VCo Jim r; tallic HEELS and COUNTERS Matte of StseS For Miners, Quarrymen, Farmers, and all men w!io do rough work, Prevent sore heels. They will make your old shoes good ns new. They are easy to attach. Any cobbler can put them on. Your shoe dealer has shoes fitted with them. They arc lighter than leather, but will outlast the shoe. Send for booVlct Out trl all about them. tinned Shoe MachlneryC BOSTON.KABS Full Sets of False Teeth for Dogs. News comes from London that many dentists there have established "parlors" for the treatment of dogs, and that the patronage of the owners of "show dogs" has made the Inno vation a profitable one. A defective tooth may lose the prize to a dog otherwise perfect as to "points," and It Is now a common practice with fanciers to send their pets to the den tist as regularly as wise parents send their children. Single new teeth from $t to $5 each, while as much as $135 is paid for a full set for a be loved old canine member of a housed hold. ONE KIDNEY GONE, Hut Cured After Doctors Said There Was No Hope. Sylvantis 0. Verrlll. Mil ford. Me., s: lve venrn nun a onu in. in y paralyzed me and affected my kid neys. My back hurt me terribly, and the urine was badly disordered. Doctors said my rleht kidney was y pracucuuy uuuu. They said 1 could WW" never walk again. I read of Dnan's Kidney Pills and be gan using them. One box made mo stronger and freer from pain. 1 kept on using them, and In three months was able to get out on crutches, and the kidneys were acting better. 1 Im proved rapidly, discarded the crutches and to the wonder of my friends was soon completely cured." Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Thirty Thousand Quakes a Year. It was realized about 15 years ago, more or less, that a series of earth quake observatories, with delicate in struments, could obtain records of shocks in any quarter of the globe, and identify the spot with certainty, even If there were no witnesses of the acual occurrence. From the rec ords of these observatories It appears that there are every year some 30,000 minor shocks of earthquake In differ ent localities. Current Literature. Brown's " menial Troches are ot great service In curing Hoarseness, Coughs, and Sore Throat In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. John L Brown & Son, Boston, Mass. A Mighty Poor Specimen. Cassldy 01 don'-t see whol Gngllnd or Amerlcky or Garmlny should t'lnk av folghtln' over a dom little ting loike Somoa! Kerrigan Ye don't, eh! Then, be- gorrah; ye're a dom poor splslmln av an Olrlshman. Puck. Bed, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Compounded by Experienced I'hysicinns. Conforms to Pure 1-ood and Drug Lnws. Murine Doesn't Smart; Soothes bye Pain. Uncle Tom's Joke. "'Uncle Tom's Cabin' never gets stale." . I ! "Any novelty this year?" "Yes. When Eliza escapes across the river she does a cake walk on the Ice." Chicago News. Tiles Cured In 0 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any eaeof Itching, Blind, Iileedingor Protruding Piles in 0 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Some of 'Em Ain't. Mrs. Homespun (Indignantly) Here's an article says that in Formosa a wife costs $5. Mr. Homespun (thoughtfully) "Wal, a good wife is wuth It. Spare moments. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens theguma, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.. Great Britain has more than ten thousand societies, and has held in 'London a world's Christian Endeavor Convention that was the equal of the monster gatherings held In America. Coughing Spells are promptly relieved by a sin gle doM oiPi&o's Cure. The regular use of this famous re mcdy will relieve the worst form of coughs, colds, hoarse ness, bronchitis, asthma and dis eases of the throat and lung. Absolutely free from harmful drugs and opiates. For half a century the household reiAedy in millions of homes. At all druggists', 25 eta. 9 & A, C "me jerm rOSlXQ A UATTLESNAKE. : 'Until o:ie has actually tried to make a rattlesnake strike for the purpose ot getting his picture, for ex ample It Is dlmeul': to realize what a mild creature he is," declares Mr. Dane Coolldge, in a recent narrative of his experience with rattlers. , He did not, however, acquire this sense of their mildness Immediately, and he admits thnt their tempers vary; nor was it till after two or three seasons of catching them as a part of his business of wild nnlmal collecting that ho began to lose bis fear and was seized with a desire to photo graph what is, he declares, "un doubtedly tho ugliest snake in the world." Despite this dubious charm, It is scarcely likely that many amateurs of the camera will care first to catch, then to release at the proper place and season, then to coax or to force to pose, and finally to "snap" such difficult models. "To make the rattlesnake pose," says Mr. Coolldge, "that Is the heavy work of the artist. Snakes are very sensitive to the attitude of their mas ters. There must be no vexatious outbreaks, or the subject will become unmanageable; no nervous fidgeting and dodging, or he will become bold and attempt to escape. But, even as you would humor a spelled child, be calm, firm and persistent." He succeeded in obtaining many characteristic pictures, and his fur ther description, If it falls to arouse emulation, will assuredly arouse in terest. "On level ground a four-Coot rattle snake ran strike about two and a half feet. To procure a good picture the camera should be within four feet of him. "With a margin of a font and h half, it would seem easy for the pho tographer to control his nerves and get a perfect exposure. Dut by the time the old bulldog, flshting male has been brought to his characteristic pose head up, rattles quivering con vulsively, and neck retracted like a drawn bow the human Imagination stops In and makes that four feet seem less than two. And from con stantly watching his opal-glowing, hateful eyes, tho darting red tongue and poison-swollen Jowls, a kind of horror, such as Is supposed to charm birds, creeps over me. The muscles twitch and joggle the camera, and one's feet develop a surprising ten dency to back up Instead of to go ahead. "But that fighting pose Is hard to get, and It endures but a moment. As the snake lowers its head, I move quietly forward, watching It through my lens. The moment It Is focused I stamp my foot. Instantly the head Is raised, the Bupple neck drawn tense. I spring my shutter and step back unharmed." FISHING FOR SHARKS. Altutakl, one of the Cook Islands, Is celebrated for ihark catching all over Australasia. One does not catch harks in Altutakl after the usual fashion, writes Beatrice Grlmshaw In her book, "In the Strange Sbuth Seas." There Is something more ex citing In store for the visitor who goeB fishing In Altutakl lagoon. By noon the lagoon is unbearably warm in all the shallow parts, and the sharks, which inhabit It in large numbers, begin to feel uncomforta ble. Some of them head for. the coral patches hero and there, and He an the sand in the shelter of tl.j rocks, their bodies thrust as far into the clefts and crannies ot the coral as they can manage to. get. This is the Aitutakian's opportunty. He is perfectly fearless 1- the wat r, and he knows that the ohark is, after all, a stupid brute. So he arms himself with a knife, takes a 3trong rope, noosed in a slip-knot at one end, and dives from his whale boat into the warm, green water, where he has marked the latter end of a Bhark sticking out from a patch of coral, some three or four fathoms under neath the surface. The shark, being head In, does not Bee anything, but by and by he be comes aware of a delicate tickling all along his massive ribs, and as he rather likes this, he stays quite still and enjoys it. It is the Altutaklan, tickling him as boys tickle a trout in a stream, and for exactly tho same reason. He has got the noose in his left band, and his aim is to slip it over the shark's tail, while ho dis tracts the brute's attention by pleas antly tickling with the other hand. He is pretty sure to get the noose on before the shark suspects any thing. Once that is accomplished he rises to the surface like a shooting air bubble, swings himself Into the boat, and gives the order to haul in. The men in the boat lay hold of the rope, tighten with a sharp jerk, and toll is on. Now the shark begins to realize that something has happened, and re alizes it still more fully In another minute or two, when he finds himself fighting for his life on the gunwale ( of a rocking boat, agtinst half a doz en islanders armed with knives and axes. The battle Is short; the great brute is soon finished, and In another hour or two the village is feeding on his meat, and his fins are drying in the sun, to be sold to the trader by and by for export to China. No dinner party In China Is com plete without a dish of , daintily dressed Bnark's fins, and a good por tion of the supply comes from the Pacific. INDIAN TRAINING. The Indian believes absolutely In nr.snl breathing. "Again and again," writes Mr. George Wharton James In "What the White Race May Learn From the Indian,", "have I seen the Indian mother, as soon as the child was born, watch It to see If It breathed properly. If not, she would at once pinch the child's Up together, nnd keep them pinched until the breath was taken in and exhaled easily and nnturally through the nos trils. If this did not answer, she would take a strip of buckskin, and tie It as a bandage below the chin and over the crown of the head, forc ing the Jaws together; and then, with another bandage of buckskin, she covered the lips of tho little one. Thus, the habit of nasal breathing was formed Immediately the child saw the light, and it knew no other method. "But not only do tho Indians breathe through the nose; they are also experts in the art ot deep breath ing. When I first began to visit the Ilopls, in Northern Arizona, I was awakened every morning In the 'wee sma' hours,' as I slept In my blankets In the open at the foot of the mesa upon which the towns are located, by cow-bells, ns It a number of cows were being driven out to pasture. But In tho daytime I could see no cows nor any evidence of their ex istence. .When I asked where they were, my questions brought forth nothing but a wondering stare. "Cows? They had no cows. What did I mean? Then I explained about the bells, and ns I explained, a merry laugh burst upon my ears. " 'Cows? Those are not cows. To morrow morning, when you hear them, you jump up nnd watch.' "I did so, nnd to my amazement I saw, fleeing through the early morn ing dusk, a score ot naked youths, on each one of whom a cow-bell was dangling from a rope or strap round his waist. Later I isartiPd.Oiat every young man was required to run ten, fifteen, twenty miles, or even double this distance, upon certnln allotted mornings. This develops a lung ca pacity that is nothing short of mar velous. ' HE DID NOT KNOW. Illustrative of the exasperating ease with which chickens occasion ally "come home to roost," Is this story from "A Soldier's Letters to Chnrmlng Nellie." One day In June, 1S62, In the early part of the Civil War, General Hood, of the Texas Brigade, halted each regiment in turn, and gave his orders. To the Fourth he said: "Soldiers of the Fourth, I know 89 little of your destination as you do. If, however, any of you learn or bub pect'it, keep it a secret. To every one Who asks questions, answer, 'I don't know.' We are now under the orders of General Jackson, and I repeat them to you." ' General Jackson also gave strict orders against foraging; but apples were plentiful, and It was contrary to nature for hungry soldiers not to eal them, and bo it came about that on the march to Staunton General Jack Bon came upon a Texan sitting on the limb of an apple tree, busily engaged In filling his haversack with the choicest fruit. The general reined In his old sorrel horse, and in his customary curt tone, asked: "What are you doing in that tree, sir?" "I don't know," replied the Texan. "What command do you belong to?" "I don't know." "Is your command ahead of you ar behind you?" "I don't know." Thus it went on, "I don't know" given as answer to every question. Finally Jackson asked,. sternly: "Why do you give me that answer to every question?" " 'Cause them's the order our gen eral gin us this mornln,' and he tole us he got 'em that er way straight from olo Jackson," replied the man in the tree. riHgusted with a too literal obedi ence to his own commands, but not caring to argue the point, General .'ackson rode on. DESPERATE LEPER TAKEN. Battling desperately for his con tinued freedom and trying to make good tho throat he nas made for years to sell his liberty only with his life, Opunul Alia, a Hawaiian leper, was captured near Honolulu, Hawaii, and is now on his way to the leper settle ment on the Island ot Molokal. The outlaw has for years defied the po lice of Oahu, has dared them to come and take him from the stronghold he had built for himself among the lava fields of Waianae and has lived by forays on the countryside. At first be was wanted only because he was a leper; then he added to this a series of robberies and hold-ups and a long succession of threats to kill the flrBt man who dared lay hands on him Twice has he held oft police posses at the point ot his gun and many times ha slipped through the traps laid for him by the territorial police. Itnin and Consumption. That rainy winds have a marked effect in consumption has been proved by twenty years of observation in Dartmoor and North Devon, England The death rate from this disease Is much less In the sheltered places than In exposed localities. wwwwvwv www When your Watch Slops ! X Yoa cannot make II go by shaking It. , V Pen the bowels are constipated you can disturb them with , cathartics but, like the watch, they will J not be able to do , their allotted work 1 until they are put into proper condi- , tion to do it. One cannot mend ' a delicate piece of , mechanism by vio ' lent methods, and ' no machine made by man is as fine , as the human body. 1 The use of pills, salts, castor-oil J and strong cathartic medicines is , the violent method. Tho use of 1 ilia tint-h Innl. 1 ' 1 Lane's Family ! Meaicme is the method adopted by lntelli cent oeonle. Headache, backache, Indigestion, x constipntion, skin diseases nil are 2 benefited immediately by the use of this medicine. Drutrcists sell it at 2";e. and ene. ) Where Arbitration Is a Failure. Uncle Jededlah I'm In favor of ar bitration as a nienns of settlln' these here international disputes, but yet I realize that there might be some case where our national honor would de mand the tribunal of war. Uncle Hezcklah What kind of a case might such be? Uncle Jededlah Cases where the arbitrators decided for the other side. Judge. CHILD HAD SIXTY BOILS And fiitftYrrd Annunlly With a Bed Scald-Like Humor on hit iirnu Troubles Cured by Cut It-urn. "Wl.on mv littlp Vivian was about ix nl.l knr lipml tirnk'R Ollt ill VlOllS. She had about sixty in nil nnd I user! Cuti- cum Simp nnd luticurn Uintmeni wnirn cured her entirely. Sometime Inter a' liiimra. Iirnko nlli lir-lliml her enlS find spread up on to lior head until it wn pear ly halt covered. 1 he humor iookwi hkb n scald, very red with a sticky, clear fluid nniin, from it This oprurrpd every spring. I always used Cuticurn Soap nnd Ointment which never tailed to neai u up. The last time it broke out it became so had that I was discouraged. Hut I continued the use of Cuticurn Soap, Ointment nnd Resolvent until she was well nnd has never been troubled in the last two yenrR. Mrs. JM. A. Schwerin, 674 Spring Wells Ave., Detroit. Mich., Feb. 2t, liliM." Totter Drug & t'hem. Corp., Pole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Roston, Mass. The Presidential Armament. Boston baked beans will form a part of President Roosevelt's outfit when he starts on his hunting trip to Africa this spring, nnd Just to let the jungle folks know further about Bos ton, he will dismember his big game with Boston-made knlveB. Four huge, razor-edged beauties, the very acme of the cutters' craft, have Just been finished for the presi dent. The knives were made after designs drawn by Unltd States Civil Service Commissioner Mcllhenny of Louisiana. There are two hunting knives, double-edged a portion of their length, and 9' Inches in length of blade, a heavy 01nch brush knife for cutting through dense under growth, and a skinning knife with a blade nine inches in length. Each kttife has a silver hand-guard to its heavy ebony handle. Washington Post. Plenty of Exercise Necessary, Plenty of regular exercise must be taken In order to keep the body In a healthy condition. Any excessive or unusual exertion, however. Is sure to cause stiffness and soreness of the muscles and joints. To counteract this effect there Is nothing better than Sloan's Liniment. Lay It on lightly where the muscles have been strained; It requires no rub bing for it penetrates right to the bone, relieves any congestion and In flammation and makes the muscles elastlo and pliant. Sloan's Liniment Is a great boon to athletes, for It not only relieves pain and Btlffness, but it Is an excellent remedy for sprains, cuts, bruises and cramps. Mr. J. F. Price of Tuscumbla, Ala., writes: "I am an engineer on 'the Southern Road from Chattanooga to Memphis, Tenn. The continued ele vation of my arm upon the throttle gives it a sore feeling when on a long Journey, and there is nothing that will take the soreness out like Sloan's Liniment, and I keep a bottle In my grin always." Breaking It Gently. "Mamma, what would you do if that big vase In the parlor should get broke?" said Tommy. "I should spank whoever did It," said Mrs. Banks!' gazing severely at her little Eon. "Well, then, you'd better begin to get up your muscle," said Tommy, gleefully, " 'coz papa's broke it." Harper's Bazar. Itch cured In 30 minutes by Woolford'e Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Congressman La fear, has distrib uted 24,000 packages of garden seed among his constituents in York and Adams counties. The original allot ment to each Congressional district was 10.000 packaees. mm. viif 8PC HN MEDICAL CO., PUTNAM Co.rmnripx).l.brlgh((.rnn,iralercolori thin any OttU 4jm nr Kuroiom without rlppln .part. Write fSj . College- Men In Business. Mr. Harrlman's opinion as to tho condition under which a college man will get on In railroading Is very much the same as that of most suc cessful men regarding college men In their especial callings. The great railroad administrator and organizer Inevitably lays great Btress on tho morHl rather than the intellectual qualities of the man under discus sion. It Is "tho stick-to-it spirit" thnt carries one through. But also It Is to bo remembered thnt It Is thI3 spirit that carries a boy through col leee with the best results. The ono who Is endowed with It Is not neces sarily or generally a fair representa. live cf college training, for that train ing dors a lot more for him than it dors for his chum who may lack In perseverance. The truth is thnt there Is such a variety of boys at college and such a variety in the colleges that any gen eralization is defective. One thing, however, is Indicated In Mr. Harrl man's shrewd commentary. It Is that the boy In college who hns to work and work hard In order to get on has, In the very limitations of his career, a real and valuable advantage over those In "easier" circumstances. Whether he be poor, or only a little dull, If he Is forced to put his wholo strength Into his efforts, they gradu ally and almost unconsciously build up in him a capacity for work that Is more precious than any other quality In after life. New York Times. Only Ono "lironio Quinine" That is l.nintive Dromo' Quinine. Look lor the signature of E. V. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25e. Defining "Optometrist." An optometry bill will be presented In the Pennsylvania legislature thin winter. It will be designed for tho protection of the public no less than for the safeguarding of the profession of optometry. This bill will be simi lar to one passed by tho legislature of New York state and signed by Gov. Charles E. Hughes. It will bring Into prominence a word that is becoming generally u?ed throughout the United States. Soon everybody will be using "optometrist." What is that? It Is the name adopted by the American Association of Opticians at its con vention at Milwaukee, Wis., to desig nate those skilled In tile practice of optometry and optometry Is the em ployment of any means other than the use of drugs for the measurement of the powers of vision and the adapta tion of lenses for the . aid thereof. Governor Hughes, when signing the New York Optometry bill, said: "The practice of optometry exists and will continue to exist, and unquestionably It forms a proper subject for regula tion; I, therefore, approve the bill." Catarrh Cannot He Cured With TOCAt. Ari'MCATlONS.ns they cannot reach the sent of the disease. Catnrrh is s blood or const it til ionnl disease, and in order to cure it you must lake internal remedies. Hall's Catnrrh Cure is taken internallr, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur face. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine, it was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produce such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. Bold hy druggists, price, 75c. Take Hall's F amily Pills for constipation. Predicting Earthquakes. Thomas A. Jaggar, a professor in the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology, suggests in a magazine arti cle that the nations of the world unite in the study of earthquakes and vol canic actions in order to gain the scientific knowledge necessary to forcast the recurrence of these natu ral disturbances, to determine where the danger zones lie ana to warn the Inhabitants of an endangered locality when to prepare for the worst. Some thing on this line has been done in the past, but very little. Certain scientists now claim to have foretold the recent earthquake that laid low Messina and Regglo,- but if their prophecies were made public they were practically Ignored. Where Prophecy Failed. When John F. Wallace reduced the cost of excavation at Panama to 30 cents a cubic yard, rival engineers said that he was just digging out the easy spots In order to make a rec ord, and that it was physically, logic ally and morally impossible to main tain any such rate throughout the whole work. Yet now our engineers are excavating more than 100,000 cu bic yards a day at a cost of only 48 cents. Which Is another demonstra tion of the profound philosophical fact that some things can be done as well as some other things. New York Tribune. To restore a normal action to liver, kid neys, stomach and bowels, take Gartteld Tea, tho mild herb laxative. Safety In Homicide. It ncually seems safer now in this country to kill a man than to wrects a bank. In the case of the former crime, it appears, an acquittal may always be depended on, if the repu tation or feminine relatives is black ened with the theoretical purpose of showing the Jurymen the mental con dition of the murderer Detroit Free Press. According to'an official report, while in the past seven years 253.020.83G passengers have been carried on the railroads of New South Wales, only one was killed by an accident. COLT DISTEMPER Can b hnmdtrd very easily. Ihmlrk art; cured, and all ntrvra in fM&me Hiatilp, no matter how "exrxifed," kept from havimr the illaoMiv h iuinr KPIIIIN'H I lul III IkKTITUPLb m.Jl on the tonmie or In fee I. Act on ih h lo.nl and ex twin fteiniH ff of all form nfdlatempfr. hent remedy ever known for man in m - iuc KUHrtimmi iu cure one cae. Mic and ft a hoi tie; tieaierf, or rent f xpretw i uuiiicp Tfiroois. our ranteiL Largest Clcmlili ind Gictrrlcloilitt, Qoahcv. Incf., U. 8. A. Lv aeltlmr hnrwe remidy In ei1tenr twelve v FAD EL ESS DYES othe. - Jr.. One HVj. pioKiwe color, .u nbern Thr-y m co.rt witrr bolirr ttmn n.ivnihe. rtyo. Von fur frM booklot-Uow to wye, Ulcaou 4 Uix CoWrj. aiON UOK U U I U CO., tiuluil lliinuul SAVED FROM AN OPERATION ByLydiaEsPinkham's Vegetable Compound; Louisville, Ky. "Lydia E. Pink, hfim's Vegetable Compound has cer tainiy done me m world of goori an4 I cannot praise i enough. Isuffere from irregularities, dizziness, nervous ness, and a sever female trouble. J.ydiaE.rinkham'i Vegetable Com pound has restore! me to perfect health and kept m from the operating table. 1 will never be v.ithout this medicine In the house." Mrs. Sau'u Lee, 8523 Fourth StLonisville, Ky. Another Operntion Avoided. Adrian, Oa. "I Buffered untold misery from female troubles, and my doctor said an operation was my only chance, and I dreaded it almost ai much as death. Lydia K. rinkham'i Vegetable Compound completely cured me without an operation." Lena V, Henry, R. F. D. 8. Thirty years of unparalleled gnft! cess confirms the power of Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound to cure female diseases. The great vol ume of unsolicited testimony constant ly pouring in proves conclusively that Lydia E. Ilnkham's Vegetable Com- Sound is a remarkable remedy for those istressing feminine ills from which so many women suffer. A Contrary Person. ' "Old Pill Oudgett, he 'was ha contrary," said the oldest Inhabitant, "that when spring came he pretend ed he felt like workin'!" Indianap olis Journal. . Many Children Arc Sickly. I rnttiavflrnv'aKn'wt Priwiipr for Child- used by Mother Oray, mime in Children's Home, W. Y., cure f ovensliness, ixnrxnpsv tdm, Stomiich Troubles, Teething Iinop-di-rs. Destroys Worms. All Draggi? ts', li'ic Sample fiiee. A. 8. Olmsted, Le Hoy, H. TC Funds for Woman Suffrage. Mrs. Itussell Sage nnd other womn of large means have pledged $60,00 to the cause of woman suffrage Im the United States. The money la to be paid in sums of $12,000 a year for the next five years. The annual receipts of the American Wotnaa Suffrage Association have grow from $2,544 in 1892 to $25.CU2 foB 1907. fj The Ingenuity of Inventors. ' The ingenuity of inventors ani manufacturers is ever at work In the), endeavor to reduce the expense Bf production, and at the same time to Improve the quality of articles having a large sale. This Is not only benefi cial to the purchasing public, but ft inures to the benefit of the producer In Increasing sales and preventing competition. This has been so in th case of farm machinery, clothing, shoes, bicycles, etc., and now It Is ap parent in the safety razor Held. Tho sands of this style of rasor have beea sold at from $1.60 to $5 each and gt en satisfaction. Recently manufa turers have applied more sclentlfii principles and Improved methods It their manufacture, and the result seen In the "Shrp Shavr" razor, whlc Is sent postpaid for twenty-five cen In stamps by the Book Publlshl House, 134 Leonard street, Net Tork. It Is superior to any razoi sold, being bought largely by thosi already owning the highest prlce razors. Not every one knows tha the best results are obtained by ha Ing two or three razors and alternat ing them In use. This practice of al ternating possibly accounts for thst ery large sale of this low priced Im plement. After 20 years of experimenting at Edinburgh firm has brought out a essence of tea which Is said to pre serve the qualities of the prepare le-f. ONION SEED 60 cti alb. Per Salter's catalog, pigs 139. Largest growers of on ton and Tegctabl aeedi In the world. Big catalog freet or, end 1 6c In stamp and reoelve catalog and 1000 kernols each of onlone, oarrota, celery, radishes, 1S00 each lettuce, rutabaga, tur nips, 100 parsley, 100 tomatoes, 100 melons, 1300 charming flower seeds, In ail 10,000 ker nels, easily worth 9 1 of any man's money. Or, send and we will add one package of Earliest Peep O'Day Sweet Corn, SALZE1 SEED CO., Boi A. C, U Cmtt, Wit. TUT RETICULOSIS CONQUFRRD. You ran he cured. NATURKH' CREATION In curing hundred. Why not you? Write for ttinmnlals and pamphbt K. D. MORGAN, 1st Mat' I bank UWlg., Columbua, Ohfc ESTABLISHED iSOv imshm P. N. U. 7. 1KJ9. DRflPQY HEW DISCOVERT t m B 1 J I ri,M 4l.k nllnf Hi Hnt nnt ". Bnnk of t-.tlmnlall u4 iaD.fi' trIMi- Dr. U. II. VHE1IVS bOXtt, lo B, AtluU, Sr.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers