The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 14, 1901, Image 6

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    “I am so nervous and wretched.” “‘I feel as if I should
fly.” How familiar these expressions are! Little things
annoy you and make you irritable. You can’t sleep, you are
unfit for ordinary duties, and are subject to dizziness.
That bearing-down sensation helps to make you feel
miserable.
You have backache and pains low down in the side, pain
in top of head, later on at the base of the brain.
Suck a condition points unerringly to serious uterine
trouble.
If you had written to Mrs. Pinkham when you first ex-
perienced impaired vitality, you would have been spared
these hours of awful suffering.
Happiness will be gone out of your life forever, my sister,
unless you act promptly. Procure Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound at once. It is absolutely sure to
help you. Then write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., if
there is anything about your case you do not understand.
You need not be afraid to tell her the things you could
not explain to the doctor—your letter is seen only by women
and is absolutely confidential. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experi-
ence with such troubles enables her to tell you just what is
best for you, and she will charge you nothing for her advice.
Mrs. Valentine Tells of Happy Results Accomplished by
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
“Dear Mrs. Prvxnay :— It is with pleasure that [
Iadd my testimony to your list. hoping it may induce |
others to avail themselves of the benefit of your val-
uable remedy. Before taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, I felt very bad,
was terribly nervous and tired, had sick headaches,
no appetite, gnawing pain in stomach, pain in my
back and right side, and so weak I could scarcely
stand. I was not able to do anything. Had sharp
pains all shrough my body. Before I had taken half
a bottle of your medicine, I found myself improv.
ing. I oontinued its use until I had taken four
bottles, and felt so well that I did not need to
take an; more. Iam like a new person, and your
medicine shall always have my praise.” — Mgrs W.
P. VaLeNTINE, 588 Forry Avenue, Camden, N. J.
the genuineness of the testimonial letters
we are constantly publishing, we have
deposited with the National City Bank. of Lyan Mam . $1 000,
which will be paid to any person wha can show that the above
testimonial is not genuine, or was published before t Beaining the
writer s special permission. ~LyDia BH. PivEnan Mapicixe Co.
MRS W P VALENTINE
Owing to the fact that some sheotieal
people have from time to time ques ned
i city of New
iwounted to more than $1,600,
interest
Locomotive No. 18.000 recently ,
turned omt of Baldwin locomotive
works at Philadelphia j 000
So —-— - { Plso’s cannot bw too highly snoken of as a
It requires no experience to dye with Por- | aough cure. J. W. O Burew, 322 Third Ave,
mam Fapsizas Dyxs. Simply bolling your | N.. Minneapolis, Minn. Ja, 8 1909,
£00ds fu the dys isall that's necessary, Sold |
by all druggists.
the
The exports of paper from this coun-
s
in 1900 amounted to about $7.000,
{try
O00
Indigestion fa a bad companion
rid of it by chewing a bar of Adams’
i sin Tutti Frutt! after each meal,
China's beverage is not confined en-
tirely to tea. During 1809 imported
from Germany beer to the amount of |
000,
che
i Got
Pep-
To Cure a Cold tn One Day. j
Fake Laxarive Browo Qrinies Taisirvs. AR
Srutss refund the mney if {t falls to cars, }
GROYR'S signature ts on cach LOX. Be
It is claimed
Over 40 per cent
world.
Out of 120,000 farmers in Norway, al
but 11,000 own their farms
The total number of persons arrested
in Boston last year
fue
was 3 55
A Centenarian
i Dr. Graham, of Kentn ky. wha lived to be one
| hundred years old, attributed his long itfe and
freedom irom lines to the uae of Crab Orchard
| Water. It was hia mn nadie ne
Canada
the nick
p
that
of
that the n Mex
Are are |
residents of
TEN CENTS
Liboy’s soups are as good a soups
can be. Some cooks may know
how to make soups as good. None
can make them better — none sn
cheaply. Six plates of delicious
soup for 10 cents — and think of
the bother saved!
Oxtall, “ollagatawny, Chicken,
Mock Turtle, Tomato, Vegetable,
end Chickea Guiabo.
At your grocers, In cans ready for Instant
serving — just heat them,
LIDDY, MoNEILL & LIBDY
Qhiocago
3 sattly curea Dys ia and all stomach,
Nver, kidney and bowel disor . An an
rivailod aperiant and laxative; invigorates
tones the whole system. A natural
sat medicinal value, con.
eanirated to ot sanior
and chespor to bottle,
ip and ue, A 80%.
Io 19 nqtial 19 2 palioos
apecondansed water
Jord by druggists trade. THOSE
mark on every h
CRAB ORCHARD WATER C0., Louisville, Ky.
Write tor cur booklet, “How to Make
Good Things to Eat"
0000000000000000p0300000
ET Te te het EE CE OOOO
CO0R2C00900009000800000002000000
000000000000 0000060000000000%000
“NEW RIVAL”
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
ETT A CAL
WHONBSTER REPEATING ARMS €0. «= = «Now Hawn, Com,
THE SHIPS OF
LIFE.
If you walt for unmixed cargo
Of happiness, pile on pile,
With never a pound of over freight,
You'll wait for a weary while:
For the ships of life in commission
Must sail their way about:
They may open their books for happi-
ness’ sake,
But they can’t bar sorrow out.
Yet this is a captain's wisdom
That makes his voyage bright,
Who stores sweet happiness in his ship
So that it stays in sight:
light,
So kindly the captain's wisdom is,
So brave is the captain's soul.
-5t. Louis Republic.
aa
: fl Story 0
West Point Cadet Who Became
the Chief of the Navajces,
BBE BE REAR R naw RR We W
Atkaa
There is a story of the old army that
session,
vague
3 one that
into a
has become a sort of sacred po
like its old and cust
it
happen
BONKS ns,
will hear if wou
ing the retiring age. The somnolent
effect of tobacco will turn the drift of
is no holding it down if a bottle is in
attendance. The tale concerns one
“Bison” McLean.
Mclean was the
gent to military
several
“Bison”
Han
hair
isourian
come famous for the names of
members. The name
B
McLean's long
and size. The
was a poor student in his classes, :
that he managed to stay at the acad-
emy for three years at all was on ac
of his superiority in riding and
His life in the
him in firearms
Point equal
He
additic
tempera-
ungovernable
er winter night
one
of
mmense
black
Mi
al
work southwest
his
was
at the could
ange
not a popular man, for. in nto
he had a sullen
and moments of
One cold, bitt
disappeared With axception
His skates
a search was
His family
McLean
missing, and so
New York. The books o1 the academy
and he was for-
soon in the preparations for
The was was fought and ended. The
tide of emigration to the west follow
opening of new
gold in California
it was
emigrants travel in
trains for their mutual
and the hussars were busy
their ald avenging
Garrisons were
the territory
to
or
placed
at Santa Fe and at several points in the
trails passing Mount
Harney was in com-
through Magon
Gen. W. 8
as Kit Carson in his employ as scouts
a major gen-
eral, and the father of Col. 8. 8. Sum-
ner, now military attache in London.
Gen. Harney's right-hand man.
Early in the fifties he was sent on a
scout with three troops of dragoons
through the Datil and Tularosa
ranges. While he was mounting a rise
in the Datils the Dragoons came sud-
but the Indians halted and raised their
hands with the open palm of peace
They explained that they were after
Apaches, with whom they were then
enjoying one of their predatory wars
Then a remarkable thing happened.
The chief rode out from thes band and
facing them gave a sharp command
The braves formed in troops of about
190 each and past as if at
parade. The amazement of Major
Sumner seemed to please the chief, for
he gave another command. The in-
dians turned sharply, changed from
line into eolumn and then back into
line, Another sharp order and they
advanced in line by t entire com-
mand.
marched
5
ae
this?” cried Major Sumner.
“We've four times this many drilled
too, perhaps, when it comes to fighting
who has taught us theze things.”
the Indians mcved over the
disappeared.
Major Sumner made an official
of the incident
the Navajos he had seen were armed
with American rifles and lances of
Mexican manufacture. Jefferson Davis
was then secretary of war.
perionces in the Mexican war to know
how extraordinary it was that Indians
fare. He ordered a report in detail and
oalled for as complete an investigation
as possible under the circumstances.
There was little more learned than
this, that the drill resembled that of
the American dragoons and was not at
ail like the Mexican tactics. No white
man had ever seen the war chief,
though one of Kit Carson's scouts
declared that he had. The chief
was not a Mexican, he sald, and
rERRRER
was a tall, handsome Indian of ro-
markable physique and rode like a dra
goon and not lke an Indian. Nothing
more than these few facts could Secre
tary Davis gather.
It was nearly ten years later that Jo
soph C. Ives was sent at the head of an
expedition to survey the Colorado
River. A troop of dragoons was de
tailed as the guard for his party. Ives
had been at West Point and had been
transferred to the topographical sur-
vey. While up in the mountains to the
east of where now the town of Green
BABY ald reported that they wee suied
to learn their tribe,
rnin
One n
of the outer pickets
£ the re
one found
an
Thore's Indian chief on the
guard line and he's a d to seq vou
‘You sh
officer, «
commanding
“I'm not
sir, and by
“Well
¥
ie
has any
does
if he
them on
A few mir
with
marvelous
He was
it later the
the chief,
figure for even
raigat
guide
officers gatiiered at Ives’
had e
eir mouths fell
4
i
tent and th in
amazement as
for his En
flaw accent
on a
open
they hear speak
WAS pure
The
stool in
him
and without
’ Bs % 4
Ol AVA sat
O
camp a seli-possessed
WF
way and looked the group of men over
quietly
hed
he 2 i
The tobacco was found for him and an
an
because of the
was d
for the bottle
inaccessibility to civil
orderly espatched to officer's
that
had been
extraor-
ization,
nursed lovingly and held for
dinary occasion.
"How
wearing the uniform?
down at the Point, did :
what do know
cried the astonished
does it
come,
‘Great Scott,
about the Point?
Ives,
But the chief only smiled and went
you
on talking about the Point and the men
who were there fifteen before
His familiarity with army ended
for he asked hungrily about
these few men and how they had done
in the Mexican war
to learn how well
years
the
there,
their fortunes had
prospered. For two hours the officers
stared at this great brown Indian and
searched thelr memories in vain efforts
to place him.
“You may be pleased to
had Arrang
off, but [ r
day while you
the
learn that it
been ed to kill your party
Ives ecognized you yester-
were prowling around
il declare the killing
enough
a mile of you to ride you
flis, and
off for old times’ sake I've
all down in an hour.”
as he rose to REO
“But who
Ives cried
the Navajo said
in thunder are
“You seem to know me
you?
but
I can’t for the life of me recall you."
“Don’t you remember McLean, who
was in your class at West Point?" the
chief asked
“What!
drowned
“Yes. I'm ‘Blson.” "
‘Bison’ Mclean-—who was
There is no record of any other in
stance of magnanimity on the part of
“Bilson” Mclean. Only an occasional
trapper, with the exception of Indians,
saw him after that His history
thenceforth is as mysterious as that
which had connected itself with him
when he was only the great Navajo
war chief. How he left the Point and
joined the Indians. and why, no one
Knows to this The retreat of
day
New Mes
war of
in al
strategy. is
to the
Lean
gecond
ico to the lava flelds in the
one of the most remark
history for its
iT.
able 1 military
generalship of “Bison” Me
volunteer told this
Leaven
regiment
at Fort
story one evening
last
theory
worth
own
ganization
summer,
that the unexpected or
of the Sioux in the
Wounded Knee campaign was the
work of the same “Bison” Mclean
it is not doubted that he is now dead,
but when and where did “e die? No
one knows and probably never will. —
Kansas City Star.
“Cheese 1”
“Cheese It” is in an English slang
dictionary of 1811, and the definition
shows that the phrase was then used
in the same sweet sense as that of to-
day. And the phrase came banging and
bumping down the last century. The
ingenious Mr. George Augustus Sala.
in his “Gaslight and Daylight” (1859)
wrote in the chapter "Strollers at Dum-
bledowndeary” about young Harry,
of the upper gallery who were pelting
him and his friends with nut shells
and broken pipes. “Two or three
‘ballon!’ and ‘now, thens!' accompaniea
by a strong recommendation to ‘cheese
it’ (i. e., act of cessation), cause these
trifling annoyances to cease.” You see
that Mr. Sala thought it necessary to
explain the phrase to his genteel audi.
ence. The dictionaries all say that
“cheese it” is thought to be a corrup-
tion of “cease it!” Maybe they think
#0. We are inclined to believe in a
more remote derivation. “Coase it!" js
ton sanv Boston Journal,
DOCS FOR TRACTION.
A——————
Forbidden in England Donkeys Superse-
ding Them in Eerlin—Esauimaux Cogs,
The Derlin Soclety for the Preven.
tion of Cruelty to Animals has for a
{ long time been agitating in of
the abolition of the practice of using
dogs as beasts of draught.
ety's opposition is having
ble effect and within past year
about one thousand donkeys have been
{ imported into Berlin to take the place
of many harne dozs
| the New York Sun.
The probability is that of
dogs for traction among civilized peo-
ples will
| The prac
| the tender
favor
The soct-
considera
the
of the aged Bays
the use
gradually dizcontinued
tics and
hundreds
in London
well al
sixty 3
CATrtSs 10 delive
The dog team
dustrial con
parts of Germany
venience
me extent
in Switzer i
of ©
France MU JLaly are
canines
subjected to this f
Dog dri
chiefly to the Fsqui
Arctic regions
glory as
no t
pends the well
vers |
doub
ern race of men
larger
dog than an
experience with the lan
y other explorer,
great admirer of him.
land 2
| for sledge hauling. They ms
to work very hard, i
neys, and
on a d
class pemmican
his experience th
will haul
that is regarded as
man, and that he
twice as far as a
Two hundred
maximum I
pounds
the Nares
with a load
| man, averaged
across the inland ice
Whale
will pull a load of
anc
will keep in
ration of
Esquimau dog
half the
a good
will
load for a
take it
man would in a day
wounds is considered the
for a though
) man during
Dr
pounds
I
a A
Jan
¥
i
RY vs +3 Lond
were hauled per
expedition Nansen
of about
seven
200 pe
mies a ¢
The adult
stand .
Souna n
male
dogs of
Greenland,
pounds each under condi
tions, except when the sof
that they sink into §
will drag this loa 0 t
miles a day, ane
far greater distance a
ceptionally good conditions
5 teens
oO twenty
i oy
iuch heavier loads a
day
A Rummage Sale Inciden®,
If one has
house
anything
around
wants to get r
one
| rummage sale. There is a
| craze just now for this
tainment or charity, whichever it may
perfect
form of enter.
This true story proceeds from a recent
sale held for a church nd
An enthusiastic young woman
| tended the sale and returned from
| great glee
“Walt until what [I've
| found,” she announced to her mother;
“just what we have been looking for in
every attic and antique shop for y«
I knew we'd get it some day, and
fund
it in
you see
ars
| more.’
"What
lady.
“it's a mate to that antique candle
| stick you've had long and never
could match.” She proudly unw rapped
i the bundle. “There! isn't that per.
tect *”
“It is indeed.” replied her mother. a
queer littie smile playing about her
{ face. “In fact, it is the same. 1 got
tired of having it around the house,
| and sent it to the rummage sale to get
| rid of it."—New York Mail and Ex-
| press,
is it?” asked the dear old
od]
:
Mars, observed in December by As.
tronomer A. E. Douglas, of the Lowell
Observatory, Flagstaff, Ariz. and
{| which revived theories of ultimate
{| communication between inhabitants of
earth and the Martians, have been
pronounced projections from the ter.
minator, and not efforts to signal
earth.
of the
section of the Academy
| Mr. Justice Stahn, secretary
| astronomic
| of Sciences, from Astronomer
las:
“Dear 8ir ~The projection which 1
observed on Dec. 7 at 16 hours, that is
between 4 and 5:30 of the morning of
Dec. 8, was undoubtedly a cloud on
the planet, which had just passed the
line of sunset, the cloud still being
lighted up by the setting sun, while
A EB. DOUGLAS. Baltimore Ame
ican,
Smelting promises to ho one of the
great industries of the future in Call.
‘ornia, »
para Sa a
WRITING BY ELECTRICITY.
Telautographs Invented Both in England
and America,
According to the London Electrician,
the Ritenle
telnutograph,
certain
nh common with
while pos-
fundamental features
Girny
sessing
the telauto-
charac
fea
ear
graph, has certain
teristics of its own. The salient
ures are two conducting clr ils,
ground
nngular con
the
the m
interest
ing
with ret one for one recs
for
of
instru
urn,
ponent and the other
other rectangular
tires
ition of 1
Compe
Th
and crosses |
he pen
nent dots its *
ind appears
opy of the
here
Power From a Solar Motor.
device for the utilization
heat in creating pow:
into operat
Cal The
y
1el-shaped
| that it may fellow
and is kept
The adjustment
fun
concentrated
1 form, 13 1-2 feet
i Am
of 1
capacity
lons of water and
centration
{Or cteam space ion of
jn # ya 1 4 w
heat is capable « the temper
per
degrees, but
ture to several thy
he boiler is prevented from being su-
within it, which
Tha
! perheated by the water
is brought to 350 or 400 degrees
engine is fed and the gu
{in the
ally aad the only
to operate the
{ mirror to focus and
the morning
from a large ur
rate of 1400 gallo:
Louis Globe-Democrat
boiler
itention necessary
» adjust the
machine 8 ku
pumping
Analytical Portraiture.
The of
tures
ag {o
combining
idea Fr
in one fomposite photo
Bet a type face, wa
out nearly twenty year
"
120 ny
» 14
R. 8
cig Galton, F nas now
vised the
portraitur
record wha
analytic
songht
the
pr axion by com
graphs of
traits, for example, may show a
with normal expression and when he
smiling On placing a carefully
| made positive of ane picture on a neg
is
| ative of the other, details common to
{ both are obliterated, and the result is
that only the smile is left. When the
process Is fully worked out, It is ex
pected to give physiologists and ar
tisis an important means of analyzing
expression. From the portrait men
tioned, it has been learned already
that the smile iz an act involving the
whole face, and not, as we have been
led to believe, simply a few muscles
around the mouth,
A Floating Monte Carlo.
A syndicate has been formed for a
floating Monte Carlo to be moored off
the English coast somewhere just be.
i yond the three-mile Hmit. Negotin-
tions are pending for an obsolete At
lantic liner, whlch would be turned
into a miniature casino, at a total cost
including the first outlay for the hulk.
of $250,000. The dea is to provide »
haunt for gamblers within easy reach
of London, but beyoud the reach of
the betting laws of the realm: and
of course, capital for running the ta.
| bles would have to be provided to the
additional tune of some hundred thou
sand pounds. Tt is understood that the
Brighton coast is thought of. Norwich
(Eng) Daily Press,
3