The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 11, 1904, Image 3

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xecuted
). Law-
nsisted
r. Sem-
nt.
Er -
8 Miss Nettie Blackmore, Mi
neapolis, tells how any young
woman may be permanently
cured of monthly pains by tak-
ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound.
‘“Youna WoMEN:—1 had frequent
headaches of a severe nature, dark
spots before my eyes, and at my men-
strual periods I suffered untold agony.
A member of the ledge advised me to
try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve¢-e-
table Compound, but I only scorned
good advice and felt that my case was
hopeless, but she kept at me until I
bought a bottle and started taking
it. I soon had the best reason in the
world to change my opinion of the
medicine, as each day my health im-
proved, and finally I was entirely with-
out pain at my menstruation periods.
I am most grateful.” — NeTTIE BLACK-
MORE, 28 Central Ave., Minneapolis,-
Minn. — $5000 forfeit if original of above letter
proving genuineness car~iot be produced.
If there is anything about your
case about which you would
like special advice, write freely
to Mrs. Pinkham. She will hold
your letter im strict confidence.
She can surely help you, for no
person in America can speak
from a wider experience in treat=-
ing female ills. She has helped
hundreds of thousands of women
back to health. Her address is
Lynn, Mass. ; her advice is free,
Variable Stars Discovered.
" The researches being carried on up-
on photographs of the two magellanic
clouds have resulted, the Harvard Ob-
servatory announces, in the discovery
of more than one hundred variable
stars in the so-called large cloud. The
two clouds have long been objects of
careful study on account of the ex-
traordinalty physical condition which
prevails in them, but heretofore they
have not been known as regions in
which variable stars are numerous.
The only place on earth where fresh
water is secured from a salty sea is
in the Persian Gulf. here are fresh
water springs in the bottom, from
which divers fill goatskin bags.
¥FrrS permanently cured. No {itsornervous=
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestoror,#2trial bottle and treatise free
The daily mileage of the trains of this
country is 2,750,000.
Cars of the Hair.
Tt is now generally agreed that many
of the shampoos in use are injurious to the
hair. I'he best treatment is frequent
brushing and absolute cleanliness. Wash
the hair in a lather of Ivory Soap and rinse
thoroughly. ILet the last water be cool, as
it closes the pores of the skin and prevents
colds.—ELrANOR R. PARKER.
There is one doctor to every $00 inhab-
itants in Germany.
TamsurePiso'sCure forConsumptionsaved
my lifo three years ago.—Mgs. THoMAs RoB-
xINs, Maplo St., Norwich, N.Y., Keb. 17, 1900
Prussia has 2033 associations of stenog-
raplers, with 51,291 members.
Cascara Bark.
Cascara bark peeling has become an
active industry in the forests of West-
ern Washington, says the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer. The bark is tak-
en from the barberry or chittimwood
trees that grow profusely in the Grays
harbor district. It has a commercial
value of eight cents per pound. An
ordinary tree yields from 50 to 100
pounds of the dried bark. Whole
families are engaged in collecting the
bark and selling to dealers. Some
men make $5 a day at tHe work. En-
tire sections are contracted by Eastern
buyers, and peelers engaged to supply
the bark. There is talk of petitioning
the Legislature to enact laws for pre-
serving the trees, which are more val-
uable than any timber grown in the
native forest. The bark is used for
medicinal purposes. It is estimated
that one pound of dry bark will make
enough liquid extract to sell for $2 at
wholesale.
AN OLD MAN'S TRIBUTE.
4n Ohio Fruit Raiser, 78 Years Ola, Cared
of a Terrible Case After Ten Years of
Suffering.
Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Men-
tor, Ohio, says: “I was cured by Doan’s
Kidney Pills of a severe case of kid-
ney trouble, of
eight or ten
years’ standing.
I suffered the
most severe
backache and
other pains in
the region of the
kidneys. These
were especially
severe when
stooping te lift
anything, and
stten I could hardly straighten my
back. The aching was bad in
the daytime, ‘but Just as bad at
night, and I was always lame in the
morning. I was bothered with rheu-
matic pains and dropsical swelling of
the feet. The urinary passages were
painful, and the secretions were dis-
colored and so free that often I had to
rise at night. I felt tired all day. Half
a box served to relieve me, and three
boxes effected a permanent cure.”
A TRIAL FREE-—Address Foster-
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For saie
by all dealers. Price, 50 cts.
SIDNEY JUSTUS.
A Catnin Tea.
One day sieek Mistress Tabby Cat
Asked in her friends to tea,
And they all came, dressed in their
best,
A goodly company.
With pleasant purrs they took their
-seats,
And tilled the table up,
And then the hostess briskly poured
For each a brimming cup.
The tea was catnip, freshly brewed,
Bright fragrant catnip tea,
Which is a drink excelled by none,
As pussies all agree.
And as they sat and gossiped there,
With many a blink and wink,
Old Towser he came strolling in,
Thinking to get a drink.
All round the room he slowly walked
And sniffed the catnip tea;
And then, disgusted, lert, because
No dognip could he see!
—Wili 8. Gidley, in Little Folks.
Sea Lions Smart Feeders.
Those wno are constantly associ
ated with animals at a zoo see many
comical and interesting sights, and
keepers of such places have many stor-
ies to relate. The sea lions are very
much “smarter” than their appearance
suggests, and while they are always
!interesting, their method of feeding is
one of the most interesting things in
the gardens. The keeper brings to the
edge of the pond a pail of fish, which
average, perhaps, a foot in length, and
flings each one as far out as he can,
when the sea lions, with amazing ra-
pidity, swim to get them. I think that
I have never yet seen a fish strike the
water, as a lion catches it before it
has time, and swallows it head first.—
St. Nicholas.
Dosing a Sick Tiger.
In the Washington (D. C.) zoo is a
very beautiful tiger, said to be the
largest one in captivity. But if he
would only move about as if he felt at
home, and not be so dignified, we
should be better pleased with him;
yet the poor creature is excusable, be-
cause he has dyspepsia, and his suffer-
ings make him cross. One day the
keeper decided to administer a dose
of medicine, so with the bottle and a
whip he climbed to the top of" the
cage. Was that tiger cross? You
would have thought so if you had seen
him throw back his great head and
snap at the whip. The keeper, after
enraging him, poured a little medicine
down the last which he gradually
withdrew, until in its place there was
a tiny medicinal stream, at which the
tiger kept biting and snapping, too
much surprised, it seemed, to distin-
guish between whip and liquid. When
he turned away his head the medicine
was poured over his paws, and when
he had licked them clean that day’s
treatment was completed.—St. Nich-
olas.
Photcgraphing Lightning.
Any boy or girl who has a camera
‘and a good stock of patience may se-
cure a photograph of lightning. The
patience is needed in waiting for the
lightning. When a thunder shower
comes at night, keep a sharp lookout
for an opportunity to secure your pic-
ture. You cannot get a picture of
lightning during every thunder show-
er. Clouds or a heavy downpour of
rain often conceals the flash from
view, and we have ‘sheet lightning.”
It is useless to photograph this, but
you may by its light get an interest-
ing picture of the landscape.
When the sharp “chain-lightning”
comes, select a window from which
| you can see it well, or if it is not
raining, go out of doors and set the
camera on the tripod focused as for a
distant view and pointed toward that
quarter of tne heavens in which the
hghtning is most frequent. The
diaphragm should be set to the largest
opening that is. ever used, the slide
drawn, and the lens uncovered as for
a time exposure. Then follows a wait
of one, two, five or even twenty min-
utes, until a bright flash comes within
the field of view of the camera, when
the lightning takes its own picture.
Then cover the lens, push in the slide
and you are ready to try again on a
fresh plate.—St. Nicholas.
Katrinka.
Kafrinka was the youngest member
of a large family, but her remarkable
beauty had so endeared her to her
mother’s heart that Katrinka’s sisters
and brothers were somewhat neglect-
ed. Katrinka’s curls were of the yel-
lowest gold, her cheeks of the softest
pink and her eyes of the deepest blue.
“I cannot look at Katrinka,” her
mother was once heard to observe,
“without wanting to make her a new
dress.” As a result of this amiable
desire, Katrinka’s wardrobe was aston-
ishing in its extent and splendor.
Katrinka’s frocks were mostly party
frocks, for she very rarely attended
school; but she often appeared at as
many as five balls and receptions in
one day. No amount of sccial dissipa-
tion, however, could dim the beauty
of Katrinka’s complexion nor mar the
modest simplicily of her manner.
Katrinka had for her own use a
closed carriage, a dog-cart, a low phae-
ton, and for winter enjoyment a charm-
ing little red sleigh. These were
made by Katrinka’s mother’s brother.
a very kind and gifted person. In-
deed, had he been less kind and less
gifted, the accident would never have
occurred, and Katrinka might still be
the darling of her mother’s heart.
.where I saw dear little sunburned girls
One June day Katrinka was removed !
from her city home to a pleasant cot- |
tage in the country, where she was to
spend the summer. The prettiest, gay-
est little brook imaginable flowed un-
der a group of willow-trees at the
edge of the lawn, and the first glimpse
of the brook suggested an idea to Ka-
trinka’s mother.
“Bob,” she said to her brother,
“Katrinka ought to have a boat. Can't
you make her one? ’
“All right,” said Bob. “You fix her
up a yachting suit and I'll have a boat
ready for her by the time you're
done.”
Katrinka’s mother returned tc the
house at once and set to work on the
yacating suit. It was made of blue,
with white trimmings, and proved
most becoming to Katrinka. A white
hat with blue streamers set jauntily on
her yellow curls. The boat, a grace-
ful canoe, was ready; Katrinka was
placed on board, and the canoe was
carefully launched.
“Just as Katrinka began to feel the
delight of sailing there was an outcry
from the house. .
“Bob! Bob!” shouted some one.
“Buz has caught a squirrel! Bob!”
Bob hastily moored Katrinka’'s boat
among the rushes at the edge of the
stream, and he and Katrinka’s mother
ran to the rescue of the unfortunate
squirrel. When they returned, fifteen
minutes later, there was no boat to
be seen, nor any trace of Katrinka.
Had the current been too strong? In
vain the heart-broken mother searched
all up and down the banks. Katrinka
had disappeared.
Bob at last pronounced further
search useless, and led his weeping
ster to their mother.
“O mamma,” sobbea Katrinka's
mother, “she was’ the very prettiest
paper doll I ever saw and I can’t bear
to think of her all drowned and wet
and sop-sop-soppry!”’
“Sweetheart,” said mamma, “once I
followed that, little brock ever so far
on its way. It flows through pastures,
picking berries, and then it runs out
beside the road and under a bridge,
where I know children must love to
wade and sail boats. Of course 1
don’t know what has happened to Ka-
trinka, but Bob’s boats don’t overturn
easily, and perhaps Katrinka will just
float quietly down the brook until
some little child sees her and draws
ner ashore to be her own.”
“It’s only a ‘perhaps!’” sighed Ka-
trinka’s mother; but she dried her
eyes and felt a little comforted.
That night, wnen Katrinka’s mother
was being tucked into bed, she began,
“Mamma, Katrinka’s clothes—” and
then she stopped to swallow hard.
“Shall I paint another Katrinka to
fit them, dear,” suggested mamma,
gently, or wouldn't it ever be the same
to you?”
Katrinka's mother shook her head.
“I was thinking, you know,” she said,
“about those little girls who may have
found her. They mightn’t know about
making things for her, and Katrinka
never could live in just a yachting
suit! Do you s’rose Bob would make
another boat, and we could send her
clothes down stream the way Katrinka
went?”
®1’]1 ask Bob,” said mamma: and
Bob came and promised to make the
boat that night.
“I'm sorry about Katrinka,” he said.
“It was all my fault. You pack up her
things early in the morning and we'll
ship them after her before breakfast.”
This time the boat was a very solid-
looking, square-bottomed one. There
was a slender flagstaff at the prow, ard
mamma had fastened to this a pale
blue banner with “Katrinka” outlined
upon it in gold. The fifteen party
frocks, the five street suits, the riding:
habit and the three morning dresses
were packed in an envelope, marked,
“For Katrinka, with her mother’s
love,” and fastened securely into the
boat. :
Then mamma and Bob and Katrin-
ka’s mother carried the boat to the
willows and launched it; and so, with
the blue banner fluttering in the
breeze, Katrinka’s wardrobe sailed
merrily down the stream to find Ka:
trinka—Hannah G. Fernald in Youth's
Companion.
Swarming Bees.
One troublesome incident of bee-
keping is the annual swarming. Some
fine morning in May or June, there is
a great hubbub in the garden, and
the air is literally alive with thou-
sands of flying bees, the hum of which
can be heard a great distance. After
a while the bees gradually settle cn
a bush or branch, and hang there for
several hours. This process is called
“swarming,” and the bees thus hang:
ing are chlled a “swarm.” These
bees are not, as is popularly supposed,
the young bees, but are the old beeg
and old queen, who have left the old
home, as this has become too small
to accommodate its rapidly increas-
ing population. The bees are wise
folk, and, knowing that they whl need
feod for'thej journey, and honey with
which to build combs in their new
home, they have, therefore, gorged
themselves with honey before leav-
ing the hive: and herein lies the sec-
ret why swarming bees are so docdie
and can be so easily handled. A bee
cannot sting without bending the
abdomen; and, at swarming time, the
abdomen so distended with honey:
that the little fellows simply cannot
sting, however much they may wish
to.—Country Life in America.
Like the Original.
“This is my portrait of Miss Peach-
ey,” said De Brush.
“Yes?” replied Miss Chellus, with a
curl of her lip.
“Yes. The face is very natural,
don’t you think?”
“Of course; it’s painted.”—Philadel-
phia Press.
i
FIENGE 10 TRADE REVIEW
SIGNS OF IMPROVEMENT.
Considerably Better Business on Hand
Than Customary at This Season,
Especially in the South.
From almost every quarter of th
country from which the International
Mercantile Agency has received spec-
ial reports this week there are signs
of an improvement in trade, with
quite a considerable better business
on hand than is customary at this
season of the year, and few cancela-
tions as a result of the rather calam-
itous reports that have been sent out
the last few days from the spring
wheat sections in the northwest.
Locally the strike of the .men in the
packing house trade fis of small con-
sequence, while indications in the
west are that it will soon be settled.
In Chicago, Kansas City, Minneapolis
and St. Paul, cities that would nat-
urally be affected by the disturbances,
there is .very little trace of a reac-
tion in trade. it is equally signi
ficant that these same sections should
report a very satisfactory distribu-
tion of merchandise, in view of the es-
timates that have been made of dam-
age by rust to spring wheat.
In some of the countries of North
and South Dakota there has
a material setback, but the damage
figures that have been made up to
help along a big bull speculation in
wheat are being generally discred-
ited.
The best reports are from the
South and Southwest. It is evident
that preparations are being made by
merchants in those sections for an
unprecedented business. Louisville,
St. Louis and Dallas all tell the same
story of a present good demand, with
satisfactory collections and the pros-
pect of a much better busine
raveling men are sending in larger
orders than they have been known
to at this season of the year.
Failures for the week in the United
States are 230, against 220 last week,
231 the preceding week, and: 178 the
corresponding week last year. Fail-
ures in Canada number 18, against 18
last week, 20 the preceding week.
and 19 last year.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flcur and Feed.
R > No.
Corn- No.2 vellow. ear.
No. 2 yellow, shelled.
Mixed ear......
Oats—No, 2white.
No. S''white... 7. .
Floar—Winter patent.
Straight winters
Hay—~No. 1timothy . ......
Clover No. 1
Feed—No white mid.
Brown middlings
Bran. bulk
Straw— Wheat
Cat
ion.......
Dairy Prcducts.
Butter—Flgin creamery... ......... 2 0 2
Ohio creamery ol 7 18
.. Fancy country roll.. 3 H
Cheese—Ohio, new S 9
ew York, new. ..... 8 9
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—neavib........ . ...
Chickens—dressed i
Turkeys, Hve.... ,...... . 2
Eggs—Yu. and Ohio, fresh S18 19
Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—New per Lbl..... .20) 225
Cabbage—per bbl. . .. i160 L773
Onions—per barrei 32 35)
Apples—per barrel S 35) 30
BALTIMORE,
Flour— Winter Patent ...... ero 8490 52)
Wheat—No.” 2 reG...... 87 82
Corn—mixed.... 56 57
EBEB (oily 7 18
Butter— Creamery... ... 19 Pl]
PHILADELPHIA .
Flour—Winter Patent..... ) 535
Wreat—No. 2red..... 88
Corn--No. Zmixed . 55
Outs—No. 2 white......... 48 49
Butter—Creamery, extra. 17 18
Eggs—Pennsylvania tirsts 19 20
5 bg
07
o8
44
18
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Prime heavy, 145010 1606 Ibs......$5 8) 6 00
Prime, 1200 to 1400 Ibs .. ...........
-- D0) 57H
Medium, 1200 10 1300 1bs.. 510 540
Kat heliers.. _.. hier sbusainate 37% 450
Butcher, $00 to 1000 lbs. ........... - 385 450
Common.to fair... .............. 300 370
Oxen, common to fat. ....... vote 200 4 00
Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 350
Milchcows,each.................... 5J1 BOY
Hogs.
Primeheavy hegs.......... ...... $565 570
Prime medium weights. ... ..... H 70 575
Best heavy yorkers and medium... 58) 085
Good pigs and lightyorkers........ 57 5 RO
Pigs, common togood . 48)
Rowphs |." 00 7. es 440
Bags... o.oo 3d 42,
Sheep.
Extra,medinm wethers ............ $450 565
Good to choice..... .... - 425 4 40
ediuIn «aa 850 400
Common to fair...... 25) 3 50
Spring Lambs, ....... .. 400 6 50
Calves.
Vealextra ..i5............ 6 00
Veal, good to choice. ....... 35 4 00
Veal, common heavy
Disease Among Fishes.
The disease which caused the death
of thcusands of menhaden fish in
Narraganset bay two or three weeks
ago has at last been determined by
Professor F. B. Gorham of Brown
University, who has worked on the
case at Woods Hole at the United
States Fish Commission laboratories.
He bas discovered that a germ existed
in the blocd of every fish examined
which caused a disease known as
DOD eve.
The consumption of spirits is on the
decrease in Canada, Holland, Italy,
New Zealand, Norway, Portugal,
sia, Spain, Switzerland and the United
States.
The church is slowly gaining in Eng-
land. Ten years ago the communi-
cants numbered only one in 18 of
the population, now the proportion is
one in 15.
Even the milk dealer is not satisfied
until his sales reach the high-water
mark.
been .
MONTAUK RESISTS DYNAMITE.
Old Monitor le Not Easily Reduced
To Scrap.
Officials at the Navy Department
have been much interested in reports
from Richmond regarding the break-
ing up of the old monitor Montauk,
which was recently sold for scrap-
iron. The difficulty experienced in
tearing the old vessel to pieces is a
revelation in regard to the skill of
shipbuilders even when the metal ship
was in its infancy.”
The iron sides of the Montauk will
go into the melting pot at some
foundry. Dynamite is being used in
the work, but even with this powerful
agent progress is very slow. This
old Civil War monitor was a fore-
runner of the -modern steel battleships.
After seeing service the Montauk
went out of commissien when the war
closed. For many years, with other
monitors, she lay ai’ anchor in the
James river, below > Richmond, but
about five years ago was taken to
League Island Navy Yard. At the out-
break of the war with Spain these
vessels were made ready for service,
‘but ° were never in commis$sion. © Re-
cently the Montauk, with several
other old vessels of the same type,
was condemned and sold at public
auction.
The Greatest Living Orator.
President Eliot is as conspicuous-
ly the foremost American orator of this
generation as Wendell Phillips was of
the last, and Webster of the one pre-
ceding. His pre-eminence marks the
changed temper of tne public, which,
though it may still be spellbound by
revivalists and by political speakers,
nevertheless trusts those who, like
Mr. Eliot, address its reason and not
its emotions. After 25 years all class-
-€3 are more eager than ever to hear
him. His voice alone, so rich, so cul-
tivated, with its ’cello notes, sets him
in a class by himself. At first, you
may miss the purple patches which
you expect the orator to supply, but
on acquaintance you discover that he
has the power to state a fact, which
you thought commonplace or value-
less, so that it shines like a jewel—
as if he picked up a dull.pebble, and
throuzh some hidden virtue in him, it
turned to opal! or ruby in his hand.
He never made a speech which you
could not read the next day or the
next year without wondering what had
evaporated from it since you heard
him speak it.—World's Work.
A Peculiar Accident.
A peculiar accident occurréd on the
Huntington and Broad Top railroad, a
few miles above Cumberland, Md., A
loaded coal train was descending the
long grade below Petersburg when
the axle of a coal car broke, wrecking
it and three other cars. The four
cars jumped the track and went over
an embankment. The rear portion
rejoined the forward portion of the
train at the bottom of the grade, the
automatic couplers joining the train
as if nothing had happened. The crew
was not aware of the accident. Three
miles below three more care were
wrecked. The trackwalker states the
train was coupled together when it
passed him, but the brake rigzing was
dragging and this, it is supposed
caused the second accident.
on
Ruins of City Found.
More than a thousand years ago
there was a great city in Centra! Afri-
ca which was the capital of the em-
pire of the Songhais in the Nigerian
Sudan. The empire of the Songhais
was the largest and most powerful
black empire which ever existed.
Even after the fall of the empire
Kouklya was a very prominent city,
but about one hundred and fifty
years ago it was utterly destroyed by
the Tcuaregs and its -very site -was
forgotten. The Academy of Paris re-
cently sent out a mission to discover
the ruins and they have just been
found by Lieutenant Desplagnes.
about one huvdred miles south - of
Gogo on the banks of the Niger.
While in a carpeted room in a tene-
ment house 75 germs settled on a
three-inch saucer in five minutes, after
sweeping there were 2,700.
Tet POCFRVIDIDPIVPP
| UNITED STATES SENATOR
Used Pe-ru-na For Dyspepsia With
Great Benefit.
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t HORM. M. ©. BUTLER,
’ Ex-United States Senator From South
+ Carolina.
¢
D X-U. 8. Senator M. C. Butler, from
— South Carolina, was Senator from that
State for two terms. In a recent letter
rom Washington, D. C., he says:
“1 can recommend Perunajor dys-
pepsia and stomach trouble. I have
een using your medicine for a short
periodand! fe:l very much relieved,
It is inderd a wonderjul medicine
resides a gnod tonic. ”’--¥. C. Butler,
Peruna is not simply a remedy for dys- |
remedy. Pe-
sepsia. Peruna is a catarr}
‘una cures dj
ily dependent upon ecatarrh of the stom-
spepsia bec it is -gener-
eh.
If you do not derive prompt and satis-
factory results from the use of Peruna
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case, and he will be
pleased to give you his valuable advice”
rratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
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Chickens Earn Money !
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Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to |
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all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man
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25¢]
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SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS.
ee SEEERERINERRIINNIIICRITLLLLAD.
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