A TRAINED NURSE After Years of Experience, Advises Women in Regard to Their Health. Mrs. Martha rohlman f 65 Chester Avenue, Newark, N. J., who is a graduate Nurse from the Rlookley Training School, at Philadelphia, and for six years Chief Clinic Nurse at the Philadelphia Hospital, writes the letter printed below. 8he has the advantageof personal xperience, besides her professional education, and what she has to say may be absolutely relied upon. Many other women are afflicted as she was. They can regain henlth in the same way. It is p-udent to heed such advice from uch a source. Mrs, Pohlman writes: " I am firmly persuaded, after oiifht years of experience with l.vdin E. l'irikhnm's Vegetable Compound, that it ts the safest and liest medicine for any suffering woman to uae. "Immediately after my marriage I found that my health boprnn to fnil n, I be came wak and pale, with so rere bearing-down pains, fear ful backaches and fivquent diizv spells. The dpt-tors pre scribed for me, yet 1 did not improve. I would bloat after cxitinit and freouentlv become nauseated. I had an acrid discharge and pains down through my limbe so I could hardly walk. It was as bad a case of female Wouble as I have ever known. Lydia K. rinkham's Vo(rntnblo Compound, however, 'cured me within four months. Since that time I have had occasion to recommend it to a numlxr of patients suffering from all forms of female difficulties, and I find that while it is considered unprofessional to rec ommend a patent medicine, I can honestly recommend Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound, for 1 have found that it cures female ills, where all other medicine fails. It Is a grand medicine for sick women." Money cannot buy such testimony as this merit alone can produce such re sults, and the ablest specialists now agree that Lydia E. rinkham's Vege table Compound is the most univer sally successful remedy for all female diseases known to medicine. W hen women are troubled with ir regular, suppressed or painful men struation, weakness, leucorrhcea, dis placement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflamma tion of the ovaries, backache, bloat ing (or flatulence), general debility, in digestion, and nervous prostration, or are beset with such Bymptoms as dizzi- Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail. Pope Hartford Pope Tribune Modern Casoline Cars and Runabouts at Moderate Prices. Barked bjr 17 Year of MannfHCInrinc Experience. 6tol6H.P. Prices, $500 to $1600 Simple Construction, Luxurious Equipment. Addreu Dept. A For Complete Cstnlognri. Pope Manufacturing Co., HARTFORD, CONN. Member A ! A. Iff. Artificial Flewera. Fashion is responsible iui many in ventions. This is the case wun the manufacture of artificial flowers, for their demand was due to a caprice of fashion. In Italy during festival time it was decreed that flowers should be worn In and out of their season, and that their color should be retained. Many plans for solv ing the problem were brought for ward, and at last some one hit upon the Idea of making tMem of various materials which would resemme ttic real flowers. Later in the Middle Ages, the artificial so far superseded the natural that both men and women decked their heads with imitation flowers of cambric, grass, paper, wax and metal. The most beautiful ar tificial blossoms are made in Paris, and their making is one of the chief industries of that city. FTTSnermfinmvMy cored. No1t or nrvot ness after first day's nse or Dr. Kline's Grea' NsrvoRestoror.tatrlaluottle and treatise free Dr. It. U. KLiss,Ltd.,!)31 Aroh8t.,Pnlla., Pa. Hamburg is to have a school for training servants. Mrs. Wlnslow's f-oothlnrr Syrup tor children teetnlntr.softeu the irums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic,!iuc.abottle. The crown of a human tooth is covered by a brilliant white cap of enamel. PIso's Cureoaanot be too highly spolcsn V aoougb. cure. J. W. OT.bien, 822 Thir l Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0,1'jOX The Norwegian corps of skaters is a body of soldiers armed with rifles. Popular Cars. The Pope-Hartford and Pope-Tribune gasoline cars snd runabouts meet the spe cific demands of a large class of automobile users. They are simple in construction, free from complication and efficient. Prices from 1000 to $1000. Knr finely illustrated catalogues and descriptive matter, ad dress l)ept. A. Pope Manufacturing 'Jo., Hartford, Conn. The -yield of cider !t 104 was the largest ever known in France. It was 921.595,000 gallons, which is double the average product for the last tea years. ness, fnintness. lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleepless ness, melancholy, "nil-gone" and "want-to-be-left-alone'' feelings, blues and hopelessness, they should remem ber there Is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound at once removes such troubles. No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. The needless sufferingof women from diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible to see. The money which they pay to doctors who do not help them is an enormous waste. The pain is cured and the money is saved by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Ex perience has proved this. It is well for women who are ill to write Mrs. Tinkham. at Lynn, Mass. In her great experience, which covert many years, she has probably had to deal with dozens of esses just like yours. Her advice is free and confi dential. Chicken Raising in China. The keenest of British poultry farmers Is, as Mr. Chamnenam oik said of himself In another connection, "a . child in these matters" as com pared w'ith the poultry farmers of China. A traveler passing through the province of Cheklang a few weeks a;o was struck with the enormous number of young chickens carried In the farmers' cart he met in the Tint'al country. He made Inquiries on the subject, and ai icngtn ho was asked by a poultry farmer to go and Inspect his rearing arrangements. The plant deals with 10,000 egga at a time and the average product is 5,000 chicks. The arrangements are sim ple and Inexpensive, but they include opportunities for the scientific ex amination of the eggs in the course of incubation, and It is amusing to hear that where the eggs on examin ation throufej the testing holes do not show signs of fertilization at the end of the fourth day, "they are Im mediately discarded to be gold cheap.' London Globe. Prefer American Goods. There has been a sieaoy Increase In Imports Into Columbia from the United States. The people as a rule prefer American merchandise, and when the prices are right and the goods are properly packed, so as to reduce the duty as much as possible, the merchants will buy from Ameri can firms. Precedence by Avoirdupois. An African exnlorer tells nt a trli,". he met whose members determined worldly rank according to avoirdu pois. The heaviest savage was chief of the tribe, the next fattest was first lieutenant, and so on. As soon as a me2br gained in weight over the neighbor .next above him in rank, he advanced one step In authority. Wealth, looks, personal popularity, Canacltv. Were not token tntn enncM- eratlon when determining the stand ing of member of the tribe. Houeb- keeper. SCIENCE NOTES. The new Incandescent lamp with a Dlament of tantalum has ben under experiment for two yoars and It Is claimed to yield the same candle power and useful life as the carbon lamps, with a consumption of half as much electricity. Tho filament Is necessarily very long about 20 Inch esand Is mounted on a special sup port enclosed In the spectnlly shaped bulb. A new railway track layer, with a crew of 40 men, will lay two miles of track a day. according to the Indian spoils News. The track layer has a huge crane 60 feet long, which pro jects forward over the road and hauls behind It a train of 16 flat cars load ed with ties and rails. A continuous double line of cars moves constantly over rollers and carries the tie with It. Both rails and ties are seized at the proper time by the niachlnery and pluced on the road In front of the train, where they shortly form part of the track over which It passes. This device is said to bo the most expeditious as well as economical track layer in the world. M. C. E. Stromeyer o Mnnches- tcr, England. supRests In a letter to Nature that Irregularities of tho earth's surface might be detected by special observations for determining the position of the northern and southern limits of totality during the coming total solar eclipse of August, next. Unfortunately, there are many practical difficulties In tho way which the author has not discussed, but he makes one suggestion which might be carried out. He proposes to placo soldiers at short distances along the northern and southern borders of the shadow's path, who, by marking the positions where the eclipse was total, might determine with greater accur acy than is known the breadth of the moon's shadow. The baobab tree, which has been transplanted from Africa to Asia and America, has a fruit whoso pulp "monkey bread" Is eaten by negroes, and seeds that are prized by natives of Madagascar for the oil that is ah stracted by crushing and boiling In water. A French chemist has been investigating. He finds that the round seeds grow to a diameter of three-fourths of an Inch, that their kernels contain 53 percent of oil, with much nitrogenous matter, and that the Madagascar oil Is a whitish solid which begins to melt at. about 2o5 degrees C. The odor recalls Tlnl sian olive oil. The oil does not be come rancid, and is suggested as a valuable product In place of cocoanut oil and in fine soaps and unguents. The usual laws of distillation are proven by the electric furnace experi ments of Moissan and Farrelley to hold good In the care of mixtures of metals. With mixtures of copper with zinc and with cadmitlm, the zinc and cadmium were quickly expelled, and pad separated from copper In the same way, but arter longer distilla tion. Some mixtures of copper and tin gradually lost their copper, oth ers their tin, while others distilled without change of composition. Mix tures of lead and tin showed a grad ually decreasing proportion of lead un til only pure tin was left. A remark able peculiarity noted in tin Is the wide range of temperature in which the metal is liquid as It melts at 226 degrees C. while its boiling point is above that of copper and lead. An Interesting archeologleal discov ery was made In the neighborhood of Bournemouth, England, recently. Dur ing the construction of a new road the excavators cut Into a mound, which is indicated upon the maps as an ancient burial ground, and a large sun-baked clay urn was unearthed. It was In a remarkable state of preser vation, 'and was Intact, though in re moving it the vessel was slightly damaged. Tho urn was only burled few inches below the surface st the ground; in fact, the roots of tho heather had forced their way into the interior of the receptacle into the ashes and dust it contained. Upon examination by experts, the urn was estimated to be 2000 years old. As this road will penetrate through other similar mounds, the work Is to be conducted under the supervision of antiquarians, in the hope that other articles of archeological value may be excavated. The Grape. The history of the grape Is almost as old as that of man. Growing In Its highest perfection In Syria and Persia, its luscious fruit recommended it to the especial care of the patriarchal tillers of tho soil, and vineyards were extensively planted long before orch ards or collections of other fruit trees were at all common. The grape came originally from Per sia. From the latter country as civili zation advanced westward, this fruit accompanied it first to Egypt, then to Greece. Sicily, Italy, Spain, France and then to Great Britain, to which latter country the Romans carried It 200 years after Christ. To America the seeds and plants of the European varieties were brought by emigrants and colonists the first 50 years after its settlement. There are a vast number of varieties of grapes, but there are really onty fibout a dozen varieties good for the table. California produces the Tokay, Muskat, Black' Prince, Malaga, etc., while the eastern stateB produce such varieties as Concord, Catawba, Ni agara, Delaware, Black Hamburg and Isabella. New England Grocer. Mutt Not Sew Bridal Gown, The Berlin bride must not sew stitch in her wedding dress If she hopes for happiness in her married life. A piece of money Is otlen tewed in the train, or else it Is placed In the shoe. This is snpposea not only to bring her plenty of this world's goods, but also to Insure to her the ruling hand in her housenom a thing rather rare in the Father land. In some of tne provinces not only money but bread and salt are sewed In the train. This Is a rem nant of the ancient custom, still prac ticed In pastern countries, of present ing bread and salt upon entering I new homo. Against Rite Iteilnetton. Atlanta, (la. The recent proposition cf J. Tope Brown, Chairman of the Georgia Railroad Commission, to re duce the passenger rate in Georgia from three to two cents per mile was protested against by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, the Order of Railway Conductors, and unions of the blacksmiths, machinists nnd telegraph ers, boilermakers, railway train men. carpenters and joiners, clerks nnd car men. These organizations employed an attorney especially to represent them, who urged that such a reduction would work against the prosperity of the State and lend to a reduction in the number of railroad employes as well as of their wages. The Travelers' Pro tective Association also protested that a reduction as proposed would result In fewer trains and poorer service. Well Seasoned Wood. Oak beams over one thousand years old were last year removed from the Blue Bell Inn at Bedllngton, England, and were made into handsome furni ture by a local manufacturer. TORTURING