<t ih» I'addlu Uaa la Ik*
'-■“’-ssS ™::3 , ;* T nS£S
ike the l iilowmg can be fut-
:Ti£ •ome of many yean’ itaudm* way to lhi» |>oa-erln! remedy, ol certific.nr. like the I ulowing
which
"uS-y.T’i
NEW
JEKSEY ..STATE
UtMl Happen! at» (ilcaned Over the Slate.
NEWS Ptob AH
Although ahe disclaim* any right aiae (or cxccDttonal pluck or four
praise for exceptional plucl Dr. Caroline S. Marsh sho'
|ualitic» in he
iwed all t s-ith a tun
irR’-ai us at
New Brunswick. Although a small woshe has a plentiful supply of grit.
iming for hel-. she took
k£K,“K liri'oa ln.tr*d .errammg h..- «**
; gsri’Jr-^.bru w 3S&
great and long-continued pain io tay foot. j to think of the ri*k 1 ran I would not
have done as I did," she said. "In fact.
as wakened I jgas slightly
le is when w akened suddenly ut of a sound sleep. Hearing something loving in the next room. I started to investigate. A* I opened the door I saw a man standing in the room. At once I forgot about the revolver, but I seized
Et:,SS:, !£«»
K,r-“
•acyaffur&fifE
snss%*& beat liniment I ever used. It cured me of ezcellrat. All thoee who have pnrehaaed
it apeak of it as
The ^follow ing'day*I
cndc“ to
Vi-pi.dbfij2.bjd,,
forgot about
him by the a _
attack gave me the advantage in the beginning. The burglar gradually worked me away from the door, and then stfddenly he broke away and knocked me
I was on my feet quickly/ and
As I reached the head
half, way down. 1 •evolver as I ran
down. I was on ■ ‘tarted after him. . of the stairs he wi in after hir- c ~—
; Si'iuiJVXJK7is/
I Vi struck him with one bullet. I am « \ie next time I find a burglar in , room I shall hide my head under bedclothes and scream for help.”
Rochester (N. Y.) labor unions wiT P. E. Church, Camdci^vil
Dock labor is scarce at many lake ports, and longshoremen are receiving
higher wages than for n
r many years past
/ Coughed
“I bad a moat stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep and I grew very thin. I then tried Ayeri Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured.’’ R. N. Mann, FallMm*,Tenn.
Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it’s the greatest cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you tiy it. There’s cure in every drop. TWw: Zfc-Me-,SI. AUeraotau.
COMMERCIAL REVIEW. General Trad* CenAtloat
Rradstrect’s says: “Seasonable winter weather, hitherto conspicuously lacking, has come very much into evidence this week, with the result of expanding retail trade in winter good!, rnbbers and wearing apparel generally. Killing frosts have about put a period to the marvelous fall season of tpos, and in the South the cotton cron may he said to be made, so far as furthei
growth is concerned.
All the nsual seasonable changer have about come to pass. Daily products and produce generally are higher, ■fake navigation is about over, iron ore shipments have ended, after the greatest movement on record, and the wheat crop has gone into winter quarters with a fair covering of snow in northern latitudes. and with a generally satisfactory condition ruling throughout much oi. the admittedly large acreage. Threshing is about completed in the Northwest, and farmers display more willingness to part with their products. Cold weather Irom now on is needed to insure the large movement ol com expected. as the result of active export
and home demand.
The year's approaching end finds prices well up to the highest point in eighteen months, though meats are
eighteen months, though meats steadily declining on good rect . Next to the expectations, already partly realized, that an enormous holiday business will be done, the most notable t—.— jj the practical unanimity pi
feature is the practical unanim opinion that a large spring trade is
aund for this being' fur-
1 volume ol
. in the Camden county jail, and had a long talK with him. After'the interview Woodward expressed himself as well pleased with the clergyman's visit and said he liked the minister better than any of the others who had called. To one of the jailors be said he realized that be must die and when the time came he would walk unflinchingly-UsOhe gallons. If plans do not fail there will be a migration of Pitman Grove residents to California next spring. Harry Jenkins, who went to Santa Cm:- some months ago. write* in such glowing terms of that country that there is a desire to live there on the part of many. A committee I has been, appointed to confer with the ! — ;, -oad company to know just what a .
ansferred to that j
• intention of rursion there.
prospect, grot
nished by the unprecedented i
such business already booked. The feature in foreign trade is the turn in the tide of corn exports, which have at last begun to expand after fifteen months ol scarcity, high prices and
trifling slfipments.
Iron trade conditions are quieter. This quieting ' has strengthened the feeling that lower price* are to rolt next year, and hence all buyers who can afford to hold off. Foreign iron still holds the balance of power in the East, but the control is not expected to continue long. Western_furnaces are > : " better shape to do work,, the breakji
better shape to of the freight
et, a sra?
is failures m the Uhited States
lor the week number 185. as against 183 last week and 237 in this week last
railroad company t< large party can’be
country for. It is not j this party *10 make' an
but to start a small prosperous town.
LATEST QUOTATIONS. Flour—Spring clear, 93 35a3.45; Seat nt. 94.6*; choice Family, 93.90. heat—New York No. 8. 77e; Pbtladeipbta No 2,7Ca?6Xc; Baltimore No 8 76Kc.
of Education its former action in declaring that no holidays would be granted between Christmas and New Year's was
week's vacath avoiding a tht school ^children.
was gram lened strike
inoos vote, a ited, thereby :e among t'
The workmen laid off at Carney Point Powder Works have been notified to get employment elsewhere, as they will hot be needed very soon. Two reasons are assigned, scarcity of coal and the fact that a large supply of powder has accumulated since the close of the South'
African and Philippine wars.
The gathering of Christmas greens is ‘ furnishing plenty of work in Salem and other South Jersey counties, and enough . help cannot be obtained for those wno are conducting the business. Thousands of yards of the greens are being made up daily_put on boats and shipped to Phila I TT* Trinity M. E. Church. Bonier.- ! town. Rev. J. H. Payrah. pastor, has just j installed a $2500 Estey Pipe Organ. Tht
instrument is provided I pneumatic action, pal
actiogr-^nd pc I electric motor.
I The Allied Trades’ Council, of Cam1 den, has elected the following officers: President, G. H. Chambers; Vice President. H. Brooks; Recording Sccrctarv. J. Hargrave: Financial Secretory. William Davis; Treasurer, Charles Weston
. 1 timothy, 9l6.S0al7.00: 2 timothy. 915 50*16.00; No. 8 tlm-
othy 913.50*15.00
Gr*«n Fruits and Vegetables—Apples per bri. fancy 91 50a2 50; fair to 4od per brl, 1 25c®92 00; Ctffibagte, Domestic, per Jfimr 94.00. Celery, per doi. 20c®40c; Eggplants, native, per 100, 91 50®2 00; Grapes, basket. 10al2« Lettuce, native, per bo box, 80c®40e. Lima beans, native, per bn box, 80® 90c; Onions, Maryland and Pennsylre-
nin yellow, per bu, 60c®70c.
Potatoee. White, per bu55a60o; Maryland and Pennsylvania, per bn 65*60c: -brU Y ° , *i’g£ er k" lw ** tl > pox
' Butterf 8ej
•ended witji tubnlar latent key register Etdp r is furnished by an
Napoleon Price, colored, was romtpittM in default of $22.50 fine and costs’ by Justice Thompson, at Camden, on the charge of hunting while snow was on the ground. The arrest w as made by Game Warden Hunt. , Philadelphia architects are prepaniil" '' plans far the rebuilding of -the licorice 1 warehouse of the McAndrew. Forbes Company, Cairtden, recently destroyed by
Rwm My skin was sallow, I had- -I a bad taste in ray mouth in the morning and my breath was offensive at times and. occasionally I had a bad headache. Bv the use of Ripans Tabufes I am now in a condition to attend to 1 my dailv duties, my ^appetite is excellent and my digestion much improved. h* iWCm/packrtW vnowgh (of aa ordinary ochaaioo. The family hottla, W —ota. oytoia* a aupply for a yoar
Glou-
ib kin
He 1
Cooper Brick, aged 44 -ear*, of ( I cester City, was struck on the head by a piece of falling iron while at work in tht New York Ship Yard. Camden. ”
, taken to Cooper Hospital,
j Measles are so prevalent around Pennsvilie that some *of the business places are closed, the proprietors being
ims of the malady.'
Henry Stork of Grand Bay, tod a remarkable experience laat Sunlay afternoon. While Talking through the woods with his two little ‘
la Nt aeShu Np"!. euetJritSieS!^
lelphia
37c.
Hay o. 2 t
St.
cream. 24a25c: pri£t*,l-lb 27a28c; Rolls, Mb. 26*27; Delry pta. Md.. Pa., V*.,
25*26c.
P" do**.
27 ci
A UlcBia-.l Tranqslllty. A gentleman who had business in s small town ‘‘out West" had • ordered somr important letters sent there, and on his arrival went .to the post office to inquire for them. "No letters here for you,” said the
postmaster.
"Thej ought to have been here yes"Couldn’t have got here yesterday. Old. Brown,'who carries the mail, was drunk, and didn't go over to Iosco
after it."
“And how about today?” “Well, he's sober enough today, his old woman has cat her foot-” "But there will be a mail tomorrow?" “Skasslv, sir. We don't have mail on Thursdays.” “Then how about next day?” “Friday is sort of off day with the Iosco postmaster, and he generally igocs fishing. If he don't he sends the poy over. I never count on it, how“You sesjm to ha^a slipshod way •f running postal affairs out in this
country.”
“Waal. I dunno but we have," he admitted, as he looked over the top of his spectacles, “but a* long as nobody but Uncle Bill Simpson ever gets any mail, and that’s only a circular about how to kill cockroacnes. we kinder take things easy, and let the United^ States run along without bustin' her biler.”
A City B*atroy*<l by Sllrorr.
Amyclae. if the old legend of ks fate is to be relied upon, actually perished through silence. The legend concerning the unique end of this ancient city is as follows; Amyclae was a town of Laconia, founded by the Lacedemonian king Amyclae. It was an independent city for many years, but was finally conquered by the Spartans. The city' had been so often alarmed by false rumors of a projected Spartan invasian thjt at last, weary of living in a state of absolute terror, it was decreed that it should be made a public offence to report the approach of an enemy. So when the Spartans at last actually appeared before the city no one dared to warn the officials of their approach, a thus they were able to take the to'
with scarcely an effort.
There is^it must be admitted, a. other “silence” myth concerning Amk ■lac. Scrvius says that the city was founded by Pytnagi r—s-jj—
by laws of their ordt
to harm serpei the snakes fre
the %
is. forbidden,
tk W-Or
that
der, to speal The result w
mg to spe; harm the the inha? : '
serpents. The result was that :s from the hills sought the of the city, and, no one dar:ak of it to his neighbor or to
A gentleman who spends Tiis life entirely immersed in books has a wife who never reads anything more ambitious than a fashion column, but she likes occasionally to pretend an interest in her husband's hobby; and so from time to time she goes to the library and takes down a book just for the sake of appearances. 'T chose a book this morning," she remarked the' other day to her husband, with a bright smile, “by ah autbos named Volix. Is he considered a
good writer?"
“Volix?" said the good man in a puzalftd tone; and then, not Hiring to confess himscK ignorant of one of the books in his own library, he added. “Yes, my dear, a writer of very siderable power, who possesses
markable insight into i But when she had elaborate toilette, and
to her, garden party, he her bedroom to discover the anthor of whom he had nt
heard. It turned out
-rnmg's 1
1 possesses a r< > his subject." 1 completed her d had gone off
"the
book
icver
to be a volume which'happened
of Browning’s poetry which'happened tr have been hound with no name on the back, where it merely bore the le-
murs—, Large. 60-lb, 13aI8*c; ma- I gend V ° L 1X *
dhuu, 36-lb, 18al3S; picnlea, 23-lb,
13,Val3>fe. Union worker* in the Unitid Live Poultry, Hens, lOalltto; old *nd Canada receive in wages rooetera, each *5*30c; Turkeys, lOXall ! the g«g»ntic sum of 1
Ducks. 11.1214
Ducks, i:
Hide*,
nd up, oloee se-
lection, ll>4al2%c; cows end light steers 934*10340. /v Provisions and Hog Prodocts-^-Bulk deer rib sides, 12c; bulk shoulders, 1134c; bulk bellies, 14c; bulk ham butts. He; bacon clear rib aides, Uc; bfcon ilders, 12c; sugar-cored breasts, ISA'o; sugar-cared shoulders, 18c; sugar cored California hams, 10>yo; ‘ * * - — in.
brls
, JOj
hattis can rosed or un can rased, 12 1
14c; refined laid tf
and 50^*01
Capsicum Vaseline Putapia Collapsible Tube*. Ws rawmowed 1! aa Uw beet sod aafeet *x•eeaal enanler-imuM kofeVa. alas os aa asfceeaebald. Moor (Mia *oj --1. la Ika baat ■> ’ * ». “f seodja* ibis w> ■* to aaMafS sts*s;a we will seed reea tote by MU . IU oruMe sfceaM.h* aosepud t* Ue eaWla •*£ etoeaam^se.-rtae ami label, ae eiherwsaa OKSUMMi IAMB ACTUM Ct
ns. gross, 1134c; refined lard, I tubs, 1134c; refined lard, end new tubs, 11340. ,
Un Stock.
Chicago, Cattle, Mostly 10al5c lower, good to prime steers 96 00a6 65; medium 93 00*575; stocken end feeders 92 00 *4 75;o*ws, 91 49*6 00; heifers 92 00* 5 00; Te*as-fed steers 93 00*4 25. Hogs, Mixed end butebers 95 85a6 25; good to choice, heavy 96 20.6 42; Bbeep, .beep —11—u. -I— — « ^ood to oholoe
whether* 91 75*4 25;
93 75*670.
Cattle steady;
00*6 90; prime 95 75*5 90. ime heavy 96 4(U6 46. media
:har~WSre. apparently, at play. Stork declare* the snakes were raised hilly three-fourths of their length from the ground, and wera knocking
’heir heads together In a playful man- : . “' I '
ner. Bo absorbed were the reptiles In each other that they paid no ntten lion to the approach .of Mr. Stork, who cut a club about eight feet long from a small pine sapling, and at the ttroke ao stunned both anakes that they were easily dispatched without further trouble. The snakto were
brought to Grand Bay
beery 96 4(U6 45, medium* tfifo] mary Yorkers 96 25*6 80. Sheep steady, Beet wethers $3 77) 14 00 colls and common 9150*2 00; oholoe lambs 95 *0*5 «0-
LA BOS AND'(NMJSTRY
illwrights at.Memphis, Tttgn., have
formed a union.
Canadian labor unions will agitate for free and compulsory education. Hoboken school tear lien may organixe and affiitate with the American
Federation of Labor.
Teiluride (Col), labor unions hsvt posted a boycott on Chinese laundries There are . 20.000 children under 14 years working < in Illinois factories,
mainly in Chicago.
New York. Ohio and New Jersey all have^Uw». preventing the night work Providence. R. I., has a union com posed of Italian paisrters and one of
Italian carpenters.
Union saw maker* at Indtapapolis demand an increase of 11 per ceqt. or the^prescut scale oi wages.
There is a general movement on foot among the labor men of Rhode Island to organise a State branch of the American Federation of Labor. Iron ynolderd and kindred trades in Stockton. Cal,/have teen conceded the nine-hour day with 00 reduction in pay.
•ISO Raward. MM.
SISTERS 0FCHARITY Use Pe-ru-na For Coughs, Colds, Grip and Catarrh-A Congressman’s Letter.
SialaTa <y Charity-are known. Not -only do they miniater to the spiritual and intellectnal needs of the charge* committed to.< their care, but they also miniater to
their bodily needs.
With ao many children te take care of
and to protect from climate and disease these sriae and prudent Sister* have found
Peruna a never failing safeguard. Dr. Hartman receives many letter* from
Catholic Sisters from all over tha United States. A recommend recently *
from a Catholic institution in
Mich., md as follow*:
JJr. S. B. JfnrfiMito Ctoitsi Dear Sir!«•*•»_ . weed the Peruna see* euffm laryngitis, ani lose of voice,
result sf the trmajmmut ions meet satisfactory. She found great relief. end after further use sf the wseif - elue tee hope to he able to say she entirely cured. "—Sts'ers of Chari I
girl u ho lug from
The
Sirier^McfkSty'an tarrh of the throat, the above letter tertiftea
Send to the Peruse Medicine Cb.,, Columbus, Ohio, for a free book written by
Dr. Hartman.
re of tb d used Peruna for a with good result*, a
n^te^ksTin^lrttyTU^frein Con pi 1 ■—aa The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, 0.; !
Gentlemen: “IX
hare used several * bottles of Peruna X and feel greatly J benefited thereby , from my catarrh j
ol the head, a
w gad' feel encouraged to behere that its continued use will i fully eradicate aj> disease of thirty i yean' standing.'t —Dsrid Maekwoo. r
Dr. Hartman, on* of the best known, phyncians and toTgeons in the United 1 btatea, srka the first man to formulate P*ei -un*. It sras through his genin* and pr— eranee that it was in trod need to the n
'raairm of this co
If you do sot derive prompt
tory remits from the use ol I at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a fig
ment of your cnee and he Will te
to^piT* you Us valuable edviee grai
POSITIONS SECURED
fw wMssret. sarajar.Titai.'gic'iBssaas.
When William E. Chandler was,Secretory tjf the Navy he ittued an order tha^ officers should not -permit their to reside at theToreign stations hich their husbands were attached
to which their husbands were attached The order was promptly rescinded upoa the receipt by the Secretory oi the following from Commodore Fyffe. in comand of the Asiatic squadron: “It becomes my painfnl duty to report that wife, Eliza Fyffe, has, in disotedis of my orders and in the face of stations of the department, taken up
residence on
sistently refused
department, taken up
the station, and
_ CWWOW CATMMKTIC
Beware
grwrntaiqa
nU fa IhSk IcstoMa
MLAWn. Acs or jum at i* .■srswrswSa imoi Cisim antor taas I
ss/sa'saEsas-s: ss er zxxstESzsxza&r--
tSSS.i‘,55SSiS.“i. Mysrsi'sts' tagtm OsftmwttoUwss
ssa-rs-lfSWSSiSSSe tsss that sdenoe has beati able to euro fa ell
^alfa"
Iteatagw.and' ... Cure Is the only poalttvo euro now I tb* medical fraternity. Catarrh bell
rTftTTfmr* “ "
* proprietors have ac
. o nfaeh faith fa Its cu rati re powers that they oiler One Hundred Dollars for any case that It (ail* to cure, bend for list of testimonial*. Address r. J. Cxxxn A Co., Toledo, a
- Bold by Druggists, Tie.
Hall‘1 Paattly PU1« era the beet,
Basic has the only zoological garden in
H. H. Gaxxa's Sosa, of Atlanta, Ga.. an tha only neoeasfnl Dropsy SpeetolMa fa tha world. 8*e their Ubespl offer fa advartUemant fa enothar eolamn of this papar. Tha men who i* always on tha* often has to wait.
sassnsrsfJifisxss, NhrvaKaetoror.fltrlalbottlaandtnaUeetroa DrAH.XiAX».Lt<L.WAwhBt..yMle..>n. Detached Ufa of haman akin live two to tan days.
thegmmaTroilsMefalemsto JSs-abottle
^yii.vssJai£‘ ,toto4 ‘" rSS^^K53l
Union leather workers at Mianapoba. lad., kart preaeatad • new price acaW. and in all prohatebty it wifi te
Is the Standard Rheumatic Remedy.
TheOHLYootopeand.M the market that osres tkis terrible a 1 - ,, wtthoit delng Irreparable bane to f “ "
UNEQUALLED as a BLOOD PURIFIER.
CHCCRPULLV RCCOMMCNDB fT.
For sale by Druggists, or wad expressagr prepaid oo receipt of $1x0. BobDtti Chemical Co.. ■ . BafUmora, ru.

