"Do Not Grasp attheShadoiv and Lose the Substance." Many people are but shadows of their former selves, due to neglect of health. Look out for the blood, the fountain of life, the actual substance; keep that pure by regular use of Hood's Sarsaparilla and robust health will be the result. Be sure to get only Hood's, because A Newfoundland dog made a deter mined and successful attempt at sui cide the other day In the lake in front of Lincoln Park, Chicago. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot Kane, A powder to shnke into your shoes; rest 9 the feet. Cures Corn 9, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-£o9e makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug gists and shoes stores, 25 cts. Sample mailed FREE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y. Progress of the Telephone. Mr. W. H. Preece, president of the British Institution of Civil Engineers, In a recent address, said that speech is now practically possible between any two postofflces in the United King dom. Theoretically it is possible to talk between London and every capital in Europe, and the British postofflce authorities are considering the sub mersion of special telephone cables to Belgium, Holland and Germany. Educate Yonr Bowels With Cnaearets. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forover. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail* druggists refund money. THE TOWER OF LONDON. Locking Up a Quaint and Anelont Ceremony. The main guardhouse at the Tower, which has just been pulled down, was hard by the Bloody Tower. It is at this spot, says the London Graphic, that the quaint and ancient ceremony of locking up the tower is nightly per formed, as it has been for centuries. A few minutes before 11 o'clock the head warder, or yeoman porter, as he is styled, clothed in a red cloak, carrying a portentous bunch of keys, and accompanied by another warder carrying a lantern, appears in front of the main guardhouse and roars out, "Escort, keys!" The sergeant turns out with some of the men, and follows the yeoman to the outer gate, the whole party being challenged by all the sen tries with "Who goes there?" and the answer is simply "Keys." The gates being locked the keys are brought tack to the main guard. Here the sentry stamps and roars out, "Who goes there?" "Keys," is the reply. "Whose keys?" "Queen Victoria's keys." "Advance, Queen Victoria's keys. And all's well. "God bless Queen Victoria!" cries the yeoman porter. "Amen," responds the main guard. "Present arms!" cries the officer on duty, and amid the rattle of the salute he kisses the hilt of his sword. The yeoman porter marches off with the keys and deposits them in the lieuten ant's lodgings, and from that time throughout the livelong night you can only circulate within the tower pre cincts if you know the countersign. John Was Ready. In these days of proposed Interna tional alliances It Is Interesting to read of the little difficulty In which a Chi cago newsboy found himself Involved, and how he extricated himself there from. He had wandered over Into one of the "foreign quarters," on the west side, where one can hear almost every language except our vernacular, and he was set upon by two or three boys. He defended himself bravely and was holding his own fairly well, until the two or three were Joined by as many more, and then the battle began to go against him. "Say!" he yelled to a group of boys watching the light from the sidewalk, "Is there an English boy In the crowd?" "Yes," shouted a stocklly built urchin of about his own size. "Come yere, then!" panted the young American, laying about him with all his might, "an' we'll clean cy the hull gang!" And they did. Miss Lockheart's LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAU MO. 67,104] 44 1 cannot express my gratitude to you for the good that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I have taken five bottles of the Compound and two boxes of Liver Pills and feel better in evdry respect. I had suffered for years with dropsy; the veins in ray limbs burst, caused from the pressure of the water. I had the worst kind of kidney trouble, faint ing spells, and I could not stand long at a time. I also had female weakness and the doctor said there was a tumor in my left side. The pains I had to stand were something dreadful. A friend handed me a little book of j r ours, so I got your medicine and it has saved my life. I felt better from the first bottle. The bloating and the tumors have all gone and I do not suffer any pain. lam still using the Vegetable Compound and hope others may find relief as I have done from its use."— Miss N. J. LOCKUEABT, BOX IC, ELIZA BETH, PA. Only the women who have suffered with female troubles can fully appre ciate the gratitude of those who have been restored to health. Mrs. Pinkhain responds quickly and withoutcharge to all letters fromsuffer ing women. Her address is Lynn, Mass. A TRUST OF TRUSTS. NEW SUBSIDY BILL A GIGANTIC STEAL. It Will Enrich the Groat Corporations by Hundreds of Millions of Dollars— A Hanna Republican Plan to Loot the United States Treasury. The ship subsidy bill, fathered by Senator Mark Hanna and Congress man Payne of New York, was favora bly reported to both the house and the senate of the last congress, the Repub lican managers are committed to tha passage of the measure, the daily press has been muzzled by the great cor porations whom the bill will enrich by hundreds of millions of dollars, and a large portion of the Republican cam paign fund is to come from the same source. The provisions of the pro posed subsidy law are thus character ized by the most influential labor or ganizations engaged in the ship-build ing trade: Th© Proposed Law. "The Hanna-Payne bill, officially en titled S. 5024, is one of the most un- American bills ever presented in the interest of foreign corporations, being practically a free-ship bill, with suffi cient Americanism held In reserve to enable its progenitors to loot the United States treasury, and even bar ring itself from being compelled to em ploy American crews. It asks for the admission of foreign ships to our regis try in the ratio of two to one; it asks for a bounty to owners of these for eign built vessels of the larger and swifter class of approximately 4% cents per gross ton on every 100 miles sailed, leaving a small inducement to the owners of lesser craft. "Its provisions would debar the ships constructed by its requirements in American shipyards from employment in our coasting trade, and the bill is so covertly worded as to mislead all but those who are thoroughly acquainted with matters marine, and is intended for the benefit of gigantic corporations which are largely alien. • * * We denounce in the most emphatic terms the bill commonly known as the Han na-Payne shipping bill." ■Endorsed by Ilanna'a Ohio Convention. Yet, this infamous measure was en dorsed last Friday by the Republican Stat© Convention of Ohio. The in dorsement misrepresents the measure, and Senator Hanna engineered the scheme. The exact word 3of the reso lution are: "For the National defense, for the reinforcement of the navy, for the en largement of our foreign markets, for the employment of American working men in the mines, forests, farms, mills, factories and shipyards, we demand the immediate enactment of legislation similar to that favorably reported to each branch of the Fifty-fifth congress at its last session, so that American built, American-owned and American manned ships may regain the carrying of our foreign commerce." In this resolution there is a delib erate concealment of the facts which the labor organizations engaged in the ship-building trades have set forth. In detail, the principal evils of the Hanna-Payne ship subsidy scheme are as follows: A Billion and a Half In Taxes. The bill provides for a subsidy or bounty to ship owners which, during the life of the franchise—2o years will amount to something like one and one-half billions of dollars. The pres ent tax receipts by '.he United States government are about one-half billion, dollars or about one-third the amount which it is proposed to give to the nun whose vessels shall fill the requina ments set forth in the proposed law. And right at this point the monopoly feature of Senator Hanna's bill ap pears: Th© Monopoly Feature. It provides for a government bounty upon each mile traveled by the ships which meet the requirements of the law, the rate to be proportioned to the size of the vessel and the rate of speed, BEING GREATER FOR THE LARGER AND FASTER SHIPS. This would exclude all sailing vessels and the small steam vessels, and concen trate the entire ocean trade of the United States in the large steam ves sels owned by the gigantic corpora tions Which combine the railroad busi ness with that of steamship lines. Then with the competition from small corporations effectually shut off by the discriminatory rates in the sub sidy law, the whole carrying trade on land and sea would, in the hands of the few corporations, soon be merged into what may be very properly termed a trust of trusts In freight and passenger transportation. The billion-dollar steel trust Is a much more difficult combination to effect. Th. Prize at Stake for Monopoly Barons. In the ship subsidy bill the prize at stake for Senator Hanna and the other monopoly magnates is so mammoth in its proportions, and if secured will, in combination with the other trust of trusts which will result if the proposed law for a banking monopoly is passed, lead to such far-reaching results as to make all lovers of popular government shudder. If this consolidating process through private corporations ever goes so far as the passage of the ship sub sidy bill and the bill for branch banks, the result will be that to protect the ensuing monopolies, '.he men in charge of them will, aided by the governments of Europe "to protect Investments," take formal possession of our govern mcnt. IT IS INTERNATIONAL LAVv THAT A FOREIGN STATE MAY, AT ITS DISCRETION, ENFORCE THE CONTRACT RIGHT OF ITS ' CITI ZENS AGAINST ANOTHER STATE OR ANY PORTION THEREOF. In pursuance of this provision of inter- national law, Egypt is being managed by an English army for the benefit of humanity, of course, and the taxes col lected are turned over to the Roths childs and their fellow monopolists. India is likewise managed by the Eng lish, and the French government has several pieces of territory in its hands as receiver for Its Monopoly Barons. Germany is likewise in the control of the money power, and Russia is fast extending her power through financial operations in China. A combination of these foreign powers can so back up the monopoly power in this coun try that the government can be held firmly in hand even to the extent of declaring invalid the election of a president and congress pledged to cor rect the monopoly abuses. Ail that is necessary Is that these foreign states declare that the contract rights of their citizens are in danger of being violated. The Irfsue. Is it not clear that every American citizen should turn in and strive to de feat Senator Hanna's ship subsidy bill, Senator Hanna's bill for branch banks, the retirement of the greenbacks and the turning over to the banks the en tire power to issue paper money and withdraw it, and help to defeat the ex isting combination of trusts and other monopolies fostered by the men whom Mark Hanna, as campaign manager, placed in power at the last national election? The Ohio state convention, with Sen ator Hanna in command, declared in its resolutions for: "President McKin ley, the best exponent of Republican- Ism and true American ideas and poli cies, the friend of every American in dustry, and the wise and patrioitc de fender and advocate of honest money. Under his splendid Republican admin istration the prosperity of the people has developed, our commerce has grown great, our trade, domestic and foreign, has Increased to a degree never before known, and the people are looking with confidence for greater things to come." Note well the conclusion: "Are looking forward with confidence for greater things to come." On tae other hand Head Professor Small of the de partment of Sociology in the Univer sity of Chicago declared recently that the remarkable growth of uncontrolled monopoly Is the greatest menace to civilization since the Huns descended upon western Europe. Practical busi ness men, he says, are asking "where will it all end? G. H. SHIBLEY. Investors Becoming Wary. From the Denver Post: There are already apparent encouraging signs that the country has reached the flood tide of the trust movement. Human greed is destroying the gorgeous com mercial structure which was being built with such pains. To buy a prop erty for $1,000,000 and then to stock and bond it for $5,000,000 was an ex ceedingly brilliant stroke of enterprise so long as the Investing public eagerly bit at the bait. More and more daring schemes were projected and more and more watered stock was Issued, until the public began to be surfeited. Later the investors will begin to look for their returns, and they are not going to come with the expected unanimity. It is true the trusts may control the output; it is true that they may, through concentration, reduce the cost of production and raise the price to the consumer as high as our protective tariff against foreign producers will permit, but in the end the matter must regulate itself. The thousands of men who are thrown out of employment by the system cannot continue to be large consumers of trust products, particu larly those which are classed as luxu ries. The very system itself destroys the consumers, which are so necessary to its continued profitable existence. When the investing public gives the trusts a cold shoulder, when many ol them realize they have been robbed, when the consumers buy as little as they possibly can (and many of them even now cannot possibly help them selves) there will be a crash in "indus trials." Secretary or Senator. From the New York Times: Sec rotary Alger announces that Senator McMillan of Michigan frequently told him that he had no desire to remain in the senate if the secretary wanted his seat. Senator McMillan declares that he never said what Mr. Alger says that he said and never had any intention or desire of saying it or of acting in the way that he is expected by the secre tary to act. This is very embarrassing. Mr. McMillan is not in the military service. There Is no promotion or degradation in rank through which Mr. Alger can refresh his memory or change the attitude of hi 3 mind. Clean Sweep Xemnary. From the New Y'ork Times: There are trusts that are vulnerable and fit for destruction. We refer to the com binations that carry on business with out competition under the shelter oi tariff protection bought of a Repub lican congress. They are the true oc topus; they indeed are a public enemy But it would be impracticable to sin gle out these tariff-made trusts foi campaign attack. The ax must strike at the root of their life and strength— Qie gold standard. Ult'i-KtiiK th© Bin© aiul Gray. From the Philadelphia Record:. The proposition ,to hold, a reunion of the veterans of the north-qnd south at St. Louis or some other convenient city is worthy of favorable consideration. A great fraternal gathering of the old soldiers of the blue and the gray would be a fitting sequel to the dertfonsfcra tions of sincere patriotism and which have prevailed throughout! all sections of the country since the begin ning of the trouble with Spain. Fertlllly of Gmpp*. It has been found that many vane ties of cultivated grapes are self-ster ile; others are imperfectly self-sterile, that is to say, when cross-polleuatiou is prevented they form clusters which are more or less imperfect; others are fully self-sterile. The last class in cludes nearly all the varieties which have proved satisfactory in commer cial vineyards. Growing Melons in Ilidges. The old plan of growing melons in hills made a wide gap if all the plants in a hill are cleaned ont by cut worms, as ofteu happens. If the melons are grown on ridges, one seed in a place, the cut worm generally leaves enough to make a good stand. So soon as the melon vines begin to run, it becomes impossible to culti vate them, so there is no advantage in having the melon seeds planted in hills, to enable the cultivator to go through them both ways. Exterminating Weeds. A weed is very properly termed "a plant out of place," but when a good, healthy burdock, nettle, teazel, rag weed.or pigweed springs up beside a poppy or marigold the order seems to be reversed; the weed seemingly thrives just as well, while the desira ble plant becomes decidedly "out of place." A vigorous use of the hoe at once upon the appearance of the little weed seedlings where a boo can be used, is the quickest and most effective way to dispose of them; but if they are al lowed to grow for a few days they may be easily pulled up root and branch. If a weed has attained any size never cut it off with a hoe, but pull it up, or generally new shoots will quickly come from the old crown. Whatever the way or means, keep tne weeds down entirely, at all hazards, for they rob the soil and render otherwise sightly places decidedly objectionable. A wise gardener is he who never al lows a weed of any kind to go to seed abont his place for a considerable dis tance about the outskirts, thereby sav ing himself many a backache the fol lowing season. When large weeds about to seed are pulled up they should be burned, as they might ger minate. —Woman's Home Companion, Controlling the Rote Slug. The common American rose slug has again made its presence felt by showiug an unusually voracious appe tite for the foliage of that plant. In several rose gardens visited while the slugs were feeding in June last year the foliage had been so skeletonized that it not only looked unsightly, but THE ROSE SLDO AND ITS WORK. its check lia<l also prevented the de velopment of the blooms. This is an old and widely distributed species, and it may almost always be found where roses are grown to any extent. For tunately there is but a single brood each year, the sawflies emerging in May, just as the foliage is fully ex panded. The eggs are inserted sin gly near the edge of the uuder sur face of the leaf iu a small slit, made by the female fly. When full grown the larvro is slightly over one-third of an inch long, slug like, but lacking the slime which cov ers many nearly related species, such as the pear slug. The larvae fed only at night and upon the upper side of the leaf, which they completely skele tonize, but leaving the uuder surface, below which they remain coucealed during the day. The larvm bocomo full grown iu about two weeks and then descend to the ground into which they burrow for one to three inches and there hollow out small cells. In these they lie dormant until the next spring,when they transform to pupic, from which the ailult saw-flies emerge in a few days. The time of the ap pearance of the adults varies consider ably, and thus the larvm may be found on the bushes for {our or five weeks. Sprays of powdered hellebore, using two ounces to three gallons of water, or one pound of whale-oil soap to three or four gallons of water will effective ly destroy them. If only a few plants are to be treated, the hellebore may be dusted on dry by pepper-can, dust bag or powder-gun, applying it while the plants are still wet with dew iu the morning.— IS. Dwight Sauderson, in American Agriculturist. It is asserted that l'aris, France, in about to replace four thousand ordin ary cabs with electric cabs. Chicago is also to have between one hundred and two hundred of the latter within two months. A Legacy of Pretense. Just one hundred years ago the Man hattan Company of New York was in corporated by Aaron Burr. Its osten | slble purpose was to supply the city with water. Its real purpose was to open a bank. The reason for the con cealment was because there was a pop ular prejudice against banks. A tank was built, hollow logs laid for pipes, and water was distributed until 1840. In order to keep its charter, this great banking company, which still exists, is today obliged to pump water from its ancient tank. A pitcherful is al ways in evidence at its annual meet ings, and a committee solemnly re ports that no applications for water have been refused. The story has its humorous side, but it illustrates the legacy of pretense and useless effort which roundabout methods always en tail. Aaron Burr's mode of seeking one object under cover of another has many followers, but in politics or so ciety or in individual relations it can never be commended and seldom ex cused. A Tale of the Flimt Napoleon. From the Weekly Telegraph: In the days of the first empire the Paris stu dents formed a cabal against the dram atist Lemercier. One first night the disturbance was reported to Napoleon, who gave orders for a second represen tation. The students 3till hissed. The emperor got excited. "Play it again," he said, "and I will go and see it." This time all seemed well. In the third act it struck his majesty to look out of his box, and the quiet was explained. Every head in the audience was cov ered with an immense nightcap drawn over the ears, and each head was nod ding. Napoleon burst out laughing. The piece was not played again. Two hundred men have refused to work at cleaning Brooklyn streets be cause they did not wish to wear the "white wings" uniform. They were hired under the new system, and all of them are Americans. They say they will not clean the streets until the j Legislature changes the law that com pels them to wear the white wings. "We are men," they say, "not mon keys." Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the kxzy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. There can be no doubt that the most obliging postmaster in the State of Missouri lives at Bethel. He recently put a telephone In his office and an nounced tjjat for the benefit of those out-of-town patrons who are connected by wire and who may desire it he will open their letters and will read the contents to them over the 'phone. To Cure Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If c. c. c. fall to cure, druggists refund money. A mill-owner not long ago issued the order that the girls in his employ should not wear laced shoes. The rea son he gave was that each one's boot became untied at least five times a day, and took at least five seconds to retic. When these 25 seconds were multiplied by 300—the number of girls In his employ—the loss of time was, he said, too serious to submit to. F1 Thing $ M Grays ■1 How is fills? £ |1 Perhap.-, sleepless nights j ■I caused it, or grief, or sick- V £ ness, or perhaps it was care, tl 3 No matter what the cause, , J F you cannot wish to look old If Ll at thirty. "jL U Gray hair is starved hair. 3 fj The hair bulbs have been 9 a deprived of proper food or jm proper nerve force. al Ayers 1 Hair Vigor J increases the circulation in ' X 9 the scalp, gives more power fl to the nerves, supplies miss- ' [9 ing elements to the hair ,\ L| bulbs. Ll \I Used according to direc- rj #1 tions, gray hair begins to k Ll show color in a few days. 3 Ii Soon it has all the softness X A and richness of youth and 9 the color of early life returns, wf y Would you like our book A i 4 on the Hair? We will gladly 3 send it to you. T / Wfito asf if 3 If you do notobtain all the 4 X benefits you expected from v | J 5 j the Vigor, write the doctor il RJ about it. He may be able to kj it E "Bgsst something of value 7# SE to you. Address, Dr. J. C. la (S Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Arc the best. Ask for them. Cost no more thuu eoinnioii ehiinneys. All dealers. PITTSIH?KG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. To get the best results you must use the best materials. You need expect only poor laundering with poor soap, but you will find dainty articles that have been washed with Ivory Soap restored to their original freshness with unchanged colors. Nothing that will stand the application of plain water will be injured by Ivory Soap. IVORY SOAP IS 99 4 >4 PER CENT. PURE. Oddities In Umbrellas. Many curious umbrellas are made. One I have seen, says James Gilmer Speed In Woman's Home Companion, j can be taken apart and put in one's J pocket. The stlok is of wood about an inch in diameter. The cover can be turned inside out and folded Into a small bundle. By touching a spring the ribs came ofT, straighten out, and may be placed in the hollow of the stick, which is then a presentable walking stick. It is found very con- j venient by its owner, who is a drum mer. Another is still more Ingenious. The handle is curved, and when a spring is pressed a pipe flies out. The ribs are stowed away In the center and the owner has a walking stick, but In the center there is also a rapier, which may be drawn out. Another neat in vention is a hollow stick which con tains a camp chair. Three steel sup ports are pressed out of the top of the stick, a triangular piece of canvas put on, and a seat is had which is at least as comfortable as a bicycle saddle. All of these strange umbrellas come from the old world. The umbrella makers say that Europeans take much more pride in their umbrellas than do people in this country. Many little Jokes are concealed in the umbrella handles there. A handle may present the appearance of the head of a mon key or a cat or some oth'er animal, and 1 a secret spring will cause the little creature to open its mouth and spurt a j drop of cologne on the beholder. Sunshine in Kurope. According to a recent report Issued ' by the French bureau of agriculture, Spain, and not Italy, should have the adjective "sunny" placed before it. On | the average, it is said, Spain enjoys | about 3,000 hours of sunshine a year, I while Italy has 2,300. France has al most as much sunshine as Italy, her j figures being 2,200. Germany has at j her disposal no more than 1,700 hours; \ while England, the land of fogs, has to \ get along with 1,400, less than half of Spain's amount. Probabilities to Fit. Wife (at breakfast)—l want to do some shopping today, dear, if the weather is favorable. What are the forecasts? Husband (consulting his paper)— Rain, hall, thunder and light ning. It's too much to expect an all-around politician to be exactly square. honM TobarrnSplt and Smoke Tour Mfe Anny. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag letic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weal; men >trong. Ail druggists, 50c or SI, Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The population of the South African Republic consists of fid.ooo Boers, 87,000 other white, called llitlandera, and 600,- 000 Kaflirs and Zulus. TVo-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81. All druggists. All the 50 Incorporators of the Mis sissippi Cotton Manufacturing Com pany, Just chartered and capitalized at $250,000, are negroes, and styled the best-known and most substantial men of their race in the State. 11. 11. Ghekn's Sons, of Atlanta, GA., are the only siucrsslul limn-v Spec ialist,. In the world. See their liberal offer ir advertise ment in another column of this paper. The Emperor of China has never left his palace except lu pray at the Tem ple of Heaven. Conductor E. I). T.oomK Detroit, Mich., says: "The ofTeet of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful." Writo hint about It. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Mrs.tvinslowV for thing flyrtip for child fen teething, sol tens the gums, ri-duce- liillain'ii e Won. allays pain, cures wind coiie.nv a buttle. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption lmth in my family and practice. I >r. ti, W. Patteh kon, lukater, .Mich., Nov. 6. 1894, S A POLIO Is Like a Good Temper. "It Sheds a Brightness Everywhere." INSOMNIA liave been urnlng t'.ISC.IKETS for Insomnia, with which I have been ufllicted foi over twenty years, and I can say that Cascarett have Riven me more relief than any other reme dy I have ever tried. I .shall certainly recom mend them to my friends as being all tliev are represented." Taos. Gillard, Elgin, 11L &f CATHARTIC . TOACWU THAOf MANN RBOIftTVWCD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good rv Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Grlj>e. 10c. 2oc /iOc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Itri.dy Company, riilrago, M M |rr t |. York. 315 NO-TO-BAfi rt ? l . d J i nd .iv , f^i , y, ,^ ed b y aiidru nw ,w WMV Kiststo CU RE Tobacco Habit SPECULATORS. Have you lst money honestly through leg!tlmate •peculation or have you been Robbed? Write us about the fakes and Swindlers in W..11 Street. Chi cago, Boston. Cincinnati, Pittsburg, Washington, and Other cities. Beware ..f Skin Information Bu reaus and Agencies. Send to cents for copy latest edition ON '( II \Ni;K, lt> pages, which elves list of aliened Bucket Shops and alleged Bankers and Brokers here and other leading cities. Bead about leader of Big Brokerage concern now a United States prisoner and in Ludlow St. jail, for fraudu lent use of malls.Other swindlers now under arrest. Bucket Shop Keepers recently convicted. Bed hot talk on evils of BUCKET S HOPS. : Bail bonds of the Notorious Dean Gang fixed at s76(M)eaoh. How fools and their money were sep arated by a Wall St. firm. How member Chicago Board of Trade worked the publ •. Find out who ! yon are dealing with. An Exchange membership, i a good Financial rating, fine pr onises or elaborate literature is no protection. We know the honest from the dishonest Brokers. Reports on Brokers (one report), $2.00. Additional reports. SI.OO. Col lections of accounts lost through Brokers a Spe cialty. Accounts examined and investigated. Re ferences 16 Exchanges and 600 legitimate Brokers in | U.S. Correspondence confidential Write or call. Address E. 1.. BLAKE JL CO., 20 llroad | Sired. Now Voik. "BIG FOUR" "THESEA LEVEL ROUTE" TO NEW YORK. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE. WACNER SLEEPING CARS. DINING CARS. Jf. F. INGALLS, WARREN J. LYNCH, President. Gen. Puss. A Ticket Agt. STOPPED FREE ~ ■?1 ■ '>■ Permanently Cured H ■ M Insanity Prevented bv ■ M B ISB 0R - KLINE'S 6REAF fta ■ ■ w herve restorer r • itm fori 11 f'Ut. BpOiff, < > tiie judges of 1 CARTERS INK j are the users. More users of it than T <► any other. Why? THE BEST I A i i Costs YOU no more than the poorest I A a ♦ + ♦ !>♦♦ + F|ENSIONKS^ Syrsin eh il war, !•>adjudicating claims, utt.v since. o'lmnuE. s.' r, I, 2S2SSb DROPSY SBT.3&K27SS , aS cases. Bo„k of testimonial, and 111 ilnv*' treatment Free. Dr- H. H OJIEEN'6 BONB Box D. Oa. RHEUMATISM 'Al.rxAMr.nii RaMl jiVCO-.TiaOreeliwiehßt., N.Y P. N. U. 28 'l)3 W ANTED - a-oc.fbn.l health that R-I-P-A-K-* "HI Mot ben.-li: 5,-1 a. Kii.ans , 'lienit.-j. ' New A . -rlt. 1 r !>' samples and icon test iiuonial f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers