The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, September 08, 1901, Image 8

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    CLOTHING
BLACK OR YELLOW
WILL KEEP YOU DRY
NOTHING ELSE WILL
Al ¥ TAKE No SUBSTITUTES
3 CATALOGUES FREE
SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS.
A.J.TOWER CO..BOSTON, MASS. se
ASTHMA-HAY FEVER
DRTARTS iH ENE
STH wre
\ADDRESS DR:TAFT.79 E1307 ST.NY.CITY
We want intelligent Men and Women as
Traveling Representatives or Loe) Managers;
salary $900 to $1500 a year and all expenses,
he ans to experience and ability. e also
want local representatives; salary $9 to $15 a
week and commission, depending upon the time
devoted. Send stamp for full particulars
‘late position prefered. Address, Dept. B.
| THE BELL COMPANY, Philadelphia, Ia.
Ny

$8.00 one of the i
BUYS best made J
800 Lb. Platform Scales
. ever Sold. Well made.
WILL LAST A LIFE TIME. FULL
\ Size Platform. Catalogue free. G&S =.
JONES (HE PAYS THE FREIGHT). 3
BINGHAMTON. N. Y.
r n=
WILLS PILLS—BIS3EST OFFER EVER MAD:
Foronly 10 Cents wa Will senlto any P. O. v1.
dress, 10 days’ treatmont of the bast medicina oa
earth, and put you on the track how to make ‘on.
eyrightat your homs. Address all orders to [as
©. B. Wills Medicia~ Compauy, 23 Eliza.
beth St., Hagerstown, Vid. Branch 0.lsos:
129Indiana Ave., Washington, D. C.
iw Y NEW DISCOVERY; gives
DR O Ss Suik Toller sud cures Wels}
B : ial os
Free. Dr. oe anEEN 8 BONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ge.
IDC 28
Use CERTAIN <2 CURE. 38
USE CERTAIN CORN "13
ANDSOME AMERICAN LADY, indepen-
dently rich, wants good, honest husband. AL
dress Mrs. E., 87 viarket St, Chicago, Ill.
Gold Medal at Butialo Exposition,
McIiLHENNY’S TABASCO
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN
THIS PAPER. BN U 4.
S0O!S °C
HER
HI



cekly letfers
ote that the old
at her one last
in to her ‘dear
pat time it was
a to leave Eng-
a, ng, tender mes-
sage of love and hope and remem-
brance into a phonograph and sent it
by special courier to Copenhagen. It
arrived only a short time before the
old lady’s death, but it made her last
hours serenely happy.—Philadelphia
Times.
Net a Waste of Time.
“Edication is a good thing, Limpy,
an’ don’t you run it down.”
“Ever git any of it, Weary?”
“Me? Well, I shoulud say yes. I
went to night school all one winter.”
“An’ what did you git to show for
it, Weary?”
“What did I git? I got four over-
coats, three hats and seven umbrellas.
Don’t you tell me that goin’ to school
is a waste 0’ time.”—Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Hearts Not Trumps.
“O darling!” exclaimed tl: young
man, as a look of pain cha ed itself
across his open-faced countenance, “you
have broken my—"
“Your heart?” interrupted the maiden
fairs “I am so sorry.”
“No, not my heart,” he rejoined, “but
every cigar in my vest pocket—and they
cost ten cents apiece, too.”


J
Trifling that Costs.
Neglect
Sciatica and Lumbago
And you may be disabled and
incapacitated for work for
many long days.
ARNE NERRLLAENRRERESS:
Will cure surely, right away,
save time, money and
suffering, It
Conqug
BRR LRNESESS
n
IABARRRRRIRA LARA HARARE ARERR IEEE E RACE EENRINS
¥
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4

Court.
Twenty-one ‘department heads at tne
Edgar Thomson Steel Works, of the
Carnegie Company, at Braddock, have
received blocks of company stock rang-
ng from $30,000 to $60,000 each. In
tach efse the 5 per cent. interest guaran-
ved “on the bonds will produce an
amount™equal to the recipient's salary.
At other plants it is said similar awards
this purpose as rapidly as the department
heads are thought to deserve it. The
beneficiaries at Braddock have their pay
doubled by this arrangement, and in ad-
dition will have the principal of the
bonds when they are due. Camille Mer-
cader, chief draughtsman of the com-
pany, who is said to be a Hungarian
count, was given $75,000 worth of bonds.
One of the worst fires in the history
of Bradford occurred Friday morning.
It originated in the livery stable of
Frank P. Beamer and consumed a dozen
buildings, including the $35,000 city hall.
Thirty-seven horses in one livery stable
perished in the flames, and the $10,000
ibrary of Brown & Schoonmaker, city
fttorneys, was totally destroyed, to-
gether with valuable maps. The fire was
discovered at 3.30 A. M., and it burned
fiercely until 5.30, when the firemen gain-
ed control of the flames. The fire burned
buildings on three streets, Kennedy and
Boyleston streets and Patent avenue.
The loss is estimated at $150,000. The
tity records were in fireproof vaults and
were not damaged. .
.» While driving from Factoryville to
Scranton, John McAnulty had an ex-
citing experience with a bear which rush-
ed from the woods adjoining the road.
McAnulty had a quantity of meat in the
wagon and this first attracted the atten-
tion of bruin. While the bear was
munching the meat, McAnulty left his
horse and wagon and fled to a house
some distance away for help and a gun.
A crowd of hunters was organized, but
when they arrived on the scene bruin had
finished his meal and disappeared again
in the woods.
Miss Elizabeth Huey, of Reading, fell
dead in the drug store of John B. Raser
% Son. After the body had been re-
moved to the morgue three purses were
found on her person. Two of them
were sewed into the lining of her skirt.
In addition, gold and greenbacks were
concealed in various parts of her cloth-
ing. The money aggregated $700. Of
this $450 was in gold. Death was said
to have been caused by heart disease.
Mrs. Sarah<&gglly, of Pittsburg, Friday
evening gave aWuarty to celebrate her
ro7th birthday. SI orn in Ireland
in 1704. Mrs. Kelly WPable to reat-4he
daily papers regularly. without the use
of glasses, and her memory is good as to
events which occurred in “¢he early part
of the last century.
A fire in the plant of the Pittsburg Oil
Refining Company, at Coraopolis, de-
stroyed the main fefining building, the
waxhouse, compound houses, filtering
houses and boiler house and spread to
the tanks, 100 in number. The hifldings
destroyed covered four acres d the
loss may be $70,000.
|

uncar , mess p
$17.50; ha ¢, $17.50% lard, refined,
50A4b. cans, 11%c.; do. do., half barrels
ahd new tubs, 11%4c. Lard, in tierces, 11c.
Dairy Products.—Butter—Elgin, 23a
24c.; separator, extras, 22a23c.; do.
firsts, 20a21c; do,gathered cream,zo0a2ic:
do imitation, 17a18c¢; ladle, extra, 15a17¢;
ladles, first, 14a15c.; choice Western
rolls, 15a16¢.; fair, to good, 13a14cC.:
half-pound creamery, Maryland, Vir-
ginia and Pennsylvania, 21a23c.; do,
rolls, 2-1b. do, 2oc. :
Cheese.—New cheese, large 60 Ibs.
10Y4 to 10%c.; do, flats, 37 lbs., 10% to
1074c¢. ; picnics, 23 lbs, 11 to 11c.
Eggs—Western Maryland and Penn-
sylvania, per dozen 23ca—: Eastern
Shore (Maryland and Virginia), per
dozen 23c.a—; Virginia, per dozen 23c.a
—; West Virginia, 22a23c; Western, 22a
23c; Southern, —az2c; icehouse, choice,
at mark, per dozen 17c.a—.
Live Poultry—Chickens—Hens, per
1b, 9ag¥4c; do oH roosters, each 25a30c;
do spring, large, per 1b, —10%c: do do.
small fat, —aric; do do, poor and
staggy, 9aglsc. Ducks—Puddle, large,
10a10%c; do do, small, garoc: do, mus-
covy and mongrel, gatoc. Geese—West-
ern and Southern, each so0aGoc. Tur-
keys—Young, 8 Ibs and over, per 1b 94a
10C.
Live Stock.
Chicago.—Cattle—Good to prime $6a
6.85; poor to medium $3.75a5.00; stock-
ers and feeders $2a4.25; cows $1.25
4.50; heifers $2.25a5; canners $1.2352
2.25; bulls $2a4.50; calves $3a6.25;
Texas steers $3a4; Western steers $3.65
a5.45. Hogs—Mixed and butchers $5.60
a6.05; good to- choice, heavy, $5.65a6:;
rough, heavy $5.35a5.60; light $5.35a
5.65; bulk of sales $5.60a5.85. Sheep—
Receipts 18,000 head; sheep and lambs
steady at late decline; good to choice
wethers $3.40a4; Western sheep $3a3.60;
native lambs $2.50a4.90; Western lambs
$3a3.50.
East Liberty.—Cattle were steady:
choice $5.60a5.90; prime $3.3045.20:
good $sas5.25. Hogs—Higher prime
heavies $6.10a6.15; heavy mediums $5.95
a6; light do $5.90a5.95 ; heavy Yorkers
$5.80a5.85; light do and gigs $5.7525.80:
roughs $4.25a5.60. Sheep strong; best
wethers $3.40a3.50;, cuils and common
Yaz; yearlings 32.50a3.75; veal calves
BOR AND INDUSTRY
many has fifty-five central trade
ions.
Textile unions have been formed at
Gastonia, N. C.
The cables for the Glasgow, Scotland,
tramways are being made on the Hud-
son.
The world is promised another revolu-
tion in fuel by which the oxygen is sep-
arated from the air.
Foreign demand for American wheat
and corn this year foots up 213,538,3: 0
bushels, against 182,210,713 bushels fo-
the same time last year.

>
Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used
for all affections of throat and lungs.— War.
O. ExpsLry, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
Dull care isn’t g marker to a dull razor.
1 Winchester Repeating Arms Co.,
Been caorrerammeemee - — —ye
As @ B “)
GUN CATALOGUE. IT’S FREE,
Itillustrates and describes all the different Winchester Rifles, Shotguns and
Ammunition, and contains much valuable information. Send at once to the
New Haven, Conn.
prae—— ————— pr

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To OVERCOME
With many millions of families Syrup of Figs has become the
ideal home laxative.
one, and the method of manufacture by the California Fig Syrup
Company ensures that perfect purity and uniformity of product,
which have commended it to the favorable consideration of the
most eminent physicians and to the intelligent appreciation of all
who are well informed in reference to medicinal agents.
Syrup of Figs has truly a laxative effect and acts gently with-
out in any way disturbing the natural functions and with perfect
freedom from any unpleasant after effects.
In the process of manufacturing, figs are used, as they are
pleasant to the taste, but the medicinally laxative principles of the
combination are obtained from plants known to act most bene-
ficially on the system.
beneficial effects —
buy the
Aifornia Fig Syrup Ce

PLEASANTLY ano (GENTLY.
PERMANENTLY
The combination is a simple and wholesome


enuine-Manufactured by

~ancisco, Cal. New YoriNY
PRICE S0¢ PER BOTTLE
Ra