HUMOR Body a slitai of Soras Called In Three Dnctnn Hat Grew Woran CaVed b Cutlcura For 75e. ''My little daughter was a mass of sores 11 over her body. Her face was being eaten away, and lier ears looked as it they would drop off. 1 had three doctors, but the grew worse. Neighbors advised Cuti cura, and before 1 had used half of the rake of soap and box of ointment, the sores had all healed, and my little one's skill was as clear as a new-bora babe's. I would not be without Cnticiira if it cost live dol lars, instead of 75 cents, which is all it cost us to cure our baby. Mrs. G. J, btcetc, 701 L'oburn St., Akron, Ohio." Cot Rich on Tins. Francois Dtunon, a French waiter, has just left Denver, on his way home to France, having made $10,000 In tips In five years. Of this he made $8000 last year at St. Louis. lie speaks six languages. His father and grandfather were waiters all their lives, anil he was brought up to the business. He is still a young man. There Is more Catarrh In this section of the country than all otlior diseases put togothw, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a groat many years doctors f 'renounced it a local disease and proscribed ocal remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It In curable. Hclence has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the markot. It Is taken intornnlly in doses from lOdropstoatoaspoonful. It acts direct ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Send tor circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Cuksei A Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75-v Take Hall's family I'llls for constipation Stralght-Laoed tij the Public Schools. A bright youngster answered nn ad vertisement for an office boy in a store in the dry goods quarter, and was turned down because ho wrote too good a hand. "It is a ledger hand, nnd you will never rise above the level of a bookkeeper," said the merchant. New York Press. The Big Woman's Troubles. There was an enormously Btout German woman sitting In tho corner of a street car the other night, weep ing as if her heart would break Some kindly spirit asked her wnat the matter was. "I am so fat dat effery time I vant to get off de car I have to back de door out, and Ce conductor man he tink I vas getting on and pushes me In. I have since 10 o'clock been riding this morning, and I'm hungry." Her sympathetic listener explained, and the poor wo man got oft at last. Boston Record. Tallest Young Soldier. The tallest soldier that ever put in an appearance in Denver arrived In the person of Arthur W. Jaffray. Young Jaffray is just a fraction! over feet 10 inches tall. He Is new in the army service, having become a recruit 10 flays ago, and Is now bound for San Francisco, from which city he will go to- the Philippines. Jaffray is barely past 22 and looks much younger. He weighs 190 pounds and is awkward and ungain lyDenver Republican. A VOICE FROM THE PULPIT. Rev. Jacob D. Van Doren, of 57 Sixth Street, Fond Du Lnc, Wis., Presby terian clergyman, says: "1 bad at tacks of kidney disor ders which kept me In the house for days at a time, unable to do any thing. What I suffered can hardly be told. Complications set In, the particulars of which I will bo pleased to give In a pertomil Inter view to any one who requires information. This I can conscien tiously say, Doan's Kid ney Pills caused a gen eral Improvement In my health. They brought great relief by lessening the p.iln and correcting the action of Ike kidney se cretions." ) Doan's Kidney Tills for sale by all dealers. Price, 50 cents. Foslei'-Mlh burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. THE OWL'S ENEMIES. With All Their Precautions They Re celve No Mercy from Bird's. As they (owls) are Incapable of sup porting the light of the day, or, at least, of then seeing and readily avoiding their danger, they shut them selves up during the day in some obscure retreat. If thoy be seen out of these retreats In the daytime they may be considered as having lost their way, as having by some accident been thrown Into the midst of their enemies and surrounded with dnnger. In this distress they are obliged to take shel ter In the first tree or hedge that offers till the returning darkness once more supplies them with a better plan of the country. But It too often happens that, with all their precautions to con ceal themselves, they are spied out by other birds and are sure to receive no mercy. The blackbird; the thrush the Jay, the bunting and the redbreasts all come In file nnd employ their little arts of Insult and abuse. The smallest, tho feeblest and the most contemptible of this unfortunate bird's enemies are then the first to Injure nnd forment him. They Increase their cries and turbulence round him, Hap him with their wings, and are ready to show their courage to be great, as they nre sensible that their danger Is but small The unfortunate owl, not knowing where to attack or whence to fly, pa tiently sits nnd suffers all theit In sults. Astonished and dizzy, he only replies to their mockeries by awkward and ridiculous gestures, by turning bis head and rolling his eyt-s with an air of stupidity. It sometimes happens that the little birds pursue their InsuitV with the same Im prudent zeal with which the owl pur sued his depredations they hunt him tho whole day, but when night comes he makes his pursuers pay dear for their former sports; nor is. a man al ways an unconcerned spectator. The bird catchers have got an art of conn terfeltlng the cry of the owl exactly, and having before climbed the branches of a hedge, they Bit unseen and call. At this all the little birds flock to the place where they expect to find their well known enemy, but in stead of finding their stupid antagonist they are stuck fust to the hedge them selves. This sport must be put Into practice an hour before nightfall in order to succeed, for If it is put off till Inter those birds which but a few minutes sooner came to provoke their enemy will then fly from him with as much terror as they Just before show ed Insolence. Notes and Queries. A Genius. Miss Mears, who made the Frances E. Wlllard statue that was unveiled In the capltol at Washington, D. C is a genius. She began to model when she was a child. Before she was nine years old her work was exhibited and admired. She w-on the prize of $500 offered by the Woman's club of Milwaukee, Wis., for the best work of art exhibited at the World's Colum bian exposition by a Wisconsin woman It was a symbolical figure of that state, which has since been put In marble, and now stands In the rotunda of the capltol at Madison. I'p to (hat time she was simply following her Instincts. All her technical in struction was limited to six weeks at the Art Institution at Chicago, III, but Ivor work attracted bo much attention that Mr. St. Gnudens admitted her to his studio In New York City, where she remained a year and a half, and then wout to Pnris, France. There she won instant success, and In 1897 her work was admitted to the salon. She then went to Rome and Florence, Italy, and nt the completion of her third year in Europe joined Mr. St, Gnudens and assisted him In his Btu dlo for two years. Her design for the Wlllard statuo was the unanimous choice of the commission. Completed Proverbs. 'Opportunity knocks once at every man's door, but often makes sure the man is out before knocking. "It takes two to make a qunrrel." How about husband and wife, who are one 7 A fool and his money are soon parted," when the fool has friends. "Whatever man has done man can do" better. "Look before you leap" out of the frying-pan into the fire. Honesty Is exact to a penny," but not always to larger amounts. The best things are not bought and sold:" they are stolen and kept. 'Pity Is akin to love," but kinship does not always signify friendship. "Everything comes to the man who waits," except thut for which he waits. A fool Is never wrong:" few of us are. "The second blow makes the fray," but not If the first is well placed. "There's many a slip 'twixt" the cradle and the grave. "No fool like an old fool" in the tolls of a woman. 'He who hesitates" when lying "Is lost." Until a mnn finds a wife he is only half;" thereafter he is less. Literary Digest. Don't Forget That There Is plenty of opportunity for superior talents. Tho top of the lad der of success offers plenty of stand ins room and Invites guests. The low ?r part only Is fearfully crowded. There Is no excuse for the universal wall of lack of opportunity, for there Is no lack. The trouble lies with the demands laid upon those who aspin! to first place. One thing is certain there is no quarter for the whiner, and precious little encouragement fof those who do not care to work with might and main. Chicago Journal FAMOUS ATHLETES As a Spring Tonic "I acLwse all Athletes who are about to go in, training to try a bottle of Pe-ru-na." -J. W. Glenister. PE-RU-NA Eenovatei Beeulates, Eestores System Depleted by Catarrh. John W. Glenister, of Providence, R, I., champion lotiK distance swimmer of Amer ica, nan pcrforme'd notable feats in this country nnd Knglnnd. He Iiiid lwd 1'rntnn as a tonic and itivch his opinion o( it in tiie following letter: New York. The Peru'na Medicine Company, v ("oliimluiv, Ohio: Gentlemen "This spring for the first time I have taken two bottles of l'e runa, and, as it has done me n great deal of nam, I feel as if 1 ought to say a good word for its worth. "During the Siriuiitlme for thn la st fete u earn. I have ta'een n-r-eral klntlH of nprlna Innivn. and have never received ani Inn" lit whatever. Till year, ricoiifft the advice of a irlend, I have tried J'erutM and It has given Millxfac Hon. 