Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1895)
Maafaclartag Pr4nrta. Colorado hu 17,067 employes In its faetori, making annually a product valued al 4 ,4i.25. In ArkaKsai 1 5.072 persona are fm ployed in manufacturing who turn oat product of 179. California has 83,542 employed in its manufactories, turning out an annual product of 2i3 The factories of Missouri employ' 143,121 hand, the annual output bring! valued at $324fil.!'3. WOMEN'S FACES like Bowers, lade I and wither wit b time the bloom of the rose M only known to the healthy woman's cbeekn. The nerv . ous strain caused by rtbe ailment and 'pains peculiar to the aea, and the labor and worry of rearing a family, can often he traced by the lines in the woman's face. Dull eyes, the sallow or wrinkled face and lhoe " f-liiiK of weakueta" have thtir rise in the derangements and irregularities peculiar to women. The functional de-rang'-tnenl, painful disorders, and cbionic weaknesses of women, can be cuied with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. For the young girl just entering womanhood, for the mother and those about to become mothers, and later in "the change of life," the " Prescription " i just wlut thev need, it aids nature in preparing the syMem for tbew events. It's a tneduine prexcribed fur thirty years, by Dr. K. V. Pierce, thief (ocMilting physician to the Invalids' Hotel aod hurgieal Institute, at Buflalo, N V. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to pt-nonal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy fife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best product to tk-e'neeb of phyical being, will attet the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Svrup of Fig. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly bwnefirial properties of a perfect lax ative; efft-etually cleansing, the cystem, dinielling eoldn, headm-los and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given natUfaction to millions and mi with the approval of the medical profciwion, because it arte on the Kid neys, Liver and lkwels without weak ening thern ami it is perfectly free from very objectionable suln-tanec. . gyrup of I-'ijr- is for sale by nil drug fiat in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Oo. only, whoso name is printed on every parlrage, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not ncr-' -., -itiite if "fit-red. lieecliaiii puis r t - fr bil iousness, sick headache, diz ziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, tor pid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples, loss of appetite, etc.. when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most fre quent cause of all of thsm. One of the moat important things for everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in tbt world, especially o) women; and itcanall fee prevented. Go bv the hook.f -ee at your ruRgist's. or write B P. AllenCo.,365Canal St., New York, fills, to and 35 a box. anmila( mnrf limn P" Mrt rr tnilaa. Waller Baker 4 Co. Limited, Tbt Lf MtnnSclHrcrt of PURE, HICH CRADC XC0C0A8 and CH0C0LATE8 HI6HE8T AWARD8 from tb fTVaYl Industrial and Food expositions in europe am jmmerim. - llt . In l f tb CaUIIOn. ImiuHonl of th lak-la anil wr.t.pata j u fnawi-fa ahoul4 Biafca r (Wal fla" aiijr"'. utir lareaste. ! la prlBlad uaj aacS iaaaa. solo by oaoccas everywhere. WlTlllll CO. LTD. OOKMtSTls, MU. tlE7 GCOflT LU1E 2 1 Mlipi) mm 9. Ha. IH-M lart Ma ' .. .. - -- A PARALYTIC CURED. Mi Grandfather, a Kavolutionarv Sol dier, and His Father, Both Died oi r'laral jraiia. Yet the Third Generation Is Cared -The Method. Vom le iirta.d, Jiuftnn, Ma$. Like a thunderbolt frvm a dear sky, a stroke of paralysis came to Mr. Frank T. Ware, the well kuouti Boston auctioneer and appraiser, at U Washington street, one nigut about t years ago. T t .. , .. . ..... m. " .. to get th.- facts, lie gave the interesting parueiiiars in Dig own war. "Th- hrst shock came very suddenly w hile 1 was asleep, but it was not lasting in Its effects, and m a few weeks 1 was able to be about. A few month after, when exhausted by work ami drenched w ith rain. 1 went home in a ery nervous slate. 'I he result huk a second and more vere shock, after which my left arm and leg were practuully helpless. "My grandfather, who n a soldier in the Itevolmiuuary War, died hiially of paralysis. My fattier died also of par alysis, complicated with other troubles, and so I had some kuowlele of the fatal character t the disease which is hereditary in uur .iimily. After the sec ond s'n" k I took warning, for, in all probability, a third would carry me off. "Almost everything under the sun was recoii.iiiciided to me and I tried all the remedies tjtiat teemed hairy to do any good, hut to no effect. "The only thing I found that helped me was llr. Williams' I'ink 1'ilis. and 1 verily believe that if il hadn't been lor those- pills 1 would have been dead years ago. "Yes, 1 still hare a slight reminder of the last attack six yei.rs hko. My left arm is not as strung as t other and my left foot drugs a little, as je paralysis hud the effect oi deadening ihe nerves. lint 1 can stilt alk a gnud distance, talk as easily as ever, and my jfciicral health is splendid. I ni over seventy years old, although ! am generally taken to lie twenty ears younger. "The I'itik I'ills keep my blood in good condition and I believe that is why I am so well, nltlioiigli cheerfulness may help. "1 have thought of it a groat many 1 1 1 1 1 i-M. and I honestly believe that the I'iuli Fills have sned m life," Mr. Ware lias every np aranee of a perfectly healthy man, anil arrives at his otiu-e promptly at H o'clock every morning, although he has reached an age when many men retire from active life. Ilis ex perience is well known to a great many people in Boston, wtjere his constant i beerf ulness has won him hosts of friends, fie thinks that both his father and his grandfather could have been saved if I'ink i'ills had been nhtainahl at that time. lr. William:' Pink Fills for Fale I'eople rontaiu all the elements necessary to givt new iife and richness to the blood and re store shattered nerves. They may he had ol all drtiKKists or direct by mail from t-lie Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N Y., at .Vie per box, r sii boxes for Forrlgnera la the t'ttlea. In Cincinnati, and Milwaukee about siity-nine per cent, of all foreign pop ulation apG of German birth. Over one-fourth of the entire popu lation m -New York was born either in Ireland or in Germany. New York city contains one-lifth of all the Husaianu in this country and one-four Hi of all the Italians. It is said that in the Italian colonies of New York there are hundreds of persons who speak no English. An Applicant Term. Mrs. Snasjgsfnewspaiier in hand) I've of'en seen the term "high cbntractma parties" used in the account of a wed ding, but never with such appropriate ness iis In the acco-int I have just read. Mr. Snaggs What Is there particu larly appropaiate about It in this case? Mrs. Snaggs- -The 1 ride wag hve feet leven inches in height and the groom tix feet two. - Pittsburg Chronicle Tel fgraph. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. 1'riee 75 rents. A IEsill Transit. "How long did it take you to cross ;he ocean V" asked (Jus lie Smith of a very aristocratic lady just returned from Europe. "I was seven days on the water." "Seven days' Why, when my brother went across it took him eight days." "Probably your brother went over in the steerage. I was a llrst cabin pas lenger," she replied, proudly. Texas SHIRKS. liro Cure for Consumption ha no equal il a t oilgll lliciliriiie. r . .o . ahbiti, fences M., Hullalo, N. Y., May It, 1S4. ' Something Thnt I'wys. Hackett 1 owe my landlady for three months' iwitrd, and she says that I have got to pay up. Kackett (indifferently)! owe my landlady a year's board bill. Hackett How on earth do you gel along with out paying tier? Hackett liy p 'ying attentions to her daughter, -N. V. World. rimn I h r.sleriiHl Signa. ",My mamma got ever so many falls when the was learning to ride the bi cycle yesterday," explained the little girl to the caller, "and that's why she'i so long coming down. She's got Hit blues all ove'r tier." ( hicago Tribune, (let double security from your rela lives. It is a Fact That II nod's san-Bparilla ha' an utieipiullei record of cures, the largest -ales in tin world, and cures when all others lull. Hood's Sarsaparilla la the Onl . True Blood Purifier Prominently in lbs public ey toHay. $1 six lor ". He stir to get Mnno's. njJ'a Dill i- acr harmoniously will HC3Q S rlllS Hood H.r..Mrllla. ALL ABOUT THE FARM SUBJECTS INTERESTING TO RURAL READERS. Number of Cost a Farm Will Keep Women Make Puccetaful Bee Kais ers Trough for I'onltry-Tetbering Morses and Cattle. Improved Feed Trough for I'oultrj. Kofi poultry food thrown on the ground or on a board is quickly trampled and liefotiled so that It is unfit to eat. I'lac ing It In a shallow pan or trough helps tli matter little. If any. The ln-st way of feeding is to us covered puna or troughs w hicli j-rnilt poultry to obtain the food and at the Mime time ket-p TKOt f.II KOU l-MAl.I. IHI KS. them out of it with their feet xmnll chicks, a double trough Is for made of tin as shown In Kig. 1. It is 'Jn inches long and luetics wide, ouch half being 2 inches with? and Inches deep, with square ends soldered on. Tin Is liest as It Is easily washed and kept clean. This trough is set inside of the box. seen in Kig. 2, the same in width find length, inside-, and Inches high. It has a hinged cover fastened down w ith a I100U and handle to lift by. Each side Is open tind fitted with wire bats placed 2 Inches apart, each end of these wires being licnr at right tingles, driven IIOX FOH TltOI'ltHS. through tup strips of w ood and clinched. The food Is placed In the trough by raising the cover of the box. A tight cover Is necessary to protect the food when they jump on the box and make a roost of It, which they are certain to do. Feed at one lime only what will be pjlen clean and keep the trough well washed. Nothing Is more productive of mouth, throat and bowel diseases in chicks than soured and musty food or a filthy feed trough. I'arm and Home. Cows 41 Vn rm Will Keep. The number of cows that may be prolltably kept on an eighty-acre farm, for Instance, depends upon the extent to w hich one wishes to make the dairy business a specialty. The number Is only limited to a raw to un acre where the business is crowded, but I would not deem It advisable for ii beginner to start In with more Uinii tifteeii or twen ty cmvs. This number will warriint a person In the necessary expenditure of melius In preparing stables and dairy and necessary appliances for buiier makitig, A silo Is regarded by many as one of the lirst necessities, alii I have no doubt that the silo is an economic method of preparing food, although I have had no exiieiience with one. I put a power mid feed cutter on ov barn floor and a f I mill In an adii- Ing building-ami fed all feed dry. The daily rations consisted of tine cut stalks for bulk food and a mixture of ground feed, corn and oals. with bran and oil meal. The result was very satisfac tory. I'llle water slightly warmed In winter was always on tap. and regard ed as a strict necessity. With the num ber of cow s mentioned a separator may lie prolllably employed and reduce the labor of the care of Hie milk to a mini mum. ' Tethering Homes unit Cuttle. It is often desired to tether a horse cow or calf in the Heidi To keep them from winding the rope about the bur or stake to which they are attached is Important. Two methods are shown herewith. A long, stout. Iron hook m a y be pressed down Into the turf, I here being Just curve enough In the part In the ground to keep It from pull lug out. but not too mm h to prevent the hook from being itKVoi.vts.i Tt:Tiit iiturned about In the soil, as shown in I ig. 1 . The hunk must be long enough and stout enough so that HOOK Th i ll KM. Ii will not pull out through the turf. The device Illustrated III l-ig. 'i needs little explanation. The wooden affair Unit slips down over the Iron bar, ami that turns freely about It, must Is? of hard wood and short enough to stand the strain upon It. The pieces of plank may be hound with hoop Iron around the edges for added strength. Kven If the rope gets wound about this It will rewind when the animal pulls upon It. American Ag riculturist. Tarnipa for Hbaeu, Turnips art aomatlmea frown on tubhla land, aa a eaten crop for sheep, by brMtVaatlnf tha aaved. After the tnralpa ar ready tba ahp art turnad oa tfca Had, aad mum sat aaly toe turalya, but tb yonag wmb. Whit It Is uot the most profitable way to pro duce turnips, yet it Is claimed for the method that the only expense Is to plow and harrow the land and the cost of the seed, no other cultivation being given. Bern on the Farm. What farmers are looking for to-day is something that will yield an Income outside of their farm. Bee would make quite an item in the income of the farmer, and would be received from what Is going to waste every year. Many an article could be bought with the honey for the bee. Honey can be readily sold In any market at thirteen to eighteen cents per pound. I to not start on a large scale, but let your apiary grow. Start with about four or six swarms the first season, says Farm News. You may lose some skips, liut you must expect Iosh. Hoes will die as well as horsea or cattle, but per haps not so often, and then there is not such a large sum Invested. Take some reliable bee paper if you Intend going hi it very strong. Many a fann er's w ife is in the lee business to stay. They tind it a light employment, and many 11 little article has been pur chased with the bees' money. I so the frame hives. 11s more money cau be j got from them than- any other. I'so one-pound sections, as they look neater and are in demand, as those who buy the sweet nectar like to have the combs ho they can place them on the table and not cut them. Secure Italian bees, as they are the best workers and lire more hardy. Hoes must Is1 protected from the cold of the Northern States. They can lie wintered In cellars or buried in a dry place In the ground and ventila tion given. Windbreaks on Sandy Soil. In every long settled locality where the soil is sandy farmers quickly learn, after the original forest is cleared away, to plant windbreaks to protect their soil from blowing away. Such w indbreaks do good, says the American Cultivator, which mote than offsets the waste of the land which they occupy. Not only is soil blown away after being plowed, but during the summer there are freipient violent sandstorms where the winds have full sweep, which un cover seeds and plants or blow sand against the foliage of plants, cutting and spoiling It. These windbreaks serve another Important purpose In winter In keeping the snow evenly spread over the fields. They should be of evergreen wherever possible,, so as to make a protection for winter as well as for the summer season. The Tobacco Worm, due of the pests which consume a great deal of the tobacco raiser's time and materially affect the value of the crop Is the tobacco worm. '1 he moth deposits Its eggs on the under side of Till-, TOIIAIlo WOUM. the leaf, and, as they are small and light green in color, not many are dis covered by the planter as he makes his daily round In search of worms. The growth of the worm Is rajiid. attaining from two to three inches In length in a few days. They are voracious feeders and soon Injure the market value of a leaf. Wheat llrills und Hrouilcast Seeders. oil the Northwestern prairie soils shoe drills are now more used than hoe drills, according to l'rof, W. M. Hays, of the Minnesota station. In some a press wheel follows the shoe. In oth ers a chain covers the seed well. The best fur ni has a heel so shaped as to make a V-shaped furrow, because the soft mud will not then clog the tube. For dry lauds the press shoe drill does best, while the chain shoe drills fie niosl suilable for moist, heavy lands. The hoe drills work best among corn stalks or trashy land. Itroadcast seed ers ai still much used for early spring seeding, especially on moist soil which Is friable after puddling and drying, (in clay soils anil in dry climates Ihe drill Is the best seeder for w heat. I Precautions Aunlnst Itroiiiclit, Kvery time u ralu falls all tilled laud should be cultivated. There are many light rains through the summer which wet only the surface of the soil, ami If this is not cultivated under, the mois ture sp lily evaporates and Is lust. This cultivation also has another effect - in developing nitrates In Hie soil. Whatever vegetable matter is In the soil Jieeits only 111 ne minium Mini i-iiimii-i with oxygen to be decomposed and Hs inamnial element set free. There Is also oil sol! that is cultivated freiuenlly u deposit "f moisture by the atmos phere which It contains, and this, being really u dew, always contains more uiuinoiilii than doe ordinary ralu water. Kniit K viirtlou. At uo time of Ihe year Is the value of the fruit evaporator better appreciated than during hot weather. The early fruit keeps poorly, and unless marketed somewhat green can Hot be disposed of before It decays. But with an evapora tor on the farm fh fruit can lie evapor ated when It la at Ha liest, and It will then I worth more than can lie got for It by (tending to aell on commission in the city. The coat of an evaporator can easily be aaved by the saving of fnilt tn a alofto eaaoo that would be watted If It ww not iwasl Highest of til ia Leavening Power. Latest U. & Gotrt Report liarcleu and UiCliartl Neglect to mulch 111 good season kills many trees. Many young trees are killed by too iep planting. If there are any bones lying around, burn the in ueartbe grapevines. In thinning grapes, as a rule, two rood clusters are enough to be left on ine cane or bud. Many fail to get good results with raspberries and blackberries by allow ing them to sucker too freely. Curious Trees. The largest orange tree in the south 's a gigantic specimen which grows out of the ric h soil in Terre Honne Parish, Louisiana. It is 50 feet high and ID feet in circumference at the base. Its yield has often been 10,000 oranges per jeason. The "tallow tree" of China aag a pitch from one inch to two feet n diameter, according to the size of ihe tree, which is composed of greasy ax, which is so highly volatile that it often catches Ore spontaneously, con turoing the tree to the very ends of its Tools. The largest Oak tree now left rtanding in England is "Cowthorpe's LSk," which is seventy-eight fett in j sircumference at the ground. The j ldest tree in Kiitian is "Parliamentary I Oak," in Clipstone 'ark, London, which g known to be 1,500 years old. The I largest apple tree in New York state is laid to be one stauding near the town it Wilson. It was planted in the year tel5, and it is on record that it once fielded thirty-three barrels of apples in i single season. There are 412 species sf trees found growing within the li ra ts of the United States. The cariosity if the wtiole lot is the black ironwood, of Florida, which is thirty per cent Heavier than wafer. Well-dried black ronwood will sink in water almost as quickly as will a bar of lead. The "life iree" of Jamaica is harder to kill than ny other species of wood growth mown to aruoricultuists. It continues to grow and thrive for months nfter being uprooted and exposed to thp sun. Mrs. Winslnw's sooth I Nn Svuer for ehlld en teething. wifien ihe iruiim, re-luees Inflam mation, allay, pain. cures winil colic. 'J.rM! boule. The i'uriotm , onslls. Some time ago, in company with a friend, I was searching for fossils among the debris of an abandoned limestone quarry. The owner hearing us chipping and pounding among the rocks, approached us and inquired what we were looking for. On being inswered "fossils" he said: "Fossils? What's them for to ketch fish with ?" do not remember what, answer he received, but it 1b more than probable hat some of the fossils would have Tiade excellent bait say some of the iraallertriloliitei could they only have oeen used in time, but, unfortunately, ive were a lew thousand decades late. Another time, while wandering over ,he rugged Jievonitin slopes of the Hel lerberg moun'ains, we came across a lattve who gravely informed us tha he curious, crooked fossil shells (zaph entis) there abounding were petnlien leifers' horns. Archaeologist. The One tlrevtl CrivilcR. (Juericus Why 00 yon think girls ire a nuisance when you're camping mt? Cynicns because when they nre iround you can't very well swear at he fellow who does the cooking. ludge. However well adapted bloomers may je for revelations of grace, they are ividently not designed for the promo iion of holiness, Syractisft Courier. "Brevity Is the Soul of Wit." Good Wife, You Need SAPOLIO "SAY BOSS! Them People CROCKRIES 1 III! Ilia Pood of Oeiiiu. James Tnompson once said he would walk half across England for a plieas ar,t dinner. 5-wilt said, "No bread is so bitter as that of a dependent." He spoke from persona! experience. Iternadotte, Napoleon's marshal, who afterward became king of weaen, liked goose ana onions. Kobert Herrtck said he could live on rosebuds and cherries if thev were served by the hands of the woman lie loved. lilt View of Hie Thine. The wheelman who was scorching, through Washington Park rounaed one of the cutks just as a little girl about 4 years o,d started to run across the road in front of him, says the Chicago Tribune. He set his teeth, turned his bicycle sharply to the left, and flew out of the saddle m one direction, while the machine went tumbling in another, the little girl escaping by a hair's breadth. "You careless brute!" exclaimed a sharp-voiced matron, who came run ning up. "You monkey on two wheels! What do you mean by racing about the park in this dare-devil kind of a way? Haveu't you got any consideration for other folks? Don't you know you're always liable to run over somebody. Do you want to icare people to death? Some people haven't got the sense they were corn witn. it l naa my way about it, I'd stop this business mighty quick. Yon might have killed my child." "Yes, ma'am, replied the young man, who bad gathered himself up and was making an inventory of his damages. "Hut 1 didn't. fhe got off without a scratch, while I've got a skinned elbow. a bruised knee, a sprained ankle, and a lameshoiilder. There's a piece of skin as big as a half-dollar got)6 from the palm of my hand, my hair is full of dirt, I've ruined a suit of clothes, and it will cost me 915 to have the macbine mended. If I'm not kicking ma'am, 1 don't think you ought to kick." lie picked up his broken bicycle, put it ever his shoulder, and limped slowly away in the direction of the nearest re pair shop. A Dog-May Kplisode. Husband Gee! It's hot! Can't wer have some lemonade, dear? Wife I'm sorry, dear, but it takes all the lemons I can buy to keep my light tan shoes clean! Truth. If woman will wear bloomers, let her wear them down to the ground. Dal las News. IEWIS 98X LYE I'owdered aed rerraro,tK&- (PATENTKD.) Te ttrmwt.it and purett Lye made Unlike ether Lye it being s Una powtlwr and packed in a can witti ren. vable lid, tbe contents ara bIm eya ready lor ue. Will make Hie betl perliimed Haid Soap la JO minulca without boiling- it la tin- best tor cleansing wasta lipr, disinfecting sbika. closets, waahing bottles, palnta. trees, ete. r'ENNA. SALT MFG. CO. (Jn.-'l Acta., I'hlla., fa. PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Pan only be accomplished with the very best of tools and . , appllauces. With a PavH klf' Cream Sepa rator on the JHaf farm you are sure of more w J and better butter, while m .f the skimmed milk Is aval- uat'e feed Fanners will IS make no mis take to Ret a , jyaj, Davis. Noat, Illustrated "5j(i5 catalogue mailed kkkf. " 1 Agents waDted DAVIS & RANKIN BLDG. St MFQ. OO Cor. Randolph Dearborn St Chicago. Patents rndrh as r. ttfTiDnon, vV m n 1 n urton. O. Cj No ni, n fe in til Patent on- i ftlnfMi Tl"rttror U.Tentor'sQuki. aLVAataaaatafat Won't Take This oap They Want SANTA CLAUS SOAP" Everybody wanta Santa Clavs 80 r who know the goodaeat of H. Try it oace and you will refaae II other kiada, too. Sold every where. Itade only by . THE 1. 1. FAIHAKK CCSPW, CtUCftM. -aaaw W