Blood is what gives strong nerves, vigor, vital ity. Uood blood and good UealLbuomo by taking Sarsa peril la Be sure to uet Hood's and only HOOD'S. Hood's Pills are the favorite lmully umhortlc. Tlie Stars in the Fin? Are Silver. Oat of tho Wost from the land of tho grain, Comes the sound of a song men are .sing ing: High on the mountain and over tho plain Is tho flash of tho flag they are bringing. "Welcome the banner, 'tis no* foreign rag. Look! thoy are silver! the stars in the flag. Now at tho shop and the forge nnd tho mill With the beads on her brow Labor standeth: •'What is this army approaching at will? And what Is the thing it comniandeth? Would it 'Old Glory' from battlemcnt9 drag?" Look! they are silver! the star 3 in the flag. Hark to the cry from the loom and the fields, 'Tis a cry liko the cry of a mother: "Men of the East would you raise golden shields "In u war on a friend nnd a brother? "Who says our banner is Anarchy's rag?" Look! they aro silver! the stars in tho flag. Bilver! not gold arc the two score of stars, And tbey tell for our country its story. Down with the hand of tho Shylock who mars For a measure of gold, our "Old Glory!" Here's the reply to Plutocracy's brag: Look! thoy aro silver! the stars In the flag. —N. P. Babcook. Free Coinage. What is meant by free coinage i 9 that silver shall be coined upon the terms and conditions which apply to the coinage of gold. This was the case from time immemorial previous to 1873. The Government always charges sufficient for refining the metal and preparing it for coinage, added to the profit on the alloy, to pay the expenses of the mint and make that institution self-sustaining. Free coinage means that gold and sil ver shall be coined with no charge for profit to the Government and only sufficient charge to defray the expenses which the Government incurs. Under free coinage the Government will neither lose nor make by the opera tion of coining either gold or silver, but it would coin all the gold and all the silver presented for that purpose. Gold Has Been Legislated Up. Silver has not depreciated: gold has appreciated. An ounce of silver will to-day buy as much of tho products of labor as it ever would. An ounce of gold will buy double what it would prior to the demonetization of silver. Gold has been legislated up by strik ing silver down. HESITATE NO LONGER. Modesty in women is natural. It is one of women's chief charms. No one cares for one who really lacks this essential to womanliness. fi suffered cause i/ucix hearts to her. She understands their suffering, and has the power to relieve and cure. In nearly all cases the source of women's suffering is in the womb. In many cases the male physician does not understand the ease and treats the patient for consumption—indigestion —anything but the right thing. It is under such circumstances that thousands of women have turned to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., and opened their heart and lives—woman to woman—and received her help. You ask how she can tell if the doctor cannot ? Because no man living ever treated so many eases and possesses such vast expeiience. Displacement, inflammation, torpid action, stagnation, sends to all parts of the body the pains that crush you. Lydia E. Pinkham's " Vegetable Compound" is the sure cure for this trouble. For twenty years it has done Its grand work and cured thousands. "My Profits Doubled from the day I took ynnr ndvloe and bought von •ADVANCE' MACHINE!" A, W „„ , H.D TAKEA LT aooner! One of tho Kiiccossfiil \v>il Driller* who uses our machinery and tools for Drilling Wells In Ohio made this remark a few d AV ni"> Ho ,11,1,! 1.00.M I> ft WAN. 111 r oiffo for a County right under letters patent, $U securing a household sneeiultv; costs 7 cent- 10 manufacture; retiiilH lor ?.") cis. s H GIKSY, .KM 7th St.,X. \Y. Washington, 1). C. nniliy ">< WHISKY hahlt cured. Rook sent yrIURS MOCK. I>l. H. M. WIKU.I.KY, Atlanta,Ga. 1 N U 30 Ryst.CouKh Syrup. Tastes Good. ÜBO '-"A 49 tUmj. Bold by drunKlstß. "W SILVER AMD PROSPERITY. WHY FREE COINAGE AT 16 TO 1 WILL BEING BETTER TIMES. Prices of Commodities Would Go Up, Farmers Would Prosper and Idle Factories Would Resume Work —Uoldbuu Arguments Answered. "It the Democrats are successful," declare Republicans, "thore will bo widespread ruin. A panic worse than any recorded in history will ensue, and the suffering of the people will be appalling." Asked to explain, to give reasons for such a dismal view of the future of this country, the inquirer will be met with statements contain ing the foundationless declaration that free coinage will depreciate the currency, cause wholesale debt repu diation, a loss of confidence abroad, and tho return to this country of se curities payable in gold; and that the demand for gold will bankrupt the country. That is, of course, a picture of dire' calamity. But ask for the proofs, the data f bat make this con clusion a reasonable one. The Republi can, if he has read the newspapers of his party aud gold literature, will im mediately begin to prate about a "fif ty cent" dollar. Let us look into this basieargument of the Republican party aguinst free silver. What is the gold dollar to day? Measured in gold it is worth 100 cents. What is it measured in silver of in other commodities? To do that will seem, to tho gold standard man, an impossibility. But get right down to the fundamental principles that underlie the use of gold and silver as money. The gold man will claim that his metal is the natural standard be cause of its intrinsio value. Its in tiinsio value is so much jier ounce,nnd it never fluctuates. As soon as an in dependent investigator makes the economic fact clear to himself that there is no such thing us intrinsic value he is on tho road to becoming au ardent patriot, a supporter of Bry an and Sewall. There is no such thing as intrinsio value. Jevon, a gold man; Ricardo, John Stunrt Mill, Prof. Francis A. Walker, all men of world renown as political economists, declaro that value arises out of the relations that exist be tween things, and that it cannot he intriusic. Intrinsic quality is possi ble, because quality is fixed, but value is only t fixed by supply and demand, variable things. ThUB gold has no in trinsic value. If placed alongside tho other products of the earth it would show as does wheat, corn, oats, cot ton, silver, fluctuations according to the supply aud demand. But gold has been specially chosen by Governments as a unit of value, and an enormous artificial demand for it has thus been created. In this way silver, the other money metal of the Constitution, has been discriminated against, and the money supply of this country, and the Governments and Nations of Europe, has been limited to a material that is vastly inadequate to supply the de mands of trade. Has this great, demand for gold affect- Bd its value? The gold man will say uo 1 He will declare that a gold dollar is a dollar, aud that as bullion the metal will exchange in auy country in Europe for the value intrinsically in the metal. Place gold, its supply for tho last twenty years, alongside of sil ver, wheat and cotton and corn, and it will be seen iaat tho average supply was of not a sufficient difference to t",ve affected tho comparative vnluo uuder natural conditions. Why is it then that while gold has remained at its stamped value, tho other commodi ties have fallen, or has gold risen in purchasing value, and have the com moditiesremained at the regular prices created by supply and demand? Has thore beon an overproduction of wheat, corn or cotton? Has there been an overproduction of silver ? What has caused the seeming fall in prices, or hasthero been a fall in prices. What is the fact? Gold has appreciated! Since 1874 it has appreciated between forly and fifty per cent. It will to-day com mand more in thu market to that ex tent than it would twenty yenrs ago. There has been no overproduction. The supply of cereals has kept pace with the population. It has not ex ceeded the ratio. It is gold that through Government aid has appreci ated in value and forced the prices of commodities down to a basis that is to-day driving men out of business and impoverishing millions of farmers all over the land. Arthur Balfour declares that when gold appreciates it leaveß tho country and goes abroad. He said that before the bond issues. The gold of the United States is going abroad. Bal four declared that tho greatest curse that could visit a country would be appreciation of its standard of value. The curso is seen in the United States. Thousands and thousands of men are out of employment, and magnificent farms containing the finest land in the world are lying untitled and great factories are still. The gold mail declares that freo silver will drive gold out of the country. Ask tho gold man what is driving the gold out of tho country now. When he declares that free Bilver will make gold at a premium, ask him what it meant the other day in England when tho Bank of England raised its discount rate. Whenever the supply of gold in England is threatened tho Bank of England raises the rate of discount; in other words, plaoes a premium on gold, and saves its supply, When tho supply in this country is threatened tho President of tho United Stnte3 calls for a bond issue, and Americans have recently seen the debt of the country increased by 8262,000,000. For that amount ol debt the United States Treasury received a trifle over §200,000,000 iu gold, which has nearly all disappeared. Free silver does not mean that tho Government will give a dollar for fifty cents. Make the gold man prove his assertion to that effect. Under free coinage the Government would re ceive silver bullion to the weight of 371r grains and coin it into a silver dollar, and that coin would bo given to the silver depositor. That dollar would be worth no more than the market value of silver bullion. It might not bo worth us much as the gold dollar, hut it would place silver on an equal looting with gold. The owner of the silver bullion would get no more than his market value of the bullion for his deposit. Would the price of silver go up? And would tho price of other commodities follow im mediately? That would happen be yond the slightest doubt, and this is a fact that gold standard men who are familiar with the subject will not deny. What will follow? Prosperity follows higher prices a3 day follows night. Farms would bo tilled again at a profit, factories, now idle, would resume work, the owners being as sured of a just price for their goods; idle men would find employment, and the only sufferer s would be the lekel bergers, Bernheimers, Rothschilds, Belmonts aud England. With pros perity assured by tree silver, is it any wonder that the army of sufferers from the Nation-killing gold standard should rally to the support of Bryan and SewallV—Madison (N.J.) Demo crat. rilE BATTLE CRT OF FREEDOM. Some Reasons Why the People uo mand tho Free Coinage of Silver. The people desire the free coinage of gold and silver at tho old ratio— -16 to I—because they are honest and want to pay their debts. In times past they have borrowed large sums of money and agreed to return the same with interest. It was legally and morally a part of their agreements that they should return these loans in money similar in kind and value to that which they had received. With out such an equitable and just under standing, borrowing and lending would have been impossible. But be tween the date of the loan and the date of payment money has beoome the equivalent of gold. That, and that alone can now satisfy .the cove nant of the bond. As a conse quence, the obligation has become doubly onerous. The effort to dis charge its superadded burden is un availing ; property) has shrunken in value, and the debtor is becoming bankrupt. He realizes that, though he has paid two-thirds of the Nation al debt as it was in 1865, with inter est exceeding the principal sum, it nevertheless requires more of his products to pay tho remaining third than was originally necessary to pay it all. He feels, and has a right to feel, that his Government has allied itself with his creditor for his undo ing, and he protests against its disre gard of the sacred purposes of its cre ation and existence. The people demand free coinage of bothgold and Bilver because tho unre stricted use of these metah by the pub lic mints makes contraction difficult and the cornering of the money vol ume impossible. Silver can only be used for coins of small denomina tions. It does tho work of the com mon people; it goes to nnd remains among them; it is the measure of their small, but innumerable transac tions. It docs not seek the great finan cial centres of the land, to be held in reserve or utilized in the adjustment of balances, but does (the monetary work of the world, when specie is used at all. It cannot be gathered by the lew and stored away to the disas ter of peoples and the confusion of Governments. It is not popular with those advooates of "sound money" who confound soundness with scarc ity. It can not be utilized by syndi cates for sale to panic-stricken debt ors or to Governments which they first control and then debauch. Its use re lieves the pressure on gold, and, like a true helpmate, it bears with the lat ter the common burden of the hour. It enables tho people to look upon the ebb and flow of gold without fear or apprehension. It places the total of primary money at a figure adequately commensurate with the needs of the world, steadies values, makes a se cure basis for paper circula tion, and prevents the acquisition by private interests of the sovereign power to furnish the people with such kinds and amounts or inouoy us in their judgmont may bo necessary or expedient, to bo expanded as contract ed at their pleasure. The people demand the restoration of silver money because they ore op posed to the further expunsiou of debt and see no other way to avoid it. The annual iuterest charge upon tho Na tion is enormous. Two hundred and fifty millions of dollars are needsd to liquidate that part of it which accrues to the foreign creditors and which must bo paid in specie or in commodi ties whose price is fixed by the com petition of the Nations. More than thrice that sum is needed to liquidate the remainder. This must be earned or borrowed to reap its meed on iuter est in turn. Only net earnings are available lor interest charges and bor rowing can not go on forever. Why should wo beg for loans from the ac cumulated treasures of Europe when we can dig from the hills the silver and gold from which money has from time immemorial been coined? Why should we pay tribute to Ciesar for the bounties with which nature has endowed us, but whoso blessings we spurn at tho behest of avarice and greed? With the restoration of its money function to silver and its ad mission to tho mints on equal terms with gold, iu accordance with the spirit of every National political plat iorm wQicn nns spouen npon tno SUD ject, this Republic would begin a career of commercial and industrial glory without parallel in its past and with no limit to its future. The people need the gold and silver coinage of the Constitution because they bear the greater portion of the public burdens. Taxes bear heavily upon them and the infamous bond is sues have grievously increased them. Taxes must be paid by industry, for such is the edict of the Supreme Court. Realized wealth cannot bo made to share the public expenditures, al though it asserts the first, right to Gov ernmental protection. The decisions of a century have been blown away like chaff; the great principles of equality and uniformity of taxation has been swept aside; the existence of a privileged class has been judicially recognized; the Nation is impotent to enforce its sovereign power against the stronghold of wealth and affluence. It may levy war and control commerce; it may coin gold and suppress insur rection ; it may vindicate the Monroe doctrine and sell bonds, but it cannot coin silver nor lay its hands upon the sacred income! Whither are we drifting? Has the spirit of our im mortal forefathers no place in the hearts of honest and patriotic Ameri cans? nave we lost laith in the sta bility and grandeur of this great Re public? When the people are aroused to the tiue condition of this country we answer, No! The lines of battle have at last been distinctly drawn, and the contest is between the masses and the classes, the common people of our country against organized wealth, backed by foreign commercial syndi cates. In times past, when our conn try put the test of patriotism and con fidence on the shoulders of her sub jects when she was in need, the com mon people of the land responded loyally to her oause, and we believe that in the present crisis they will also be found on tho side of a Government "by the people, of the people and for the people."—New York Suburban. Watered Stock ami an Honest Dollar. The Western Union Telegraph Com pany and the Bell Telephone Company have been consolidated, and the capi tal stock of each company has been increased fifty per cent. The owners of the stock in each of these com panies are the greatest howlers for an honest dollar. They ore also the greatest waterers of stock in the ooun try. The telephone business has un fortunately cut down the profits of the telegraph business. Competition would soon have forced both com panies to lower their rates; conse quently, they pooled their interests and formed a trust to keep up prices, and at the same time watered their stock to'put more money in tho treas ury. It is perfectly legitimate for these calamity howlers to deal in inflation, and to combine to make the pcoplo pay dividends on watered stock by paying more for telephone and tel egraph rates than they are honestly worth ; but when it comes to the Na tion's increasing the currency by add ing to the stock of gold a similar stock of silver, or making fifty-three cents' worth of bullion worth a dollar m money, there are no more fierce, ag gressive and uncomprising adherents of National honesty and National honor, and no more bitter and ven omous foes of repudiation than these masters in tho art of ballooning cor porate values.—New York Suburban. The Cheap Dollar Bugaboo. In one breath our goldbug friends howl "50-cent dollar," and in the next they declare that free coinage is all for tho benefit of tho silver mine owner. Well, if the silver miner will only get a 50-cent dollar for his 50 cents' worth of silver, wherein is the benefit to him. But, if on the other hand, ho gets a dollar for his "50 cents' worth" of silver, tho silver dol lar under free coinage must be, not a 50-cent but a 100-cent dollar. There is no one quite EO inconsistent as the argumentative goldbug. Wheeling Register. Dobbin*' Flnjitlnr-Bnrax Soap ha* not 01 •torn of adulteration in it. It is 100 per cen ture. Try it once. Be sure you *et tlie ireni Ine Your irrorpr has it, or will *et it for yoi Wrapper* printed in red. In tho yoar 1700 ovor one-half tko cfty 01 Edinburgh was destroyed by iire. Catarrh and Col<H Relieved li II to 60 Minutes. One short puff of the breath through the Blower, supplied with each bottlo of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Pow der over the surface of the natial passages. Painless and delightful to use. It relieves in stantly and permanently euros Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Ton silitisand Deafness. If your druggist hasn't It in stock, ask him to procure it for you. A SUNLIGHT EFFECT. ► The clear morning sunlight brings < with it gladness and renewed cn ► ergy, and , • Sunlight Soap] drives Into the background, like a dark shadow, | that old bugbear "wash day," and does its I ► work quickly, ensily, perfectly. Vse Sunlight I I Soap, and you will realize that "Sunlight" lias I | come into your life. 1 it Makes Home Brighter. J I Lover Bros., Ltd., Hudson Jb Harrison Sts., PLY. I We'll have no comic valentines; 'Tis cheering, you'll allow. To see the skill spent in those lines All turned to posters now. —Washington Star. She—Am I the first girl you ever kiss ed? He (surprised)— Why, no! I have three sisters.—Soinerville Journal. She—What's your business? He- Looking for a wife. "You've got a steady job, haven't you?"— Life. Binks—Your nephew Is quite a prom ising young man, isn't lie? Jinks—Well, he lias never done anything else as yet. —Somerville Journal. "That was a bad runaway you had the other night, Mrs. Dash." "Yes, but it was very stylish; we had four horses."—Chicago Record. Mrs. Brown—Mrs. Smith is a woman of remarkable strength of mind. Mrs. Jones—ls she? "Yes. She never buys anything she doesn't want."—Life. Time works a strange distractiou In the object of her zeal; 'She's forgot to want the ballot Since she learned to ride the wheel. —Washington Star. Johnny—Pa, what is the difference between a tonsorial artist and a bar ber? Mr. Wiggles—The tonsorial art ist uses longer words.—Somen*ilie Jour nal. "He lives in a brick house now, does he?" sneered the rural cynic. "1 used to wipe the clay off my boots that the bricks in that house are made of."— Truth. Her Dearest Friend: Cholly—llow old do you suppose Miss Furbish Is? Gertrude—You might ask mamma. Per haps she'll remember.—Cleveland Lead er. The man who thinks that women have No lively gift of wit, Hus never asked a girl to wed, And heard her answer "nit." —lndianapolis Journal. Mrs. Gazzam—Why is the ringing of a bell made obligatory upon bicycle riders? Mr. Gazzam—lt gives their victims time to make an ejaculatory prayer.—Truth. Waiter (at club restaurant) —Ready with your order, sab? City Sportsman • hack from a week's fishing)— Give me some fish; I'm tired to death of other things.—New York Weekly. Laura—ls It a fact that your engage ment with Willie is broken oft"? Flora —Why, no; not broken off, exactly. It sort of tapered off. one might say.—ln dianapolis Journal. Johnny—Papa, what is meant by"a person of sanguine temperament?" Papa—lt means—a—it means a person who expects a good many things that do not happen.—Puck. Dah's lots o' folks puts in <lah time (I hnhdly kin endure 'em) A-talkin' 'bout dah troubles 'stid O' hustlin' roun' ter cure 'eui. —Washington Star. Balliuger—lt. will he a sweltering summer at the shore. How will you manage to keep cool? Manhattan—l shall limit my engagements to Boston girls exclusively.—Town Topics. Osgood—l guess Matthews intends to run for office this year.—Wawniam— What makes you think so? Osgood— He's removed the fence from around his beautiful lawn.—Cleveland Leader. Hungry Higglns—What do you think of this here eiglit-liour movement, any way? Weary Watkius—Ef it means not moviu' moron once every eight (lours I guess it's all right.—lndianapo lis Journal. Mrs. Buzhey—What's nil this talk the papers are full of about li> to 1? Mrs. Buzbuz—Oh. it's the score of sonic great baseball game, I suppose. You know how crazy men arc on that subject.— Roxbury Gazette. How strangely do life's prizes go. Awarded by the crowd; Some triumph by the things they know, And some by talking loud. —Washington Evening Star. Mrs. Motherby—How arc you getting on with your singing lessons, Kate? Miss Screecher—Well. I think I must be improving. I notice, anyway, that when I practice now the neighbors don't come and ring the doorbell to pro test.— Somen* ilie Journa 1. She (on the way over)— Just to think that tills big ship is absolutely under the control of the man at the wheel, lie—Oh, that's nothing. The man on the wheel at homo claims to have pow er enough to control the whole nation. —Philadelphia North American. When for a lengthy hiking tour 1 Vacationists prepare. The first inquiry ought to 1H As to the railroad fare. —Washington Star. Flowery Fields—ls dere any demand lor farm laborers between here an' Squedlink? Farmer Jones—Naw; I reckon th' farmers liev hired all th' help ! they need by this time. Flowery Fields (shaking his partner)-' Wake up, Weary! We've struck do right road at last.—Judge. Mother—"Mary, that young Spinners has been paying a great deal of atten tion to you of late. Do you think he means business?" Mary (with a far away look) "1 am afraid lie does, mother. He is the agent for n bicycle firm, and lie has done nothing but try to sell me a cycle ever since he has heeu com lug here."—Puck. Iri 1212 the central districts of London wero totally destroyed by Are. The Ladies. The pleasant effect and perfect safety with which Indies may use Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the name of the California Fig Syrup Com pany, printed near the bottom of the package. For sale by all responsible druggists. An oarg beaton up in tea or wine will he found very strengthening for invalids. Heart DlHPitße Itnllered In 80 Mlnatw. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, ami speedily ef fects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering spells. Pain in Lett Side and all symptoms of a Diseased IL-art. One dose convinces. If your druggist hasn't it in stock, ask him t* procure it lor you. It will save your life. il'aniirte.l With-,IV ~y..s i|.c Dr. D;ia. Thornp son s Kyc-water. Druggists sell at 25cpcr bottle J ! Pistols and Pestles. < j ( M The duelling pistol now occupies its proper (ffHj) place, in the museum of the collector of relics s|# rap of barbarism. The pistol ought to have beside so\ the pestle that turned out pills like bullets, ,pf (to be shot like bullets at the target of the (|S|) liver. But the pestle is still in evidence, and v,J will be, probably, until everybody has tested (fTgaj) the virtue of Ayer's sugar coated pills. They treat the liver as a friend, not as an enemy. fe|j) Instead of driving it, they coax it. They are (fj|) compounded on the theory that the liver does /; ■ its work thoroughly and faithfully under (fej) obstructing conditions, and if the obstructions , v:/ / are removed, the liver will do its daily duty. ( A When your liver wants help, got "the pill %lif/ that will," l^p) Ayer's Cathartic PiSls. ® !fp • ') Q v; ) _ ' ,j< Q "The Old Soldier's Favorite,'' " l| A little bit of pension goes a long li y way if you chew "Battle Ax." § jgi The biggest piece of really high- M p grade tobacco ever sold for 5 cents; |$S g almost twice as large as the other 0 fellow's inferior brand. 0 leal Cocoa f lie test of 115 years proves x tie purity of Walter Baker k f Co/s Cocoa aid Clocolate. 4 W ALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, Dorchester, Mass. IHE UNIVERSITY OFKOTRE OiME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. < lalr, Letter*. Science, I.H\V, Civil, !i[P. rhaiilcal and Electrical I ii*iiicci in u . rJ.l° '"fe Preinirutory and Commercial i OUTMCN. al students at special rates. Kooiti* Free. Junior or Senior Year Colleniata TbTn-.V Hall, for bo^SlnderVs! Ififltt c . Term will open September Nth, I r ut lr, * e on application to very Rev. A. iflorriaaey, C. S. C., President. i THE CLEARER 'TIS, THE COSIER 'TIS. WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT SAPOLIO Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, •s raerenry will surely destroy the sense of | smell and completely derange the whole svstem. when entering it through the mucous surface*. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is tenfold to the good vou can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <fc Co#, Tolelo, 0., contains no mercury aud ia taken internally, acting directly upoa the blood and, mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure ho sure to get the genuine. It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A- Co. Testimonials ltea. bold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle, Hftlrs Family Pills are the best. The Sanskrit language is said to hava about 500 root-words. FlTSstopped free and permanently cured. No fits after first day's use ot DM. KLINK'S CHEAT >. EityK ItERTOiiEK. Free $2 trial bottle aud treat ise. bend to Dr. Kline. 031 Arch St., Phila.. Pa- Mrs. Winslow'9 Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums,reduces inflamma tion, allays pain; cures wind colic. 25c u bottle. For Whooping Cough, Piso's Cure is a suc cessful remedy. M. |\ DJKTEK, 07 Throop AVW euue, Brooklyn, N. V. Nov., 14, 'U4. APOLLO MM , There is more proti' . n it t. all concerned than on j any other jr..a. 'J*. Ihe makers, because thev make more of it. To tin* sell. i>. lic.-uuse they sou more ! of it. To the worker.-. ise it takes los* time for i a job I the owners i. . an-oit makes a good jol. APOLLO llt O.N AND s ii EL CO., Pittsburgh, l'a. r N If 30 00
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers