The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, July 19, 1906, Image 7

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    FS,
GAINER |
Comran:es
ices ©
. quality is
battleships
an by (he
ton, which
hat is be-
now in
yeople will
plating of
cgie and
n have to
lers © {from
to the
vy. The
companies
would not
royalties.
were net
nade big
)y them a
The Mid-
n on pres-
1d Bethle-
e on class
e heaviest
Midvale
nd Bethle-
vale made
e $41 and
Carnegie
aggregate
5 upon a
ulk of the
ny, . 7,328
568, upon
the armor
| for bolts
',328 tons,
ased upon
the armor
ompany is
bid of the
rest com-
‘ERAGE
Increase
mproves- -
oof the
epartment
1e reports
agents, of
the acre-
about 95,-
of about
cent. .a8
sof the
The av-
1g Crop on
ared with
t the cor-
and a 10
wheat on
ent over
excluding
n that of
res, or 1.3
dition on
ared with
Boxes.
elyou has
to. effect
regulation
ural mail
purchase
sted man-
al routes *
ruct their
onform to
NTS.
ed Philip-
ze.
tement in
1€e.
will open
¢e the be-
tions was
ing in oil
iro, says:
te of Mat-
capital of
the presi-
ized the
bed.
the cash-
who was
nk to de-
e was ac-
and two
opped the
dead and
ashier es-
ed.
men took
ro, from
vainsboro,
anooc¢hen
Che night
by Miss
ing under
ff.
1 visit to
to bear
ounced a
the duty
erican ex-
signed to
' commer-
his coun-
1.
wdor and
anew on
countries,
to have
settlement
two coun-
1e Ameri-
who was
States to
ulties be-
nala, has
nala City.
What is a Backache?
IT IS ‘NATURE'S WARKING TO WOMEN
Diseases of Woman's Organism Cured and
* Conseguent Pain Stopped by Lydia E.
~ Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
+** It seems as though my back would
break.” Women utter these words
over and over again, but continue to
drag along and suffer with aches in the
small of the back, pain low down in
the side, ‘‘ bearing-down” pains, ner-
vousness and po ambfion for any task.
They do not realize that the back is
the mainspring of woman's organism,
and quickly indicates by aching a dis-
eased condition of the female organs
or kidneys, and that the aches and
pains will continue until the cause is
removed. :
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-~
pound has been for many years the:
one and only effective remedy in such
cases. It speedily cures female and
kidney disorders and restores the fe-
male organs to a healthy condition.
++ I have suffered with female troubles for
over two years, suffering intense pain each
month, my back ached until it seemed as
though it would break, and I felt so weak all
over that I did not find strength to attend to
my work but had to stay in bed a large part
of the first two or three days every month,
I would have sleepless nights, bad dreams and
severe headaches. All this undermined my
health.
“We consulted an old family physician, who
advised that I try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound. I began taking it regularly
and soon found that I could sleep and eat
better than I had done for months. Within
two months I becameregular and I no longer
suffer from backache or pain.”—Miss Maude
Morris, Sec. Ladies’ Aid and Mission Society,
85 E. Hunter St., Atlanta, Ga.
Oldest Waling Vessel.
An old time whaler, the oldest in
the world, the ship Canton, lately
sailed on another voyage to distant
seas. She brought home on her last
voyage 2,200 barrels of sperm oil in
16 months—an exceptionally short
voyage for a vessel of her size. The
Canton sailed the whale grounds of
the world long before the garish days
of kerosene. She struck whale in
waters almost unknown to the rest of
the maritime world. And stout in
every timber, able as the day when
she was launched, with ribs so well
preserved that they chip fresh and
bright under the shipwright’s adze,
she promises to carry her white and
blue house flag with the black letter
“W’ on the white and red ball on the
blue field, the famous old pennant of
the “Wings? of New Bedford, around
the world for many years to come.
She was built more than half a cen-
tury ago, a typical whaler of the far
off days when men built ships Iike
churches. She is about 250 tons
burden, but she has the appearance
of a big merchantman, for she towers
out of the water with bulky sides
and her fat bowsprit is almost as big
as a mast.—New England Magazine.
Egg and Bottle.
Take a boiled gg, remove the
shell, have a bottle with a large neck;
add a piece of paper to the neck and
light it. When in blaze put the egg
on it, point down, and the heat will
pull the egg with great force inside.
Now put again a blazed paper in the
bottle and manage to have the egg
in the neck point up, aand the heat
will push out the egg with an ex-
plosion.—Hartford Times.
OUTDOOR LINE
Will Not Offset the Ill Effccts of
Coffee When One Cannot Digest It.
‘A farmer says:
“It was not from liquor or tobacco
that for ten years or more I suffered
from dyspepsia and stomach trouble;
they were caused Dy the use of cof-
fee until I got so bad I had to give
up coflee entirely and almost give up
eating. There were times when I
could eat only boiled milk and bread
and when I went to the field to work
I had to take some bread and butter
along to give me strength.
“I doctored with doctors and took
almost everything I could get for my
stomach in the way of medicine, but
if I got any better it only lasted a
little while until I was almost a
walking skeleton.
“One day I read an ad. for Postum
and told my wife I would try it, and
as to the following facts I will make
affidavit before any judge:
“I quit coifee entirely and used
Postum in its place. I have regained
my health entirely and can eat any-
thing that is cooked to eat. I have
increased in weight until now I
weigh more than I cver did; I have
not taken any medicine for my stom-
ach since I began using Postum.
Why, 1 believe Postum will almost
digest an iron wedge.
“My family would stick to coffee
at first, but they saw the effects it
had on me and when they were feel-
ing bad they began to use Postum,
one at a time, until now we all use
Postum.” Name give by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Ten days’ trial of Postum in place
of coffee proves the truth, and easy
and pleasant way. ‘There's a rey
son.’
Look in pkgs.
famous little book,
Wellville.”
for a copy of the
‘The Road to
01d Book, Just Come
m—————
aia
to Light,
Tells Stirring Stories of Old Days -
‘When Women Pirates Were Abroad
Too oan aman
Pirates and petticoats -on first
blush do not seem to blend, but his-
tory, nevertheless, records the fact
that less than 200 years ago there
were real women pirates.
Only the other day an old book |
detailing the dare-devil adventures
of Mary Read and Anne Bonny was
knocked down for $39 in an auction
room at the sale of the library of
the venerable comedian, William J.
Le Moyne.
Just ‘Robbers’ Whims.™
Captain Johnson, the author, was
an old English sea rover. The facts
recorded he personally gathered
from the participants and their as-
sociates. His recital has all the di-
rect simplicity, the indelicate truth-
fulness of scriptual narrative ot
early Elizabethan drama. No pirate
knew our waters better than this
blunt old sea dog.
The account of his own capture,
detention and ransom by the In-
dians dn the Ohio River in 1700 is
now scarcely less valuable American
than his masterpiece, for which he
apologizes in the preface for calling
it a history, since he tells us “it’s
nothing but the actions of a parcel
or robbers.” :
. This parcel of robbers is the quar-
ry from which Marryatt, J. Clarke
Russell, Pyle and hots of lesser
writers are said to have builded their
sea romances, while Robert Louis
Stevenson had more than passing
acquaintance with the record. How
Mary Read and Anne Bonny escaped
their nets seemelt strange. In bold-
ness and daring, no less ‘than self-
sacrificing courage, these women pi-
rates were not surpassed by any of
the picturesque -freebooters with
whom their fortune was cast and
whose deeds are enshrined in song
and story. E
Externally these first and only re-
corded women pirates had little in
common with the gaily caparisoned
feminine pirates of polite romance
or comic opera. Despite the donning
of real breeches, braving every hard-
ship and peril known to the twenty
heroes of Johnson’s history and with
not a few of whom they fought hand
to hand with sword or pistol, Mary
Read and Anne Bonny were genuine
women is not ‘“‘perfect ladies.” They
would have gone to their graves
their sex uhsuspected by their fierce
and bloodthirsty companions had not
Cupid found them out.
As with not a few of their tinsel
counterparts, the little blind god was
their undoing. Both were tried for
their lives in Jamaica in 1720 and
condemned to death, but escaped ex-
ecution. Both died in prison.
“As to the lives of our female pi-
rates, we must confess,” says the
author; “that they may appear a lit-
tle extravagant, yet they are never-
theless true. As they were publicly
tried for their piracies, there are liv-
ing witnesses (1724) enough to testi-
fy to what we have laid down con-
cerning them. 4
“If there are some incidents and
turns in their stories which may give
them a little air of a novel, they are
not invented for that purpose; it is
a kind of reading with which this
author is little acquainted, but as
he himself was exceedingly diverted
with them when they were related to
him, he thought they might have the
same effect upon the reader.”
A ANN RL lan
Mary Read wa$ an English girl.
' When Mary was four years old her
mother put her into boy’s clothes,
and, taking her.up. to. London, Mary
and her mother fgll into dire dis-
tress. She was told at this crisis of
her sex. She was now thirteen and
handsome as a picture. She hired
out as a footboy to a French count-
ess. But conventional life soon
wearied her and she enlisted on a
r-an-of-war. After spirited engage-
ments she left the service and went
to Flanders.
There, as a cadet, she carried
arms in a foot regiment and won
praise for bravery, her sex never
being suspected. While deserving a
commission, she could not obtain
one, as they were bought and sold,
and this feminine soldier of fortune
was penniless. Spoiling for new
fields to conquer, she quit the foot
regiment and joined a horse guard,
where her bravery and good behav-
ior won the esteem if the officers.
Her advance was assured when she
fell in love with her messmate, a
handsome young fellow named
Fleming, .- -~ he
Sailed With Pirates.
When but a few days out the ship
was captured by pirates. Being the
only English person aboard, the pi-
rates kept Mary, together with the
ship’s plunder. She sailed with the
pirate crew for some time, until the
King’s proclamation pardoning all
pirates who voluntarily surrendered
was taken advantage of by her cap-
tors. All went ashore and lived in
apparent content until their money
gave .out. Hearing that Captain
‘Wood Rogers, governor of the island
of Providence, was fitting out a pri-
vateer to cruise against the Span-
iards, Mary joined the crew.
They had not sailed far when the
crew, Mary included, turned against
the commander and took up the old
trade of pirating. Mary Read always
declared she abhorred the life of a
pirate, and only followed it under
compulsion. Men who sailed with
her, however, swore under oath at
the trial for her life, that there was
no pirate afloat more resolute in
undertaking hazardous ventures
than Mary Read. In one of the
fiercest conflicts with a manof-war,
none kept on deck but Mary Read,
Anne Bonny and one other.
Eloped With Pirate.
Anne Bonny’s father, when she
was five years old, put her into
boy’s clothes, installed her in an es-
tablishment, giving out that she was
a relative’s child whom he intended
to educate to be his clerk. Losing
his business and repute soon after,
the father left for new parts where,
embarking as a merchant, he ac-
cumulated’ money, bought a vessel
and sailed for the American coast.
In his North Carolina plantation
Anne, who had resumed petticoats,
was much courted. She was widely
sought, and her father had great
matrimonial expectations for her.
But Anne was captured by a worth-
elss spendthrift, who, when he found
her father disowned her, shipped
with her to theisland of Providence
in search of work. There Anne
Bonny fell in love with the dare-
devil Captain Rackam, and, discard-
ing her husband, donned trousers
and eloped with the pirate.— Boston
Post.
em x
Great Wealth.
It is generally believed that Pro-
fessor Summer's prophecy has al
ready been fulfilled, for John D.
Rockefeller is credited with having a
billion. In this connection it is in-
teresting to note, also, that while in
the early part of the last century
there were only a few men of great’
wealth, today the multi-millionaires
scattered throughout the country are
to be counted in the thousands. In
other words, the proportion of very
wealthy men and women to those of
moderate means is as much larger
as is the amount of money that is re-
quired to make a great fortune. A
man with merely a million today cuts
much less figure than did the man
with one hundred thousand dollars
half a century ago. He is fairly well
to do, but is in no position to cope
with the kings of high finance. On the
whole, the term ‘great wealth” is
very indefinite. What would be con-
sidered such by some would be re-
garded as abject poverty by others.
Perhaps the time will come when all
thrifty Americans will be millionaires
and only those with a billion or two
will be ciassed amcng those of great
wealth.—Hartford Telegram.
British Autopsy of an American Joke.
Out of the American packing in-
dustry springs one of the popular
banterings of the Briton who cannot
see a joke. What he does not see is
really the American turn of phrase.
One of the usual anecdotes, for in-
stance, turns upon the ' strange
phrase, ‘‘he put for the door,” and
the Englishman never sees the point,
but then he does not know the
idiom. The packing joke is this: A
Briton, admiring the enormius pro-
duction of fruit in a California val-
ley, asks how so much is disposed of.
“Well,” replies the American, ‘we
eat what we can, and we can what
we can’t.” The inquirer is bewil-
dered, but only because he would
have said ‘“tin’’ instead of ‘‘ean.” In
some versions he is represented as
repeating the sentence with ‘““tin’’ for
“can,” as American
a specimen of
i humor.—London Chronicle.
Bullet Struck Watch Charm.
A watch charm of the Masonic
variety, dented with a bullet, now
hangs in a window in the Kimball
House block, where it is under the
observation of all passersby who care
to see it.
which is carved the figures emble-
matic of the secret order saved the
life of W. R. Nash, a well known
Georgian, a week or ten days ago
at Woodberry.
Descriptive stories of the duel at
that place, in which James Clark
used his pistol promiscuously, have
been printed. In the gathering when
lead was flying thickest and fastest
was W. BR. Nash. © A bullet from
Clark’s pistol struck a wateh charm
swinging in front of Nash’s vest.
The charm gave the leaden pellet
a deflection, and instead of penetrat-
nig the body the bullet glanced to
the left and, clipping the flesh on
that side, went on its course until it
found its way into a telegraph pole,
from which it was subsequently dug.
The charm was badly battered
and yesterday Mr. Nash, its owner,
brought it with him to Atlanta to
have it replaced in its setting, from
which it had been knocked by the
bullet. He carried it to a Kimball
House block jeweller, frc.a whom he
purchased it originally and by whom
it was placed on exhibition.—Atlanta
Constitution.
Bird in the Hand.
On a cabbage patch owned by a
negro in a Southern community oil
was found. Speculators offered the
negro $20,000, which was accepted
without waiting to consider another
proposition, said to be worth $40,000.
‘“ What is this about your cabbag
patch?” inquired a neighbor of the
negro. “I understand you have sold
it for $290,000?”
‘“Yas, that’s true, boss,” replied
the negro “You see, men come
picking round my place, an’ dey say
éar’s oil heah. Dey say, ‘We gib yo’
$20,000.” 1 say ‘All right.”
or two you have
$40,000.”
“Yas, dat mebbe
might sold it for
so, but a bird in
—Boston Post.
That piece of gold upon |
“I am told if you had waited a day !
the han’s th’ nobles’ work of God!” |
FIVAREE 110 TRADE REVIEW
TRADE . CONDITIGNS ARE QUIET.
However, Is Far in Ex-
Earlier Years for the
Dull Seascn. os
:~R. G. Dun. & Co.’s review of trade
says:
All Businsss,
cess of
-. Midsummer et conditions are
mere in. evidence that ‘at any.
previous. time this scason, al-
though trade continues far In
excess of earlier years, and pre-
parations for-fall and winter are un-
abated. Conildence is the commer-
cial sentiment, induced by exception-
ally favorable crop reports .and the
absence of any distinctly adverse fac-
tor in the wholesale distribution for
this period, and the majority of re-
ports indicate| satisfactorily prompt
collections, while at some points sum-
mer stocks are being reduced by
clearance sales,
Not only the leading industries but
nearly all manufacturing undertak-
ings have orders assuring activity
well into the future, and scarcity of
labor is still the chief complaint. Dis-
putes as to wages are practically set-
tled at the soft coal mines, and an-
thracite collieries are resuming on a:
sliding scale, giving hard coal miners
an advance of 1 per cent in July.
Evidences of the unexcelled business
during the fiscal year just ended are
found in every statement that ap-
pears.
Railroad earnings in June were 10.8
per cent larger than in 1905, and for-
eign commerce at New York for the
last week ows an increase of $1,-
§99,887, in imports and a loss of
$794,622 in exports, as compared with
last year’s figures. Temporary ease
in call money did not weaken the
quotations of time loans, which re-
flect the expectation of heavy ship-
ments of currency to the interior for
crop moving in the near future.
Many iron furnaces and steel mills
have resumed after a brief season of
idleness for repairs, inventories and
settlement of wage scales, so that the
production is once more very heavy.
Textile manufacturing conditions
are not materially altered. Failures
for the week numbered 202 in the
United States, against 223 last vear,
and 21 in Canada, compared with 26
a year ago.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
. R0 R2
= 72 73
Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear. 56 57
No. 2 yellow, shelled 35 56
Mixed ear... 53 58
Oats—No. 2 whit 42 43
No. 3 white........ 30 41
Flour—Winter patent 0 415
Fancy straight wint 410
Hay—No. 1 Timothy.... 1525
Mover No. 1...........:. “ee 112
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton........ 230)
Brown middlings.............. 20 0)
Bran, bulk....... rine vibencloees 21 50
Btraw—Wheat..... .ceeeesrasvanss 75)
Ae, vsansde dre ishdnscdnaitsnvne 8090
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery........... § 222 29
Ohio creamery 20 21
Fancy country ro 19 20
Cheese—Ohio, NEW...ceuuun.. ciins 12 13
New York. mew...l............. 12 13
Poultry, Ete.
Hens—per 1D.........vv se idvs shuns S$ nH 15
Chickens—dressed........ gel. 15 13
Eggs—Pa. and Chlo, fresh......... 17 18
’ Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 85 g0
Cabbage—per ton = 1300 15m
Onions—per barrel... 200 29
; BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent.............9 05 25
Wheat—No. 2 red..... * 5 i, 2 86
Corn—Mixed.. . 46 47
BEBuceesancnrniaannnlsn 16 20
Butter—Ohio creamery 24 28
"PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent..... $50 53>
NM heai—No. 2 red..... » 84 85
Corn—No. 2 mixed.. 35 54
Oats—No. 8 wiilte... 35 36
Butter—Creamery........ . 29 32
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 20
KEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents.......eces:cee00ee.8 500 515
Wheat—No. 2red. .s 89 90
2, 67 68
No. 2 white 86 48
Butter -Creamery ..... cco vene oe <8 25
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 16 18
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,450 101,600 1bs............ 3065 $585
Yrime, 1,208 101,-00 Ibs 5 40 5 60
100d, 1,.0( 52 5.40
Tidy. u 101.140 }bs.... 5 10 5
air, 10.4100. 3be. con ana. 4 35 4 8
Comnion, 700 10 £00 Ib 4 00 475
Common 10 good fat 27) 4 50
Comn.on 16 good fat} 2 50 4 15
Commnicn to good fat cow 0 4 00
Heifers, 7L0 tol, 1601bs. .. 0 4 50
Fresh cows and springers. 16 00 45 00
Sheep.
Rrime wethers....l................ $570 5 85
Good mixed vis oe 5 40 5 60
ixed sand w 4 75 b 2
Culisanu common... 250 4 0
Culls 10 choice lambs. ..... 5 50 7 95
Hogs.
Primeheavy hogs................. $705 21
Prime medium weights. vw. 7.10 7 20
best heavy Yorkers.... TR 7 20
Good light Yorkers. . 6 90 7 00
Pigs, as 10 quality....... 6 70 6 80
vommeon to good roughs... 5 40 5 80
Bags. ov isis rte rininenss senses. 400 435
Calves.
Veal Calves, nai. ,.i.. 0:0 $4.50 6 5)
Heavy and thin calves.............. 3 00 50
Oil Markets.
The following are the quotations for credit
balances in the different fields:
Pennsylvania, $1 64;
Sand, $1 ¢4; N
Indiana. ¢0c; Somerset,
ada, $1.38.
, $1 74; Second
é : South Lima 93¢;
dle; Ragland, 62¢; Can-
HANDIGAEFELU.
“Yes, sir,” said the pompous citl-
zen, who rates himself at half .a
million, “I began life a barefooted
boy, and see what 1 am today!”
«That's all right,” replied the easy-
going man, whose sole assets consist-
ed of one wife, six children and nine
dogs. “You had a big advantage
over me at the start”
| “How’s that?” queried the p. c.
«You began life a barefooted boy,”
| rejoined the other, “while I was com-
: pelled to begin as a barefooted babe.
See ?’—Columbus Dispatch.
4 Serpent -Mound.
The greatest monument of the
mound huilders, not only in Ohio, but
‘ih thé ‘entire country, is the Serpent
Mound, in Adams county. This im-
mense mass of “earth, probably piled
up for purposes of worship, has had
a’ curious history in respect to changes
of ownership in recent times.
FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. #2 irial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Of all cities Rome has most frequently
been in the hands of enemies.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing S p for Children
teething. softens thegums,reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic,25¢ca bottle
Casting Shoe After Bride.
Casting an old shoe after the bride
is an old custom in England and
Scotland, symbolizing the fact that
the parents gave up all coniurol over
their daughter after her marriage.
This practice is said to have origi-
nated in the custom among the an-
cient Israelites of delivering a shoe as
a testimony in the transference of a
possession. In Psalms, Ix, 8, are the
words, “Over Edom will I cast out
my shoe,”” when reference is made to
the custom of throwing a shoe as a
token of new ownership.
UTTERLY WORN OUT.
Vitality Sapped by Years of Suffering
With Kidney Trouble.
Capt. J. W. Hogun, former post-
master of Indianola,’ now living at
Austin, Texas,
writes: “I was
afflicted for
years with
pains across the
loins and in the
hips and shoul-
ders. 1 had
headache : also
and ‘neuralgia.
My right eye,
from pain, was
of little use to me for years. The
constant flow of urine kept my sys-
tem depleted, causing nervous chills
and night sweats. After trying seven
Gifferent c { and using all kinds
of medicine had the gocd fortune
to hear of Doan’s Kidney Pills. This
romedy has cured me. I am as well
years ago, and
ny eye
Sold
Hox.
N.Y.
. B80 cents a
Co., Buffalo,
Emperor Wants Clean Tea.
The Emperor of China's
grown in a garden
tea is
high walls that none but the cul-
approach it. The picker
thy times daily, we
n from eat-
ir breath should spoil
Izaves’ aroma.
BOY'S TERRIBLE ECZEMA
Iiouth and Eyes Covered With Crusts— | Drill Testand BlastHoles.
Hands Pinned Down-DNMirac-
ulous Cure by Cuticura.
“When
old he
was sir months
I'he sores extended
my little boy
Lad eczema.
surrounded by |
1
4
An Old Document.
The original coramission of Thomas
Lord Fairfax, Baron of Cameron, was
found several] days ago at Winchester,
Va., among some old relics and docu-
ments bought by Dr. Charles von
Witt of that city. it is elaborately
engraved on parchment, dated in
England, ‘April, 1738, and is in a fair
state of preservation.
WITH
(UTICURA
SOAP
/
ee
Physicians, Pharmacists,and
Nurses endorse Cuticura
Soap because of its delicate,
medicinal, emollient, sana-
tive, and antiseptic proper-
ties derived from Cuticura,’
the great Skin Cure, united
with the purest of cleansing
ingredients and most re-
freshing of flower odors.
For preserving, purifying,
and beautifying the skin, as
well as for all the purposes
so quickly over the whole body that we at |
once called in the doctor. \Ve then went
to another doctur, but he could not heip |
him, and
third one.
in our alr we went
Matters became so bad that
ues]
he had reguiar holes in his cheeks, large |
food
his |
with crusts as thick |
ever he opened the
The
for
enouzh ‘to put a finger into.
had to be given with a spoon,
mouth was covered
as a finger, and when
to a!
mouth they began to bleed and suppurate, |
as did also his eyes.
and back, in short, the whole body, was
covered over and over. We had no rest
by day or night. Whenever he was laid
in his bed we bad to pin his bands down,
otherwise he would scratch his face, and
make an open sore. 1 think his face must
have itched most fearfully.
“We finally thought nothing could help,
and 1 had made up my mind to send my
wife with .Le ¢"iid to Kurope, hoping that
the sea air migut cure “im, otherwise he
was to be put under rood medical care
there. But, Lord be blessed, matters caine
differently, and we soou saw a miracle. A
friend of oars spoke about Cuticura. We
made a trial with Cuticura Soap, {int-
ment and Resolvent, and within ten days
or two weeks we noticed a decided 1m-
provement. Just as quickly as the sick-
ness had appeared it also began to disap-
pear, and within te. weeks the child was
absolutely well, and his skin was smooth
and white as never betore. I. Hohrath,
President of the C. l.. llohrath Company,
Manufacturers of Silk Ribbons, 4 to 20
Rink Alley, South Bethlehém, Pa. June
5, 1905.”
Oldest Postmaster.
Warren Belcher, for 53 years post-
master at Winthr¢ Mass, has re
signed to he succeeded by his son.
David Belcher. In time of service he
was the oldest postmaster in the
United States.
Rong te £
Ghicitens Earn |
if You Know How to Handle Them Properly.
Whether you raise
€ Poultry, and in
in
Stamps.
Sh
know onthe subject to make a success.
SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS.
CAENIRTTRETIERE RRA NRNNLINRL
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
134 Leow#ro ST. N. £
Hands, arms, chest |
hickens for fun or profit, you want to
do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this
is to profit by the experience of others.
all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man
who made his living for 25 years in raising
that time necessarily had
to experiment and spent much money to learn fj
the best way to conduct the business—for the i
small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps.
It tells you how to Detect and Cure Diseuse,
how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save
for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must
Trill for Water
of the toilet and bath, Cuti-
cura Soapis priceless. Abso-
lutely pure and may be
used from the hour of birth.
Sold throughout the world. Cuticurs Soap, 25¢c., Olnt=
, Resclvent, 80c. (in form of Chocolate Coated
per vial of 80), may be had of all druggists.
ZR Corp., Sole Props., Boston, Mass.
iled Free, “All Ahout the Skin, Scalp, and Halr
Prospect for Minzrals Goal
We make
DRILLING MACHINES
For Horse, Steam or
Gasoline Power.
Latest
Traction Machine,
LOOMIS MACHINE CO,
TIFFIN, OHIO.
The Greatest Boarding College
in the World.
Universtiy of
Noire Dame
NOTRE DAME, [NDIANA.
We guarantee two points: Our students
study and our students behave themselves.
18 Buildings. 75 Professors. £00 Students.
Courses in Ancient and Modern Languages,
English History and E ¢s, Chemistry,
Biology, Pharmac i rical and Me-
chanical Engine Archite re, Law, Short
hand, Book-keepin ype-writing.
SPECIAL DEPART NT FOR BOYS? g HR
IN U
THIR IN. {
TERMS: Board, Tuition and Lad. dry,
« . Mend ten cents to the Secretary
tor Catalogue.
IGHTNING EGG TESTER—Shows fertile or bad
es at ance, Tests five eggs at one time.
Artific it unnecessary. All who use egg: should
have a er in the house ts wante i. Sample
se. Agen
Robt. Wilson, 116 May St.
silver), , Buffalo, N.Y.
Mention this paper.
60 Bushels Winter Wheat Per Acre
That's the yield of Saizer’s Red Cross Hybrid Winter
Wheat. Send 2 in stamps for free sample of same, as
also catalogue of Winter'\WVt Rye, Barley Clovers,
Timothy, Grasses, Bulbs, Trees, ete., for fall plant g.
SALZER SEED CO., Box A.C. LaCrosse, Wis,
FOR GOOD FARMS
Delightful Homes, in mild climate, at bargain
prices. - Send for description. Address,
KERR & TAYLOR, Denton, Maryland.
FR 48 1. LO IK Tice, Highest refs,
Long experience. [ltzgera!d
PATENTS Xa. Dept 54, Washington. D.C
P. N. U. 29, 1906.
DROPS
worst cases. Book of testimoni.
Free. Dr. H. H.
4
NEW XISCOVERY;
ives quick relief and cures
and 10 Days’ treatment
Atlanta, Go.
GREEN'S , Box B,
ioney !
We offer a book telling
EE