EX-MAYOR CRUBSBO RECOMMENDS PE-RU-NA ; "My endorsement of Pe-ru-na is Based On Its Merits." Ed. Cmmbo. I 7 D. CRUMBU, ex-Mayor of New A I- !ibany. Ind.. writes from 511 JS. Oak treet: "My endorsement of Fernna is based on its merits. "If a man is sick he looks anxiously for something which will cure him, ind Pernna will do the work. "I know that it will cure catarrh of the head or stomach, indigestion, headache and any weary or sick ieel ing. "It is bound to help anyone, if used according to directions. "I also know dozens of men who speak in the highest terms of Penina and nave yet to hear of any one being disappointed in it." Mr. Crambo, in a later letter, dated Ave. 25. 1904, says: "My health is good, at present, but if 1 ahould have to take any more medicine I will fall back on Peruna." Had a Few Lives Left. After being missing for two weeks a eat belonging to a family in Wilt shire, England, was found clinging to the Ride of a well 35 feet from the surface and just above the water. Bhe wa3 apparently none the worse for her experience when she was brought to the top. D1SFIGUREDW1TH ECZEMA. Brushed Pcales From Fare Like Powder Under riiyelcans Grew Worse Cuticora Works Wonders. ' "I suffered with eczema six months. I liad tried three doctors, but did not get any better. It was on my body and on my feet so thick that I could hardly put ft pin on me without touching eczema. My face was covered, my eyebrows came out, and then it got in my eye. I then went to another doctor, lie asked me w'.iat I was taking for it, and I told him Cuticura. He aid that was a very good thing, bit that - lie thought that my face would be marked for life. But Cuticura did its work, and my face is now just as clear as it ever was. I told all my friends about my remark able cure. I feel so thankful I want every body far and wide to know what Cuticura can do. It is a sure cure for eczema. Mrs. Emma White, 841 Cherrier Place, Cam den, N. J., April 25, 1005." Mark's Books Barred. Mark Twain's "Huckleberry Finn" and "Tom Sawyer" have been barred from children considered under the age of discretion by an order issued by the Brooklyn public libraries. "AM IDEAL BELF-IN6TRUCTOR." (Tm PHOEi.'IX Walking Chair v holds the child securely, pre venting those painful falls and bumps which aro bo frequent when baby learns to valk. "BETTER THAN A NURSE." The chair is provided with a re movable, eanitiry cloth seatwhich supports the wcitjht of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles ; it also has a table attach ment which enables baby to nd amusomont in Ita toys, etc, with out any attention. "As Indispensable et I cradle." It is so constructed that it pre vents soiled clothes, sickness from drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. lLUTCT.lCTCajM OJTLT XT PHOENIX CHAIR CO. SHKOVQAH, Wia. tT-From t!o cratiia to the baby chair" 8 I HAVE YCU k IMBY? 8 II so, you ought to have a h I'PHOEEJIX I WALKING GKA1R I - ,. i yCti tnly he had ot year turnlturs t.JJ For San Jose Scale. Many fruit growers know the San Jose scale from sad experience. These and any others whose plants Hre af fected with this pest; should prepare nt once to spray them with the linie sulphur preparation. If this work Is postponed it may not be done at nil. The formula recommended for use In this state is as follows: IJme (unslncked ), SO pounds; sul phur (flour or Hovers), 30 pounds; fait. 10 pounds; water, 100 gallons. Indianapolis News. Loquid Manure. When a fainter makes up bis mind to post himself upon the value of manures, about the first thing he finds out Is that the liquid portion of the manure is the most valuable. I'p on finding this out the first thing to do Is to devise pome ways or means In which this ll:uid manure can be saved and kept so that the greatest percentage of its hii;h value may be made use of. Any plan that will ac complish this Is pood, and he quick er a man adopts it, or puts it into op eration, just so much sooner will he find his land greatly improved In value. Weekly Witness. Fruit by Weinht. Hereafter bananas are to be sold wholesale by weight and all quota tions will be given by the hundred pounds and the cuality will be given by grades: Firsts, seconds, thirds, etc. This is the only fair war to sell all products. Even email fruits could he put up in boxen holding approxi mately a given weight and quotations would then mean something. Where as as asis now the case, boxes of all kinds vary so much that quotations by the case or box elves no definite Idea of the market. Then, too, laws could be made regulating these weights, the same as In the case of other, commodities. -National Fruit Grocer. The Pig's Early Life. At one of the Canadian institutes a speaker, who had as his topic "Swine Breeding and Feeding," said, among other things, that "when pins are far rowed a common weight is three pounds (although we quite frequently have them weigh four); a litter of ten pigs will then weigh thirty poum'.s, and when they are four weeks old, it they have been well nursed, they will weigh eighteen pounds each, making a gain of 150 pounds In 28 days, or the sow producing an aver age of five and a half pounds per day. So that you see the sow should be a milker and be fed with an eye to milk production. The young pigs will sometimes commence to eat at two weeks old, but usually about four. If you have only a limited supply ot milk to feed them. It Is a good plan to set a shallow trough where tne sow can't get at It, and tlie young pigs can, and feed them milk, or they will do very well on scalded shorts mixed with a thin slop; they will in this way gradually learn to be self dependent." Weekly Witness. Practical Poultry Points. If you should meet with the misfor tune of havirnr the combs frozen, use upon the frostbitten part the follow ing preparation: Sweet oil, one tea spoonful; turpentine, one teaspoon ful. It Is very necessary that the hrns should be supplied with grit, as this Is really their teeth. Throw, gravel, oyster shells and old broken white dishes where they can cet it. Pure water should be. available at all times; cold water in summer and warm water in winter. Do not neg lect this. A large percentage of the egg Is composed of liquid. Give a supply of rreen food daily cabbage, pulped turnips, apples, beets and lettuce. Table scraps or all kinds can be used to advantage when they are not too salty. Avoid using pepper or peppers except on a very cold day. Egg breaking Is sometimes caused by the lack of oyster shell. If you have not used this you do not know its value. The last egs of summer Is good, but the first egg of winter sounds move to the point. At ter the moulting season feed for egg production. Farmers' Home Journal. Latest Egg-Laying Contest. The latest egg-laying contest Is that just concluded at the Kansas ex periment station. The leading breeds were represented each with a pen of a male and six pullets. The methods were those ordinarily employed, the idea being to bring out comparative results such as might be obtained by an experienced poultryman: The usual' mixtures of grain and soft feed were given, also vegetable food, oyster shells, grit and meat meal, but'. no fresh meat, pepper, patent food3' or other stimulants. During the twelve months of the contest the pen of White Leghorns laid 885 egss; the Tloe Comb White Leghorns laid 828, laying, however, a larger proportion of their eggs In the winter than the single comb pen. The American Reds laid 20 eggs and showed the best winter egg record. The White Wyandottes laid 779, the Buff Wyandottes 764, Barred Plynv nth Rocks 619, Light Brahmas 539. The Plymouth Rocks were not fairly represented, the females being year lings, while those of the other breeds were pullets. The Brahmas were, as usual, slow In developing, but contin ued to lay well except in the spring. Probably for a longer time their rela tive show-ins would have been bet (er. Indianapolis News. Unthrifty Calves. A render, Fredertckton, Ohio: Please advise me what to do for my calves. I do not consider them sick, but they are not doing well. When I bought them last Octover they were very thin In flesh and had been run ning on very short pasture. From October till December they had fair pasture, and since then have been fed clover and timothy hay, mixed, once a day, and nice, bright corn fodder once a day, also one and a half pecks of nubbins, given . at two feeds each day. , They are salted once a week, have access to good water and are warmly housed at night. They have access to a wheat straw stack, but I never see them eating It. Their droppings seem normal, but they are not thriving. The backbone of one of them Is almost sharp enough to hurt the hand when rubbing it. The hide is not tight to the backbone, as I have noticed would sometimes be the case when cattle were not doing well. They are last April and May CRlves. I have hran and oats. Would they be a better feed for them than the corn? If so. how much should I feed ? Your feed under ordinary conditions would keep them thriving fairly well, yet, with the exception of the clover they get in the hay, none of your foods are suitable for the best grow ing of calves. Yes, I would, by all means, change the corn nubbin feed ing to nats and bran, and also get some Unseed oil meal. These calves were thin, as you say, in October, hence were not In condition to start in on foods that were not exactly bal anced, like corn fodder and corn nubbins, which are never very good car!!" foods. The quantily of the grain you should feed depends largely upon the calf. I think a very good rule would be to mix oats and wheat bran equally by measure, then to every hundred pounds of the mixture add ten pounds of the linseed oil meal. Start in with this on a pint to each calf twice a day. When they eat It well increase until you are feeding two quarts twice a day to each calr. This, of course, should be varied as the individuality of the calf would seem to require. If one Is dainty, care should be used in not overfeed ing it, yet with this class of grain food there Is little danger of one's feeding too much ' after they get used to It. You will get value re ceived In growth, provided they are not scrub bred calves. In short, good feed to good, well bred calves means value received; good food to scrubs means a tight squeeze to get the money back. C. D. Smead. in the Tribune Farmer. An Observant Horse. Another champion of the reasoning power of animals has come forward with a special Instance. A retired farmer living in Kansas City says that he once had a farm horse that un doubtedly possessed reasoning facul ties. "This horse," he says, "was once injured by barbed wire,, and ho had a wholesome dread of barbwlre ever after. He could not bo induced to step across a wire lying on the ground. One day, when this horse was grazing in the pasture, I started with another team to water them at a pond. To reach this pond I went through a gate into a field, going out on the other side by crossing the fence wires low ered to the ground and fastened. The horse in the pasture, seeing that I was driving the team to water, fol lowed until he came to the place where I crossed the wires. He re fused to do it and went back and around the field. The next day he followed the team again going to wa ter, having forgotten about the wires that lay in the way. While down in a hollow out of sight of the fence in either direction the cogitative horse suddenly remembered that those wires were probably lying In the same posi tion they were the day before. Toss ing up his head with a disgruntled Enort, he turned and trudged back around the field. That was a case of reason. From cold facts and proposi tion retained In his memory and not excited by any new perceptions, he reflectively reasoned out that he'd have to make a detour sooner or later, and he might as wetl start now." Kansas. City Times. -: Reassuring. Doctor Well, how does the eye feel this morning? .... Patient It's exceedingly painful, doctor. I'm afraid I'm going to have trouble with it Doctor Ob, don't worry; it will come out all right. Philadelphia Ledger. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. No one who does not enjoy work can truly enjoy anything else. Presi dent Raymond. In proportion as nations get mora corrupt, more disgrace will attach to poverty, and more respect to wealth. Colton. Remember that whatever knowledge you do not solidly lay the foundation of before you are eighteen you will ever be master of while you breathe. Lord Chesterfield. In a state of sensitiveness to every touch of the Spirit, we never think of getting anything. We are only con scions of becoming something, our be ings are exalted, our natures are en larged. Here is my work to do. to worry over. . . . "My work," I say. Rut. if I can know that Is not my work, but God's, should I not cast away my rest lessness, even while I worked on more faithfully and untiringly than, ever? Phillips Brooks. . .' Yes, things are" hard sometimes. And we must live on and bear God's will. Because he makes a plan tor us, and there will be always some thing coming, we cannot tell, day by day, what may be, only he never for gets us or leaves anything out. Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney. TEACHING THE DEAF. Modern Method by Which the Hear ing is Cultivated. . I placed her (the deaf pupil's) chair two feet from mine, drilled on A, B, C, etc. In one year's time (including thre months' vacation with no drill) her father stated that her hearing had improved 100 percent during thi year. She could then hear exceeding ly well. We also used the piano as a means. On March 30, 1905, I found that she could hear "C" above the staff. That is the twenty-second note from the right limit of a piano at eight and one quarter octaves. On this day I btjgan using the instrument to which she re fers for about fifteen minutes, then tried the same "C" without the in strument and all the notes until the next higher "C" was reached. She could hear perfectly even that. From day to day we worked on tones until we were five or six notes from the highest. Here we remained for over a week. My pupil declared she could hear the thumping of the note, but not any tone. I had my doubts of her own self-confidence, so one day I started with two notes higher than she bad ever heard and descended to the troublesome note. All were heard perfectly. It was a matter of what she had expected to hear. I had usually started drill four or five notes lower than her limit and worked up to the new tones, but on this occasion I re versed the operation, and she, be lieving all would go on as usual, was expecting to hear whatever note I first struck. She now hears every note on the keyboard, even the highest, and the others indefinitely beyond. She cau enjoy a musical play fully as well as most normal people (of course she does not hear the words; do you?) She hears whistling three feet away, which was previously out of the ques tion, no matter how near she was to the sound, and she Is constantly im proving in hearing, even when not be ing drilled Mrs. J. Scott Anderson before the Convention of Instructors of the Deaf. Lock of Hair in Dickens' Watch. Sir. E. S. Williamson of the Crown Lands Department, president of the Dickens Fellowship, has discovered another interesting reile of the great author, and one which curiously enough he has been carrying around for a few years without knowing it.' He has been the possessor since IflOl of tho first gold watch carried by Dickens, which was brought to this country by Francis Jeffrey Dickens, tho third son of the author, who came to Canada shortly after his father's death and became inspector In tho Northwest mounted police. His father gave him tho watch as a keepsake. Recently Mr. Williamson sent the timepiece to a local jeweller to bo cleaned and tho latter discovered in the back case a secret recess. In this was a lock of dark hair, a man's evi dently, tied with thread. Whose is it? That is the question Mr. Williamson nnd others interested would like to solve. Mr. Williamson thinks it may have been cut from the novelist's own head and placed in his watch when he was giving it to his son. Toronto Globe. Beyond the Limit. "I don't mind folks borrowing," said Miss Hodges, plaintively, to an old friend who was paying her a vis it, "but I've got an awful trying woman for a neighbor just now. She borows such queer things I'm most but o' patience with her." "Shears and brooms nnd the flour sifter nnd ironing boards, I s'pose," eaid the guest, who had known life in a country town. . ".Mercy me, I don't count such things!" said Miss Hodges. "Nor my best umbrella nor my carving knife. I can make shift to get on without 'cm for a while any time. But when she come over to borrow my diary 'the other day, go's she could keep account of the weather and her hens' eggs, and so on till her husband came back from California, she hav-' 'ing given him hers to put down his expenses and sights in, so's she could copy her record In from my book In the right place I declare I called It the cap-sheaf!" Youth's Companion. When We Begin to Grow Old. Dr. Osier's Jocose remark about the comparative uselessness of man for the activities of this life after the 'age of CO, has brought out a rival In the person of Prof. Mlnot, of Har vard. Prof. Mlnot declares old age begins at 25. A man of 30, he says, Is not nearly as likely to have an origlnnl idea as one of 20. Tha Har vard professor, like Dr. Oler, must be speaking In a Pickwickian sense. If he was in earnest lie certainly would have placed the beginning of old age at birth, for there Is where It really begins. Pittsburgh Gazette. 1 FITS permanently cured. No tits or nervous ness after first day's use ot Dr. Kllne'H (Ireat UerveHe8torr,ttrialbottleandtreiitlBfre9 Dr. B. H. Kline. l.td.,K)l Arch 8t.,Pliila,Pa. A naturalist lias Keen milking observa tions on the toilets of certain i" Is. Mm. Wlnslow's Soothinv Bynip for Children pain, cores wind colic, K5ca bottle They bare a queer way ot holding auc tions ii. Japan. Costly Eggs. Eggs of the aptornls, a recently ex tinct wingless bird, bring very high prices, line colored specimens fetch ing as much as $750 to $1,000 apiece. The apteryx, or New Zealand kiwi, Is a bird which, though still living, is becoming scarcer from day to day, and its final extinction Is only a question of years. These kiwi breed very slowly, only one or two very large eggs being laid during the sea son, and as yet there is no record of the successful raising of young in captivity. BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUGS CURES BY ABSORPTION. Cares Belching- of 0 Bad Hreath and Bad Stomach Short ltrrath Bloating Rnnr Krnctutluns Irregnlar Heart, Ktc. Take n Mull's Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good ef fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, disinfects the stomach, kills the poison germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of the head and throat, unwholesome food and overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint ot some kind. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching ana fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through this process. Discard drugs, as you know from experi ence they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A soothing, healing sensa tion results instantly. We know Mull s Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you to know it. This offer may not appear again. 4146 GOOD FOR 25c. 142 Send this coupon with your same and address and your druggist's name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send you a cer tificate good for 2Tic. toward the pur chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable ior stomach trou ble; cures by absorption. Address Mull's Grape Ionic Co., 328 3d Are., Koik Island, ill. Giee Full Addreti and Writt Mainly. All rimiffiriatB tifr Knr np Kv mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. The Highest Bridge. The highest railroad bridge in the world will be built across the top of the famous Royal Gorge near Canyon City, Colo., and the construction will begin March 1. It will be 200 feet above the present hanging bridge of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, and from It the great stream will look like a thread or silver. The bridge will be for the extension of the electric railway system from Canyon City to Florence and the top of Roy al Gorge, and the cost of the bridge will be about $100,000. England's Oldest Peer. The only living peer who was a member of the Louse of lords at the time of Queen Victoria's arcession is Lord Nelson, 'lie succeeded to the earldom in 1S33. Lord Nelson Is not a direct descendant of the hero of Tarfalgar, but 1 3 only collaterally de scended from Horatio Nelson's sister Mrs. Bollon. He enjoys a good es tate and a pension of 5,000 granted to the first Lord Nelson and his heirs. Chinese Cavalry. In describing the Chinee cavalrv. a correspondent asserta that horses In finer condition do not exist in any army in the world. He says that the Chinese la a born horseman, who has nothing to learn from Europe or America in the handling of horses, though he is ignorant of veterinary science. Three States Beat Germany. Germany's present railway mileage Is reported at 34.1S3. The mileage In the United States is nearing the 220, 000 mark. In three states, Illinois, Texas and Pennsylvania, tho railway mileage is about equal to that In Germany. The lead would be great ly increased by including the trac tion Hubs. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. THE WHOLE LOT B we don't heed prevention, we will need a euro. The 01d-Mcr,k-Car St. Jacobs Oil Is reicr always for all terms of muscular aches or pains, from ' LUMBAGO RHEUMATISM to to ; STIFF NECK IT CURES ALIKE PUT IN A M tV iw7T rood brighter nd farter colon thin any Women in Our Hospital Appalling Increases in the Number of Operations Performed Each Year How Women . May Avoid Them. Going through the hospitals in our large citlasone is surprised to find such a large proportion of tho patients lying on those snow-white beds women and grirls, who are either awaiting or recovering from serions operations. Why Rhould this be the case ? Sim ply because they hsve neglected them selves. Female troubles sre certainly on the increase among the women of this country they creep upon them unawares, but every one of those patients in the hospital beds had plenty of warning in that bearing-down feel ins;, pain at leftor rightof the abdomen, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back, dizziness, flatulency, dis- f placements of the organs or irregular ties. All of these symptoms are indi cations of an unhealthy condition of the female organs, and if not heeded the penalty has to be paid by a danger ous operation. When these symptoms manifest themselves, do not drag along until you are obliged to go to the hos pital and submit to an operation but remember that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has saved thousands of women from surgical operations. When women are troubled with ir regular, suppressed or painful periods, weakness, displacement or nlceration of the organs, that bearing-down feel ing, inflammation, backache, bloating (or flatulency), general debility, indi gestion, and nervous prostration, or are beset with such symptoms a dizziness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all-gone" and " want-to-be-lef t alone " feelings, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Falls WINCHESTER RIFLE AND PISTOL CARTRIDGES Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges of all calibers are loaded by machinery which sizes the shells, supplies the exact quantity of powder, and seats the bullets properly. By using first-class materials and this up-to-date system of loading, the reputation of Win chester Cartridges for accuracy, reliability and excellence is maintained. Ask for them. SHOOT In 1905 there were 9,'5 fatal acci dents In the collieries of Great Bri tain and Ireland. MAKE EVERY DAY COUNT- , bad the weather You cannot afford to be without a WATERPROOF OILED SUIT ,,OR SLICKER. When vou buy I00K for the SIGN OF THE FISH t Ojijt Drill for Water Prnnpect tor Mirerals Drill restart Blastliotes. We make DRILLING MACHINES For Hirso, S'.fm or Gasoline Power. Latest Traction Machine. Cos! 1 Oil. 100M IS MACHINE TIFFIN, OHIO. CO., GOLO-MININS STOCK FHEE-STunSra mint ot trfk free In rh KTPAtt srold-intnfnir prijK)ition in the worlii'ihivorv. -Many furtnn mre to made Thi ft your tr.lrin oiipnrt unity Write totifiy lon't ilWnv. A K U( -0 N K N THA ToiiCO Tract Society liuililii;jr, Mew York. Successfully Prosecutes Clam I Lt PrlnclTjal E-tnmur U 8. nnsioo Hure 3yi-Mii jtvii hut. 15itU vdjcatntzrlHiiiii.attj si ms, Iif-A PATENTS i: R p. Ijo-'k fw. Hlehont rrr. Co.Lvin.M,VashlniiU,n.I.C SPRAIN I ... ; THB WHOLB LOT. ------- P2?1 THEY Ml FADELESS DYE S other dye. Onlue. rckM color all oil Th m hu,HlL . The following letters cannot fail to bring hope to despairing women. -,. Miss Buby Mushrush, ' of East Chicago, lnd writes : Dear Mrs. Plnkham: " I have been a great sufferer with irregular periods and female trouble, and about tluee months ago the doctor, after using th X-'ftay on me, anid 1 hod an a)crs and would have to have an oration. My mother wanted me to try Lydia E. Pinknam's Vegetable Compound as a last resort, and It not only saved me from an operation but made me en tirely well." . : . Mrs. Alice BerryhilVof 813 Boyce Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: ' "Three years ago life looked dark to ma I bad ulceration and inflammation of the female organs and was in a serious condition. " My health was completely broken down and the doctor told me that if I was not op erated upon I would die within six months. I told him I would have no operation hui would try Lvdia E. Pinkhanvs Vegetable Compound. He tried to influence me against it but I sent for the medicine that snme day and began to use it faithfully. Within five days I felt relief but win not entirely cured until I used it for some time. " Your medicine is certainly fine. I hava Induced several friends and neighbors to take it. and I know more tbnn a dozen who had female troubles and who to-day are as well and strong aa I am from using your Vege table Compound." I j Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other njedicine, for you need tne oesi. Mrs. Plnkham, daughter-in-i Lydia E. Pinkham, invites all sick wo men to write her for advice. Her advice and medicine have restored thousands) to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. WHERE YOU HOLD W. L. Douglas SJ&'SSHOESSa W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cllt Eds Lin cannot be quailed at any price. . i. aovciat: makes sflls moh .'; $-.e.','y,ot s THAitAnroTHt Q1 fl flflft RHVAi-.D to snyono who ess ' O I U)UUU discrove this statement. II I could lake you into mv three large factories at Hrncktun, Mass., and show you the inlinite enre with which ever v poirnt shoes Is made, you would realize why W. L. Dougls S3. SO Hints cost more to make, why tliey hold their shape, tit hotter, wear longer, and ore of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3. SO shoe. W. L. Douglnn Sirsrtg APate Shnea lorn Hon, $.HO, SV.CIJ. Bay' School "r.'!'i?oom,$2.&a.$7!.$1.73,$1.Sa i CAUTION. I Han't upon navinu 'i A.Ah.v.j. Ia sli,.". j'nkg no suoMlitura. Nona fremiti,, ti-ithr.ut big n:iine and price stampoil on bottom. Fust Color Etltlels mei ; tiey tvttt not WW brtu,lu. Write for lllllstr.ltpil Cnt.iln);. W. I.. 1)111 IW, Brockton, Mass. That Delightful Aid to HealtU Toilet Antisepti Whitens the teeth purifies mouth and breath cures nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes, and by direct application cures all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions caused by feminine ills. i Paxtine possesses, extraordinary cleansing, healing and germi cidal qualities unlike anything else. At all druggists. 50 cenui y LARGB TRIAL PACJCAGB FREB The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass, DROPSY SSUSSSmn "ri umv Book r t-silmoiilaia u4 IO Osmysj' troatW tfft M. II. tEKkVH WHS, Bui AtUal!!, gffpyijq I jj Capital a.aooiw
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers