ife. Fre I, fellow, er than y yellow [eaven. [common rfect for for duty, enden morning soft his Ie morn- morning, row en- ie grass! we were t length we are he past. ortnight 00 good 1 novels, onstant, ked this is morn- Times. IC. an whe '—Chls d wi nk yo e othey d greal th?” —Chida¢ ra, hat : aboul ntioned asking t youn bs vhethel in com CE. nk; it's RM. super- ractical ekton’d . The hot, ir into a els the hingtor and all ren are agreed ow we 1 your. Stand l e 7 |} 1de?” | you sed d it ie sir." — ted the lignant 5 mem: id you choco- st year apt ex: “I de RMER. ou be- ividual do. 1 ccumu- 1ty-five lled to to the olitical Thal it ba rly, 0 avhich City." = KIDNEY TROUBLE “wuffered Two Years— Relieved in Months, Three R. C. B. FIZER, Mt. Sterling, Ky., writes: “1 have suffered with kidney and bladder trouble for ten yours past. “Last March I commenced using Peruna and continued for three months. 1 bave not used it since, nor have 1 felt a pain. “1 believe that 1 am well and | there fore give my highest commendation to the curative powers of Peruna.” Pe-ru-na For Kidney Trouble. Mrs. Geo. HU. Simser, Grant, Ontario, Can., writes: *“lI bad not “een well for about four years. I had kidney trouble, and, in fact, felt badly nearly all the time, “This summer 1 got so very bad ! thought 1 would try Peruna, so | wrote to 5% and began at once to take Peruna and Manalin, “I took only two bottles of Peruna and one of Manalin, and now 1 feel better than 1 have for some time. “1 feel that Peruna and Manalin cured me and made a different woman of me al- together. 1 bless the day I picked up the little book and read of your Peruna.” It is the business of the kidneys to A match company, which tried to set up a factory at Savannah, Ga., found that the product could not be success fully made in the atmosphere of that city. The so-called “sacred running oxen” of Ceylon are the smallest of the ox family, and it is affirmed that their height never reaches wore than thirty inches. In porous glass, which is made in France, the holes are so small that neither dust nor draught can enter, and vet the ventilation is said to be ex- cellent. Nearly 70,000 pounds of sheep-gut are used annually for making strings for musical instruments in Germany, Rus. sia furnishes most of this—64,000 pounds. The Pan Handle is testing an electric headlight for its passenger locomotives. One of the company’s engines has been equipped with a dynamo placed direct- ly back of the smokestack. It fur- nishes light not only for the headlight, but for a large number of small bulbs placed among the machinery of the engine. That the radio-activity of air may be due to the escape of emanations from subterranean regions, to heat in the earth’s interior causing the expulsion of negative ions from certain oxides, or to ions received from the sun, is sug- gested by H, Nagaoka, in a paper on radio-activity and geophysical phenom- remove from the blood all potsonous | ena, published in the Physico-Matb- materials, They must be active all the time, else the system suffers. There are times when they need a little assistance. Peruna is exactly this sort of a remedy. It has saved many people from disaster by rendering the kidneys service at a time when they were not able to bear their own burdens. King Alfonso's Lineage. Alfonso XIII. of Spain unites in his veins the blood of the houses of Bourbon and Hapsburg. He goes straight back to. Hugh Capet (A. D. 987) of France, founder of all that line of kings whose weal and woe culminated in the French revolution, and he can claim lineage with the long line of the Louis of France, St. Louis, Louis XI., Louis XIV. and all the Philips and Ferdinands of Spain, including our own patron, Isabella. In his paternal line are great men, wise rulers and good men, and also monsters of tyranny, debauchery and every human frailty. Such names as Philip II.,, Alva, Torquemada, Crazy Jane, Isabella the Catholic, St. Louis, all suggest possibilities of inherited tendencies that may have ccme to this amiable youth from his paternal line. Alfonso bears in his face to a striking degree the physiognomical marks of his lineage. The high nose of the Bourbons, the pendulous lip of the Hapsburgs and the emaciated fig- ure of the Spanish line are his. He has given no evidence of that foolish pride which cost the life of one of his ancestors because the grandee whose business it was to attend to the fire did not happen to be present when the fumes of the stove threatened the monarch’s life. On the contrary, Al fonso XIII. seems to be a good deal of a democrat.—Indianapolis Star. Morality and Price of Whisky. “Raising the price of whisky seems to have brought about a wave of moral reform,” remarked a police official to the Toronto Globe. Only two prisoners charged with being ate drunk appeared before Mag Denison. They were two old The price of whisky was raised by the hotel men, and the reports from the different police stations yi rday morning disclosed the fac ; Tr arrests for being drunk w : Monday than for some time past. spector William Davis of the Cour street division stated that his divis jon had a clean slate, not one drt being chronicled. “This is the time in the history of No. 1 divisi that I have never seen at least one prisoner arrested for being drunk,” said Inspector Davis, ‘and I have been attached to the division for several o years. Wanted in Wyoming. At the International Sunday school convention, at Louisville, Ky., in answer to the roll call of states, re- ports were verbally given by the var- fous state chairmen. When the Lone Star state was called, a brawny specimen of southern manhood step- ped out into the aisle and with stri- dent voice exclaimed: ‘We represent the great state of Texas. The first white woman born in Texas is still living—she now has a population of over three millions.” There was a pause of bewilder- ment for a moment, and then a voice from the galleries rang out clear and distinct: “Send that woman out to Wyoming —we need her!’—Everybody’s Maga- zine. Russia's Naval Loss. The total value of the Russian war ships either sunk by the Japanese or captured by them in the recent war has been found by the Russian Min- istry of Marine to amount to no less a sum than $132,850,000. Trouble in Mailing. An official of the New York post- office relates a story of the sad pre- dicament of an Irishman who entered that office for the purpose of mailing a letter to his fiancee. He had paused in perplexity before a board containing three letter slot bearing the words “City,” “Domestic,” ‘“For- eign.”’ “Faith,” he muttered, “this is a pretty problem. Maggie's a do- mestic, she lives in the city and she’s a foreigner. What beats me is how I'm going to get this letter in the three holes at wanst.””—Harper’s Weekly, ematical Soc. Tokyo Proc. The degree to which solids slowly ine termix is one of the recent surprising discoveries. A New Zealand teacher mentions the dark patches which ap- pear opposite the steel winding-stems on the inside of silver watch cases forty or fifty years old, tests showing that these patches are iron, which has vaporized, dissolved in the silver and diffused into the solid metal. Still more remarkable is an instance of the penetration of carbon into porcelain. Fresh pencil marks are easily removed from an old porcelain writing tablet, but some notes written forty years ago have sunk into the tablet to con- siderable depth and cannot be erased. Amateur entomologists will be inter- ested in a suggestion by Dr. F. E, Lutz for the preservation of all kinds of spiders’ webs. The webs should be sprayed from an atomizer with artists’ shellac, and then, if they are of the or- dinary geometric form, pressed care- fully against a glass plate, the sup- porting strands being at the same time severed. After the shellac has dried, the plates carrying the webs can be stored away in‘a cabinet. Even domes shaped webs may be preserved, in their original form, by spraying them with shellac and then allowing them to dry before removal from their sup- ports. Many spiders’ webs are very beautiful, and all are characteristic of the species to which they belong, so that their permanent preservation is very desirable. The transmutation of metals—so much ridiculed a few years ago—is now thought to be taking place in nature, but the modern alchemist is still as powerless as was the ancient one to bring it about by artificial means. If it ever becomes practicable, the valua- ble product will be the energy released as electricity or in other form. Mr, F. Soddy points out that the energy of some hundreds of tons of coal would have to be put into an ounce of silver to convert it into gold; but that a more probable change would be from a heavy element like lead, the operation vielding energy of great value, with the gold as an unimportant by-product. A similar extraction is going on at our great power stations—water power, steam and gas. The fuel or high po- tential water is converted into baser products, and the process abstracts valuable energy that is converted into useful forms. French Municipal Art Schools, ‘Ameriéan Consul Goldschmidt, at Nantes, France, in an extended article on industrial art aducation in France and its influence upon French indus- tries, says there are at present in France, aside from the national art schools, 300 provincial and municipal schools of fine arts, which ..re free to young men and women. While leav- ing to each school the development of the line of art suited to loca! needs, the State gives direction by annual visits of im®pectors of drawing. The application to trade is practical and complete. The ‘administration of fine arts” se- lects and sends the greater part of the models useful to instruction, gives prizes, scholarships, purses, and en- couragement to pupils who have dis- tinguished themselves during their course of studies. Woman's Pathetic Optimism, Woman is always convinced that she has never looked so alluring as in her newest spring hat. There is indeed with regard to her personal appear- ance something pathetic in her opti- mism.—Lady’s Pictorial. Linotype machines are being put in at the Bank of England, and in future the addresses on the dividend notices gent out will be printed, instead of written by hand. Brazil produces from two-thirds ta three-fourths of the coffee raised in the world, THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPENED Yet In Two Cases They Were Remems bered Nevertheless, Some years ago a story went the rounds of the papers to the effect that the ,great preacher, Henry Ward Beecher, on one occasion startled his congregatioh by saying as he entered his pulpit, “It Is damned hot to-day.” The members of the congration pricked up their ears with astonishment, Af- ter a pause he repeated the remark, and added, “Such were the words 1 heard as I entered the church,” He then proceeded to preach a powerful sermon on the sin of profanity. Mr. Beecher repeatedly denied the correct- ness of the story, both orally and in print, but it still went on its way. Mr. Beecher was speaking of the matter one day, when a young lady friend gaid, “But, Mr. Beecher, you did say it, for I heard you.” After that Mr, Beecher concluded that it was useless to deny the story any more, and de- cided that it is possible to remember things which never happened. This reminds me of an incident of my childhood, when a little negro boy came near remembering something that never took place. My little brother Jimmy had hulled a lot of walnuts and left them under the tree to dry. The next day when he went to get them they were gone, he knew not whither, My schoolmate, Sam, and 1 had hidden them to play a trick on Jimmy. When Jimmy could not find his walnuts he at once jumped to the conclusion that a negro boy named Ifarry had taken them. He knew that Harry had been into that field to drive up the cows. Jimmy called up the supposed culprit and began with great suavity of manner, saying, “Harry, would you tell a lie?” Harry replied that he would not. Then Jimmy de- livered a lecture on the sin of telling lies, and told how a man and woman were once struck dead for telling a lie. Then he toook Harry to the wal- nut tree and said, “Now, Harry, did you take my walnuts? Now don't tell a lie, or the devil might come and snatch you right away.” Harry was much impressed with the gravity of the situation and the imminence of the danger. A look of perplexity came over his honest face, and he scratched his head in deep cogitation. At last he said with solemnity, “I reckon I took them, but if I did I done forgot.” That was too much for Sam and me, We broke out with laughter and re- lieved both Harry and Jimmy by re- vealing the hiding place of the walnuts. I think if Harry's fears had been stimulated a little more, he would have remembered taking the walnuts. WISE WORDS. You don’t have to wear good clothes if you can afford to. A girl never likes you to kiss her un- less she says she doesn’t. There would be a lot more fun in re- ligion if people tried to discourage you from it. Everybody would want to tell the truth if it did the work better than a lie. Faith in a thing is knowing you wouldn't have it if you tried to reason it out. . A man has a mean disposition to give up coffee because he can't get it fit to drink. When a woman isn’t afraid to men- tion stays before a man it's because he is too old. Hardly any girl is ever so lucky as to be rich and have curly hair at the same time, A girl is innocent when she isn’t afraid to call what she walks with what they are. Burglary is a more risky business than politics because sometimes the burglar lands in jail. A woman talks the kind of stuff she does to a baby so the baby won't be sorry he can’t talk it back. One of the sardonic things of life is that when a man is lucky to die he isn’t here to enjoy it. When a woman has a good-looking husband it is a sign she is suspicious of the designs of most all her friends. Generallly when a man is a great help around the house he isn't very much at supporting the family outside, Nothing: more is needed to prove the natural deceit of a woman than the way she can pretend she is having a good time at a reception.—From “Re. flections of a Bachelor,” in the New York Press. African Ghost Story. A ghost story comes from Durban, South Africa, where, it is said, a spectre is haunting a Louse occupied formerly by a lawyer, r>w a few months dead. The new tenant saw an unearthly shape about the garden and in the study of the late lawyer. A party of eight decided to play cards in the house and watch for the ghost. Suddenly one of the players started up with a cry, “What is that?’ Look: ing in the direction in which he wad staring, the others saw a horrible looking head protruding through the doorway. The head was like that ot a skeleton. It disappeared. The party went to the door and into the adjoin. ing room, but the ‘spectre” had van- ished. Orange Juice Fad. Just now one of the fads of diet is orange juice. Its effect on some is marvellous. In extreme cases of pov- erty of the blood, it is a preventive of the distressing effects that generally follow. For anyone who has a ten. dency to such trouble it is said to be an excellent thing to take the juice of at least one orange as soon as awaken. ing in the morning. Gray is universally popular. Men, women, girls and even small boys are wearing it. | FEEDING THE CHICKS, It is poor policy to feed the little chicks any wet or sloppy food, for if you do you run an excellent chance of their having all sorts of bowel tréuble, WHEN EGGS ARE BEST. Eggs are at their best a few hours after being laid—just long enough to allow the animal heat to pass out; but during this time they should not be allowed to lie around in filthy nests or musty, damp cellars. They shculd be kept in the refrig- erator or in a cool, dry place, where the atmosphere is pure. All eggs should be gathered twice daily, and taken at once to a cool place. Eggs absorb impurities and odors very readily, and for this reason it is important that they be stored xhere the air is perfectly pure. Onions or kerosene should not be kept where there are eggs, otherwise they will absorb the odor. «Care should be taken that a hen does not sit ou fresh eggs for several hours, as much of the complaint about bad eggs is due to this. HOME MADE CORN CUTTER. The idea comes from Australia, where the machine is used in harvest- ing sugar cane and sorghum, as well as corn. The implement has been tried by a few farmers in this section and pronounced a success. It is made by bolting the blade of a strong, heavy scythe to a sledge of sled, as shown in the illustration. A rod of wrought iron about one inch in diameter is bent to former follower, as shown. One of these machines is expected to cut about two and one-half acres per day. After cutting the crop is less easily handled than when cut by hand, but the total saving in labor is consider- able.—American Cultivator. GREEN FOOD FOR SWINE. If the swine are not on the range, and hence without access to green food during the summer, they should be supplied with it in the pens if one | would have them thrive. Make it a business to pull up weeds for a half- hour daily and cart them to the pig pen. Any weed that is not poisonous will do the swine good and they will eat them greedily. Change the diet a little occasionally by giving them some grass or vegetable tops frem the gar- den. Do not give them a great lot of green stuff one day, so much that they waste a portion of it, and none for a week, but let them have all they will eral times a week. Give them also all than it would otherwise. CLEAN UP THE BARN. A dairy farmer may have a poorly built barn and the plainest kind of a milk room, but he can, if he wants to, have them clean, says Farming. He 1 can sweep down the cobwebs; wash the woodwork and flush the floors and manure gutters; wash the windows; curry his cows and keep them clean; clean the manure cut of the stable at least twice a day, and spread it on his land once a day, not pile it up against the sides of thie barn or in close prox- imity to his water supply; and have the cows’ bedding fresh and clean. This means work, certainly; but he will find that his cows will repay him in an increased yield of milk. Dairy cows always respond to proper treat. ment; and proper {treatment means keeping them clean—in clean stables, with clean water to drink, sunlight, fresh air, and a good food, fed in a cleanly manner. THE FARMER'S GARDEN. The farmer's garden should afford a great deal of interest and is generally sure to be a very important factor from the standpoint of economy. The farm- er's family should be interested in it, for it not only affords them a luxury that city people are deprived of, but the choice fresh vegetables that are secured from it all contain health- giving properties which cannot be fig- ured up in dollars and cents. On most tarms land is generally plentiful enough to allow the selection of a choice location for the garden. When you have secured this spot fertilize and prepare it thoroughly, and as the plants push themselves up through the earth give them every care possible. We are firmly convinced that an ex- cellent vegetable garden is one of the best ways of convincing those who live on a farm of the luxurieg they possess, and it goes a great way toward con: vincing them that they are indeed fortunate to be classed as residents of a rural district. For fattening pigs, peas and soy beans balanced with old corn are best. The soy beans are very rich in protein and require a liberal corn ration in order to balance the ration and get the The Provinclal New Yorker, Adding millions to its population and stories to its skyscrapers every decade Intensifies, rather than de- creases, the provincialism of New York eity, No new point of vantage is gained of what the 75,000,000 other people of the Nation are doing, To the New Yorker the universe bound- ed on the south by the Sandy Hook light-ship, on the north by the Har- lem, on the east by Jamaica bay and on the west by Heboken, A few stars are thrown in overhead and stories are told of people who inhabit the places where this little world sloughs off beyond the horizon. In the nar- row confines of New York city lack of knowledge as to the remainder of the Nation constitutes no drawbacks and extreme provincialism is a virtue.— Ditroit Free Piess. FITS, 8t.Vitus' Dance: Nervous Diseases pear- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. €2 trial bottle and treatise fres, Dg. H. R.KniNg, Ltd. 931 Arch 8t., Phila, a. No Cure No Pay. The head of an Eskimo family gives his doctor a fee as soon as he comes. If the patient recovers it is kept, if not it is returned. Washing Feathers, Make large bags of thin cotton and empty the feathers into them, Di-solve half a bar of Ivory Soap in a tub of moderately warm water and put a bag of feathers in. Let soak for hall an hour; then work well with the hands and 1inse through two warm waters, on airing table to dry.— PARKER. It is thirty years since Rysdyk's Ha:a- bletonian died. Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma= tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢. abottle Good Labor Laws. Legislation has made possible In Lombardy the application of rigid laws governing the employment of women and children in factory laber, in the protection of workmen, in compulsory insurance and pensions. ing class... Women's hours for labor and the age at which children may be employed are definitely fixed. TORTURED WITH ECZEMA. Tremendous JTtching Over Whole Body =—Scratched Until Bled—Wonder- ful Cure by Cuticura. “Last year I suffered with a tremendous itching on my back, which grew worse and worse until it spread over the whole body, and only my face and hands were free. For four months or so 1 suffered torments, and I had to scratch, scratch I bled. At ht when 1 went to bed things got wc and I had at times to get up and scratch my body all over until I was as sore as could be, and until 1 suf- fered excruciating pain. They told me that 1 was suffering from eczema. Then I made up my mind that I would use the Cuticura Remedies. 1 used them accord- ing to instructions, and very soon indeed I was greatly relieved. 1 continued until well, and now I am ready to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to any one. Mra. Mary Metzger, Sweetwater, Okla., June 28, 1005.” Automobile Spectacles. There were 19 different styles of autemobile spectacles and goggles on one tray in an optician’s window, an interesting proof of the benefit of motori to this trade. The opticians are quick to cater to the patrons in every sport and some of the automo- bile spectacles seemed the first ins of sorts first offered to bicy- these inexpensive things will make the | food given them count for much more | | | | | eat up clean, and give it to them sev-| the fresh water they want, with a] ! shady corner, and you will find that | most value out of the beans, They se special clip for to fall off whe sides special 5, field ter of o too, ¢ es with a fers, warranted not playing a shot, be- ctacles for rifle and fishermen, glass to offset the Sul flection from the water. Yachtsmen and horsemen are also customers for spe spectacles as well as for field glasses.—New York Sun. STOPS BELCHING, Cures Bad Breath—Positive and Instan$ Cure Free—-No Drugs-—Cares by Absorption. A sweet breath is priceless. Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will eure bad breath and bad taste instantly. Belching and bad taste indicate of re breath, which is due to stomach trouble. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers purify the stomach and stop belching, by absorbing foul gases that arise from undigested food, and supplying the stive organs with natural solvents for food. They velieve sea or car sickness and nau- sea of any kind. They quickly cure headache, correct the ill effect of excessive eating or drinking. They will destroy a tobacco, whisky or onion breath instantly. They stop fermentation in the stomach, acute indigestion, cramps, colic, gas in the stomach and intestines, Senna abdo- men, heartburn, bad complexion, dizzy spells or any other afiliction arising from a diseased stomach. We know Mulls Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you to know it. This offer may not appear again. oo 6166 GOOD FOR 25c. 143 Send this coupon with vour name and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps or siiver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send vou a cer- | tificate good for 23e. toward the pur- | chase of more Belch Wafers. You will | find them invaluable for stomach trou- ble; cures by absorption. Address Murr’s Grave Tonic Co. 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, Ill. Give Lull Address and Write Plainly. I All druggists, 0c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Good Whitewash for Outbuildings. Place one bushel good fresh lime in barrel and add 20 pounds beef tallow; slake with hot water. When the lime is slaked the tallow will have disap- peared, having formed a chemical compound with the lime. Dry colors may be added to make any color de- sired. Add the color before slaking the lime, or if after slaking, mix With alcohol and then add to the strained wash. Thin to flow nicely from the brush. A coat of this wash will last as long and look almost as well as much of the lead paint. and in better housing for the labor- | Queen's Face on Pearl. A wonderful pearl bearing the exe act likeness of the late Queen Vie toria of England was found in a fresh water mussel in the Mississippl rive er, The pearl is now on exhibition in the windows of local jewelers, 407 Nicollet avenue, The pearl is of ire regular shape, and its lines corres= pond with those of an old portrait =* Queen Victoria, which shows a fi profiile, as if carved by hand, so ta has nature observed even the sma est detail of the queen's likenet The pearl weighs about six grah It was picked up near Davenpors, Jowa. The pearl will be sent to the Englich correspondent of the firm in I STR COMTDECE Women Obtain Mrs. Pinkham's Advice and Help. Ehe Has Guided Thousands to Health, « How Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Come pound Cared Mrs. Alice Berryhill, It is a gread satisfaction for a woman to feel that she can write to another telli her the most p vate and confidens tial details aboug her illness, and know that her let ter will beseen by a woman only. Many thousands of cases of female diseases come be- fore Mrs. Pinkham every year, some personally, others by mail. Mrs. Pink. ham is the daughter-in-lawof Lydia BE. Pinkham and for twenty-five years under her direction and since her dee cease she has been advising sick women free of charge. Mrs. Pinkham never violates the con- fidence of women, and every testimon= ial letter published is done so with the written consent or request of the writer, in order that other sick women may be benefited as she has been. Mrs. Alice Berryhill, of 313 Boyce | Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — *‘ Three years ago life looked dark to me, 1 had ulceration and inflamumation of the , scratch until | female organs and was in a serious condition. ¢ My health was completely broken down end the doctor told me that if I was not op= | erated upon I would die within six montha !'T told him I would have no operation bud would try Lydie E. Pinkham's Vegetabl i Compound. e tried to influence me agai | ft but I sent for the medicine that same day and bezan to use it faithfully. Within five | days I felt relief but was not entirely cured until I used it for some time. ‘“ Your medicine is certainly fine. Ihave | induced several friends and neighbors to take it and 1 know more than a dozen who had female troubles and who to-day are as well and strong as I am from using your Vege table Compound.” Just as surely as Mrs. Berryhill was cured, will Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of female ills. If you are sick write Mrs. Pinkham for advice. It is free and always helps ful. » iii i 9 Food Droducts eazble you to enjoy your meals without having to spend half your time between Soe pres hot seul tore, the cooking is done in Libby's kitchen—a kitchen as clean and neat as your own, and there's nothing for you to do but enjoy the result. Libby's Products are selected meats, cooked by cooks who know how, aad only the good parts packed. _ For a quick and delicious lunch any t'me, in doors or out, try Libby's Mel- rots Pate—with Libby's Camp Sauce. Booklet free, “How to Make ood Things to Eat.’ You Cannot CUR all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal cons ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 5o cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON €O., Boston, Mass. THE DAISY FLY KILLER rid te R@e. box Asta the tire season, Harms oss 10 rsona, Jlewn, neat wud will, xuything. Try them once und you will never be without oem. I not kept Oy dealers, sens meena for HAROLD SOMERA, 141 DeKalb Avemmey Brooklyn, MN. \ Ww 2 i Wheat, 60 Bush Is per acre. Catniorie and samiles YRE®. Suiser Sood (©. BoxA.' ., La Grosse, Wis P. N. U. 24, 1906. 48 1. bok free. Highest refy Long experience, on &Co.Dept 64, Washington,D.C If amicted 2734 Thompsgs Eye Wats — 5 ; JE : 8 toi moll or injure
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers