The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, February 26, 1902, Image 3

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KIDNEY
Louise M, Gibson Says
hat This Fatal Disease is
asily Cured \by Lydia E.
fnkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound.
“ DEAR Mrs, PINRHAM : =I felt ver
diséouraged two years ago, I had suf-
fored 6 long with kidney troubles and
other complications, and had taken so
much medicine without relief that I
began to think there was no hope for
me. Life looked so good to me, but
what is life without health ? I wanted
to be well.
ha
a
MRS. LOUISE M. G
“Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound cured me and made
me well, and that is why I gladly
write you this, and gladly thank you;
six bottles was all I took, together
with your Pills. My headache and
backache and kidney trouble went,
never to return ; the burning sensation
I had left altogether; my general
health was so improved I felt as young
and light and happy as at twenty.”
—MRrs. Louise GiBson, 4813 Langley
Ave., Chicago, I1l.—§5000 forfeit if above
testimonial is not genuins,
If you feel that there is anything at
all unusual or puzzling about your
case, or if you wish confidential advice
of the most experienced, write to Mrs,
Finkham, Lynn, Mass., and you will
be advised free of charge. Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
has cured and is curing thousands of |
cases of female trouble.
/ TN KNOW THE VALUE OF
, IT WILL
(KEEP
N THE
WETTEST WEATHER
LOOK FOR ABOVE TRADE MARK
ON SALE EVERYWHERE
g CATALOGUES FREE
UL OF GARMENTS AND HATS.
SHOWING
Ww BOSTON.MASS. ,
AJT





BROADWAY AND 634 ST., N
ABSOLUTELY 2
FIREPROOF.
From Grand Central Stgffion ta}
Broadway and 7th Ave. S&ver
On ¢ si
Kle way to 5ath St.,
wnjnute’s walk to hotel,
The Hotel Impire 1estaurant is noted for its ex.
ellent cooking, etMoient service andi moderate prices,
nt and shopping
ooklets.
SN, Proprietor.
LLY, Managor-

why he should not
| medicine
YOU DRY|!
IN Tt
Paris supplies, free of cost, sulfurous
paths to all persons engaged in handling
ead.
PurNam Faproess Dyus do nol spot, streak
or give Jour goods an unevenly dyed appeal
ance, 1d by all druggists. ,
Five Presidents of the United States
have been of Scotch-Irish descent,
How's This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure,
I. J. Cuexty & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J,Che-
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per-
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga-
tion made by their firm,
Wrst & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Warping, KINNaAN&MARvIN, Wholesale Drug-
gistg, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act-
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Price, 75¢c. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free,
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
There were 150,000 children at school in
sixly years ago. There are 4,000,000
Best Yor the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headache to a can-
cor, you will never get woll until your bowels
are put right. Cascaruts help nature, cure
you without a gripe or pain, produce easy
natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to
start getting your health back. CASCARETS
Candy Cathartie, the genuine, put up in metal
boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on
it. Beware of imitations.
Any man may make a name for himselt,
but a woman may make several, if she
marries often enough.
Brooklyn, N.Y.,Feb.20.—The activity at the
laboratory of the Garfield Tea Co. is further
evidence of the popularity of their prepara-
tions; over Three Million Families used Gar-
fleld Remedies lagt year! This vast public
approval speaks well {forthe remedies. They
arc: Garfleld Tea, Garflold Headache Pow-
ders, Garfleld-Tea Syrup, Garfleld Relief Plas-
tors, Garfleld Belladonna Plasters, Garfield
Digestive Tablets and Garfield Cold Cure.
Because wealth doesn’t always bring hap-
piness is no reason why we should culti-
vate poverty.
FITS permanently cured. No fits ornervous-
ness after firs ‘suse of Dr. Kline's Great
NerveRestorer.%2 trial bottle and treatisefreo
Dr. R. H. Kring, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Does a standing army ever occupy the
seat of war?
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
| teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma-
SEAFARING MEN]
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25¢ aboitle.
Jecause a man is ungainly is no reason
Piso’s Cure for Consnaption is an infallible
for coug and o0olds.—N. W.
SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900.
Paradoxical as it may seem a square
meal is one that will go around.
| Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children
| Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in
the Children’s Home, in New York. Curve
Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disor-
ders, move and regulata the Bowels and
Destroy Worms, Over 80,000 testimonials.
At all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FREE
( Address Allen 8. Olmstead, LeRoy, N. Y
The sign man may not pose as a literary
i person, but he’s considerable of a word



oh eT Tet dad ik ARIE 1%
Small crops, unsalable veg- §
etables, result from want of
otash.|
Vegetables are especially
fond of Potash. Write for
our free pamphlets.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
THE TRACK!
Fere's the monarch—nothing
iton earth, Salzer’s New 20th
ury Oat takes the ¢
the biggest yielder
oats are bred ¢
pulture claim
alzer’s
the best.
o, carries first
ywhere, THe faot
The U.S. Depart.
over 400 samples and
Héw do you like that,
hr new 20th Century Cat is bound to completely
rowing and we expect dozens of farmers 10 repert
ng from 200 to 800 bushels per acre.
Price fs
buy this varlety this spring to scll to
ped.
It will surely pay you.
revel Whoat--42 bus. per Acro
on efrth that will yield » paying erop north east, south,
tate in the Union.
We also have tho celebrated Maées-
our fats, C3 bushels per acre.
SPELTZ
and hay food on earth, producing from €0 to 80 buskels
pnd our stock of earliest Peas, Beans, Sweet corn and
is cnormous.
Prices are very low. Onion seed CO
T10c—Westh $70
ogue contains full description of cur Beardless Barley,
bhishels; our Triple Income Corn, going 490 bushéls;
, yielding (00 bushels por acre; our grass and clover
producing 6 tons of maguificent Lay; nr Péa
1) fts 8 ods of hay, sad Tevsiote with 80 tons,
bn fodder ber acre.
Szlzer's gréat ¢stalogué,
h $100 to any wide awake gibdener or
mer, with 10 fafm sced ramples,~aworty
$10 to get 4 start—is mailed you ou
receipt of 10c. postage.



Y LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
ywder shells, because they aré made
Xa} {machinery with the standard brands o
ings. Try them aid you will be convinged.
pa
'DEALBRS ¢ KEEP + THEM

PENNSYLVANIA
BRIEFLY TOLD.
——
Condensed Special Dispatches
Many Points.
From
PATENTS AND PENSIONS GRANTED.
Officers Spirited the Man Away to Save Him
From Angry Crowd—Children Burn to
Death—Engineer and Trainmen Blamed for
Accident—Steam Radiator Explodes in a
Shirt Factory—.Craz:d by His Error.
Patents granted Pennsylvanians: Al-
nert J. Bearer, New Kensington, specu-
lum; Arthur B. Bellows, Pittshurg, steel
car truck frame, also truck bolster; Jos.
E. Bissell, Pittsburg, means for effect-
ing the noiseless discharge of guns;
Samuel S. Brechbiel, Altoona, folding
stool; John F. Budke, Cannonsburg,
rate for rolls; David H. Burkey, Alle-
gheny, weather strip; George G. Craw-
ford, Braddock, furnace valve and dust
:atcher; William H. Cullers, Allegheny,
netallic wheel hub; John L. Dawes and
W. F. Hull, Pittshurg, chipping glass;
Samuel Diescher, Pittsburg, heating fur
nace; also drawing tubes; Robert T.
Gillespie, Rochester, currycomb; also
chill support; Thomas Gunning, Pitts-
ourg, feed water heater and purifier; Al-
exander Heiden, Allegheny, car; Julian
Kennedy, Pittsburg, rolling mill; The-
ron R. Palmer, Erie, billiard table cush-
‘on, Wm. M. Piper, Allegheny, draft
rigging; Peter LL. Swank, Conemaugh,
switch-throwing device. . .
These pensions were granted: Wm.
Reiff, Pittsburg, $6; Peter H. Zell, Bea-
ver Talls, $12; Andrew J. Campbell,
Blairs Mills, $12; Nehemiah M. Brun-
dage, Brownsville, $8; Peter Kinsey, Jr.,
Johnstown, $17; David Ray, Coopers-
own, $24; George L. Smith, Stanton,
B16; John R. Kingsley, Cambridge
Springs, $10; John E. Swartz, Henri-
ctta, $8; Lewis J. Kimble, Mitchell
Creek, $8; Jacob H. DeHaas, Kerr-
moor, $8; minor of Jonathan Lohr,
Hooversville, $10; Mary Foster, Union
Church, $12; Hannah Atkinson, Pitts-
surg, $12; Samuel A. Money, Bradford,
$6; John Mull, Washington, $10; James
A. Painter, Apollo, $10; John C. Am-
srose, Sylvan, $10; David Potts, Smith's
Ferry, $8.
Fire at Coatesville destroyed the
houses of William Johns and David H.
Mills, in the southern part of the bor-
»tigh.
Anthony Morica, who was injured by
falling coal at Gilberton Colliery, Ma-
hanoy City, died at the Miners’ Hos-
ital.
While purcnasing a revolver ina Nor-
ristown gun store, William McCormick,
f Bridgeport, accidentally shot himself
in the left hand.
The body of Wassil Barrill was found
in the Cranberry Mine, Hazleton, where
he was drowned three months ago. Was-
sill entered the mines during a heavy
rainstorm, which caused a sudden in-
undation of the mines.
A special meeting of the Schuylkill
Classics of the Reformed Church was
held at Pottsville. Addresses were made
by Rev. J. G. Kershner, of Mahanoy
Citv, and Rev. C. E. Bartholomew, of
Cressona.
When a smallpox guard's shanty
raught fire at Pittston and he was busy
utting out the flames the patient was
watching his escape from the house. He
was captured a half hour later.
The local Methodist congregation has
ided to build a new church at Potts-
which will cost $80,000.
William Bitner, of Port Royal, aged
ro years, and Mrs. Bella Gish, of Har-
risburg, also 70 years old, were married.
John Brown, of Chase, a lumberman,
was killed on the mountains while log-
zing with his father. A tree he was
chopping down fell on him.
John Thomas, who is under arrest
it Lancaster on charges of complicity
in the attempted raid on the Gap Na-
tional Bank a week ago, and who was
shot in the mouth by Night Watchman
David Stamix, was given a preliminary
hearing before Alderman Spurrier and
was held for trial at court.
Edward Broome, a fire boss, employed
at No. 1 Mine of the Delaware & Hud-
son Coal Company, at Plymouth, was
found dead in an abandoned working
of the colliery. Broome had evidently
encountered a body of gas, which had
ignited and an explosion oecurred, caus-
ing his death.
Chester City Councils authorized the
Finance Committee to negotiate a loan
of $5,000 to be used in securing or erect-
ing a temporary building for smallpox
cases. Twenty-four- cases of smallpox
are now under quarantine in Chester.
At a joint meeting of a committee of
the various trades unions of Pottstown
resolutions were adopted condemning
the Stanley G. Flagg Foundry Company
because they have employed a number
of girls as coremakers.
The loss by the wreck in the Lacka-
wanna yard in Scranton, caused by a
runaway train, will reach close to $100,-
300. Two men were injured—Charles
Stauple, of Washington, N. J., and Thos.
Cannon, of Hackettstown, N. J. Stau-
ple’s skull was fractured.
Chester was on the edge of another
scene of riot, with the intent of lynching
a murderer, as she went through twelve
days ago, when 5,000 men were gathered
at the City Hall clamoring for the in-v
stant death of West, the colored man
who had killed Policeman Mark Allen.
Just before noon on this day, which tra-
dition has given over to thoughts of love,
Robert Kilpatrick shot to death his
housekeeper, Mrs. Elizabeth Bearmore.
An hour later he was under arrest and
before midnight had been locked in a
cell at the county prison at Media, but
at least twice in the interim crowds
gathering with muttered threats of tak-
ing the law into their own hands, had
been dispersed only by the cooler argu-
ments of less hotheaded citizens.
The Daughters of the American Rev-
olution made another attempt at Pitts-
burg to save the environs of the old
blockhouse at the point, the standing
relic of Fort Pitt. They appedred before
the City Finance Committee with law-
vers and asked to have the property
about the blockhouse purchased for a
public park. The estimated cost of the
park would be about $3,500,000. The
Finance Committee shelved the propo-
sition by referring it to a subcommittee.
The firemen at the Avondale colliery
of ihe Ralaware, Lackawanna & West-
ern Cg went on strike because of
a disag Int over the hours of work.
COMMERCIAL REVIEW,
Genera! Trade Conditions:
R. G. Dun & Company's “Weekly Re-
view of Trade” says: Business contin-
ues to progress satisfactorily, notwith-
standing heavy losses through the cle-
eh )
ments. The new year has been unusu-
ally handicapped in this way, floods and
snow ‘blockades being closely followed
by fires and explosions, destroying much
property and retarding traffic. It is only
another evidence of the solid basis upon
which the nation’s industries are estab-
lished that in each case plans for rebuild-
ing on a grander scale were made before
the shock of ‘the catastrophe had fully
passed. :
The labor situation has distinctly im-
proved during the past week.
In the iron and steel industry it 1s now
being demonstrated that there is such a
thing as too much prosperity. The re-
sult is a gradual falling behind with
deliveries and a tendency of buyers to
send orders abroad whenever needs are
urgent.
Higher prices were the rule.in the
markets for the leading agricultural
staples. :
Continued strength is to be noted in
all the cereals and flour.
Failures for the week numbered 240
in the United States, against 257 last
year, and 33 in Canada, against 40 last
year.
LATEST QUGTATIONS.
Flour—Best Patent, $4.00; High Grade
Extra, $4.40; Minnesota Bakers, $3.25a
3-45.
Wheat—New York No. 2, 887%; Phil-
adelphia No. 2, 86a86Vc; Baltimore No.
2, 8s.
Corn—New York No. 2, 685; Phila-
2, 65%%a66c; Baltimore No.
phiia No. 2, 501%; Baltimore No. 2, 46¢.
Green Fruits and Vegetables.—Apples
—Western Maryland and Pennsylvania,
packed, per brl, $3.00a3.50; do. New
York, assorted, per brl., $3.7524.50.
Cabbage—New York State, per ton,
domestic, $15.00a16.00; do. Danish, per
ton, $18.00a20.00. Carrots—Native, per
bushel box, 4o0a4sc; do. per bunch, 1}4a
2c. Celery—New York State, per dozen
staiks, 25a40c; do. native, per bunch, 3a
ac. Cranberries—Cape Cod, per brl,
$6.00a6.50; do. Jerseys, per brl., $5.50a
5.50. Lggplants—Florida, per crate,
$3.50a4.00. Kale—Native, per bushel
box, 13a20c. Lettuce—North Carolina,
per half-barrel basket, 75c.a$1.00. Onions
—Maryland and Pennsylvania, yellow,
per bu. $1.z0a$1.30; do. Western, yel-
low, per bu. $1.2521.30. Oranges—Flori-
da, per bx., as to size, $2.00a2.50. Oyster-
plants—Native, per bunch, $4.00a4.50.
Spinach—Native, per bu. box, $1.00a1.15.
Strawberries—Florida, per quart, 3oa3sc.
Tomatoes~Florida, per six-basket car-
rier, fancy, $2.75a3.25; Turnips—Native,
per bushel box, 25a30c.
Potatoes. -— White — Maryland and
Pennsylvania, per bu., No. 1, 75a80c;
do. seconds, 65a7oc; do. New York, per
bu., best stock, 75a80c; do. seconds, 65a
7oc; do. Western, per bu. prime, 75a
Bcc. Sweets—E astern Shore, Virginia,
kiln-dried, per brl, $2.50a2.75; do. per
flour brl, $2.75a3.25; do. Maryland, per
brl., fancy, $2.50a2.75.
Provisions and Hog Products.—Bulk
clear rib sides, 9%4c; bulk clear sides,
14¢c; bulk shoulders, gc; bulk ham
butts, ¢Yc; bacon, shoulders, 9c;
sugar-cured breasts, 1034c; sugar-cured
California hams, 834c; hams, canvased
or uncanvased, 13 lbs. and over, 12c; re-
fined lard, tierces, barrels and 50-1b.
cans, gross, 10%e; refined lard, second-
hand tubs, 1034c.
Butter—Separator, 28a29c; gathered
cream, 25a26c; imitation, a1a2ac; prints,
1 1b., 27a28¢; rolls, 2 1b,, 26az2yc; dairy
prints, Md., Pa. and Va., 27a28c.
Eggs.—Western Maryland and Penn-
sylvania, per dozeris 27¢; Eastern Shore,
Maryland and Virginia, per dozen, 27¢c;
Virginia, per dozen, 27¢; West Vir-
ginia, per dozen, 26az27c; Western, 27¢;
Southern, 25a26c.
Live Poultry.—Turkeys—Hens, choice
——-al5c; young toms, choice, 13a14c; old
toms, 11a1zc. Chickens—Hens, 11a12c;
old roosters, each, 25230; young, I2al3.
Ducks—Fancy, large, 13al4c; fancy,
small, 11a12; muscovy and mongrels,
11ar3. Geese, Western, each, 6oaysc.
Pigeons, young, per pair, 20325c.
Cheese—New Cheese, large, 60 lbs,
11%c to 1134c; do. flats, 37 lbs, 11%4a
11V4c; picnics, 23 Ibs., 11%4¢ to 1134c.
Hides—Heavy steers, association and
salters, late kill, 60 lbs. and up, close se-
lection, Io0aiic; cows and light steers,
Sagc.
Live Stock.
Chicago.—Cattle—Good to prime
steers, $6.50a6.75; poor to medium, $4.00
ab.25; stockers and feeders, $2.50a4¢5;
cows, S1.2522.25; heifers, 32250535;
canners, $1.25a2.25; bulls, $2.25a4.60.
Hogs—mixed and light, weak; close,
lower; mixed and butchers, $5.80a6.30;
good to choice heavy, $6.30a6.45; rough,
heavy, $6.00a6.25; light, $5.75a5.90; bulk
of sales, $5.85a6.25. Sheep—good to
choice wethers, $4.75a5.25; fair to
choice mixed, $3.85a4.20; Western sheep
and yearlings, $4.2525.80; native lambs,
$3.7526.75; Western lambs, $5.25a6.75.
East Liberty.—Cattle steady; choice
$6.50a6.75 ; prime, $6.2526.40; good ; $5.60
a6.00. Hogs steady, prime heavies, $6.15
a6.50; mediums, $6.3026.40; heavy York-
ers, $6.20a6.25; light Yorkers, $6.00a6.15,
pigs, $5.80a5.00; roughs, $5.00a6.00.
Sheep steady; best wethers $5.10a5.35;
culls and common, $2.00a3.00; yearlmgs,
$4.502a5.65.
LABOR AND INDUSTRY
Chillicothe, Ohio, has women street
car conductors.
There are 1,513 miles of sewers in
Greater New York.
Indianapolis has revived the project té
build a labor temple.
The French Chamber of Deputies has
adopted the eight-hour bill for miners.
The Brewers and Bottlers’ Unton has
gained an eight-hour day at Grand Rap-
ids, Mich.
Chicago school teachers are making 4
bitter fight against the proposed 20 per
cent. reduction in salaries.
The cry of “scab” is a sufficient cause
for an officer to make an arrest under
the new police order in Boston.
About 75,000 machinists are now
working under a nine-hour system, and
2,000 are striking for a similar conces-
sion.
The Canadian Pacific Railroad will
build immense locomotive and car works

in Montreal and employ 7.000 men.
Muscular Soreness,
As the result of over-exertion and expo-
sure to heat and cold, or from whatever
cause, may be treated successfully by the
timely application of St. Jacobs Oil. A
thorough rubbing is necessary. The Oil
should be applied vigorously for at least
twenty minutes, two or three times daily,
when all pain, soreness, stiffness will be
removed in twenty-four hours. It will also
strengthen and harden the muscles. Foot-
ball players, gymnasts and all athletes
will find St. Jacobs Oil superior to any
other remedy for outward application, for
the reason that ite action is more rapid
and its effect permanent. Thousands of
people all over the world use and recom-
mend St. Jacobs Oil for muscular sore-
ness, A twentyfive-cent bottle is quite
sufficient to prove its efficacy. In cases
where muscular soreness is complicated
with any disease which requires an altera-
tive Vogeler's Curative Compound should
be taken. This prepared by the proprietors
of St. Jacobs Oil, Baltimore, Md., who
will send a sample free on application.
California has almost a monopoly of
the cultivation of apricots in the United
States,
Chronic Tetter. -
Dr. James C. Lewis, Tip Top, Ky., writes:
“I have an invalid {friend who has had great
benefit from Tetterine in chronic tetter,
Send a box to above address.” 50c. a box
by mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.,
if your druggist don’y keep it.
Our own msfortunes are always the
greatest.

! gray hair.


had a very severe sickness
hair.
«y
that tock eff all m
chased a bottle ©
b
I pur- i
Ayer’s Hair |
Vigor and it brought all my hair 4
# back again.”
WV. D. Quinn, Marseilles, Ili.
One thing is certain,—
Avyer’s Hair Vigor makes
the hair grow. This is
because it is a hair food.
It feeds the hair and the
{ hair grows, that’s all there
§ is to it.
§ of the hair, too, and al-
It stops falling
ways restores color to
$1.00 a bottle. All drugglats.
If your druggist cannot supply you,
Bl send us one dollar and we will express
5 you a bottle. Besureand give the name
t of your nearest express office. Address,
J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass
2
Use
Ea CURES WH LS,
fy Bes* Cough Syrup. Tastes Good.
+ time. Soid by druggists.
> ONSUMPTION
Delicately formed and gently reared, women will
find, in all the seasons of their lives, as maids or wives
or mothers, that the one simpie, wholesoms remedy
which acts gently and pleasantly and naturally,
and
which may be used with truly beneficial effects, under
any conditions, when the system needs a laxative—is—
Syrup of Figs. It is well known to be a simple com-
bination of the laxative and carminative principles of
plants with pleasant, aromatic liquids, whieh are
agreeable and refreshing to the taste and acceptable
to the system when its gentle cleansing is desired.
Many of the ills from which women suffer ave of
a transient nature and do not come from any organic
trouble and it is pieasant to know that they yield so
promptly to ihe
beneficial effoets of Syrup of Figs,
but when anything more than a laxative is needed it
is best to consult the family physician ¢
the old-time catharties and loudiy adve
trums of the present day.
to avoid
ised nos-
When one needs only to
remove the strain, the torpor, the congestion, or
similar ills, which attend upon a constipated condi-
tion of the system, use the true and gentle remedy—
Syrup of Figs—and enjoy freedom from the depres
sion, the aches and pains, eolds and headaches, which
are due to inactivity of the bowels.
Only those who buy the genuine Syrup of Figs
can hope to get its benefleial effects and ag a guar-
antee of the ¢xeellence of the remedy the full name
of the company—California Fig Syrup Co.—is
printed on the front of every package and without
it any preparation offered as Syrup of Figs is fraud-
ulent and should be declined. To those who know the
quality of this excellent laxative, the offer of any
substitute, when Syrup of Figs is called for, is
always resented by a transfer of patronage to somo
first-class drug establishmént, whero they do not
recommend, nor sell false
brands, nor imitation
remedies. The genuine article may be bought of ail
reliable druggists everywhere at 50 ¢ents per bottle.


"150 Kinds for 16¢
1t 1s a fact that Salzer’s vegetable and flo
seeds are found in more gardens
® and on more farms than any other
in America, There is reason for th
We own and operate over 5000 acres fol
the production of our choice seeds. In
order to induce yon to fry them
we muke the following unprec-
edented offer:
For 16 Cents Postpaid
20 Kinds of rarost lnsclons radishes,
12 magn!ficent earliest melons,
16 sorts glorious tomatees,
235 peerless lettuce variciles,
19 splendid beet sorts,
65 gorgeously beautiful flower seeds,
in all 150 kinds positively furnishin,
bushels of charming flowers an
lots and lots of choice vegetables,
together with our great catalogue
telling all about Teosinte and Pea
Oat and Bromus and Speltz, onion
seed at 60c. a pound, ete., all only
for 1 6c. in stamps, Write to-day.
'OHN A. SALZER SEED CO..
La Crosse, Wis.

EA RE
ills Pillg ea
World.
Are You Sick?
Send your name and P. O, address to
The /. B. Wilis Medicine Co., Hagerstown, Md.
Saif-Threading Sewing Machine Needle!
@; 7c ond we will send you sample package assorted
ne Give name of ns ne. Agents wanted, Na-
tional Automatic Needls Co., 150 Nassxu St., N. Y. City
OR oO Fo 8 NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cures worst
{| casn"s.
Book of testimonia's and 10 dnys’ treatment
{ ¥yev. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S EONS, Box B, At'anta, Go

| a Gold Medal t Buflalo Exposition,
McILHENNY’S TABASCO
REE ATE PAS

A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL.
Watch our next advertisement.
hires metatytitines
“LION HEADS.”
Lion fa Tion Heads
ey are dll the rage at present.
Lion ads,
{lpi
pin
Cut from Tok
Lion
Heads,
them is task that’s pleagant,
COFFEE WRAPPERS
They of woman’s heart are trappers,
Also tempt
a host of papg
$,
They 8re being Siggen incessant!
Lion Heads, Lion Heads—
Vhat a
Lion Heads, Li
Women hat
ION COFFEE is exCelling
véfy other kind now selling,
Millions are it8 praipés telling—
Praisés ever intervening!
value th¢y dre meaning!
gn Hegls %.
fe 10 thém a léaning.
Lion Heads, Lion Heads,
, Uselu
Lion Heads,
predént
Lion
representing,
eads,
Bring the best &f man’s inventing,
Goods that are experimental,
Useful, needful, orndriientsl
For domestic tastes
Earning them
Lion Heads, L
Coupons
Lion H
ion Bring + fa
fon

8
he
paren al, .
brifigs no regeatingl
a Heads
ways votth the saving,
which you're érdving.
8 no glazi
( offec folks arc oh sing,
dhner of good health iy rdising—
Ovet all who usé it, waving,
— ih
Just try a package of LION COFFEE and you will understand §
the reason of its popularity.
WOOLSON SPICE €0., TOLEDO, OHIO,