Told sition sular three nator make om a meri- st of mis- on to d in- 00 a n ap- cquis- build- Am- on of SY. riury and state- nniss, the pany, grand’ 1g in- ments while y and o the >r be- 1dants ose to com- ir full \neisco 0 work 1diana, 2,000 county '0, Was .. bya re the irge of elected States 1] term s elec- ossible sw Or- ards of blocks stem of ch and Y., lost len ex- It. is by the ‘ead so cut off. lar ap- proved raises ies and for the amend- urchase aniople. wife of States ition in Nevada decree Auburn- Massa- murder bbed to ther in ta, 100. superior osperate ving 20 > Turks inded. Miners’ tion ad- laho de- mprison- nce on >d with- rnest on ttsburgh na, Pa. between lary and ich two ec others h states cided to WO war- ss plan- thus ef- 00,000 in ymmittee f Ameri- ting at sessment working on was his will 000 each INTERESTING LETTER WRITTENBYANOTABLEWOMAN Mrs. Sarah Kellogg of Denver, Color Bearer of the Woman's Relief Corps, Sends Thanks to Mrs. Pinkham. The following letter was written by Mrs. Kellogg, of 1628 Lincoln Ave., Denver, Col.,to Mrs. Pink- ham Lynn Mass.: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: ‘“ For five years I was troubled with a tumor, which kept wing, causing me tense agony and Mrs. Sarahhellogg gros mental depression. I was unable to at- tomy house work, and life became a bur- den tome. Iwas confined for days to my bed, lest my appetite, my courage and all hope. ' 1 could not bear to t of an ation, a in my distress ] tried évéry remedy which I thought would be of any use to me, and Ypading of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham etable Compound to sick women decid: to five it a trial. Ifelt so Gisoous age that I little bope of recovery, and when I began to feel better, after the second yuk, thought it only meant temporary re ; but to my great surprise I found that 5 Es gaining, while the tumor lessened in size. “The Compound continued to build up my hers) health and the tumor seemed rbed, until, in seven months, the tumor entirely gone and 1 a well woman. Iam so thankful for my recovery that I ask women may Jove of Lydia E. mpound.” When women are troubled with irreg- ular or painful periods, weakness, dis- placement or ulceration of the female organs, that bearing-down feeling, in- flammation, backache, flatulence, gen- eral debility, indigestion or mervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com- pound at once removes such troubles. No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unquali- fied endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female ills. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She isdaughter- in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years under her direction and since her decease has been advising sick women free of charge. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Remember that it is Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound that is cur- ingwomen, anddon’tallowanydruggist to sell you anything else in its place. THE DAISY FLY KILLER Gem fhe Taran aflords comfort to every home. One row of the wonderful curative Pinkham's Vegetable mire sesson. Sm ioss perso Clean, ND and wil 3 1" not soll - future ~ so anything, y them BY NZ on pri (2 anything you will 2 om L{ uJ never a i If not kept Swipes, sent HrRoLD SOME 149 DeKalb BAe nusy Brooklyn, K. ). go Bushels Winter Wheat Per Ac hat’s the yield of Salzer’s Red Cross Hybrid were Wheat, Send 2c in stamps for free sample of same, as also catalogue of WinterWneat, Rye. Barley, Clovers, Timothy, Grasses. Bulbs, Trees, etc..for fall planting. SALZER SEED CO., Box A. C., La Crosse, Wis. Sussnsey and Red rolled Cattle at Elkdale Stock ‘arm. A limited number for sale, includ’g Guernsey Form best straits. D. L.Stevens, prop.,Uniondale,Pa. ek Ee Changes in British Views. “Too many influences spoil the ‘British’? might be adopted as a prov- erb. Within the last quarter of a century the American woman has con- siderably altered the character of her British sister; the American business man has greatly changed that of his equivalent in England; the French have accustomed us to an attitude of mind which would have horrified our parents and the Germans have intro- duced their military spirit into a coun- try which has always been opposed to a large standing army.—London Graphic. Pacific Coast Cities. Portland and Seattle rank next to San Francisco in importanee among the ports of the Pacific coast of the United States. In 1000, when San Francisco had 343,000 inhabitants, Portland had 90,000 =nd Seattle had 80,000. Each of these towns was growing much faster than the Cali- forn?a metropolis. H. H. GRFEN’S 80 the only successful Drops cigists in the world. See their liberal oli.” in advertise- ment in another column of this paper. Wood intended to be made into pianos requires to be kept forty years to be in perfect condition. To Prevent Seasickness. Anybody who has had a good case€ of seasickness must have felt that he would welcome the electric chair as a relief. Now an electric chair for seasickness has been tested in an English Channel steamer ocean liner. You sit in a snug arm- chair. A motor under the seat is connected with the ship’s electric current. You sit and take vibratory treatment. Up and down and cross- wise you are shaken. Most sitters need but one treatment. Their tend- ency to seasickness is vibrated out of them. Some need a second sit- ting. A few are seasick as soon as their treatment ends. It is a pre- ventive, mark you, not a cure. The theory is that seasickness is essent- ially a nervous malady and that vi- bration reduces the nervousness. Certainly imagination and expectation have much to do with the disorder. Rlessings on the new armchair if it can block quick-coming seasickness. But many believe and many doubt.— Everybody’s Magazine. The Keeley Motor. About 1872, John W. Keeley, of Philadelphia, began his experiments in that city to attempt to develop to practical results a machine worked by power without cost, i. e. running jteelf. Nothing definite, however, was ever given out concerning this motor except the name. ‘“Pneumatic-Pul- sating-Vacuo-Engine,” until the motor was denounced by a Boston lawyer as a huge fraud, run by a water motor in a sub-basement. Hundreds of thousands of dollars were lost by stockholders. The machine at last accounts was stored in Jamaica Plain. Keeley died in the fall of 1898. | | cured and well. | to get employment, as my face, head and i my throat, down 11y body & and an | o Wellville,” Hot-Cross Buns. Only 5,000,000 ‘‘hot-cross buns” ‘were consumed in London on Good Friday, indicating the dying out of the - custom. The cross-bun is the modern equivalent of the cakes eaten in honor of the Saxon goddess Eos- tre, from whose name the word Eas- ter comes. Her worshipers became Christians, but, unwilling to give up the bums, compromised by making them with a cross. They have discovered gold digging under Broadway in New York. FITS St. Vitus’ Dance:Nervous Diseaces per- manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. KLINE, Ld., 981 Arch St. Phila., Pa. Berlir has no slums, owing to the Gov- ernmental orovisions for the poor. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain,cures wind colic.25e a bottle Women smoke in some tew of the New York cafes. Te Air a First Necessity. For want of air a man will die in five minutes, for want of sleep in ten days, for want of water in a week and for want of food at varying per- iods which depend upon other cir- cumstances. 'DISFIGURING SKIN HUMOR® ou | ee. to publish my letter in newspapers, so other | {mpossible to Get Employment, as Face # and Body Were Covered With Sores - Cured by Cuticura. “Since the year 1894 I have been. trou. bled with a very bad case of eczema which I have spent hundreds of dollars trying to cure, and I went to the hospital, but they failed to cure me, and it was getting worse all the time. Five wecks ago my wife. bought a box of Cuticura Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap, and 1 am pleased to say that I am now completely It was impossible for me body were covered with it. The eczema first appeared on the top of my head, and it had worked all the way around down the back of my neck and around to znd around the hips. It itched so I would be obliged to scratch it, and the flesh was raw. 1 am ! now all well, and I will be pleased to rec- smmend the Cuticura Remedies to all per- sons who wish a speedy and permanent cure of skin diseases. Thomas M. Rossi- ter, 200 Prospect Street, East Orange, N. J. Mar. 30, 1905.” CURED WOMAN'S FANCY Surgeons Drug Her, Make Surface Wound and Show Her Lizard. An extraordinary cure by auto- suggestion has just been performed in the: Cochin hospital at Paris. Recently a ‘peasant woman from a village in Normandy applied for treat- ment at the hospital, saying she had a terrible monster in her stomach and wanted it taken out. She described the creature as having a head like a snake, and a long thin body and tail, with four short legs furnished with claws. The surgeons had the woman put to bed and quite seriously nursed for a few days, preparatory to being operated on. ‘J.ater she was placed under an anest¥otic and a surface wound made upon her body which was duly bandaged with great care. When she regained consciousness she was shown a common gray lizard in a jug, which she was told had been taken out of her stomach. Ever since that time she has improved, now eats well and experiences no pain at ail. She will be given the lizard, which was bought by the surgeons in a bird store, to take back to her village and show her friends. Origin of “The Levant.” Nowadays “The Levant’ means solely that Eastern Mediterranean re- gion upon which Lord Charles Beres- ford has been keeping his eye dur- ing the trouble with the sultan. But it really signifies the East in a gen- eral sense—the region of the rising sun, in fact—being derived from the French “lever,” to rise. By “the High Levant’ Bacon meant the Far East. In the eighteenth century Chambers’ Encyclopedia explained that “Levant” applied to any coun- ha. Ga. array to the eastward of one, and in tu. . sense Evelyn wrote of ‘‘more Levantine parts than Italy.” “Le- vant,” indeed, was interchangeable with “Orient,” just as ‘‘Ponent’” was with “Occident.” So we find Milton writing of ‘Levant’ and ‘Ponent” minds.—London Chronicle. KNOWS NOW Doctor Was ¥ooled by His Own Case For a Time. It’s easy to understand how ordinary people get fooled by coffee when doc- tors themselves sometimes forget the facts, A physician speaks of his own experi- ence: “I had used coffee for years and really did not exactly believe it was in- juring me, although I had palpitation of the heart every day. “Finally one day a severe and almost fatal attack of heart trouble frightened me and I gave up both tea and coffee. using Postum instead, and since that time I have had absolutely no heart »alpitation except on one or two occa- sions when I tried a small quantity of woffee which caused severe irritation ind proved to me I must let it alone. “When we began using Postum it ieemed weak—that was because we iid not make it according to directions —but now we put a little bit of butter n the pot when boiling and aliow the Postum to boil full 15 minutes, which rives it the proper rich flavor and the ieep brown color. “I have advised a great many of my Iriends and patients to leave off coffee ind drink Postum, in fact, I daily give ‘his advice.” Name given by Postum To., Battle Creek, Mich. Many thousands of physicians use Postum in place of tea and coffee in heir own homes and prescribe it to atients. ‘There's a reason.” A remarkable little book, can be found in pkgs. “The Road | Parliament before FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY. No Letup in Consumption and Orders for Future Delivery Con- tinue to Arrive. R. G. Dun & Co.’s Weekly Re- view of Trade says: A moderate reduction in com- mercial activity is to be expected at this time of the year, but confidence in the future is so strong that there is evident reluctance to assume sea- scnable quiet conditions. This atti- tude is most pronounced in the in- dustrial world, preparations for fall ond winter distribution being on an unprecedented scale, and several leading producers‘ announce that the customary summer shut down will be entirely omitted or curtailed to the extent necessitated by repairs. The heavy movement of merchandise is attested by an increase in railway earnings thus far reported for June of 11.8 per cent over the correspond- ing period of 1905, and foreign com- merce at New York for the last week shows a gain of $1,841,071 in exports and a decrease of $671,000 in imports as compared with the movement a year ago. All classes of farm staples except cotton. were exported more freely in May than in the same: month last year, and the loss of almost $10,000,- 000 in cotton failed, to prevent a gain in all exports of $6,755,718, while im- ports showed an increase of $12,423,- (69 over the corresponding month of 1905. There is no dimiaution in the aclivity of steel mills and iron fur- naces, ‘and the consumption keeps pace with production and new busi- ness holds the date remote at which: shipments can be made in most de- partments. Primary markets for textiles have the support of a good attendance of buyers, who state that the drygoods trade throughout the country is most satisfactory and there is every reason to anticipate a continuation of pros- perity. New England footwear manufac- turers are receiving many sample orders for spring lines from the west and south. Leather is quiet and steady at the recent advance, but the disposition to delay purchases is in- creasingly pronounced. That hides wiil probably maintain their strong position is indicated by contracts covering the entire output of four large packers during the balance of the year for spready native steers at full prices. Foreign dry hides are resold to Europe at higher prices than are offered by domestic tanners. Failures for the week numbered 183 in the United States, against 229 last vear, and 15 in Canada, compared with 25 a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Graln, Flour and Feed. Woes Ro 2 red 3 es 2 73 Sr 2 itv e 56 57 No. 2 yellow, shelle 55 56 Mixed ear......... 53 58 Qats—No. 2 white 42 43 Flour—Winter patent..... Fancy straight winters... 4 00 4 10 Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... 1500 1525 Clover No. 1....... 107 112 Feed—No. 1 white mid 2:50 2301 Brown middlings. i950 200) Bran, bu 200 2150 JiFav Wiens 750 7 50 ORl... vs veersvsvrvesassssorasrss 75) 800 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... S 4 25 Ohio creamery...... 20 21 Fancy country Toll 19 Cregse UNIS: new.. 12 18 New York. new..... 12 13 Poultry, ‘Etc. ‘Hens—per Ib........ccecvuineanenns 14 15 "Chickens—dressed............ 18 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh 17 18 Fruits and Vegetables. ApPpPIOS bblic.iceecoereiss 35) 550 Potatoes—Fancy 85 90 Cabbage—per ton esses 5. ee 23008 BW , Onions—per barrel............. ev 200 22 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent 5. 5 Wheat—No. 2 red............. os 85. 26 Corn—Mixed.. oe 47 enn @ PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 50 5 Wheat—No.2 red..............0 es 84 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed.. 35 54 Oais—No. 2 white... 35 36 Butter—Creamery 29 3¢ Eggs—Pennsylvania first 16 2 NEW YCRK. » Flour—pPatonts.......c...sv0eeaas.d $500 515 Wheat—No. 2 red. 89 90 Corn—No. 67 Oats—No. 2 white 36 38 Butter -Creamery . ® Kggs—State and Pe 16 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,480 101,600 Ibs. ..... .... $560 $575 Prime. 1,500 to 1,400 1s, s 58) 5 50 Good, 1,400 to 1, 360 1ba. , bio 5 30 Tidy. 1,040 10 1. 150 1bs.. + 460 515 Fair, $00 to 1,100 lbs. . 440 475 Common, 709) 10 £00 The... 4 40 4 60 Common to good fat oxer 27) 4 50 Common to good fat bulls 2 50 4 15 Common to good fat cows 2 00 4 0) Heiters, 700 to1, 1001bs.. 2 50) 4 50 Fresh cows and springers. . 16 00 50 00 Sheep Prime wethers....s... .5........... $580 5 90 Good mixed..... 7 .. 8... ws BH 50 575 Fair mixed ewes and wethers. 5 00 5 4) Culls enc common. 2 50 4 05 Culls 10 choice 1ambs. . . on. ..onn 5 50 6 9 Hogs. Frimeheavy hogs.. . $667 6 70 Yrime medium wei es 0 67 6 70 Lest heavy Yorkers. . 6 65 Good light Yorkers... . 6 50 6 65 Pige, astoquality.......... . 52 5 80 Common to ga0d Tonghs -. . 540 b 80 Stags. . cecasssens. 3 00 4 8 Eves: Veal Calves.......... $4 H 6 5) Heavy and thin calves. . eg 4 5 Oil Markets. The following are the quotations for credit balances in the different fields Pennsylvania, $1 64; Tiona, $1 74; Sécond Sand, $164; North Lima, 98c: South Lima 930; Indiana. 90c; Somerset, 91c; Ragland, 62¢c; Can’ ada, $1.38. The simple life marches, boasts the Indianapolis News. Witness the appearance of peasart members of the Czar without | court constumes. gee Wiiar Joy THEY Brine To Every Home 900 ws as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by censtant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri- ous or objectionable nature, and if at any time a remedial agent is required; to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa- ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence -we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent © e ® only. the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company— California Fig Syrup Co.— plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. © ® e If you fail to get Quarrying lce—A New Industry. The great glacier on Mount Blanc is being used for other purposes than furnishing an occupation to guides and an attraction for tourists. An ice trust has gone into the business con an extensive scale of quarrying the clear, hard ice, at an altitude of 4,- 000 feet. The ice is blown out in great blocks by means of dynamite, after which it is sawed into regular sizes and sent dewn the mountain on a narrow-gage railway. Down in the valley it is loaded into freight cars and distributed through southern France. Her Idea of Protection. A woman canvasser in a recent British election campaign asked a la- borer whether he was in favor of pro- tection, and he replied by inquiring what it was. The question embar- rassed the woman ‘somewhat. She replied: “I cannot go into precise details at the moment, but it is a sub- ject of vital importance to all who care for wild birds.” ETATE OF onto, C1tY oF Tcrepo, ! 5 1.vCAS Lqunry, RK oh that he i3 irm os 1’, a CREN 3 s in tne City oi 'l'ole : id, and tha. sail £ HUNDRED DOL- 53 Ol CATARR: > use of HALLS 1 firm wii pay the sam 0 LARS ior each and ev that cannot be cared | CATARRH CURF, sworn to before me a ~Aw~y presence, this { SEAL. } ber, A.D. 13306. — 24 in mov of Decen- A. W.GLEASON, Notary Publi, Hail’s Catarrh Cureis taken internally and actsdirectly on the blood and mucous suc- laces of the syste n Seu: lor testimonials, iree. ¥. J. CarNky & Co. Toledo, U, Sold by all Drugwcists, Toe. Hali's family Pills are the best. Longest of Steel Ropes. In a short time Calumet may just- ly claim to have the largest steel wire rope in the world. The new rope will be used in the No. 4 shaft of the Cal- umet branch of the mine. The rope will have a length of 9,500 feet, which is not quite two miles in length. The diameter of this cable is 13g inches, which is somewhat heavier than the ordinary rope which is used in the mine work. At the present time the Calumet and Hecla had some cables which equal the one to be secured in length, but they are not as heavy as the new steel rope. - It can be safely said that the new rope will be the longest of this character and thickness in the world.—Detroit Free Press. Animals and Poisons. Certain substances which are dead- ly in their effects on men can be taken by animals with impunity. Horses can take larger doses of an- timony, dogs of mercury, goats of to- bacco, mice of hemlock, and rabbits of belladonna. DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will Never Return. Only ope way to cure an aching back. Cure the cause, the Kidneys. Thousands tell of cures made by Doan’'s Kidney Pills. John C. Coleman, a prominent merchant of Swains- boro, Ga., says: “For several years my kid- neys were affected, and my back ached day and night. I was languid, nervous and lame in the morning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief that followed has been per- Winchester cartridges in all calibers from where you aim when the trigger is pulled. accurate, Shoot Them and You’ll Shoot Well. Always Buy Winchester Make. INCHESTER CARTRIDGES For Rifles, Revolvers and Pistols. Pons 22 to .50, shoot They are always reliable and uniform. prob For Preserving, Purifying and Beautifying the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands. Cuticura Soap combines delicate medicinal snd emol- Hent properties derived from Cuticurs, the great Skin Cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and tha most refreshing of flower odors. Depots: Londen, 27 Chater ons Paris, # Rue de la Paix; Boston, 137 Columbus Ave. “potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sols Props. a@r-Mailed Free, ‘How to Preserve, Purify, and Besutity Bealp, Hair, and Hands. P. N. U. 25, 1906. manent.” Sold by all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. X. | ! 50 cents a box. | | worst eases. ok NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick. relief and cures of tertimonials and $0 Days’ treatment Exec. Dr. i. I. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, a, DROPS “From ihe idl to the oy chair? HAVE YOU A BABY? if se, you cugkt to have a PHOENIX LKIHE CHAIR (PATENTED) “AN IDEAL SELF-INSTRUCTOR." UR PHOENIX Walking Chair holds the child securely, pre- venting those painful falls and bumps which are sc frequent when baby learns to walk. BETTER THAN A NURSE." oe chair is provided with a re- i movable, sanitary cloth seat,which | supports the weight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; italso has a table attach- § § ment which enables baby to find # amusement in its toys, eto., with. cut any attention. “hs Indispensable as a cradle.” t i3 80 constructed that it pre ¥ vents sciled ‘clothes, sickness from § drafts and floor germs, and is g, reccmmended by physicians and ® endorsed by bothmotherand baby. i Combines pleasure and utility. #€ INo baby should be without one. 8 Call at your furniture dealer § and ask to see one. & STC MANUFACTURED ONLY BY PHOENIX CHAIR CG. SHEBOYQAN, WIS. 3 %, Can ony be had o yous Taine dezler. & Drill for Water Prospect for FHinerals Dril} Testand BlastHoles. Coal We make Gas DRILLING MACKIRES [| Oil. For Horse, Steam or 4 asoline Power. : Latest Traction Machine. LOOMIS MACHINE CO., TIFFIN, OHI0, - gga 48 p. bok free. Highest refs, Long expe; lence. Fitzger ald Dept 64, Washington, D.Q RRS PREMRSEe y ay SER ER RAS A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers