Cape May Herald, 1 November 1902 IIIF issue link — Page 6

U*al Prod urloc Flowar*.

The faldanella <t>r uiovrbel! ot the Alp» i> a dainty little plant about there inchrt hrgh. bcarine two pendautfringed white or violet bell* on each

flow* — —

flower (talk. They may often be found with the (now (till firmly frozen round the (tern, and the oueation naturally arises how did the blossoms, so much larger in circumference, make their way through? Botanists tell us that the plant forms its flowers buds under

e process of breath:h heat that the ennelted and trickles

arise largt

ar

the snow, at ing evolves

dow freqi ally

COMMERCIAL REVIEW.

A PanUlimaai

, _..ow-is melted and trickl down the stalk, round which it fretqnently freezes again. ITius jjradu-

ly a dome-shaped c— ! ‘" ! -

round the blossoms, is continued till in

ome-shaped cavity is ic blossoms, and th: process J

s they j

t me »ui i«vc of the sam ay be noticed comparative!, d it stirring.

erted in the bell-like ilant growing in a shady

is continued tlU in many cases they

A modified fornf of the same heat

producing power may be noticed in the fox-glove. On a comparatively cool j mo y i?cr n S “StTVlte; 1

' - . : - . i. i

prominent lady

of Richmond, Va., a great, sufferer with woman’s troubles, tells of her cure by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. u Dear Mrs. PinsAam : — For some years I Buffered with backache, severe bearing-down pains, leucorrhoea, and falling of the tomb. .1 tried many remedies, but nothing gave any positive relief.

a E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound

j first half bottle, I felt a vast ii bottles with the result that I fe

' ‘ le Com-

_ nervous mnds and ,'ived."—

“ I commenced' taking Lydia E. P

in June, 1901. When I had taken the first half bottle, I felt a vai* improvement, and have now taken ten bottles with the result that I feel

uke a new woman. When I commenced taking the Vegetab pound I felt all worn out and was fast approaching complete collapse. I weighed only 98 pounds. Now I weigh 109* pour am unproving every day. I gladly testify to the benefits recei Mre R. C. Tcfmax, 423 West 30th SL, Richmond, Va.

WTien a medicine has been successful i cases, Is It justlse to yourself to say, withot

believe it would help me ” ?

n more than a mlllt t trying it, **I do z

Sorely you cannot wish to remain weak

aged, exhausted with each day's work. You

.. feminine organism, and Lydia

ment of the feminine organism, and Lydia E. F table Compound will help you Just as surely as it Mrs. W. II. Pelham, Jr., 108 E. Baker St.,

it I dt

and sick and disco urhavc some derangePinkham's Vege-

»nd, Va., says:

“ Dear Mrs. Pikkham :—I must say that I do not believe there is any female medicine to compare with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-

pound, afid I return to you my heartfelt thanks for What your medicine has' done for me. Before ‘ iking the Vegetable Compound I was so badly off that I thought I could not live much longer. The little work'I had to do was a burden to me. I suffered with irregular menstruation and leucorrhcea, which caused _ an irritation of the parts. I looked like one who had consumption, but I do not look like that now, and I owe it all to your wonder-

ful medicine.

“I took only six bottles, but it has made me feel- like a new person. I thank God that there is such r female helper

1 as you. 0

ff r--bn > Be it, therefore, believed by all

n who toe fll that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vet Is the medicine they shonld take. It .myi is has hundreds of thousands of c

egetable Compound has stood the test of time.

s hundreds of thousands of cur shonld consider it unwise to use any othi

Mrs. Pinkham, whose adi fully and without cost all 1c

Perhaps she has Just the knowli try her to-day — it costs nothing.

$5000

[dress is Lynn, Mass., will answer cheere letters addressed to Iter by sick women, ledge that will help your case —

the Orfctnxi Utters a>4 «l*«*torts 01

■bsotat* nMiasaasA

Uodlclaa Co.

Ampler*.

rith that firm a long

scbbol friend. —i with the

An Cnlmpertaat » i • You have been with I

time,” said an old sebb

"Yes," answered the

\ patient expression of countenance "what’s your position?"

‘Tss an employe.”

"But what’s your official title?” “I haven't any official title, it’s this. Wbea the proprietor wants somcthinr done he tells the cashier, aftd the caduer tells the bookkeeper; and the' bookkeeper tells the assistant bookkcspec. and the assistant bookkeeper

. tells the chief clerk, and the chief clerk

‘^VmTWiat then?"- .

"We*. Pharen't anybody to tell, so I have »o go and do it.”

MABftlY nur NAKtft* or

Sympathy and lore go together as' ..iiurally as the perfume and the blossom: and-just as the blossom under the influence of nature’s forces ripens into fruit, so the love and sympathy of a Christian life develop into fruit for the blessing of humanity and tjie glory of God.

CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH

p-S«at<d Cbms EtpeelA tt U. B. B.Ssnt Xr,«.

ms, withsehes and pains in

hones, joints and back, ajonixing lwins In shoulder blades, hands, fingers, arms and legs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting,nose bleeding, ringing in the ears, sick stomach, deafness, noises in the head, had teeth,thin hot blood, all run down feeling of catarrh arc sure signs of en awful poisoned eondii of tSl blood. Take Botanic Blood

(BB.B.) Soon all aches and pains

ss

i and I

stop, the poison is destroyed and a

permanent care is made cf the worst raatisa or foulest catarrh. Tbousan cases cured by taking B.B.B. It strengthens weak kidneys and improves digestion. Druggists, fl per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co, 14 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free

The Standard Rheumatic Remedy,

rimmon w--

STANDARD ^•SSJS&t'SSJSlT^rt: ==*=s* physician recently said: "I have never been able t. write a prescription that will cure rheumatism,’owing to the facf that the usual remedies do incalculable harm to th* digettm organ. RHECMAClDf com-

n indefinite period, ot as tong as a

Aft Drvggiws. $..oe>, •

1 simplicity of the :aled to nearly et

I.lttle Mias Mabel Bat at the table.

Drumming with tork and spoon. Till ber mother said, "Child,

I shall really no wild

If you don’t stop that clattering soon.”

But Utile MUs Mabel

That, what do you think happened nest?

Ber spoon and ber fork Were sent to Now York,

And Mgl>el waa very much v»xed.

—Carolyn Wells, In Washington Star.

tVUere Sllut Comes From. would think It. 4Buld

flowers of a plant growing in a shady | You never 1

place will frequently register a tempera- j you? but I'd told that flint la really that of" th^surroundin^'air^amJ even more or less than sponge turned IrSm pUnu'in'.Wch’a’nuuibtr'of'tiaii | l “ u “" 01 ll “ "*■ “ “> )l " flowers are congregated together with- ! ^row now. but that was ages and agio in an outer sheath or spathe. as in i «P>; and alnce that shrdl uahrdluu the aruraus. i ages and ages ago; and alnce then the w sponge, turned to flint, has lain cover-

llipple Saf* sad Inexpensive. ed bj

The utility and riicck hat appei

who has {

Udng suapldoua of the men. Bones did not approach the bone at first, evi-

dently fearing capture, but finally be ; Gtotral Trtdc Lood/ifeai edged up u> It and cauUouely ataried ! R. C. Dmi & Co.’s "Weekly Review to drag it off. Without lu paper cov- ‘ of Trade" »jy-: No Ixntcr evidence o

erlng the price waa hard to manage. ] industrial

but Bonea at last got It up the court i

He

wmire he belong*]. He waa seen

go Into the house, only to emerge In a low seconds oj a fast run. minus the

prize he had struggled home with.

Bone* tore back to the apot on the street where he bad dropped the soup bone and ravenously smelled around until he found a tiny bit of moat rb.t

bad fallen off the bone. Thl

the bone. t thetW os

s seems to be a knoi

body who has given the’ scheme any thought. It has the endorsement of financial experts and the business men who are dependent on the mails for the receipt or dispatch of money, particularly in small sums, no a considerable extent. It ought to impress Congress favorably, for it is in the interest of the people. Such being the case. Congress ought not to pay much heed to those who are opposing the introduction of this form of money on no more worthy grounds than that it will give them a little more work and trouble. The pending bill is clearly one in the interest ol the masses, and the indications are that its adoption cannot

ultimately be prevented.

Id esses where bronchitis has become chronic from want of proper treatment in the .earlier stages, there is nothing so good as Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Breast Tea, in conjunction with which is strongly

advised the ui{ of St. Jae

tus{

ward application along the front of throat, from dose up under the chin

Ivised the ui{ of Si

application al t, from dose

lown to the top of the cheat; the one remedy assists the other, and as intended, they work in complete unison. The wonderful penetrating power of St. Jacobs Oil enables it to Teach the adhesion of foreign matter which line* the bronchial tubes and which makes breathing more and more difficult. As these adhesions become inflamed and enlarged, St. Jacob* Oil causes such adhesions to break awty, i making expectoration easier and more free. Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Breast Tea, drank slowly and very hot, soothes and heals the parts, is comforting and quieting,} slope the cough and relieves the breathing. Thl* manner of treatment fwfid there is no other two remediea that will work together so successfully) reaches the difficulty from the outside and tha inside at the same time. St. Jacobs Oil reaches tha roots of the adhesion, and assists Dr. August Koenig’s Hamburg Breast Tea in clearing them; then both remedies set in unison in healing and curing.. The above remarks apply with equal forte in cases of asthma, croup, whooping cough, enlarged tonsils ' all bronchial affections. Every family

ad by rocks and earth of many kinds piled thick above it. Seen with a microscope. flint ahowg the make of sponge In Its fibres; and sometime* you can aee, bedded In It. the shells of the tlny creAturca on which the sponge had fed. Now and then, inside a flint, will be found hits of the sponge not yet changed. The last proof settles It;

but I may say It’s hard

Old OealmaNext door to where we lived once, there waa a great big dog named Victor. He was a handsome St. Bernard, but so large and so good-natured, running up to everybody and making friends with all, that the neighbors gave him a nickname, calling him ‘‘Old Useless." They though^ he would be no good, even foe a watch-dog. he took everybody Into his favor so readily. So they would say: •There goes ’Old Useless.’ or ask; “Have you seen Useless this morn-

piled i like’ fo

should have St. Jacobs Oil and Dr. August Koenig's Hamburg Breast Tea always in th* house in order that they may be promptly, used ia tbs fint stages. Often the maladies develop with wonderful rapidity, and compliestiona taka place with

The stations built originally along the Siberian Bailway have already been doubled ia number. ■ 100 Eaward. •100. The readers of this paper will be pleared to learn that there Is at least one dreaded dtoease that science has been able to cure In all It* stacea. and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive core now known to lb* medleal fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, reoulrea a oonitltr tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally. act loir direct It ur*m the blood i

riving the patient strength by building np tha oon'tltutlon and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors hare so much faith in Its curative powers that-they offer One Hundred Dollars for anv case that it falls to cure. Bend for Hst of testimonials. Address. 7. J. Cxrvxr A Co., Tblado, a Sold bv Druggist*. 76c. Hall's family Pills are th* baat. Delaware took fra name from the rirer which fronts it, and this waa named from Lord Delaware, who died off th* coast in

>ped on a few clothes he saw that the upper part of the building was In

flames.

In an attic chamber a baby was sleeping In the care of a young woman, but the woman had run down , stain; when Victor began to bark and now

the baby was alone.

TheJUmcs were getting so hot that no one dared go for the child, but Victor heard it cry and sprang through -the smoke and Are and brought the

baby down alive and safe. J

They thought, after that .--that Ure

called hlm\

Id Useless” any more, «ad

tlm s

roftt in Poaket, ; Is paid by fresh. raw berries allowed

1,000Per Cent. Profit! Oxaltw tn Pi.rascaa U luscious, horn* grown Btrat to ripen thoroughly n> the vines. Wesell th* Plante packed to carry fresh anywhere la lb#0.8. OariGO-pag- Maooalffreatobuyazs) makes growing tor pleasure or profit plain to all Plant now. Ca alogu* Btrawberrias. A*i-4r*gu*,e(o.,fies. Cogrutursi. Pnarr Co. Ha IS Strawberry Heights.. KlUretl N. a ^Jpxg Tnrr Butter Color makes top

in th* Bands of tuna. Persons in Morocco are reeuired to pay th* policeman who arrests them a lea cl

IlTfliieiiha»«altyaaiefl.8oflteoromiom nea* after am day’# use of Dr. Kilns’s Great KarveReatorwr.tttrial bottle and teeatteatrea Dr-K. H. Kuya,Ltd..«lArehBt..>hllA,Pa. JSSSSiSSgSZXSZZ t ten .allays p1a.*um Wind aolM. Ma. aWttla

g2S?533SSES /swaSTrsr’ 1 -’’*-—

- Some were even disposed to be cross with him and would give him a kick and cry Opt: ”Get away. Useless. You are no

good.”

It seemed as If the big dog would understand for he would hang bis head and slink away aa If ha were’

ashamed.

They said you could.grot depend on him for anything, except to eat all he could get. for he had an appetite so fierce that you could never seem to fill him up. J One mac exclaimed: “He Isn’t worth half of what It takes to feed him for six months." So Victor was liked well enough because he was so kind, hut all seemed to think It a waste of money to have such a helpless, do-nothing creature about. But after, a certain night the opinion of people about Victor was greatly

changed.

He had been put Into the shed In j tr thing the evening, as usual, and all the folks 1

had gone to bed

when the lond way,

ter got up and fouud that the house was on Are. The man 'slfcpt on ground floor, and by the time he

' he st

alter call •Look 1

Qlngs I’m

bis waa eatiltah. and taking his

..elghbors who

Had oUerved' the dog spill the bone and drag It home said the reason that Bones tame back for the amelia was that the people to whom he belonged had taken the bone away from him to

poor table. Aa towing dog. it U

probable that he will not take his next find home.—Philadelphia Record.

What Ike urn Said.

One night, when the coon waa abroad and passed the possum with his noae In the air and without speaking, the

called to him and said:

here, now, you needn't hold

your nose so very high. You are a coon to be sure, but I’m not so very far be-

hind you. In t

way ahead.”

“I’d like to tear of them,” replied the coon with a flirt of hi* tall. “Oh. you. would? Well, listen to this. You’ve only got forty-twio teeth, while I’ve got Ofty-slE Some of your teeth are larger than mine, to be sure, but I can crush any bone that you can. I’ve also got five toes, antf one of them Is as handy as a 'boy’s thumb. I can pick up a sack In my paw. while you must

It In your mouth.”

hoard brag before today.”

"And so have 1/ but I’m talking straight. I admire your long tall with black rlftas around it. but it Is of no real use tl you and Is often full of dirt and itur0i. On the otbir hand. I can hang To a limb by my tall for hours at a time. In fact. I often go to sleep that way and I’ve never had a fall yet-” ’’But look at the difference In our

food." said the coon.

’Yes, there is some difference." rethe possum, “but not much. 1 fowls, mice, grasshoppers,^ bugs, birds’ eggs, garter snakes, frogs and crabs, and 1 often find somettftng in the farmer’s garden to my liking. rm.aIao fond of persimmons and othi fruits. I’ll admit that you can run ter than I can. and you are also a better fighter, but I’m not so slow after

alL"

’’You couldn't fight a puppy dog three

months old."

’’But what would be the use? My fur and skin are extra thick—much thicker than yours—and If overtaken by a dog or falling into the hands of a man I play dead. A dog may throw me around for an hour, or a man may hit me a dozen whacks with a club, and I’m not hurt in the leaat. 1 dead until they have gone

sneak awi

otnmercial activity u

needed than pre-cut inadequate trails porting facilities. Every form of rail way equipment from track to rolling (lock hat been inercated and perfect** during the past few yeas', to an extern 1 tliat appeared almost excessive, yet the nation's busmen ha> more than kep*

pace.

Unseasonably mild weather has retarded retail trade at many points, ye' the movement of goods is fuily-sus tained by undiminished preparation) ‘or future sales.^Disfribulion delayed by high temperature is not lost, while the agricultural community will profit very materially by the tardines* of ‘rust, increasing their ability to con,ume the products of factories and

mills.

.Labor is more fully employed than at any recent date. Ohly a few small controversies iiUerrupting. Money market pressure has been removed, and, a! though securities do not respond, leqitimade trade is not retarded by quiet ‘peculation. Earnings of the railways luring October thus far exceet} fast year's by 4.5 per cent, and fhoic ot 1900 by iso per oent. / Coke is still the vital faotor in the iron and steel situation. Not only bar

airy it ’Tv* 1

wild

1 just play : and then

d and were sound aslee

he dog began to bark. In 1 i>\ and so wildly that his mi

t up an

n fire.

eyes.”

to find fault.

"Well my eyes might be better, and ■ that's a fact,” replied the possum, "

dog was a hero and no one o

."Old Ua spoke of

tor."—Brooklyn Eagle.

>ke of him sometimes aa ‘‘Mble

r

A Dog's Bard Luck. This Is a tale of dog hard Ipck. Bones Is the name of a canine resident of a court running off Cherry Street, near Broad. The animal belongs to a family that has a hard struggle to procure enough food to keep life going, and Bones, poor fellow, m’ust get his meals, when he eats, on the outside. Prom the looks of Bones he Is not a good grubber. for. his ribs are painfully evident through his coot of boardysrd for. However, yesterday Bone* made a ten strike Just outside of the Terminal Market. Hunger had driven him to the depth*, and while a weighty housewife was looking for the other way the dog stealthily niched from off an overflowing basket a package. Any one can guess that the package Bones selected contained something akin to meat Boo as had been observed in Ms purloining, but the two men who saw him and bis starving appearance concluded not to give him up to the law, but to

aa they w of his

booty. Hi* dog did' not stop to look

» dog did' not stop to 1 eidently -realizing tha re tlnallty should ha ba cam

made a bee Una In tha direction of Ms hope. The package waa ao big and Booee so little that tha animal had to hold hla head high In the air to keep tha package clear of the ground. The thief waa followed to within a half block of hla home, whan tha i»ck-

ike and there rolled to tha *1 fine soup bone. Bonea had g

«. ■ tow aaega hater* ha reallaad. by th* Hghtnaaa of hta hwntao. that «•- thtag waa wrens. H. looked baak and

*ay. And let. me tell you anotfc^ Letti ;. The fAx Is very cunning-ks Limi cs about the farmyard at night,

ho sneaks about the farmyard at night, but If you ask the farmer he’ll tell you that 1 get more of hla fowls then th« fox. I haven’t got as keen a nose as Reynard, and so I fall Into the ’raps ■dftener. but don’t you forget that ff tere are any fat pullets around I mange to get my share of them. I picked a goose the other night which made

three good meals.”

"But you don’t seem to have good ,’’ said the coon, who felt b

better.

>ssum, "but

1 do not run swiftly or travel tong

3 felt bound

Ing, t dog o

only a dog c •T said I w

>u som top o k’s nt

distances I do not need eyes like yin or the fox’s. I make up for It In hearthough. I can hear t£c bark of a

the shout of a man a good deal

further than you can. When you go out you have to leave your yovng behind you. and the wild cat often finds and destroys them. When L-go put'my little ones go with me In my pouch or ding to my back. Did you ever hear of anyone eating.coon meat?’ t

"l can’t say that I hate.”

"And It Is because it is so strong that

could eat It." ’

was no tighter, but let me

tell you something. One day 1 climbed

a big elm tree to inspect

a hawk's nest. I had seen the hawks come and go. and knew that they had a nest there. I found the nest In a crotch, and while I was eating the two eggs both hnwlrn came homo and pitched Into me. The fight lasted half an hour, and I was badly - bitten and scratched, bat I beat those hawks off and got down In tajfity; I bit on* of them to badly that h« died within a week. Could you have done any better

than that?

-I heard the farmer say that I had done him a great service, for th* surviving hawk flew away after her mate died. Come, now, didn’t I do well?” “But look at the dlfferenca In our said the coon, as he began mov-

away.

"Yea, there is a difference, hut don’t you be too stuck up over that Many a

fur.” Ing a 1

:s a

into baits.

3k% or Hnlngs there la no * It I'm not a coon, and I'm to pass for one. but you Joat r that no aalmkl of your >1

member that no aalmkl has any call to put on

That’s all. you can now run atong.--

improvement occurred but the sup of fuel is falling flirt her (behind, and

;look is alarming.

ply

the outl

No improvement appears in the demand for men's wear, woolen or worsted fabrics', new orders being lot

'mall quantities only and 1

quantities only and not sugges )f a genuine supplementary de mand (or spring weights. Although the movement of sample pieces from first lands is on a liberal scale, there are still numerous complaints of late de livery. Silk goods are ^ *-*-

scarcity in many descr

cscriptions. Deltv

of footwear on old orders are very heavy and New England producers ire receiving fair contracts for staple lines running into next March. Failures for the week numbered 23s n the United States, against 240 last year, and 22 in Canada, compared will) ■ LATEST QUOTATIONS. Flour-Spring clear. $3 10a3.30; best Patent. *4.:>0; choice Family. *3.7.Y Wheat-New York No. 2. ; 7BXc; Philadelphia No 2. 73?»&75c; Baltimore Coni—New York No. 2, 67c; Philadelphia No. 2. 69o69K; Baltimore No. 2. <9 Oat*—New York No. 2.34Xo : PhUadelpbia No. 2. 38c, Baltimore No 2, H^A-So. 1 timothv. $17.00x17.50; No. 2 timothy. #16.00x16.50; No. 3 tim-

otbyfil&.00al5.50

per brl, 1 2.‘>cOfil 75; Beets, native, per bunch lo©lKc; Cabbages, native, flat dutch, per 100. 75c ®fil 25; Celery, per doz. SacS40c; Eggplants, native, per 100. fil 00® 1 25; Grapes, basket. lOatto Lettuce, native, per bu box. 25c935c. 1 beans, native, per bu box. 80s lit*, each. 4c«5c;^ Sqoaah. Anne

irba, (

native, each. 4c®5c; Sqoaah, Aiuudcl, per bosket, 10c&l5c; Strhig

beans, native, per bu. green, 25c®30o; Tomatoes. Potomac, per peach basket. 20o®25c. Bappabannock. ber bu box. ^I’otatoe*. White, per bu 60a65c; Maryland and Pennsylvania, per bu 60aKw;

£r,£i' C r b “ ^

2Jb^26a27; Dairy pU. Md., Pa., Va., Egg*. Fresh-laid eggs, per dozen.

Li« Poultry. Hens,, HKal2o;

* ■'* spring chic

rooatera, each 25a30c;

llalSo.

kevt

1; old

each 25a30c; spring chid young stags, llalUfo. tlOXc. Docks, Hal 1(64. s. Heavy a leers, association

late kill, 60-lbs and up, olooe u

salters, late kill. 60-lbs and up, olooe selection, 12Kal3;ic’; cows and light steers

SXalOfcc.

Provisions and Hog Products.—Bulk clear irib sides, 12o; bulk shoulders, 123£o; hulk bellies, 13c; bulk ham butts. IG**c; bacon dear rib sides, 13c; bacon shoulders, 12c; sugar-cured breasts, 15Kc; sugar-cured shoulders, lie;

sugar cured Calif a

bams canvas

and over, 1 .

and 50 lb cans, groaa, UKc; n

mound-hand tubs, half-barrels and m

difomia hams.

ivaaed or nncanrai

r, 14o; refined lard tiero

as, HJ4c; refine

11 •sc; refii SW tub*. 11 Hi

fined lard, * inod lard.

a4 26; oowa, fil 40a4 50; bettors fid Oita 5 00; Taimr-tod ateors fi3 OOai 25. Hog,. Mixed and butobers fi6 65a7 10; good te choice, heavy fi6 90a7 25; Sheep, sheep and tamba alow to lower; good to choice whether* fi3 60a4 00; Werteru sheep

♦3 50*560.

East Liberty, Cattle ateadr; ohcxoe •6 80*7 00; prime fi6 15x6 7a. Hogs, prime heavy fi7 3k7 35, mediums fi7 10; - heavy York*»«7^0a7 05. Sheep steady. Bret wetbeesafifl 60u3 80 culls and 00*-

n fil 60*200; ebnlreU LABOR AND INDUSTRY

Retail cferks at Oakland. Cal., bare

wtrrs dsn”.— Raisin pickers at Fresno. Cal.. ttnicV and received higher wage, T rlejrepher* at Milwaukee. WU. joined the Federated Trade, ’Council. h.:nki*c mfrtlcr, at S» Calhermv Oi*».. have received ctooreAms aac won their strike, which uu-toto l . erot ■Mas ot tha reaua I