The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 23, 1902, Image 7

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THCMAS A. EDISCN’'S HABITS.
Not Allowed to Be So Absorbed in
Work as Fcrmerly. ;
An amusing story is told in Success
of Thomas A. Ediscn’s first marriage.
Shortly after the ceremony he was
called away to his laboratory on an
important experiment. He plunged
into the work. At midnight one of his
friends called to see him. ~He had-just
accomplished the gbject of his labors
and was preparing to quit work.
“I guess I'd betier go home,” he
said as he hurried into his coat and
jammed his hat down on his head.
“You know I was married today.”
But the days of complete absorption
in work have passed for him. The
second Mrs. Edison has undertaken
the task of keeping the inventor
healthy. She will not permit him to
neglect his meals or to work more
than she thinks is good for him. She
insists that he shall leave the labor-
atory at a certain hour each night,
and she undertakes to see personally
that he does so. At times Mr. Edison
objects, but in a very mild way, to
this regime. Not long ago he was
deeply engaged in a certain experi-
ment, when Mrs. Edison called for him
and insisted upon taking him home.
° After some resistznce he at last con-
sented, saying, however, by way of a
final protest as ha stepped into the
carriage:
“Billy (his pet name for Mrs. Edi-
son), you're a nuizance.”
Were it not, however, for the sav-
ing influence which Mrs. Edison ex-
ercises over her husbana it is doubt-
ful if he would accomplish so much.
UNIVERSITY WITHOUT A FIRE
Primitive Conditions of Life That Pre-
: vailed in Ezrly England.
In 1200, chimneys were scarcely
known in England, one only was al
lowed in a religicas house, one in a
manor, one in the great hall of the
castle, or lord’s house; but in other
houses they had ncching but what was
called Rere Desse¢, where their food
was dressed, whe:e they dined, and
the smoke found its way out as it
could. .
In King Henry VIII's time the uni-
versity at Oxford }.ad no fire allowed,
for it is mentioned that after the stu-
dents had supped. which took place
at 8 o’clock, they vrent again to their
studies till 9, and then in the win-
ter, they having no fire, they were
obliged to take a gcod run for half an
hour to get heat in their feet before
they went to bed. \
Hollinshed, contemporary with Eliz-
abeth, describes the rudeness of the
preceding generation in the arts of
life.
“There were,” says he, “very few
chimneys even in capital towns, the
fire, was ‘laid to the wall, and the
smoke issued out at the roof, or door,
or window. The houses were wattled
and plastered over with clay, and all
the furniture and utensils were of
wood. : The people slept on straw pal-
lets with a log of wood for a pillow.”
Short is the triumph of evil,
Long is the reign of right,
The men who win by the aid of sin,
The nation that rules by might,
The party that lives by corruption,
The trickster, the knave, the thief,
May thrive for a time on the fruits of
erime, . s
But their seeming success is brief.
: Sneer if vou will at honor;
Make virtue a theme for jest;
Scoff at the man who strives as he can
"To seek and to do the best;
Make goodness a butt for slander
And offer excuse for vice;
Proclaim the old lie, the corruptionist’s
cry,
That every man has his price.
Yet know that the truth shall triumph,
That evil shall find its doom;
That the cause of right, tho’ subdued by
might,
Shall break from the strongest tomb;
That wrong, tho’ it seems to triumph,
Lasts only for a day,
‘While the cause of truth has eternal
youth,
And shall rule o’er the world for aye.
—J. A. Edgerton in the Denver News.
No Questions to Be Asked.
When J. P. Morgan was traveling
for pleasure through rural France on
one occasion, he engaged a local pho-
tographer to take and develop some
views of interesting places. The pho-
tographer, receiving nothing as a re-
tainer, did not begin the work until
he had consulted with the manager of
. the hotel where Morgan was stopping
in the neighborhood. Yes—the man:
ager knew Morgan, and thought Mor:
gan all right.
‘But, monsieur,” said the photog-
rapher, “it is such a large order! Can
I safely trust this American for 300
francs?”
“Mon Dieu!—300 france!” ex-
claimed the manager. “Trust him!—
yes; for anything and everything un-
der heaven he may take it into his
head to dream of! He is pre-eminent.
ly a reliable man!”
Strain Is No Greater.
The question has been raised
whether if it should be practicable to
attain to a speed of 100 miles or more
an hour by rail, the engineer could
stand the strain. It has been affirmed
by a physician that such fearful go-
ing would wear out his nerves in a
little while. The question has been
answered already by one experienced
engineer before a meeting of scien-
tists. Asked as to the probable ef-
fects, in case of a common accident,
of a speed of more than sixty miles
an hour, he said: ‘A smash-up at
sixty miles would make splinters of
everything; at 100 miles the splinters
might be finer but the destruction
could not be more complete.” That is
to say, when an engineer runs his
engine at sixty miles he is under as
severe a strain as he would be at any
other speed.
Let the seraph and the poet change
places if you would judge thesa sing
erg aright.
THE MARAETS,
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat—No. 2 red $ 70 71
No. '2.. 56 57
Ww 6g 63
o. 2 yellow, shelled 63 69
Mixed e. 69 70
. 28 14
No. 3 white........ «220 3114
Flour—Winter patent..... .400 405
Fancy straight winters. . 3 90 4 00
Hay—-No. ltimothy............. 16 00 18 50
Clover No. 1. ................ 1200 1300
Feed—No I white mid. ton........ 21 00 2150
Brown middlings .1800 1850
Brap, bulx,....... »... L100 1750
Straw—Wheat we T50 8 00
Oat... 0 aa a, 7 50 8 00
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery............ 8 2% 2
Ohio creamery... ... . wo 24
Fancy country roll. 0
Cheese—Ohio, new... . 11° 1g
New York, new : 13
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per b.viy.covnnnniinnn 8-13 14
Chickens—dressed ... ,...... iE 16
Eggs—Pa. und Ohio, fresh .
Fruits and Vegetables.
Green Beans—per bas $100 12
Potatoes—Fancy whit 50 55
Cabbage—per bbls... 50 60
Onions—per barrel . 2B 250
BALTIMORE.
Flour— Winter Patent................8370 380
Wheat—No. 2 red..... LT 7014
Corn—mixed.. 52 51g
DEES i. a 2 R24
Butter— Ohio creamery. . 24 2
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent ...... $350 400
Wreat—No, 2red........ . 1344 73%
Corn—No, 2 mixed. . 69 70
Oats—No. 2 white. ...... oi 37 37%
Butter—Creamery, extra; 24 ug
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts.. 3 231g
NEW YORK.
Zlonr—Fatents............... ....83 8 4 00
Wheat—No. 2red 7078 1636
Corn—No. 2.......... we OBlg oy
Oats—No, 2 White 56 7
Butter—Creamer 2 Rie
Eggs —Stateand Pennsylvania...
LIVE STOCK.
Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa.
Cattle.
Prime neavy, 1200to 1600 1bs.......$68 715
Prine. 1500 to 1400 ibs. ...... . 640° 5675
Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs 570 6 15
Fat heffers....... . . =. 300 HOV
Butcher, 900 to 1000 1bs. 8 90 4 60
Common to fair... .... :.. 5060 = 365
UXen, common to fat. ..........5. 200 400
Comnron togood fat bulls and cows 250 425
Milch cows, each.L... 0... 7 0 2500 3500
Extra milch cows, each............ 4000 5000
Hogs.
Primeheavy hogs. ..........i..... 750 7 60
Prime medium weights....... $745 756
Best heavy yorkers and medium... 785 = 740
Good to choice packers............ 710 720
Good pigs and light yorkers. . 6 S80 700
igs, common togood...... 670 900
Common to fair......... 00 500
Ronghs................ . 600 715
Stags............... FF ~~ ¥ 5 00 600
Sheep.
fXtra, medium wethiers ............ $330 400
Good to choice 350 375
leqiom .,.. 0. 0) 300 350
Common to fair 150 200
Lambs’clipped.. |. 0 al Bi 560 57
Lambs, good to choice, clipped. .. 500 550
Lambs, common to fair, clipped.. 300 450
Spring Lambs 260) 62
Yealextrg, TFL. an 8 00
Veal, good to choice. 5 50
Veal, common heavy 6.00
Veal, common to fair 500
REVIEW OF TRADE.
Transportation Worst Feature—The
Railroads Unable t Handle Busi-
ness Coming to Them.
R. H. Dun & Co.s Weekly Review
of Trade says: Settlement of the coal
strike removes the only serious hand-
icap to industrial progress. Five
months of restricted fuel production
had begun to check the wheels at
many manufacturing centers. Trans-
portation is now the worst feature and
threatens to continue disturbing.
While the grain crops are being moved
the suppy of rolling stock and motive
power will prove insufficient, athough
every eifort is made at the shops, lib-
eral premiums being offered for early
delivery. That the railways are well
occupied is evidenced by earnings for
the first week of October, 3.5 per cent.
larger than last year and 10.9 per cent.
above 1900. Inadequate supplies of fuel
caused further banking of furnaces,
but the effect of a decreased output of
domestic: pig iron has been partially
abroad. Practically no price can be
named for immediate delivery of homes
iron, and there is no dispgsition to
make concessions on distant contracts
owing to the abnormal coke situation.
Fortunately there has been little inter-
ruption at finishing mills, and the out-
put of rails, structural material and
kindred lines well maintained. Con-
sumers not only find difficulty in se-
curing steel from the mills,but encoun-
ter further delay on the railways
which are unable to handle freight
promptly. Orders come forward freely
for the heavier lines, numerous con-
tracts being offered for steel rails for
next year’s delivery, and the plans for
building and bridges keep a lot of
business in sight in beams, channels
and angles. Plates for ship yards are
also sought freely, prices tending up-
wards on tank steel. Higher freight
rates have checked imports of finished
steel. Footwear shops are actively
engaged, many producers having added
to their long lists of orders, and while
practically all the New England manu-
facturers are assured full time to the
end of the year, they are also taking
orders for deliveries in March. Lea her
is slightly weaker owing to the sharp
fall in hides which has been acecentu-
ated by the poorer quality now coming
on the market. In cotton goods the
feature was a purchase of about 250.
000 pieces of print cloths. While quo-
tations were not altered the tone be-
came decidedly firmer. In other divis-
lons of the market buyers are only
interested in meeting current . de-
mands, future requirements being held
back by evidences .of weakness in the
raw material. Failures for the week
numbered 206 in the United States
against 229 last year and 24 in Cana-
da compared with 31.
Bradstreet’s says: ‘Wheat, includ-
ing’ flour, exports for the week end-
ing October 16 aggregate 5,240,688
bushels, against 5,645,779 last week,
5,636,073 in this week last year and
3,796,643 in 1900. Wheat exports since
July 1 aggregate 78,371,180 bushels,
against 95,103,917 last season and
55,302,165 in 1900. Corn exports ag-
gregate 180,674 bushels, against 180 -
358 last week, 640,033. last Year and
2,886,993 in 1900,
WHITE HOUSE CANES.
Call for Souvenirs That Cannot Be
Complied With.
Colonel William H. Crook, the vet-
eran disbursing officer of the White
House, sometime ago arranged to give
a few canes of historic value to his
friends. When the interior of the
Executive Mansion was being. torn to
pieces by the contractors who are re-
modeling the building, Colonel Crook
obtained some of the flooring in the
room used for so many years by pres-
idents. He was especially careful in
selecting portions of the flooring over
which Lincoin had walked, sat and
done business in the trying days of
the country’s history. No man in
Washington knew better the habits
of President Lincoln around his office
than Colonel Crook, whose first work
at the White House was as bodyguard
for the great war executive. Many a
day and night Colonel Crook, who was
then a policeman on the city police
force, remained with and near to Pres-
ident Lincoln. His mind is full of
reminiscences of just how the famous
President worked, what kind of a desk
he used, how he handled himself, and
other details of personal interest. On
obtaining the flooring from the par-
ticular spot he had selected Colonel
Crook sent the timber to a wood work-
man and had a dozen or so canes made
for presentation to his friends, who
appreciated most highly the gifts be-
cause they were confident of their
historic value. Mention of the canes
was made in the Washington Star,
with the consequence that during the
last two months Colonel Crook has
been unable to meet the demand, and
he has been kept busy with a gratui-
tous correspondence. Several female
organizations of a benevolent and
charitable nature in Washington have
gathered hundreds of pieces of timber
and almost every article from the
wreck of the interior of the White
House, and propose to convert them
into small souvenirs to be sold here
and elsewhere, the proceeds to be
used by the organizations in their
work. The relic hunting at leagth in-
terferred so seriously that visitors to
the grounds had to bg shut out, and
the few who were admitted got in by
a card from the superintendent in
charge.
Quaint Uses of Common Words.
Crowd yas the old English name for
fiddle or violin. Good-by is a con-
traction of “God-be-with-you.”” Fash-
ion was the old name for a certain
disease of the horse. It is alluded to
in “The Taming of the Shrew,” where
Petruchio’s horse is said to be “in-
fected with the fashions.” The com-
plaint is a common one now, but not
among horses.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any cage of Catarrh that cannct be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CagxExY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
Jrrlecily honorable in all business transac-
ions and financially able to carry out any
obligation made by their firm. .
West & Trusx Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Warping, KiNNAN & MArviN, Wholesale
» _ Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
© Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act-
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, T5c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. iu
“ "An: ostrich lives about thirty years, and
the average annual yield of a bird in cap-
tivity is i two pounds to four pounds
of feathers. ry .
FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous-
nessafter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
NerveRestorer. $2trial bottle and treatisefreo
Dr.R. H. Kriyg, Ltd., 031 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa.
The cook can generally be depended upon
to stir things up.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething soften the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion,allays pain cures wind colic. 25¢..a bottle
American machinery, tools and sewing
machines are used all over the world.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W.
BAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900.
The experience that makes a man poor-
er should also make him wiser.
Money refunded for each package of
PurNaMm FaperLess Dyes if unsatisfac-
tory.
Repentance is too often embodied in the
words: “What will people think?”
Victoria's Boundary. A
Professor Gregory, of the University
of Melbourne, is delivering a series of
lectures on the “Geography of Vie-
toria.” In one of them he gave an in-
stance of the happy-go-lucky fashion
in which business was conducted in
Downiag street in the olden days. Halt
a century ago, wien the Port Phillip
Province was detached from New
South Wales and erected into a new
colony under the name of Victoria,
it was the intention of the imperial
government of the day that the River
Murrumbidgee should be the North-
ern boundary. But the clerk in the
Colonial office who copied out the en-
abling document, never having heard
of the river with the long aboriginal
name, and being uncertain as to its
proper -spelling, coolly substituted
the River Murray in its stead. No-
body noticed the change, but it made
a vast difference to the new colony.
Victoria would have been twice its
present size if the original arrange-
ment had been adhered to, and would
have included the valuable pastoral
provinces known as Riverina, which
stretches from the Murray to the Mur-
rumbidgee. Although Melbourne, the
Victorian capital, has always done
most of the trade with Riverina, the
district continues to be officially ruled
from Sydney.
Mysophobia.
The medical profession has con-
ferred no small boon on many suffer-
ers by inventing a Greek, or pseudo-
Greek, term for their otherwise demo-
cratic complaints. The last of these
inventiong is recorded this week. The
disease lig; fussiness and the medical
name is mysophobia. The mysophobe
is he who, when seated by his table,
lifts his glass to see if it is fingered
and if he detect a smudge uses his
napkin to dispose of it. In short, my-
sophobia is the exaggeration of that
respect for cleanliness which con-
vinced Svengali of the, madness of En-
glishmen when he surprised the Laird
in his matutinal tub. The lady in the
play who seized on every one’s watch-
chain and began rubbing it with cha-
mos leather was a mysophobe, and the
irritating man who begs your pardon
and picks some miscroscopic piece of
fluff from your sleeve is another. The
servant, though most would benefit by
inoculation with the disease, who in-
sists on dusting papers is another, and
\he diseaSe is widely prevalent among
all housekeepers in the spring. It is
nice to know at last just what to call
it, but the medical press is more in-
clined to suggest scientific names than
remedies.
SCIENCE BAFFLED THE BURGLAR.
A Cyclometer Was the Means of
Bringing Him to Justice.
Science -sometimes baffles the bur
glar. whose knowledge is not strictly
up-to-date. = A thief who broke into a
house the other day leisurely packed
. Az PU 2
his plunder in a compact bundle, then
added a, bicycle to the stolen articles
and rode off. So far he had exhibited
commendable - common sense, for it
isn’t every. thief who is clever enough
to steal the means of transporting his
stealings to his own lair. But he had
overlooked the fact that attached to
the wheel was. a cyclometer which rez-
istered the exact. distance ridden by
the thief ‘on his journey home. When
pursuing justice caug up with the
burglar Le had disposed of all his plun-
der except the wheel. The little cy-
clometer’s record of distance traveled
proved the case against the thief, for it
registered the exact distance from the
house to the thief’s quarters.
Glaciers Getting Smaller.
In Switzerland the studies of many
years have determined the fact finally
that the glaciers are not only steadily
receding;but that their rate of reces-
sion is; becoming greater each year.
There are only a few glaciers that stiil
grow. The Boveyre glacier in Canton
‘Wallis is the cnly one that has in-
creased steadily since 1822. The fa-
mous Rhone glacier has receded al-
most 800 yards since 1876.
American citizens of Polish birth
and extraction are interesting them-
selves in the project for the election in
Vashington of a statue of Count Casi-
mir Pulaski, the intrepid Lithuanian
who served with distinction in the Rev-
olutionary war.
WwW
“Why
Syrup of Figs
5
the best family laxative
It is pure.
It is gentle.
It is pleasant.
It is efficacious.
It is not expensive.
It is good for children.
It is excellent for ladies.
It is convenient for business men.
It is perfectly safe under all circumstances.
It is used by millions of families the world over.
produces.
It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians.
1 If you use it you have the best laxative the world
GONGRESSMAN
WILBER SAYS
(To The Pe-ru-na Medicine Co., of Columbus, 0.)
Congressman D. F. Wilber, of Oneont
a, N
Eo ph PR ER \;
8 DF WILBER $
EFRON i YOR (3
. Y., writes:
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio:
Gentlemen—‘‘Persuaded by a friend I have tried your remedy and
IT have almost Tully recovered after the use of a few bottles.
I am fully
convinced that Peruna is all you claim for it, and 1 cheerfully recom-
mend your medicine to all who are afflicted with catarrhal trouble,’
Pe-ru-na a Preventive and Cure for Colds.
Mr. C. FP. Given, Sussex, N. B., Vice-
President of the Pastime Boating Club,
writes: / .
“Whenever the cold weather sets in I
have for years past been very sure to catch
a severe cold, which was hard to throw
off, and which would leave after-effects
on my constitution the most of the win-
ter.
“Last winter I was advised to try Pe-
runa, and within five days the cold was
broken up, and in five days more I was a
well man. I recommended it to several of
my friends, and all speak the highest praise
for it. There is nothing like Peruna
for catarrhal afflictions. It is well
nigh infallible as a cure, and 1
gladly endorse it.”’--C. F, Given.
A Prominent Singer Saved From Loss of
Voi
Mr. Julian Weisslitz, 175 Seneca street,
Buffalo, N. Y,,.is corresponding secretary
of The Sangerlust, of New York; is the
leading second bass of the Sangerlust, the
David F. Wilber.
largest German singing society of New
York, and also the oldest.
In 1899 The Sangerlust celebrated its
fiftieth anniversary with a large celebra-
tion in New York City. The following is
his testimony:
“About two years ago I caught a severe
cold while traveling, and which settled
into catarrah of the bronchial tubes, and
so affected my voice that I was obliged
to cancel my engagements. In distress I
was advised to try Peruna, and although I
had never used a patent medicine before
I sent for a bottle.
“Words but illy describe my surprise to
find that within a few days I was greatly
relieved, and within three weeks I was en-
tirely recovered. I am never without it
now, and take an occasional dose when I
feel run down.”—Julian Weisslitz.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfac-
tory results from the use of Peruna write
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state-
ment of your case and he will be pleased
to give you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
ALABASTINE
The Only Durable Wall Coating
Wall Paper is unsanitary. Kalsomines are tem-
y, rot, rub off and scale. ALABASTINE isa
pure, permanent and artistic wall coating, ready
for the brush by mixing in cold water. For sale
by paint dealers everywhere. BUY IN PACKAGES
a8 BEWARE OF WORTHLESS IHITATIONS.
ALABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich.
25e. 500. lid h ayy 3 Fh
Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk,
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
“something just as good.”
02.
P. N. U. 43,
Off Reape !
GURES WHERE ALL ELSE
§ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes
n time. Sola by drugg
1% INVESTMENT
The Preferred Stock of the
W. L. Douglas Shee
Co.
Capital Stock, $2,000,008.
$1,000,000 Preferred Stock.
$1,000,060 Common Stock.
Shares, S1 OO each, Soldat Par,
Only Preferred Stock offered for s-le.
. L. Douglas retains all Common Stock.
The Preferred Stock of the W. L. Donglas Shoe Comi-
any pays better than Savings B s or Governm€n
ae Every dollar of stock ¢ public has
behind it lay’s
WC 10
€.
year in the
the busines
1¢ na
TE A
BHAA a pir) [er ay 7 J
dividend on the preferred stock of '$1.005.000. J
The annual business now Is $5.500 000, it is increasing
BY; idly, and will equal $7.0:0 00,0 for the year 1508,
tory is now turning out 7 s of shoes per
addition te the plant is being built which
se the capacit 0 pairs per day.
eierred Siock for sale
=
v to 10
ng the
3S,
great busine
Hed che
tyable to W. 1. I
your town, send mon
© MONey orders.
by express or
post offi
Prospectus giving tall information yut this great
and protitabie business sent npon app tion. Address
iW. L. DOUG LAS, Brockion, Mass.
DR O = SY NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick ralie’ and cares worst
cases. Book of testimeniais and 10 days’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S30NS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga.
¥f afflicted with
weak eyes, use Thompson’s Eye Watar
Because
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Its component parts are all wholesome.
It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects.
It is wholly free from objectionable substances.
It contains the laxative principles of plants.
It contains the carminative principles of plants.
It contains wholesome aromatic
agreeable and refreshing to the taste.
All are pure.
All are delicately blended.
All are skillfully and scientifically compounded.
Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to
the orginality and simplicity of the combination.
To get its beneficial effects — buy the genuine.
Manufactured by
ALIFORNIA fis Sviee ©
San Francisco. Cal.
Louisville, Ky. New York, N. Y.
FOP SALE BY ALL LEADING DREUGGISTS.
liquids which are