper w ho docs not provldo good nutritious pasture nml regular constant food. Is called iltiru on the broken-growth of the fiber when the fleeces go to market. Htarvlng one time ind heavy feeding at another nisy bo a good way, ns one once rln lined to get "strenks of Iciin and fat" In pork, but It won't innke gooil regular growth liber in woal as many sheep owners have found when neglecting their sheep. No class of domestic animal pny better for their keep than good sheep, when we con sider both the mutton aud fleece. In diana Farmer. FEEDING SMALL CHICKENS. Chicks do not reo.iilre food for the first twenty-four to thirty-six liour.i after hatching. One of the best foods that can be fed the first few days is stale bread slightly moistened with milk. This should be crumbled fine and placed where the chicks hnve free access to it, so they cannot step on it. It placed on the floor or on a board, the larger part of the food will be trampled upon, and soon becomes unlit to eat. A simple a,nd efllclcnt feeding trough THOUGH FOR THE YOUKUHTER4. may be made by tacking a piece of tin or galvanized iron about three ami onc-hnlf inches wide, and of any length desired along the edge of n Imlf-incb-board, so that the tin projects about one and one-half Inches on each side. lSoud this up so as to form a shallow trough, and fasten the board to blocks which raist It an Inch a'jovt the floor, as shown in the accompany ing figure. This trough may bt front one to three feet long. It Is within easy reach of the chickens, and so nar row that they cannot stand upon the edges. Tin food placed in such troughs will be kept clean until con 8 umcd. Granulated oats with tho hulls re moved ninko uu excellent food for young- chicks. There Is perhaps no better grain food for thcui thnu oats prepared in this manner. It inny be fed to good advantage after tho second and third day lu connection with the bread. The chicks should liavi free access to some kind of grit after the first day. Walter Kinney, lu Farm and, Home. , FAKM NOTES. Good feeding is the forerunner of prosperity. Liver is a good food for milk produc tion, because It is rich In fats. Failure is the usual result ot think ing a business cuu run itself. The farmer's team should bo one well adapted to bis requirements. Even in summer sufficient bedding should bo provhled to keep tho stock clean. Tho dwarfing of a tree occurs by tho slight disagreement between the scion aud tho stock. Desirable Qualities are fixed In a herd by a loug lino of careful selec tions and breeding. Thrift lu sheep is generally secured, when the farmer thinks enough of them to care for them. Moss-covered trees will be much benefited by scraping nml then white washing with limo aud wood ushes. Judgment is the outgrowth of experi ence, yet a man may have a wide ex perience aud yet luck lu judgment, The profltablo mutton breeds of sheep are thoso of early maturity, rapid growth aud necessarily short lived. It is very Important that a brood sow should bo gentle, so that she may be handled ut furrowing time if ne cessary. It Is not through Increased age that Increased cost of growth results, but the greater cost is tho outgrowth of Increased sisso. Ouo ot tho strongest Inducements a farmer can have to grow and to fatten stock is to use thu stock us u medium to improve his land. Fancy prices aro only obtained for fancy horses. If you expect to get the top of the market you must havo the best kind ot horses. No ono business lias any assurance of always proving a prolltublo one, be causo changes so frequently occur to disturb ull branches of farming. Sweet skim milk bus over four pounds of sugur to each 100 pounds of milk. Bouriug the milk chunges the sugar into lactic acid and decreases the feeding value by so much. While sour milk will sustuln life, and If given enough of it young animals will grow, they will do much better ou warm, sweet skim milk, ( WAS IT Or OR ASSAULT? What HaManedWhen temeWhlskera Want Up In Smoke. He was not a large man, but be had the most elaborate and ambitious set nf whiskers that had been seen on Broadway In many a day. . They were thick and curly, and afforded a com plete ambush behind which the proud proprietor remained In hiding, and thus absolutely concealed his real ap pearance and his hopes. . Tho wind was blowing almost a gale, and tho man In front of him slop ped to light a cigar. He drew from his pocket a small box containing matches of tho sort that defy wind, rain hail and lightning once they are Ignited. Nothing can extinguish them after they start to burn until tho Are consumes all of Iho chemicals on the end of tho tiny slick. And these ehemlcnls are so liberally applied by the manufacturers that each match fesembles a tiny gong-beater, Tho man lighted his cigar and then threw the fuse away. As he threw It tho other man he of the luxuriant whiskers, passed. Tho flaming torch, resembling a young comet and prepar ed to deal destruction as It traveled, landed In the wilderness of hnlr bo nlnd which the other mnn was con cealed. The whiskers caught fire and be gan burning fiercely. Fanned by the strong wind, the conflagration spread rapidly In spite of the fact that the owner of tho heard was pawlr.g at his face with both hands, and ns yelling as only a man can yell whoso property is on Ore when he knows that tie Is carrying no Insurance. I The burning man danced and howl ed while the cause of the trouble looked on In amazement. The air was filled with the odor of singed hnlr, and a crowd collected under the be lief that there was a mattress factory In tho vicinity. A policeman run up and elbowed bis way through the crowd. In the meantime the fire had been extinguished. But the beautiful whisk ers had become history, and only smoking ruins marked their former site. Tho disfigured man, certain t'.at he was out of danger of death, attacked the man who had thrown the match. The other prepared to defend him self, tho policeman Interfered, and both men were dragged to tho police station. There the matter was explained to tho sergeant. "I demand that you lock that man up," snld the man whose whiskers had been burned. "On what charge?" asked tho ser geant. "He has apparently set your face spinach on fire. Do you want to nccuso him of assault o'r arson?" "I refuse to bo arrested," said the other mnn. "Whiskers are not prop erty. This guy will look better with out hair on his face. His whiskers wero foolish, onywny. IIo ought to give mo a reward for burning 'em." "No property?" yelled tho other. Why aren't they property? Didn't I grow 'em? Why, I havo spent 18 years raisiag that beard and now thid mnn sets mo on fire and I look like a singed cat. I will sua him for dam ages." "See hero" said tho sergeant "you better compromise this affair. If you sue for damages you will havo to ap pear In court with tho ruins of your wlnd-teasors marked 'Exhibit A.' Bet ter get a smooth shave and let your wife see what you really look like." "But who will pay for tho shave?" asked tho man as ho rubbed his fing ers over his faco. "I will" said the firebug. "I guess I am responsible to that extent. Any way I will hire a barber to run a lawn mower over your faco In order to satisfy my curlouslly as to the per sonal appearance of a man who wants to hide himself from the view of his neighbors." As they departod in search of a barber shop tho sergeant remarked to himself: "I don't think the man was guilty of elthor assault or arson. I think tho proper charge was mayhem." Collier's Weekly. The Making of Friends. In tho cultivation of friendships ex ercise tho twin virtues of courtesy and common . sense. The sentiment of amity when rooted in any other soil does not flourish vigorously. Short lived Intimacies and romantic affini ties aro dissipations to bo avoided. The ono aud only way to win and to keep them Is to learn how to be both uniformly agreeable and sweetly rea sonable. Don't exact of others more than yon aro willing to give and to do yoursolf. Friendships, please remember, are In vcktments in which you aro simply obliged to put something of tho best of yourself In order to earn and enjoy tho profltablo and pleasing dividends of delightful ami sympathetic com punlonshlp, says Adelaide Gordono In tho Chicago Inter-Ocean. There are men and women by tho scoro who" ex pect friends to be given 'them Just In proportion as the ruin falls on tho Just and unjust. It Is needless to say thut (heir expectations remain wholly un fulfilled. Mako yourself agreeable and men and women will como to you at; readily as bees gather about tho honey pot, and when you find yourself un Bouuht &nd undesircd as an associate and an Intimate rest very well us sured that the cause of your Isolation Is not fur to seek. It lies always right within yourself. Th9 chances of preventing the ul timate collapso of the Doge's palace In Venice have bocn greatly Increased by removing from it the library of 350,000 volumes. 4 r Tyf'- A prominent club forth, of St. Joseph, my ( I i was cured of falling of the womb and its accompanying pains and misery by Lydia E. Ptnkharrs Vegetable Compound "Deati Mrh. riNKHAJt: life looks dark Indeed when a woman feels that her strength ia fading away and she hns no hopes of ever being restored. 8uen was my feeling a few months ago when I was advised that my poor health was caused by prolapsus or falling of tho womb. Tho words sounded like a knell to me, I felt that my Klin had set; but Lvilla E. PlnUlmm's Vegetable. Compound came to me as an elixir of life it restored tho lost forces and built mo up until my good health returned to mc. For four months I took the medicine daily and each doso added health and strength. I am so thankful for tho help I obtained through its use." Wns. Florence Danforth, 1007 Miles Ave., St. Joseph, Mich. A medicine that has restored so many women to health and. can produce proof of tlio fnet must he regarded with respect. This. Is the record of Lydia E. rinklinni's Veifetnble Compound, which cannot bo equalled by any other medicine the world has ever pro duced. Here is another case t T)eati it M I Jy medicine, it'ja M . . rr l.v,ll, v.. three of Sanative eniovinir fWiter Kt... "FREE MEDICAL AIVICE TO WOMEN." Women would save time and much sickness if they would Write to Mrs. rinhluun forndvico ns soon ns nny distressing symp toms appear. It is free, and has put thousands of women on the right road to recovery. Mrs. l'iiiklmm never violates the confidence thus entrusted to her, and although alio publishes thousands of testimonials from women who have been benellted by her advice and medicine, never in all herexperienco has she published such a letter without the full consent, and often by special request of the writer. S5000 FORFEIT!' wii cannot forthwith prodno tbe original lettnra sod signatarM fcbovA iaftuaouisui. vljleh vlll prove their absolute KenutnineM. Lid I K. rinkhM MadleiM Co., Lynn, Haas. Eighteen floor and two basement floors making In all twenty floors of HOUSEHOLD GOODS, FURNITURE, CARPETS, QUE X$ WAKE, KUOS, CVRTAIXS, ItKDDIXt, LAMl'SS, STOVES, KITCHEN' UTENSILS, ETC. In fact we can furnish your house from Baaemsnt to Attle, and you don't have to bother about the money. CREDIT lO PEtNN WE TRUST fs aouD. PITTSBURG, FA. t$Whn If you pay cash we allow 10 por cent. When you visit the City call and take a look, through our store, the largest In the World, or wrMe for Catalog. Wo pay the Freight. Please Mention this Paper. WHY GET SOAKED . ' WHEN m Arif-. V f OILED ' CLOTH INC- WILL KEEP YOU DRY IN THC &rthtM MABDMT STOCK? LOOK MR MOVE TRAM MAM MWA8C Of IMITATION OATtlOQUCI race ohowin run. UNI or OAMMKNTS tND M(TS. a. . TOWrn CO.,aoTO, uata., u.a.a. TrrWKH CANADIAN CO , ITO., TORONTO, CANADA. K :.mklr.,;.d.r.'.. Thompson's Eyt Walir 2b ( Mm ( if. .!-' woman, Mrs. Dan- Mich., tells how she Mns. TiNKnAM: For yearn I wn As;- - troubled with falling of the womb, Irregular and painful menstruation, leueorrlicea.lieariiig down pains, backache, headache, dizzy and fainting spells, and stomach troublo. "I doctored for about flvo yenrs but did mf annui in Imnrnvn. T liptmn tlio use nf vour and have tnken neven bottles of IMnlrhnrnVi Verretnlile 'nmirouml. IMood Vuriller, and also used tho Wash and Liver Tills, and am now cood health, and have gained in flesh. 1 manic you very iiitu ii ior wimi, you havo done for me, Bnd heartily recom mend your mcdiciuo to all suffering women." Miss Emma Snyder, 218 East Marion. Ohio. -' TREAT FOR ANYBODY BEECH-NUT Sliced Bacon, Sliced Boat, Grape Jam, Cranberry Sauce, Orange Marmalade, Strawberry Jam. Put up la Vacuuub OIaai J are. BEECH-NUT PACKINli CO., Canajoharie,M.Y. V. N. U. OU, 1004. DROPSY,1! - Va4 94 leMlLaMUWlt NEWDIttCOVIgT;, quik r.ll.1 ana aura ia IU ears' 1 Vr.e. vt, a. a. aaaui leae. im a. i uaaia. rv
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers