g 6,200 in port of ui revo- by the ived at cd that in the , Amer- stated council Threa t $200,- btained )y tha ... The Yacuis niles of 1s “the this re- require, sand * broth- 11 the manu- when st six oldiera, se 48% st died 1ade of at Uva- of war 1t more ) Yaqui hands junta were ANY. Against in. f King retween in and affair, adopted w. He ~ Amer- nd the royalist wafa on -Malie- re oniy e chief )y the consul ing Os- ages to yon the nents. formed aced fin d navy yrmeriy now be \it New ' f Eng- of pay- Lrmy. China, begun, o with- ster of yminion 1 privy >houses lasgow, ed and 38 sus- heavy. nstrue- from » miles rontier, cinning resent- dow of lS mur- gsassin a mos- [., Cap- n, and , from ith. of ndered nd sev- Ss been Z, Rus- is fare- at I.i- d with ived at ia, and andant, g the ceeding ind. Mon- ca, the ortures , ex- lead to bands. inister gue to will es- poriant i Aus- to sup- ess her ‘our of n Vene- Presi- own in > inten- ~ which 3 wish, 1cceeds xnation 14 last. dizd at e last fer old- mbrun, nber of clor of hingtor rs. Bel- i —3 _ be saved. A PAST BY AN ER SAVED BY PE-RU-NA. Rev. H. Stubenvoll, of Elkhorn, Wis., John’s Church, of that place. Rev. Stubenvol sented to him by Emperor William of Germany. TT CEPT aii — Xe - oy Te errr ii > 2, is pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran St. is ‘the possessor of two Bibles pre- Upon the fly leaf of one of the Bibles the Emperor has written in his own handwriting a text. This honored pastor, in a recent letter to the Peruna Medicine Co., of Columbus, Ohio, says concerning their famous catarrhremedy, Peruna: The Peruana Medicine Co., Calumbus, Ohio. Gentlemen: “I had hemorrhages of the lungs for a long time, and all despaired of me. Itook Peruna and was cured. Itgava me strength and courage, and made healthy, pure blood. it increased my weight, gave me a healthy color, and I feel well, Itis the best medicine in the world. 1If everyone kept Peruna in the house it would save many from death every year.’ —H. STUBENVOLL. Thousands of people have catarrh who would be surprised to know it, because it has been called some other name than ca- tarrh. The fact is catarrh is catarrh wher- ever located, and another fact which is of equally great importance is that Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. « Art in Railway Building. In the general plan, equipment and application of electric power to the working of the new electric under- ground and elevated railways in Ber- lin, little is presented which can be regarded as novel or especially sug- gestive. The one respect in which Ger- man constructors leave others far be- hind and offer an object lesson worth careful study, is in the artistic beauty, the architectural charm and sense. of fitness, which they have imparted to the stations, the bridges, and even the ordinary overhead viaduct sections of the new.road. In Germany the require ments of public taste are never per- mitted to be neglected or forgotten. Where the new Berlin line passes through a public square, it is on solid and artistically designed masonry. The above ground stations are of stone, steel and glass, no two alike,but each especially designed to fit, not only the requirements of traffic, at that point, but the adjacent buildings as well—the architectural framework in which it is set. The whole arrange- ment of the enterprise, from start to finish, illustrates the wise, firm con- trol which the municipality of Berlin maintains over corporations which ask for franchises at its hands. Patrolling the Ocean. A plan is projected by which a regu- lar line of steam lifeboats shall do on the ocean what the Red Cross Society does on the battlefield. It is to be known as the International Blue Cross Line, and will have a certain number of specially designed boats, which will patrol the seas over fixed and known routes, following the main ocean high- ways. It is believed that if captains knew that at a certain time one of these boats would be within sight of a certain latitude and longitude, many crippled ships and their crews would It is proposed to make the plan a business venture, with fixed salvage charges, and this promises better for its success than if it were purely a philanthropic scheme. The multiplication of railways has not diminished the number of postal stages in Germany. On the contrary, the number of stage drivers rose from £6,176 in 1896 to 5,314 in 1900. ¢‘ My wife had a deep-seated cough i for three years. I purchased two bottles of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, large size, and it cured her com- pletely.’’ J. H. Burge, Macon, Col. Probably you know of cough medicines that re- lieve little coughs, all coughs, czcept deep ones! The medicine that hag been curing the worst of deep coughs for sixty years is Ayer’s Cherry § Pectoral. id Three sizes: 25¢c., 50c., $1. All druggists. Consult your doctor. If he says take it, E BE then do as he says. If Le tells you not R § to take it, then don’t take it. He knows. iB Leave it with him. We are willing. 11 J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. § If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The ! Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. Ohio. ABUSE OF FUEL. The high price of coal, caused by the strike now ending, have carried with them a salutary lesson. It has re- minded our people that they have been using fuel wastefully. The natural resources of the United States are so great that something out of the usual is necessary to convey the lesson that there is a limit to them. But it is not merely in the matter of wastefulness that fuel has been abused. The sani- tary argument is even stronger than |. In America |: that based on economy. we indulge in hot rooms to a degree unknown in other parts of the world. Some of those who lecture us on the subject probably err on the other side. The cold rooms of Germany and France have their drawbacks, and there is reason to believe that they are often insufficiently heated. But that does not, in any degree, excuse the hot rooms to which Americans are very ‘commonly subjected. It is.not the degree of cold which is so fatal to health as the sudden transition from |: heat to cold. To quit a room at the temperature of a day in July and go into a zero temperature ‘is necessarily periicus, yet this is a common inci- dent of American experience. It has cost many a man his life, and caused others troublesome attacks of illness. With coal at abnormal prices the temptation to use too much fuel is not 80 strong. When normal rates are re- stored, it is altogether likely that most of the people will forget the prudence which necessity has taught them. The National Bread Company fur- nishes 4,000 loaves of bread a day un- der the bread contract to feed the im- migrants at Ellis Island. The Blood. The blood is life. We derive from the blood life, power, beauty and reason, as the doctors have been saying from time im- memorial. A healthy body, a fresh appear- ance, and generally all the abilities we pos- sess depend on that source of life. It is therefore the duty of every sensible man to keep the blood as pure and normal as pos- sible. Nature, in its infinite wisdom, has given us a thermometer indicating the state of the blood, which appeals to our reason by giving notice of its impurity. Small eruptions of the skin, to which we scarcely pay any attention, headaches, ringing noises in the ears, lassitude, sleeplessness, are generally a Sign that the blood is not 1n its normal state, but is filled with noxious sub- stances. These symptoms deserve our full attention. If more attention were paid to those symptoms, and steps taken to re- move them then many illnesses from which we suffer would become unknown, and the human body would become stronger and healthier. Attention therefore should be paid to those warning signs, and the blood can be purified and poisonous substances removed from it by the use of Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Drops, discovered more + than 60 years ago. Parts of London’s old Roman wall have been Mid bare by the house-breakers now engaged in the demolition of Christ’s Hos- pital. Newgate street. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti- tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflame mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condi$ton, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaee. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness {eax sed by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Cir- cularssent free. F.J.CrEXEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75¢. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Silk is considered unclean by the Moham- medans, because it is the product of a worm. 1 J Life 1fe. Point of View. ‘When a fellow has spent His last, red cent, The world looks blue—you bet! But—give him a dollar : And you'll hear him holler: S &. &There’s life in the old land yet!” —Atlanta Constitution. Precious. Mrs. Knicker— ‘Mrs. Smith seems very proud of her diamonds.” Mrs. Bocker—‘‘Yes, she refers to them as her white coals.”—New York Sun. Worth While. She—*I should like to know what good your college education did you?” He—*Well, it taught me to owe a lot of money without being annoyed by it.”’—Life, The Influence, Jerry—*“How do good clothes make a man a gentleman?” Joe—‘They make him feel as if he was expected to act like one.”—Detroit Free Press. A Promoter of Pedestrianism, “So you are going to get an automo- bile!” “Yes,” answered the man who is always thinking of his health. “The doctor says I must walk more.” : A Conclusive Objection. * “Poverty is no disgrace,” said the young woman with ideas of her own. “No,” said Mrs. Cumrox; “i's no disgrace. But it certainly is extremely unfashionable.” —Washingten Star. . Softened Grief. Wilson—“I lost that fine silk um- brella that I carried in town to-day.” Mrs. Wilson—“Oh, what a pity!” Wilson—“There is one consolation. It wasn’t mine.”—Somerville (Mass.) Journal. Another Advance. She—“So you think the necessities of life are constantly advancing in price? For instance?’ He—*“Well, the average fine for ‘auto- speeding’ bas advanced from $10 to $30 within a year.”—Puck, BAR 7 Gabbleton (effusively)—"‘Why, hello, Grimshaw! Glad to see you're hack.” Grimshaw (coldly)—‘“This is my face you are looking at, Gabbleton.’—New York Journal. No Cause For Him to Complain. “See here,” remarked the guest to the new waiter, “there doesn’t seem to be any soup on this menu card.” “Ch, mo, sir,” replied the waiter, nervously, “I didn’t spill it at this table —it was'the one on tne other side of the room.” — Cincinnati Commercial "Tribune. Or me Satiric. “Don’t you think that some people in society are very deficient in man- ners?’ said the man who had been an- noyed by a box party. “Perhaps,” answered Miss Cayenne; “but possibly they are not to blame. They have to meet so many customs house inspectors, you know.”’—Wash- ington Star, .. As She Reéasoned Tt. “It is but natural,” said Mrs, Van Scadders, “that those who possess wealth should consider themselves the best people.” © . “I don’t quite follow you?” “It is an axiom that everything Is for the best.’ | “Yes? 1 “And the people with money are the only ones who have a chance to get everything.”—Washington Star. * A Cheerful Soul “Hanks always looks on the bright side of everything. Do you know what he said when he lost his job the other day?’ “I haven’t heard.” “He seemed to be quite cheerful over it. ‘You see,’ he explained, ‘I applied for a raise of salary nearly six months ago and didn’t get it. Think of how much more I would have had to lose if they’d given me the increase,”’—Chi- cago Record-Herald. < He Dropped the Subfect. He was talking to the pessimistic, sharp-tongued damsel “Have you noticed,” he asked, “that, as a general thing, bachelors are wealthier than married men?” “I have,” she replied. “How do you account for it?” he in- quired. “The poor man marries and the rich one doesn’t,” she answered. “A man is much more disposed to divide noth- ing with a woman than he is to divide somethipz,”—Chicago Post. THE NMNARRKETS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red ye—No. ie 57 58 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear. 73 74 No. 2 yellow, shelled 69 ww Mixed ear 69 70 Oats—No, 2 wh 36 38014 No. 3 white. 5 36 Flour—Winter patent. .400 410 Fancy straight winters. S.365 39 Hay—No: 1timothy.................. 152% BD Clover No. Y................... 12 00 50 Feed—No. ! white mid. ton........ 2100 2150 Brown midalings.............--- 17 50 18 00 Bran, bulf,... .................0 17 60 17 50 Straw—Wheat ..................... 85 900 Oat................. ...0 0... 8 50 9 00 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery .8 28 29 Ohio creamery..... : 25 Fancy country rol 20 23 Cheese—Ohio, new..... . BB 13% New York, new................ 13 134 Poultry, Etc. Heng—per I...ou,: aus iviiiids 12 13 Chickens--dressed ... ,...... 15 16 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh 25 20 Fruits and Vegetable Green Beans—per bas..... $15 1725 Potatoes—Fancy white 59 Cabbage—per bbls. 7% 160 Onions—per barrel 20 2=3 BALTIMORE. Flour— Winter Patent ...............8370 380 Wheat—No. 2 red...... 73 74 Corn—mixed........ +s 58 59 EBS inn ins a 20 27 Butter—Ohio creamery. ............. 27 28 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent.... Wkeat—No, 2 red. Corn—No. 2 mixed Oats—No. 2 whiie....... Butter—Creamery, ex Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. NEW YORK. Flour—Patents.......................$385 400 Wheat—No, 2red 7814 189% Corn—Noe. 2....... 107 68 Oats—No, 2 White.. 387 “8 Butter—Creamery ...... .... . R12 Eggs—Stateand Pennsylvania......... 23 28g LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa Cattle. Prime heavy, 1560 to 1600 Ibs.......$ 600 625 Prime, 1300 to 1400 lbs... ...... s.. 8 BOO Medium, 12€0 to 1300 lbs. 500 550 Fathelters......... i... 4 65 560 Butcher, $00 to 1000 lbs. ...... 350 410 Common: 10 fair............x 300 400 Oxen, common to fat: ............. 200 500 Common togood fat bulls and cows 200 400 Milch cows,each..... .............. 250) 8500 Extra milch cows, each............ 180) 5500 Hogs. Prime heavy hogs............. 635 6 40. Prime medium weights. ...... $63 640 Best heavy yorkers and metlium... 630 6 35 Good to choice packers............ 625 6 30 Good pigs and light yorkers... 625 63) Pigs, common togood......... 300 020 Common to fair........ Levianee B10 1020 oughs......,... 500 600 Bihgs:. 500 52 Sheep. Extra, medium wethers ............ $360 37 Good to choice .. 340 Medigm.,. .. 300 Commoz to fai 23 Lambs clipped 3 550 Lambs, good to choice, clipped... .. 500 520 Lambs, common to fair, clipped... 30) 490 Spring Lambs... ..... co. cogrmmss 60) 625 Calves. Ven], 0XEra,. .. oie esesnisenioness 750 836 Veal, good to choice... i. tesiiive 300 550 Yeal, common heavy.............. 30) $ o Veal, commonto fair.............. 30) REVIEW OF TRADE. Wage Increase Aids Business—Christ- mas Purchases Are Heavy—Coke Still Backward. R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Voluntary increases in wages by some of the largest rail- way systems in the country bear eloquent testimony to the amount of business handled in the past, and emphasize the confidence of officials in continued heavy traflic. Moreover, by this addition of large sums to the purchasing power of railway employes there is assurance of a larger demand for all staple lines of merchandise. Temporarily, sales of seasonable lines of wearing apparel are retarded bv mild weather; but this loss wiil be fully made np when low temperature becomes general. Preparations for holiday trade are on an unprecedent- ed scale, especially at interior points. There is no relief as toc the conges- tion of railway traffic, nor any im- mediate prospect of free movements at the points of most serious block- ade. Coal freight is steadily gaining, and all railway earnings thus far re- ported for November exceed last year's by 5.9 per cent and those of 1900 by 12.9 per cent. Orders are now coming forward for iron and steel products that have been held back mary months in expectation of an easier market. Instead of making concessions, however, producers ask premiums for early delivery, and hesi- tate to accept contracts where ma- terial and fuel are not in sight. No relief is reported as to the movement of coke, nor is any anticipated for some time to come. Imports relieve some departments of the industry. Plans for constructive work are now increasing and a very large tonnage of structural material will be re- quired, As the present congestion is due to inadequate facilities. the most importunate Inquiry is for railway equipment. Activity is notable at works making agricultural imple ments, bolts and kindred lines. Re- cent reductions in prices of a few of the lighter forms stimulated dealings to a fair degree. Heavy lines of dry goods and footwear need the stimulus of cold weather. A fairly steady demand is reported for staple cot- ton. goods, but buyers are taking only for immediate requirements. Orders for spring shoes are coming forward freely, and there is supplementary buying of winter goods on a moderate scale. Both sole and upper leather are quiet, yet quotations are steady, and belting butts are firmer. No con- cezsions are ohtained on hides except where naw offerings are of inferior quality. Fallures for the week num- ered 266 in the United States, against 218 last year, and 24 in Can- ada, compared with 31 a year ago. Pradstreet’s says: Wheat, includ- ing flour, exports for the week end- ing Norember 20, aggregate 5,277,672 1 bushels, against 4,440,160 bushels last week, 5,518,930 bushels in this week last year, and 3,827,296 bushels in 1900. Wheat exports since July 1 ag- gregate 106,862,324 bushels, against 122,701,248 bushels last season and 75.292.387 bushels in 1900. it © ~ un # 0 gf gh Ii ws b, seni 7 2 2 A nervous, irritable mother, often on the verge of hystéries, is unfit to eare for children; it ruins a child's disposition and reacts upon hepsedf. The trouble between children and their mothers too often is due to the faet that the mother has some female weakness, and she is entirely unfit to bear the strain upon her nerves that governing a child involves; it is impossible for her to do anything calmly. She eannot help it, as her condition is due to suffering and shattered nerves caused by some derangement of the uterine system with backache, headache, and all kinds of pain, and she is on the verge + of nervous prostration. ‘When a mother finds that she cannot be calm and quiet with her children, she may be sure that her condition needs attention, and she can- not do batter than to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. This medicine will build up her system, strengthen her nerves, and enable her to calmly handle a disobedient child without a scene. The children will soon realize the difference, and seeing their mother quiet, will themselves become quiet. Mrs. May Brown, of Chicago, [il., says: = “ DEAR MRS. PINKHAM honor is due,” and you deserve both the thanks and honor of the mothers of America whom you have so blecsedly helped and benefited. I have used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Coms= A poun ni You x you honor. + : — Honor to whom | when I would feel run-down, nervous and irritable, or have any of the aches and pains which but few we that it relieved me at once and gave me new strength. erary Union, speak in the highest praise of your Vegetable Compound, &s they have been cured from serious female troubles. who thought she must submit to an opera- tion, was cured without usin the world but Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound and Sanative Wash. men escape, and I have found Several ladies, members of our Lit- One lady, ' anything in have hosts of friends in Chicago, and ey if you came to visit our city we would delight to do Gratefally yours,— Mrs. May BROWN, 57 Grant Place, Chicago, Ill. How Mrs. Pinkham Helped Mrs. McKinny. # : * DEAR MES. PINgmAM : — I feel it my duty to write and let you know the . good you and your Vegetable Compound are doing. I had been sick ever since my first baby was born, and at the birth of my second, my doctor, as well as myself thought I should never live through it: After that menstruation never came regular, and when it came I suffered terribly. A friend of my husband’s advised him to get Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for me. but now nothing could induce me to be without it. ovarian trouble. regular, and I feel like a new woman. ing women. Vegetable Compound. St., San Francisco, Cal.” I also had womb and At first I had no faith in it, Menstruation has become Your medicine is a God-send to suffer- I hope this letter will lead others to try Lydia E. Pinkhan’s Yours truly, Mes. MiLDRED McKINNY, 28 Pearl (March 16, 1901). FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO 43 WOMEN. — If there is anything in your case about which you would like special advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. Mass. above testimonials, which will prove t Address is Lynn, Her advice is free, and her advice is always helpful. eir absolute genuineness. $5000 FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produne the original letters and signatures of Lydia XE. Pinkham Medicine Co,, Lynn, Mass, All the officers of the Ostend mail steamers have been ordered to learn the Morse telegraph alphabet so that they may be able to work the wireless telegraph apparatus on board their vessels in case of need. Beet} Celery is an acknowledged nerve tonic. FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous- nessafter first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great NeryeRestorer. $2trial bottle and treatisefres Dr.R. H. Krixg, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Fame is merely an entree; fortune is a feast. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma- tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25¢. abottle The dull season is when the scissors grinder does his best business. PurvaM FADELESS DYES cost but 10 cents per package. It’s funny how even cold cash can burn a hole in a man’s pocket. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. SamvEL, Ocean Grove, N.J., Feb. 17, 1900. Life would be very monotonous if there was nothing to kick about. Es All Druggists Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in balk, Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” JOHN W.MORKIS, ENSIO Washington, D.C. penioee ssfully Progecutes Siaims. yreiu civil war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since NEW DISCOVERY; gives DR 0 PS quick relief and cures worst ecases- Book of testimonia's pnd 10 days’ treatment Kree. Ds. H. H. GREEN'S B0NS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. P. N. U 5, ‘2 W. L. DOUGLAS $3 93:52 SHOES it! W. L. Douglas shoes are the standard of the werld. W. L. Douglas made and sold more men’s Good- year Welt (Hand Sewed Process) shoes in the first six months of 1992 than any other manufacturer. 30 REWARD will be paid to anyone who 3 can disprove this statement. W. L. DOUGLAS 84 SHOES ANNOT BE EXCELLED. 1899 sales, 9 QF 1902 sales, ) 4 158g cai, $1,103,820 19% i, $2,340,000 Best imported and American leathers, Heyl's Patent Calf, Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Vici Kid, Corora Colt, Nat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelets used. i Tt ine have W. L. DOUGLAS’ Caution ! Hin ven ped on bottom, Shoes by mail, 25¢. extra. Illus. Catalog free. W. L. DOUGLAS, BRCCKTON, MASS. ferer from bronchial troubles ac- companied with a hacking cough. 1 at times suffered from extreme nervous -prostration. About four years ago I began taking Ripans Tabules, and since then 1 have used them pretty constantly. I rarely retire at night v/:hout taking my Tabule, and I fin? they keep my di- gestive organs (which naturally are weak) in good order, and they also allay any tendency to Rervousness and make me sleep. At druggists. I'he Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a vear. mee Ry TAINS a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers