The Fulton County news. (McConnellsburg, Pa.) 1899-current, May 30, 1901, Image 7

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    Appropriate
"This," the inventor, "is my new
Iretlger for river and harbor work."
"Ahl" replied the capitalist. "I ob
serve you call it the 'Politician.' Your
dca in that, I suppose, is to court favor
ith the powers that be."
"No; I call it the 'Politician simpl"
jtcause it throws mud,"
A inr Thing,
Promoter Now in case the stock
ties up, you win.
Financier Yes; but in case it goes
lown?
Promoter Then I win. You see this
s a sure thing; one or the other of us
s sure to win.
Cnrea Cancer and Blood Polaon,
Contagions blood poison, old Anting ulem,
Krofula, bom pains, falling hair, mucous
uatcbe, anil deadly cancer, running, fester.
Inriore. persistent pimples, eared by B. B. B,
(Botanic Bltxxl laliu), which kills the poison.
Ileal every sore; especially recommended for
old, obstinate eases. Druggists, 1. Uoscribe
troubles and trial treatment sent free by writ
lug Dr. Gillaiu. l'i Mitchell Bt., Atlanta, Qs,
It's the early worm that gets on the fish
book.
Pjming is a simple as washing when you
ami Putnam Faimu.i Dm, Bold by all
druggists.
There are ten battalions in the British
regular army that wear the old Scotch
kilts.
The municipality of Chicago employs 182
women in various capacities.
Ask Tanr Ielr fur Allen's Foot-lCase,
A powder to shake into yonr shoe ; rests the
feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Hwnilen, Bore,
Hot, Callons, Aching, Sweating Feet and In
growing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new
or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and
sho stores, 25 cts. Ram pie mailed FREE.
Address Allen B. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Out of every three persons struck by
lightning two recover.
if Yon Slave nhenmatians
Fend no money, bnt write Dr. Bhoop, Racine,
Wis.. Boi 148, for six bottle of Dr. 8hoop'
llhenmatie Curo, exp. paid. If cured pay tS.oO.
If not, it is free.
Switzerland cultivates 35,000,000 fruit
trees.
Mr. Winslow't Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gnms, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cure wind colic. 25o a bottle.
In society it is more blessed to be polite
than to be truthful.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a cough cure. J. W. O'Bbiem, 822 niird
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0, 1800.
Ireland sends to England 237,000 tons
of meat a year.
If you want "good digestion to wart upon
yonr appetite" you should always chew a bar
of Adnm' Pepsin Tntti Fruttl.
A cord of wood weighs, on an average,
two and a half tons.
A. M. Priest, Druggist, BheloyvUle, Ind.,
savs : "Hall's Catarrh Cure gives the beat of
satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials,
as it cures every one who takes it." Druggists
seu it 7oc.
No other sovereign in the world baa as
many physicians as the Czar.
Once Tried, Hever roraakeis.
This has been the history of Crab Orchard
Water.'- It makes friends j it keeps them. It
does all that is claimed for it.
Time Inay be money, but most of us
would rather give up our time than our
money.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day a use' of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. 42 trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. B. H. Kliwc, Ltd., 981 Arch Bt., Phlla,, Pa,
Great Br' tain eats her entire wheat crop
in about thirteen weeks.
WHY MRS. PINKHAM
Is Able to Help Rick "Women
When Doctors Fail.
IIow pladly would men fly to wo
man's aid did they but understand a
woman's feelings, trials, sensibilities,
and peculiar organic disturbances.
Those things are known only to
women, and the aid a man would give
is not at his command.
To treat a case properly it is neces
KRiy to know all about it, and full
information, many times, cannot be
eiven by a woman to her family phy-
Mrs. O. H. CaarriLu
Ician. She cannot bring herself to
tell everything, and the physician is
at a constant disadvantage. This is
why, for the past twenty-flve years,
thousands of women have been con
fiding their troubles to Mrs. Pinkham,
and whose advice has brought happi
ness and health to countless women in
the United States
Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Park, 111.,
whose portrait we publish, advises all
suffering women to seek Mrs. Pink
ham's advice and use Lydiu E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, as they
cured her of inflammation of the ovaries
and wotab ; she. therefore, speaks from
knowledge, and her experience ought
to give others confidence. Mrs. Pink
ham's add ret- is Lynn, Mass., and her
advice is ubwjlutely free.
To produce the best results
in fritf, vegetable or grain, the
fertilia'j- used must contain
enough Potash. For partic
ulars see our pamphlets. We
send them free.
GERMAN, KALI WORKS,
9) Nauau St., N.w York.
ESTIMATING CHARACTER.
Rev. Dr. Talmage Says the Divine Way
Differs From tbe Human Way.
The America! Nstloi Pat lot the Royal
Balaac - "The Lord Welf hcth
tbe Spirits."
tCoprrlsht IPrl.t
Wasihnoto, D. C. In this diseours
from a symbol of the Bible Dr. Talmage
urges the adoption of an unusual mode of
estimating character and shows how dif
ferent is the divine way from the human
way- text. Proverbs xvi, 2, "The Lord
wcigheth the spirits."
The subject of weights and measures Is
discussed among all nations, is the subject
of legislation, and has much to do with
the world's prosperity. A system of
weights and measures was invented by
Phidon, ruler of Argos, about 800 years be
fore Christ. An ounce, a pound, a ton,
yre different in different lands. Henry
III. decided that an ounce should be the
weight of 640 dried grains of wheat from
the middle of the ear. From the reign of
William the Conqueror to Henry VII I.
the English pound was the weight of 7880
grains of wheat. Queen Klir.aheth desreed
that a pound should be 7000 grains of
wheat taken from the middle of the ear.
The piece of platinum kept at the office
of the exchequer in England in an atmos
phere of sixty-two degrees F. decides for
all Great Britain what a pound must be.
Scientific representatives from all lands
met in 1869 in Paris and established inter
national standards of weights and meas
ure. You all know something of avoirdupois
weight, of apothecaries' weight, of troy
weight. Yon are familiar with the differ
ent kinds of weighing machines, whether
a Koman balance, which is our stcclynrd,
or the more usunl instrument consisting
of a beam supported in the middle, having
two basins of equal weight suspended to
the extremities, pcale have been invented
to weigh substances huge, like mountains,
and others delicate enough to weigh infi
nitesimals. But in all the universe, there
has only been one balance that could
weigh thoughts, emotions, affections, ha
treds, ambitions. That balance was fash
ioned by an Almighty God. and is hung up
for perpetual service. "The Lord weigh
eth the spirits."
The drine weigher puts into the bal
ance the spirit of charity and decides how
much of it really exists. It may go for
nothing at all. It may be that it says to
the unfortunate, "Take this and do not
bother ine any more." It may be an occa
sional impulse. It may depend upon the
condition of the liver or the style of
breakfast partaken of a little while before.
It may be called forth by the loveliness of
the solicitor. It may be exercised in spirit
of rivalry, which practically says, My
neighbor has given so much; therefore I
must give as much." It is accidental or
occasional or spasmodic. When such a
spirit of charirv is put into the balance
and weighed, God and men and angels
look on and say there is nothing of it.
It does not weigh so much as a dram,
which is only the one-eighth port of an
ounee, or a scruple, which is only the
twenty-fourth part of an ounce. A man
may give his hundreds and thousands of
dollars with such feelings and amid such
circumstances, and he will get no heavenly
recognition.
But into the divine scales another
man's charity is placed. It starts from
love of God and man. It is born in heav
en. It is a lifelong characteristic It may
have a million dollars or a penury to be
stow, but the manner in which that giver
bestows it shows that it is a divinely im
planted principle. '
The one penny given may, considering
the limited circumstances, attract as much
angelic and heavenly attention as though
the check given in charity was so large it
staggered the cashier of the bank to cash
it. It is not the amount given, but the
spirit with which it is given. "The Lord
weigheth the spirits."
Perhaps no one but God heard that good
man's resolutions, but it amounted about
to this: "From this present moment to my
last moment on earth, God helping me, I
will do all I can to make the world a
purer world, a better world, a happier
world." But the resolution shines out in
his face, sweetens his conversation, en
larges his nature, controls his life and
shows itself as plainly in the contribution
of $1 as though lie had the means to con
tribute $500,000.
When that charity is put into the royal
balance, the heavens watch the weighing
and invisible choirs chant from the clouds,
and 1 catch one bar of the music "Now
abideth faith, hope, charity these three;
but the greatest of these is charity."
So also in tho celestial scales is placed
the spirit of faith. In most cases faith de
pends on whether or not the sun shines
and the man hsd sound sleep last night,
and whether the first person he meets in
the morning tells him something agreeable
or disagreeable. Some day the sales in his
store do not amount to sd much as he ex
pected, and he goes home with enough
complaints to fill the house as soon as he
enters it. Another day the sales are twen
ty or forty per cent, larger than usual, and
as he is putting the key into the door lock
his family hear him whistling a tune most
i'ubilant. He has faith that everything in
lis own affairs and in the affairs of church
and state are tending toward better condi
tions until something depressing happens
in his own personal experiences or uuder
his own observation.
But there is another man who by re
pentance and prayer has put himself into
alliance with the Almighty God. Made all
right by the Saviour's grace, this man goes
to work to mskethe world straight. He says
to himself: "God luuched this world, and
He never launched a failure. The Garden
of Eden was a useless morass compared
with what the whole world will be when
it blossoms and leaves and flashes and re
sounds with its coming glory. God will
save it anyhow, with me or without me,
but I want to do my share. 1 have some
equipment, not as much as some others,
but what I have I will use. I have power'
to frown, and I will frown upon iniquity.
I have power to smile, and I will smile
encouragement upon all the struggling. I
huve a vocabulary not so opulent as the
vocabulary of some others, but I have a
storehouse of good wordB, and I mean to
scatter them in helpfulness. I will ascribe
right motives to others when it is possible.
Ill can say anything good about others, I
will say it. If I can say nothing but evil
of them, I will keep my lips shut as tight
as the lips of the Sphinx, which for 3U00
years has looked off upon the sands of the
desert and uttered not one word about the
desolation. The scheme of reconstructing
this world is too great for me to manage,
but I am not expected to boss this job. I
have faith to believe that the plan is well
laid out and will be well executed. Give
me a brick and a trowel, and I. will begin
now to help tuild the wall. I am not a
soloist, but 1 can sing 'Rock of Ages' to a
sick pauper. I cannot write a great book,
but I can pick a cinder out of a child's eye
or a splinter from under his thumb nail.
I now enlist in this army that is going to
tuke the world for God, and I defy all the
evil powers, human and sutauic, to discour
age me. Count me into the service. I can
not play upon a musical instrument, but I
can polish a cornet or string a harp or ap
plaud the orchestra."
All through that man's experience there
runs a faith that will keep him cheerful
and busy and triumphant. I like the
watchword of Cromwell's "Ironsides," the
men who feared nothing and dared every
thing, going into the battle with the shout:
"The Lord of hosts is with us. The God
of Jacob is our refuge, Sehth!" No bal
ance that huiuau bruiu ever planned or
hiiintn hand ever constructed is worthy
of weighing such a spirit. Gold and pre
cious stones are measured by the carat,
which is four grains. The dealer puts the
diamond or the pearl on one side of the
scales and the carat on the other, and tells
you the weight. But we need something
more delicately constructed to weigh that
wonderful quality of faith which I am glad
to know will be recognised and rewarded
for all time aud all eternity.
The earthly weighman counterpoises on
metallic balances the iron, the coal, the ar
ticles of human food, the solids of earthly
merchandise, but he cannot test or an
nounce the amount of things spiritual.
. .Put also into those royal scales the am
bitious spirit, livery healthy man snd
woman has ambition. The luck of it is a
Sure sun r ilium or unmornlit- . The
only question is, What shall be" tbe style
of our ambition! To stack up a stupen
dous fortune, to acquire a resounding
name, to sweep everything we can reach
into the whirlpool of our own selfishness
that is debasing, ruinous and deathful. If
in such a spirit we get what we start for,
we only secure gigantio discontent. No
man was ever made happy by what he got.
It all depends upon the spirit with which
we get it and the spirit with which we
keep it and the spirit with which we dis
tribute it. Not since the world stood has
there been any instance of complete hap
piness from the amount of accumulation.
Give the man f worldly ambition sixty
years of brilliant successes. He sought for
renown, and the nations speak his name;
he sought for affluence, and he is put to
hi wits', end to find out the best .stocks
and bonds In which he may make his in
vestments; he is director in enough banks
and trustee in enough institutions and
president of enough companies to bring on
paresis, of which he is now dying. The
royal balances are lifted to weigh the am
bition which has controlled him a lifetime.
What was tho worth of that ambition?
How much did it yield for usefulness and
heaven? Less than a scruple, less than a
grain of sand, less than an atom, less than
nothing. Have a funeral a mile long with
carriages; let the richest robes of ecclesi
astics rustle about the casket; carrcature
the srene bv choirs which chant "Blessed
are the dead that die in the Lord." That
.man's life is a failure, and if his heirs
scuffle in the Surrogate's court about the
incapacity of the testator to make a lost
will and testament it will only be a pro
longation of the failure. The son, through
dissipation, spent his share of the fortune
before the father died, and so was cut off
with a dollar; tbe damhter married against
his will, and she is disinherited; relatives
whom he could never bear the sight of
will put in their claim, and after year of
litigation so much of the estate a the law
yers have not appropriated to themselves
will go into hands which the testator
never once thought of when in his last
days he bad. tearful farewells to the
houses and lands and government securi
ties he could not take along with him into
the sepulcher.
1 I do not know the intermediate chapters
of the volume of that young man's life,
but I know the first chapter and the lost
chapter. The first chapter is made of high
resolve in tho strength of God. and the
last chapter is filled with the rewards of t
noble ambition. As his obsequies pass out
to the cemetery the poor will weep because
thev will lose their best friend.
Many in whose temporal welfare and
eternal salvation he bore a part will hear oi
it in various places and eulogise his mem
ory, and God will say to the ascending
spirit, "To him that overcometh will 1
give to eat of the tree of life, which is in
the midst of the paradise of God." In the
hour of that soul's release and enthrone
ment there will be heavenly acclamation
as in the royal balances "the Lord weigh
eth the spirits." 4
But if our character and behavior as
nation are reversed and good morals give
place to loose living and God is put away
from our hearts, and our schools snd our
homes and our people and our literature
be debauched, and anarchism and athe
ism have full sway, snd our American
Sabbath becomes a Parisian Snbbath, and
infamous laws get a place on our statute
books, and the marriage relation becomes
a joke instead of a sanctity, and the God
to whom Columbus prayed to on the day
of his landing from stormy seas and whom
Benjamin Franklin publicly reverenced
when he moved, amid derisive cries, the
remilar opening of the. American Congress
with prayer, shall in our national future
be insulted and blasphemed, then it will
not be long before we will need another
Edward Gibbon to write the decline and
fall of the United States republic, and it
will not be another case of destruction by
the Goths and Huns and Tartars and Tarn
erlanes and Attilas or foreign opposition
and hate, but it will be a case of world as
tounding national suicide.
The wish of this sermon is to empha
size the invisible, to show that there are
other balances besides those made of brass
and platinum and aluminium and set in
earthly storehouses; that the spirit is the
most important part of us; that the scales
which weigh your body are not as impor
tant as the scales which weigh your soul.
Depend not too much for happiness upon
the visible. Pyrrhus was king and had
larne dominion, hut was determined to
make war against the Romans, arid Cineas,
the friend of the king, said to him, "Sir,
when you have conouered them what will
vou do next?" "Then Sicily is near at
hand and easy to master." "And what
when vou have conquered Sicity?" "Then
we will puss over to Africa and take Car
thage, which cannot long withstand us."
"When these are conquered, what will you
next attempt?" "Then we will fall in
upon Greece and Macedonia and recover
what we have lost there." "Well, when
all are subdued what fruit do you expect
from all vour victories?" "Then," said
the king, ''we will sit down and enjoy our
selves." "Sir." said Cineas, "may we not
do it now? Have you not already a king
dom of your own? And he that cannot
enjoy himself with a kingdom cannot with
the whole world."
I say to you who love the Lord tho
kingdom is within you. Make more of the
invisible conquests; study a peace which
the world has no bushel to measure, no
steelyards to weigh. As far as possible
we should make our balances like to the
divine balances.
What a world this will be when it is
weighed after its regeneration shall have
taken place I Scientists now guess at the
number of tons our world weighs, and they
put the Apennines and the Sierra Nevada
and Cliimborazo and the Himalayas in the
scales, bnt if . weighed as to its morals at
the present time in the royal balance tbe
heaviest things would be the wars, the
international hatreds, the crimes mountain
high, the moral disasters that stagger the
hemispheres on their way through immen
sity. But when the gospel has gardenired
the earth, ns it will yet gardenise it, and
the atmosphere shall be universal balm,
and the soil sholl produce universal har
vest and fruitage, and the last cavalry
horse shall go unsaddled, and the last gun
carriage unwhceled, and the lost fortress
turned into a museum to show nations in
pesce what a horrid thing war once was,
then the world will be weighed, and aa
the opposite side of the scales lift aa
though it was light ss a feather the right
side of the scales will come down, weigh
ing mora than all else, those tremendous
values that St. Peter enumerated faith,
virtue, knowledge, temperance, patience,
godliness, brotherly kindness, charity.
God forbid that it should ever be writ
ten concerning us as individuals or com
munities or nations, as it was written on
the wall of Belshaxxar's banqueting hall
the hour when Daniel impeached the mon
arch and translated the fiery words which
blanched the cheeks of the reveler and
made them drop their chalice brimming
with wine. "Thou art weighed in the bal
ances and fo-nd wanting."
NEWSY CL5ANINCS.
There nre C0.000 telephones In New
York City.
Tliero nre 150 tulles .of electric rail
ways In Spain. (
Marconi's wireless telegraphy Is be
lli); utilized lu the Soudun.
Elu-hardt guns are to be adopted as
the field artillery of Norway.
A tax of ten cents a ton is to be
Imposed by Wisconsin on ice export
ed. A French Geodetic Commission lias
arrived at Colon on Irs way to Ecua
dor. Radical changes have beon niado in
(be conduct of the royal household lu
England.
Russian railway receipts for April
Incrensed $324,500 over tbe sumo,
month lust year.
The Russian Government is consid
ering plans for a caual from tbe Black
Sea to the Caspian Sea.
Tbe Wisconsin Legislature bag voted
to submit to tbe electors next fall n
prohibition Constitutional nmeuduicnt.
There Is a preut demand for reartlutf
matter among tbe troops stationed nt
distant posts in tbe Philippines aud lu
Alaska.
COMMERCIAL REVIEW.
Otscral Trass Ceailtloas.
New York (Special). R. G. Dun's
"Weekly Review oi Trade" says:
"Crops continue in the main favorable,
ind ease in the money market returned
to encourage business enterprises,
which looked aghast at the collapse of
itock speculation. The talmer tone in
securities la welcomed in all directions.
As against the favorable developments
referred to there is but one adverse
factor, and the labor disturbances rh
several quarters are not considered
likely to be a iong-continued drawback
and prsmtw not to very generally af
fect the trades involved.
"Less urgency for early delivery of
iron and steel products was reported at
manufacturing centres. With mills as
sured of activity beyond the middle of
the year and some uncertainty regard
ing the labor organizations' sttitude on
the wage schedule, there is a disposi
tion to let new engagements wait as
long as possible.
"Both wheat and corn continue to
sell at more than 10 cents a bushel
above the price at this date last year,
and the fluctuations in speculative op
tions sre much wider. Contracts in
May corn have been closed at phenom
enal prices, owing to clever manipula
tion at Chicago, and next crop options
are sustained beyond the prices war
ranted by encouraging crop reports.
"Failures for the week numbered 177
in the United States against 177 last
year and 19 in Canada against 30 last
year."
Bradstreet's financial review says:
"All through this week the stock
market has been experiencing various
stages which usually follow a condition
of panic like that which existed ten days
ago. The volume of transactions has
fallen off sharply and only became com
paratively active when heavy liquida
tion was in progress, as was the case on
Tuesday. The public has become sold
out and has little appetite for specula
tion, and Wall street has been adjust
ing losses and the other complications
which resulted from the severe and
swift decline. There is buying of good
stocks by investors on what have
seemed to be favorable terms, but these
are outright purchases, and even the
news which met the street on Wednes
day that a substantial settlement of
differences had been made between the
parties to the Northern Pacific contest
failed to stipulate speculation. The
street is again bullish in sentiment."
LATEST QUOTATIONS.
Flour. Best Patent, $4.5034.75; High
Grade Extra, $4.3534.00; Minnesota
bakers, f2.90a3.25.
Wheat. New York. No. 2 red, 80a
Biiie; Philadelphia, No. 2 red, 77J4a
78c; Baltimore, 77Jia78c.
Corn. New York, No. 2, siVic;
Philadelphia, No.2, 48J4a48J4c; Balti
more, No. 2, 48a48;4c.
Oats. New York, No. 2, 3.1 54c;
Philadelphia, No. 2, white, 34c; Balti
more, No. 2 white. 33WAc.
Rye. New York, No. 2, 61c; Phila
delphia, No. 2, 60c; Baltimore, No. 2,
58a59c.
Green Fruits and Vegetables. On
ions, spring, per 100 bunches, 5oa6oc;
do, new Bermuda, per crate, $1.40:11.50.
Asparagus, Norfolk, per dozen. No. 1,
Sf.50a1.75; do, Norfolk, per dozen, sec
onds, 75ca$i.oo; do. Eastern Shore,
Md., per dozen, prime, $1.0031.25. Cab
bage, Charleston and North Carolina
per crate, S1.25a1.75; do, Norfolk per
Darrel, fi.00a1.25. celery, t-londa, per
crate, $i.5oa2.oo. Apples, per barrel,
7j.ooa4.25. Uranges, S2.ooa3.oo, btraw
berries, per quart, gaioc.
Potatoes. We cjuote: White. Marv
land and Pennsylvania primes, per
bushel, soassc; do, new York prime, per
bushel, fSaooc; do, Michigan and Ohio,
per bushel, 55a6oc; do, new, Bermuda,
per barrel, Sso. 1, $4.0034.50; do do,
No. 2, S2.50a3.00; do. new Florida, per
barrel, No. 1, S3.50a4.50; do do, No. 2,
$2.ooaj.oo. Sweets Maryland and Vir
ginia, kiln dried, per barrel, S2.ooa2.25.
Jerseys, pe- barrel, $2.2532.50. Yams,
choice, per barrel, S1.25af.50.
Butter. Creamery, isaiox; factory,
nai3c; imitation creamery, 13317c;
State dairy, 15318c.
Cheese. Fancy, large, colored, loVic;
fancy, large, white, io4aio!4c; fancy,
small, colored, H.'jC; fancy, small,
white, lic.
Eggs. State and Pennsylvania, 13a
I3!ic; Southern, nai2; Western stor
age, 13c
Provisions. The market is steady.
Jobbing prices: Bulk shoulders, 8a8!4c;
do short ribs, 9J4c; do clear sides, oJ.$c;
bacon rib sides, 10c; do clear sides,
lo!4c; bacon shoulders, 9c. Fat backs,
SJ'jc. Sugar-cured breasts, li'Sc; sugar
cured shoulders, 9c. Hams Small,
nVi) large, 11c; smok:d skinned hams,
12'Ac; picnic hams, 8Kc. Lard Best
refined, pure, in tierces, 954c: in tubs,
i'Ac per lb. Mess pork, per bbl, $16.00.
Hides. Quote: Green salted, 6'Ac;
dry flint, 13c; dry f sited, 11c; dry calf,
10c; dry glue, b'Ac; Bull hides, per lb,
green, 5!4a6c. Goatskins, 15325c. Calf
skins, green salted, fwaSoc. Sheepskins,
60375c. Spring lambskins, 3oa40c.
Live Poultry. Market is steadv.
Quote: Hens, 10c; old roosters, each,
25330c; spring chickens, 18324c; win
ter, do, 2 to 2-j lbs, 16a 1 8c. Ducks,
839c. Geese, apiece, 30a4Oc,
Live Stock.
Chicago, 111. Good to prime steers,
S5.10a6.00; medium, $4 ooas.oo; cows,
S2.80a4.65; heifers, $2.8034.90. Hogs,
top, $5 95; mixed and butchers' $5.65
14 5- Sheep, choice mixed. $4. 14a
4.40; native lambs, S4.ooa5.15, Western,
$4-55a5. 1 5-
East Liberty, Pa. Cattle steady; ex
tra $5..6oa575; prime S5.40a5.60; good
S5.25a5.35. Hogs steady; prime heavy
$5.9035.95; best mediums $5.90; heavy
Yorkers, $5.8535.90; light Yorkers,
$5.8035.85; pigs $57oa5 75: skips $4 25a
5.25; roughs $4.0035.30. Sheep steady;
best wethers $4.3034.35; choice lambs
$5.1035.20; common to good $3 .5035.00;
veal calves $5 7035.75.
LABOR AN'D INDUSTRY
Louisville has the South's largest
ioap factory.
The postoflice clerks of Chicago have
built up a flourishing union within the
psst yesr.
The International Printing Press
men's and Assistants' Union lias a
menihcrshrip of more than 20,000, and
is well off financially.
A colony of 100 negroes left Knox
ville. Tcnn., recently for Hawaii, under
a contract to work thire years on a
sugar plantation.
Before the Albany street car strike
the mayor signed an ordinance forbid
ding traction companies to employ in
experienced motormen.
The Colorado Legislature just ad
journed adopted an amendment to the
State Constitution that will permit an
application of Henry George's much
discussed theory of a single tax on land,
giving right to exepipt all personal
property and improvements on land
from taxation. The single taxers are
preparing to win a victory willi the idea
of making Colorado a sort of Utopian
Commonwealth, and thus afford a strik
ing example to the other tax-burdened
States of the Union.
Why Angama HMn'l.
Pretty Angelina Swizzlcblossoms had
fallen from her wheel and sprained her
wrist, and Augustus Bloomcngarten,
her manly escort, was kneeling by her
side endeavoring to bind a handkerchief
about the disabled member.
"Rubber ncckl rubber neck!" yelled
a near-by newsboy at a passing wheel
man, who turned to look back at the
pathetic scene.
"But her neck isn't hurt, don't you
know," replied the astonished Augus
tus, and the newsboy went and pounded
his head against a lamp post.
It's all right to have faith in humanity,
but it's better for humanity to have faith
in you.
V0N(C01ESTrO2
"NEW RIVAL" FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
ouuhoot all other black powder shells, becsuse they are mad-)
better and loaded by exact machinery with tbe standard brands of
powder, shot and wadding. Try then and you will bt convinced.
ALL REPUTABLE DEALERS KEEP THEM
W. L.DOUGLAS k
$3. & $3.50
ml worth f W.
it. AO sihiM- U
4vilt Kdgc IIm
aa t mng
01 tni root, una n m-frrnrtion or tn pno. it
H use.
BfASTCOLftc?
11 rVFI r-r. TJ
v . a v
St CTn"WBnt ' W
a ,, "w-riTON a.;,- 1 l' i "v
w .-,. t. ... - -'nj got
know! Mae that Ititre ninnr V. I,. pontrlM ahf thr nn in th worm rur Tnt-n,
Tnkr ii MtilsMltiH-. IntM on tinrlntt W, L. ItounlfW ilioes with muiie
ftMjirlr trmip4t on bottom. Your dlr ihoiiM kp thm, If he does nut,
end lor catalog giving full Inrt ruction how to order hj tnal.
w. I.. mpt ULAH,
f
Jul
In our
Roasting
we
positively
do not allow
the use of
Efts.
Eff Mixtures,
Qlue,
Chemicals,
or similar
substances.
LION
COPfEE
is an
absolutely
Pure Coffee.
In every package of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated and descriptive list. No housekeeper in
fact, no woman, mai, boy or girl will fail to find in the list some article which will contribute to their happiness,
comfort and convenience, and which they may have by simply cutting out a certain number of Lioa Heads from
tho wrappers of our one pound sealed packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold)
WINTER
IIS
but act as a tonic on the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the
muscles and restore healthy, natural action buy them and try them.
You will find in an entirely natural way your bowels will be promptly
and permanently put in good order for the Spring and Summer work.
10c
25c 50c,
ALL DRUGGISTS.
nunc
trouble.
"-si
I II I 111 (atacls, bloate.4 bowel. rnl
VWIII Bnantb, haadacb. ldlila, plmplea,
pahsj after aaUiia, )lr Iraabla. ull.w cuililai
f .imuhm. nan four bawai l.nl auv. r..
larl, fan ara gt-IUntj trk. t)auMatloa hill Mora
Koala !haa all otber 1laaa (uuu r. It I a
trr far tba hraula allru.nl an 4 laag faar at"
Baaferlna; that uai afterwaro. Na uw what
you, atart lak.ln OASM-aWtfTH ta-aar, fas yaq
wtll stavar t wa.l ana ba woll all tba tae nat. I
woar bowal ri.lih lab uar aaie luit
wtist ViicaREls tM.r, aaa.r aa abaalata guar
MM la eara ar snaaajr raiujaaaa. mi
: a v, vr
m st?erur( nrnanan u
F0JWHE BESWENCE
U MADE OFfl WIRE.
"Tit gave t sat aiae et Petal fkataa."
MclLHENNY'S TABASCO.
3
LlliUtt WHIM! All 1IM- 1AILS.
I Best Couch Syrup. Tuus Uond. Cm
in tim. em nt aruatmn.
MwigMiiyjssignr
SHOES
UNION
f - kJ
MADE.
1,. Itnnirlsu II I a. net
4 to V My 4
cannot bm 4uh1IhI
1
prirc.
It H not fclnn tn ntt
IthvT Ihrtt mnkr a firrt
1 iho it la th nmln.
MYif ifLnifta iMrif . mtaii
to niriinirKi -mm tia
iirtrPkton, jm
B-H
I Ui 1
f '""mm"! l' isf tt j Js
fcUL
fit))
-Ik ;j hi
if ?rf - 8.
arriWsriUk-ajBR. ?ZWtX ' ssasssssa-aaassaas-
A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH
Watch our next advertisement.
Just try a package of LION COFFEE
and you will understand the reason of its
popularity.
LION COFFEE '3 now used in mil
lions of homes.
Causes bilious head-ache, back-ache
and all kinds of body aches. Spring
is here and you want to get this bile
poison out of your system, easily,
naturally and gently. CASCARETS
are just what you want; they never
grip or gripe, but will work gently
while you sleep. Some people think
the more violent the griping the better
the cure. Be carefultake care of
your bowels salts and pill poisons
leave them weak, and even less able to
keep up regular movements than be
fore. The only safe, gentle cleaner
for the bowels are sweet, fragrant
CASCARETS. They don't force
Ollt ih? fVral matter xirliU xrirJrkr .
CURED BY .
LIVER TONIC
BnpcadlHtIa, fcll-
a birMlh, a !, win
isT Mil fA .'. 4TI kMuto r akr-"w4
Mt I mrtr
liatm tit mmmw
fa)sjaaWWM
FSICK HEADACHE 1
(uku MmdUTMth wrraiaMrtotaa
i
A rt .rural mMictnnl waUTvmtriA.
Aponasnt, Uxatire, tnlr. A vtrifw f.r all
llTar, kidney, Mornat b nrl bow! dwoHert.
It euro Tftrpii llvar. lllllMMrMs Jm.
rltttit, 4hrfile MsrMM f tkiKUi.T
Iti HmrtfcvrM, tUaisl .
Djienlerf Cafiatlpatl". Ili. .
'-.. (be.!.-,-J Watafj 11 thft IslOal ffl-'
caciotit nt th natural mtntral water; tno
fonrftnifinl to tnne; mH
oonomkeal to buy.
Th arennln taaalrtfcv
all rlriiir-ariatai with reah
Aapt trarle Oiir. onflWl MU
vorr bottle. e r
CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO.. Lovntiltt. X?.
WILLS PILLS-BIGGEST OFFER EVE3 MMIE.
Foronlir IO Out we will aentl to any P. O. el
ttrpMfi, la Amy' treatment of the bent me Heine on
earth, and put you on tlie traok how to make .!nn
ry ritflit at your bom. AddrM all ortlTs t The
H. It. Wllltj 1eHlr(n ( nmpaiv, 23 Kllr.a.
brth Nt. II ttaTCrto'n Md. it ranch Otllceei
129 Indiana Are., V aehlntoa. I. C.
DROPSY,
f nt Boo of teattmonlaii
Itnr DIHOOT1RT! m
nlek Mltof and anrai wra
lonlaia and lOilM' tree -
tree. Br. ft. aUl ftOMe. Mmm ft. AtUata. oa.
MsECEBTAIWggCUBLH
ITT DAVO TO AHVKItTIKH 1.1
I IrfK T O THIS fAPUK.
If A U IS,
OP ALL!
"THE NEW KING COLE."
Old King Cole was a merry eld soul,
And a merry old soul was hc
Jle called lor his pipe but inttead nl a (last
He called for LION COF FEE.
For Old King Cole wai a shrewd old soul
And he couldn't be tooled on brands,
"LION" ot his vote, for it has no co.it
On its merits alone it stands.
Old King Cole had a wise old poll
And a wise old poll had he,
lie ate and he drank (oods ol highest rank
So he lavored LION COF FEE.
And he knew 'twas belt, hy a varied Uif
That millions ol homes it pleased.
LION COFFEE grand was the only bland
That his appetite appeased.
II Old King Cole could have control
Today oi the public mind,
No Coffee brand but the "LION" grand
On the market we could find.
And tlie LION heads whose value spreads
Satisfaction through the land,
Would be bringing grist from the Premium list
Given with tbe LION brandl
WOOLSON SPICB CO., TOLEDO, OHIO.
BILE
NEVER
SOLD IN BULK.
Iff
nti mmm V
a. V tV
, .
r -bb-
GUARANTEED fpil
-. -4f aar UaiiaMlr'i. V W Mfl