'ladvUe all athlete who are about to ao In training to try a bottl". for it certainly gels the syntem In gooil ine. " I'ii- trul it, JOf.V II'. ULENtSTF.tt. WBtBKBBBEBSlil Let Common Do you honestly believe, that John Oleninlfr, Champion SwimniT ami ii'y AthMe to SuccetafuUy 1 bvim Through the Michigan Whirlpool llnpids. J V I r it is ojtened in your kitchen. This has made LION COFFEE the LEAOEX Of All PACKAGE C0FFC Millinna of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and in ing popularity. "Quality survives all opposition." (Sold only in 1 lb. packages. (Save your Lion-bends SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE Cost of the Capitol. The capltol at Wasnmcton, wnen the extensions planned have been made, will have cost, including the works of art, nearly twenty million dollars. The first btilldinar lot on which the capitol stands cost $500 in 1700, and the cornerstone was laid on September 8, 1.93, with a sneech by President Washington, a military procession and a barbecue. A Healthy Town. Brls'ton, Me., is a good, healthy iown to live in. Out of 34 deatns in run seven were over 80 years of age. The average age was nearly 60, and de barring one infant the average waB over 60. The death rate was a trifle over 13 per 1,000. "All Bifrns Foil in a Dry Time THE SIGN OF THE FISn KEVEB FAILS IJT A W ET TIME In orderfr.R Tower'n Rlickert, s cuitomor write: "I knoir ther will be all rielit If ther hurt tha 'FISH' on them." This runtldeuce Is the out growth of aixty-nino yoari ot caretul muiufiMtujlo. Higtifst Award World's Fair. 1904. A. J. TOWER CO.1 " Boiton. U.S. A. tPYVB? Tower Canadian Co. :S355 Limited ' t n Toronto, Canada "SHtSJr Mstr$ tfWamntnl Wit Wtathtr Clothing OLD VIRGINIA . wild olimm. Band tor catalogue. CASSELMAN & CO., Richmond, Va. PAY GLOWS TRIBUTE to Get tho IV System in 3, ATHLETES realize the importance o(l keeping in good bodily trim. The digestion must be good, the circular lion perfect, sleep regular and enough of it. If the slightest catarrhal condition of lungs or stomach is allowed to remain, neither digestion nor sleep will be strength sustaining. y Tlioso who lead vera active Uvea, Ilk? uthletes, with good niUHViilarde vrlopment, find the spring month enpevlnlli) trying. Athletes everywhere praise IVruni be cause they, of ull men, appreciate tin- villus of u tonic that dispels physical depression. T.'ip vocitlon of soma men may aU low them to endure the depressing, feelings Incident tn sprtng weather, out the athlete must never a'luw htm- srlfto get 'under the weather," He must keep in the "pink of condition" all the time. In order to do this tie must avail him self of a spring tonic upon which he can1 rely. X'temfore athletes are especially friendly toward Pernna, Peruna never falls them. Sense Decide coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed to dust, germs and insects, pausing through many handa (some of them not over-clean), "blended," you don't know how or by whom, is fit for your use t Of course you don't. But LION COFFEE Is another story. The green berries, selected by keen lodges at the plantation, are skillfully roasted at our fac tories, where precantlons yon would not dream of are taken to secure perfect cleanliness, llavor.strengthand uniformity, From the time the coffee the factory, no hand touches Lion-head on every package.) for valuable premiums.) WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, ffis MOTHER CRAY'S O SWEET POWDERS Iff FOR CHILDREN. JCtv A Owhi Onre far FovartlhaM. "WC-NT Htomiic-h Troubles, Terthln i u-.i U'"olra,'JC" n1 Mother Orav. nrmM. The Hr,.k I'.nlAm NarMlnOtiild- ran's Horn., Nw fork Uitf. ID M Dfrtira. At .11 L'rUKffliU, Koto o.mDl. raided PKRK ArMn A. S. OLMSTED. L Ray. 4 Y. PIQPLES than to my friends. I feel Una when 1 riie n thl CiKire'li " M 4 ehnc " MoomiMaJ fni C. WltMn, 7 Elm 8 Newark. H.J. old In bulk Tn. gnaln. tablet ctmuiiad OOCL UurentMd to cur or jrour uuiiey buk. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 50J ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Bolt Cough Srrup. iuti.,Mi. n .. A. J k' Hi S I . I -i r, Ohio. V T ff The Bowels XJ5! CANDY CATHARTIC fj? Tti.r-ra rr afnirtd with waak , Thompson's Eye Walei A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers