The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, February 02, 1905, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ST,
'UNDED.
nd Peace
Is Im-
burg cor-
OWS:
. and no
parts to-
the auto-
mechani-
which,
> people.
1e entire
mination
xe which
e. The
use and
over to
5 that in
but one
Trepoff,
of Keiff,
f the in-
ent says,
racy has
Russian
sts have
ortresses
urg cor-
ort that
0 to the
~ circula-
tt Grand
ssinated.
1, merely
's where-
OVEN.
/erdict in
th Kill-
first de-
1 against
yurndale,
ial since
ss Mabel
r's home
it March.
the State
penalty.
e finding
1+ Tucker
foreman
led from
street to
condition
d in his
r stimu-
sician.
> mother
the an-
on’s fate
ight. At
counsel-
he court-
d for the
news she
BATTLE.
ead and
<en
bed near
ment of
100 arm-
cadership
cked the
Malabon,
Tuesday
en killed
There
nong the
wevere
n the la-
and two
hese, to-
women
the la-
ooted the
) and 25
he rebels
Ary ani-
1 confus-
eft.
Pa., sen-
ne to 10
Western
pleaded
gars and
3 grocery
tel Wav-
ON.
Buffalo,
Prop-
nage
ly yester-
Buffalo,
road sta-
g county,
the main
nch from
‘hich had
‘orm, was
te, which
1e basket
er of the
iscovered
it of the
1ished af-
ed. It dis
who left
tion with
the com-
short dis-
5, son of
enn., cap-
killed his
ation.
inventor,
m a sur
Tuesday
ehind his
r trouble
tion was
2clared it
r. Edison
in good
ey expect
# thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pink-
Copperas for Fertilizer.
Experiments made in Belgium indi-
cate that copperas benefits crops like
oats and other grains, while weeds
are destroyed. This shows 'remark-
able discrimination by the sulphuric
acid and the iron if it Is true.
FITS permanently cured. No {its or nervous-
ness after first day’ s use of Dr. Kline's Great
NerveRestorer,32trial bottleand treatise free
Dr.R.H. Kurxe, Ltd. 981 ArchSt., Phila., Pa.
There are sixty fot shans in Berlin in
which horseflesh is sold
Many School Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s
Home, New York, break up co’ds in 24hours,
cure Feverishn ss, Constination, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and -Destrov
orms. Atalldraegists. 25c. Kamp'e mailed
Frere. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Lo Roy, N.Y.
Barrie has received more than $250,0C0
from his pla vs
A Guaranteed Curd For Piles.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles. ruggists will reiund money it Pazo
Ointment fails to cure in 8 to'14 days. 30c.
There are 298 miles of railway in the
Congo Free State.
H.B. Gries s Sos, of Atlanta, Ga., ara
the only successful Dropsy Sv ‘ecialists in the
world. = See their liberal offer in advertise-
went in another column ¢ of this paver.
Fifty-two bill
the London Ol
ion dollars passed through
3 last year.
| Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sy. rub for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion, alloys in, cures wind colic, 25¢c.a bottle
Singie eyeglassesr are prohi hited in the
German Armv
Home-Niade Boxes.
Covering boxes with chintz and
French cottons is the fancy work of
the day. These are used for gifts
and much ingenuity is shown in them.
The smooth surfaced box is bought
from the factory and covered with
stitches and glue. Some people pre-
fer starch paste to any other method.
The dainty woman has anywhere
from two of twelve of these in her
living room. They hold everything,
veils, gloves, ribbons, visiting cards,
invitations, amatuer photographs and
manicure implements.
The exports of palm seeds from
the Netherlands amounted to 50,452,-
600 pounds, 52,498,600 pounds and 57,-
043,800 pounds in 1901, 1902 and 1903,
respectively.
Former “President Steyn, who is
now in Paris, is still paralyzed in the
hands and cannot keep his eyes open
Jone without pain.
WOMEN'S NEGLECT
SUFFERING THE SUREPENALTY
Health Thus Lost Is os Is Raztored by Lydia |
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
How many women do you know who
are perfectly well and strong? We
hear every day the same story over and
over again. ‘‘I do notfeel well; I am
80 tired all the time!”
More than lilkzely you speak the same
words vourself, and no doubt you feel
far from well. The cause may be easily
traced to some derangement of the fe--
male organs which manifests itself in
depression of spirits, reluctance to go
anywhere or do anything, backache,
bearing-down pains, flatulency, nerv=
ousness, sleeplessness, leucorrheea.
These symptoms are but warnings
that there is danger ahead, and unless
heeded a life of suffering or a serious |
operation is the inevitable result.
The never-failing remedy for all these
symptoms is Lydia 8. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound.
Miss Kate McDonald, of Woodbridge,
N J., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :
“1 think that a woman naturally dislikes to
make her troubles known to the public, but
restored health has meant so much to me that
I cannot help from telling mine for the sake
‘of other suffering women.
. “For a long time 1 suffered untold agony
‘with a uterine trouble and irregularities,
.which made me a physical wreck. and no one
‘ham’s Végétable Compound has entirely
{cured me, and niade me well and strcng, and
T feel it my du? to tell other suffering women
what a splendid medicine it is.”
If you are ill, don’t hesitate to get a
bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound at once, and write to
Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for special
advice—it is free and always helpful.
National Oats
Greatest oat of the century.
Yielded in oa 187, in Mist
in Mo. 255, and in 'N. Dako
3H) hus, per acre.
You can beat that recordin 1A,
re msil yon free Tots of farm seed
amples and our biz gatalog, tell-
ior about this oA nde: and §
ousands of other seeds.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED co. &
Sit Go
| down,
! his coffee cup he’ remarked,
SDET SOILS OSD 20d [Hee 040 |
4 TAKE CARE OF YOUR HAIR BY USING -
Promotes the growth. Restores its
Natural color.- Prevents .the falling.
Frees from dandruff Used fifty years.
Sold by all druggists. £1.60.
WM. C. MONTGOMERY CO.
535 N. 8th Strezt, ° Fhliadelphia, Pa- 2
COvO+ Cv O+O+0 *OeL0Oe0e
g MONTGOMERY'S HAIR RESTCRER. Q |
©
<°
OO P S NEW DISCOVERY; sive
D R quickrelief and cures worst
Send for book of testi monials a dd 10 days’
ash Free. Dr. B. HE. CREEK'S BONS. Atlanta, Ga
. fee was harmful.
{
|
|
ie “Ogle day
Bottling the Food.
The early people had an abundance
of one kind of food of which we can
certainly deprive ourselves—air—and
this lack is the cause of much, if not
of most, of our ill health. The early
people had to work—and often work
hard-——for their food, and hence did
not often get too much of it. We have
food set before us in such abundance
and variety that we overeat without
knowing it. This causes so many of
the illnesses from which modern man
suffers ‘that, barring accidents, it may
be said that if we are ill or ill temper-
ed it is likely to be our food which
is at fault in some of the many ways
we have indicated. Every day of our
short life should count for something,
and to lose it because one ate the
wrong foed is foolish waste. The
chief object of the thorough mastica-
tion of the food and its treatment with
saliva in the mouth is to protect the
stocmach from overwork. The thoro-
ughness with which the stomach pre-
pares the focd for the final act of
digestion, intestinal absorption, de-
pends upon the amount given it to do.
It would seem as if man might learn
this lesson rapidly, but the fact is
that the average human being bolts
his food and washes it -down regard-
less of all physiological law.
A Second Wesley.
Cardiff, South Wales, hag published
abroad the tales of a new evangelist,
Evans Roberts by name, who, from a
common collier, has suddenly leaped
into fame as almost a second Wesley.
He draws vast throngs to hear him.
To Care a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money it it fails to cure.
. W. Grove’s signature is is s on box. 25e.
. There are 252.436 miles of ocean ‘cable
in operation to-day.
JamsurePiso’sSurs forConsumntionsave 1
my life three years ago.—Mgs. THoMAS Ros-
EINs, Maple St., Norwieh, XE Feb. 17,190)
Seven of the greatest mountains have
never been climbed.
Ancestral Breakfasts.
According to the Oxford Dictionary,
1463 is the date of the earliest men-
tion of breakfast, but until a century
ago it consisted of a draught of ale
or tea or chocolate, says the Chicago
News. There were only two meals
a day—dinner, ranging from 9 o’clock
in the morning in the Fifteenth cen-
tury to noon in the Seventeenth, and
supper, which similarly advanced from
5 o'clock in the afternoon to 7 o’clock.
Pepys, for instance, went dewn to the
| admiralty at 4 or 5 o'clock in the
morning on no other bréakfast than
half a pint of wine or a dram of cor-
dial. But in the Eighteenth century
dinner was gradually postponed until
5 or 6 o'clock in the afternoon. When
it passed midday breakfast became
a necessity and a meal. Before this
hunger had demanded the addition of
bread and some such relish as radishes
to the morning draught.
But when, 100 years ago, cold meats
and fish began to be served at break-
fast the utmost surprise was express-
ed. Its novelty made it fashionable
and led to the giving of breakfast
parties, of which Mr. Gladstone's
were ‘the last. Eleven or 12 o’clock
was the hour, and it was declared to
be par excellence the meal for poets.
Tom Moore was an inveterate break-
faster, and after the trencher work
sang for the company’s entertainment.
Breakfast finally became an institu-
tion as a necessary oasis in the long
stretch between supper overnight and
dinner the next afternoon. This ap-
pearance of breakfast a century ago
thus made England fer the first time
a three-meals-a-day nation.
A FELLOW FEELING.
She Felt Lenient Towards
Drunkard.
A great deal depends on the point of
view. A good temperance woman was
led, .in a very peculiar way, to revise
her somewhat harsh judgment of the
. poor devil who cannot resist his cups,
and she is now the more charitable.
She writes:
“For many years I was a great suf-
ferer from asthma.
got so poor that I found I could not lie
but walked the floor whilst oth-
ers slept. I got so nervous I could not
rest anywhere,
“Specialists told me I must give up
the use of coffec—the main thing that
I always thought gave me some relief.
I consulted our family physician, and
he, being a coffee fiend himself, told
me to pay no attention to their advice.
Coffee had such a charm for me that
in passing a restaurant and getting a
Why the
whiff of the fragrance I could not re-
sist a cup. 1 felt very lenient toward
the drunkard who could not pass the
saloon. Friends often urged me to try
Postum, but I turned a deaf ear, say-
ing ‘That may do for people to whom
coffee is harmful, but not for me—cof-
fee and I will never part.’
“At last, however, I bought a pack-
‘age of Postum, although I was sure I
| could not drink it. I prepared it as di-
rected, and served it for breakfast.
Well, bitter as I-was against it, I must
say that never before had I tasted a
more delicious cup- of coffee! From
that day to this (more than 2 years) I
ave never had a desire for the old cof-
$e . My healtlr* soot returned; . the
asthifia disappearesl began to Breen
wen ¥ana in a short-time I gained 20
‘pounds in weight. : Sg
I handed my
the fiblets he had pre¥cribed for me,
telling him I had po use for them. He
stayed for dinner: Whén I passed him
‘I am glad
%o see you were sensible: enbugh not
“%o let yourself be persuaded ; that cof-
This.is the best cup
| of coffee I ever drank,’ he continued;
| ‘the trouble is so few people know how
to make good coffee.’ When he got
his: second cup I teld him he was
drinking Postum.. He was incredu-
lous, but I eonvinléed him. and now he
uses nething-but Postum in bis home,
and has greatly improved in health.”
Battle
Name given by Postum Co,
Creek, Mich.
Look in each package for the famous i
little book, “The Road to Wellville.”
Finally my health ~
‘place the shoes,
phy sician.:
Sauce for Croquettes.
Put one cup of sugar with one cup
of water and cook five minutes, add
vanilla flavoring to the taste and it is
ready to use hot.
Whole Wheat Muffins.
Sift ore cun of whole wheat flour,
one cup of white flour, one-quarter cup
of sugar, one-half level teaspoon of
salt and four level teaspoons of bak-
ing nowder together twice. Mix one
cup of milk, one beaten egg and one
tablespoon cf melted butter. Beat for
three minutes, then fill muffin pans
two-thirds full after heating and but-
tering them. Bake about twenty-five
minutes.
Pearl Cake.
Cream one cup of butter and beat
two cups of fine granulated sugar into
the butter; add one cup of milk, one
cup of corn-starch and two cups of
flour sifted with three level teaspoons
of baking powder. Add last the whites
of six eggs beaten stiff and a little
rose flavoring. Bake in small cakes,
cover with a white icing and orna-
ment with small candles; or bake in a
large sheet and ice, then mark off into
squares and cover each alternately,
like a checker-board, with little pink
and white candies.
Rice Croquettes.
Cook one cup of rice in plenty of
salted water for half an hour, or less
time if the rice becomes tender. Drain
in a colander cool and shape in cones
or cylinders, after adding the beaten
volk of one egg. Roll each croquette
in an egg beaten with a tablespoon
of water, and then in sifted cracker
crumbs. Put two or three croquettes
in a frying basket and fry quickly in
deep hot fat, which should be smok-
ing hot, as .the mixture has been pre-
viously cooked and only needs heating
through and browning. Drain and
serve with a sweet sauce.
Plain Frozen Pudding.
Put three sticks of cinnamon, two
blades of mace and one and one-quar-
ter pounds of the choicest raisins,
seeded, into six cups of milk and sim-
mer fifteen minutes. Keen the pan
well covered. Beat the yolks of: five
eggs a long time, or until light colored
add one and one-quarter cups of pow-
dered sugar and beat light. Strain
the spice and raisins from the milk
and put the milk back in the sauce-
pan, stir in the eggs and ‘sugar and
cook a minute, then cool. Add the
raisins, a quarter, of a pound of
blanched almonds, beaten to a pow-
der, a few drops of rose flavoring, one-
half pound of citron and a few bits of
preserved ginger, all cut fine. Now
add a quart of thick cream, stir well
and freeze like ice cream. This
makes a large quantity and the rule
may be halved for a small dinner.
Helpful Hints,
All green vegetables keep their col-
or better if boiled | rapidly and left
uncovered.
Whole cloves will more effectually
exterminate moths than either cam-
phor, tobacco or cedar shavings.
When milk is spilled on a woolen
dress or coat, at once apply absorbent
cotton. All traces of the stain will
be removed,
When cooking anything with milk,
and you require to add salt, do not
put it in till the very last, or it fill
curdle the milk.
Cane seats mayv be easily tightened
by. the use of hot water. Turn the
chair upside down and wash the cane
with very hot water, using a brush. If
the cane needs cleaning use soap and
dry in the open air away from the di-
rect rays of the sun. *
Watercress must be very thorough-
It is an ex-
ly and carefully washed.
cellent blood purifier.
Brass hooks and éyes should be
used for washing dresses and blouses,
They leave no iron marks in the wash-
ing.
Bites of insects will be greatly re-
lieved by touching the spot with a
drop of ammonia. This" neutralizes
the poison and consequently soothes
the pain.
Eggshell crushed in little bits and
shaken well in decanters, water bot-
tles, etc., three parts filled with water,
not only cleans them, but makes the
glass look like new.
The proper way to dry shoes is to
soles upward, near
enough, but not too near, to the fire
to dry slowly and properly, but not
to steam during the process. The
soles should always be turned upward,
even when the shoes are only slightly
wet, for this way enables the air to
Teach the wettest part of the leather
first. !
New print dresses should be well
soaked in cold water to remove all
the “dressing” before washing in hot
water and soap. Do not boil them,
and do, not use soda. . Rinse in pale
blue ‘water.
When packing closets or trunks pre-
paratory to an absence, have a long
shéét of papér dnd a pencil by your
side, and on this write alphabetically,
or under ‘some classification, the
names of the articles in the trunk or
cupboard the sheet refers to. .It is ob-
vious what a. help this will be in.the
‘case of anything being wanted sud-
denly.
a. carload. of Indian
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
BLIZZARD HITS TRADE.
So Does the Russian Ruction, but
Confidence Remains Unabated.
R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of
Trade says: Storms at home and
complications abroad tended to check
activity in commercial and financial
markets, but most industrial lines
continue busy, testifying to confi-
dence that trade interruptioa will be
brief. Prior to the bad weather
there was a liberal distribution of
merchandise at steady prices, but
subsequently a sharp advance occur-
red in retail prices of food products,
owing to restricted receipts at points
of heavy consumption.
Country merchants at the South
have large stocks that move slowly
because of the decline in cotton, and
collections are slow.
New England manufacturing plants
are well engaged, especially in ma-
chinery, jewelry and textiles; but
buvers have left the Boston footwear
market without placing contracts, ow-
ing to disagreement as to prices.
Foreign commerce at this port for
the last week shows a gain of $772,
924 in imports and a loss of $1,690,
177 in exports, as compared with the
same time in 1904. Railway earnings
in January were only four-tenths of
1 per cent larger than last year.
Production of pig iron continues at
the maximum rate, yet there is no
evidence of a reaction. Connellsville
production of coke remains at the
large percentage, but traffie is now de-
layed and may cause a decrease. Tin-
plate mills are fully engaged. Even
steel rails are beginning to feel the
effect of expanding confidence, sever-
al large contracts increasing the
amount of business on ‘the books to
about 1,000,000 tons. Railway bridges
will take a large tonnage of structur-
al steel, and extensive building opera-
tions are about to begin, so that this
division of the industry is in a fairly
encouraging position. Pipe mills are
assured of full activity for some time
to come, and preparations are being
made for a very large trade in agri-
cultural implements. Machinery
houses also are in better condition,
partly because of the resumption at
Fall River. Western markets make
less uniformly favorable returns.
Textile manufacturing conditions
remain practically without alteration.
Much of,the best news comes from
woolen mills, which have large or-
ders on hand. Buyers of cotton
goods in the primary markets con-
tinue to limit their operations to
immediate needs, and in many cases
have deferred business entirely in ex-
pectation of much better terms later
in the season. Uudoubtedly future
conditions in both branches of tex-
tile manufaoture must depend largely
upon the raw materials,
Moderate supplies maintain packer
hides. There is no pressure to pur-
chase in any department, and stocks
of native steers are accumulating
rapidly. All foreign hides are firm
and some grades advanced.
Failures this week numbered 305 in
the United States against 302 last
vear and 43 in Canada compared with
28 a year ago.
MARE TFTITS,
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat— No, 2red
Rye--No. 2..
Corn—Nao, 2 vell ;
No 32°00, ley:
Straight winters.
Hay—~No. 1timothy..
(Clever No. 1
Feed—No
lwhite mid. to
Brown middlings............ 2 0
Bran. bulk ia 20 50
Straw W heat . . fi
O8L.......... via 75)
Dairy Products.
Butter—FElgin creamery............ 30 31
Olio creamery .... dns 19
Fancy country roll 13 11
Cheese—Ohio, new. .... 11 2
New York. new. i... ions it,
Poultry, ® Elec.
Hens—per 1b... . ..... Ls
Chicnens—di essed 14
Turkeys, live....
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio,
Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—New per bu .............. 5 6)
Cubbage—per bbl .... Iw
Onions—per barrel 185
Apples—per barrel hnevasis fe
BALTIMORE.
Flour— Winter Patent ..$355 580
Wheat—No. 218d we
C orn—mixed = 8 66
24 210
euee <5 26
PHILADELPHIA .
Flour—W juter Satans 570
Wreat—No. 2 . 111
Corn=No. nad 59
Oats—No.2 white. ....... 37
Butter—Creamery, extra 26
Eggs—Pennsylvania tirsts... 24 2%
NEW YORK.
Flour—Fatents, 6 50
W heat—No, 2 red... 119
Corn—No. [3
Quts—No, 2 White. 37
Butter—Creamery . - 206
Eggs—.....:.. 08 2 25
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
: attle,
Extra beavy, 1420 10 1606 ibs.... ....
Prine, 1500 to 1400 lbs...
Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs.
Tidy, 105) 10.1150... .; . . .-...
Butcher, 900 to 1100 1ns.
Common 10 fair.
Oxen, common oft. 5 i
Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 350
5000
Milch'éowa, each a... ...... cuss ous 116 2)
Hogs.
Prime heavy hogs.......... pat Da 5. - 500
Prime medium weights. . - 5 5 00
Best heavy yorkers and medium. J 495
)
Good pigs and lightyorkers..
Pigs, commen. Logo
koughs te
Biags.:. Yi... mead BL 3
‘Sheep.
EXtra,medium wetirers
Good to choice
Medinthiv...i. oo .vn0ne
Common to fair.
dyring Lambs
Calves:
Veal, oxtran. ....;. ih. 500 750
Veal, good to choice. . 30d 459
Veal, common heavy 304 37
The Brooklyn institute has, received
specimens from
the ancient town of ~ Zuni, in New
Mexico, collected by Stuart Culin, Who
has just returned fr his second ex-
pedition to the vest.
GOL. BECKWITH SAYS
““] Take Pleasure in
For Coughs
Commending Pe-ru-na
and Golds.”
COL. PAUL E.
LTV LLHLVLVVLLLVVULITTDLLLALTTLLTLLLVLL HLTH VLLLL LD VVVVVVVVVTLRUAVY
Colonel Paul E. Beckwith, Tit. Col.,
from 1503 Vermont avenue, N. W,,
Paul E. Beckwith.
1992922 S
IN FIELD OR BARRACKS
PE-RU-NA IS EFFICACIOUS.
The constant exposure to the elements
experienced in an outdoor life is not so
apt to cause coughs and colds as sedentary
habits.
Those who are brought face to face with
the weather every day in active life are
much less liable to catarrhal diseases than
those who are housed up in illy ventilated
Toons. And vet both
ALL CLASSES of these classes are
more or less subject
ARE SUBJECT TO} +t, nh and Io
CATARRH. tarrhal diseases. The
soldier as well as the
civ ilian finds it frequently necessary to use
’eruna on account of coughs and colds.
No one is exempt. The stron
healthy are less ii than the weak
ill, but none entirely escape.
and
and
Washington, DG,
“From the unqualified endorsement of many of my friends, I take
pleasure in commending your remedies for coughs and colds, ’--
4999999999990 % 499992 VATUTRVVVVVINN
BECKWITH.
>
retired, 1st Reg. Minute Men, in a letter
writes:
p
4
J
“HV
Peruna has always been a great favorite
with the military men, both in the army
and navy.
The strongest kind of testimonials are
received from officers of high rank con-
gerning the virtues of Peruna for all ca-
tarrhal ailments.
Only a small per cent. of these can be
used for publication for want of space.
Mr. Harrison I. Deam, Burnside Post
No. 8. Department of the Potomac, Colonel
Encampment No. 69, Union Veterans’ Le-
gion, dona Green Clay Smith Regiment
No. 17. , Department of the Poto-
mac, Military Order Loyal Legion, De-
partment of Columbia, Major 34th Indiana
Veteran Volunteer Infantry, writes:
“There is no longer any question
asto ihe curative qualities of Peruna
in all catarrhal troubles. Its suc-
cessful use by many of my friends
entitles it to confidence and endorse-
ment,”
CANDY
CATHARTIQ
GUARANTEED CURE : for all bowel rors appendicitis, bilistsriess, bad breath, “bad
blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, E
pains ‘after eatin,
§ regularly you are sick.
, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness.
No matter what ails yu, start taking:
CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels
right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today ander absolute guarantee to cure or
money refunded.
booklet free.
The genuine tablet stamped C CC.
Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York.
Never sold in bulk... Sample and
: 502."
Drinking Less Tea.
Figures published by the
Brokers’ Association of London for
the five months ending October: 31,
this year, show a diminution. in the
consumption of tea in the British Isles
to the extent of 4,000,000 pounds as
compared with the corresponding time
in 1903, an indication of dire pover-
ty.
15 YEARS OF TORTURE
Itching and Painful Sores tod Head
and Body—Cured in Week by Cuticura.
“For fifteen years my scalp.and fore-
head was one mass of scabs, and my body
was covered with sores. Words cannot ex-
press how I suffered from the itching and
pain. I had given up hope when a friend
told me to get Cuticura. After bathing
with Cuticura Soap and applying Cuticura
Ointment for three days, my head was as
clear as ever, and to my surprise and joy,
one cake of soap and one box of ointment
made a complete cure in one week.
(Signed) H. B. Franklin, 717 Washington
St., Allegheny, Pa.”
5 Parkman's demse of Justice.
A friend met Francis Parkman walk-
ing along the street holding two street
boys by their coat collars. In reply to
his friend’s request for an explanation
Parkman said: “I found this boy bad
eaten an apple without dividing with
his little brother. Now I'm going to
buy one for the little boy and make
the big one look on while he eats it.”’—
St. Nicholas.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by localapplications as they cannot reachthe
diseased portion oftheear. Thereis only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by consti-
tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. Whenthis tube is in-
flamed you have a rumblingsound or imper-
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed.
Deafness isthe result. and unless the inflam-
mation can be taken out and this tube re-
stored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten
are caused by catarrh,which isnothingbutan
inflamed condition of the mueous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrn)that can-
notbecured by Hall's Catarrh Care. Send for
circularsfree: F.J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’ s Fami
© con stipation.
has been figuring out the
number of wordS a man utters in a
year and finds the average to be -
800.000.
Some one
Nimeteon planos’ every one of which
was a wedding present, are in the pos-
session of the Prince and Prineess of
Wales,
Tea
“From A cradle lo tio baby chale”
HAVE YOU A BABY?
if so, you aught to have &
“AN IDEAL SELF=-INSTRUCTOR."
Quz PHOENIX Vol Chair
holds the child securely, pre
venting those painful f
bumps which are so frequent a
baby learns to walk.
SBEYTER THAN A NURSE."
e chair is provided with & re-
movable, sanitary cloth seat, which
supports the weight of the child
and prevents bow-l and spinal
troubles; it also has a table attach-
ment which enables baby to find
amusement in its toys, etc., with.
out any attention. ~~
“As indispensable as a cradle.”
It is so constructed that it pre.
vents soiled clothes, sickness irom
drafts and floor germs, and is
recommended by physicians and
endorsed by both mother and baby.
Combines pleasure and utility.
No baby should be without one.
Call at your furniture dealer
and ask to see one.
PETTITTE
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
PHOENIX CHAIR CO.
: SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
6 Can Bony io had o your RAGS Sealefs
SEND STAMP—Get description of 50 cheapess
farms in Ohio. H. N. Bancroft, Jefferson, O.
P. N. UJ. 5. 1905.
Ea Ee St FAN FAIS,
“coR 5 wh
Best Longs gam
Sold b
When your bowelsdon’t move fi.
Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It
starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering.