T@ 74 13 14 24 25 2 10@ 2 15 45 50 9 100 7% 85 3 80@ 4 00 71% 12% 4215 428 3014 31 22 23 25 26 3 30@ 3 40 7234 73 4134 42 303; 31 2514 27 25 3 90@ 4 25 1 4514 31 35 i7 25 19 2214 arty, Pa. 5 40@ 5 60 500 525 415 435 360 410 330 485 280 320 250 450 250 360 20 00 35 00 35 00 55 00 5 5 05@ 5 10 5 15 505 510 515 520 3¢ 3 90 505 510 495 500 3:80 4.10 300 390 3 4 00@ 4 20 365 390 300 38:0 1560 825 & 5 40@ 5 60 350 425 425 490 $ 7 00@ 8 00 400 500 4 L 5 00 350 450 DE. sing Show it sus One. ain. ckly Review cial failures bout 10,630, 00, this weturing for . for $60,000,= porters, etc. either of the 00. , Besides ‘ial concerns 00, swelling er and $170,- hows a large y year, when , and liabili- owever, 1899 prosperity in as then stim- e succeeding of reaction. d been made rests for a e end of the ance did not the interior made general of mercantile More talk 1 coke and ation opens 1settle quota- cts, but iron en tenor of tment of this offered than urchasers are for delivery. t was lost on \y points do- yed by inabil- nstead of the 1 rails preva- broducers are dvance. Do- line cxceeded d among for- 7,000 tons {or maller sales. ted for build- ticcable activ- export. shipments for 1,105 bushels, last week, 3,- corresponding ishels in 1898, 07.790 bushels date this sea- 151.455 bush- shels last sea- els in 1898-ga. cek aggregate 5.465 573 bush- ushels in this 45 bushels in 1897. and 2,- uly 1 to date arc 04,240,169 t5 bushels last hels in 1898-00. colporteurs of e Society, of over 2,000 Bi- languages to Deed. es L. McDon- it Fort Wash- afternoon at- yur privates at ipted to place bhed three of which he had ough was tak- etropolitan po- an districts. ed a bank safe re frightened | any booty. a sun festival. the winter sol< festival of. the les the festival other localities Dragon. It is riment and one -malities is the pers: ilways consum- for the illumin- imption of car- 0 is estimated ,000,000 gallons - ® | co . >» | | ol ov «© ww *~ ~~ Dawn of the New Century. If the change of the centuries took | place at cither of the equinoxes— March 22 or September 22—then, since on those days the earth’s axis is at right angles to the plane of the orbit, od | there is equal day and night all over the world, the matter would be very easily decided. The dawn-line would coincide with the date-line, and from pole to pole che first sun of the new century would rise ot the same moment. But, unfortunately, this is not so, and the consequence is that the line of dawn, as it sweeps round the earth, first touch- es the date-line to the south of ths equator, and then gradually creeps up this line till it leaves it far to the north. So the first sun of the twentieth century will rise on the places along or near the date-line in the order of their posi- | tion, from the south upwar | ow there is no land along this line { | from the Antarctic circle to Antipodes | Island, hence this tiny spot of earth | will first see the twentieth century dawn. A few minutes later Bounty Island will | see it. hen it will sweep along the | northeast coast of North Island, New | Zealand; then over Vanuva Levu in the Fiji Islands. Next it will shine on the scattered coral islets of the Ellice group, and after traveling about 9 degrees more to the north the light-tide will touch the crossing of the dawn-line and | date-line at 6 o'clock. Two hours and five minutes will have to pass before it reaches the banks cf the Yarra. In six hours and twenty. | five minutes it will gild the temples and palaces of Calcutta. In nine hours and | fifty minutes it will be flowing over | Lion's Head, and down the rugged sides i of Table Mountain. In twelve hours and twenty-five minutes it will crossed Montmartre and touched the base of Eiffel Tower in Paris. Five minutes later it will have passed the cross of St. Paul's and be flowing up ' Fleet street. In seventeen hours and twenty minutes from the time it cross- ed .the dawn-line it will be flowing round the feet of the Statue of Liberty, and in three hours more it will have reached the Golden Gate. Thence it will cross a stretch of ocean unbroken by rock or islet back to the dawn-line, and so will be accomplished the even- ing and morning of the first day of ihe twentieth century.—Pearson’s Magazine. have Nothing Wasted in Paris. A duty of primary importance is dis- charged by the ragpickers of Paris. Working at night, busy under the gas- light with hoop and pannier, the value of ‘what they collect is estimated at $10,000 a day. Assuredly one-half of | the world does not know how the other half lives, says a Paris correspondent. Of course, the conditions of Paris life are exceptional. The population is very closely packed; the tall houses are crammed with inhabitants, there are no gardens, as with us—there are~but the houses and the streets. The Parisians have a way of emptying all kinds of lumber and refuse into the streets, and then the ragpickers gather in their harvest. Se Cie LA | fact that there is in existence an act ot = 3 . ard labor light. It is not stagecoac % > weekly st : x : | A 10-ct. can of Libby's Premier pis dnd g the stagecoach and the weekly news | parliament which provides that persons | y letter, and that henceforth we are to | be confronted only with the ston) glarcof the Intelligent Reading Public. | or fine. The statute dates from the pe- Once upon a time, that is to say a gen- | riod of the protectorate, but that it is eration or two agn, he was very highly | rarely enforced is proved only too con- esteemed. To him books were dedi- | clusively by the very sparse attend- cated with long rambling prefaces and | ances which take place at so many of with episodes which were their own | Our public places of worship. Dis- | whish encircles the earth is equal to Y . man when be was > big,” Stretching | William Page seemed to take more | frorhiee opie praise 2p his RIMS smoking an imaginary | pleasure in the “Sonnets” of Shakes- | Cough Syrup Quick, So pipe. This amused the children SO | peare, which he would quote by the | Refusesubstitutes. Get Dr. Bull's Couge much and made them shout and laugh | hour, or as long as he would find lis- | so loud that the teacher was obliged teners, then in painting his “Head of | | who fail to attend divine services on | Sunday shall be liable to imprisonment | No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascarers help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health ack. OCAscarers Candy Oathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab- let has C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Dresden is to have, in 1903, a ‘city exhibition,” at which all German towns of over 23,000 inhabitants are to be v represented. PurNam FADELESS Dye produces the fast- est and brightest colors of any known dye stuff. Sold by all druggists. A scientist says the weight of the air At 81,000 cubes of copper, each or "are a ¢ Sin toat and lum; Dr.ou: Bl | BY’S Soup makes six plates of the best soup you ever tasted. If there was a way to make soup + better, we would learn it— but there isn’t, 8 Oxtail | @ Tartle Mullagatawny Mock Tartle excuse for being. In the very middle of the story the writer would stop with | | tinctly it is a law that may be trans- | Chicken gressed, though it is to be hoped that | Tomato readers will not take advantage of the | om; Chicken Gumbo Vegetable a word of apology or explanation ad- | p,owledge thus afforded them and st dressed to the Gentle Reader, or at the very last with a nod and a wink. No matter if the fate of the hero be in suspense or the plot be inextricably away from church altogether.—Pear- v's Weekly. The Best Prescription for Chills involved and Fever is a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS y * = CHILL Toxic. It is simply iron and quinine in “Hang the plot!’ says the author; | a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. “I must have a chat with the Gentle . Toi Reader and find out what he thinks Nearly 75,000 tons of corks are need- about it.” ed for the bottled beer and aerated wat- And so confidences were inter- STE consumed annually in Britain, changed and there was gossip about the universe, and suggestions in re- gard to the queerness of human na- ture, until, at last the author would jump up with, “Encugh of this, Gentle Reader; perhaps it's time to go back to the story.”’——Atlantic Monthly. Dyspepsia is the bane of the human sys- tem. Protect yourself against its ravages by the use of Beeman’s Pepsin Gum, July is a month of thunderstorms in Hungary. Last July 33 persons and 286 sheep were killed by lightning. Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.— Wn, 0. ENDsLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb, 10, 1900. Applying the Rule. After Sunday school little Ned and his younger cousin, Horton, were per- mitted to play in the yard on condi- tion that they would be very good | Chicago rules that noisy cows chickens are no longer to in the residence parts of the city. cause, she found her small son sit- ting on his cousin, pounding him vig- orously in spite of Horton's pitiful wails. “Well, mamma,” Ned cxplained, “I | been discovered. wanted to teach him the golden rule, and he said he wouldn't learn it.”— Detroit Free Press. cian in his private practice. st To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. Railways use up over 2,000,000 ton | of steel a year, almost hali the world There are 300,000 French-Canadians, of whom 52,000 arc voters, in Mass- future.—Denver (Col.) Times. achusetts. | product ay | and | be tolerated | and quiet. They had not been out | yj Garfield Headache Fovwdadrs long when Ned's mother heard loud |, Cure. screams. Upon investigating the | The formule for these powders is the same | as prescribed for years by a prominent physi- | On the island of Alaska, 50 miles west { of Juneau, a large deposit of gypsum has | ¥ree. or. H. H. @F | All | - gruggtsis refund the money if it fails to cure. i RE E. W. GROVE’S signatures is on each box. 25c. Ready-Made Soups. | ® One can will make you a convert. { Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago Write Sooial for qur free book, ‘‘How to Mal Eat.” | FREE ELECTR - |B 3 [N68 CURRENT ELECTRIC BELTS | Ee ! (32H to any read be 0 money in advance; sty ; positive guarantee. io) ALMOST NOTHING com with most all other nib ures when 9 other elec. trio belts, appliances and remodies fail. QUICK CURE for re thanbdailments. ONLY SURE CURR for all nervous 01 P. N. U. 1, 1901. DR. 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