JUS. itive ited: acord. mmis- ilroad luring | Sep- ngers 2,154 injur- acci- es not ments or tha 3,307 while g de- ployes whole strous idents lected se and shurg ¥ "hig n, PA. . ory of City, e loss ployes stown, James 3 . the been Pitts- r Cast- OD com- nodern | to do teller Duluth, eft of arrant arrest. Ivania. on has + canal or use ruction for im- trains Scotch Tidland d two , score d in a s- de- od by as pro- CL pro- use be t Sena- ote and at least i Janu- t is fix- not be e first augural Ls EE A KE TBE i "THE DISCOVERER Of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, the Great Woman’s Remedy for s Ills, 7 No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or such hosts of grateful friends as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacement of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. . It has cured more cases of Backache and Leucorrhea than any other rem- edy the world has ever known. It is alinost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of de- velopment. Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debil- ity quickly yield to it. Womb troubles. causing pain. weight and backache, in- stantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it invigorates the female system, and: is as harmless as water. 1t quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, ‘‘ den't care” and ‘‘ want-to-be-left-alone” feeling, excitability, irritability, nervous- ness, Dizziness, Faintness, sleeplessness, flatalency, melancholy or the ** blues” and headache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, or some de- rangement of the Uterus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaints and Backache, of either sex, the Vegetable Compound always cures. Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want—a cure. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Refuse all substitutes. Ar Ewisicasa. America has retaiiated upon Sir Ed- ward Clarke and his proposal to call the Great Republic “Usona.” “You're another,” says the United States of North America to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and all the British dominions beyond the seas. “BEwisicasa! Yah!” For we are Eng- land, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, India, Canada, Australia, and South Africa, though we may not all approve of the order of the initials. But if we ad- dress our letters to ‘“Usona” the re- ply will come to “Ewisicasa.”—ILon- don Chronicle. . ALWAYS CALL FOR A CIGAR BY ITS NAME MEANS MORE THAN ANY OTHER NAME BROWN BANDS GOOD FOR PRESENTS y Pay and Year the Jame. #*Largest Seller In the World. The latest tests of the motions of . Venus indicate that astronomers have been correct in believing that the planet rotates on its axis in the same time it requires for a revolution around the sun. That is te say, a day-in Venus is the same as a year in time. an] SI TB EL {10,000 Plants for 16¢. k More gardens and farms are planted to =. Salzer’'s Sceds than any other in 9 America. There is reason for this. We own over 5,000 acres for the pro- duction of our warranted seeds. In order to induce you to try them, wo PINS HF make you the following unpre- Among those who have received the high- cst award—the Grand. Prize—at St. Louis World’s Fair, was the A. J. Tower Co.. the makers of the Fish Brand Slickers. Many of our readers who went to the Fair, will recall their fine exhibit in which water- proof garments were shown adapted to so many uses that almost every department of the world's work was sugoested. The Grand Prize was a deserved tribute to one of the oidest manufacturing concerns in the country. cedented offer: For 168 Cents Postpaid 1000 Ferly, Hedium and Late Cabbages, £000 Vine Juley Turnips, 2000 Blanehing Celery, 2000 lish Nutty Lettuce, 2000 Splendid Onions, 000 Rare Luscious Kadishes, 10600 Gioriously Brilliant Flowers. Above seven packages contain suffl- cfent seed to grow 10,600 plants, fur. 4 nizhing bushels of brilliant ers and lots and lots of choice 5 “’ - vege es, together with our great f catalog, telling all about Flowers, Roses, Small Fruits, etc., all for 16¢ in stamps and this notice. Big 140-page catalog alone, 4c. Sy ¢ JOHN A. SALIER SEED CO, arc. La Crosse, Wis. AD *I had trouble with my bowels which made my blood impure. face was covered with pimples which no external remedy could remove. ed your Cascarets and great was my joy when the imples disappeared after a month’s steady use. have recommended them to all my friends and quite a few have found relief.” : C. J. Pusch, %7 Park Ave., New York City, N. Y. . The Mexican dollar is disappearing from international circulation. Alcohol! from Peat. A company has reeently been or- ganized at Rendsburg, Prussia, for the purpose of distilling alcohol: from peat. According to its process the company will be able to distill alco- hol cheaper from peat than it can be obtained from any other substancs and will, therefore, be able to sell its product for fuel purposes. It will also be in a position to do an export business. All British public men have popu- Best For lar nicknames. The recent arrival of The Dowels. Dr. Jameson at Cape Town. was an- ‘ : nounced as the “return of Sunny Sim.” Ss CONSTANT ACHING. Back aches all the time. Spoils your appetite, wearies the body, worries the mind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan’s Kidney Pills relieve and cure it. H. B. McCarver, of 201 Cherry St. Portland, Ore., in- spector of freight for the Trans-Con- tinental Co., says: “I used Doan’s Kid- ney Pills for back WM. C. MONTGOMERY CO. ache and other 635 N. 8th Street. Phliadelphia, Pa: 2 symptoms of kid- Ie OPO GoO OSV eCTLOe0909 | joy trouble which PENSIONS (pers foots Won son in | Bad anuayd ins fo records of TRA Ry au aces of | months. I think a Chin men, 32 years practice. Laws and advice FREE 5 "OE si- A. W.MCCOmMICK & EE Walnut ot, Oincinnar, 0 | cold was 1 SSpoily: ble for the whole It seemed to settle in my kid- leasant. Palatable, Potent, Taste Good Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10 ,50c. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tablet mped CCC. Guaranteed to cure or your money back Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 600 ANNUAL SALE, TEM MILLION BOXES sho Good, SO CTHOH+0 206009040 TAKE CARE OF YOUR HAIR BY USING MONTGOMERY'S HAIR RESTCRER. Promotes the growth. Restores its Natural color. Prevents the falling. 9 Frees from dandruff. Used fifty years. Sold by all druggists. £1.00. BEND STAMP—Get description of 5) cheapest | ypoype ms in ohio. H. N. Bancroft, Jefferson, A ne i s farms i 110 | peys. Doan's Kidney Pills rooted it P. N. U. 4. 1805. i out. It is several months since I used i them, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble.” Doan’'s Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers. F § comis LL ELSE FAILS. § Host Cough Byrup. Tastes G . Use : d by druggista. time. Price 50 cents per box. ['0os- ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, YX. Palestine is a land of flowers. Bot- anists tell us that thege are 2500 dif- ferent kinds. The eastern sun gives the’ colors a brightness they seldom have in our hazy clime. The wild flow- ers. are somewhat localized, so that acres, and indeed miles, take their hue from a single flower. Diamond cutting up to a recent time was’ nearly all done abroad, Holland being tbe.chief centre of the industry for some centuries, but of late a good deal of it has come over {to America, where electrical machines are used in the work to great advantage in all ways. European work has always been done by hang, as it still is, and the lapidaries there ave only just waking up to the knowledge that artificial power can be applied. Besides cutting real gems, the machinery employed here turns out great quantities of ar- tificial ones, which now rule the mar- kets of the world. Weather forecasters in the British Isles have worked at disadvantage. The . disturbances largely approach from the west and southwest, and in those directions the Atlantic has kept the observing stations too far away fot effective reports. The ‘aid of wire 3 telegraphy is now being invoked. I forts of the Meteorological Council t make arrapgements with Lloyd failed, but private enterprise has now stepped in and the appreach of future storms is to be signalled from ships crossing the ocean. It is expected that in winter, when the western coasts of Europe are often swept by severe gales, the warnings will be of great value, ~ — When we read of the men who in- habited the caves of Europe at a time when mammoths dwelt on that con- tinent, we seem to have gone back to a period so immeasurably remote that we can hardly picture in the mind's eye the appearance which the repre- sentatives of our race, then presented. Yet, according to Professor E, B. Ty- lor, the natives of Tasmania “remained within the present century representi- tives of the immensely ancient Paleo- {ithic period,” Recent studies of the relics of the Tasmanians, who became extinct when brought into touch with modern civilized man, show that the workmanship of their rude implements vas below that exhibited by the ‘drift and Cave men” of Paleolithic times. The Smithsonian Institution has pub- lished a new edition of Dr. Langley’'s “Experiments in Aercdynomics,” first printed eleven years ago. In summing up Dr, Langley speaks of the prospects for the future somewhat as follows: Since that time, he says. he has demon- sirated that mechanical fii i Se sible by actually p rming. it with steal fiying machines nearly one thou: sand times heavier than air, driven by steam. These machines weighed from hirty to forty pounds, and flew from one-half to three-quarters of a mile at’speeds varying from twenty to thirty miles an hour. 1t is believed by Dr. Langley that the time is now very nea when human beings will be transport: ed at high velocities, though perhaps at first under exceptional conditions. such as are demanded in the arts of was rather than of peace, Dignity and Influence. The influence of the editorial depends upon the character of the journal in which it appears, maintains fourth Estate. ‘ If the newspaper notoriously lacks sobriety of judgment, decency and se ricusness of purpose, Its editorials axe necessarily . inconsequential, trivial, silly and of no interest to intelligent persons. Tlie opinions of a mountebank, wic stands upon his head and twiddles his toes by way of exordium and to attract attention, are not listened to with re- spect, and it is not to be wondered at that in time he should come to the con: clusion that the people do not want ppinions, and that toe twiddling is the only thing really worth while. In journalism, as in the law. politics, theology, science and philosophy, the value and weight of opinion, are in exact proportion to the character and reputation of him who pronounces it. If the readers of a newspaper have confidence in its sincerity, serious- ness, ability and fidelity to what it be- lieves to be the public interest, they do much more than glance at its ed- jtorials, and that newspaper exerts a very marked infliience upon the thought of the community in which it is pub- (shed, and is recognized abroad as a. reliable exponent of intelligent public opinion. — Vast Riches in Corn. The greatest hoard of the ycliow metal ever gathered in any country zould net buy one yedr's harvest of the American corn and wheat. To buy one season's corn crop would take all the gold minted in this country in 3 In the last seven years all the gold mines have produced only nough to buy one year’s yield of our six leading cereals. Cools Are Necessary. A Pittsburg educator tell us cooks are paid more than teachers. Oh, well, one must eat, while, on the other hand, at a pinch a man can make his mark to a contract involving millions.—N. Y. Telegram. One Man Split. A Dench of seven mag were “equally divided” in opinion of vid a case, and that no decision wuld be | given, . Railway earnings for January thus far FIANCE AAD TRADE EVIE MILLS BEHIND IN CREERS. Rail Business Quiet, Although Large Contracts Are Pending—Activity at Tin Mills. Progress is more rapid in manu- facture than in distribution, but this is largely due to the efféct of un- seasonable weather at. some points and the unsettled feeling in the South, where the collapse of cotton prices has retarded ccllections and caused many cancellations. That production is maintained by mills and furnaces may be taken as evidence of confidence in the future. Iron and steel plants lead in ac- tivity, with woolens the feature in textile fabries. Settiement of the pro- tracted labor struggle at Fall River is encouraging, but the industrial at- mosphere is disturbed elsewhere, al- though, on the whole, there is less than the customary idleness of this season. Prices of newly opened lines of woolens are higher, as was to be expected in view of the position of the raw material. but consumption is not curtailed. Similar strength in. foot- wear has restricted. buyers in. the Boston market placing few contracts. show a gain of 2.3 per cent. Foreign commerce at New York is also better than a year ago, the last week showing gains of $1,555,889 in value of imports and $292,986, in ex- ports. Scarcely any alteration in guotations of iron and steel is the best possible guarantee of continued ac- tivity. Conservatism now controls the situation, holding prices at a posi- tion that is attractive, considering the volume of bus gs and cost of production. Cocke ovens are establish- ing new records of fuel output and raflic conditions cause little delay Very extensive contracts for machin- ery are pending, and a considerable quantity of pipes and tubes are want- ed, while the Pittsburg mills are be- hind on deliveries of billets and bars. Tin plate mills are not only fully en- gaged but have orders running well into the future. Structural steel and rails are quiet, although large contracts are pending. Hides are still firm as a rule, except that some declines are recorded on packer native, as these constitute the bulk of current receipts. This is a seascnable influence, and does not detract from the general tone of strength. - Failures this week numbered 335 in the United State gainst 358 last vear, and 24 in Canada compared with 53 a year ago. MARE HINTS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat No p tiene a1 04 10° ) o. 1timothy. Clcrer No. 1 i = I Feed—No white mid. 22 5) Brown middimgs........ .19400 Bran. bulk . 20 50 0) 270) Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery............ at 3i Uhio creamery. .. .. . 8 19 fancy country roll. sn B 14 Cheese—Ohio, new. ... Tod 12 New York, new................ 11 12 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per Ih... 2 3 Chichens—diressed 15 16 Turkeys, ive..... 16 17 Eggs—Fa. and Ohio, fresh 2 30 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—New per bu 6) Cabbage—per bol .. 1w Onions—per barrel . 1%) Apples—per barrel a <2 : BALTIMORE. Flour— Winter Patént ... 58) Wheat—No. 2 req..... 113 Corn—mixed . . UG Kush X..00. 0 : 25 Butter—Creamerv ... . . 0 26 : PHILADELPHIA . Flonr—Winter Patent... $5 15 57 Wheat—No. 2red.... 110 ii Corn—No. mixed. 53 59 Oats—No. 2 white. . : 56 57 Butter—Creamery, extra. 20 Xo Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. 24 x5 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents, 6 0) 6 50 Wheat—DNo, 2 red 1 Is 19 Corn—XNo. 59 6) Qats—No, 2 Win 34 37 putter—Creamer PA] EH Eggs—......... 5%... ee 24 2) LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra Leavy, 141010 1608 ibs........ $5 35 rine, 1500 to 1400 lbs | 52) 3 Medium, 1200 16 1300 ibs 4 60 5H 1u Tidy, 103) tu 1150... 435 4 60 Butcher, $00 to 1100 lus. . 31.0 8% Common 10 fair... ... 20 27S Ozen,cominon to fat ......... RTD 4 00 Common togood fat bulls and cows 25) 359 Milchcows,each.................... 161) 3500) Hogs, Prime heavy Bogs. ............. 500 Prime medium weights asi . 493 50 Best heavy jorkers and medium 499 3 95 Good pigs and lightyorkers. Pigs, common togood..... i 400 47 Houghs................ 376 41 btags 3% 35) t KEXtra,medinm wethers Si 64. Guod to choice ......... i 56° Medium .... : 52 Common to fair 53 diving Lambs. o.oo... Sachs 6v Calves, Veal,extra....... i . 500 753 Veal, good to choice 25) 15) Yeal, common heavy 8 3 “Your wife would like t of coal in her stocking” is an adver tisement of a iladelphia ccal deal- er. It is not clear whether this is a | p; reflection cn the sizz of the wife stocking or the amount of coal tie dealer gives for a ton. Pr { 3 6, any } | the toc find a ton | Ville Courier-lournal. CAUGHT BY THE GRIP-- RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA. TFBTLLLLIBLHLHLLLIBDRVLVLBODDG R.GUIL. Jae, HON JAMES \) ach, L £ = “The World of Medi Recognizes Grip as Epidemic Ccatarrh,’’'=- Medical Talk. d me to try your Pe- i) did, and was immediately 1 ans Bo Glass a ngtounlity Lp | benefited and cured. The third bottle cam= : Ted, ang ® 1gnorant, the ansio-, pleted the cure.”—H. J. Goss. crat and the pauper, the masses and the I C di 7 > ks es are alike subject to la grippe. None ; ured 1n a Lew Wee s Miss Jean Cowgill, Griswold Operas N. La Grippe is Epidemic Catarrh. | “A friend advi runa, which I re exempt—all are liable. ) Grip is well named. The original French | House, Troy, Y., 1s the leading lady term, la grippe, has been shortened by the! with the Aubrey Stock Co. She writes busy American to read “grip.” the following: : Without intending to do ‘so, a new word “During tne past winter of 1801, I suf- as been coined that exactly describes the | fered for several weeks from a severe at- case. As if some hideous giant with awful | tack of grip, which left a serious catarrhak grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp. condition of the throat and head. Men, women. children, whole towns and “Some one suggested Peruna. As a las& cities are caught in the baneful grip of a | resort, after wasting much time and money terribie monster. . on physicians, I tried the remedy faith~ Have you the grip? Or, rather, has the | fully. and in a few weeks was as well as grip got you? If so, read the following] ever. —dJean Cowgill. fetters % lefters, Sn a Saved by Pe-ru-na. These testimonials speak for themselves ¥ AT AT 4 ' a Das i Mt. ¢ Ton. James 1. Guill is one of the oldest as to the efficacy of Peruna in cases of la : = B) : grippe or its after-effects: and most esteemed men of Omaha, Neb. ’ ] = =. 1 1 1 . . v is s He has donc much to make it what it is, serving pu bonrds a number of ti A Southern Judge Cured, Serving on pub i board 3 Fhe F of Lies. : e endorses: Peruna 1n the foilowing Judge Horatio J. Goss, Hartwell, Ga., W pei words: - “I am 68 years o.d, am hale and hearty and Peruna has helped me attain it. Two 7 go 1 had la grippe life was de ed of. Peruna sz J. R. Guill. COLOR BLINDNESS COMMON. “Some five or six vears ago I had a very severe spell of grip which leit me with sy temic catarrh. Ve me. Revival of Roller Skating. Forty or fifty roller skating rinks | have been built and opened to the public in New England, New Jersey | and other states within the last year. | All are well patronized and their pro-|; moters believe that this sport, ne glected for 20 years, will again become | Many Young Men Rejected at Naval Recruiting Station. Many American youths fail to get nto the army ong hysical navy because of Lieutenant S. M. defects. popular. In the late ’70s and early! Price, who is in charge of the Cleve- ’80s roller skating almost attained the | land naval recruiting office, stated lignity of a national amusement. No | + : dignity of a national amusement. No that there were cnough applicants person was too old or too young to]. : use the rinks. The hockey games, | oT the naval service, ‘but that the endurance races, and exhibitions of majority were rejected for physical fancy skating arranged by rink owners | reasons. A very cemmon defect attracted big audiences for four or among the young men is color blind ive years before the popular appetite | ness. Lieutenant Price says it is { was satisfied. very {frequent occurrcnce for an af Then, and almest in a moment, DPlicant to be unable to tell green fronts roller skating fell into disfavor. Only | red. children clung to it, and on them it has never lost its hold. This sud-| To Cure a Cold in One Day ii den Ioss of popularity was due sim- Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Af ply to the fact that the passtime was | druggists relund money if it fails to eu: vorked to death, for although a good | ™ '* Groves signature i= on box. 25e. many harsh charges were made by | solemn meralists against it, In 1903 we were S itzerland’s best cus these | tomer. never could have killed it. Now it is| oa returning, as a novelty, with another | Coa! and Railroads. generation of pleasure seekers to ap- The total coal production of peal to, but it is improbable that it the United States is now at will ever regain the glory it once had.| the rate of 1,000,600 tons The out-of-doors cult has made great| per progress since 1885, and roller ing is an indoor game.—New ca day, and the consumption Shas of coal by railroads is equal to 40 per York | cent. of this, or 400,000 tons per day. Sun. The fuel bill of a railroad contributes about 10 per cent. of the total ex- Apple and Anointed, ! pense of operation and 30 to 40 per George Ill. was wondering how the! cent. of the total cost of running the apple got into th» dumpling. | locomotives. A locomotive will con- “Because the policeman on our beat sume on an average $5,000 worth of prefers it that way,” explained Queen, coal per annum, and for a road hav- Charlotte. | ing an equipment of 1,000 locomotives From that moment the King's ming | the coal bill is approximately $5,000, began lo totler.—New York Sun. | 000. How's This?” | | A new marine reptile has been dis- We ofler One Hundred Dollars Reward fo- | covered in the Hosselkus limestone in any case of Catarra that cannot be cared by | the upper triassic of Shasta county Hall’s Catarrb Cure. | California 5 F. J. Cuxey & Co., Toledo, 0. | : We, the undersizved, have known F.J. | ————— Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him | perfectly honoral usiness transac- | tions and finavei to carry out any | oblizations made by their firm. | WEsT & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To- ledo, O, WaALDiNG, § Druggis Hall’s Cat Inz directly upon the faces of the system. ,75e.nech ‘faike Hall’s ABAS casas anenn ses & Marvivy, Wholesals 1 . istaken internally, a cod and muecoussar Testimonials sent free, | ia. Sold by all Druzzists, ly Pills for constipation. | No Notion of Real Trouble. #1 pet | get into more trouble than man in this State,” volunteered young fellow. “Nothing in the e line overk 8 Mme. Why, I'd raid to marry” THERE IS NOTHING more painful than 3 ® Ain't you married?’ ejacu- Rh 1; SRF liS Fou miriedy ejam CUMMLISITN elderly pariy. Boy, you know what trouble is.”—Lcuis- 2nd % rs = ot Neuralgia Railrcads Kill Most. The railroads kill more people than tles. For the year ended 2 30, 1994; 55 S0NS were jured on the railroads of tates and as many more The capture of Port Ar- ted to have cost 80,000] i led, wounded and miss-| ‘loo were 54,400. © Peace] FEF TIIE TEEPE IPE HEE Price 25c. and 50c. sre eesmssac scans nssasanss ess SSSR + FEIT P reo 1| If afMicted J ed wine Thompson's Eye Wate
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers