The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 27, 1908, Image 3

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YALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co.
SOLD BY CEADING DRUGGISTS- 504 pe- BOTTLE
Plenty of Asphalt.
Asphaltic layers have been found
in Syria near Kferie, a village about
25 miles northeast of the port of Lat-
akia, along the road leading toward
Aleppo, which have been declared by
competent mining engineers to be not
only rich in- asphalt, but also prac-
tically inexhaustible. at
ECZEMA FOR FIFTY-FIVE YEARS.
, Buffered Torments from Birth—In
Frightful Condition—Got No Help
Until Cuticura Cured Him.
“I had ‘an itching, tormenting eczema
ever since I came into the world, and I am
now a man fifty-five years old. 1 tried all
kinds of medicines I heard of, but found no
relief. I was truly in a frightful condition.
At Jast I broke out all over with red and
white boils, which kept growing until they
were as big as walnuts, causing great pain
and misery, but I kept from scratching as
well as I could. I was so run down that
I could hardly do my work. I used Cuti-
cura Soap, Ointment, Resolvent, and Pills
for about eight months, and I can truth-
fully say I am cured. Hale Bordwell, Tip-
ton, Ia., Aur. 17, 1907.”
“I cheerfully endorse the above lesti-
monial. It is the truth. I know Mr. Bord-
well and know the condition he was in.
Nelson R. Burnett, Tipton, Ia.”
© Lightning Strokes.
Fire insurance men estimate that
40 per cent of barn fires are due to
lightning, 10 to 15 per cent to careless-
mess, 8 to 12 per cent to overheated
flues, the balance to other causes, in-
‘cluding incendiarism. According to
the report of the weather bureau of
ithe department of agriculture for
1900, the total number of strokes of
lightning in 1899 which caused dam-
age was 5,527, the number of. build:
lings injured 6,256, value of property
Tost $3,016,520, number of deaths by
lightping 563, number of persons: in-
jured 820, number of live stock killed
in the field 4,251.
Tall' chimneys emitting smoke that
carries moisture with it are mare oft
en struck than other objects, barns
containing hay that gives off moisture
by evaporation, and porus tree barks
-are frequently struck. For the same
_ reason ice-houses aré more attraetive
‘to lightning than other storehouses.—
- Suburban Life.
His Time Will Come.
The thing most talked about in the
closing scenes of Harvard and Yale is
the beat race. The man who leads
in mathematics, sociology or Latin
composition wanders in the valley of
forgetfulness. But he will turn up
some time when the fellows who won
the boat race have been forgotten.
German Trust.
Negotiations among the German
manufacturers of wall paper have
finally led to the organization of a
trust. The seven leading manufactur-
ers who have already joined have a
combined annual production of about
$2,620,000.
FRIENDLY TIP
Restored Hope and Confidence.
“After several years of indigestion
and its attendant evil influence on the
mind, it is not very surprising that
one finally loses faith in things gen-
erally.
AN. Y. woman writes an interest-
ing letter. She says:
“Three years ago I suffered from
an attack of peritonitis which left me
in a most miserable conditicn. For
over two years I suffered from ner-
vousness, weak heart, shortness of
breath, could not sleep, ete.
“My appetite was ravenous but |i
felt starved all the time. I had
plenty of food but it did not nourisa
me because of intestinal indigestion.
Medical treatment did not seem to
help, I got discouraged, stopped medi-
cine and did not care much whether
I lived or died.
“One day a friend asked me why |
didn’t try Grape-Nuts, stop drinking
coffee and use Postum. I had lost
faith in everything, but to please my
friends I began to use both and soon
becams very fond of them.
“It wasn’t long before I got some
strength, felt a decided change in my
system, hope sprang up in my heart
and slowly but surely I got better. 1
could sleep very well, the constant
craving for food ceased and 1 have
better health now than before the at-
tack of peritonitis.
“My husband anc 1 are still using
Grape-Nuts and Postum.” “There's
a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road ‘o
Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
interest.
\ Making Baby Beef.
~ The more unsatisfactory the milk
situation becomes, the more anxious
we are to turn our attention to other
branches of farming, which will be
more remunerative. ~ If we could take
up raising beef or sheep, we should
still have our manure and a good
profit from our stock without so much
worry over the labor problem and
trying to ‘meet the difficult require-
ments of the city people in regard to
milk production.
Perhaps the most promising new
field is that of baby beef. Baby beef
is a prime butchers’ beast, thoroughly
fattened and ripe for the block at
from 12 to 24 months of age. Growth
has been artificially promoted by con-
j tinuous heavy feeding from birth,
with the object of obtaining in the
shortest time possible the maximum
weight of well-matured beef. "Its es-
sential features are early maturity,
quality, finish and thickness of flesh.
The next question is, where can we
get stock from? We can either raise
the stock ourselves or buy young
calves from the range at weaning
time, when they will weigh from 350
to 500 jounds, and cost from 4 to 6
cents a pound. Should we decide to
raise ouf -own stock, we should pur-
chase either Hereford, Short-Horn,
Angus or Galloway cattle. These
need not be registered steak, or at
least the cows need not, and should
it be found advisable good young
grade heifers could be bought in
Texas, which if mated to a registered
bull would produce excellent stock
for baby beef.
- The next point to consider is how
to feed our babies so as to meet the
market requirements. What are the
requirements? The illustration shows
very clearly what are the most val-
uable cuts to the butcher, and we will
do well to bear this in mind when we
are raising our young stock.
Our calves must be fed for growth
from the start and the food provided
must be composed of ingredients that
can be easily digested. Whole milk,
of course, hedds this list. This, fed
fresh and warm from the cow until
weaning time, will produce the best
calf for any purpose. This gives the
youngster a change to take a little at
a time and often and so avoids over-
loading their stomachs. At the pres-
ent prices of milk and labor, it would
Yo ga
become accustomed to it, or they may
overeat. For winter feed, many, Mr.
with a ration made up of 15 to 25
pounds of ensilage, 3 pounds of corn
meal, 2 pounds wheat bran, and
plenty of clover hay. Feed regularly,
at stated times; see that nothing is
left in the troughs from meal to
meal; provide plenty of clean, fresh
water, and don’ t forget the salt. Oats,
barley; rye, &te., should be ‘crushed.
The folowing table, compiled by
the United States Department of Agri-
culture, gives an excellent idea of the
comparative advantages of producing
baby over long-fed beef: “i 1
Long-
Bab fed
bee: beef
ONE STEER. (av. (av.
of 10 of 10
Rim steers). | steers). ,
Days -on feed...........; 700 913
Weight when put on ex-
eriment, db. .......... 122 107
Weight when slaugh 5 i
tered, Ib............ IEE 1,297 1,235
ain during feeding
period, 1b. 0 1,175 1,128
Daily rate of gain, lb... i. i286
Feed eaten:
Hoots and ensilage 1b..| 15,703 19,529
Ba 150 231
iA milk, 1b.. . 1,645 ,9592
ape, Ib... oii i 00, 70: igwe..ii
Meal, 1b... i... oo. 3,809 1,405
Pasture, months .......} ...... 9
Total cost of feed £63.06 $59.66
Cost per 100 lb. increa-
live weight... i... 5.29
Selling price per 100
live weight
5.62 4.78
These young beeves should be fed
indoors in the winter, and in the sum-
mer should be protected from the hot
sun and flies by keeping them in a
| darkened stable during the hottest
part of the day. Prime young beef
can be sold right on the farm where
they are raised, and the demand far
exceeds the supply. This industry is
certainly worth considering.—A. D.,
in The Country Gentleman,
‘Managing the Hay Crop.”
As a rule too many farmers delay
the cutting of their hay crop until a
large proportion of the feeding value
is lost on account of the hay becom-
ing tough and fibrous. Our whole
aim should be to cut and cure our
hay at a time when it will be the
CHICAGO RETAIL: DEALERS
METHOD OF. CUTTING BEEF.
probably pay to let the calves run
with their dams from 4 to 6 months,
supplementing this diet with a iittle
shelled cern and oats mixed, after
the first few weeks. On the other
hand, should any of us bring our-
selves to believe that there was any
profit in milk at 3 cents, we could,
after the first few weeks. milk our
cows by. Land and feed the calves
from a pail. The great -point to re-
member is not to give the youngsters
any set-back, wean them gradually
and don’t gorge them, Warfield says:
“The weaning is in a great degree
a crisis in a calf’s life. 1f cut off from
nature's diet tco early, bad results
not infrequently ensne; but if allowed
to go on to that period at which in
the natural sequence of events the
calf would find his milk ration more
and more insufficient and his capacity
to eat more and more perfect every
day, the transition, instead of being
violent, is at once natural and easy,
and therefore without injurious con-
sequences. The great thing is to
keep the growth of the calf from suf-
fering any serious check. If this
growth goes rigat along, all is well.
If, however, the weaning is followed
by a period of pining and real need
of the milk diet, and the calf is for a
few weeks unthrifiy, the effect will
be apparent in the animal's after
life; for these short periods of re-
tardation in early life count up large-
ly in the sum. This is not an easy
matter to impress upon many mean,
and yet an animal that has an un-
broken calfhood of thrifty growth
will mature earlier and develop more
completely the possibilities of its na-
ture than another which with equal
promise was suffered to get again and
again out of condition by unwise sav-
ing in the first months of i’ life.”
Perhaps I should have said that the
best time to have our calves dropped
is in the fall; then by the time the
pastures are green the following
spring the youngsters are well started
and can safely get part of their feed
from the fresh grass. Mr. Ritzman,
of the United States Department of
Agriculture, gives as the best summer
combination. to furnish a proper bal-
ance with good pasture, shelled corn,
or a little oats, with an cccasional
feed of a little cottonseed meal,
gluten meal, linseed meal, just to
stimulate the appetite. Bluegrass
makes the best pasture, and next to
that ranks clover or alfalfa, but care
should be taken in feeding the clover
and alfalfa at first, until the cattle
most palatable and the easiest for
our animals to digest and assimilate.
The analysis of early cut hay and
that which is cut later does not jus-
tify the cutting of the hay crop early
but actual experience in feeding ani-
mals will prove that early cut hay
will produce better results when fed
to all kinds of farm animals than
that which is cut later. We may feed
our animals on late cut hay during
the winter and they will become thin,
but when they are turned out on the
same grass in the spring they will
shed off their old hair and take on a
lock of prosperity and thrift, even
though the same grass contains no
more protein nor comes any nearer
to producing a balanced ration. How
are we to explain this fact? The cat-
tle are not getting a different class
of food as far as chemical analysis
is concerned, for the dry hay contains
the same elements as the pasture
grass, but the great difference is due
to the succulent condition of the
green grass which is in a different
condition. :
In order to make the best possible
food out of our hay crop it should be
cut when it will come the nearest to
approaching the same condition * as
pasture grass. The nearer this grass
can be preserved to the way nature
provided it the better food it will
make for the farm animals. It is
by the feeding of this kind of hay
that we are able to get the best de-
velopment that our animals are cap-
abie of making.—Epitomist.
Fed at a Loss.
The hen that eats her head off
should have an operation performed
on her neck to prevent further eat-
ing; likewise the cow that is not
worth her keep should go to the
block. The first thing is to deter-
mine with accuracy what animals are
fed at a loss.—Farmers’ Home Jour-
nal.
Served, Sir?
“How long bas this restaurant
been open?” asked the would-be di-
ner.
“Two years,” said the proprietor.
“I am sorry I did not know it,”
said the guest. ‘I should have been
better off if I had come here then.”
“Yes?” smiled the propretor, very
much pleased. ‘‘How is that?”
“I should probably have been
served by this time if I had,” said the
guest, and the entente cordiale van-
ished.——Harper's Weekly.
Ritzman says, have had great success.
{FINANCE AND TRACE REVIEW
"DUN'’S WEEKLY SUMMARY t
Demand Improves and Some Bales of.
Pig Iron‘ ‘Are Made at Conces-
*sions—Collections Improving.
New York.—R.. P. Dun & Co.’s
“Weekly Review of Trade” Says:
“Trade and industrial activities con-’
tinue. to expand, improvement being.
of a conservative nature that promises
permanency. There is little dispo-
sition to ‘anticipate thre “future, bur
current distribution -is larger, and.
| mercantile collections are ‘more’
“prompt.” . mam .
“In’ manufacturing fies “the iron
and steel” industry is steadily adding:
ing substantial contracts, * although
producers are handicapped by the
persistent strength of hides and leath-
er.
“A few special sales of pig iron
have been made-at concessions from
former quotations, some merchant fur-i
naces seeking all the business offered,
but the general level of prites is not:
materially altered, and there is a dis-
tinet improvement in demand. Most:
recorded transactions are for this:
years’s delivery, each week bringing
alittle larger consumption - at steel
mills and some reduction of stocks
in furnace yards.
“Extremely quiet conditions pre-
vail in primary markets for cotton
goods. As goods on hand were
made from cotton purchased above the.
present price there is no encourage-
ment for producers to make sales.
“Footwear factories in New Eng-
land report a steadily improving de-
mand from Western wholesalers. Low
stocks in the hands of jobbers are in-
dicated. by urgent requests for quick
shipment. Leather is quiet as a rule,
but certain varieties are strong and
active, heavy weight sole being scarce
and sold well ahead. Hides are again
very firm, large sales of Western
packer sides being made at good
prices.”
MARKETS.
PITTSRIUPG.
Wheat—No. 2 red 85 9)
Rye—No.2....
Core hin 2y ellow 88 9
No. Yellow, ota 85 86
r x 73
67 63
65 5
Flour—Winter patent...... 58) 59
Fancy Fright winters.
Hay—No. 1 Timothy...... 150) 1v 5)
Clover Na. 1:.......... 13 0)
Feed—No. 1 white mid. to x8 0
Brown jnidalings SE 5 50
Bran, bulk... verse 2 23
rs . :
aoa rd 7% 750
Dairy Products
Butter—Elgin creamery 2 23
io creamery 20 2i
ancy country r 17 18
Cheese—Ohio, new. 1 17
New York, new.. 13 17
HONE DBE 1D ii..s 2200s reuse ssesas 14 1¢
Chickens—dressed.. .s 12 12
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, ¥resh...... 1 1s
Fruits and Vegelables,
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.. 9 i 0
Cabbage—per ton..........., -“ 15017;
Onions—per barrel............. See D0 GUL
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 3170 39)
Wheat—No. 2 red 10:2 =
Corn—Mixed 7 :
Parcor—ORio, CHoRtiory. 2
PHILADELPHIA.
Flpur—Winter Patent. cares 500 575
Wheat—No. 2 red..... 9
Corn—No. 2 eal t8 8
Jats—No. 2 white. oi tq
Butter—Creamery 24 25
Eggs—Pennsgylvan 17 13
NEW YORK.
Flour—Patents....c....cu-00raaess $ 58 59
Wheat—No.2red......ocvee.r.vc... La :
Corn—No, 2........ 9) 0
Oats—No. 2 white. te 5
Butter -Creamery .. “ =
Eggs—Stato and Pen yl 17 1s
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
CATTLE
Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds....
Prime, 1300 to 14)0 pounds
Good, 1200 to 1400 pounds
Tidy, 105) to 1150 pound
Fair, €0) to 110) pou: ds ..
Comninon, 70) to 900 pounds.
Cows Yai
Frithe, Heavy. .. vi. oi ies 70@70
Prime, medium sight. LT @7:5
Best heavy Yorke
L675 @ 700
figm Yorkers 630 @> 70
Prime wethers....................... 42) @440
Good mixed..................... 400 @ 4 20
Fair mixed ewes and wethers.. 32> @3 7
Culls and common .. 150 @300
Spring lambs........ .- ... 30) @6 35
Yeal calves............ 50 @ 77
Esavy to thin calves 300 @4 59
For three and a half centuries Spain
has been gradually losing that vast
empire which Charles V. abdicated
for the quiet of the cloister. Bereft
of her fairest possessions, torn by
dissention and religious per:
her throne a prey to pretend
her social regime at the nrercy of
anarchists, it was with the greatest
difficulty that his mother handed over
to Alphonso XII. the restricted realm
over which he governs. But of late
Spain has realized that she has the
fairest realm of Europe, contends the
Home Herald. Energy, determination
and intelligence have taken "the
place of lethargy, indecision and ig:
norance, and the result has been a na-
tional and industrial rehabilitation.
She is competing successfully for the
trade of South America and already
her material advance is marvelous.
Under her present liberal governor,
Spain is destined to play a great part
before the cnd of this century.
EE ——— re PP ——e
The noiseless rifle is welcomed by
the Philadelphia Inquirer. Anything
that makes war more deadly and
more dangerous is certain to advance
the cause of peace, though few of
us expect to live to see the univer-
sal brotherhood of man established.
to output, and shoe shops are receiv- |
“The Prawback,
“Travel broadens the mind,”
Declares one shee
“But pshaw! It, gs we- find,
~- Flattens the feet
“Wow! It
“He danced every dafice with me.” |
“He must have thought it was a
charity ball.”—Houston Post.
aa
His Method. :
Nodd—*“How can you keep track
of all your children?”
Todd—“By a card index system. »
—Life.
r—————
No Coupons.
Ostend—‘Pa, what is a ‘bond of
sympathy?’ ”
Pa—*“A very poor investment, my
son. It never draws any interest
from the public. ”—Chicago News.
The Honker Haunted. .
“What makes old Blank so uneasy
when a motor car comes along?”
“Why, his wife ran away in one,
and he is always afraid she is com-
ing back.”—Tit-Bits.
Lost Chance.
She—*“My husband won’t listen to
reason.”
He—*“He ought to be ashamed of
himself. It isn’t every married man
that has the chance!”
Merely the Purse.
“I notice that you always fling the
cabman your purse.”
The hero of this historical novel
was a thrifty character.
“Yes,” explained he, “I buy them
purses cheap by the gross.”—Wash-
ington Herald.
Very Particular.
Guest—"Bring one portion of a
nude turkey.”
Waiter—*“Nude turkey?”
Guest — “Yes. Turkey without
dressing.”—New Orleans Picayune.
Pretty Close.
“That waiter’s an idiot.”
“What's the matter now?”
_ “I asked him to bring me a water
cracker.”
“Well?” :
“And here he brings me an ice
pick.”—Cleveland Leader,
In Ambush,
“Stop the auto.”
“But, sir—”
“I think I saw some red ferns.”
“Better lemme keep on, boss,” ad-
vised the chauffeur, earnestly. “Them
red ferns is the local constable’s whis-
kers.”—Washington Herald.
Patting Him “Next.” -
“I will give you a penny if youl:
promise to be good while I'm away,
Johnny.”
“What'll you give me if I'll be good
when you get back home?”
“I'll give you something if you are
not good then.”—Houston Post.
Their Game,
“These crooked legislators of ours
are just as bad as counterfeiters,”
said Knox; “in the same class, in
fact.”
“Think so?” asked Dudley.
“Sure! They're forever
and passing bad bills,”
Star.
making
— Washington
The Limit,
“There's nothing that makes a
would-be society woman madder than
to find her name left out of the report
of some swell function she has at-
tended.”
“Unless it’s to find besides that her
rival’s name is in."—The Catholic
Standard and Times.
Affected Him Differently.
“Maw, what's
the basement?
box?”
“No, dear; he's putting new wire
gauze in the screen-doors.”
“How do you know?”
“By the language he is
dear.”—Chicago Tribune.
paw doing down in
Patching up the ice-
using,
All Beach.
Wilfred was sitting upon his fa-
ther's knee watching his mother ar-
ranging her hair.
“Papa hasn’t any Marcel waves like
that,” said the father, laughingly.
Wilfred, looking up at his father’s
bald pate, replied:
it's all beach.”—Harper's Weekly,
“Nope; no waves; !
Switzerland Prohibits Absinthe.
At a time when the prohibition of
-alcoholic beverages has becoiife more
than an academic question in’ some
‘parts of the United States, it is in-
‘teresting to read that Switzerland
has outlawed absinthe, which, as is
well known, is an emerald liquor
‘made largely of wormwood macerat-
ed in alcohol. The decision to forbid
the manufacture and sale of absinthe
‘in Switzerland was arrived at through
‘the medium of a national referendum,
which showed a majority of over
80,000 in favor of the. proposition.
This action of the demoeratic eléétor-
ate is little short of heroic, for the
most famous brands are made in
Switzerland, notably at Neuchatel,
and have been. extensively exported,
so that the prohibition put upon: their
manufacture and sale will ‘seriously
affect the government's revenue.—
i Rd Scurmna) 4
Harry
Nature and a woman’s work com-
-bined have produced the grandest
remedy for woman’s ills that the
world has ever known.
In the good old-fashioned days of
our grandmothers they relied upon
the roots and herbs of the field to
cure disease and mitigate suffering.
The Indians on our Western
Plains to-day can produce roots and :
herbs for every ailment, and cure
diseases that baffle the most skilled
physicians who have spent years in
the study of drugs.
From the roots and herbs of the
field Lydia E. Pinkham more than
thirty years ago gave to the women
of the world a remedy for their pe-
culiar ills, more potent and effica-
cious than any combination of drugs,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s- Vegetable
Compound is now recognized : as the
standard remedy for woman’s ills.
Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St,
. Louisiana, Mo., writes :
+ Complete atin to health
means so much to me that for the sake
of other suffering gvomen I am willing
to make my troubles public.
‘For twelve years I had been suffer-
ing with the worst forms of female ills.
During that time I had eleven different
physicians without help. No tongue
can tell what I suffered, and at times I
could hardly walk. About two years
ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice.
I followed it, and can truly say that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re-
stored health and strength. It is
worth mountains of gold to suffering
women.’
What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound did for Mrs. Muti,
it will do for other suffering women.
WLDOUGLA,
W. L. Douglas makes and seils more
men’s $3.00 and 83.50 shoes than any
other manufacturer in the world, be-
cause they hold their shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other imnake.
Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children
W.L.Douglas $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoss cannot
Ve equsllid Si any Drie W. L. Dou; 22 92.50 avd .
$2.00 shoes are the best in
Fast Color Eyclets Used tli
eF- Take No Substitute. W. I. Dougias
name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold
everywhere, Shoes OO from factory to any
Cart of the world. Catalouue free.
L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from oy
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannet do.
germicidal, disin-
fecting and deodor-
izing toilet requisite fv
of exceptional ex- f
cellenee and econ- §
omy. Invaluable [
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug and toilet
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
WITH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY’ BOOK SENT FREE .
THE PAXTON TOILET GO., Boston, Mass.
~ P.N. U. 5, 1908,
DROPSY =v, bisa y
gives quick rollef and eures
worst enses. Book of testimonials and 20 Days’ treatment
¥ ree. Dr HH,
GREEN'S SOXS, Box B, Atlanta, ta,