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r Welcome Proposition lo LatfiuS! j i WE WILT. DRESS YOU F.I.EOANTI.V [N THE I.AT- ! | EST STYLES AM. FASHIONS OK PARIS.!/ >NDON J-NU I NEW YORK ,\T MoDKRATKCOST. 3119?This New Vork Fifth jJfcCTgft A**p. meld waist is hullt of tine. white sheet lawn. Dwarf-tuc<e.i panels, united by Vnl. lace insertions, combine to createa medl mi Wdf yoke. Swiss embroidery of open and blln<l work, framed in Vat. < laco Insertions, constructs siile 4Tis^^g/JW^^ 1 arches and epaulettes oil theqljUnffS/IihV.\y| shoulders. Tiny gatherings fall W? iVfl f/US?Spv / from the yoke anil medium plaits / drop from the sides, enforcing 'fil &*/' neat folds to the full blouse. Val. laco edgings flulsh the Uicked 7 collar and cuffs. Clustois of grad- I /If*irflf / l uatlngpln tucks adorn the back \1 Wi" 7 A In semi-figure fashion. Buttons \mr Jj Si back. Madt'ln white and three- ? annrter s eevcs only. Price $1 ; postage iree. j WAISTS from $1 to $15 each. i ( Guarantee* so with every purchnnei all ; our Roods are made lu bright, cleau workrooms, thus | eliminating all risks of contagion. Should you not be satisfied with your purchase, : you may return same to us and the money which ! you paid wilt be refunded to you at oneo or ex- : ohanged for other goods, which ever you prefer. You Can Htiy From I ns l<?die?' S?uita, 1 Skirts, I'etticontM, and the finest and largest.as- ! sortmentsof I.utiles' Waiat*, C'orxet t'overt, j 1 HJght Gowns, etc. J . EXEMPLIFIED SAUSFAC1MS: A nut. j (omer write-*: "/ hare received the gimU ordered. j J I am delighted a>ul inn ftiewl* are, turprlnedat I . the beautu and chea/we** of the garnients. I'nu j 1 arc everything you cUilm to he." We DO A MAIL ORDER BUSINESS EXCt-USIVELT. i WE IIAVB NO AOE.VTS; SO BRANCHES. ' A fashion book, picturing and describing the lates; i . styles and fashions of Paris, Loudon and New York J ?nd fantples of material for good? mado to order; . sent Free. Write to-day fortius UKAUrtFDLbook, j INTERNATIONAL FASHION CO., 1 Makers and Creators of Fashion, 26-28 Washington Place, Dspt. K. New York City As Gcuius Affects Women. j j A reviewer in one of the recent , ? publications, calling attention to Mr. j t Gribble's book about George Sand, j 1 says that "we still believe that gen- j ius, however it may palliate the ; ^ crimes of a man. aggravates the wtck- j p ?dness of a woman. f rasa its !| you suffer from Epileptic Fits orFalllng I jWlg^HSicknens or have Children that do so. my Now OUcovery and Treatmeot I j give them Immediate relief, and j alkali yoa are asked to do la to send for j ' Free Bottle of Bpiloptlcldo Cure | f Qn(* Test '* Oomplote directions ' C sjRjfl^Bwith Free Treatment, also testimonial* 1 _ DM andM pate book. "Epilopny Ernlained." j v free by mall. Give AGE and full addrof*. V H W. K. MAY. M. D? 541 Psarl Stmt, He* Y'.rk. j e At a recent tobacco exhibition in Lon- j 11 don, some Havana cigars were shown which i I were quoted at S3 each. a FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases per- | manently ciired by Dr. Kline's Great N'erve j r Restorer. $'2 trial bottle ana treatise tree, i Dr. H.R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch St., 1'hila.,I'a. c ! d Only three per cent, of the world's popu- i ^ lation gains its living directly from the sea. j s DOCTOR PRESCRIBED CUTICURA t After Other Treatment Failed?Haw ^ Eczema on Ilaby's Face Had , Lasted Three Months. i ^ "Our baby boy broke out with eczema on j [i his face when one month old. One place j [ on the side of his face the size of a nickel I was raw like beefsteak for three months, ! and he would cry out when I bathed the | parts that were sore and broken out. 1 j o crave him three months' treatment from a I a good doctor, but at the end of that time | c the child was no net let'. inc/ my ciocior j t; recommended Cuticufa. After using a cake C of Cuticura Soap, a third of a jox of Cuti- v cura Ointment, and half a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent he was well and his face was as smooth as any baby's. He is now C two years and a half old nnd no eczema has reappeared. Mrs. M. L. Harris, Alton, { Kan., May 14 and .June 12, 1907." ; i b It is computed that the English language ; ^ is spoken by 050,000,000. 1 ? Piles Cured in O to 14 Days. Pato Ointment is guaranteed to cure any 0 c&^of Itching, Blind, 1'ieedingorProtruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. 0 The world's total hop crop for 1907 is i, about 1.947,000 hundredweight. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's tl Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists e A cucumber weighing three and one-half j j, pounds was raised in Sawtelle, Cal. ^ Mrs. WinslowV Soothing Syrup forChildren ' tl teething,softens thegums,reducesinHamma- i tion,allay8pain,cures windcolic,25cabottle, j ti St. Louis and other Western cities ! expect to be able to feast on Mexican j C( oranges every year from the middle j of October on, these orang3s being j 7 ripe a month or so earlier than the ; tl California l'ruit. I u 1 a LANGUID AM) WEAK. j n A Condition Common With Kidney Trouble and Kackache. ^ Mrs. Marie Sipfle, 416 Miller St. | a Helena, Mont., says: "Three years j h tago my back grew { p weak and lame anJ j I could not stoop ; y without a sharp l ^ pain. It was just as ' 0 bad when I tried to ! V get up from a chair, j * ^ I was languid and j j listless and had j much pain and trou- j t ble with the kidney secretions. This ; was my state when I began witb Doan's Kidney Pills. They helped me j ? from the first and four boxes made a complete, lasting cure." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. ; Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. , 0 ! p Jud^e Not. ! a Never pass final judgmeut on any j T one from first iaipressious. We are , , all such creatures of limitations. | t Eyes are faulty, and the elements ot ! ( character which elude us often more ' ( than compensate for the faults we i 1 see. Look again, look deeper. You ? will be surprised at the number of ! * stars in the night sky if you look 1 long enough. Most people have more virtues than are seen by snap vision. Be charitable and patient. Do not , spoil your world by peopling it with I i ImocrinQrv hoinP'sa r niiua.w.,.. j ? o~* L Responsibility For Wrecks. The Nebraska State Railway Commission now requires photographs 1 ' and complete details of wrecks fur- j nished to it by all railroads in the i State. These are used to fix respou- j sibillty for disasters. Details ol equipment must be supplied to the commission and the road must give Its opinion as to the cause of the accident. The Public Service Commission in this State also requires full ripfails of all accidents. 1 Thumb-Bells. The thimble was originally called a | thumb-bell by the English, because j worn on the thumb, then a thumble, I and finally Its present name. It was j < a Dutch invention, and was first glass | and pearl. In China beautiful carved ! pearl thimbles are seen, brought to ' , England in 1693. Thimbles were j < formerly made only of iron and brass, i but in comparatively late years they 1 have been made of gold, silver, steel, hor$, ivory and even glass and pearl thimbles are seen, bound with golf* J and with the end of gold.?Eclectic. GILLETTE EXECUTED AFTER MAKING CONFESSION Slayer of Grace Brown Meets Death Unmoved at Auburn. WALKED UNAIDED TO CHAIR 3nc Shock Kills Him?Ministers Say "Xo Legal Mistake Made"? Condemned Youth Leaves Message of Warning to Young Men. Auburn, N. Y.?Chester Gillette, ivho was? put to death iu Auburn irison for the murder of Grace Brown, made a confession tc his spirtual advisers. This fact was made known after he execution by the Rev. Messrs. Mcilravy and Herrick, his spiritual advisers. in the following announcenent: "Because our relationship with Chester Gillette was privileged, we do lot deem it wise to make a detailed aaicuiciu* tutu sihijuj ?iou 117 r*c\j hat no legal mistake was made in lis electrocution." Gillette left a word for young men n a communication he handed to iVarden Benham the night before, ind that was given out. It says: "In the shadow of the valley of . leath, it is my desire to do every- . hing that would remove any doubt P ls to my having found Jesus Christ, 1 he personal Saviour and unfailing riend. . "My one regret at this time ls that have not given Him the pre-emilence in my life while I had the opjortunity to work for Him. If I j ould only say some one thing that vould draw young men to Him I yould deem it the greatest privilege iver granted me. But all I can say iow is: I know in whom I have beieved and am persuaded that He is a ble to keep that which I have com- v aitted unto Him against that day. "If the young men of this country ould only know the joy and pleasure if a Christian life I know they would .0 all in their power to become earlest, active Christians, and would trive to live as Christ would have hem live. j, "There is not one thing T have i eft undone which will bar me from 0 acing my God, knowing that my f ins are forgiven, for I have been free . ( nd frank in my talks with my spir- t tual adviser and God knows where t stand. ji "My task is done, the victory won. c "CHESTER E. GILLETTE." s Gillette's last night was a quiet v ne. He slept a little, his spiritual t dviser, the Rev. Mr. Mcllravy, being t lose at hand. An hour before the c ime for the electrocution Guard r !rowley asked Gillette if he did not n - ant breakfast. v "N'o, I don't care for any," he said. ^ "You better take something," said ^ lhaplain Herrick. "Take some cofee and a little something to eat." t "All right." was the reply. j, The autopsy showed t^iat Gillette's j, rain weighed 57% ounces. The $ eart was smaller than normal, Q weighing scant twelve ounces. c Gillette met death unmoved. Only ? ne contact was necessary. g Gillette was declared dead by the 5 fficials at 6.18, but by watches held t y some reporters it was two minutes 0 iter that the warden said: "Gen- p lemen, the physicians announce that tie man is dead." There was lacking much of the sol- f mnity of former executions, and durlg most of the time, except when e tie electric current was turned on, tiere was a hum of conversation. This grew so marked during the ime that the physicians were exam- a ling the body for signs of life that u tie warden nad to pound on the tile- 3 Dvered floor for silence. w The contact was of 1S00 volts at J" amperes, and it was held on* * tiree seconds more than a full min- ?' te. When this had been done ex- r minations of the man's heart showed c o sign of life. Witnesses of the execution declare r lat it was the most successful in the r istory of the State. There was not 6 ae slightest hitch, despite the very t, Dnarent nervousness of those who f1 ad it in charge. For some reason? 0 robably because of doubt whether a 'j eprieve would not stay the death 1 sntence raised by the condemned b outh's mother's appeals to Governor a lughes?there was a general feeling f uncertainty in the prison. The harden was up long before daylight, e nd with State Electrician Davis, who s as charge of the preparation of the eath chair, made repeated tests of ? tie current. MEXICO'S PEACE COUNCIL. (ranch of tiio Central American Fra* ternity Organized. " Mexico City.?The Mexican branch il f ihe Central Am2rican Fraternity, ii rovided for in the recent Peace Confess held at Washington, organized il nth the following officers: Ramon e /Orrnli, Vice-President of the Repub- a ic; Taderico Bamboa. Sub-Secretary o if Foreign Affairs; Felix Romero, a Thief Magistrate of the Supreme b Jnurt: .Toaqiu Casusus, former Am- a >assador to the United States; Pablo o dacedo. Senor A. Cambacho and n flavor Portirio Diaz, Jr. s o Emperor Now Favors Hill. ji Emperor William recalled his ob- ? ections to Dr. David Jayne Hill as " Embassador, and lie will be ap>ointcd. /1IT?T lllTCr CI? l.> vtli.l 19 IIIJitrriiciH. S'onvoginu Perfects; Attachment to c Make Firearms Noiseless. ? Boston. Mass. ? A young Norwe- 1 jian, of Worcester, has invented a z nuffler for all kinds of guns which v liakes them noisele:;s. An ambition r :o shoot bothersome cats without his leighbors knowing the origin of the v shots brought about this result. The v. muffler is a simple piece of rectanguar steel two inches long, fitted over s :he end of the gun. 0 BOYCOTT JAPS IV AUSTRALIA. Chinamen Object to Setllement of I1 the Tatsu Incident. P Melbourne.?A Chinese boycott of it Japanese on account of the Tatsu in- t indent has beeu widely taken up by Chinese merchants throughout Aus- j tralia. At a meeting in Sydney in j, support of the boycott movement, it was decided to patronize a new line of steamers which is being formed at^ x Canton for trading between China,'? Australia and the United States. 1 BEGINNING TO .\,V;k./ IgP ^fjj ?Cart Si CALL FOR BUSINESS PE NTERSTATE COMMISSIONE AND GIVES OUT E declares That Reports Show More Per Mile Than in Depression Washington, D. C.?Some reiru bout conditions in the railr vorld which were contained in an erview with James J. Hill in 1 fork brought out a response f i'ranklin K. Lane, a member of nterstate Commerce Commiss lere is part of Mr. Lane's statem* "The whole world has a great oiration for Mr. Hill, but I do v ie would not be so lugubrious. Jumps has not yet superseded ptimistic Uncle Sam as the typ imerican. A year ago Mr. Hill ! hat the railroads had failed to n he traffic necessities of the coun hat there had been a steady incre a business which the railroads lot met and that it would be ne ary to invost $5,500,000,000 in i iding equipment, double tracks erminals to handle the business he country properly. And now ause for two or three months ailroads have been able to hai (lore business than was offered tl ve are met on all hands with the hat the country is going to the b '0W3. "What is the necessity for painl he picture blacker than it is? E t arise out of the fact that Cong; 3 in session, or that there is a Pr [ential election impending? I: aan an enemy of the railroads ause he refuses to believe every woman's tale that comes out of V Itreet? I do not understand the i on why at the time when railr redit should be upheld those i ught to be most interested in s orting mat creau are leuuins u RAILROADS NEED 300, Americans Preferred in Wc Admit They See Many Chicago.?The"unemployed," \ re congesting the cities, subsi3< pon charity and menacing the pe f various communities, if they re; -ant work can find it with the r oads of the United States at 01 'his is the opinion expressed here eading railroad men. The wa ange from $1.50 to $2.50 a day-, luding good board and transpo Ion. Within the next sixty days ailroads must find 300,000 men epair roads, bridges, furbish up s ing tracks, build extensions and r he shops. The ravages of the v zr months have left much work e done, and it must be done sp( y, for the railway managers ad hey see many signs of improv usiness and must have their-li nd equipment in condition to c or it. Americans will have the pre nee. Heretofore it has been ini| ible to get Americans as labor 'RESIDENT ROOSEVEi VIII Not Enforce the "Com Pendine Sup Washington, D. C.?The Gov< lent will not prosecute railroads ailure to comply with the "cotim ty clause" of the railroad law po tig a decision of the Supreme Coi That decision has been arrived t is understood, after careful con ration by the President, and he ccordingly directed the Dopartru f Justice to bring a test case as s s possible after May 1. the day w ecomes effective the law forbidd ny railroad to transport any art r commodity (other than tinil lanufaetured, mined or produced uch road,'or in which it is dire r indirectly interested. 1 Thus any railroad that owns < nines would be liable to prosecul hould it carry its own coal to n :et. The decision of the President aws tho recent decision of the W Chicago Police Chief Kxonerated For Shooting Anarchist Assail, Chicago.?A Coroner's jury iared Chief of Police George hippy and J. F. Foley, his dri 0 have been justified in killing arus Averbuch, the young Rusk rho attacked the Chief in his he ecently. More than a score of witnei /ere examined, chief among vvl /ere Olga Averbuch, sister of lead man; Chief Shippy himself, on, Harry, who is recovering fi . serious wound in the chest. Feminine Notes. Paderewski's wife recently i 17500 for four live chickens. Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish is said tr Jew York's best woman bri 1 layer. King Victor Emmanuel ex pros ho wish that Miss Elklns she lave no dowry. Mrs. Sage granted an appeal Ittle girls and gave back a house tad bought of their father. The erase on the part of Ameri fomen for marriage with titled :igners is causing amazement England. SEE MIS WAY OUT 5 oon by Dc Mar, in the Philadelphia Record. SSIMISM, SAYS FRANKLIN H. LANE R CALLS MR. HILL "JIM DUMPS' NCOURAGING STATISTICS. ' the Railroads to Be Earning Much Last Presidential Year---Thinks is Only Temporary. irks influence to breaking it down, oad "Let us see what these figures j in- show," said Mr. Lane. "The average i S.Tew monthly receipts from freight and rom passenger traffic for each mile of the the 225,000 miles of railroad in the Uniion. ted States reporting to this commis3nt: sion for the first seven months of this ad- fiscal year were $980, which is $1S0 i'ish per mile per month more than the Jim average for the fiscal year ended the July 1, 1305, the year of the last ical Presidential election, which was cersaid tainly not regarded as a poor year in leet the railroad or industrial world. The try; net revenue from traffic allowing for jase all operating expenses, including inhad creased wages and cost of material in ces- the fiscal year ending in 1908, is $37 pro- per mile per month greater than in and the year 1904-05. The net monthly ; of revenue for this fiscal year is thus be- far $7 less per mile than for the prethe ceding year 1906-07, which may be idle taken as high water mark tnus rar in | lem the history of the United States." cry The interview which drew the ow- above comment is as follows: New York City.?James J. Hill, ; ting who has arrived in this city, says of >oes 1 business conditions: "While I cannot ress permit myself to be too optimistic, I esi- am trying not to be pessimistic. The 3 a general recovery in business which be- has been predicted has not yet maniold fested itself to any remarkable derail gree, and it is not to be expected that rea- it should. The prevailing conditions oad were not brought about overnight; vho they are the result of events of many ;up- months, and a revival will no doubt leir be correspondingly gradual." OOO MEN FOR REPAIR WORK >rk of Extending: Lines?Managers Signs of Improving Business. vho | because they were engaged in more :inE I profitable employment and work sace more to their liking. Furthermore, ally they do not care to associate with the ail- motley gangs that usually go to make ace. up the repair squads. Now that many ! by men are out of employment it is iges hoped by railroads to get a larger in- percentage of Americans, who admitrta tedly are the best workmen in the the world. Formerly forty per cent, of i to the laborers employed in the spring >ag- work were Italians on roads between nan the seaboard and the Rocky Mountain ains. West of the mountains, espe: to cially on the Hill lines. Japanese ?ed- were employed. In the southwest mit! Mexicans, Indians and Italians preing | dominate, but everywhere there have :nes I been many Greeks, Slavs, Poles, Huns are j and other nationalities. Because of i the financial stringency many thoufer sands of these have departed for Eu)os-j rope. Now it. is hoped to get the ers.1 work done by Americans. T EASES UP ON RAILROADS moclity Clause" Part of Rate Law ireme Court Action. in- em Maryland, a Gould coal road, to for go into the hands of receivers. That locI- action, if. was announced, was forced nd- on it by the commodity clause of the irl:. rate law. which, bearing as it did on at. the road's prospective earning capacsid Ity, affected its borrowing capacity, has The President, it is stated, has no icnt desire to add to the embarrassments oon j which surround the railroads in their hen J efforts to comply with the law, and ling i as the question of the validity of the icla "commodity clause" has been critiicr) cised by competent legal opinion it by was thought best for all interests inctly volved that, a prompt determination of the question by the Supreme Court ^oal should be sought. It is understood tion that the railroads have given assuring :incr> to the Government that if the courts decide against thom they will foi- immediately and in good faith comost ply with the law. | Pol an dots (Joing Home Because of ?nt. i deduction of Wages in Cotton Mills. de- Springfield, Mass. ? A wholesale M. exodus of Polanders to Europe will ver, follow the ten per cent, reduction in La- wages in the Chicopee and Holyoko iau, cotton mills. Seventy-five per cent. >mc ! of the 4500 operatives are Polish. i Steamship agents stated that they 3ses | have sold all the steerage and second iom cabin accommodations at their dispothe I sal in outgoing liners for six weeks his to come. Four days' work a week at roni reduced wages, the workmen assert, will not pay the cost of living. Jottings About Sports. -aid of iate yachtsmen have wondered why the public does not take as live> be ly interest in the sport afloat as It dge did a few years back. Coach Courtney, of the Cornell ssod 'Varsity crew, has discovered a new )uid 'Varsity rowing star in E. A. Stevens,a junior in the College of Law. of New Orleans papers announce thi she beginning of a campaign to abolisli horse racing in Louisiana. The namrj ican of many well known men in that cit) for- are signed to a petition now bein,i in circulated for presentation to the Leg islature. 250,000 COAL MINERS B TEMPORARILY QUIT&i cloths about Wait Adjustment of Scale in Bi- n tuminous Fields. ru?Por In i progre MANY JOBLESS MEN IN LAND 2?i may I inipro* Over 330,000 Railroad Men on Seventeen Roads Have Been Laid Off RIOT ?Long Coal Strike is Not at All Probable. _ i>Iore Indianapolis. Ind.?Two hundred ^ and fifty thousand bituminous coal r miners of the United States stopped threat work until a wage settlement has fence been reached and a scale adopted be- er*y 1 where tween the members of the United worii Mine Workers of America and the Hamm coal operators of the various fields. For The situation, however, does not ^on Cl der co indicate a prolonged strike. The dif- ] c]jarg? ferences between miners and operators are very slight. It is practically agreed that , the present wage scale Law will be continued. ductio Vice-President Lewis, who sue-, to tal ceeded President Mitchell at mid- posted night, is endeavoring to revive the the re interstate unit rule. | nnders Ohio and. Western Pennsylvania ten P( mines will close, as no agreement has operat been reached. The Southwest District, consisting of Missouri, Kansas, ] Oklahoma, Texas and Arkansas, is Lon holdVig its meeting at Kansas City, bitrati and it is probable that the miners in tish ir this district will be idle for a time, tion it Thirtv-f ve thousand men are affected, cent, i An agreement Is looked for In the the ire Kanawha field in West Virginia. Pitvsburg.?It was decided that the 45,000 miners in the Pittsburg soft ftea coal district should lay down their {n the tools at t.he end of the day's work. car an The mini owners assert that they qqo ei have decided to end some troubles jn ad which have n-orried them for years, week and so insisted on a two-year contract, with th.> "sympathetic strike" eliminated and ivith the right of arbi- -^ra, tration at all tidies guaranteed. issued Des Moines, .Towa.?Every coal rhanjr mine in the State vlf Iowa closed. The f , shutdown will last at least thirty jnf0rn days. 345,000 JOBLESS RAILROAD MEN. ? ai Roa Vast Army of EmployeJr Has Been gj^pgC Laid Off Since Jua.e. Railw; Chicago.?On seventeen representative railroads of the United States, constituting ene-third of the mileage of the country, the total number of employes is eighteen per cent, smaller lntcrs than on June 30, 1907. This state- * ment is based on authoritative figures yya, just obtained by the Chicago General Lane> Managers' Association for the infor- inters mation of its members. says 0 The railroads from which reports "pr were received traverse practicably all COmm; parts of the country and the figures taking are said by railroads managers to be reveni fairly typical of railway conditions 0fj to generally. The percentage of men ueved laid off is much the same among all jjy pr the line, running from fifteen to five statist per cent, of the number employed last Haven June. In one or two instances the tral, I figure is larger. On some of the nja> g roads not included in the list the per- ville, ] centage of men discharged is known Milwa to be as large or larger than those erIli g( reporting. Among these is the Penn- an<i ]s; sylvania. " taken The total mileage of the seventeen road < railroads amounts to 71,872 miles. The ? On June 30, 1907, the number, of juiy> men employed on these roads aggre- study gated 581,713. At present the nuni- so far ber is 476.947. a decrease of 104,706. tpnrJpr The number of idle employes at pres- towari ent is probably in the neighborhood "yii of 345,000. tjjQ c ? shown READING EMPLOYES LAID OFF. di3qui Nearly 1000 Now Out of Work in Gar includ and Locomotive Shops. panic Reading. Pa.?At the close of work Sreate In the Reading Railway Company's w0J1Icl car and locomotive shops, GOO em- ancl r ployes were laid off. This is in ad- countI dition to 350 who wera indefinitely pa-)'.5J5 suspended last week. The force had . ,. been previously reduced, so that less 'rit"1D taan two-thirds of the men are now ^ .ah at work. Foremen have been placed treiS^ in the ranks, and the plants are work- ? tra ing four days of eight hours each. DeeJ1 1 Similar suspensions took place at Past * Palo Alto and Schuylkill Haven *he shops. The revival in the coal trade Assocl has apparently not stimulated work surPlu at the shops as was expected. Hny V promn CUT WAGES OF MILL MEN. mal c genen Reduction Goes Into Effect in Fac- (jocke: tories Employing (10,000 Hands. doors. Boston.?Tho general reduction of ten per cent, in t.he wages of New HTL England cotton mill operatives, which was recently decided upon, has be- Resign come effective in mills employing , GO,000 persons. Next week the movement will apply to the pay of as many *"a! more. The reduction is due to the Roose dull state of the cotton goods mar- uomin ket, which forced many mills to cur- ^ tain production during the winter and at present. The cities of Fall River and Lawrence and Berkshire County arc not included in the general re- illie dmtion, but may be affected later SPe oc. ^-le Ai There was some interest in mill The circles as to how the operatives would Tower accep'; the cut down. Several minor at strikes were regarded as possible, but tions no serious walkout was expected at any point. ft Curtailment is general throughout The New England. Since January 1 it is appro estimated tnat mills with a total of j ing tt Japanese Press is Enthusiastic The A Over Promised Visit. Tokio, Japan.?The press, without Ror exception, is enthusiastic over the for Vi announcement that the American peror. fleet will visit Japau. and the govern- The ment is receiving considerable praise its coi for extending the invitation. The man I newspapers regard the prompt accep- Crowr tance of the invitation evidence of ger as America's friendship for Japan, and is. inf that the visit will sIjow the world -'P that a breach of the friendship is im- Empe possible. The press urges the gov- cate 1 eminent not. to limit the expenses. avoidi 1 lie riciu oi muur. A metal trades council has been organized at Brainerd, Minn. . ne A labor paper in the French language has been started at Montreal, ciujjS Canada. ^ A union to be composed of street of pQ laborers, in San Francisco, Cal., is re>rr.rc proposed. SSmi Kansas City (Mo.) labor unions luj decided to occupy their view labor moter temple on next Labor Day. Englii The ten-hour workday law for $200C women in the State of Oregon has can c been declared constitutional. aware ),000 spindles have curtailed. " verage curtailment is placed at twenty to twenty-five per cent. :otton mills of New England ; about 15,000,000 spindles. In j rliver the production of print I _ last week was lessened by 155,000 pieces. It is probable 0 lost of the Fall River mills will M. C. D. Borden's policy and J i half time. ? ,'iew of the curtailment now in ^ tss a general strike is not prob- c There is a sentiment in Boston f fFices that a second cut in wages e )e necessary unless condition* , /e. " _ S 1 OP PHILADELPHIA IDLE. a b Than a Thousand Hunt .Jobs On o New Opera House. S< ladelphia. ? Fifteen hundred nen took part in a riot and fi ened to swarm over an iron J fj surrounding the Harrah prop- I it Broad and Poplar streets, I ? two score of Italians began on the excavaiion for Oscar n lerstein's new opera house. ^ half an hour the demonstraDntinued, and before the disor- j D uld be quieted details of oolico I p id the crowd with riot clubs. j t] Reduction at Lawrence. . | J, rrence, Mass.?Notice of a re- j n in wages at the Pacific Mills, i n ce effect early in April, was j a at the mills. The amount of j h duction is not stated, but it is i c >tood that it will average about J *r cent. About six thousand | ^ ives are affected. I rron Workers' Wage Cut. J Q don.?The Conciliation and Ar- * on Board governing the Scoton trade has agreed on a reduc- ? i wages of seven and a half per I on account of the decrease in \ F >n business. I _ Reading Lays Off Men. ! ding, Pa.?At the close of work j ^ ! Reading Railway Company's e d locomotive shops in Reading, I Q nployes were laid off. This is ! dition to 350 suspended last i , I c ? i? y Off 200 Navy Yard Hands. | j shington, D. C.?Orders were ? for the furlough of 200 me- j r 3 at the Washington Navy Yard * aety days. Lack of work is the ; t lation given. ' | h [echanics Idle at Roanoke. j ,noke, Va.?Eight hundred men ! lischarged at Roanoke from the ' * of the Norfolk and Western , ay. "* * I y liROAD OUTLOOK BETTER. ] j I 1 tatc Commissioner Lane &iys ! l Conditions Arc Improving. ? shington, D. C. ? Franklin K. ( Pacific Coast member of the 1 tate Commerce Commission, #t f the railroad situation: i om the figures available to the ? ission it does not appear that, j ; the country as a whole, the . les of the railroads have fallen { the extent that generally is be. I have the figures compiled j ofessor Henry C. Adams, our I ician. as to the New York, New J and Hartford, New York Cen- | , Baltimore and Ohio, Pennsylva- i outhern, Louisville and Nash- I Rock Island. Atchison. Chicago, | ( ukee and St. Paul, Northwest- j < outhern Pacific, Great Northern (.1 forthern Pacific, which may be ; j as representative of the rail- i 3ystems of the entire country, j Igures are for the months of r August and September, and a j of them shows that the panic, j ? as it affected the railroads, ex- j ' I but slightly beyond Chicago | i the West. ewing the country as a whole, mtlook for the railroads, as j j by their own figures, is not so eting as has been supposed, and j figures, it must be remembered, 1 e at least two months after the t began in New York, during a 1 r portion of which time banks not make loan3 or discounts ] ailroads io many parts of the i y would not receive checks in 6 :nt of freight. 8 iere can be no question that t : the past three weeks there has j s a strong upward tendency in ; e t revenues. A greater volume > ? ffic is moving to-day than has j j moved at any time during the 11 wo and perhaps three months, j r gures of the American Railway j a ation show that there is less i o s of cars at this time than at ' t eriod since October 30. This j * ses an early return to more nor- j J :ondItions, and railroad men J illy are more optimistic than j have been since the Kuicker- j r Trust Company closed its I " t L NAMED FOR GERMANY, j ; ' ? iation of Ambassador Toivcr i >pted by President Roosevelt, shington, D. C. ? President i "J velt sent to the Senate these | f ations: ' id J. Hill, to be Ambassador to | my. j i hur M. Beaupre, to be Minister t i Netherlands and Luxemburg Hague). ' ncer F. Eddy, to be Minister to ; gentine Republic. ? i resignation of Ambassador j at Berlin will take effect ./rune a which time the above nomina- c will go into effect. | l fore Grounds For Divorce. j t i French Senate passed the bill j ved by the lower house widen- j ie grounds for divorce. IHUMLilll U II I VlUMVu as New Europpan Peril | ne.?King Victor Emanuel left j juice to meet the German Em- j < I ! Giornal D'ltalia. in concluding J 1 nments on the visit of the Ger* j s Smperor, says that the German \ . i Prince once ran the same dani the Duke of the Abruzzi?that , J atuacion with an American. ; j srhaps," adds the paper, "the j ror will be able to communi- } :o King Emanuel a method ol j I ng this American danger." i , : ( News of the Athletes. > Brooklyn Club is willing to j $5000 for an experienced left r of ability. So are most other Trenton. N. J., F. C. Smithson, rtland. Ore., broke the world's 1 1 in the sixty-yard hurdle race. ] ide the distance in 7 4-5 seconds. , te Marsh, a Western fight pro, has offered Jim Driscoll. the ' 3h featherweight champion, i > to fight Abe Attell, the Ameri ( hampion. Marsh also offers to L a gold title belt to the winner. The Evolution otf Household Remedies.' The modem patent medicine busiess is the natural outgrowth of the ld-time household remedies, In the early history of this country, 3VEBY FAMILY HAD ITS HOMEIADE MEDICINES. Herb teas, itters, laxatives and tonics, were to be ound in almost every house, compoundd by the housewife, sometimes assisted y the apothecary or the family doctor, uch remedies as picra, which was loes and quassia, dissolved in apple randy. Sometimes a hop tonic, made f whiskey, hops and bitter barks. A :ore or more of popular, home-made emedies were thus compounded, the Drmulae for which were passed along rom house to house, sometimes written, Dmetimes verbally communicated. The patent medicine business is a atural outgrowth from this wholo3me, old-time custom. In the begining, some enterprising doctor, imressed by the usefulness of one of hese home-made remedies, would take 1 t up, improve it in many ways, manuictnre it on a large scale, advertise it lainly through almanacs for the home, nd thus it would become used over a irge area. LATTERLY THE HOUSE[OLD REMEDY BUSINESS TOOK l MORE EXACT AND SCIENTIFIC 'OEM. Peruna was originally one of these ld-time remedies. It was used by the lennonites, of Pennsylvania, before it ras offered to the public for sale. Dr. [artman, THE ORIGINAL COM'OUNDER OF PERUNA, is of Menonite origin. First, he prescribed it or his neighbors and his patients, .'he sale of it increased, and at last he stablisked a manufactory and fbrished it to the general drug trade. Peruna is useful in a great many limatio ailments, such as coughs, colds, ore throat, bronchitis, and catarrhal iseases generally. THOUSANDS OF 'amtt.trs HAVE LEARNED THE rSE OF PERUNA and its value in the reatment of these ailments. They lave learned to trust and believe in )r. Hartman's judgment, and to rely n his remedy, Peruna. A Famous Encounter. Not long ago King Edward wan Halting a country house near the icene of one of Cromwell's historic jattles. Strolling out one day by limself, he met tlxs village blackin?ith returning from a shoeing expelition. "I say, my good fellow," said 3is Majesty genially, "I understand ;here was a big battle fought some- ' vhere about here?" "Well?er?" itammered the blacksmith, recognizng the King, "I did 'ave a round with Bill, the potman, but I didn't know four Majesty had heard of It."Great Trek of Caribou. The greatest herd of caribou ever eported in the Yukon is now report?d moving southward across the head if Sixtv Mile River. 100 miles west >f Dawson. The herd has been cross- 9 ng there for nearly thirty days. It Sj s estimated that 200,000 caribou 5 lave crossed already. The end of the W nammoth procession is not in sight. H There may be half a million o* even H i larger number in the great moving S ierd.?Tacoma Ledger. . 9 Pathetic. Bfi He was very sad. His confidence I n some of his best friends had been M udely shattered. He had just ac- S cnewledged that he had been mis- H aken and they had not contradicted 9 iim. Beware of Ointments For Catarrh H That Contain Mercury, SB is mercury will surely destroy the sense of B raell and completely derrnge the whole sy?- ?H era "when entering it through the mucous ra urfaces. Such articles should never be used HQ ixcept on prescriptions from reputable phv- . U icians, as the damage they will ao is ten fold o the good you can possibly derive from |9 hem. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured SB ?y F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O...contains H 10 mercury, and is taken internally, acting ?H irectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces H f thesystem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure |fl ie sure you get the genuine, it is taken in- HE ernally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by J)\ 9H| I. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. H Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's Family rills for constipatioa. 9 Austrian Women Barbers. M Women barbers are admitted to Bfl he Austrian Union, but they are re- HS luired to apprentice themselves for B hree years before they can go Into H msiness on their own account. Only One "Bromo Quinine** ffl fhat is Laxative Brorao Quirwne. Look A;?nnfiica V IV ^Ipava T T fh* m UI 11IC ai^UULUl V. Ui f I . VTiVfVl vwv. ?> ? WK Vorld over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. SW The expression, ua canary bird appetite," Mi s a misnomer, for a canary bird cats more 9fi ban its own weight daily. gfl Uk Your Dealer For Allen'* Poot-Esi*, iflSP powder. It rests the feet. Cures Conw, 3unions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, SB Jweatinc Feet and ingrowing Nails. Allen ? !"oot-l?aae makes new or tight9hoeseasy." Afc ffi ill Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac- nR| ept no substitute. Sample mailed Frek. bb ludress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. jflS The sale of women's gloves outnumbers fli hat of men's seventeen to one. Truth and ? Quality I ippeal to the Well-Iniormed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent HW iucccss and creditable standing. Accop- m ngly, it ia not claimed that Syrup of Figs md Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of 99 cnown value, but one of many reasons gD vhy it is the best of personal and family HE axatives is the fact that it cleanses, >weetens and relieves the internal organa |B8 jn which it acts without any debilitating flog ifter effects and without having to increase ihe quantity from time to time. Bfl It acta pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component BB parts are known to and approved by ifl physicians, as it is free from all objection- jSfl lble substances. To get its beneficial SMR effects always purchase the genuine? KB manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, a.ad for sale by all leading drug- n gists. SKg