The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 24, 1908, Image 3

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.XAS
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utes and
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of black
curred at
is brings
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liars Senna
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aches due to Constipation;
Acts naturally, acts vuly as
xative.
‘Best forMenWomen and Child
ren -— .
flv buy the Genuine which
Ss e full name of e Lom-
"CALIFORNIA
He Syrup Co.
| by whom it is manufactured, printed on the
vont of ever:
ackage.
SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
one size only, regular price 50¢per bottle.
To 2 Hen icial Effects
<SOWERs
RADE
Hove
SLICKER
at the same time 4
cheapest in the ¢
end because it
wears longest
2300 Everywhere
Every garment quar-
anteed waterproof
Catalog free
TOWER CO BOSTON US A
Fors, YE AD aN CO LIMITED TORONTO CAN
. A Long Job.
An English astronomer, J. Franklin-
Adams, is said to haye begun the pro-
digious task of counting the stars.
Most people greatly overestimate the
number of stars to be seen on a
clear night—a matter of some 4,000
—but their guesses are likely to fall
as far short of the number revealed
.by a telescope. Even a field glass
increases the visible number aston-
ishingly, and the big telescopes reveal
a number estimated at over 60,000,-
000, while the camera reveals, appar-
ently, over 100,000,000. The method
of counting is by moving the photo-
graphic plates, each covering a small
area of the heavens, across the field
of a microscope provided with a grad-
uated grating so that the stars can
be counted in narrow strips—Spring-
field Republican. :
tn 39
When You Are Tired.
Don’t grit your teeth and work
harder. Ease up a littie.
Den’t talk any more than you can
help. Talking takes vitality.
Lie down in a dark place if only for
15 minutes.
Don’t read anything in which you
are not interested.
Don’t feet that everything must be
done in one day. There are 361
more. *
Realize that it is better to leave
things undone than overdo yourseif.
Avoid people and their woes at that
time. Seek some one frivolous.
Don’t try to improve yourself. Give
your mind a rest.
And don’t forget that a little lemon
juice in cold water in the morning is
a great help.
Temperance in Norway.
“The cause of temperance is work-
ing. gréat headway in Norway. We
have adopted the local option policy
with excellent results,” said P. Anen-
sen, a manufacturer of white paper,
from Skien, Norway. “Whenever the
people of a certain district or county
wish to abolish drinking houses an
election is held at which all adult
males in that territory are supposed
to. vote. If any are absent thelr
votes are counted for prohibition.
Another election cannot be held until
after five vears.”
AFRAID TO EAT
Gir! Starving on Ili-Selected Focd.
“Several years ago I was actually
starving,” writes a Me. girl, “yet
dared not eat for fear of the conse-
guences.
“I had suffered from indigestion
from overwork, irregular meals and
_ improper food, until at last, my
stomach became so weak I could eat
scarcely any food without great dis-
tress.
“Many kinds of food were tried,
all with the same discouraging ef-
fects. 1 steadily lost health and
strength until I was but a wreck of
my former self.
“Having heard of Grape-Nuts and
its great merits, I purchased a pack-
age, but with little hope that it would
help me—1I1 was so discouraged.
“I found it not only appetizing but
that I could eat it as I liked and that
it satisfied the craving for food with-
out causing distress, and if I may use
the expression, ‘it filled the bill.’
“For months Grape-Nuts was my
principal article of diet. I felt from
the very first that I had found the
right way to health and happiness,
and my anticipations were fully
‘realized.
“With its continued use I regained
my usual health and strength. To-
day I am well and can eat anything
I like, yet Grape-Nuts food forms a
part of my bill of fare.” “There’s a
Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Rcad to
Wellville,” in pkgs.
| Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and fuli of human
interest.
@eotsesesc0ecceseacecacces
¢ NEW LAWS FOR :
5 NEW CRIMES. 2
© 93585000000690000800300%
If Draco and Solon, the old-time
lawmakers, should revisit the earth, a
tour of investigation in these United
States would make it speedily clear
to them that we moderns, as well as
the ancients, busy ourselves pretty
much all the time with the framing of
new laws. ¢
“I am fined for failure to provide
good drinking water on my passenger
trains,” a Rhode Islander might say;
to which a fellow-railroader in South
Carolina would add:
“In this State a jail sentence fol-
lows a neglect to provide spittoons
for every two seats in our cars!”
A man in Virginia says: “I killed
a partridge on the second day of
February, for which I must serve
time in jail.”
In Tennessee a man must pay a
fine or serve three years’ imprison-
ment for killing fish with dynamite.
In Wisconsin a baker must serve
three weeks in jail for sleeping in
his bakery.
In California nurses are punished
by fine or imprisonment should they
fail, in the proper instance, to notify
the physician of certain phases of ill-
ness in their patients. ;
To water a bicycle path in the State
of Ohio is an offence punishable by
heavy fine and sometimes imprison-
ment. : ;
In most of the States it is a penal
offence to tap a telegraph wire or to
sell kerosene that is not up to the fire
test.
If the old lawgivers were to extend
their tour of investigation they might
learn of men fined or imprisoned for
dropping advertising matter in letter
chutes; for ‘gambling by means of
slot machines; and for countless
other offences the very means for
committing which were unknown one
hundred years ago.—IHarper's Week-
ly.
A ———————————————————
WORDS OF WISDOM.
m
The lonesomest man in the world
is the third party in a hammock.
When a man starts down hill every
one gets busy greasing the slide.
It’s tough luck for a chauifeur to
be knocked down by a milk wagon.
A man rocked a boat, and every
one said it was a most impressive fu-
neral.
There are seven ways to skin a
rabbit, but the rabbit has no prefer-
ence.
Many a divorce suit has started
with the bread .that mother used to
make,
When you feel like fighting use
fhe telephone—it saves the skin.
Honesty is the best policy; but
honest people don’t play policy.
A wise man gives his tongue a rest
at the expense of his ears.
It takes two to make a quarrel,
but one peacemaker can start a riot.
Makes no difference whose name
is on the safe; it’s the man who holds
the combination.
Cold cash makes quitters of us all.
She that fishes fbr love is liable to
catch—any old thing.
The reformed men in paradise
must bore even the angels.
Few of us believe in luck unless
we nappen to be unlucky. .
Father Time frightens us away
from the future by the sign “No Ad-
mittance” on the door.
Lots of us don’t cast our bread on
the waters until it is too stale to do
anything else with.
We entreat the gods to give us the
desires of our hearts, then, when
they are realized, we dispose of oun
obligations with a hasty ‘Much
’bliged.”—From ‘Fool's Cap Filos-
ophy,” in the New York Telegram.
.
Connecticut Bird Preserve,
Despite the fact that reports have
been circulated of late that the Com-
missioners of Fisheries and Game had
secured 2000 quail from Oklahoma
and would place them on Terry Isl-
and, near Suffield, Commissioner Geo.
T. Mathewson said last evening that
nothing has been done about buying
any quail as yet. It is true, however,
that the use of the island, which con-
tains about 135 acres, has been ob-
tained by the commission, and it i=
very likely that a preserve will be es-
tablished there.
Until fifteen or sixteen years ago
the island was inhabited by Clinton
Terry, and the house is still standing,
and it was from this place vears ago
that a band of Second Adventists put
on their ascension robes and waited
in vain for the end of the world.—
Hartford Courant,
Cost of Titles.
King Edward’s birthday is eagerly
awaited by the various heraldic of-
ficers of the Crown, for the new titles
that, as occurred this summer, are
distributed on every birthday, mean
a payment to the heralds of a good
many heavy fees. The following is a
list of the cost of taking up titles in
England: Duke, $6495; marquis,
$5640; earl, $4785; viscount, $4000;
baron, $3210; baronet, $2675, and
knight, $485.—New York Press.
Mother's Preference.
1'The twins were being congratuia-
ted upon the arrival of a small broth-
er when the neighbor inquired, “Well,
how did you boys like the boy?”
“Oh,” answered Howard, noncha-
lantly, “we thought it was all right;
but mamma would rather have had
an automobile,”
DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY
Gradual Improvement in the Business
Situation Reported—More Steel
Orders in Sight.
New York.—R. G. Dun & Co.’s
“Weekly Review of Trade says:
“Gradual imprevement in the com-
mercial situation is reported, although
the volume of trade has not expanded
in proportion to the growth of confi-
dence. Resumption of work at man-
ufacturing plants is the best evidence
of progress, the number of unemploy-
ed, though slowly, diminishing.
Scarcity of water is an adverse in-
fluence at several points. Several
returns for the last week exhibited
little or no loss, as compared with sim-
ilar figures for 1907, notably shoe
shipments, flour output and bank ex-
changes at some points.
‘Steel mills have more business in
sight. A current factor of value is
the increased demand by the rail
ways for both rolling stock and equip-
ment.
“Restricted operations at cotton
mills during the past nine months have
prevented accumulation of goods in
the hands of producers, and the
statistical position is also healthy as
to jobbers and retailers.
“Buyers are scarce in the market
for woolens, but there is a good call
for delivery of sample pieces. An
unusually small percentage of the sea-
son’s requirements has been ordered.
“The domestic market for hides is
still quiet, yet the tone is better. al-
though actual sales at the East are
unsatisfactory. Tanners of upper
stock insist that price are too low in
relation to the hide market, but ef-
forts to secure a proportionate ad-
vance result in a check to business.
Forwardings of footwear from Bos-
ton showed a tota] slightly in excess
of the corresponding week last year.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 red... 8"! 2
Rye—No.2......... .
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear. 90 91
No. 2 yellow, shelled 87 58
rei 73
53 54
AR 53
5 80 5 90
Hay—No. 1 Timothy.... 130) 13 5)
CloveriNo.1......... 110) 12.0)
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton 3000 3100
Brown middlings... x70) 2850
40) 2450
700 870
700 8 00
Bairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 2 26
Ohio Creamery......cocevesnees 22 23
Fancy country roll ree 17 13
Cheese—Ohio, new.. .e 15 17
N ork. noW.s....... v0... 16 1%
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per 1b.......... ivareeane 3 17 18
Chickens—dressed.........sveeeses 12 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 22 23
Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu 9y. 1:00
Cabbage—per ton.... e-ti 1:00, "157%
Onions—per barrel.. . 850 6W
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 35.70 9)
Wheat—No. 2 red..........-..e0nas 102
Corn—Mixed,........xsasrssesnrass . Tt 7
EES ies vans salts trans saa sirae sens 17 13
Butter—Ohio creamery............ 23 2
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 560 5 75
Wheat—=No. 2 red... ........ couse a7
Corn—No. 2 mixed.......ceenneense 88 58
Jats—No.2 white..........eaeenns . o3 54
Butter—Creamery...........c.oees . 24 25
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 17 13
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents.......c.ev.. agree .$ 58 59
Wheat—No. 2 red. hs LW
Corn—No. 2............... 9) 9
Oats—No. 2 white........ b4 a5
Butter -Creamery .......c..... <2 <5
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 17 13,
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
"CATTLE
Extra, 1459 to 1600 pounds 57% @31)
Prime, 1300 to 140 pound 50 @57
Good, 1200 to 1300 pound 515@550
Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pound 445 @ 5335
pair, $90) to 1100 pounds . 400 @475
gommon, 70) to 900 pound 300 @ 490
ulls ed vee 300 @ 45)
BOWS L100 @40
C HCGS
Prime, heavy.. ...... 725 @7 4)
Prime, medium we 2) @72
Best heavy Yorkers. . LT) @7 3)
Light Yorkers.... . 064 @ 65
Pigs........; 550 @ 62)
Roughs, Hh 2 @ 62»
Nags... aaa 25) @t7)
SHEEP ,
Primo wethers............ s..coo.peie 400 @ 1410
Good mixed 35 (@ 3
Fair mixed ewes and wethers....... 300@3 .0
Culls and common............. 150 @ 3))
Spring lambs.... 30) @6 35
Veal calves........ .H00 @77)
Heavy to thin calves................ 300 @ £3)
CUSHION COVER OF LINEN.
Pretty sofa cushions always add a
touch of hominess to any room, and,
while the cushions may be not only
beautiful but inexpensive, they are
well worth the little trouble it takes
to make them. A very . attractive
cover, answering to this description,
is of old-fashioned scrim dipped in
coffee to give it a rich, creamy tint.
It is a very useful material, for it
may be embroidered in many ways.
Narrow cotton soutache works in
charmingly; mercerized cotton or silk
—doeone in, the cross-stitch—gives it
a comfortable, grandmotherly laok.
And last, but not least, the mesh is
wide enough to permit the design to
be carried to perfection with French
embreidery ribbon.
An ecru scrim cover is made beau-
tiful by a design of large brown
daisies done with the last-named ma-
terial. The flowers are not scatter
ed broadcast on the pillow, nor have
they any stems. The design is quite
conventional: the daisies—which per-
haps are better as stars,
save for the yellow rosettte in the
center of the five petals—are placed
in a double row around the edge of
the pillow, thus forming a border.
This leaves the smooth material in
the center and insures the comfort
of the 1 when in use.—Pitts-
burg
FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW | nol. 5 es
Testing Kinship by Blood. i
ilarities or blood analyses, as
suggested by Prof. Nuttall, the Eng-
lish biologist, is bringing novel ideas
into zoology. . It shows that the hip-
popotamus is a pig and the walrus a
horse and confirms the long recog-
nized relationship between birls and
reptiles. But it does not connect
man with monkeys and traces only
slight kinship with the anthropoids.
Beware of Ointments For Catarrh
That Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole sys-
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfaces. Such articles should never be used
except on prescriptions from reputable phy-
sicians, asthe damage they will do is ten fold
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. all’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains
no mercury, and 1s taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of thesystem. InbuyingHall’s Catarrh Cure
be sure you get the genuine. It is taken in-
ternally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by I.
J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists; price, 75¢c. per bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
ep im
One Way to Do It.
‘While the automobile enthusiasts
are considering ways to avoid acci-
dents at railroad grade crossings, 1t
might be a good idea for the chauf-
feurs to slow up and be a bit careful
until some other plan can be figured
out.
CEEP CRACKS FROM ECZEMA.
Could Lay Siate-T’encil in One—
Hands in Dreadinl Stato—lisease
Defied Treatment for 7 Years
—Cared by Cuticura.
“I had eczema on my hands for about
seven years and during that time 1 had
used several so-called remedies, together
with physicians’ and druggists’ prescrip-
tions. ‘The disease was so bad on my
hands that I could lay a slate-pencil in one
of the cracks and a rule placed across the
hand would not {ouch the pencil. 1 kept
using remedy after remedy, and while some
gave partial relief, none relieved as much
as did the first box of Caticura Ointment,
I made a purchase of Cuticura Soap and
Ointment and my hands were perfectly
cured after two boxes of Cuticura Oint-
ment and one cake of Soap were used. W.
H. Dean, Newark, Del, Mar. 28, 1807.”
Ruins Restored.
The famous ruins of Tintern Abbey,
Monmouthshire, England, are being
restored as far as the four great
arches are concerned, and more exca-
vations are being made around it in
hope of finding other buildings.
H. H, GRrReEN’s Sons. of Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise-
ment in another column of this paper.
Skipping.
The art of reading is to skip judic-
iously. Whole libraries may be
skimmed in these days, when we have
the results of them in our modern
culture without going over the ground
again. And even of the books we de-
cide to read, there are almost always
large portions which do not concern
us, and which we are sure to forget
the day after we have read them. The
art is to skin all that does not con-
cern us, whilst missing nothing that
we really need.—P. G. Hamerton.
Moon’s Surface Changes.
Changes on the moon’s surface, es-
pecially near the crater Linnacus, are
now recognized by Pickering, Barnard
and others. It is concluded that the
diminution of a white patch must be
a melting of hoar frosts at sunrise
and that the deposition and melting
of frost must be taking place in other
parts of the moon.
Miners Not Consumptives.
A mining journal published at
Seranton has been calling attention
to the curious fact that in coal min-
ing communities there is a marked
deficiency in the mertality from tu-
berculosis as compared with that of
other localities. .
The Smallest Brain.
A healthy, regularly formed brain of
twenty-four ounces, scarcely half of
the normal average, seems to have
been the smallest ever recorded for
an adult. It was recently found in
Daniel Ryan, a New York coachman,
who died suddenly at the age of forty-
»six.
New Shingles.
Shingles are now made under a |
patented process from asbestos fiber
and Portland cement. Owing to the
enormous pressure under which the
shingles are manufactured it is said
that they absorb, when fresh, only
about 5 per cent of their weight in
water. |
Twin Evils.
Next to lack of work.
gambling are responsible for more
suicides +than anything else in the
country, and yet there is always a
howl when any atiempt is made to |
regulate these twin evils. |
drinking and
ONE KIDNEY GONE,
But Cured After Doctors Said There
Was No Hope.
Sylvanus O. Verrill, Milford, Me,
says: “Five years ago a bad injury
paralyzed me and
affected my kid-
Leys. My back
hurt me terribly,
and the urine was
badly disordered.
Doctors said my
right kidney was
practically dead.
They said 1 could
never walk again.
began using them.
stronger and freer from pain. | kept
on using them and in three months |
was able to get out on crutches, and
the kidneys were acting better. 1 im-
proved rapidly, discarded the crutches |
and to the wonder of my friends was |
soon completely cured.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. XY.
HELPFUL
ADVICE
Say 2D =
You won’t tell your family doctor
the whole story about your private
illness — you are too modest. You
need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pink-
ham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you
could not explain to the doctor. Your
letter will be held in the strictest con-
fidence. From her vast correspond-
ence with sick women during the
past thirty years she may have
gained the very knowledge that will
help your case. Such letters as the fol-
lowing, from grateful women, es-
tablish beyond a doubt the powerof
LYDIA FE. PINKHANM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
to conquer all female diseases.
Mrs. Norman R. Barndt, of Allen-
town, Pa., writes:
“Tver since I was sixteen years of
age 1 had suffered from an organic de-
rangement and female weakness; in
consequence I had dreadful headaches
and was extremely nervous. My physi-
cian said I must go through an opera-
tion to get well. A friend told me
about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, and I took it and wrote you
for advice, following your directions
carefully, and thanks to you I am to-
day a well woman, and I am telling
all my friends of my experience.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-
tion, dizziness, ornervous prostration.
i 6000 Money-
J For Sale making Farms
2in 14 States. Strout’s mame
I=" moth illustrated catalog of bar
"® rains with State maps mailed free; we
~ |payRr.r. fare, E. A. STROUT CO.,
est Farm Dealers, Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia
World's Lasg
»
t’s only a question
don’t bring back all that
you hunt in the
Plenty of excellent guides.
a
[i
y
i
our office only one week.
Address
Hunting Trips
FOR SAL
° It’s Up to You!
MAINE WOODS
i5. Accessibility such that you're away from
- }
Send today 2-cent stamp fer two beau-
tiful hooks telling the whole story—‘‘In Se
the Fish and Game Country” and “Fish
and Game Laws Worth Knowing.”
C.M.BURT, G.P. A., Boston, Mass.
MARYLAND
FARM
On the Potomac, opposite Quantico, Va., 218
acres; substantial farm house and outbuild-
ings; 95 acres in timber, comprising about
4,500 cords of wood The river iront of three-
eighths of a mile 18 a’ commercially valuable
fishing shore. Price. $ 7 per acre,
8. HERBERT GIESY, Atty. for Owner,
918 F St, N. W., Washington, D. C.
[Duff's College
A post card will bring illustrated
catalogue and “The Proof.”
6th Street and Liberty Avenue,
PITTSBURG, PA.
{ W. L. Douglas makes and sells more {
men’s $3.00 and $3.50 shoes than any
other manufacturer in the world. be-
cause they hold their shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of tha
Familyy Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children
W.L.Douglas $4.00 and £5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes cannot
be equalled at any price. W. L. Douglas $2.50 and
$2.00 shoes are the best in the world
1
Fast Color FEyclelis Used Exclusively.
oa ake No Substitute. W. L. Douglas
name and price is stamped on bottom. 1
everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any
fort of the world. Catalouue free.
/. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
yo
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un-
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin-
fecting and deodor-
izing toiletrequisite pi: J
of exceptional ex-' Puree
cellence and econ- NTT i
omy. Invaluable TOILET Tir f
for inflamed eyes, FT mead’
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 CO., Boston, Mass.
P. N. U. 39, 1908,
DROPSY It%, DISioTey;
gives quick rellef and cures
worst eases. Book of testimonials and 1©@ EPays’ treatment
@ree. Dr. ll. Hl. GREEN'S BONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga
PR ;
SHO
ro
——
aa
of your aim if you
the law allows when
License fee only
ET Y
AT LOW PRICE.
SUPERIOR TO BEST SOLD AT ANY PRICE,
great demand for this Razor.
The benefit is the consumer's.
The Biade is of the finest steel, scicn-
tifically made and tempered by a secret
process--and the blade, of course, is the impar-
tant part of any Razor. The frame is of satin finish,
silver plated, and ‘‘angled’’ correctly for safe,
2 | quick and clean shaving. The tough bearded man
1 read of Doan’s Kidney Pills and | finds this Razor a boon; the soft bearded man
One box made me finds it a delight. These blades can be stropped.
Buy one and you will recommend it to all your
friends. That is the best test of any
The small price Is made possible hy the
The small
profit on each aggregating as large a
sum as if we sold fewcrata greater price.
in postage stamps
or cash brings it
prepaid by mail In
a special box.
roy
J
EXTRA
BLADES
ro 3 ¢
article.
Write name and full address very plainly.
| BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSK,
134 KEconard E€treest, WN. ¥Y. Cilz,