The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, June 18, 1891, Image 5

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    igust
ower
This is thOiery per
petually on your little
boy's lips- And be is
no wop than the big
per. oliier, balder-bead-ifc
is an interrogation
fh.it is it for? we con-
frora the cradle to the
vith this little introduc
ive turn and ask: "What
lowt.r for?" As easily
Is asked : It is lor Dys-
bs a sri-cial remedy lor
ami Liver, routing
this; hut this brimful.
August Flower cures
We know it will. We
A.r knowing it. Twenty
f started in a small country
!iv it hat an honored
tv city an ' country store,
of the largest uianu
n, ints in the country and
here. Why is this? The
; simple as a child's
t is honest, docs one
does it right along it
psi.i.
S.i!e Mao'fr.U'oodbury.N.L
Lt Did She KtprKU
.it do yon think of that
I bought down ut th
on account of the fire.
Us it damaged niucn by
I at all by Are; only dam-Lau-r
which touched It
CleHuinff Metal W.irk
The .oai usni fr riming mrtjU
- uu,, consist of mixtures of;
we,c ft, mixed with
B;"aU 1utty of rog,,. Avht-u
freshly ,,re,,aH. they leave nothing to
dntred; but, u.ifortunaU-ly, such miit
ure soon turn rancid and bworae UIl
fit for uae. A new soap for met:U work
which H stated to be free from this ob-j'-ction,
ia made from cocoaimt butt-r
in the f-Uowing way: 2.5 kilgoftlie
butter are melted in an iron vwwL to
Betbor with a little water, and to the
mixture is added, with constant stir
rlnR, IV) grms. of chalk, 87,5 grms. o'
Jum, 87.5 grmn, of cream tartar, and
fc7J fjrms of white lead. This mixture
i then poured into molds and allowed
to solidify. The Chemical Trades
Journal says the soap so obtained is
made into paste with water, and
rubbed over the. metal to be cleaned.
..,..1 . i
remuveu uy a ury rag or
cnamou leather.
K at the clock) "Ahl time
(yawningly) " lea, and
ila e the excellent exam
ine sta,"-N. Y. Herald.
umatism
h'3 I
LY CURED BY
ses. v
erCa, UHtU
AViuIiIiijt Away the Kitrlli.
A French geologist has made a care
fill calculation of the amount of solid
matter yearly carried off into the ocean
iy tlie action of the rivers of tlie world
and other causes. He estimate that
the reduction of the average height of
the surface of the solid land is O.UHS in.
dies each ywir. Making allowance fur
the corresK)iidingriHe in the bed of the
ocean, and taking no account of the oc
currence of volcanic and other excep
tional phenomena the general ten
dency ot w liich is to hasten the process
of disentegration the period at w hich
the Bolid land will have ceased to exist
and the surface of the earth w ill be
covered with water, has fori n etimated.
A, however, that period is 4,.Vxj,0oj
years distant, the prediction need cause
no Immediate disquietude, From
Pittsburg IMspatch.
Much for Endoimncc
Citizen (indignantly
liiadum, I want you to see
f ; of yours sit down once
nd reads the papeis. 1
such an icnoranius about
The idea of a boy of his
such idiotic questions."
p-"The young numskull
snow if the "Hon." before a
m's name meant bonest."
vrn-lluded Jostle.
J-"Vou are charged with com-
assault oti this man and
is eye. What have you to
pn Tour honor, my wife
K, and I caught this fellow
k."
("Vou are discharged; but at
fu miserable scalawag with
, the next time you steal a
and don t keep it, I'll send
r bix months." New York
yon
On flhara.
-"How about that bill
tocoUect on shares T
M You said I could have half
t you r
y.B
ve collected my half. Can't
-New York Weekly.
It Workiil.
"This is my last drink," said the im
pencunlous customer, as he opened a
small paKr and sprinkled a white
powder into the liquid.
"Stop! stop!" cried half a dozen bar
room loungers, as they ran toward him.
"Hands ofT," he cried, "this is my po
tion," and ho swallowed it ut a
draught
"Now, barkeeper, you can collect
your fee from the Corona ."
"I)on't die here," sarieked the bar
keeper, and ho rushed the wretched
man out on the street, and in live min
utes had the place shut as tight as a
bank.
Kid the man die? No, he didn't lie
slid round the coiner laughing.
"It worked," lie chucRled; "I
wouldn't have believed it, but it work
ed like a mice," and again his mullsMu-
ous laughter floated out on the night
air. From the Detroit Free Press.
.Mother's Luxe.
The loving devotion of a mother to
her child is almost as enduring as the
iieavens above and is not to be com
bed with early things, says tlie fori
W orth Gazette. This fact hits many
times been exemplified, and the ex
treme hardships undergone by Sirs
aney Sixkiller, mother of the two
Huunawas boys who were hanged at
this plneejwas only another substantia
ting instance of this assertion. After
learning that the principal chief had
refused to pardon her boys or com
mute the (ieith sentence the old lady
was wild with grief and determined to
go to the chief in person and make a
last appeal to him for their lives. The
distance from Mrs. Sixkillers home m
Going Snake district to Chief JJaye's
residence on Grand river is not less
than ninety miles. Although an aged
and feeble woman of seventy years she
made this long journey afoot and
alone.
And all In vain!
Her pleadings with the stern old
chief came, to naught, and the heart
broken mother was back at this place
the day before the hanging so that she
might be with her doomed boys during
their last hours on earth.
When she left her homo Mrs. Six
killer had on an old pair of shoes, but
when she arrived in Tallequah her feet
were bare, torn and bL'eding, and she
was in an utterly exhausted condition
caused by her grief, hunger and fatigue.
She had waded creeks and climbed
mountains until her shoes were com
pletely worn from tier feet.
A Iay On.
Mrs. Out of-Town (to her neighbor)
Such trouble as I've had today! I'm
nearly dead
Xeighbor-Mercy! What's hap
jiene.J." "My husband's watch stopped last
night?"
"I don't see w by that "
"Xo, neither could wo. It neyer
stopped before, and we didn't know it
was stopped this morning, because it
slopped last evening and so I set the
clock by it, and that was wrong and my
husband misslUie train to tho city
and tho children were late to school."
"Xot pleasant, of course; but "
"O! but 1 haven't tald you. You see,
my husband, after missing his regular
train, concluded to take a day off and
mend all the furniture."
MOB
Bailing
Poudec
Cream of Tartar Powder.
t0 eTcrjr' other known.
Million., of Homes
40 Yean the Standard.
Cake uui PMtry, Light Flak?
uh, Griddle CaWFe&teble
md WMsssm
A New Food I'lnnt
The choco plant, Secliium edule, is
being grown in Santa Jiarbrra county,
Cal. This is a valuable Fruit Grower,
the seed of which were procured from
Samoa, ltoth the tubers of the vine
and the squash like fruits are eaten.
The fruit is said to resemble tho chest
cut In llavor, and will under favorable
conditions weigh some three pounds.
The tubers, which are somewhat simi
lar in flavor to the yam, sometimes
weigh as much as twenty pounds. One
of Its peculiarities is tho sprouting of
tlie seeds in the blossom end while the
fruit still hangs upon the vine. The
plants under favorable conditions fruit
in about three months. They do not
seem to be very particular as to soil or
locality. Just about what amount of
cold they will stand has not as yet been
determined.
A Nejrro Worn ih'h Invention.
F.llen F.lgin of New York, a member
of the Woman's National Industrial
league, invented a clothes-wringer.
She Bold the invention to an agent for
618 in 1889. When asked by the writer
why she sold the invention so cheap,
she replied: "You know I am black
and if it was known that a negro wo
man patented the invention white
ladles would not buy the wringer. 1
was afraid to be known localise of my
color in having it introduced in the
market; that is the only reason, I am
working on another invention and have
money to push it after the patent is is
sued to me, and the invention will be
known as a black woman's, too."
"Whats Fair For One "
"Didn't see you at committee meet
ing last night, Ooodpater?"
"No, I stayed at home to look over a
book my boy brought from the library
1 like to know what he Is reading."
"Does he make good selections?'
"Horrible; the thing he brought home
last night was the vilest trash that over
poisoned a man's morals. It begins
bad and gets worse on every page, I'll
finish it to night aad make him take it
back, and if ever he brings another one
like it about tho house I'll skin him
alive." ;
. i
Widowhood!" Chin.
Tt ualawflfflood society In China
that young widows never marry agala
Widowhood Is therefore held In the
highest esteem, and theolderthe wldo
trows tl mora agreeable does her po
tion tec with the po-. Should
si roach fifty years, she my, by ap
plying to the emperor get a sum of
Ew'ywIthwhichtobuyaUbleton
which is engraved the sum of her vlr
..v Tne Ublet Is placed0Tr the
principle entttfbe tor houje.
The action of tho postmaster of El
Paso in refusing to allow the Kl . nso
77mm to be transmitted through tho
mail simply because it contained as
news an associated 1 ress dispatch giv
ing a synopsis of the opinion of the u
preme i ourt of Louisiana compelling
the, .Secretary of State to submit at the
the next election a constitutional
amendment passed bv the last general
assembly extending tlie charter of the
Louisiana Mate Lottery twenty-five
vears. is deserving of the severest con
demnation and censure, not only be
cause of the injustice officii an arbi
trary proceeding, but upon grounds of
public policy. The business manager
of the J7me very properly had this
postmaster who bears the historic
name of Smith, arrested for unlawfully
detaining mail matter, and he was
bound over to appear before a commis
sioner foi trial, but the punishment
whatever it ill be, oven if ever meted
out after many months of delay, will
not lit tho crime. Nothing short of ab
solute and inimediale official decapita
tion, with whatever other punishment
the law provides, would be proper for
such officious intermeddling with the
mails. If the United States mail is to
be subjected to such scrutiny and ex
clusion by the postmaster at El 1'aso,
the postmasters at tho crossroads in
the M.ito and throughout the United
States have the same right, power and
authority, and are of course at liberty
to do just as tho postmaster at I-1 l'aso
has done. If the postmaster can stop
the transmission of a newspaper be
cause it has in it the decision of a court
in regard to the Louisiana lottery, he
can also stop it because it mentions the
name of tho lottery in it, and if he can
do this he can stop tho rost, because it
incidentally mentions the name of the
Louisiana Lottery Comyany in cnlicls
ing his oflicial cortduct. If lie can do
this, however, he can override tho
strongest bulwark of the liberties of
the people and violate one of the plain
est provisions in tho constitution (if the
United States, thereby completely throt
tling the press
Tpon grounds of public policy the
United States Government should not
tolerate such tampering with the mail,
lt throws oen the doors to fraud and,
if permitted, will tend to make the
service inenlcient and unreliable. Why
not detain a letter sjispected of con
taining a lottery advertisement, and
whv not open it to ascertain if the de-
1 . . l.i 1 H It.. - I , n ,..
tendon is legai r ii iu cuuwjiihj bio lo
cal why then of course it might be per
mitted to continue on its journey.
jho great wrong done newspaper
publishers, however is to allow a post
master to authoritatively detain mail
matter which Is in his opinion illegal,
lie ought not to be permitted to do this.
If the publisher has committed any
wrong lie can be held responsible and
be made to suffer the penalty; but a
postmaster may detain an entire edi
tion of a newspaper, entailing a heavy
loss upon tlie publisher, and yet when
the matter comes to a final trial the
court may decide that the patters are
mailable. The damage has then been
done the publisher, and there seems to
be no adequate remedy for him. Bun
pose the politics of a newspaper are ob
jectionable to the postmasters generally
and throughout the state thev choose
to hold a paper because in their opinion
It is not mailable, it would thus p(it it
within the power of the postal depart
ment to stop the circulation of a news
paper and bankrupt it, leaving the pub
lisher with a lot ofsuita against post
matters as assets. Such a State of af
fairs leaves newspaper publishers with
out adequatejreiuedy, and to allow such
arbitrary conduct on the part or offi
cious postmasters Is contrary to the In
stitutions of this government, and a vi
olation of the legal maxim that each
wrong has Its adequate ramedy-Hous;
&n(fex.)'fMayl
A iil.iul .Judgment.
One of the. players must be blind
folded and seated at the upper end of
the room. Each of the others is then
led in turn, lind, without touching
them, the blinded one must give udg
nicnt regarding them. If the judg
ment is probable then the person led
up must be blmdfolde 1 in his place: if
not he pays a forfeit and another per
son is brought up until he makes acor
rect guess. For example:
Question Wha' is your sentence re
garding this piisoner?
Judge lie must ting a German song.
Forfeit Miss T does not under
stand German and is so hoarse she can
carcely sjieak.
Question What i3 your sentence re
garding this prisoner?
Judge That she will read a selection
from "Hamlet."
Forfeit-It is your little baby brother
who doesn't yet know his letters.
Question What is your oentence re
garding this prisoner?
Judge He must buy hlmsel' a wig.
Dr. V ; being bald lu-idel, now
has the honor of the judge s chair.
And so the cntertaiiune..t goes on, to
the interest and delight of the assemb
lage. Fin aia J. Gray in Good Housekeeping.
Clean in? Colored Woolens.
Four ounces of white castile soap
four ounces of ammonia, two ounces
of alcohol and two ounces of glycerine.
Shave the soap in one quart of water
over the fire. When dissolved add four
quarts of rain water, and when nearly
cold the other ingredients. Jlottle and
keep in a cool place. One cup of this
mixed in two quarts of water will be
sullicicnt for ordinary use. Now lay
the goods on an old sheet, and iron rap
idly and lightly on the wrong side, and
then roll tightly on a curtain pole or
any round piece of wood. If this is cue
fully done you do away with the creases
made by folding. For black silk or
cloth dissolve one tablcspoonful of
borax and one tablcspoonful of indigo
in one.pint of warm water. Sponge
the pieces well and lay smoothly one
above the other, and, if possible, put
in tho sun to dry. Ladies' Home Journal.
The Gallery Boys Whistle.
It isn't often that the progress of a
play is delayed by a whistle. This oc
cii red one night at Heuk's opera house,
lietween acts the orchestra played a
i election that gave the flute and piccolo
a chance to distinguish themselves at
the finale. The boy's in the packed
gallery took up the refrain, and the big
theatre w as filled with the music they
put into the air from their pursed
lips. The curtain bell rang, but the
boys stormed noisily for an encore.
The orchestra attempted to take up
the music cue for the rising of the cur
tain, but the whistlers in the gallery
would not have it. The leader was
obstinate. The picolo and the flute
were brought out again, and the selec
tion played once more. The gallery
boys w histled the refrain with enthusi
asm, and when the curtain- bell rang
again little Miss Leslie, The Prince,
had an opportunity to whistle herself.
Cincinnati Commeieial Gazette.
No Sufar Itemed y can be had "for
Coughs ond Colds, or any trouble of the
Throat, than "Brown's Broniehal
Tiwhea." I'rice2jcts. Sold only in
boxes.
A H. pithy Location.
City Man (looking for a home In the
iiihurbs) "I like this place very much,
but 1 am told it isn't healthy."
Agent " Ain't healthy ? D'ye see
that mule over in that field? 'That
mule hez liven here all his life, an' it
,in't a week since he kicked a locomo
tive off th track." New York Weekly.
Buck Number Itoitaarant
Cliasscey Depew says: "I lately got
a letter praising my speeches and say
ing: 'So much have they impressed
me that I have but one grand wish. 1
wish to listen to the speech you '
Her J I reached the end of the page
On turning tlie sheet over I read the
rest: 'would make f ter a dinner in
your railway restaurant at l'ougb
kecpsie.'" A rhllUophlenl Family.
AiTii'lIn li;t lmpl( , and miw in 'ho head,
I rnm Imitior ioU rnul hr nmn tim Kruwn ted;
Hhf'x n Ixi'l on her neck tlmt U hiff ah a boll'
Hut In nthnr roMpit nho is d lag quite well.
Anil I'a liiw dyoiiepsin, malnri i und gnnt,
Hip ImmiH with hnlt-rhrnm nieall broken ont,
II.' lb ijnmo to rheumatics that make hU lens
Hut In ullior reapsi ta he la doinu qultn well.
Ami Mn tins nlght-anca's unil a tronblesomo
rniiuh,
Thnt al 1 of onr doctor cant ppem to drive off;
Win wnki every ninlit and coughs qnite a spell,
Hut lu utlicr respects she is doing qnite well.
There is nothing like philosophy to
help one bear the ills of life but in the
case of this family what ia most needed
is a good supply of Dr. Pieroee' Golden
Medienl Discovery. It would ' cleanse
Amelia's bad blood, cure pa's ailment",
nnd check ma's cough. The "Golden
Modioli Diacoveiy'' by its action on the
liver, cleanses the system ot impurities.
It cures humors, ulcers, boils, scrofula,
null-rheum, erysipelas and all kinds- of
sores and swellings. The only guaran
teed blood-puritter.
Wot ITard Hint to Taka.
Mr. Faintheart Are you fond of
champagne, Mlsa Rosa?
Mms Kosa Moderately to, but what
I most admire about a bottle of cham
pagne is the cork. .
Mr. F. Indeed! and for what rea
son, pray f
Miss a Oh, merely because it pops
so delightfully.
Pilot Kuoft.
The celebrated Pilot Knob mines
have been worked since l&iG, and dur
ing the years intervening at the pres
ent time have produced an almost
fabulous amount of ore, says the St
Louis ltepubbcj. The miners reached
their zeiiitn in l'JHi, when they -pro
duced 200,000 tons. This output was
continued for about three years, when
it began rapidly falling off, and two
years ago the Vulcan works, whose
capacity is 15,000 tons per month, were
closed lor want of sufficient ore. The
company continued to prospect, how
ever, feeling confident that would soon
strike anotlier paying vein, and as at
a last resort the company sunk another
shaft 110 feet deep, the expense of
which wiks enormous. This failed also
and the conclusion was forced upon
the company that the "mountain of
iron" was exhausted. Prospecting was
continued, however, but very quietly
until a vein, was struck nearer the sur
face. This vein was nothing like the
original vein, however, the output be
ing orly seven cars daily. The mines
were quietly stripped of all the machin
ery, and scarcely any of it is to be
found there at this time.
The furnaces and forges were built
in 1847 by the Pilot Knob Iron com
pany, and in ISM were acquired by
Choteau, Harrison & Valle. lief ore
the Iron Mountain railroad was com
pleted to this point the output bad to
be carried over the Ozark mountains
to frt. (ienevieve, Mo. It finally came
into possession of the at. Louis Ore and
Steel company. -
'J he location of the mine is historic
ally interesting, as it was one of the
worst nests of bushwhackers develop
ed by the war. It was at Pilot Knob
that Ulysses 8. Grant received his com
mission as general, lt was at Pilot
Knob that the United States head
quarters for the southeast were estab
lished. It was at Pilot Knob that Gen-
Hardee surrendered in 1861, and it was
this same spot that the celebrated bat
tle of Pilot Knob was fought in Sep
tember of 1801. And now, like the
tales of the war, the erstwhile famous
"Pilot Knob mine, ' the supposed Gol
conda, is a thing of the past, a shatter
ed stronghold.
Copyright, 1800.
lie who waits
for an inactive liver to do its work,
exposes himself to all the diseases
that come from tainted blood.
Don't waitl Languor and loss of
appetite warn you that graver ills
arc close behind. You can keep
them from coming; you can cure
them if they've come with Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
It's the only blood and liver medi
cine that's guaranteed, in every case,
to benefit or cure. Your money
back if it doesn't Thus, you only
pay for tho good you get. Can you
ask more? It cleanses the system
and cures pimples, blotches, erup
tions and all skin and saalp dis
eases. Scrofulous affections, as
fever - sores, hip - joint disease,
swellings and tumors yield to
its superior alterative properties.
N. N. U. No. Bl
York, Neb
YORK
GREENHOUSE.
it II Kinds of ll.mse l'lanta
Shrubs, Vegetable Flanta,
mU CUT FLOWERS.
MAIL OKDKKS !OLIClTM.
St.. T.jOJB1. yoke, jsebr.
Th moat eompleta Um at
Drcsa Befonn Oooda a to
north-west. Including thaoald
brated Eqnipoise and Dalaarts
sisu, Jennesa Miller apeeUl
tisa and Jeraer Knit Underwear,
bend stamp for fro Uloatrsad
"""lilt". L. W. PUSH,
75 Madison SU, Utuoaga.
DonsunPTion.
Ikmapsthb mad? for thsabrndlssassi by lis
ass tboaasods o( eassa of the wont slod aad of long
UBdiDtbavabseaaarad. IadssdsosttoBclsnurfaaa
Is Its sOoaor, thstl will ssad two smui ran,wilfe
VALUABLE TRBATISB on this i to any sat-
anc who will ssod sm Ihalr Kipnas and P.O. addtssa,
. A. fecass. H. Cm Ml Fearl Be. N. T.
DE
WITT'S
LITTLE
EARLY
RISERS
Only Pill for Constipation, Dj s
iwngt, Hour Stomach, Sick Head
ache, find lireiih. So Griping-.
Ho Aim sea, no Puln. Small Pill.
Safe Pill. IJeMt Pill
E. C. DE WITT (0, Chicago,
School Teachers!
DO YOU WANT TO
MAKE HY
during vacation, or when you have
spare time? If so address the
Graham School Publishing Co..
York, Neb.
We want to correspond with every
teacher in' the land, and will make it
worth your while.
Our publications are new, are for
teachers and schools, have the en
dorsement of the best educators, and
Will Sell Rapidly.
Nothing Like Them
On The Market.
Graham School Publishing Co ,
YORK, NEB.
UIV ECU CD CURED TO STAY CURED.
llJlI IklCH We want the name and ad
dress o f every sufferer in the
&1 OT U f 1 A U.S. and Canada. Address,
AO I nisi It F.InMbmS.I.,IiCsU,I.I
IS THE BEST MEDICINE
for the General Ailments of Horses, Cattle, Hogs
and Slieep. They tui Ify tlie blood, prevent a4
cure disease. Honest and reliable, In bonsai
packages; used and warranted for over twantr
years. Everyone owning a horse or catUe aheala
five it a trlaC Made by F.mmkbt PkofkusTAM'
Co., Chicago. Sold by all druggista. .
0 P I II IT! Or Morphine Habit
Or. 8. B. COLLINS, Original Dlaeovaim
Painless Oplnm Antldoto.
Will onre too i t home without acr
sf oidinarr business. Boot sent ire to any aav
dress. Hundreds of original teatlsaoniaM al
physicians and others fur inepectina at ny of
Boa, Room 27 American Expreea Raildlna, Hash.
roe st.. Chicago, 111, P. O, Drawet aft (filial
U Porta, Ind.)
FAT FOLKS REDUCED
23 1 bi. rar month brhiurrjilfMa herbal
Nostaarvinir- nAlnwnMniuuas
d no bud effect. Strictly rouftdantlai.
Ok
Wf OUthsaelraualadassl
leading remedy far aSlk
nnnatoral oiachargae ana
prlvata dlsissis of man. A
Icsrtalneuraforthe 4sMl
' tatlng weakaesa psnallat
to women.
f IWMMI halt MS (Ml MSI
ITkEMsiCmeWMiOa In reeommsDalag It to
g ail sonwwv.
L J. 8T0NFR. I O.D(Ctrm.lU-
HaM y Dr ua-s-Ota.
I iWUINs Ml
I MaMlW
The Iarrest stock of ArtllU
cial Eyes in the West. An ss
Bortmcut of eyes sent to any
address Allowing purchaser
to select one or more and re
turn the balance thus usuiiasr
a perfect tit. Office. 163 State st, Chicago, Hi.
DK. B. A. CANFZKLD,
consulting and operating; surgeon to the Chlcajr
Eye and Ear College, patients nt a distance' treated
with unparalleled success and when risitinr the city
are furnished board and lodging at reasonable rates.
Free Trade Prices
No Prn.eetlont
No Monopol'.ea I
$45MacMneslen$ 6
We are now sellinir our
Western Improved Singer
Sewing Machine same aa
cut complete with all at
tachments and waiafMad
Sor K vears for aalv il
Send for circular and see full descolplloa of Out
snd other styles to N. A. Scullla A Ca 6l W,
Lake St., Chicago, Ml.
ptotccrc;-
ouffiTi a tttiisxi
a rKtoi lmt rait
EET, WALLACN 4 W
IISWataihAvHCWctfta
srr -J i- 1
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