Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / April 12, 1905, edition 1 / Page 6
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A . : .. -. v WOME AMERICANIZED FILIPINO CON- STABULARY OF TO-DAY. .1 . AND CONSIDER THE ALL-IMPORTANT FACT STOP! l " r ' " - I U. ' 1 V V . ... That in addressing Mrs. Pinkhan y ere confiding your private ills to a woms a woman -whose experience with! man's diseases covers a great many You can talk freely to a vvomaji when it is revolting to relate your private'troiibles to a nian besides a man'doets not uiader stand simply because he is afa&n?' Many women suffer in silence and drift along - from bad to worse, knowing full well that thu- ought to have immediate assistance, but a natural modesty impels them to slirink from exposing them selves to the questions and probably examinations of even their family physician. It is unnecessary. "Without money or prjfce you can consult a woman whose knowledge frehn actual experience is great. Mrs. Pinkharos Standing Invitation: Women suffering from any form of female weak ness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pmkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus has Deen estaDiisnea the eternal confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which has never been broken. Out of the vast volume of experience which she has to draw from, it is more than possible that she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She asks noth in g in return except your good-will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she - - does, not take advantage of this generous f j "Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Following we publish two let ters from a woman who accep ted this invitation. Note the iTesult. First letter. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham: - For eight years I have suffered something terrible every month with my periods. The pains are excruciating and I can hardly stand Ibem, My doctor says I have ovarian and womb trouble, and I must go through an op eration if I want to get well. I do not want to submit to it if l can possibly help it. Please tell fne what to do. I hope you can relieve me. "-Mrs. Mary Dimmick, 69th and E . , Capitol Sts., Bennirg P.O., Washington,D.C. Second letter. f Dear Mrs. Pinkham: ; 44 After following carefully your advice, and taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable v Compound, I am very anxious to 'send you my testimonial, that others may know their valueand what you have done for me. J As you know, I wrote you that my doctor said I must have an operation or I could not live. I then wrote you, telling you my ail ments. I followed Aur advice and am en tirely well. I can alk miles without an ache or a pain, and I owe my life .to you and TOjjycua rTOKnanvs vegetable Compound. I wish every suffering woman would read this testimonial and realize the value of writ ing to you and your remedy." Mrs. Mary Dimmick, 59th and E. Capitol Streets, Ben ning P. 0., Washington, D. C. When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health so many women whose testimony is so unquestionable, you cannot well say, without trying it, " I do not believe it will help me." If you are ill, don't hesitate to get a bot tle of Lydia Ev Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink ham, Lynn. Mass., for special advice it is free and always helpful. "The United Kingdom spends $4,400,000 , year on raisins. Jam sure Piso's Cure for Consumption save"! Bay life three years ago. Mas. Thomas Bob bins, Maple St., Norwioh, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1909. The chronic borrower is usually out on a strike. TITS permane otly cured. Nofits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great KerveRes-.orer,f 2trialbottle and treatise free Dr. K. H. Exm e, Ltd. ,931 Arch St. , Phila., Pa. The Duke of Portland's pictare,. gallery is 236 feet long. . ldls Can Wear Shn One size smaller after usinsr Allen's Foot Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching Jeet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At -all druggists and shoe storo3, 25c. Don't ac cept any substitute. Trial package Fiike by mail. Address, Allen F. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. Skeletons are now being sold in Russia for $1.15: ?fr?. Winslpw's bootbing Syrup for children teetbin'-',sofLen-tbe gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c. abottle. You can make a man so mad he can't see by telling hinf how every body admires the ability of one cf his friends. Cent for Every Horseshoe. Ralph H. Whitney, one of Houlton's enterprising blacksmiths, has a unique method in regard to keeping account of the number of horseshoes he nails on each year. v For every shoe that he places on a horse's hoof he gives his wife 1 cent, and at the end of the year he can easily tell the exact number. He has followed this method ever since start ing in business, and the amount of money which his better half has saved is not small. In the year 1903 the number of shoes was something like 14,000, and during the year 1904 the whole num ber was 12,101. Kennebec Journal. PAY TUITION AFTER (POSITION ISv SECURED STirsJ; 10 who clip this notice . and send to DRftUOHON'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Rlrtl;ii. Co.UITVJi. 6 ..0.. Vli . At'i .Tita.. VViCO, Ft. Worth, " NsshviJle. ?nn jrcay, without giving notes, pay EVERY. 'CENT of tuition out of salary after (.good position is secured. If not secured mo cay required. ? COURSE BY MAIL FREE If net ready to enter you may take lessons by mail FREE until ready, which would save time, living expenses, etc., or complete at home and get di v plorna, D. P. B. C. Co.. has $300,000.00 capital, 17 bankers on Board of Direc tors, and TWENTY Colleges in THIR TEEN states to back every claim it makes. Established j SIXTEEN years. Clip and send this notice to-day. m-so All WEB H 1 I4WISI toy nw& EVERYWHERE. The teat material billed workmen and juty-icven years eoerience ha mute TOWER'5 flickers. Coats and tt foncui the worid ever They arc made in black or .yellow for all Rinds of wet work. and every garment tearing the olGN Of THE rfiri is cynteedto oive sat isiocuon. mm raaoK csaiera sen tnem. rai ctmm (OMtMcsmo. can. Had a Derelict In Tow. Admiral Evans one day noticed two sailors in earnest confab. One of them was imparting information to his com panion of a very agreeable nature, judging from his beaming coun-tenance.- The admiral, in relating the inci dent, says the manner of the speaker amused him very much. As he passed by the mate raised his voice, with the unmistakable intention of being overheard, saying to his com panion : "I mean to give up this seafaring life when my time is out. I am go ing to marry a rich widow woman, the derelict of a .butcher." Pointed Paragraphs. When a woman has a birthday after she has counted the ipressnts she hasn't time to count the years. A man hardly ever knows enough to pretend to think his wife knows more man sne aoes. Tavlor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature's great remedy Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lunff troubles. At druggists;, Ion., 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. :&tt&sMv mmte&8&rtmtt mm-timnvy - ?te. J In capturing a fort on the Island of Jolo, held by Moro outlaws, on January S, Lieutenant James J. Jewell and one private of the Fourteenth United States Cavalry were killed. Second Lieutenant Roy WAshbrook. of the Seventeenth Infantry; Captain Halstead Dorey, of the Fourth Infantry; Second Lieutenant R. C. Richardson, of the Fourteenth Cavalry, and three privates were wounded. On December lti Xloros killed Lieutenant Stephen K. Hoyt and thirty-seven men from ambush. On November 10 ten American soldiers were killed and twelve Filipii;o scouts with the American Army were wounded. Oh Mav S two American officers and fifteen men were killed and six wounded from am- b'zsh, belonging to Lieutenant Winfield Harper's detachment. On April 11 Cap tain Wheeler and Corporal Heyvelt were killed by Moros. This is the record for the last nine months only.' The formidable fighting qualities displayed by these native warriors are by no means lost wThen they come under American influence and American civilization. If this country should ever be drawn into a war in the Fir East any Filipino regiments in the American Army could be relied upon to sive-i good account of themselves. About 5000 of them have enlisted already wfh our forces as scouts. . QUICK LURCH IN NURSERY. " When the average baby makes up his or. her mind that it is time for the bottle there is generally no room for argument. In this respect the infant MILK. SUPPLY ALWAYS AT HAND. stand which would hold the nursing bottle in such a position that it would be always at hand and always in a convenient position for pulling on the contents thereof. Another scheme to accomplish much the same purpose forms the subject of the accompanying illustration, which is the invention of a woman. This idea consists of connecting the bottle to the frame of the bedstead or crib by means of a piece of flexible tubing. One end of the latter is supplied with a means for clamping the arrangement securely to the crib, and the other end is i fitted with a shell-like arrangement for clasping the bottle. By this means the bottle is always in reach of the young ster, who has but to reach for it and thrust it in the mouth an accomplish ment which is learned .very early in life by the little ones Philadelphia Record., . The "Mountain-High" Waves. The size of the Atlantic' waves has been carefully measured for the Wash ington Hydrogfaphic Bureau. In height the waves usually average about thirty feet, but in rough weather they attain from forty to forty-eight feet. During storms they are often from 500 to" GOO feet long and last ten or eleven seconds, Ayhile the longest yet known measured half a mile and did not spend; itself for twenty-three seconds. Chicago Journal. is often unreasonable, but no amount of reasoning will close up the little onVs mouth so effectually as a warm stream of milk trickling down the in fantile throat. There are some chil dren, who seem to think that this should be at hand instantly, .and for lue average birthrate for Europe such instances as this a Philadelphia I shows that tor every 100 girls 100 inventor some' time ago devised a 1 boys are born. A FLOATING CHURCH FOR SAILORS. The Aztec Indian of Mexico are noted lor their, strength Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'g Sanitary Lotion. Never Trails. Sold bv all druzgists, -$1. Mail orders promptlv nlled by Dr. E Detclion, ' Crawfordsville, lad. The 'ifc-savins dog are vili:able aids to the police department of Paris. to, 15. r CURES WHEkE ALL ELSE FAILS Best Cough Syrup. Taates Stood. Use la tlnye. feom by druggists. W iv rh. ;. . ' V Is It KiffhtT Is it right for you to lose $4.20 that a ilealer may make 50 cents more by selling fourteen gallons of ready-for-use paint, at $1.50 per gallon, than our agent wili make by selling you eight gallons of L. & M., and six gallons of linseed oil, which make four teen gallons of a better paint, at $1.20 per gallon? Is it right? Sold everywhere and by Longman & Martinez, iew York. Paint Makers for Fifty Years. There have been 319 statues of the Kaiser erected in Germany. ; The Present Kate Latr. The duties of the present Interstate Commerce Commission are to correct all discriminations in railroad rates. If it finds that an unjusf rate is in effect, the railroad is notified. If it de clines to change it, the Commission can bring suit in Courfc and if the Court de cides in favor of the Commissioners' finding, the railroad must obey, or its officers may be brought up for con tempt of Court and summarily, dealt- KfflB?TTmiiffii-iir1-nfT)-r-i iiti mri-nr t or it New York City. Draped waists cut to form "points at the front are among DEAPED BASQUE WAIST. the latest and most satisfactory de signs offered. ' This .one is especially ne. threp nmi t,2SaoH v a rds twenty- 'seven, or one and seven-eighth yards forty-four inches widei with one and one-fourth yards of. silk-for chemisette and cuffs and nine yards of-lace inser tion and one-half yard of bias' velvet to trim as illustrated. " Gathered Shirt Waists- Shirt waists made full at the shoul ders are among the latest novelties shown and are peculiarly well adkpted to. the many light weight and soft cot ton materials although they are attrac tive in silk and in wool. This one al lows a choice 'of yoke or no yoke, and includes sleeves of the very latest cut that are full at both shoulders and wrists. In the case of the model the material is white Persian lawn, the collar and cuffs being of linen, but the. model is adapted to all waistings that can be made full with good effect. x The jvaist consists of the fitted lining, which can be used or omitted as nia terial renders desirable, fronts, backs and yoke, the yoke also being optional. The sleeves' are in shirt waist style, with wTide cuffs, and there is a turn over collar at the neck that is attached to the neckband by mepns of button holes and studs. A LATE DESIGN BY MAY MANTON. At Humboldt, near Berlin, the German Empress and Prince Eitel Frederick recently dedicated a floating church to be used by the sailers? on the rivers and canals of Germany. It was formerly a passenger vessel and was devoted to its present use in the will of the late owner. The main hall vwill accommodate a hundred people. The boat was equipped almost entirely for its new purpose by the Emperor and Empress. Glimpses of Gehenna. "What's that instrument upon your desk?" I asksd old Nick when I dreamed that I had gone below to call upon him. 'That," said he, His a powerful micro scope." x "What in the middle of the world of .a microscope 9" do you want asked him. "I have to use it every ten years," he said, "when I take the Tophet cen sus. I never could count up the souls .-.4- t4- ' T,rv rrr- ri !- r?rTrr Vl OTO so small tnat l can t see them with the naked eye." He picked., up what seemed to be a speck of soot with a pair of delicate nippers and neld it beneath the object glass for me to see. It wriggled fran tically, but I had a fair look at it. "Whose soul is that?" Tasked. "Read the' word upon its cap," said, he. I looked again, and such was the power of the lens, I easily deciphered the tiny lettering. . The word was "ianitor." Judge. graceful and can be made with the pos tillion back, as illustrated, or with a point as may be liked. xThe model is shown of nut brown voile, with the trimming of chiffon velvet, chemisette and deep cuffs of chiffon-covered taffeta with ecru lace insertion applied to form diamonds, and is exceedingly handsome, but all materials that are soft enough to cirape wrell are appro priate and the chemisette and cuffs can be of any contrasting material. The lines of the front are exceptionally de sirable, and the little shaped coilar finishes the neck most satisfactorily, while the sleeves are full at the shoul ders, giving the broad line, yet are of moderate size. The waist is made with the "fitted lining, which closes at centre front, and itself consists of fronts, backs, side-backs and under-arm gores, the backs being laid over onto the side- backs. The chemisette is arranged over the lining and closes invisibly, and the wait is closed at the left of the front. When hked the sleeves can be cut off at elbow length, as shown in the small view. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four yards twenty Chic Light Blouse The ever popular separate blouse grows more and more elaborate -each day, and with the return of the flow ered and figured silks many are made from these fabrics. For wear with tailored frocks is a white .taffeta with i pale blue rings. The round yoke and stock are heavy all-over lace, out lined with two narrow bands of Per sian embroidery in delicate shades, the top one forming a deep point in front and finished with a jabot of fine lace. A band of the material also out- The quantity of material required for the medium size is four yards twenty- one or twenty-seven inches wide, or two yards forty-four inches wide. lines the yoke and forms a point on , the shoulders. The sleeves are - new, all the fullness at top, with smaller puff at elbows and a double flounce of lace as a finish. , ' ' :.f An Evening Gown. The prettiest evening gowns seen recently were of chiffon, which comes in all-over designs, or else with a plain surface and a deep flowrered : border These gowns are much affected by young girls and debutantes i? rv V -:- i i
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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April 12, 1905, edition 1
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