er ef o Actress odesty. 4,700 was supreme ged by a she refus- in tights. Lee Mor- Henrietta re Hurflig a Harlem 1, Charlés for a\sea- er a con- hey were e months , Lee to * costume r appear- . When and were de¥bera- the full Morrisons SALOON. However, Cities. tion elec- ps in 84 ' the city me abso- and ap- one-half 1s in that business. the state, ® licensing voting in ra, Elgin, n, Mon- e, Joliet, d le saloon Dixon, Pontiac, ¢ Cham- - ILE hat the d. : of repre- nd other el Astor : of unem- d States ness. sentative of the pared “a f unem- he num- out the nt time 0,” said HIM 3 of Dis- 3 f War the sen- n of the scharged with the lg, Tex- applied order of ecember > senate ts have plicants ken on | for by Senator United at $55,- till in ely the make a ’ public ms cer- will end onths of ent ex- y $36, namited Huron, d with as bad- ho are umber, ATS. TS. rteenth ndidate la, was he late urs the le ap- a fash- t. Lou- for 23 depart- secret ion at yin, * le re- killed yY were c train in rail- driver fatally rope. ) was ork in s slow- enter ta this there, Fe SPRING KIDNEY TROUBLE. Vividly Described by One Who Has Suffered From It. Mrs. H. Mutzabaugh, of Duncan- non, Pa., says: “I was sick and mis- erable all last Spring, and as I did not know what was the matter, I kept going down and down until I was a physical wreck. 1 had smothering spells, flashes of heat over the kidneys, and pain HA A in pasting the kidney IE secretions, which con- tained sediment. My husband urged me to try Doan’s Kidney Pills, and at last I did so. They did me much good, and I used in all eight boxes, which restored me to perfect health.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Cipher Code Stolen. A copy of the cipher of the Amer- ican State Department, used in private correspondence between Washington and the various American. legations and embassies, was stolen recently from the American legation at Bucha- rest Rumania, by a French employe, who escaped to Constantinople. 7! _—_— 16 WAS DELIRIOUS WITH ECZEMA. Pain, Heat and Tingling Were Excru- ciating—Cuticura Acted Like Magic. “An eruption broke out on my daugh- ter’s chest. I took her tora doctor, and he pronounced it to be eczema of a very bad form. He. treated her, but the disease spread to her back, and. then the whole "of - her head was affected, and all her hair had to be cut off. The pain she suffered was’ excruciating, and with that and the heat and tingling her life was almost gnbeara- ble. Occasionally she was delirious and she did not have a proper _hour’s sleep for many nights. The second doctor we tried afforded her just as little relief as the first. Then I purchased Cuticura Soap, Oint- ment, and Pills, and before the Ointment was three-quarters finished every trace of the disease was gone. It really seemed like magic. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, Brentwood, Essex, England, Mar. 8, 1907.” Millions for Missions. A compilation made by Rev. Dr. D. “L. Leonard of foreign. missionary sta- tistics of the world shows that the to- tal contributions of the missionary societies to foreign missions last year amounted to $22,459,680, an increase over the previous year of almost $1,200,000. : Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle ‘Wedding Music. It happened at The Little Church Across the Street. : A wedding was in progress. The organist had played “Lohengrin Com- and was prepared to play “Mendelssohn” Going Out.” During the ceremony the strains of “Call Me Thine Own’ were blent with the pray- er book service.:@ Suddenly the sex- ton whispered in the ear of the organ- ist: “Both of them’s been married three times!’”’ Instantly the fingers on the keyboard modulated into the key of Gee flat, and through the low- vaulted aisles rippled that beautiful Opus 29th Street, “Just for To-Dday.” —Suceess Magazine. Daniel Un to Date. Jimmy, aged 5, was told the story of Daniel in the lion’s den by his grandmother. When she had finished the story she asked Jimmy what he thought Daniel did the very first thing when he found he was saved from the lions? > “Oh, I guess he telephoned home to his wife: to tell her he was all right,” answered Jimmy.—Philadel- phia Record. This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: «J suffered untold misery from fe- male troubles. My doctor said an opera- tion was the only chance I had, and I dreaded it almostas much as death. “One day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was better, and now I am en- tirely cured. ; / “Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulce ra- tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear- ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. T7hy don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW GENERAL TRADE CONDITIONS Dun’s Reports Outlook for Future Brighter Because of Crop Pros- pects—Steel Prices Maintained. New York—R. G. Dun & Co’s Week- ly Review of Trade says: “Commercial conditions show little alteration, the gains of the first quarter being maintained, but further progress is extremely slow. The weather “has favored retail trade in seasonable wearing apparel at most points, and the outlook for future bus- iness is brighter because of the unan- imous reports of satisfactory crop prospects. Manufacturing returns are conflicting, several mills and factories running, while some others curtailed operations, and the rate of pig iron production at the opening of April was smaller than on March 1 to the extent of 2,000 tons weekly. Textile and footwear .factories throughout New England proceed cautiously be- cause of the small orders that are be- ing placed for future delivery, all dealers confining purchases to imme- diate requirements. | i : “Prices of finished' steel products are. being maintained, but new bus- iness comes* forward :very slowly,” ex- cept in the lighter forms. Tin plates lead in activity. almost” the full ca- capacity of mills “is being operated, and there is also a good movement of wire products and other agricultu- ral supplies. Demand is poor in the heavy lines, although the Erie rail- way’s financial plan may provide funds for a’large tonnage of rails that .is needed, and the increasing value of ‘building’ permits promises to infuse some activity into structural steel. “Although a better, demand is noted in many sections of the cotton goods industry, the prices offered are usual- ly unsatisfactory, and the mills need still cheaper raw material if the bus- iness is to be done at a profit. “Shoe shops receive a steady call for tan goods, but business in staple footwear is light, and many producers are taking stock. Wholesalers re- port a, fair trade, but restrict orders from New England factories to im- mediate wants. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—NO0. 2 red.....ccvesvenssnss $ 9 9? Rye—No.2........... Te 7! 73 Corn—No 2 yellow, ear. o 66 67 No. 2 yeliow, shelled:.......... 61 65 Mixed ear..........:s2 0200s 66 67 Qats—No. 2 white 53 5 0.3 white....... 57 52 Flour—Winter paten 4 95 50) ancy straight wint 46) 475 Hay—Né6. 1 Timothy. 150 15%) Clover No. 1...... 1500 155) Feed—No. 1 white mid 2750 2800 Brown middlings . 200 2700 : Bran, bulk.......- «65 265) Straw—Wheat..... 95) 100) Bier escvnsosvinsnsssms thane d ». 950 100) 2) 31 22 24 18 ai] 13 17 16 17 Poultry, Eto. - Hens—per 1b...:... 3S 17 18 Chickens—dressed. Rr 13 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fres 18 21 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 70 i Cabbage—per ton. ........:.e Les 1500 180) Onions—per barrel............ ely y BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 55 58 Wheat—No. 2 red 97 Corn—Mixed............ . Tt 73 BES as a vionintisitn. vuiviss 30 32 Butter—Ohio creamery 35 40 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $53) 5M Wheat—No. 2 red...... o 97 Corn—No. 2 mixed... Ti 75 Oats—No. 2 white.... +4 45 Butter—Creamery........ ae 31 33 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 33 42 NEW YCRK. { Flour—Patents.....,..ceees S$ 4% 17 Wheat—No. 2 red. 10) Corn—No. 2....... 63 61 Oats—No. 2 white...... . 52 oi Butter--Creamery ............... : 33 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 35 4) mite ipa LIVE STOCK. Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 to 1,60) 1bs............ $ 6 80 70) Prime, 1,300 to 1,400 1bs . 6 50 6 75 Good, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs 6 35 6 30 Tidy, 4,050 to 1,150 lbs... 6 00 62) Common, 700 to 900 lbs 5 2 59 XOD, ctsvileesinsosiseesions 45) 50) Bulls... ial un. 30) 500 Cows... . 0... 353) 4 8) Heifers, 700 to 1,100........ 25) 555 Fresh Cows and Springers........ 15)) 5J0 Hogs. Prime heavy : 6 50 6 35 Prime medium weight «. 050 655 Best heavy Yorkers .... . 650 655 Good light Yorkers.. . 620 6 25 Pigs... on d00 00 50 5 8) 475 52) .~-35)"' 44) Prime wethers, clipped 7) Good mixed....... 5. 0... 820 Fair mixed swes and wether 5 55> Culls and common. 3 50 ambs 1300 Cal Veal calvesi.......c....nqetivid ed 72% 50) Heavy and thin calves Babies Die From Neglect. Temperance League at Chester a resolution was c2rried unanimously asking for a royal commission to in- quire into the causes cf the continu- ous and appalling increass in in- sanity, and the part played by alce- hol in its. causation. Discussing the effects of intoxicat- ing drinks on child life, Dr. Johnson Bolton said that we had our “Jungle” in the 120,000 year-cld babies who died. annually from lack of mother- ing. Recent observations proved that there was a direct connection between the drink habit cf the father and the inability of his daughter to nurse her child. —Londcn Daily News. As we understand it, defines the New York the distinction be- tween a suffr and a suffragette is that the former maintains a wo- man’s right to: smoke cigarettes and the latter exercises it. At the conference cf the British | Rabitua! Constipation May be permanently overcome by proper personal efforts vaththe assistance of the one Truly bene ical laxative remedy, Syrup of figs and Elusive which enables one foform vegular habits daily so thal assidlance to na- ure may be gradual ly dispensed with when no longer needed as the bestof remedies, when vequired, are to assist nature and net to supplant the nour. al functions, which must depend ulti- mately upon proper noutis ment, proper efforls,and vighl livin § generally. ogel its beneficial effec s, always uy the genuine SyrupyFigs= FlixirfSena CALIFORNIA Fic Sypup Co. ONLY LL IT Sob vp LEADING oF oo iy : Big . Trees. . . At Gaylord, Mieh., the other day they cut down an.elm.that was eight feet through at-tie"bawe: It scaled more than 10,000 feet.” Another one, although rotten dt ‘the-base, was’ cul off 18 feet from the ground and con- tained .5,000 feet. A .third tree in that section is 27 feet in circumference. The vandals have spared it so far. Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocalapplications as theycanuot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti- tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byam inflamed condition of the mucous lining af the Eustachian Tube. When this tubeis in- flamed youhave a rumbling sound orimper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafnessis the result, and unless the inflam- mation can be taken out and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, hearing will bedestroyed forever.. Nine cases out of ten arecaused bycatarrh, which is nothingbutan inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. ‘We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused bycatarrh)that can- not be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circularsfree. F.J.CHENEY & Co.,Toledo,O. Sold by Druggists, 5c. ! : Take ’s Family Pills for constipation. Uncle Sam as a Custodian. Ten millions growing moldly in the United States treasury suffering for an owner! ‘What a burden to an overworked government to have to sit up o’ nights and watch it, and not know to whom .it belongs! For -something over 40 years this vast store has: been gathering dust, being .the proceeds of “abandoned proper- ty” captured by the Union soldiers, sold for cash and the money turned into the treasury. To be strictly accurate, there still remains, after millions have been distributed to ap- proved claimants, $10,028,351.88 for which Uncle Sam has never been able to find a proper owner.—Philadelphia Telegraph. BONES OF SEA SERPENT. Scientists Gloating Over Finest and Most Complete Specimen. The University of Chicago has add- sea serpent. It was found in the bed of the Smoky hills near thewest- ern boundary of Kansas. Scientists say it is the finest and most complete specimen of its kind in existence. Prof. Samuel W. Williston of the paleontology department discovered the bones of the creature last sum- mer. It measured 19 feet long, had 112 vertebrae and four paddle-shaped feet. Not Fitted for Farm Work. There is a great army of city work- ers who are willing and industrious enough but who would be of little use on a farm, because they know prac- tically nothing of the work. Many of those who ask with impatience why the men who are out of work on account of business depression do not go on the farms fail to consider that scores of them know so little about farm work. that they’ would be scarcely worth hiring. The cities of this country have.been rearing a class of workmen who are not adapted for the farm and who know it ‘perfectly well. It is unfortunate, no doubt, that city life unfits most. men fol agricultural pursuits, , Nevertheless Soft is—and that is a very :congidera: ble reason why clerks and ‘méchanics do not rush to take the places which the. faTmers, affer. «io, Tut oopd Roller Skating. = : This amusement affords so: much delight to young people that no one feels much inclined to interfere with it, even when it is annoying.: It is remembered that in a crowded city boys and girls are in a measure shit out from both amusement and health- ful exercise. The playgrounds are excellent as far as they go, but there are not enough of them, and they are useless anyway in a wet season: Therefore, with malice towards none and charity for all, the sympathizing public will probably continue to put up with the inconveniences rather than to call for its suppression, but manifestly the sport requires some regulation in the interest both of chil- dren and adults.—Chicago Record- Herald. What's in a Name. It is noticed that the town of Boo- zy, W. Va, is as ‘dry’ as QGeorgia, and Coldwater, Mich., has been car- ried agaiust prohibition. The next thing you’ll hear of the water wagon going “wet.” FITS, St. Vitus’'Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 32 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, L.d.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, Wrong Island. A college professor is going to Min- danao to look for lost races. We suppose he knows his business, but it looks ag if he had picked out the ed to its co:lections the bones of a | y GL 77 4 RS A 0 NO ONE CAN ALWAYS AVOID 2% a BH <i .One Dose in fied Ft Time, Saves Nine. °° +4000 0000 clothing. She os they. are slightly perspifing. + oO = = = t cautions, hence they catch cold. 1 . + ! vances, they do not ‘decrease. ) t:riding on the car without being. provi b.caution should be observe 0-0-00v000000-00 + b-during this season. - However, in spite of the greatest p “ $.directions on the bottl h Do not put it off. +4400 +4 Bad Effects From Cold. Mr. M. J. Deutsch, Secretary Building Material Trades Couneil, 151 Washington St., Chicago, 1ll.;, writes: . 1 have found your medicine to be un- usually efficacious in getting rid of bad effects from cold, and more especially in driving away all symptoms of catarrh, with which I am freqeuntly troubled. “The relief Peruna gives in catarrhal troubles alone is well worth the price per bottle. I have used the remedy for several years now.” Spells of Coughing. Mrs. C. E. Long, writes from Atwocd, Colorado, as follows: : . “When 1 wrote you for advice my little three-year-old girl had a cough that had Many people persist in riding on the street cars, insufficiently protected by } 4 They start out perhaps in the heat of the day and do not feel the need of § wraps. : The rapid moving of the car cools the body unduly. 1 5 : i When the body is in this condition 1t is easily . This ‘is especially true when a ‘person is sitting. a $* *' Beginning a street car ride in the middle of the day and ending it in the even- J t ing almost Invariably requires extra wraps, but people do not observe these pre- 4 3 Colds are very frequent in ‘the Spring oni this account, and as the Summer ad- 4 During the Spring months, no one should think of , Sek with r £2 ¢i A cold caught the Spring.is.liabléite last through the entire Summer. at. this season against exposure to cold. first few pleasant days of Spring; the ability of catching cold is great. : : No wonder so many people-acquire muscular rheumatism and catarrbal diseases 1 tecautions, colds will be caught. : L. ©" At the appearance of the first symptom, Peruna should be taken according to and continued uptil every Symptom disappears. 0 not waste time by taking oth t to take Peruna and continue it until you are : : disappeared. This may save you a long and perhaps serious illness later on. 4 00000004 > 04 PO +H PIII OI Ee + +4440 04 + +044 +4 44 POOF E4040 one’s health. S044 +4040 TE e940, When they board the car J +0440 000 004 +44 a wrap. <> +4044 04 Great § During the 4 600000000 ré-o-4000094 er remedies. Begin at once ositive that the cold has entirely } 4 and have spells of coughing: that would sometimes last for a half hour. “Now we can never thank you enough for the change you have made 1n our little Before she began taking your Peruna she suffered everything in the way of cough, colds and croup, but now she has taken not quite a bottle of Peruna, and is well and strong as she bas ever Veen in her life.” Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Morrison, 68 liast 16th St. Paterson, N. J., writes: “1 have given Peruna a fair tral, and I find it to be just what you claim it to be, 1 cannot praise it too highly. 1 have used two bottles in my family for colds, and everything imaginable. can safely say been troubling her for four months. She that your medicine is the best. 1 have ever took cold easily, and would wheeze | used.” SHOES AT ALL ; PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. . W. L. Douglas makes and sells more Re™ men’s $2.50, $3.00 and 4350 shoes 4 : than any other manufacturer in tho ) P&S world, because th hold thelr “E33 : se ZS Fase shape, fit better, wear longer. an ¢ V2 or are of eater value than any other 2 shoes in the world to-day. 3) - $i Lzclusivelye wrong island. Coney is a great deal lost—Philadelphia North American. “A Sprain or Strain ‘must have immediate attention Sloans Liniment / is invaluable in an emergency of this kind . It quickly relieves the soreness and congestion, reduces the swelling and strengthens the 2 weak muscles. | : Because of its antiseptic and healing properties, Sloans Liniment is the best remedy known for cuts,wounds,bruises stings,burns and scalds. PRICE 25¢ 50¢ & $1.00. Dr.Earl S. Sloan, nearer the place where the races are. Boston, Mass. _ x W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price : 8 vAUr: oN. oo TL. Douglas name ahd price Is ssampsd on hottoms: Tak Ne Suhetifute. old W y e, tOT] vy part 1d. tiated os A er Yvan, f#hosy in Ww. L. Do VoL AS Brockton, Mass. Erma f BERET a Re ATR Our Wool Is Shrinking. ‘While the population of the United Stateg has increased by at least 10,- 000,000 ,n ten: years, the supply of wool for clothing the American peo- ple is less by millions of pounds than it was ten years ago. The only re- lief from this condition is in adultera- tions of cotton and shoddy (“devil's rust”) and the enterprise of the gen- ial smuggler. In much the same con- ditions a favorite toast of that stern old moralist, Samuel Johnson, was: “Here’s to the smuggler, the only honest trader going.”’—Philadelphia Record. Many Old People Suffer From Bronchial Affections, particularly at this time of year. Brown’s Bronchial Troches give immediate relief. . Soldiers Must Swim. All German soldiers must learn to swim. Some of them are so expert that, with their clothing on their heads and carrying guns and ammu- nition, they can swim several hun- dred yards. Garfield Tea, the herb medicine, insures a healthy action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. Take it for constipation and sick-headache. Write Garfield Tea Co. Brooklyn, N. Y., for free samples. The Greatest Heat. The greatest heat is never found on the equator, but some 10 degrees has been registered in Northern Si- beria than has been found near the Pole. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. this country showed 51,672. to the north, while more severe cold | The last census of locomotives in Cowper’s Home. The home for many years of the poet Cowper at Olnev, Bucks, has just undergone a thorough renova- tion conducted on reverent lines, at is vested as a museum. Ludies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot- Ease, arowder. It makestight or new shoes easy. Curesswollen, vot, sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all druggists and shoa stores, 25 Don’tac- ceptany substitute. Trial package FREE by mail. Address Allen S.Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. o Its Only Victory. There will be no veto of the “In God We Trust” bill. Mr. Roosevelt will bow gracefully to the will of the people who disagreed with him. It should not be overlooked, perhaps, that at this point congress scores its only and most extraordinary victory over the chief executive up to date.— Springfield Republican. Plea fer Economy. It is bad enough in times like these to propose higher public salaries for existing offices; but it is going from bad to worse to propose the creation of still more salaried offices. Has anybody noticed that business corpor- ations are pursuing such a course?— Springfield Republican. China Needs Powder. Instructions bave been issued to the provinces that the presence of all sulphur mines in China must be re- [ported the mineral being required for i military tire of ammunition Oxford is the 1 . st university in | the world. It has 21 .colleges an. | five halls. | A the hands of the trustees in whom it | purposes and the manufact- No Flies on This Cow. A feature of the roads of France Missouri’s latest is a cow with ‘two is the ever-prese ( hese | tails, which brushes the flies from guidepost , | both of her sides at once. Man Who Guideposts in France. | milks her must have happy Aime=} uhstantial | New York Herald. iis i 1 white and rt tt rt pron ny poasibil | Birds That Live icng. | Among the birds the swan lives to the com ich they be the oldest, in extreme cases reach- lace in | ing 300 years. The falcon has been either direction as > dis- | known to live over 162 years. tances between all DOINIS | EE u 1 that route. Thus vou will find, | ESE if "ou are traveling on a road which g to Paris. ropolis will 1.. althe hundred kilo Magazine. the name of the at on the sign fate relief, and i tc do is to send for Dr. May's DE CURE Some Gocd Indians. The Pima Indians, who live on the EO A DA Os banks of the Gila river (pronounced J FREE by mail. nd full address in Spanish Heela), are the most civ- Ww. H ae H. D., 548 Pearl Street, New York ilived of any North American Indians. They live in houses, manufacture use- PN U. ful articles and are known for simplic- ity £ haracter, eaceful ss and If afflicted hs > § E W { ity of character peacefulness and mthwent | 10MPSon'S ye a a1 honesty. 16, 1993. There is Only One si Bromo Quinime’’ That ic Laxative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TO CURE A COLD iN ONE DAY. Always remember the full name. Look 7 | for this signature om every box. 2dec. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers