V T T Many Persons Have Gstarrh of Kidneys, Or Catarrh of Bladder and Don't Know If - - - - - - - - - - Prnadnnt NewhoT ana nar Cnrmsnnndent Richards Were Promptly Cured by Pe-ru-na. Mr. C. B. Newhof. 10 IMnmare street. Albany, N. Y., 1'resiilent Monteliore Club, writes: "Since my advanced age J find that 1 have been frequently troubled with urinary ailment. The Mad der seemed irritated, and my phy miclan said that it was catarri, caused hy a protracted told which would tie difficult to overcome on account of mil advanced years. I took I'eruna, hardly dnrlnq to be lieve that I would he helped, hut I bum! to my relief that 1 soon bean n to mend. The irrllatton aradually subsided and the urinary difficulties passed away. I have enjoyed ex cellent health now for the past seven months. I enjoy my meals, sleep soundly, and am as well as 1 was t wenty years aya. 1 aire all praise toltruna." V. B. Scuhof. Buffered From Catarrh of Kidneys, Threatened With Nervous Collapse, Cured by Pe-ru-na. Mr. F. H. Riclmi'ds. WW E Street, N. W., Wnuhiiifrinn. 1). (!.. War CoiTCTPoiment, writes: "Kxnetly six years nno I whs ordered to l ima an stall eorrespoiKieiu i the New York Sim. 1 was in charge of a Bun Dispatch boat tlirnimh the Spanish American War. The effect of the trop ical climate and the nervous strain showed plainly on my return to the States. Lassi tude, depression to the vei-pe of melan cholia, and iuccRsant Sidney trouble made ma iirm.Hcnllv nn invalid. This undesira ble condition continued, despite the best of treatment. "Finally a brother newspaper man, who like mvself had served in the war, in duced me to irive a faithful trial to l'erunn. I did so. In n short time the lassitude left me, niv kidneys lvsinned a healthy con dition, anil a complete cure was effected.! 1 cannot too strongly recommend I'eruna to those' suffering with kidney trouble. To-day I am able to work as hard as at anv time in my life, and the examiner for a leading insurance company pronounced me an 'A' risk." In Poor Health Over Four Years. Pe-ru-na Only Remedy of Eeal Benefit. Mr. John Nimmo, 215 Lippinrntt St., Toronto, Can., a prominent merchant of that city and also a member of the Masonic order, writes: "X have been in poor health generally for oyer four years. When 1 caught a bad cold last winter it settled in the bladder nd kidneys, causing serious trouble. 1 took two greatly advertised kidney reme dies without getting the desired results. I'eruna is the only remedy which was A Teetotal Duke. The Duke of Fife la said to be the only teetotal 'duke In the House of Lords, and 1b one of the few British land owners who do not believe In the accumulation of vast estates. For eoraa years he has steadily parted with hlg land as opportunity arose, holding that one man cannot control vast Btretches of territory "to the best advantage of the community." j A Guaranteed Care For Tiles. Itching, .Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles, Druggists will refund money if 1'azo Ointment fails to cure in 0 to 14 days. COc. Eagles sometimes rise to the height of 6000 feet. Rough on the Solicitor. The other day a coal merchant Bent the following letter to a customer, after having lost all patience In ap plying several times for an unpaid bill. "Sir If you do not pay for the ton of coal and chaldron of coke before next Saturday I shall place the same In the hands of my solicitor." London Tlt-Blts. BEST BY TEST . "'i have tried all kinds of waterproof clothing and have never found anything al any price to compare with your Fish Brand for protection from all kinds at weaiher " (The name and eddren cf e writer of this umobeRcd letter rosy be hid upon application.) A Jl TOWER CQ The Sign at the Fish U.S.A. TOWER CANADIAN Torerto Canada 'mW Hakart of Warrant Wat WaaUar C'otaiif CONSTIPATION "Tor tfrer nine rear I inffered with chronic eon rrtlpatton and daring thta lime 1 hd Ij tnko n inject ion of warm water onct ry M h jura before 1 could harts an action on my bowels. Happily I triad Cattcareta, and today I am a well man. taring tbe nina yeart before I nifd Cascams I uttered untold tnttory with internal pilot. Thanki to yon I am free from all that thi morning. Yon aa tua Uilt lu baualf of uffering humanity." B. F. Fiibtr, Aoanoke. Ill 5est For f pr ineooweis a CAMonr CATruirnc r1aaaant, Palatabla, Potent. Teate Ooed, Do (food, UTr Sicken, Weaken or Grin, lee, c. Ha. Kerar ld In bulk. The genaina tablet tarn pad 0 0 0. naranletrt to cure or your money back. Aterlinff Retnedr Co., Chicef o or N.Y. 609 USUAL SALE, TEI KUJJOI I0XES sjrMCinwC On ate t ss-OItII War. or en dba rtiialWll bilUr.enr war. and for wldowe. Hare ranorde of moat loral soldiers' eorrlce, and agea ot Oblo men, H Tear, practice. Lawi and advice FREE A. W.MaC'onnioK Boa, SIS Walnut Bu,'- lnclnnall. (j 30, 40 & 50 Par Cant. Paid HONEAT nn.l WIDE-AWAKE AGENTS aSSKSFrolt 4 Ornamental Trees Smell FrnltPi Hlimbf, Rose and Tines, nalnaaa aatabllsbad l&M. r Irat-claia reference! mnat acoompany ayillcatlon. I THE It. II.HARCA.N CO..GeneTn.W.Y. PN. U. 10, 1905. I I Best fiotlX Ijrup. 'eevaai)calirbas 1 1 In than. eoM by dmprW. IfMfn I i Mtj-lf fir, , PRES. C. B. NEWHOF, Suffered From Catarrh of Bladder. really of any benefit to me. I have not had a trace ot kidney irouuie nor a cum in my system." Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics. One reason why I'eruna has found per- nnmiiil ii.b in ir. lllilttV (llllllf'S 1H that it contains no narcotic of any kind. I'eruna is perfectly harmless. It can De used any length of 'time without ncouiring a drug habit. I'eruna does not produce temporary results. It is permanent in its effect. It has no bad effect upon the system, anil gradually eliminates catarrh by re moving the cause of catarrh. There are a multitude of homes where I'eruna has been used off and on for twenty years. Such a thing could not be possible if Peruna contained any drugs of a narcotic nature. The World's Postal Fmptsyes. Germany lins 242,000 postal employes, the United State! 230,000 and Great Britain 184,000. None of the other States In the postal union possesses 100,000 postal employes. France has 81,000; Austria. 59,000; Russia, C7.902, and Japan, G7,!KI5. State of Ohio, City ot Tolbds, I Lucas Uourtt. f Frakk J. CnKNKT make onth that he Is senior partnnr of the firm of F. J. Orkney ft Co., doinK business in the City of Toledo, County ami State aforesaid, and that said II rm will pay tbe sum of out durdrkd dol lars lor eaoh and every case ot catarrh that cannot be cured by the use ot Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frakk J. Crrr.NEi. Bworn to betore me nnd sulisorllied in my , - -. , presence, this 6th day of Deoem Jseal. her, A. 1)., 1806. A.W.Ulfasok, . ' Notary J'ublic. n all 's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and nets directly on the blood and mucous sur faces o( the system. Bond for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. Hold by all Drugirlsts, 73o. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. A Sew Danklng; Mystero. A new banking system which enables persons to make deposits of twenty-five cents nnd upward, Interest being al lowed when the amount lodged reaches $5, was adopted by the National Bank of Ireland recently. The bank has sev eral branches in London. The Original Mrs. Grundy. A writer tells of the origin of Mrs. Grundy, and says that "What will Mrs. Grundy say?" occurs In Mor ton's comedy, "Speed the Plow," writ ten In 17S9. One of the characters, Farmer Ashfleld, growing weary of constant references to Mrs. Grundy, a character in the play, by his good wife, suddenly turns upon her with: "Be quiet, will ye. Always ding- donging Dame Grundy Into my ears, 'What will Mrs. Grundy say?" What will Mrs. Grundy think?'" The phrase tickled the public ear at the time, and Is still In fashion. Scottish American. The only newspaper In England that can prove an unbroken publica tion for 1S4 years the Northampton Mercury, which was founded In 1720, was sold the other day. For Cupboard Corner St. Jacobs Oil StrattM. stront, sure. Is the best house bo td remedy for Rheumatism Neuralgia Sprains ' Lumbago Bruise BacKache Soreness Sciatica Stiffness Price), 25o. and 5O0. -X, TifWw2 &WZ&&ic MM KING OF THE GUILLOTINE UNIQUE' POSITION OF FRANCE'S PUBLIC EXECUTIONER. Government Functionary With High Sounding Title Sinister Office Often Descends From Father to Son Louis Deibler's Wife Daughter of an Executioner. One of the best known Parisians of modern times has just passed away; yet there were not 60 men In all France who were willing to know him. He was peculiarly popular, In a con temptuous way, among the lower class es, says Pearson's Magazine; yet no one workingnian In ten thousand would shuke his hand. He had a unique position, alone of his kind. Though neither statesman, man of law, administrator or soldier, he was a government functionary with the most high sounding of titles; yet tlrls title was unknown to the great mnRS of Frenchmen, who called him by another name which was not his. They called him "Monsieur de Pa ris." His real title was exueuteur des hautes oeuvres (he who executes high deeds). His name was I-ouls Antolne Stanislaus Delhler, and his profession was the cutting off of heads. He was the sole public executioner of France and Corsica. His father had been public executioner before him. And his son succeeds him In the sin ister office. The futuer of Ijouls Deibler was pub lic executioner at Rennes and In the five departments of Brittany. The stain was already In the family, and so was familiarity with the vocation. What could the young man have done In life? Should he make himself a lawyer, a painter, or go Into busi ness, the stain would have followed him. He was the son of the guillotine, and there was not a girl in France that would have married him! In France it is not as with us, where these dread responsibilities are diluted by division among a thousand sheriffs, each occupying for a few years only an ofrice that is highly hon orable, and in which the "execution of high deeds," if it comes at all, is the rarest of accidents and leaves no personal association in tire public mind. It has always been different In France. Under the old regime of kings, as far back aa the 13th century, we find individuals whose life work It was to "whip, brand, hang, behead, break on the wheel and burn" in the name of the law. The title was that of "executor of high justice," a pro fession that demands long apprentice ship, because, according to an ancient ordinance, the bourreau (execution er) must "know how to do his office by means of fire, by the sword, the whip, the wlreel, by drawing and quartering, by the fork, by dragging, pointing and pricking, by ear cutting, by dismembering, by fustigating, by the pillory, by the Iron collar, and by other like pains according to the cus toms and usages of the land ordered by the law for the terrifying of mala, factors." In 1720 the bourreau of Paris had a fixed salary of 1G.O0O llvres, equivalent today to $10,000, for himself and his aids. The guillotine was not yet in vented, though the practice of tortur ing had almost died out and the chief work of Monsieur de Paris was the merciful cutting off of heads by means of the axe and block. In those days it was always "Monsieur de Paris," "Monsieur de Rennes," and so on a strange title strangely shared by bish ops. Thus the great Bossuet was known to the court of Louis XIV as "Monsieur de Meaux." It was natural that the ill famed though highly paid office should run In families. A single family the fam ous Sansons occupied It through generations, from the year 1688 down to 1847, from the old days of torture to the merciful invention of the guil lotine, through the merciful red waves of the Revolution, the Empire, and the Restoration of kings down to the very eve of the Second Republic. Genera tion after generation the Sanson fam. ily kept its memoirs; and their pub lication a few years ago, in eight large volumes, though scarcely more than a publisher's venture, with few important contributions to history, make strange reading. Louis Antolne Stanislaus Deibler, who was born In the year 1913, had discovered early In life) that bis father was not like other men he was "Mon sieur de Rennes." A few years ago, in a moment of mournful remlni scence, he pictured to a friend his young wife's solicitude when his own little son began to ask questions. "Papa Is traveling," the child would prattle. The boy grew. Then one day he said "Papa Is traveling!" in a tone she had never heard from him before. And she knew that he knew! I have said that there was not a girl in all France who would have married Louis Deibler. There was one in Algiers, however, who received his suit gladly a charming young lady, well educated, virtuous, good looking and possessed of a handsome marriage portion. What made this tender paragon re ceive the ostracized youth so kindly? She was in the same position as him' self. There was probably not a young man of decent family in all France or Algiers who would have asked for her hand. She was the daughter of M. Raseneuf, the public executioner of Al' giers. Louis Deibler came and saw and was accepted. Indeed, he was doubly afr cepted, for he at once entered into the office of assistant executioner to M. Raseneuf. This was in 1858. and In 1863 his own father died, still execu tioner at Rennes. He himself contin ued to live in the family of his father-in-law and to assist him in bis .work until the law of 1871 came to suppress the separate posts of executioner in tbe provinces Louis Deibler was called to Paris and, in the quullty of assistant of tire first class, he was at tached to M. Roch, the "Monsieur do Paris" of the day. M. Roch died in 1879, and M. Dlebler succeeded him and "exercised" during all of 20 lon3 years. Louis Dolblor had barely entered on his functions as executioner for Paris and all France when he was called to Agon to guillotine Lapradc, a youth of 20 years, who had assassinated his father, mother and grandmother. Tho execution was duly carried out on May 19, 1879; but the new executioner met with such resistance from the young villain that he was obliged to bang his head against the side of the guil lotine until he was practically insen sible. His second victim was the cele brated Prunler, condemned In Sep tember of the same year for the assas sination of an old woman. with ag gravating circumstances. Prunler was 23 years old and showed extreme courage In Ills lust moment, smoking a cigarette as he walked Jauntily to the guillotine. Another execution of his first year as "MonRieur de Paris" made a great talk. It was that of tho policeman Prevost, who hnd a mag nificent record for honesty and brav ery, but was found to have robbed a Jeweller and cut his body Into 78 pieces. To the astonishment of his chiefs, he confessed to tho previous assassination of a young girl. He walked to the guillotine with firm ness, saying that he had not enough blood to wash away his crimes. But Louis Deibler's experience of his sad mission in life was nut to be lim ited even to the victims themselves. After Prevost It was Menesclou, in April, 1880; this one's mother went suddenly crazy In the crowd the mo ment the knife fell. Henceforth the list becomes too numerous to mention, except, perhaps, for a few of the more celebrated Tropmann, who had murdered an en tire family; Marchandou, the valet assassin; I'ranzlnl, the professional killer of women; Prado and Anastay; Byraud, the accomplice of Gabrielle Bompard, who, after her recent par don, was kept out of the United States; Vachler, the slayer of shep herd boys and girls; Sellier, the ghoul and a series of anarchists like Rava chol, Henry, Vaillant and Cnserlno, the assassin of President Carnot. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. An old labor law in England in force in 1783 contained the following six clauses: Any tailor who Joined a union was to be sent to jail for two months. Tailors must work from six o'clock In tho morning until eight at night Wages were not to be higher than forty-eight cents a day. Each tall or wns to be allowed three cents for breakfast. Any tailor who refused to work was to be Imprisoned for not more than two months. If any em' ployer paid higher wages he was to be fined $25, and the workmen who took the increase were to be sent to Jail for two months. An amusing story Is told of some of the richest men in the, country who were attending a recent directors meeting at New York. Around the table were J. P. Morgan, James Still- man, William Rockefeller, J. J. Hill and Senator Depew. A messenger en tered with a package for the senator on which $1.40 was due, and after go ing through his pockets the wonderful Chauncey acknowledged he did not have enough money to pay the bill and asked financial aid. All subscribed as much as they had with them, but these multi-millionaires were good for only a little over $1 among them. A mes senger boy bad to advance the rest. In 1859 some distance southeast of Lake Nyaesa, In Central Africa, Liv ingston discovered Lake Shlrwa, a body of water about thirty miles long and fifteen rolles wide, whjch has now entirely disappeared with the excep tion of a few ponds In its bed. Lake NyamI, discovered by Livingston at the same time, has also disappeared. The cause of the change appears to be a gradual drying up of bodies of water in Central Africa. As marking the results of a single half century the changes named (with no. doubt oth er equally important, but not recorded) show a rapidity of mutation in those inland waters not equalled elsewhere in the contemporary geographer's sur vey. Discipline is Bevere in the German army, and the treatment of privates is sometimes unjustifiable. At Dessau a sergeant who had been drinking to ex cess insulted two young women who were escorted by a couple of men in the ranks. The privates protested to the minor officer, who drew his sword and attacked them, In his drunkenness wounding one of the girls. In the af fray which followed the sergeant was disarmed and felled to the floor. All three were put on trial. The sergeant was sentenced to prison for five months, while the unfortunate privates were condemned to five years behind the bar at hard labor, were dismissed from the service and were deprived of their civil rights. Service as a priv ate In an army so regulated cannot be a cause of pride In time of peace. Deprived of His Means of Support. Beggar Kind sir, could you help a victim of the trusts? I am starving! Citizen How are the trusts respon sible? Beggar They shut down the factory where my wife had a Job, sir. Puck. Purposely Lost His Leg. A remarkable case has been brought to tho attention of the manager of the Texas & Pacific Railroad by a letter hlch he has renlved from W. L. Marlng, of Marcellne, who lo3t a leg by being Tun over by a train while employed on that road as a brake man. He was paid $3,000 by the company In settlement of the injury.' Marlng's letter reads: "Four year ago I worked for the Texas & Pacific, and at that time I was a had man, reckless. careless, and had no respect lor Uod or man. While under the Influence of liquor I purposely lost my leg. But recently God has saved me, and my hope of heaven is sure. I want to make this confession, as the Good Hook requires us to do. I have spent this money that 1 have received from you and am willing to submit to any thing that you should think Just." Kansas City Journal. FITRnnrrrmnrmM.y cured. No fits or nnrvons nessnftitr Hint ilny's lino of Or. Kllno's Oront Ni-rToltiwtorer.ir'itrlnl bottlnnndtrnntlsofrei Dr.il. II, Klinb, Ltd., !M Ari-hHt., I'Uiln., l'a. LIprp, Belgium, is luiy with arrange ments for nn exposition. Tills VIII Inlrrrst Mother. MotliprOniy's Sweet Powders for Children, tipfd by Mother Orriy, a nurso In Chlldrmi's Home, New York, enre ronstlpntlon. Fevnr Islmeg. IVothlnK Disorders, Rtoiwirh Trou bles nnd Destroy Worms; 80,000 testlmonluls Oleums. All drui?Klts, 25c Hnmplo Fuek. Address Allen 8. Olmsted. Le Hoy, N. Y. The largest si one ever nunrricd came from a granite KmIkc in Maine. To Care m VoU Iji One liny Take Laxative ilromo Quinine Tablets. All drupeists refund money if it fails to cure. K. W. Grove's signature is on box. 25c. Franee leads the "countries of Europe in theatres, having 304 of them. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothlnirBynipforelilldroti leethinir.soften tho gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, euros wind colic, '25c.abottle Irrigation is said to be lowering the tem'ierature of Egypt. JamsiiroPlso'SoUM forOons'mptlonsave 1 ny life three yean airo. Mas. Trohas Bob.' HNS, Maple (it., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1931 The imperial post in Germany uses 12,551 railway trains daily. A Bible In Marble. Great as has been the amount of labor expended on the various Bible of the world the palm tor execution must be given to the Kutho-daw, which Is a Buddhist monument near Mandalay in Burmah. It consists of about TOO temples each containing a slab of white marble, on which the whole of the Buddhist Bibles, contain ing more than 8,000,000 eyllables, has been engraved. The Burmese alph abet Is used, but the language is Pall. This wonderful Bible Is absolutely unique. The Kutho-daw was erected In 1857 by Mindon-mln, the last King but one of Burmah. The vast col lection of temples together form a square, with a dominating temple in the center. Each of tho marble slabs on which the sacred text Is in scribed Is surmounted by an ornamen tal canopy In pagoda form. CUtlCURA GROWS HAIR Scalp Cleared of Dnnilrnn and Ilnlr Re stored by One Ilnx of t'ullciira and One Cake of Cullcura fionp. A. W. Taft, of Independence, Va., writing under date of Sept. 15, 1004, says: "I have had falling hair and dandruff for twelve years and could get nothing to help me. Finally I bought one box of Cutirura Oint ment and one pake of Cuticura Soap, and they cleared my scalp of the dandruff and stopped the hair falling. Now my hair is growing ss well as ever. I highly prize Cutirura Soap as a toilet soap. (Signed) A. W. Taft, Independence, Va." The Tsar's Dependence. The Czar Nicholas II. is physically weak; his nerves are shattered, his wfll feeble. He is amiable where Iron-handed ness is essential. He is dependent when a strong individual ity is required. He is constantly in subjection first to one Influence and then to another. He Is more than usually amendable to women's con trol, and the fair sex has on more than one occasion exercised powerful. If not calamitous, Influence upon bis life. Everybody's Magazine. Billion Dollar Grass. When the John A. Sslzer Seed Co., of La CrosseWis., introduced this remark able grass three years sgo, little did they dream it would be the most talked of grass in America, the bigpest, quirk, hay pro ducer on earth, but this has come to pass. Agricultural Editors wrote about it, Agr. College Professors lectured nhout it, Apr. Institute Orators talked about it, while in the farm home by the quiet fire side, in the corner grocery, in the village Dost-ohice. at the creamery, at the deDot. in fact wherever fanners gathered, Salzer'a I Billion Dollar Grass, that marvelous grass, i f;ood for 5 to 14 tons hay per acre and ots of pasture besides, is always a theme ' worthy of the farmer's voice. Then comes liromus Inermis, than which there is no better grass or better perma nent hay producer on earth. Grows wher ever soil is found. Then the fanner talks about Salter's Teosinte, which produces 100 stocks from one kernel of seed, 11 ft. high, in 100 days, rich in nutrition and greedily eaten by cattle, hogs, etc., and is good for 80 tons of green food per acre. I Victoria Rape, the luxuriant food for hogs and sheep, which can be grown st 25c a ton, snd Speltz at 20c a bu., both great food for sheep, hogs and cattle, also come in for their share in the discussion. JUST BE5D IOC IK STAMPS i and this notice to John A. Sailer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., for their big catalog una many farm seed samples. A. C. L.J Leads In Peaches. Georgia baa held the lead in the production of peaches for the Eastern market since 1902 and for years to come Is likely to be the leading peach ! State in the Union. She has more than 7,660,000 trees. I PUTNAM Colo? mon foodi brlfbtar and fatter colon than nttaiiiattwwffi wlii mm pom pua Woman's Kidney Troubles Lydia E. PinKham's Vegetable Compound is Espe cially Successful in Curing This Fatal Disease, fl Mrs. J.W.L any and Mrs. S. Frake Of ell the diseases known, with which women are afflicted, kidney dis ease is the most fatal. In fact, unless early and correct treatment is applied, the weary patient seldom survives. Being fully aware of thlB, Mrs. Pink ham, early in her career, gave exhaust ive study to tho subject, and in pro ducing her great remedy for woman's ills Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound was careful to see that it contained the correct combination of herbs which was sure to control that fatal disease, woman's kidney troubles. The Vegetable Compound acts in har mony with the laws that govern the entire female system, and while there are many so called remedies for kidney troubles. Lydla E. Plnkham's Vege table Compound Is the only one espe cially prepared for women, and thou sands have been cured of aerlous kidney derangements by it. Derangements of the feminine organs quickly affect the kidneys, and when a woman- has such symptoms as pain or weight in the loins, backache, bearing down pains, urine too frequent, scanty or high col ored, producing scalding or burning, or deposits like brick dust in it; un usual thirst, swellingof hands and feet, swelling under the eyes or sharp pains in the back running down the inside of her groin, she may be sure ber kid neys are affected nd should lose no time in combating the disease with Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com pound, tbe woman's remedy for wo man's ills. The following letters show how tnarvelously successful it Is. Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound Say Plainly to That you wont LION COFFEE always, nnd he, lining a square man, will not try to sell you any thing else. You may not care for our opinion, but What About the United Judgment ot Millions of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a century ? Is there any stronger proof of merit, than tho VlVTyZkN. carefully packed In sealed pack- A Jl rf T Si fir.no nnllk lilAa rf f 00 YArflftfill Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON 8PICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. 32 YEARS SELLING DIRECT I We are the largest manufacturers of We Have No Agents tsz bat ship anywhere for ex amination and approval. guaranteeing ary. Yon ara out noth 1 Ins if not satisfied as to style, quality and, price. We make 200 1 styles of vehicles and So. tts. ComMnatfon Surer "it1 eM 65 atylea tlrh u.1 Mwttt V n Mhh Wm. Prtf . J complete S4B SO. At (oodas telU ."I" . att Carr-iaef (Xh H ernem VERY FEW. IF ANY, CIGARS SOLD AT 8 CENTS. COST AS MUCH TO MANUFACT URE. OR COST THE DEALER AS MUCH AS "CElEf.10 IF THE DEALER TRIES TO SELL YOU SOME OTHER ASK YOURSELF WHY? PONANZA- n.rmttnm flnm M1nM Pat!. ulrrl:iiiD. NIE1.HF.N COM. PAii Y. 11 Smith d.itli at- Phil tdelphta. Pa. FADELESS DYE tor otter dy. On 10c ptvekava colon atllt. wool and paciac nnw jot xrt Doo-uatHow touj xsivaca Mrs. Samuel Fralte, of Prospect Plains, N. J., writes: DenrMrs. Pinkhnm: ' I rminot thank you enough for what Lydla E. Finlihatii's Vegetable. Compound has done forme. Wh I first wrote to you I had suf fered for years with what the doctor called kidney trouble and conation of the womb. My haekaehoi dreadfully nil the time, and I suffered so witb that bearing-down feeling I could hardly walk across tho room. I did not gi t any better, so docided to stop doctoring with my physician and take Lyolo E. Pink bnrn's Vegetable Compound and I am thank ful to say it hat entirely cured me. 1 do alt my own work, have no more backacho and ail the bad symptoms bavc disnppearnd. I cannot, praiso your medicine enough, and would adviso all women suffering witb kidney trouble to try it. Mrs. J. W. Lang, of 620 Third Ave nue, New York, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : I hove been a groat sufferer with kidner trouble. My back ached all the time and I was discouraged. I beard that Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound- would enrs kidney disease, and I began to take it; and it has cured mo when everything elM: had failed. I have recommended it to lots of people and they all praise it very highly. Mrs. Plnkham's Standing In vitation. Women suffering from kidney trouble, or any form of female weak ness are invited to promptly communi cate with Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. Out of the great volume of ex perience which she has to draw from, ft is more than likely she has the very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice Is free and always help ful. I n Woman's Remedy for Woman's Ills. Your Grocer Confidence of the People and ever Increasing popularity? LION COFFEE Is carefully se lected at the plantation, snipped, direct to our various factories, where It Is skllllully roasted and Is exposed to germs, dust. In sects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches yon as pure and clean as when It left the factory. Sold only In 1 lb. packages. vehicles and harness in the world sell ing to consumers exclusively. safe dellv- of harness. ... TfT. Ceopr Top Saner. Mce amfMa Mfff. Co.. Elkhart. Indiana. 10,000 Plants for I6c. Miter loU W1&Q mnj Qtuvr in marVa. Tfwr la raauton for thtft. I We own ow 6,000 txertm for th prr i Antn At Aitr wrtnfilrd mftttm lit nrrittr to indue too to vrr wiem, ww mate you xnm iouovuie wiprva i rwlatntjart Affari I 10 OmatB Pom pa m J .laUMlailHMafMl tfciaif Crr7, all? leatttUaa KBafbtM, laMMaaif IHUUM rWWvfk ajrn psvkafr contain awim- in mm- t, fur llaVBt y rVSf -! r run u4 tola and lota or eii . tnaftnr w to "Ur wr Hlntr all about Flowcra, amaJl Jfnnt, etc, ail ior 4 tampsj and thia antir v Uavpatfa cAtAtuK muus, so. sb A.tAlZ!R SEED CO, " La Croese. Wia. a Thompson's EyeWafer wltaweak ejee, ae rotten equally wall tad la rttfcnntMtl to rtrj parrort r io4.hu colon, avnttui &kiu tu, t ajoBTUia. i I r' im n km 1MM Kara TL II A htair II I I eiretaUl 'II Iflaaio i H 11Jl,2s I- ir mietd 7,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers