TRUSTEE'S SALE Of a Valuable Manufacturing Plant. By virtue of Riitliorlty vested In J e by a morlgimn, dnted Dm cnitwr 1st HUM. iworjl.d In th dtll.-u for tlio rwonlirw or umh In .It'f ferwm count v, on -an. 21. Won. In Mortice Hook 8, p iK . Hiul In piirautsni-e of H writ ten notn:e of icqiiPHt, accomprinled by a biinil. of the li.Klfrs of a majority In value of llie tionilKoiiisiaiHllim.iw "J aid llt'l'n' vidi-d, I will oiler for Bale upon the i il by auction or outcry, on llitirsduy, Iho iili day of May, A. l).,W,at HUM o'clock a. m the followtnii real eat ate, to wll: All t h ut ii'it iln niece, parcel r tract or lam II, ! and i'elnL- slt.mie In th.totiiijl.Hj ofWlMHlow count y of Jellerson bim state i f Fennf.ylv.intn, bounded an.l de-.crli.ed as f -lows: ll..iinln at a post on tho ror I. I I of the Tr.Mi- Hun br.m.'h of the HnlM.i, Ho che tcranrl I'l.t hum Ualln.ad, twelve .Vet from the cenfr of the track iimnwlte the point of Ihcswlld. ruiMiliu: mo hi.; A''' -can Production Conui'iny lmllil!int. 1 1. n o by a jiln.MV Hcjice (. curve 10 inu rk'h , twelve feci from I he c.-nlcrof satil ral road, eiillt hiiccl fd and Miventy-slx !' feet posi; ihcnceno'lh iwciity-llvu decrees en-,1. wo uu In d and llt'y-lN f.el (N. ileineuH E. SiW ft I nmreor less t " Hon P'.st, forly eluhUJK) feel east of a smill beech; ihence north eluhiv-six decrees .st six '"'!!! 1'' . and sixty-three feel (N. tw deiecs I M.I (U to an Iron post close to a small wh lu oak, thence south four decrees and thirty inlllll es east two hundred and ilhy-iilne feci . -Kre.sll. minutes E. Mil (t.) to the pb.ee if EeKlnnlin; and eontatnln live mid three tenths aci cs ( i A.), more or less; bel.m part of a larKif .met of land conveyed to I he Keynoldsvllle Land and Improvement, t.om- pany by the Central hand ana min.iiK i.om- any, ana couvejre.i .j v j . ., : ,and and Improvement Company to the American t'rouuenuii w)niinj "j dated , J une 13th, 1005. The above described land lies adjacent to Keynoldsvllle borough, a llourlshlnn place, surrounded by a densely populated district traversed by a net-work of steam and elec tric railway's, and has erected thereon one bulldlnir 75 feel In widt h by 2I feet In lenilli, Vlth a one Northern Engineering ten ton elec tric crane, traveling the entire length there of, and one Cupola; also one building 63 by 300 feet, with a boiler house attached; also one two story office building with vault, and a one story brick or hollow tile building used for putter i shop. Each of the aliove described buildings are of lire proof construction throughout, wlili cflment floors, metallic window frames and Bash, and cement and metal roofs. 1 he buildings are located along the Trout Hun branch of the K. V. C. It. It , with a private switch running between them. The buildings have the following machin ery, tools and Implements Installed therein, via: Three sleam boilers and stock, one lT'txa Buckeye engine and iiO K. W. generator, to air compressors, one steam pump, one Ma honing V. and M. punch and equipment, one Cleveland E. & F. punch and equipment, one McHierry's 124 Inch squaring shears, one Bliss No 75 vertical puuch and equipment, one Sibley & Ware vertical drill press and equipment, one Snyder 81 Inch back geared drill press, one Hamilton IS Inch back geared drill press, one Morgan bolt cutter and dies, one 18 In. x 111 In. lathe, one McSherry's 8 In. by (14 In bending roll, one II Inch tool grlndr, two large motors. onesmiill motor, one ltrowu & .ohrman radial drill and equipment, no 12 In. lool grinder, one llelles Jones angle she:irs, one Win. vertical punch, one lie ule hear and punch, one Allen M In. linpan rlv- . eler and dies, one N irthern Engineering ten ton electric crane, one Wlcpes Bros. 10 In. j bending rolls, llvesleeljlb cranes, one wood Jib crane, two air receivers, one supply tank; one McSherry hand power shears, one MeSherry's foot, power punch, one Kobln Ron foot power folder, one Peck and 8lone foot power shears, one MoShO'-ry's Oil in. hand power break, three blacksmith's forges, tools and equipment, ono J. V.Openberg dunging clamp, three hand forces, ono Tale & .lonus oil forge, complete equipment of drills, com plete equipment of taps, complete equipment of small holler maker's tools, seven pneu matic riveters and dies, three pneumatic motors, live pneumatic chipper and caulkers and tools, four pneumatic Jacks, and consti tute a nl int as a whole, ready to be put In operation as a plate works or as a foundry nndplaie works. The land, buildings, ma chinery, t mis and Implements, described and mentioned In and covered by said mortgage, will he sold to the highest bidder, free and discharged from taxes and liens of record. TERMS OF SALE. Thirty-three and one-third per cenlumlii cash when the property Is knocked down, and the balance In two tqual annual payments with Interesi. to be secured by a bond and mortgage, which shall be a llrst Hen on said proiwriy. The purchaser shall have the right to pay too whole of the purchase ptl.'e In cash if be so desires. If the holder or holders Of said bonds, or any of them purchase said property, they shall have the right to apply the par value, ot the'r proportionate share of the ptoci eds of such sale, with accrued In terest, of the bonds hld by them, on said purchase money. U. M. McDonald, Trustee. ! OTICE TO CKKDiTORS AND OTHEKS. In tho matter of the estate of E. A. Gnur ley, deceased. In the Orphans' Court of Jefferson county. N nice Is hereby given that. I). O. Gourley administrator of the estate of said decedent, will present to said Court on the Mill day of April, 1WH, at 2 o'clock p. ni., of said date, his petition for an order to nell at. private sale for llie payment of debts, all that cer tain messuage and tract of land of whi -li the said decedent died seized, lying, being and situate in David Reynolds' addition to tho borough of Keynoldsvllle, count y of Jellerson and state of Pennsylvania, known as the West half of lot No. 62 as plotted by James Caldwnll, bounded and described as follows, to-wlt: Commencing at a corner on Grant slice , being the center point of lot No. fii on ssld Orant streets thence north Ih'rty and ihree fourths degrees west, forty eight and one half feet to a post corner of lot No, SI; thence south along lot No. fi-i, tifty-thieu degr es west 1o Vilow alley; thence south thirty ana thr'-e-fourihs degrei's east along said alley ; MHy feet to a post ; thence noiih lifty nlne and one half degrees east to (irtmt Btreei, the place of hcginnln,:; containing six thousand six hundred thirty and one half Miu.ire feet (ii.li.1 sq ft. I, belli t tho . same iiicMiage or tract, of land. Inter aha. conveyed bv M. W. fnillh and wife to E. A. Gourlev.'the said decedent, by deed dated Feb. Ill, IIH7, recorded in tho Recorder's offleo In and for the said county of Jefferson, In Deed Hook Vol. 11, page 10, for the price or c .nsldcratlon of one thousand (flow, dollars, at which litne, If no exopih n Is taken, or objection made to granting the order of sale as prayed for, the Court will take action on said petition. W.N.Conhao, Attorney for Fetitione-, Remove Poisons FROM THE SYSTEM. There sre three wyi ..d three only, bv which the human body can be nd of poiwo ous, waite milter the bowel i, the kidneys, and the tkin ll it only when the boweli become (luggiih and cotutipited thai the kidneyi ploy out at a result of the excessive work thrown t'pon then Now, there is only one medical trealmee'. that fully realizes this condition of affairs. Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney and Liver Pills For they regulate the bowels as well as the kidneys and thereby remove the cause of trouble and cure the most compile sled cases. You csn scarcely find a case of kidney disease which did not begin with liver end bowel disorders snd .which could therefore here been prevented by this great prescription of the famous Receipt Book author. One pill a dose, 25 cents a box, at ail dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co, Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. E. F. Smith, 1306 S. Washington S treat, Lansing, Mich., states "Suffering from kidaejr troubles, I used Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidner and Liver Pills, and was (such pleased with thea thorough scnoa oa lbs liver sod kidneys, rernoving the bile, rsgu lating the bowels and toning the kidneys up .to healthy and normal action." For Sale by StoWo & Fetch I Drug Co. ;l CIHCUS Vast and Dazzling, It Is Really a Very Simple Affair. AN ANALYSIS OF A BIG SHOW. Four Main Parts, Aerial, Ground, Equestrian and Hippodrome, to Which All Else la Incidental The Actual Cost and Presi Agent Figures. While the performance of the bis luouVrn circus is truly iltizKlhig nml touftisliiR to the Average visitor, nn Himlysls will show It to lie n very slm lealTnlr. Tho performance proper consists of four parts namely, norlnl, ground, equestrian nml hippodrome. Every thing else Is lneluVnttil or adjunctive. The mcnngi'iie, frenks, curiosities, etc., tnnke up the remainder of what we call "the show." If one will examine the programme of the circus performance carefully, It will he seen that the ground acts al ternate with, sny, a jockey net, an aerial net, an eqnestrlnu act, another ground act, another aerial act, and so on for the entire performance. The performers are mostly foreign ers, Japan furnishing the most of any particular country. France, Italy and Germany give us the most of the ath letic artists, while England and Amer ica produce the equestrians. Hut the Japanese furnish fully three-eighths of the whole entertainment. The '.atlves of Nippon have never been equaled by those of nny other country for tricks of the feet and hands. The Japanese, however, are never found on the programme as equestrians, trapeze artists or clowns. With these parts eliminated they may be sold to give the greater part of the performance. Cut the equestrian and trapeze acts and the Jnpnnese will bo found In almost every number. A single Japanese troupe of five orBlx members, costing from $150 to $400 a week, will thus furnish the most of the entertainment. As every circus goer knows, tho Japanese are especially skillful In every feature of Juggling, balancing by hands or feet, manipulat ing of objects, wire walking, etc., which they have carried to such a de gree of perfection that their acts are unapproachable by the people of any other nationality. The first Japanese performer In this country was a small boy who came with the first Japanese embassy to the United States. Ills perrormancp created a perfect furore of enthusiasm, and he attracted more attention than the novel embassy Itself. Mttle "All Right" will bo re membered, though the embassy and Us Important mission has long been for gotten. The name was acquired from tho cir cumstances that the words "all right" were the only English, words the child know at the time, and ho used to sing them out In his shrill treblo ss ho fin ished what was then deemed a re markable feat, to the Intense delight of the audience. So popular was the little chnp that his advent was followed by several other little "All Rights" from the samo curious country beyond tho raclfic un til the Japanese performers here be came an old story. The chief reason for tho overwhelm ing preponderance of foreign talent In the American circus lies In the practi cal exclusion of children from tho stage and ring In the United States. So many of the states have laws for bidding the public appearance of chil dren under sixteen that theatrical man agers hesitate to produce any play with' a child in the cast. As acrobatic feats require early and severe training, the American Is practically cut ofJf from this way of earning a living. In present conditions when Little Eva in "Uncle Tom"s Cabin" has be come old enough to marry little "AH Right" would be an Impossibility, for not only do these laws prevent tho training of American children for tho stage and ring, but they prevent tho appearance In this country of some of the most famous family troupes of Eu rope. Abroad the show career offers a bet ter means of advancement than flic trades, and poor parents frequently ap prentice their children to those -who train them for the stage or ring. In this country we generously send them to the cotton mills or the mines. The American circus performer has gradually liecom? restricted to the equestrian act, and In the act of riding he or she is not excelled, even by the English, though 'the latter nation has produced some fine' equestrians, hauts ecole and daring bareback riders. Mme. Dockrlll, wife of R. H. Dock rlll, himself one of the best high school riders of his time, was a famous Amer ican rider In 1874. She used to ride four bareback horses abreast, her feet resting on the two outside horses In Roman fashion. She also did the Ma teppa act and other thrilling bareback feats. Her pretty daughter Rose was trained In the same act and afterword Your Life Is at Stakt when yon bave a cough or cold in your chest banginr on week slier week. Hundreds ol fatal cases might be pre vented by taking- the right remedy in lime. Piso's Cure will prevent the deadly con sumption snd drive out the persistent cough or cold. It Is Ihe one sale remedy givinc prompt relief, yet pleasant to une ana narmiess. All Druggist IS Csntf became a star rldcf . Emma Lake, who died quite recently at an advanced ago, was another fa mous American equestrienne. She al ways won salvos of applause as her horse, with noble head high In the air, rose almost to a perpendicular on his hind feet at the word ot command, while his skilled mistress retained a firm place In the saddle. Riders at one time were the chief at traction of the circus and were billed as we now bill our "death defying deeds." In the old one ring days the whole performance was practically di vided between the rider and the clown. When tho rider was not riding, tho i 1 , , even t.lC !Mtl . i.:i:ll tho clown i mix or v. n his Ju.u's. after which llie riiler lesiinn-.l the perform ance. All riders in those days were "cham pions" In the show printing. Tho press agent Invariably wreathed these cham pions lu laurels wrested from other champions, and on the dead walls their breasts were adorned with rich medals of superlative merit. There were sucji champions ns Charles W. Fish, Martlno Ix)waude, William Demott, William Sliowles, Robert Stlckney, Wllllnm Ducrow, Jim Robinson, Jim Melville, his son, Frank Melville, and many others. Among the clowns of renown lu the earlier days were Jim Cooke, the Shakespearean clown; Johnny ratter lion, the Irish clown; Joe I'enlland. Dan Rico, Billy Burke, etc. Their pay was nearly as high as that of the rid ers. Clowns and riders were the only real expensive atractlons of the circus up to the year 1870. A year or two later P. T. Barnum and his associates, W. C. Coup and Dan Costello, introduced a hippodrome, and that feature became a fixture In the circus performance and necessitated the big tent The hippodrome sepa rated the audience so widely from the performers that the old singing and talking clown soon vanished. Ills place was taken by the silent funmakers of today. From being a chief feature the clown became a mere pautomlmtst, relegated to the waits. The hippodrome multiplied riders and cheapened them, so they, too, lost In dividuality. The distance and multi plicity of features enabled tho show men to run In mediocre riding acts In stead of the first class ones formerly necessary. The sharp rivalry charac teristic of the one ring days was dead. Tho hippodrome, which furnishes half an hour's entertainment. Is itself relatively the cheapest part of the per formance today. When Maude Oswald was a hippo drome rider, the races were hotly con tested. So greut was this rivalry at times that tho management had to In terfere, not because of the danger to the contestants, but for fear that they might Injure the horses or other prop erty. Tho riders owned their Individ ual necks and could be replaced at any time without expense to the show. Nowadays the hippodrome personnel Is made up of the odds and ends and costs little or nothing extra. A clown will become a "Roman" rider; his wife will drive a chariot. Half a dozen wo men, some of them sewing girls In tho wardrobe department, make up tho la dies' flat races. An equal number of stable grooms will do the crack Jockey races. A few dogs run around the track once, and It Is called the "whippet dog race;" half a dozen terror stricken monkeys are strapped to pony saddles, and N their frantic fear Bends tho au dience Into convulsions of laughter. The only really meritorious feature of the hippodrome is that of tho fine Jumping horses Introduced in modern days. Then come tho chariot races, the cheapest kind' of affairs, but furnish ing perhaps the most thrllllngi excite ment to the average country crowd. There used to be elephant and camel races, but the brutal manner In which It was necessary to goad and prod these unfortunates In order to get them to run at all was so repulsive1 to the gentle hearted in the audience that these races had to be eliminated. The hippodrome ns a circus feature Is popular with showmen because cheap and a good tiller. Nobody has to bo hired for it The obligation Is put Into certain contracts. The harmless little press agent sto ries as to the tremendous outlay In sal aries and nil that which may seem to conflict with anything here set down may be relegated to the fiction depart ment The real cost of running a big show Is considerably less than any oth er business In like capitalization. Bal timore Sun. a good lamp oil that is safe burns with a clear, white light does not "frost" chimneys nor char wicks is Family Favorite Regardless of brand or prioe thera is no better Far superior to ordinary tank wagon oil YOUR DEALER HAS IT. Waverly Oil Works INDEPKNDBNT REFINBRS Oil for All Purposes PITTSBURG, PA. ooki.it asMT pan Powar of Habit. - The power of habit was strikingly Illustrated not lorn; ago In a shirt waist factory'. One woni.ui who had done nothing but sew up the Beams of sleeves for four years was taken off that particular Job and was asked to run up seams In the body of the waists. She complained that the chanpe made her so nervous that she could not work. "But what Is the diiTe;'ence?" nuki-.l the foreman. 'There hi noliilng but n straight pen in here, Just the same us yon have been used to." . ' "I know," replied the vo:min wUii true feminine f '.:lc, "but It Isn't sleevs." And li did Indeed prove to be n fact that owl:: to her lour ., w ork on I leeves ll tools av.i of slea !.v icr fully tin! ni.niy v. ec'-.ii t' ove.-m-.'!" !uv norvirm uess stilli" icntl.v In run llie iiiiiiinne a' her iii'ciis iiinivl fpeed when sewing an oilier pin t of Hie waist. -Kxrlinnge. Diamonds. Why are diamonds expensive, being merely dust and ashes? Because wo men love them. And why do women love them? Because they aro expen sive and useless. Loudon Chronicle. Approaching Infinity, First Lady (accidentally meeting sec ond ditto at party) Well, my dear, you never come to see me. Second Lady (with emphasis) My dear, I'm always coming! Punch. It 111 beseems a man to Taunt arro gantly. Homer. DR.fl.W. CHASE'S QEn CATARRH POWDER Ub. Is sent direct to the diseased parts by tho Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air pansafres, BtopadroppinffS in the throat and permanently cures Catarrh and Hav Fever. No harmful drutrs. 25c blower free: all dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase MedicineCo., Buffalo, N.Y. For sale by Stoke & Feioht Drug Co. fJUGHES & FILMING. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Main Street. Reynoldsville, Pa. WINDSOR HOTEL W. T. lirulmker, Mirr. Midway lietnepn ltroad St. Ration and Rending Terminal on nibort st. Rooms $1.00 per day and up. -Theonly Dioderale prieed hotel of rep utation and consp(iiBiice In PHILADELPHIA Sanitary Plumbing Plumbing Is a science. Good or bad plumbing depends upon the skill or lack of skl.l of the man who does the work. Bad plumbing is dear at Any price; good plumbing tjhe kind we do coats no more, Is conducive to health, and is a Vroat mon .ey saver in the end. See Me for Estimates On your noxt job. Satisfac tion Is assured if I do the work. G. E. Main Street Keynoldsvllle, Pennsylvania. Humphrey Pennsylvania Railroad EASTER EXCURSION ATLANTIC CITY CAPE MAY Anglesea, Wildwood, Holly Beach, Ocean City, Sea Isle City NEW JERSEY THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1908 Train leaves Reynoldsville at 4.25 p. m. $10.00 Round Trip $12.00 Round Trip Tickets (food only In coaches. PROPORTIONATE RATE3 FROM OTHER STATIONS. Tickets (rood for passage on trains leaving Pittsburg at 4.65 p. m. and 8.60 p. m. and their connec tions. Tickets good for sixteen days. EASTER SUNDAY ON THE BOARDWALK. For stop-over privileges and full information consult nearest ticket agent. J. R. WOOD. Passenger Trafflo Manager. Study the Qoess. There is much to study . about a goose. Just observe a flock of Reese some day when you aro out visiting on a farm. They'll give you amuse ment by the hour. A goose hasn't the slightest Idea of breadth or depth. The assertion that every goose that passes through an open barn door ducks Its head, no mat ter If the opening be twenty feet high, Is as true as can be, and, while a goose can't be made to believe that there Is no danger to Its bead as It passes over the sill of a barn door, It Is equally positive that It cau creep through a two Inch augur hole or a knothole In a fence just as easily as It can go through a twenty foot door and with more safety to its person. I have laughed myself sore more times than a few at tho persistence of some old gooso In trying to enter an luclosuro through a hole In the fence hardly big enough to get its head through, while a gate big enough for a team of horses to pass through was wldo open within three feet of tho bole. New York Bun. Ona to Three at Whist, The late Senator Hoar was extreme ly fond of whist, which he played with remarkable skill. A friend says that the only time he ever knew the usually placid and genial man from Massachusetts to be abso lutely Impatient was when on one occa sion at whist the senntor had an unusu ally stupid partner. Notwithstanding this handicap, the pair were winning right along even against good players. In the middle of one game some one paused behind the senator's chair and asked, "Well, senator, how are you get ting on?" "Very well, Indeed," was the reply, "In view of the fact that I have three ad versaries." St. Louis Republic. Piles We are so certain that Itching, Bleeding and Pro trading Piles can al- wv tin ml invtvl anH nH. UBoIutely cured by this ointment that we positively guarantee satis faction or money refunded. M Dr. A.W. Chase's dealers or Dr.A.W.Chase f a r 4- w Mn( Medicine Co.,Uu(TaIo.N.Y. Vi 111 ITI Will Fo e by Stoke & Felchl Drug Co. ENTIRE CITY INTERESTED IN YOUNG MAN Cooper's New Theory Attracts Widespread Attention During Stay in Cincinnati. Art adequate idea of the Intense in terest which has been aroused by young Mr. Cooper during the past year -with his theories and medicines is given in the following article which appeared In the Cincinnati Post while Cooper waa introducing his Ideas to the people of that city. The article says: "The beginning of Mr. Cooper's second week in Cincinnati gives every Indication that he Is to enjoy the same astonishing success here as la other "From the first day of his visit the crowds that call to see hlra have stead ily increased, until now it has reached a point where several thousand 'talk with him each day. The entire city seems to have become Interested in his theory that the human stomach is degenerate, and he already has an army of followers in Cincinnati who eeem positive that bis claims are cor rect. "A number of CInclnnatinns were latervlewed at Cooper's headquarters on Frldiy, and several interesting Btntemcnth. showing their intense faith :a Cooper's preparations, were secured. The following are selected-from these statements and are characteristic of them all: Mrs. M. E. Emerson of 630 Vest Court street, said: I have suf fered with stomach trouble and con stipation for a year or so. When I ite I would have bloated spells, sour stomach, fermentation, bad taste in my mouth. In the morulas ' ai a -TO- GEO. W. BO X U, Rheumatism Badly Cripples a Baldwinsville Farmer URIC-0 QUICKLY CURED HIU Treated Two Tears with a High-Priced Physician with No Success Mr. Frank Howe, a prominent farmer In the town ot Van Buren, says: "I visited the beat physician In this country, who treated me for about two years fur rheumatism. I spent In that time several hundred dollars and seemed to grow worse lu-lcail of better each day. Ilnlniron crutches and forced to drive to the train and liolihliug to thn doctor's olllco became very discouraging, let alone the sleepless nights i' nil fearful hours rf p:iln. ISkIiij; aurlsed by a friend I purchased Smith's Uiln-O prescription, look It home andliscd It that d.iy as directed. "Those fearful scl.-itlo pains left me, my blood seamed to lot loose and flow freely, 1 felt di:!nront and knew the next morning I had fo mi) a cure, as 1 slept and rested well all that nli-ht, soniethlug I had not done bofnro In two oar.s. I used In all six battles of (Jrlc-0 and have nerer felt a return of the disease, had no us for crutches or cane since the first day's treatment. "I hare since recommended Urlc O to hun dreds of friends and acquaintances and In every n lnstnncs It gave remarkable relief. To every person who surfers from Rheumatism I say, take Urlc-l) at once and your suffering will oon end. FRANK HOWE, Baldwinsville, N.Y." Anvone who doubts Mr. Howe's experience i ln.ii, a to wrlln him fur further dotlis, 'i ..r irm-eilaeur r.i h:ivo so mu li con.'ldence in Mn r i. U to. t thoy will g.adly clvo a law 7'c I' -tilo of UrhOfreetoitll Itheu'n tics t. i! h.n e never used It and are looking for a l:r!inniDt.lasttngcure for this most dl ironing d:oa-o. Address for tree trial, Smith Drug Co., t-yracuse, K. if, Urlc-O Is sold and personally recom mended in IteynoldBville by Sti ke & Faicht. ubsscrlbe for The 4fr Star II you want the News tired as when I went to bed. I had a dull pain In the lower part of my back. I have taken almost one bottle of the New Discovery and am so wonderfully: improved that I have come down here to thank Mr. Cooper In person and ob tain more of the medicine. "Another individual Interviewed was Mr. J. H. Brooks, living at 627 Walnut street, who had the following to say: 'For the pas eighteen months I have been a constant sufferer from catarrh ot the head and stomach. My nasal passages would become Inflamed and sore. I would have severs headaches; which affected my eyes, and great crusts of matter would drop into tha throat, causing an Irritation of the) bronchial passages, until the stomach; Anally became poisoned. When I would lay down at night a phlegm would gather in my throat until It almost choked me, and would cause an an novlng cough. Half a bottle of Cooper's New Discovery gave me re lief, and when the first bottle was fin ished I felt like a new man. I am now completely cured, and consider Cooper's New Discovery the greatest catarrh, blood and stomach remedy In the world.'" The Cooper preparat'ons have been .1 n.,MMar,,l Y.nr.nrrKAtf' tha United States. We consider them rT markable medicines and would J pleased to explain the nature of thw Stoke & r'eiciit urug u. - Tickets Rood in Parlor or Sleeping Cars in connection with proper Pullman tickets. General Passenger Agent. .