Colds
" I bad • terrible cold and could hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer’a Cherry Pectoral, and It gave me immediate relief.*' _ V. C. Layton, Sldell, 111.
How will your couch be tonight? worse, probably. ror it’s first a cold, then a cough, then bronchitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. Stop this downward tendency by taking Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral.
tek* It. B* Hum. -tra-wilUa*. _
A Woman's Wish Mrs. Housekeep—My husband has been complaining a good deal of late because his dinner has not been served
on time.
Mrs. Clubb—Gracious! 1 wish m'nr Mr*.*HousAeep—You do? Mrs. Gubb—Yes, "because he'd have
earlier to do it.
. The Monarc b and the Autocrat George III. innocently wondered bow- the appje got into the dumpling. "Begorra.'" announced the cook, “if h's any insitmations you’re making'. O’ll "be afther lavin' at once.” Terrified by this threat, the monarch lost his reason completely. A PoMlbUUy . 'Do you believe that Gcorget^VashiWton never told a lie?” - ^It’s possible. He never was much of a business man, anyway.** „
Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late General Roger Hanson, C.S.A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accomplisbed by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “ Dear Mrs. Pinbusm : —I cannot tell you with pen and ink what good Liydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for me. suffering from the ills peculiar to the sex extreme lassitude sod that all gone feeling. I would rise from my bed In the morning feeling more tired than when I Went to bed. but before I used two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound, I began to feel the buoyancy of .my younger days returning, became regular, could do more work asd not feel tired than I had ever bee n able to do before, so I continued to use Hun til I waa restored to perfect health. It is indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it- Tours very truly, Mbs. Bosa Adams, 819 ISth St., LcrnurrUle^Ky.? _ tSOOO farftr it ertflm* of FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will nnderatand pour case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice U free, and the address is Lynn. ” No woman ever regretted written her, and she has
NEW JERSEY JTATE NEWSl Jacob Probst appeared beforg Jus lice Campbell s! Burlington and sworr out a warriiTt for the arrrwt of Nicholif Kalcn, charged with brutally bearing Probst's wile, who is Kalen's sister. Probst lives on a farm near Buvtleton and hit brother-in-law had been in his employ until a short time ago. when i* is alleged a quarrel over Kalen's con duct led to the latter's discharge. Dur ing Probst's absence Kalcn, it is said, went to the house and made an attack upon the defenseless woman, throwing her down two flights of stairs. It if alleged he then set upon her with a shoe knife, inflicting numerous deep wounds. Mrs. Probst. despite her terrible injuries, dragged herself to thr home of neighbors who at once gave the alarm, but an immediate search failed to reveal the assailant. Mr. Probst then swore out a warrant. Mrs Probst's injuries are of a more serious nature than was at first believed and fears' are entrrtainrd for her recovery. r While preparing dinner for her father Annie O'Hanlon. «a motherless little girl, of Camden, was burned so badly about the body, face and hands that she died at the Cooper Hospital. In attempting to move a pot of bean soup rhat had boiled over the child's pina fore caught fire. She ran screaming into the street a mass of flames, Pass ers-by beat out the flames, and Policf Sergeant Schreglcr, who was in tne vi cinity, sent in an emergency call fot the ambulance, in which the girl was conveyed to the hospital, where she died six hours after her admission. Atlantic ‘City will be fifty years old next May. In 1854 it had a population of too. At the present time the city's population is over 30,000. Mayor Stoj has appointed fifty leading residents as a committee to arrange for the celebration of the city's anniversary. William Carll, of Canton, has a pumpkin patch that is a sight. Pumpkins arc so thick that a person can jcarcdly walk, and it does't pay to haul them to market. , A horse, buggy, harness, two blankets and an overcoat were stolen from Gilbert Kirkbride, of Sewell. John Garrigan. a servant of Mrs. Evelyn Wentworth Murray, a wealthy New York woman, was arrested at Somerville on -suspicion oi having *et , tire -to a hay bam on the estate oi 1 James B. Duke. Garrigan called at j-thc Duke residence and demanded, it 'ytis said, flowers for his mistress. Bcr cause Mr. Duke refused to see him he went away angered. The fire occurred later. Mrs. Murray insists that her servant is innocent. Garrigan wias taken before Justice Sutplien and coni mitted to jail to await the action of thr Grand Jufy. The Women’s Home Missionary Society of the Tttnton District will hold its convention wn the First Methodist Church. Bordcntown. November 10. An address will be made by Mrs. Mary Leonard Woodruff, of New York. An effort will be made in Trenton. - November 18, to form a local branch I of the National Woman's Suffrage As1 sociation. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Cat. i and other leaders in the movement will i be present to deliver addresses. In the United .States Court at Trenton. a jury gave a verdict of X2173 against Mrs. D. Richards, of Asbury Park, to recover a stock assessment of $53 a share to cover the shortage due to the failure of th€* Asbury Park National Bank. Similar suits wilt be instituted against other stockholders who refuse to pay their assessments.
Singing Cattis to Sleep. A curioua Instance of the povier of made comes from the western ranches, where the cowboys have learned that they can sing calcic to Me*-p. At “bedding time" a ride.* -trill ride to the front of a herd, eto,i It, ana then he will ride rapidly cronnd and around it til! the cattle are herded clone together. Ke usually sings ot whistles while he Is doing this, and presently one of the herd lies down, to toe followed in quick succession by the others, till In tea minutes the herd of £>00 may be all down. The cowboy now rides slowly around them, stopping occasionally If he desires to. and whistling or singing, as he likes. Bnt should the herd get up or become excited In the night he rides aroind rapidly or sings until they arc quiet.—New York Tribune.
The Angry Tree. Old you know that a tree can be angry? There is a kind cf acacia in Nevada that not only Is as “touchy" as the sensitive plant, bnt, as a gardener put it. "goes very mad.” It is about eight feet tall and is a very rapid grower. When the sun sets It is ready to-go to sleep, and shuts its leaves together and coils the ends of its twigs Just like a pigtail. If any one pulls that tail—well, the tree do^it squeal, but it flutters and mores uneasily and seems to be deeply agitated. If it is ever disturbed by a shock, such as transplanting, tiu leaves stand out in all directions and quiver violently, strongest of all. they send out a pungent nauseating odor that is most unpleasant It takes this bad-tempered tree an hour dr taro to get back into good
Immense Wh.-.lc E rought Ashore. This morning, while two fisher men named Hansen and Peterson were out fishing, they saw Juct outside the Graves the bedy. of a whale come distance away, says a dispatch from HIngham, Mass. They rowed out and attaching a line to it drew U np onto the shore at Cohasset harbor. It was sixty feet la longtn, nine feet through the body and thirteen feet across the tall. It gave the a; ance of not baying been dead than a day <jr taro,- as ' had not set lab It is thought to hare been killed off the coast by a harpoon bomb and — drifted in. ft U ——
COMMERCIAL REVIEW. Qrscrsl Trade CeeSUlin R. G. Dun & Co.'* "Weekly Review of Trade" s»y*: Industrial activity hat increased somewhat, many plants reluming and other* preparing id reopen. Several pending labor rontreverlics have reached amicable adjust, mem adding to thr aggregate ef jaage
be closed by lark of new business, while tlie struggle for control of the copper properties has thrown thousands out of work. While there is evidence^ of u .setback in the steel industry and some hesitation in textiles at the East, the general tenor of these report* is encouraging for a continuance of prosperity. particularly in the sections where agriculture is the chief occupaFailures this week were 253 in the United Slates, against 233 last year, and 15 in Canada, against 22 a year ago. Uradstreel's says: The movement of the crops has been freer Northwest, West and South and interior collections have improved. Eastern jobbers in turn note a more cheerful tone to trade. Wheat, including flour, exports for the week ending October 29 aggregate 4.007,873 bushels, against 4.265.060 last week, 5.907.030 this week last year 6.672,888 in 1901 and 3,612,421 in 1930 Corn exports for the week aggregate 1.393.214 bushels, against 1,809.885 last week, 152.205 a year ago. 606,159 i-t 1901 and 620,110 in 190a LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS Flour—Spring clear.*$3.85(04.05; best Patent $5 25; choice Family $4.35. Wheat—New York No. 2. 67c: Philadelphia No. 2, 83!4(gS3^jc; Baltimore No. 2, 85c. Corn—New Yoiic, No. 2. 54c: Philadelphia No. 2. SO'si'a’SO'A: Baltimore No. 2. 54c. Oats—New York No. 2. 4154; Philadelphia No. 2. 43Mr@43; Baltimore No. 2. 4oJ<;c. Green Fruits and Vegetables.—Apples—Maryland and Virginia, per brl. fancy, $1.00(21.25; do. New York, assorted, per brl $2-25^2.75. Beets.— Native, per bunch, t©ti^e. Cabbage— Nat Ac, per too $2.0o'u'2.5o; do. New York State, per ton $1200® 13.0a Cauliflower—New York, per barrel or crate $1.50(22.00. Cranberries—Cape Cod. per brl $7 5<XaB jo: do, per box Si-75fe2.oa Celery—New York State, per doacn 25<§33: do, native, per bunch 4'a> Carrots—Native, per bunch. idii'Ac. Com—Natit-e, per dozen, sugar. 15(0185. Eggplants—Na live, per basket 452150. Grapes—Con cords, per 5-lb basket 132? 14c; do. Niagara. do, «7@20c: do. Catawba, do. 44SJ5: do. New York, black, per basket 12^114. Lettuce—Native, per bushel box 30@35c. Kale—Native, per bushel box !2^@i5c. Lima beans— Native, per bushel box go(n$i 00. Onions—Maryland and Pennsylvania, yellow. per bu 55®6o; do. Western, white, per bu 75'S$i.oo. Pears—Eastern Shore, Kieffer. per basket 30@40c: do. per brl $1.50^1.75: do. New York. Bartlett. per_ brl $4.00<§5 0o: do. do, Seckel. per brl $5O0(q<6xx); do, Durhess. per brl S2.5a32.75: do, Sh.-ldon per brl $4.0061:4.50. Pumpkins—Nativc^ch Z'/U&J’A- Quinces—New York State, per brl $>[email protected]. String bean* —Anne Arundel, per bu, green. 8o>g90c. Spinach—Native, per bushel box aoST 25c. Tomatoes—Anne Arundel, pci H-basket .WS50C. Turnips—Native, per bushel box 20(S’25c Potatoes.—White—Native, per bu box. 606165c; Maryland and Pennsylvania. prime, per bu. Gc/^SC'- New York, prime, per bu. 6o(S65c. Sweet* —Yellows. Maryland and Virginia, per brl_$i.25<?i.50: Virginia, red. per brl. $i.do5Jt.25. Yams—Virginia, per brl. $1.00rt?IJ5. Hides.—Heavy steers, association and sailers, late kjll. 50 lbs and «p. close selections. oJ^StoJ^c; cows and light steers. Rdfo Live Poultry.—Turkeys, young, 7 !b* and over. —61140; do, old, do. —6^13. Chickens—Hens, heavy ^o medium, it rt£i»k4; do old roosters, each 25@3o: do, yonng. large. !2kS<£i3: do. young small, ly&tzli. Ducks—Young. 3 lbs and over. —(gI2c; do. fancy, large, old. white. u@!2; do. fancy, small, —(Sto; do, Mnscory and mongrels, ii@'i?c. Geese—Western and Sontbcrn each 35®50c. Eggs.-^Western Maryland and PennS 1 vania, loss off, per dozen —(gzSc; utern Shore. Maryland and Virginia, Joss off. per dozen —@*7: Virginia, loss off per dozen, —@27; West Virginia. loss off, per dozea jSifi; Western, loss off.- per dozen —rtc27; Southern. loss pff. per dozen 24^25. Hides.—Heavy steers, association and sailers, late kill, 50 lbs and up. close selections. cows and light steers SCoS'ALire Stock. Chicago.—Cattle—Good to prime steers $5-3°<ji5-9°: poor to medium. [email protected]; Stockers and feeders $2.25 <04.10; cows $i-3S@4-2S: heifers $2.co‘S> 4.85; canners $t.35<S^-So; balls $2,005? 4.35; calves [email protected]; Texas fed steers $2.75(5.5.50; Western steers $3.00(54-75- Hogs—Mixed and butchers' $545®5^o; pood to choice heavy $5-45®S-8o: rough heavy $4 95®5-35: light fc-25®5Bo; bulk of sales $5-35@ 5.60. Sheep—Sheep steady to 10c lower; Jambs steady to joc lower; good to choice wethers $3 00<g4.50;' fair to choice mixed $2.00^3.00; native lambs ^l5em Island.—Cattle steady; choice te-35@5-55; prime $5.10^5^5; fair $3.50 61J4.15. Hogs higher; prime heavy $5.90 (55.95; mediums $595®'?.00: heavy Yorkers $5-90@5-9S: light Yorkers SS.Tofis&J; pigs $5 30(55-50; roughs [email protected] Sheep steady; prime wethers $3-7o®3 85; cullr'and common $1.50 @2x0; choice lambs $5-30(215-veal calves ^ratxSv.vz INDUSTRIAL AND SCIENTIFIC NOTES. The Turks are bnt one-sixth of the population of European Turkey. Of the population of Buffalo onethird are German; in Boston oneoTthe victims of Bright's disease, 47^per cent are over three-score year* Cincinnati has the tallest
A UlMti t.ucsHer dearest friend had dro-p:d 11 for k call, and she staightwa./ t u «> t a five-pound box of expenri e tan y. "Oh!” cried the friend, "have y.u been squandering monev like thitr T didn't squander it, was the reply. "It wits a present to me." "A present," repeated the fr en "Let's seel Who's been here la ely? Anj^of yonr girlhood friends?” "Sometimes a family friend, pa sirg 1 through " "Not the case this time." "Mrs. Baxter felt very grateL.l to you, for ” "Sue didn't send it. “There was that fritnd of your hu - band that visited here -" V*Tt didn't come from him " "Oh,‘I know now. You won it on a bet". “Wrong again.” “Has any old friend disaprointed you at dinner? St*mctimts they try to square things—” . ^ ."No." "Well. 1 give it up." "Try guessing the most unlikely person in the world, considering that it s five pounds oi the roost expensive candy and not a little 50 cent box." "Your husband?" "Right.", "Heavens! He jmist have been doing something awful." When Eng and Will Be Caal Hungry England has jnst been informed b; the royal commission on ccal sup > y that she may expert a coal farn'n: in the year 1945—which is not so far off when you come to think of it. The coal in the "tight little is'a r d" will not be by any means exhausted in 1945. but all of it which lies a: a I s; depth than 2000 feet will have been taken from the earth and bumrd u . ' It is estimated that all of Engl n coal will have been transformed into heat and smoke by the end of a pc 10 1 of from ^lo to 300 years. Aft.r time, if coal is still to be used a* fu:l. it will have to be brought Horn the United States or China. Nob d • knows how large the coal cle^osi.s of Qiina really arc. but they arc known to be immense. The royal commission c*timatcs t'r»t even if the exportation of coal from England should be prohibited by law. it would only delay the using uo of the natural coal supply for about fifty years beyond the time when th; sip ply will be exhausted anyway. However. 250 year* is a long lock ahead, and sonic other fuel mav apierr by that time which will make the burning of coal as old-fashioned as tl.e , burning of wood is now. A Desperate Villian -v "Alas! alj i* lost." lie moaned, a* "he left the home of his adored. "She ha; cast me out into tbigcold. cold w vi !. I must have revenge". AnJ he io thwitb filled his face ftilj cf smoke from an Egyptian cigarette and blew it through the keyhole. (Shrieks, oaths, cal! for the ambulance and pol ce.) "Bah Jove. I did.not reckon on such havoc, don't you know. 1 am an assassin/’
FIELD warehouse MANAGER Cured of CntHrrli of Kidneys* by
a a a sent Fdee. Cores. IU001I Wo4 Skin Diseases. Csncers Itching Humors. Bone rains. Bolenic Blood Bslm (B. B. B.l core* Pimples, scabby, scaly, itching Erzema.. Ulcer*. Katiiqc Sores. Scrofula. Blood Poison, Booe Pains, Sweliingt, Uheumati-ni. Cancer. Especially advised for chrun'ie eases that doctors, patent medicines and Hot Springs fail to rare or help. Strengthraa weak kidneys. Druggist*, 81 per Urge bottle. To prove it cures B. II. P>. sent free by writing Blood Hai.vi Co.. 53 lislra Bldk-, Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in aeakd letter. Medicine sent at once, prepaid. AW we aak U that you will apeak a good word for B. B. B. when cured.
PI-o'cCrrefor Conaumptloa U "ninfnlllbU mculcino for coughs and eo’d*.—X. W. Biwcti.. Ocean Orovc. X. J.. Feb. 17.1S00. Durinc the raring season more than $1,000.dt) a day is wage red on horses. Fruit acids wifi not stain goods dyed with IVtoam Faoki.km Dm.
Bartley's Great Remedy^’Bej'urey< Agta.. tttanley A Brown Drug Co., r~
H0\. J.<HN T. KIIEAHAN, OK CHICAGO. Hon. John T. Sliealisa, who has been for seventeen years manager of klarsliaII Field A Co.’s whoirulc'warehouse. «nd i» ••orporal 2d Regiment Infantry, l. N. j , writes the following letter from 37.3 Ind-a >a avenue. Flat Six, Chicago, ill.: Peru na llrdlclnr Cm.. C-tumOu . oklo. a ■nlirmen — -' uum-mor I a coll ic'iick meemoi to mettle 1* mi/ kif^oeym an 1 aff -ce . lh*ui h uf.o. i trie l a co iple 0/ Iclan-y remedies larjely aJeertlmtJ. ba- Ikiy ilU no- help ns* ani- One of .uy foreman told me 0/ the great hel » tr %n1 re •r.loe . In Uolnj Pjruaa In a mlml or
e lmr. and l at ‘.nor procured m me.
m -. no I n m on nty feet a large part 0/ Ike Iffsced m- arrlinaly. but four bolllem of Pc rut.a CM mo mseullrrlu nnd l ir-uld not b ■ leltXoul It for three montho’
aolarm."—J >HX T. SHEA in \.
Mr. Jarob Fleig writes, from 41 Scram r 1 *uich prominepre I hat the serious nature venue, Brooklyn, X. Y-: | of tlie dn-eav t« at nice suspected, but the.
; eliri
of nrven 11,-/1 cr 1 taro, ilianki iron rr/ul remedy Perm
Jae >6 FI- fg.
Catarrhal inflaiomaiion of th lining of the kidneys, also <-a:!c«l
• and msidiousfy
'•""' I peeled until 1
” 1'al
1 fa.-t.neJ 1
. . _r In-
Ibe acute form products
The New Sttrax
The new 2-cent stamp will proba ly not feel especially stuck up after the usual abuse has been heaped upon it. The fact is. life is not worth I'.v ng ft r an ordinary litfic postage stamp in these days of clarifying good las'*. Some time perhaps a designer »il who will discard pictures of i s tional worthies and confine h m elf strictly to pure design, and the stam > that he will produce will raliilt w it > loveliness on an envelope of hanl-made
Papc-
At the appearance of the first syir • run* should be taken. This re
1 the mo.011- utrik.-s at once a: the very root of tti
died ''Briif-it r j t_*e.
le or rtironi.-. I .3 book on catarrh sen! free by Tli symptom- of ] run- Medicine Co., Columbus, 0.
Tixm Skxorteat Wcx out cf so attack cf Rheumatism £ Neuralgia
If You Don’i Want
:
CURLS IN YOUR HAIR I
Carpenter's 01 MtfgdW P05UDE Tt )• -ti* s,.- --r«! r ii—*6H: iu»4r* •b« tislr soil -it «l—« - 11- rertaclly lianaMn. Mow than worth th. prtoa
SUacobsOil
Price, 25c. and Xc.
KlpansTabulraar* the best dyspepsia medicine ever made. A hundred m minus of them have be-n sold In the lintted States lt^ a single year. Every illnrsa arising from a disordered stomath is 1 relieved or cured by tbrir use. Se common Is It lhat dishes originate from the stomach it may he safely asserted there is no condition of 111 health th-.t will not be l>eoeflted or ' cared by the occaklunal use of Ulpana i Tabnlea. Physicians know them asd speak highly of them. All druggists j sell them. The five-cent packagr is ! enough for no ordinary occasion, asd ' the Kamlly Uottlc. sixty cents, contains ; a household supply for n year. One | generally give* relief within twenty | minutes. W. L. DOUGLAS s 3.3§ & *3 SHOES ml Yon can aavs from $3 to $6 yearly by wearing W. L. Danglas $SA0 e^$3 sbaea. They equal thaeo J — that have been coning rera from $4.00 to 85.00. Tho 1mraonso sole of W. I,. Donglos shoes proves j their superiority over 1 all other moke*. , J Bold by retail shoe I dealers ererywherp- 1 Book for name sod <
if CURES.
nCer-
r INCH ESTER fake-Down Repeating Shotguns ' Don', spend from *S0 » *200 for •cun, when for » much less money you onn buy t Winchester Tete-
n atenTs, W» T>t*HK-2t*BKl« t AND PBXmoXe. ''SXSZSSZTLmfiSSL*
ADVERTISE 1 * IT PAYS J Reproach She—One of my great-grandltihsrs was so English lord. He—But that sras so long ago. \ oar | family has lived that dovra by this

