FASTEN AGE MARKS. Sick kidney* make people look older than they am; hasten the evenlne days ol life; fasten the marks of premature old ax*. The world over Doan's Kidney PUb Is the reco«nUad Kidney Specific.
—. — Piertoos to taktoi
i gb at Dose's KMoej PtIU 1 could i Wd my urine. Now I cao sleep all
d rarely hare to ret up, and that ach■a my back a little a bo to my hips li ... ~Wyo.
1 IDn.hack.aBd
loin paius overtorac. Swelling of the nicot, dip’ll colored, cxceaalvv pain In passAs'ssJ&TZz calculi and gravel Relieve heart palpitation. sleep lessors*, headache, nerrouanrsa. sni eotlrely cured of a very lame bsci.—tv.
a Cuavai-iKti.
uus.: ..I mr b»ck dlsaprwrd like a snow hank In hr* sun Doan's ill Is reach the spot— II to me Siocr using them I have DO oe:i lo get up so often st night. Uy com-
ggntagtaswer;
Bromo-Seltzer
Promptly cures all
HeadacKes
NEW JERSEY STATE NEWi Lslest Happeninz« Olesned From AH Over the Stale. Jersey Blue Council. No. «. Jr- O- i U. A. M.. celebrated iu thirty-second anniversary at Clayton. This lodge ha* over two hundred member! and is one of the strongest in the State. When it was organized there were thirty members. but only three of them are now living. At the celebration addrose* were made by Rev*. Eli Gifford, F. W. Johnson and S. J. Cleeland, of Clayton, and Rev. F. H. Van Hise. «.( Malaga. As a result oi the recent northeast storm one ol the curiosities ol the many marine disaster* which have occurred along the Atlantic coast was picked up off Cape May. It was an organ. It was discovered by Captain S. Walter Bennett, and was found near Cold Spring Inlet. William Schellenger. a patrolman of the Cape May lifesaving station, the same day found a chest of carpenter s tools partly buried in the sand. The organ and tools arc supposed to. come from the wrecked vessel H. E. Hargrave*, which met her doom on the bar at Atlantic City. The contract for macadamizing A»bury Avenue. Ocean City, the main business street of that retort, from Fourth to Tenth street, and some of the cross streets, was awarded by City Council lo Riley & Dixey, of Atlantic City, for $74,000. The gutters will be paved with vitrified bricks. The John A. Rocbling's Sons Company. of Trenton, has announced its intention of increasing the wages of its laborers from eight to ten per cent. The advance will go into effect next week and about tooo men will be af-
The Pacific Iron and Steel Company, capital. $1,000,000; the Barry Transportation Company, capital. $160,000. and the Penn Securities and Investment Company, capital $125,000. filed article* of incorporation in the Camden County
Clerk's office.
I Relic hunters galore attended the sale t. c of the late Mary Young, at Cross Keys
irrect hit | where dishes 200 years old were sold.
besides four spinning wheels and all kinds of antique goods. The bidding
CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. I was spirited. _ , „ I A New York firm has bought up all lateUCaMsbpKUlly ; (h( . j^.^ble strawberry crop around ' ‘ •“* rr **' Ccdarville at 5 cents a quart, the deal
cr paying for the boxes and freight and
farmers paying for the picking. Mrs. Maria L. Moore, living m Bridgeton, was taken to the com jail in handcuffs, charged by hi band. Hamilton Moore, with and battery upon him. She ha< dragged from her home to the
car and struggled furjo
Save Your Eyes. If your eyesight is good, take care of it. Look away off yonder every time you get to the bottom of a page in reading. If it is defective, let no foolish pride prevent you from wearing the proper glasses. There is no sense in handicapping yourself in life when a piece of pl as5 before each eye will make your vision as good as it possibly can be. The oculist will not advise you to wear glasses if you do not need them anymore than he will prescribe a drug you do nos need. Plenty of people, though, do not know that they have defective sight because they have never really seen at all. They have headaches, inflamed eyes, sties, even much graver troubles, from the strain of trying to see with eyes that were put up wrong. _ There are cases where homicidal insanity has been completely cured when unpaired vision has been corrected. Dyeing Long Age In the dyeing of cloth the ancients possessed not a whit less excellence than the people of today. Specimens of old tartan have retained their hues In their original brilliancy after the lapse of nearly two hundred years. With the use of native plants, such as the bark of the alder for black, and that of the willow for flesh color, me for red, crotal or cudbear from lichens for brown or purple, tormentil roots and heather sprigs for yellow, the women on ilmost every farm on Lochtayside were tompetent to produce remarkably fine and durable colors.
Poorly?
“ For two years I suffered terribly from dyspepsia, with great depression, and was always feeling poorly. I then tried *—** *
paril]a, and in one new man.”—Johi
Philadelphia,
wayafe
tried Ayer'a Sana-
week I was s
McDonald,
Don’t forget that It’s 14 Ayer’s” Sarsaparilla that will make you strong and hopeful. Don’t waste your time and money by trying some other kind. Use the old, tested, tried, and true Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
^gagaggsa
If you wot in your heart who will arrii
The calumnial justify his sin r
iuld be truly loved prep.rr a place worthy pf Love : when his place is ready
—To Provolt B.
Three disease*, with aches and pains in banes, joints and back, aconitine pains in .iiaulder blades, hands, fingers, arms am! .e£s crippled by rheunutism, lumbago, st . sties, or neuralfis; bswkini, spitting, note bleeding, ringing in the ears, sick stomach, deafnare, noises in the head, bad teeth, th.r. hot bland, all run dewn feeling of catarrh are sura signs of an awful poisoned condition of the blood. Take Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon all aebaa and pains atop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure la made of th* worst rheumatism or foulest catarrh, thousands of
7“’ dige*Sem-
ens weak kidneys and improves tion. Druggists, $1 per large botUe. pie free by writing Blood Balk Co., is Mitchell St., Atlanta, Qa. Deacribe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter
Russian journals dcclar* that Japan has sent spire and agitators in great numbers to Manchuria.
1. c. xna C..
Idle ConvernaUon. When will women in business realize that nothing is more disturbing to a busy man than the idle conversation many women indulge In during busine** hours! Such conversation wastes both time and money and makes her an unmitigated nuisance more than anything else. As a matter ol fact. It is not easy 10 find a taciturn woman, according to the Baltimore News. It is almost Impossible to discover one who. given sufficient provocation, will not tell the story of her life to a sympathetic person. when she should be writing letters or adding figures. Sometimes a solitr y woman will put a whole office to confusion by an untimely word here mtd a five-minute conv ten who have . business world have been the ten who knew when to hold their tongues and where. There are women who avow themselves able to talk while they wotfc, ant to do a task as well to an accompani mem of chatter as they do ifi, a profound silence, but they will be luckj if they can induce their employers to believe this. Aqdg in deed, it is not true, for no one can do two thing.* at the same time and do them well. The woman who wants to sneeeed in business, then, must take a lesson in keeping quiet "before she will be regarded as an acquisition to an offic« in which men are employed.
Igeton. wa* taken to the county in handcuffs, charged by her hus1. Hamilton Moore, with assault batter*' upon him. She had to be 1 from her home to the trolley struggled furiously all the way hen Constable Edward E. Reeves
went to arrest her she had an ax and club at hand ready for use. It is believed her mind is affected. Htr husband says she recently battered him with a club, breaking his knuckles and dislocating his wrist. They have beenmarried twenty-two years and are the
parents of five children.
Owing to the increased amount of business in the Glassboro Postofficc during the past year the salary of Postmaster Sickler will be raised $100. The Central Hunterdon County Teachers' Association met in Lambertville High School Building. Addresses were made by Miss Anna Stout, of I-ambertville. and Miss Mary Shaden.
of New York.
:rcer <
county roads which for sevi have been the causes of muc
tion between the railroad and county authorities. One of the roads is the New Brunswick pike, which ha* brought the company into court for
maintaining a nuisance.
Dennis rrawlcy. his son, Thomas, and Charles McAllister, detectives of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, stationed at Trenton, have been held for court in $800 bail on charges of assault and battery, preferred by Trenton men. who are alleged to have trespassed on railroad property. The complainant# claim to have been ronghly handled by
the detecUves.
The few survivors of Company H. Third New Jersey Volunteers, will meet in Mount Holly on Saturday, May 2, and hold their annual reunion. The exercises will be followed by a supper in
the evening.
The Daretown Baptists have purchased land adjoining the church and will
reel a parsonage.
The Brownall Company, capital $950,000, to manufacture machinery of all kinds, was incorporated at Trenton. At a special meeting of Cape MayCity Council, York Brothers were
awarded the contract
rine houi
id Company mty several everal years inch conten-
boulders, blade I shoulders. 1
toJ4; sugar-cured shoulders, broad, ti!4; sugar-cured Californi bams. J0J4. canvased and uncaavaso ta lbs and over, 13%; hams, canvased and uncanvased. 15 lbs and over, ijr haras, skinned. 14; refined lard, second-
CCMMERCWL KEVIcW General Trade tMdltion* R. G. Dun & Co.'* 'Weekly Review
of Trade" says:
Cold and wet weather in many cations of the country retarded retail trade in spring and summer wearing apparel. Jobber* also felt the effect f in a lessened activity, and agricultura' operations made irregular progress Production of farm staples may not bt curtailed by the later planting, although in some case* there will be greater danger of loss at the end of the season through early frost. Traffic condition! are steadily improving, yet some com plaints are still heard, and further additions to motive power and terminal facilities must be made if another season of congestion is to be averted at
the next time of pressure.
Textile mill* have not received any material increase in amount of new business, and there is evidence that the exceptionally heavy transactions ol January and February provided sufficient supplies for present needs. Nc improvement has occurred in the
.mprovemt ket for men's
has occurred in — - heavy weight woolens and is prospect of an unusually early ig of spring lines for next year ir order to maintain activity at the mills. Failures for this week numbered 212 in the United States, against 261 a year ago, and 16 in Canada, compared with 24 last year. _ UTEST QUOTATIONS Flour—Spring dear. $3-t5@3 3°: f**' Patent. $4.70; choice Family. $3 95 Wheat—New York No. 2, So'Ac Philadelphia No. 2. t8@78!4c; BaltiNo. 2, 80c. Com—New York, No. 2. 5«V4c; Philadelphia No. 2, 48!4@48J4c; Baltimorr Oat's—New ATork. No. 2, 39Ac; Philadelphia, No. 2. 43c; Baltimore. No. 2.
43 Ac.
Hay—No. 1 timothy, $19.50^20.00; No. 2 timothy. $i8.50@!9.oo; No. 3 timothy $15.00(0 17 00. Fruits and Vegetables.—Cabbage— Danish, large, per ton. $12 ooffi/ij® new Florida, per brl. $1.00^1.50; Charleston, per brl. $i-50@i-75- Potatoes—Maryland and Pennsylvania, per bu. 55(060; Easterti. per bu. 5$(q6o Eggplant. Florida, per orange box. $2.50(03.00. Onions—Yellow, per bu. 3S@40c; red, jier bu. —<&—- Celery, Florida, per case. $2.500303. Applet —Baldwin. No. 1, per brl. Sa-oofea w; do. No. 2, do, $!.oo0i.5o; Russet. No. 1 do, $i.7502.oo; do, No. 2. do, $1,0001.40; "Ben Davis, No. 1, per brl. $2.oo(<i 2.50. Sweet potatoes—Potomac, yellow, per brl, $2-7503-00; North Carolina, do, $2.5003 00; Eastern Shore, do. $2.5003.00. Yams $i.5o02.oo. Tomatoes—Florida, fancy, per carrier, $3.50 04-00; do, fair to good. do. $2.0002.50. Asparagus, per bunch. 150JOC. Strawberries per quart. 10012c. Cukes,’ Florida, per box. $2.oo03-oo. Spring onions, per too, 5O06oc. Green peas, per basket. 750SI-25- Green beans, per box, $2.0002.25. Butter—Separator. 30031; Gathered cream, 29030; Prints, i-lb, 29030; Rolls. 2-lb, 29030c; Dairy pts. Md., Pa.. Va.. 38029C. Eggs.—Western Maryl an< J and Pennsylvania. per dozen. —014/4c; Eastern Shore (Maryland and Virginia) —0. 14Ac; Virginia —01454; West Virginia —01454: Western —@14#; Southern —014; duck. Eastern Shore fancy. 19020; do Western and Southern l8@ 19: do small and dirty 16017; goose 20 030. Jobbing prices 54 to Ic higher. Cheese—Large. 60-lbs, 1454<§'M54c; do. 36-lbs, 145401454; 23-lbs. 14549
14M.
Live Poultry—Turkeys, hens, choice, —0i6c; do young toms, choice. —@14; do old do, I20J3- Chickens, hens. ‘ icdium, —0i4c; do old
Maggy. 13014: do spring.. 28032; d winter. t8022. Ducks, fancy large, t50i6: do do. small, I3@t4: do musco-
.... .. |@I5. Geese, Wes: trn. each. 4006a Guinea fowl, each "Provisions and Hog Products—Bulk clear rib sides, tic; bulk clear sides. ti}4; bulk shoulders, 10: bulk fat backs, 18 lbs. and under, 10; bulk bellies. 11; bulk ham butts. 10; bacon clear rib
tides, n)4; clear sides, 12; bacon shouljers, 1054: sugar-cured breasts, small. 12; sugar-cured shoulders, blade cuts,
cred shoulders, narrow. :ured shoulders, extra
“POOR DIGESTION LANGUID AND TIRED ”
lAn Interesting Letter - Concerning Pe-ni-ne.]
lunar sis
•‘Daal Bprlno n*V tlaaJ warned cloggr t up. m\j dlgeBtlon poor, mi/ aehrd and I fell languid and tired all the Htnr. Ug plig-lctan jereaei lor me. but a friend advlned u»r to tr ~ to elate that I found it a icnrulrrful 1 In three teeeke I %eae like a new u> w buoyant, light and hoppu and without on ache or pain. Pcruna le a re-
liable family medicine. ”
Ad in Brittain, of Sekitan. O., write*: "After using your wonderful Rerun* arte month* 1 have had great relief. I
If you do not derive prompt
factory result* from the me of Rerun*.
;a“«:u£s a
be pleased to give you hie valuable advice
The eating of snakes, lizards, scorlions, centipedes, tarantulas, and other eptiles is now prohibited by statute : n Kansas.
Mervellaatoicr. •atrial botttoand izw-tUt* r re 3 Dr. B.U.Kn»«, Ltd., *81 Archut..ful^..i , a. It take* ninety thread* of the spider to equal in aize one of the silkworm. Un.Wlaalow'a Soothlngiyrnp for ehUtlre. laething.softaa the gums, reduces tnfiauima Ut'g.aiiay* pain,eurei wind colic. Z3r. a houi > Eryaipclaa is now clataed a* a contagious
icr au amotions 01 inrou anu lungs.—.' t. O. gvPSI.CT, Vanburen, fad., c"cb. 10. liOj. Smallpox coata Prance ncaRy K.OOO.OJJ ,
C*Lmc
Three pairs of Siamese twin fishes have been hatched at the New York
Aquarium.
e stain pod C C C. fever sold fa but Beware of the dealer who tire to sea
“aoxrthlng jest as gwi."

