The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 04, 1905, Image 3

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A TRAINED NURSE ose i= oe
A PERIL.
Is causin’ very nearly all the trouble that
After Years of Experience, Advises Women in
Regard to Their Health.
Mrs. Martha Pohlman
of 55 Chester Avenue,
Newark, N. J., who is a
graduate Nurse from the
Blockley Training School,
at Philadelphia, and for
six years Chief Clinic
Nurse at the Philadelphia
Hospital, writes the letter
printed below. She has
the advantage of personal
experience, besides her
professional education,
and what she has to sa,
may be absolutely relied
upon.
Many other women are
afflicted as she was. The
can regain health in the
same way. Itis prudent
to heed such advice from
such a source.
Mrs, Pohlman writes:
‘I am firmly persuaded,
after eight years of experience
with Ts E. Pinkham’s
Vi table Compound, that it
is the safest and best medicine
for any suffering woman to
use,
“Immediately after my
[iarriage 1 found that my
health to failme. Ibe-
came weak and pale, with se-
vere bearing-down pains, fear-
ful backaches-and frequent
dizzy spells. The doctors pre-
seri for me, yet I did not
improve. I would bloat after
eating and frequently become
nauseated. I had an acrid discharge and
ains down through my limbs so I could
ardly walk. It tvas as bad a case of female
trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, however,
cured me within four months, Since that
time I have had occasion to recommend it to
& number of patients suffering from all
forms of female difficulties, and I find that
while it is considered unprofessional to rec-
ommend a patent medicine, I can honestly
recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, for I have found that it cures
female ills, where all other medicine fails, It
is a grand medicine for sick women.”
Money cannot buy such testimony as
this—merit alone can produce such re-
sults, and the ablest specialists now
agree that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound is the most univer-
sally successful remedy for all female
diseases known to medicine.
When women are troubled with ir-
we
Worryin' ’bout the weather when experi-
ence will show
That the sunshine’s bound to follow every
case of rain or snow.
Gettin’ the imnression that your own par-
icular brand
Of sorrow is the birgest that is raised in
3 all the land;
Thinking’ ‘t vourself until you find
you're half delirious.
Nearly all the bother comes from’ takin’
hings too serious.
bout
Some folks on a holiday makes labor out o’
Toilin’ an’ J-hurryin’ to get their money's
w :
Never takin’ time for any comfort an’ re-
pose,
An’ maybe gettin’ jealous of some other
person's clo'es :
Makin’ it a custom in their pleasures to be
glum,
An’ clingin’ to their sorrows like they must
enjoy ’em some:
It's time the nation realized it's mighty de-
eterious,
This universal tendency fur takin’ things
too serious.
—Washington Star.
“Is marriage a failure?”
never tell till you've seen the wedding
presents.”—Cleveland Leader.
You can
“My boy,” asked the school teach-
er, “what is the chief end of man?”
“Why, the end his head’s on,” replied
the youngster.—Baltimore Herald.
Her—Why do you prefer hotel food
to my cooking? Him—At a hotel I
can always look at the menu and see
what I'm eating.—Cleveland Leader.
“See that man? Well, sir, he landed
in this country with bare feet and now
he’s got milliébns.” “Gee whiz! he
must be a regular centipede.”’—Phila-
delphia Ledger.
Strayner—My heart goes out instinc-
tively to the cry of distress. Budge—
Well, that’s the cheapest thing you can
let go out; thats some consolation.—
Boston Transcript.
Stubb—Time works changes among
the wealthy as well as the poor. Penn
—I should say so. These days the
chauffeur knows more family secrets
ness, faintness, lassitude, excitability,
irritability, nervousness, sleepless-
ness, melancholy, ‘‘all-gone”’ and
‘‘want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues
and hopelessness, they should remem-
ber there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound at once removes such troubles.
No other female medicine in the
world has received such widespread
and unqualified endorsement. No other
medicine has such a record of cures of
female troubles.
The needless suffering of women from
diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible
to see. The money which they pay to
doctors who-do not help them is an
enormous waste. The pain is cured
and the money is saved by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Ex-
By
FUN and manufacturers are now receiving
regular, suppressed or painful men- | Perience has proved this.
struation, weakness, leucorrhcea, dis- It is well for women who are ill to
placement or ulceration of the womb, | write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass.
that bearing-down feeling, inflamma- | In her great experience, whieh covers
tion of the ovaries, backache, bloat- many years, she has probably had to
ing (or flatulence), general debility, in- | deal with dozens of cases just like
digestion, and nervous prostration. or yours. Her advice is free and confi-
are beset with such symptoms as dizzi- | dential.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail.
Pope-Hartford~Pope Tribune
at Moderate Prices.
Backed by 27 Years of Manufacturing Experience.
6 to 16 H.P. Prices, $500 to $1600
Simple Construction, Luxurious Equipment.
Address Dept. A For Complete Catalogues.
Manufacturing Co.,
HARTFORD, CONN.
Artificial Flowers. Chicken Raising in China.
Fashion Is Responsive Uf weuy - | Cmppe keenest of British poultry
ventions. is is the case witn the Se. ; :
manufacture of artificial flowers, for farmers is, as. Mr. Chamoeriain une
their demand was due to a caprice of | said of himself in another connection,
fashion. In Italy during festival | “a child in these matters” as com-
time it was decreed that flowers pared with the poultry farmers of
should be ‘worn in and out of their | China. A traveler passing through
season, and that their color should | the province of Chekiang a few weeks
be retained. Many plans for solv- gag was struck with the enormous
ing the problem were brought for-|pumper of young chickens carried in
ward, and at last some one hit upon | the farmers’ cart he met in the
the idea of making tliem of various T'int'al country. He made inquiries
materials which would resemple the |p the subject, and ar icngth he was
real fiowers. Later, in the Middle [asked by a poultry farmer to go and
Ages, the artificial so far superseded | jngpect his rearing arrangements.
the natural that both men and women The plant deals with 10,000 eggs at a
decked their heads with imitation time and the average product is 5,000
flowers of cambric, glass, Paper, Wax chicks. The arrangements are sim-
and metal. The most beautiful ar-|ple ang inexpensive, but they include
tificial blossoms are made in Paris, opportunities for the scientific ex-
and their making is one of the chief amination of the eggs in the course
industries of that city.
| of incubation and it is amusing to
a ous. | Bear that where the eggs on examin-
To), None naryon™ [ation througl the testing holes do
Re ertoran SB cumori ha troaica ese | TOF show signs of fertilizgtion at the
Dr. R.H.Kuing, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila, Pa. | end of the fourth day, “they are im-
I mediately discarded to be sold
cheap.’—London Globe.
Pope
Members A. L. A. M.
Hamburg is to have a school for training
servants.
Prefer American Goods.
There has been a Steaay increase in
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrun for ehildren
feethinz, soften the gums, reduc nflamma- |
tion,allayspain,cures wind colie,25c.abottle. | imports ‘into Columbia from the
The crown of a human tooth is covered | United States. The people as a rule
by a brilliant white cap of enamel. | prefer American merchandise, and
= — - when the prices are right and the
Piso’s Cure cannot bs too highly spoken’ | onnq5 gre properly packed, so as to
esa cough cure.—J. W. Olpsrani oo ind | reduce the duty as much as possible,
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Mian, Jan.5,199). | the merchants will buy from Ameri-
can firms.
The Norwegian corps of skaters is a
body of soldiers armed with rifles.
Popular Cars. : Precedence by Avoirdupois.
The PopeHseriond ood Dan An African explorer tells of a tribe
1 ars and runabouts mee De- | 2 :
Hr De of a large class of automobile he met whose members determined
They are simple in construction, | worldly rank according
users. S .C | We ( to avoirdu-
free from complicationand efficient. Prices pois.” The heaviest savage was chief
from $500 to SOM ns finely illustrated {of the tribe the next fattest.was first
catalogues an scripti 8 , -
| lieutenant, and so on. As soon as a
| member gained in weight over the
neighbor next above him in rank, he
dress Dept. A. Pope Manufacturing Co.,
Hartford, Conn.
The yield of cider in 1904 was the advanced one step in authority.
largest ever known in France. 1t Wealth, looks, personal popularity,
was 924,595,000 gallons, which is capacity, were not taken into consid-
double the average product for the eration when determining the stand-
last ten years. 3 ing of members of the tribe.—~House-
than the butler.—Chicago News.
Carrye—What did papa say when
you asked for my hand? Cholly—
From what the ambulance surgeon
told me when I came to he must have
said aplenty.—Pittsburg Dispatch,
Clara—How did you break your hus-
band of stuttering? Grace—Every
time he started it I began to protest
against his smoking. I never failed to
start his flow of language.—Detroit
Free Press.
“Why, yes,” said Miss Pertie Good-
win to her intimate friend, “Harry and
I are going to have a secret wedding.
Not a soul is going to know of it till
after it’s over. Hadn't you heard ?”’—
Chicago Tribune.
She—To think that he should treat
me so! And he told me he loved me
with. his whole heart. He—That was
all right; but you see since then he
has been suffering from heart failure.
—Boston Transcript.
Little Willie—Say, pa, what is the
meaning of ‘Noblesse oblige”? Pa—I
don’t know, my son, unless it has some
: 3 s Ohio creamery...... 2 2
connection with those foreign nobles Fancy country roll. 16 1s
Shiite Qbliged Jo mAlTy for money. | Cl men BL 1
Chicago Daily News. Poultry, Etc.
“I can truthfully say,” remarked a Heng—per Ip...) 000... 0005 14 15
i $* bod Chickens—dressed en 16 18
St. Petersburg official, that no y lg 1 13
ever threw a bomb at me. To what Fruits and Vegetables.
do you attribute this fact?” asked the Apples pts 0 TER , 470
sardonic colleague; “popularity er un- Fotatoss— Fancy whit 5 35
: 3 3 ‘abbage—per ton 20 10
importance ?’—Washington Star. Bri pos taro] Hh
“Those two men talking together
over there are worth a good many BALTIMORE.
millions . between them.” “Which is | Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 460 48)
: : : Wheat—No. 2 ved... .. 0.00000 95 97
the richer!’ “I don’t know, posi- | (oe *2vs ernesse wv 7
tively—but watch the bishop, who's 16 18
going to speak to them.” “Why?” 21 23
“See which one he shakes hands with
first.”—Life,
: Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 550 575
Gunner—I think there should Qe an | (ii mC MT Ren > 0m 0
authorship class connected with ev-| Corn—No. 2 mixed. 5 51
3 Oats—No. 2 white.. 36 37
ery big college, I mean so students Butter—Creamery. ........ 1 ot =
would be enabled to write fiction for | Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. ....... 16 17
money. Guyer—Fiction? Say, did ee
you ever see the letters that students NEW YORK.
write their parents when they need a en 6 59
cneck?—Chicago Daily News. SO Ra [Osesbnensactees sss o 56
“yp i e can’ i ‘ =No. 2 white................5 ? 3
I'm afraid we can't use this Sketch DN une. Cretan ae 24 25
of your life in this campaign,” said the | kere State and Pennsylvania... 17 18
boss to the young candidate. “I'm ———
afraid the publie won't believe you LIVE STOCK.
came from the country?’ “Why not?” me
‘‘Because you don’t say you ever taught Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
school for a term and then came to Cattle.
itv 7.’ —Omaha News. | Extra, 1450 to 1600 vs... 0 326 35 6 50
the city to Study law Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs SLs 6 20 6 35
Business Manager—I'm sorry, young Mean, 1200 Lots ibs fog om
s : : , Y.10530 to 1360... 475 575
man, but I'm afraid you will not serve | gyqiora00 too $8 a
7 ose. licant—DBut, sir, I] Common to fair... . .. S50 875
my harp 2 App Oxen, common to fat ..... . RTD 40)
have nine diplomas and degrees. Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 330
Business Manager—Maybe; but in ac-| Milchcows,each........... ..... ... 1800 4500
quiring them you have evidently been Hogs
I r : 1ythi iseful. {| Prime heavy hogs.................. 555
too busy to learn anything usef I Ee 2%
Good-morning.—Cincinnati Commer- | Best heavy yorkors and medinin.. 555
cial-Tribune Sood pigs and lightyorkers........ 550
. ; cain 1g8, common to good 48)
“But don’t you see, Miss de Muir, Koughs 2 415
argued young Professor McGoozle, | Stags 359
“that you merely beg the question 2x1
3 ; 3 is woe iXtral 0 : 500
when you take that position? 1am Good to choice oe
sure, professor,” protested the young | Medium _.. 4 60
£ x IRs te > Common to fair 4.00
woman, her eyes snapping, “I haven't | Lamps... o Fh)
changed my position a particle since
I sat down here, and I haven't thought | veal, extra... : "00
EE Sal anv os- | Veal, good to choice. ...... 39 4 50
of begging y ou to ask me any ques Ne nice: 130
tion whatever!”—Chicago Tribune.
Mrs. Nayberleigh—Why, what are
you crying about? Mrs. Youngbride
—Well, you know, John is away on
a business trip— Mrs. Nayberleigh
Yes. Mrs.
that he gets out my picture and k-
kisses it every day. Mrs. Navber-
cry about. Mrs, Youngbride—VYes, it
is! Just to play a joke on him, I
Youngbride—He writes | through the various courses she was
not allowed
been promised dessert.
leigh—Well, that’s surely nothing to! turned out to be pie, which she was
not allowed to have.
wedge of it was put upon her plate,
BUSINEES IS BROADENING
Jobbers Experience Good Spring
Trade, Manufacturers Receive
Large Orders for Fall
Shipment.
Trade says: Business broadens in a
ture is the scarcity of labor disputes.
These controversies are usually most
serious trouble is threatened, and one
Jobbers
have experienced a good spring trade,
tivity in the building trades.
large contracts for fall shipment,
while retail sales are of satisfactory
volume, except at a few points whera
inclement wcather has temporarily re-
tarded distribution.
Activity at the interior is evidenced
by the increased transfers thither of
silver dollars and subsidiary silver by
the treasury, crop prospects being
well maintained despite excessive cold
in a few sections. Railway traffic
continues very heavy, earnings for
April thus far exceeding the same per-
iod last year by 10.7 per cent. while
foreig'a commerce at this port for the
last week shows a gain of $3,834,447 in
value of merchandise imported, and an
increase of $1,947,550 in exports as
compared with 1904. Mercantile col-
lections show further improvement
and money remains abundant and
easy.
Current conditions and prospects for
the future are both extremely satis-
factory in the iron and steel industry.
Several new plants have been com-
pleted and others repaired and put in
operation. Two lines of distribution
are particularly overwhelmed with
business—railway equipment and
structural steel.
Textile industries continue to make
encouraging progress. Condition of
cotton. goods in primary markets has
not been depressed by the weakness of
the raw material, the situation ex-
hibiting more inherent strength than
for many seasons. Woolen goods are
quiet, duplicate orders not vet arriv-
ing from clothiers, but quotations are
readily maintained particularly as the
new wool has begun to move without
any depressing effect.
The domestic iron situation shows
little change, but is perhaps a shade
steadier with some producers refus-
ing to fully meet the recent declines.
MARK ETS.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat—-No, 2 red................. $ 108 109
R No.2............ 90 4
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear.,... 52 53
No. 2 yellow, shelled....... 5) 51
Mized ear.................. ve 43 45
Oats—No. 2 white.. 35 33
Nh 3 white 34 35
Flour—Winter patent 5 80 6 09
Fancy straight winters........ 5 45 5 50
Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... 1% 1300
Clover No. 1,........... 127 1800
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton 2000 259
Brown middlings.... 19 57 20 00
Bran, bulk..... 2050 2100
8 raw—Wheat 50 800
Nest ttre raleasansin dunia en 7 50 300
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 30 31
Quid Pro Quo.
A small girl at dinner sat patiently
to eat because
The
she had
dessert
A very small
took my picture out of hig grip when
er’s in its place.—Cleveiand Leader.
keeper.
however, to redeem the promise.
he started, and put one of m-m-moth- | gazed at it a moment, sighed, and said
mournfully:
She
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
R. G. Dun & Co.’s Weekly Review of
wholesale manner, and the most en- | ®
couraging indication regarding the fu-
numerous en May 1, but this year no
beneficent result is the expanding ac-
FAMOUS ATHLETES
PAY GLOWING
TRIBUTE TO
As a Spring Tonic
“I advise
all Athletes
who are
about to go
in training
to try a
> bottle of
Pe-ru-na.”
—dJ. W.
Glenister.
Se —_—— mrlo-zili-Z
John Glenister, Champion Swimmer and Only Athlete to Successfully
Swim Through the Michigan Whirlpool Rapids.
to Get the
System in Good Shape.
PE-RU-NA
System Depleted by Catarrh.
John W. Glenister, of Providence, R. I
country and England. He has used Perun
as a tonic and gives his opinion of it i
the following letter:
Renovates, Regulates, Restores a
champion long distance swimmer of Amer-
ica, has performed notable feats in this
A THLETES realize the importance of
keeping in good bodily trim.
The digestion must be good, the circula-
tion perfect, sleep regular and enough of it.
! f the slightest catarrhal condition of
| lungs or stomach is allowed to remain,
neither digestion nor sleep will be strength-
sustaining. .
a
n Those who lead very active lives,
like athletes, with good muscular de~
New York.
The Peruna RMedicine Company,
Columbus, Ohio:
Gentlemen—“This spring for the first
time I have taken two bottles of Pe-
runa, and, as it has done me a great
deal of good, I feel as if 1 ought to say
a good word for its worth.
“During the Springtime for the
last few vears, I have taken sei-
eral kinds of spring tonics, and
have never received any benejit
whatever. Thisyear, through the
advice of a iriend, I have tried
Peruna and it has given salisfac-
tion.
‘1 advise all athletes who are
about to*go in training to try a
bottle, for it certainly gels the
system in good shape. ?’
ornrs truly,
JOHN W. GLENISTER.
?
This has made LION COFFEE
ing popularity. “Quality surv
(Save your Lion-head
Cost of the Capitol.
The capitol at Wasn:ngton, when
the extensions planned have been
made, will have cost, including the
works of art, nearly twenty million
dollars. The first building lot on
which the capitol stands cost $500
in 1790, and the cornerstone was laid
on September 8, 1793, with a speech
by President Washington, a military
procession and a barbecue.
A Healthy Town.
Briston, Me., is a good, healthy “own
to live in. Out of 34 deaths in 1904
seven were over 80 years of age. The
average age was nearly. 60, and de-
barring one infant the average was
over 60. The death rate was a trifie
over 13 per 1,000.
¢¢ All Signs Fail in a Dry Time?’
THE SIGN OF THE FISH
NEVER FAILS IN A WET TIME
In ordering Tower's Slickers,
a customer writ I know
they will be all right if they
have the ‘FISH’ on them.”
This confidence is the out
growth of sixt
careful manufactu
Bighest Award Worlds Fair, 1904,
A, J. TOWER CQ, The Sign of the Fish
Boston, U.S. A. ~COWER3
Tower Canadian Co, =
Limited >
Toronto, Canada
Makers of Warranted Wet Weather Clothing
|
857
{
mv
Ww prices, |
limate. |
OLD VIRGINIA 3% coop
|
Send for catalog
“all that for this!”—Lippincott’s,
CASSELMAN & CO. R
hmond, Va.!
Let Common Sense Decide
Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed
to dust, germs and insects, passing
through many hands (some of
them not over-clean), “blended,”
you don’t know how or by whom,
is fit for your use? Of course you
don't.
is another story.
berries,
judges at the plantation, are
skillfully roasted at cur fac-
tories, where precautions you
would not dream of are taken
to secure perfect cleanliness,
flavor, strength and uniformity.
it is opened in your kitchen.
Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE daily.
There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increas-
(Sold only in 1 1b. packages.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
| sold in bulk.
velopmen', find the spring months
especially trying.
Athletes everywhere praise Peruna be-
cause they, of all men, appreciate the value
of a tonic that dispels physical depression.
Te vocation of some men may al-
low them to endure the depressing
feelings incident to spring weather,
but the uthletz must neverail rw him-
self to get ‘under the weather,’
He must keep in the “pink of condition”
all the time.
In order to do this he must avail him-
self of a spring tonic upon which he can
rely.
Ter>fore athletes are especially
friendly toward Peruna,
Peruna never fails them.
But
LION COFFEE
The green |
selected by keen |
From the time the coffee leaves
he factory no hand touches it till
the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES.
ives all opposition.”
Lion-head on every package.)
s for valuable premiums.)
GRAY'S
$9) SWEET POWDERS
" FOR CHILDREN,
A Certain Oure for Feverishness,
\ Constipation, eceadache,
RG | Stomach Troubles, Teething
isorders, and Destro
Mother Gray, Worms. They Break up Colds
Nurse in Child- in 24 hours. At all Drug, ists, 26cta,
ren’s Home, Sample mailed FREE. pd no
New York City. A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, A
PLES
‘1 tried all kinds of blood remedies which failed
to do me uy good but I have found the right thing
Ty x
G2 MOTHER
50 my feel fine when Irise n the
morning. Hope to have a chance to recommend
Cascarets.” :
Fred C. Witten, 76 Elm St., Newark, N. J,
Best For
The Bowels
| Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good,
Never Sicken, V ken or Gripe, i0e, 25¢, 5c. Never
genuine tablot nped CCQ,
or your money back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y,
Th
Guaranteed to cure
| ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
P, N. U. 18, 1905.
EEL oT
URE HERE A t .
Best Se Sra sits yas Qe
y geists.
in time. Bold drug
[Toms
If afflicted
wi
ast Thompson's Eye Waer
PE-RUNA
a