The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 18, 1902, Image 7

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Black Hair
¢“1 have used your Hair Vigor
for five years and am greatly
pleased with it. It certainly re-
stores the original color to gray §
hair. Itkeeps my hair soft.”’—Mrs.
Helen Kilkenny, New Portland, Me.
Ayer’s Hair Vigor has
been restoring color to
gray hair for fifty years,
8 and it never fails to do
this work, either.
You can rely upon it
for Slopping your hair §
from falling, for keeping §
your scalp clean, and for §
! making your hair grow.
$1.00 a boitle. All drugzists.
If your drigpiss cannot supply you,
send us one dollar and we will express
you a bottle. Be sure and give the name
of your nearest SLs office. Address,
J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
Headache?
Appetite poor? Bowels con-
stipated? It’s your liver!
Ayer’s Pills are liver pills.
Want your moustache or beard a
beautiful brown or rich black? Use
Buckingham’s Dye
S0cts. of druggistsor R. P. Hall 8 Ca., Nashua, N.H.
NEW WAY ROUND THE WORLD.
From Paris to San Francisco With
One Change of Cars.
Travel from the far East to London,
Eng., and other Eurcpean points
which has heretofore sailed fron
China, Manchuria, the Philippines
and Japan through the Suez canal,
is likely hereafter to follcw the Royal
Mail, which it has recently been deml
onstrated, can be brought to London
through San Francisco and across the
United States three or four days more
quickly than via the old route. The
traffic department of the Chicago and
Northwestern railway has advices
that the Russian ministry of the in-
terior has arranged with the Inter-
national Sleeping Co., for new sleep-
ing car service on the Trans-Siberian
Arthur, to be weekly at first, tr1-
railway, between Moscow and Port
weekly later on, and eventually a
Train-de-Luxe, to be inaugurated be-
tween Warsay and Port Arthur, leav-
ing Warsaw daily. At Warsaw con-
nection is made with the famous Ex
press Du Nord from Paris, Berlin
and ether Kuropean capitals. Thus
Port Arthur will be within easy reach
of Paris, and from Port Arthur the
journey is completed in fast vessels
across the Pacitice to San Francosco
and on the New Overland Limited
via the Southern Pacific, Union Pa-
cific and Ct zo and Northwestern
Railroads to Chicago. Inter-Continen-
tal travel is thus practically estab-
lished through what had, until re-
cently, been supposed to be the wastes
of Siberia; now proven to include
much rich farming country, which is
being rapidly settled.
An Enormous Pier.
Baltimore is to have a pier, which
will be able to accomodate at one time
four of the Jargest ships that float. The
pier is 935 feet long and 120 feet wide.
The water all about it is 30 feet deep.
The fisherman catches the terrapin
with a pair of tongs on the eastern
shore of Maryland.
CHANGE OF LIFE,
Some Sonsible Advice to We-
men by Mrs. E. Sailer,
“ DEAR Mrs. PingAM:—When I
passed through what is known as
‘ change of life,’ I had two years’ suf-
fering, —sudden heat, and as quick
chills would pass over me ; my appetite
was variable and I never could tell for
3 Fr
MRS. E. SAILER,
President German Relief Association,
Los Angeles, Cal.
a day at: a time how I would feel ths
next day. Five bottles of Lydia BB,
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
changed all that, my days became days
of health, and I have enjoyed every day
since—now six years.
‘ We have used considerable of your
Vegetable Compound in our charitable
work, as we find that to restore a poor
mother to health so she can support her-
self and those dependent upon her, if
such there be, is truer charity than to
give other aid. You have my hearty
#ndorsement, for you have prevem
yourself & true friend to suflarig wo-
men."—Mgs. E. SATLER, 7508)¢ Hill 8t.,
Los Angeles, Cal. —§5000 forfsit If above tes-
timonlal is not genuine.
No ether person can give such
helpful advice to womem who
are sick as can Mrs. Pinkham,
for no other has had such great
experience—her address is Lynn,
Mass., and her advice free—if
you are sick write her—you are
foolish if you don’t.
How He Felt While Falling 110 Feet.
x EWIS MASON, boilermaker
and ironworker, says that a
( fall of 110 feet isn’t so bad.
Mason tumbled 110 feet
ond
down the smokestack of the American
: No, I didn’t think of death.
Sugar Refinery at New Orleans, La.,
and fifteen minutes later was complain-
ing because the nurse wouldn’t let him
smoke a cigarette.
“It’s all a bluff,” declared Mason,
“this thing people tell you about not
thinking or feeling while you are fall-
ing. I thought about a lot of things
and knew everything that was doing.
It never
: occurred to me that I was going to die.
‘Mason,’ says I to myself, the first sec-
ond of the journey, ‘you've always
been a lucky dog; you will be now.
You are going to escape,’ and I did. I
hit the bottom on a coil of rope, and
then I went to sleep for fifteen min-
utes.
“We had put up the big iron smoke-
stack at the American Sugar Refinery.
The scaffolding and stay work were
on the inside of the pipe—not the out-
side.
“I was up 110 feet, working with a
steel poker. Of course the ledge was
narrow and a man had to watch his
balance, but being accustomed to it
the height never bothered me. I
worked up there just the same as on
the ground.
“In this case I was putting a good
power in the hand rod, and was lean-
ing over considerably off a perpendic-
ular. Suddenly the poker came out
and I lost my balance.
' “The first sensation was the only one
of fright I had. After the first instant
I was never frightened. I made one
| grasp at a rope but missed it. I knew
then I would go to the bottom of the
shaft. There was plenty of time to
think and I reasoned everything out.
The first was—were there any cross
boards near me. ‘No,’ I replied to my-
self, ‘they are all out’ That relieved
me. I felt pretty good. I knew I had
a long fall, but I reasoned that I had
always been lucky, and why not now?
That was anether consoling thought,
two; no boards and always lucky. I
thought it all out just as I am telling
it now.
“The black sides of the smokestack
were whirling by. Have you ever gone
down in an elevator very fast? Well,
just imagine you are going a little fast-
er and you have an idea of it. :
“When about half way down I had
reasoned it all out and was satisfied. I
crossed my arms tightly, determined.
if possible, to fall right side up. Then
the sides of the big stack began to ring.
The din was frightful. I thought a
million wagons were running over
iron crossings.
much thinking now. The noise changed
to booming cannons. They bellowed
and roared. I thought the whole thing
was moving, and that I was gracefully
floating in the air, sailing in an airship,
with the objects moving about me.
Nothing hurt me. I must have still had
my reason, for I remember distinctly
what happened. One very bright
thought come to me, and I wondered
why I had not reached the bottom. It
seemed that I had stopped en route.
Then I wondered if I had slipped by
the coil of rope and was not going to
stop there at all.
“The sensation was growing more
pleasant. Just as I thought to myself
how comfortable I was feeling a beau-
tiful light broke in upon the darkness.
There was a green lawn and some boys
playing tennis. So far as I know per-
sonally I never hit the bottom. I went
to sleep—a beautiful sleep—as the pic-
ture flashed upon me. That must have
been when I struck, but I never felt
anything.
“Fifteen minutes later I opened my
eyes as they were carrying me to the
ambulance. I pulled up a leg, then an
arm, and I knew I was still alive. I
said to myself, ‘Mason, you're luck -is
with you.’ Somebody asked me it 1
knew what had happened, and I re-
plied that of course I knew; that I had
fallen down the smokestack. I felt a
little pain in my back as they carried
me in the hospital.
“In the hospital—I've got no use for
’em—they won't give you anything to
eat and they won’t let you smoke and
roll on the grass. They treated me like
an invalid, and only gave me milk
toast and some other soft things. So
‘When the nurse went out of the room I
Jumped out of bed, got all my clothes I
could find and left the place.”
Mason is twenty-four years of age,
‘Weighs 170 pounds and stands five feet
eight inches in height.
“There is only one day I didn’t
work,” said he. “The day I fell.”
An Exciting Canoe Run.
Now, before us, says a writer in
Scribner’s Magazine, telling of Cana-
dian ‘adventures, ran a strange, wild
river of seething hite, lashing among
great, gray-capped, dark-greenish
bowlders that blocked the way. High,
rocky banks standing close together
squeezed the mighty river into a tu-
mult of fury. Swiftly we glide down
the racing torrent and plunge through
the boiling waters. Sharp rocks rear
above the flying spray, while others
are barely covered by the foaming
flood. It is dangerous work. We mid-
men paddle hard to force the canoe
ahead of the current. The steersmen
in bow and stern pry and bend their
great seven-foot paddies. The bowman
I was not doing sol
with eyes alert keenly watches the
whirling waters and signs of hidden
rocks below. The roar of seething
waters drowns the bowman’s orders.
The steersman closely watches and
follows every move his eomnanion
makes. Down we go, riding upon the
very back of the river; for here the
water forms a great ridge, rising four
or five feet above the water-line on
either shore. To swerve to either side
means sure destruction. With terrific
speed we reach the brink of a violent
descent. For a moment the canoe
pauses, steadies herself, then dips her
head as the stern upheaves, and down
we plunge among more rocks than
ever. Right in our path the angry
stream is waging battle with a hoary
bowlder that disputes the way. With
all its might and fury the frantic river
hisses and roars and lashes it. Yet it
never moves—it only frowns destruc-
tion upon all that dares approach it.
How the bowman is working! See his
paddle bend! With lightning move-
ments he jabs his great paddle deep
into the water and close under the left
side of the bow; then with a mighty
heave he lifts her head around. The
great canoe swings as though upon a
pivot, for is not the steersman doing
exactly the very opposite at this pre-
cise moment? We sheer off. But the
next instant the paddles are working :
on the opposite sides, for the bowman °
sees signs of a water-covered-rock not
three yards from the very bow. With
a wild lunge he strives to lift the bow
around, but the paddle snaps like a
rotten twig.
another, and a grating sound runs the
length of the heaving bottom. The
next moment he is working the mew
paddle. A little water is coming in,
but she is running true.
Biz Bear Chased Him.
“Bert” Banta, deputy sheriff, 1s In
Colorado near Creede, spending his va-
cation with his brother-in-law, B. E.
Putnam. In order to show his ‘‘ten-
derfoot” relative a good time Mr. Put-
nam organized a fishing and hunting
party, and with a camping outfit all
went up into the Rio Grande canon.
Instantly he grabs fer .
It was while there last week that Mr, |
Banta had an experience with a bear
that will furnish food for many a nar-
rative when the deputy sheriff returns |
home.
Banta’s experience in this way:
“Mr. Banta was fishing along the
river, deep in thought of the last bear
The Creede Candle tells of MI. ' pers or saw them out of three-inch
{
Farm Topics}
White Clover’s Advantage.
White clover will germinate and
make headway where certain grasses
w not thrive. It is easily crowded
it will give excellent service as
food for sheep for awhile.
Prevents Onion Bulb Exhaustion.
The custom of breaking down the
leaves and seed stems of onions is to
prevent the exhaustion of the bulb by
the formation of the seed. Some grow-
ers do this as soon as the leaves are
full grown, by twisting and bending
them down, as the bulb is not the root,
but the enlarged stem of the plant,
this concentrates the force of the plant
into the bulb or stem, and so produces
a vigorous growth there. The practice
may be of questionable effect, so far
as this view is concerned, but would
certainly be useful in case a seed stalk
was forming, as the production of seed
would weaken the bulb. The breaking
down is done when the bulb is well
formed and the leaves fully grown.
Shading Enariches Soil.
The complete shading of the soil
rapidly enriches it, even without the
application of manure. It may be that
shading causes a deposit ef nitrogen
from the air; every farmer knows that
wherever a stack of hay or straw
has stood for several months the
ground underneath is not only enriched
but grows much darker in eolor. Any
one may try an experiment as follows:
Select the poorest spot of ground on
the farm, lay over a strip of any
length, but about a yard wide, a few
inches of straw, and cover with a
board, or, if preferred, lay only a board
on the ground. If the place is seeded
to something after the covering is re-
moved, the difference in growth be-
tween the portion previously shaded
and that mnot shaded will be very
marked.
A Manure Sled.
A good and simple device for hauling
manure is to take some old sled run-
plank, which will need shoes, or if they
| can be bent as in A, they will not need
. shoes.
“story told at breakfast that morning, !
and he had a rifle hanging over his’
shoulder. He considered himself a
dered him in consideration of his cour- !
age, and he came to the conclusion
that he was just as brave as the peo-
ple considered him. Just then he
heard a noise, a snort, then the bushes
crash, and to his horror a big bear
making toward him. He dropped his
rod and gun and started and the bear
gave chase.
“Along the river bank they flew and
the big brute was close upon him, as
he could feel her hot breath, and he
‘thought all was over but the chewing,
and he imagined he could feel the
bear’s sharp claws and teeth ripping
his very flesh, when suddenly he came
upon a small tree and with a bound he
lit ten feet from the ground into the
branches. At almost the same instant
the bear plunged into the trunk of the
tree with such force as to break it
down. Banta gave a yell and resigned
himself to death. The tree was over-
hanging the river and into the water
he and the bear both plunged. On ris-
ing to the surface both swam for the
shore, but the bear stopping to shake
gave Banta considerable start, and he
put for camp like a wild Indian. He
overtook a jack rabbit and, giving it a
kick, hollered ‘Get out of the way and
let a fellow run that wants to run.’ On
reaching camp he never thought of
stopping, but kept tearing on down the
canon, and he kept his lead, for the
bear was compelled to stop repeatedly
to paw the mud out of her eyes occa-
sioned by the dust from Banta’s heels.”
—XKansas City Star,
Heroic Boys Give Lives.
William J. Carroll, aged fourteen;
Amiel Kologewski, aged twelve, and
an unknown boy, aged about fourteen,
were drowned in the Allegheny River
by sinking into a hole left by a sand
dredge.
The boys were stripped and wading
along a gravel bank left by the dredge.
About fifty yards away were a number
of boys swimming in deep water. One
of the lads was seen struggling and
crying for help. Another rushed in
after him, but the drowning boy
clutched him and both were swept off
their feet.
The third boy went in after his com-
panions and was succeeding in get-
ting to safety when he was carried off
his feet, and the three went down to
arise no more.
Long Drop of a Woman Miner.
Mrs. N. E. Brooke, one of the few
successful woman mine operators in
the Cripple Creek (Col.) district, had a
narrow escape from an awful death re-
cently. While being lowered down the
Mabel M. shaft, on which property she
is leasing, the brakes for some reason
failed to act and the bucket fell ninety
feet before the engineer regained econ.
trol. Mrs. Brooke, accompanied by a
miner, was riding on the rim of the
bucket, but both fortunately kept firm
hold on the cable, and while badly
frightened, were uninjured. The depth
of the shaft is 135 feet. When the
bucket was stopped Mrs. Brooke took
the ladder way for the remainder ef
the distance, both in and out of the
shaft.—Denver Republican.
Big Product of Orange Tree.
An orange tree in full bearing has
been known to produce 15,000 oranges;
a lemon tree 6000 fruit.
There is a demand for gutta percha
600 times greater than the supply.
Next take a plank three inches
thick and cut out two pieces the shape
of the ones in B, and set them on the
| runners, as shown in figure C; then cut
worthy hunter, and wore a badge ten- !
grooves near the ends on each side of
these pieces an inch and a half from
the end, which is shown by a dotted
line at F, and bore an inch hole in the
runner on each side in a straight line
with the groove; then whittle out eight
pins an inch through and stick them in
the holes in the runners and up along
the grooves. Then take two boards
$ix inches wide for raves, and bore inch
holes in it and put this on top of the
pins, which are left sticking up an
inch; this board should be long enough
to reach out on the end of the runner,
where it should be fastened. Now put
a shallow box on it, then a box about a
foot high, with strips nailed up and
down to keep it from falling off. This
outfit is handy for hauling manure
from the stable.—G. E. Durst, in The
Epitomist.
Crops For the Silo.
With a good three-year rotation of
crops for the purpose of filling the silo
and feeding the cows through the sum-
mer by careful practice, it is possible to
nearly doublethenumberof cows to the
acre, and make them do better than by
a haphazard system of farming.
An excellent system of rotation for
such work is to divide a farm of sixty
acres into three sections, so that twen-
ty acres of ensilage can be raised every
year, Plant the twenty acres with
corn fer the silo each year, and follow
it with a rotation of ®oats the second
year, and then with grass, sowing
about half clover and half timothy
This can be mowed for hay the first
year, and then plant it to. corn, or two
crops of hay can be taken from it, and
the corn planted later.
By having two seasons of hay the
fertility stored up in the soil makes
excellent ground for corn, and the
crop is pretty sure to be good. The
corn for the silo needs to grow rapidly,
and by the time it is ready to be cut
it will be large of stalk and heavy of
yield. On very rich soil a gain of twen-
ty per cent. in yield is obtained for the
silo. A little fertilizer to topdress the
grass each year will prove of advan-
tage in making both the hay and the
eorn crop better.
With a good crop of corn, hay and
oats growing on the farm, ample pro-
vision for the cows will be made. The
pasture field may be kept separate
from the highly cultivated fields, out
its condition should likewise be kept
up as much as possible. Pasture fields
are saved, however, and their fertil-
ity maintained indefinitely where there
is am abundance of ensilage, oats and
hay to feed the cows. It is when the
heavier feeds are scarce or high-priced
that the dairyman ruins his pasture
in order to economize on grain and
bay. We can make each acre of land
produce sufficient food for twice the
number of cows ordinarily fed from
them if we but adopt some system of
intensive farming where heavy erops
are annually raised.—C. 8. Walters.
NerveRestorer. $2trial bottls and treatisefree
aS
Bure of a Good Contribution.
A rural Virginia preacher took ad-
vantage of neighborhood hullabaloo
over a robbed chicken coop in the fol-
lowing manner: “Dear friends, I'se
about to take up a c’lection ta repar dis
church, an’ I can’ say to dat, if dar am
any nigger here to-night what had a
han’ in stealin’ Farmer Jones’ chick-
ens. I doan’ wan’ him to put nuffin’
in de plate.”
Customs Treaty With China.
The customs treaty about to be
signed at Peking between the rep-
resentatives of the British and Chinese
governments will serve as a pattern of
one to be concluded by Mr. Conger
with China.
FITS permanently cured. No flts or nervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr, Kline's Great
Dr. R.H. KLINE, Ltd., 981 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa.
The thief who steals watches ought to be
made to do time.
M. L. Thompson & Oo., Druggists, Cou-
dersport, Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the
best and only sure cure for catarrh they ever
sold. Druggists sell it, 75c.
The mining expert goes through some
trying ore deals.
Mrs. Winslow's 8cothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma-
tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. abottle
There is some excuse for poverty, but
none for filth.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible
medicine for eoughs and eolds.—N. W.
SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N.J., Feb. 17, 1900.
some people
“Vain imaginings” brin
g reality.
more misery than does har
BAAS LLSSLSALALLLLLHLLLHLHLLOAOD
PPP PIIPVIVVIVPTIYIVIVOVOIVITIV
“ am—
LIBBY Luncheons
> production k ing cans. Torn
p aton thers find ‘the Sob oR nCLIy as it left
> wus. We put them up in this way
Potted Ham, Beef aud Tongue,
Ox Tongue (whole), Veal Loat,
Deviled Ham, Brisket Beef,
Sliced Sinoked Beef.
48 Natural Flavor foods. Palatable and
olesemee. Your grocer should have them.
Libby, McNeill & Lib%y, Chicago
“How ro Maxz Goop THINGS TO EAT” will
be sent free if you ask us.
LALA DAALALLLLLASLLSLLLLHLHALLHLLE
QP VPOIVVOCOVOVIVIVIIVIIVIVIVVIYIY
A BA BO AN AN A A A AR BAA BA A AA A A OA AAA A AAA A ASS ASS ADAALSSS.
POC PVPVIPROOVOVPIPOPIIVROOIVESCPOIPVYOOVIIVVIVVIIVTIVIN YY
ALSO SALALDAALLLSS
PEPVIVVVIVIY
ALLLHE DL
POOVOVY
OBA
VOPVOVYY
YOU'LL BE SORRY
WHEN IT RAINS
IF YOU DONT HAVE
; Wi "THE GENUINE
ALL
YYOV
or
YOOPw
SALE) RE
MADE FOR WET WORK
BN BLACK YELLOW
SOLD BY ALL RELIABLE DEALERS
BACXED ARANTER.
BY OUR .»
A.d. TOWER CO., BOSTON, MASS.
OIL
POSITIVELY CURES
Rheumatism
Neuralgia
Backache
Headache
Feetache
All Bedily Aches
CONQUERS
PAIN.
SSAA ATA oy jo EA
WwW. L. DOUCGLA
5 = N
$3 & $3:52 SHOES Wit
W. L. Douglas shoes are the standard of the werld.
W. L. Douglas made and sold more men’s Good-
year Welt (Hand Sewed Process) shoes in the first
Bix months of 1902 than ary other manufacturer.
$1 0 03 REWARD will be paid to anyone who
Ww. L
can disprove this statement.
¥ EXCEL oi Ho Es
CANNOT BE EXC oe
1902 sales, Q9) ¢
ED $1,103,828 1st C rss $2,340,000
Best imported and American leathers. Heyl's
Patent Calf, Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Vici Kid, Corona
Colt, Nat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelets vsed.
: . L. DOUGLAS’
Caution ! J Bonne oS Eommberd on bottom,
af r
Shoes by mail, 25c. extra. Illus. Catalog free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTCN, MASS.
od 3 4 /
I was troubled with torpid liver
for many years and was subject to
dreadful headaehes, which confined
me to my bed once a week. A friend
recommended’ Ripans Tabules. I
did not have much faith, but he per-
suaded me to try them, and inside
of three weeks I was a cured
woman. On account of my age I
hardly thought it possible to effect a
cure, as I had been subject to those
awful headaches since I was a lt-
tle girl.
nena
At druggists.
The Five-Cent packet is enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
60 cents, contains a supply for a year.
100
. EN ST RT ot d i Al
Boe. 50n. li beet Sa D; |
rugglsts |
Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in halk, |
+ Beware of the dealer who tries to sell |
“something just as good.”
i Fo SRR TUR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAIL
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good.
in time. Sold by druggists.
DROPS
P.. N. U. 8, 0%
NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cures worst
cases. Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment
¥ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S S0NS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga,
EVERY CHIL
ing, disfiguring humours of the skin, scalp, and bload,
becomes an object of the most tender solicitude, not only
because of its suffering but because of the dreadful fear
that the disfiguration is to be lifelong and mar its future
happiness and prosperity.
BorN 18x70 THE WORLD with an
inherited tendency to distress-
Hence it becomes the duty of
mothers of such afflicted children to acquaint themselves
with the best, the purest, and most effective treatment
available, viz.,, THE CUTICURA TREATMENT.
Warm baths with CUTICURA SOAP, te eleanse the skin of crusts and sca
les
and soften the thickened cuticle, gentle anointings with CUTICURA OINT-
MENT, to instantly allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and soothe and
heal, are all that can be desired for the alleviation of the sufiering of skin-
tortured infants aud children and the comfort of w
4A single set is often sufficient to cure when the be
Sold th rouglont the bint] British Depot: 27-89, Charterhouse Bq.. ndon
Paix, P sivalian De) TOowxs & Co., Bydney.
orn-out, worried mothers.
st physicians fail.
Lo . Freach Depot: 3 Ruedels
Porren Dave a¥p Cue. Corr,, Bole Props.
wi
sn NEO SAA psi or
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