,.,... i-- f . The Sioux County Journal, HAKKISON, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 1895. N UMBEK 16. VOLUME VIII. tff.i THE really beautiful old lady seems to be atom from the great assembly of womankind now be fore the public. The trouble Is that directly a woman reaches 40 she think tt neceawary to retrograde In years by the adoption of youthful drew and manners bo that you can pretty gener ally estimate a woman's real age In the Inverse ratio of her drww. In other ajerds, the gayer her attire the older she is likely to be In reality. Yet It la tree f Tery many women that they grew In personal beauty a the years franc. Very often this Is a question f health, and as the weakness are eetgrown In full womanhood new and hitherto unknown charms are discover ed, little by little. No woman need grow Into the hideous, hopeless corpu lency so often aeon In the elderly worn tkan animal, and all pretenses to good locks are ntterly destroyed, for nothing la more hideous than an enormous wom an, all toppling and running over with unnecessary fat If the thing Is begun In tine all the after annoyances may be avoided ; due attention paid to diet, exercise and hygiene will accomplish eD this, and much more, for the com bined powers will secure perfect hesltb STYLISH BLOUSE EFFECTS FROM LONDON. No. 1. In cloth and embroidered muslin. No. 2. livening bodice of white silk ganze. 4. In velvet or velveteen. No. S. In burgundy-red velvet. 5. In patterned muslin. Madame. and consequently much personal Im-hii-ly. All this is not to say that on old lady, of eoneldersble plumpness, Is a forbid ding eight; not a bit of it; a goodly amount of flesh go far toward keep ing the face youthful, and. It Is wild, "the heart light;" this should 1 true, since the old song runs, "Iaugh and grow fat" end It Pxr rule that cannot be applied both way. To us half ttie cbarin alsmt an old lady Is the dainty, pretty things allotted to her wearing; U fashion writers seem to forget wholly, the dear old grandmoth ers, and saintly mothers, we all know and love so well; forget them, at leant, in their chronicles of fashion, and must make the dear old ladles feel quite out of kith and kin with the younger set so ofteu set forth. Hut If their age, their personal charm, Is si ml led the old laxly Is s picture of grace and leauty that the younger one can never tiop to emulate even though every fashion baser In the world gives her hints ss to the selection of her cos tumes. The Walking Hhoe, ' 'The shoe best adapted for walking Is made of calfskin and thick cork soles. These are light In weight durable and most comfortable to the foot Small, 111 fitting shoes have done as much harm In the world as tightly laced cor sets. They have made cheerful people peevish and strong people Indolent, If not week. Have shoes Urge enough to five your feet ample freedom. What will set a woman sacrifice for beauty? Comfort always and health sometimes, bnt beauty produced In this way is only a shadow of what It should be and la ef short duration. The druggist find the counterfeit of beauty In great demand, and, like everything else, Ae markets have tried to monopolise beauty, and for a few cents one may buy rosy cheeks and ruby lips, but nature asks no money and has a way of developing beauty outside the apothecary's shop, and one year of good outdoor exercise will do more for a woman's beauty than all the lotions and pomades that were ever Invented. Interesting as are the changes produced In man by proper training, the change in a woman is marvelous. Exercise seems to have an Immediate effect on a woman's com plexion. Correct Child Culture. Some one, speaking of child culture, argues that since grown people have hobbies, "children certainly have an equal right to a similar indulgence." "Indulging a hobby" Is not a happy expression of cultivating a taste or tal ent, and the argument that the child should Indulge because grown people do Is unsound. A hobby horse Is a make believe horse, and neither grown people nor children should cultivate make be lieves. Even In the matter of tastes Indiscriminate Indulgence may be a bad thing. It Is true that many children are warped out of all beauty and happi ness of life by parents who are deter mined that their children shall follow certain trades or callings whether or not they have tastes or bent In that di rection. But steering a child clear of bad tastes or elusive fancies Is quite different from fitting hi in to a Procrus tean bed. Fredoru to choose among gsid tastes, to follow any wholesome bent, the child should have, but to In dulge bad tastes or follow wrong bents he should not be allowed. It Is In this Indiscrimination that the philosophy of developing Individuality goes to ex tremes and HKlls the child even more hopelessly than the procrustcan treat ment Getting In the lila Hleevt-a, It U hardly necessary to say that all the coats and Jackets and all manner ot wraps that are with sleeves endued have those sleeves big at the shoulder to provirle room for the Imperious, tyrant dress sleeves. This Is the most serious problem the cloakmakers have met In recent years, and In its solution they have gradually Increased the sire of the srmhole, used smoothly silken linings altogether and substituted In their sleeves lighter material for th fur. Woman's Way. When a woman says no, if he wanla you to insist upon her saying yes. A man will always respect a woman If he sees that she respects herself. A wife is willing to be obedient, but she Pistes to be considered a slave. With a woman, her soul should al ways be at least as well clad as her body. If a married woman commences as a slave, she will never again regain her freedom. , Kven when a woman Is In love she never forgets to see that her bat U c etraurut rVLL ABOUT THE FARM SUBJECTS INTERESTING TO RURAL READERS. roola Neceeeary for the Farm Ice Harvest-Apples Not Hurt bjr Bruis ing' Potatoes Food for Stock Heater for Poultry House. The Fsrnt Ice Harvest. The tools absolutely necessary where wily a limited amount of loe 1 put up consist simply of an ice saw, tongs, hook, chisel, and a wagon or sled. The i Uw does not cost much and the tongs, book and chisel can be made by a local blacksmith at a very small expense, and will last almost a lifetime. An Ice plow Is very desirable, but unless con siderable is to oe put up Is not essen tlal, as a large saw will answer the purpose. Devices for cleaning snow from the Ice field can be easily made should they be needed. In filling the Ice house, first nut In 18 or 24 no. 2. tosos. Inches of sawdust. then set the first layer of loe cakes on edge, allowing 12 or 18 Inches of saw dust at the sides. The other layers may V FIG. 8. ICE HOOK. be laid flat breaking Joints; If prac ticable, pour In water to fill up the In terstices, and make a solid block of the whole mass that will keep out air. When the house Is filled, cover the lc CO FIO. 4. ICK CHISEL. with two feet or more of sawdust. Ag riculturist Barreling Apples. Many of the most profitable opera tions In commercial life depend In the first Instance upon very simple facts. Most persons would pass by without observing the barreling of apples as a case In point If apples were placed loosely In barrels they would soon rot though passing over but a very snort distance of travel; and yet when proper ly barreled they can be sent thousands of miles, even over the roughest ocean voyage, In perfect security, says Mee han's Moutbly. This Is owing to a fact discovered years ago, without any one knowing particularly the reason, that an apple rotted from a bruise only when the skin was broken. An aiple can be pressed so as to have Indenta tions over Its whole surface without any danger of rotting, provided the skin Is not broken. In barreling apples, therefore, gentle pressure Is exercised, so that the apples are fairly pressed In to each other, and it Is Impossible for any one fruit to change Its place in the barrel on Its Journay. Apples are sometimes taken out of barrels with large Indentations over the' whole sur face, and yet no sign of decay. In these modern times we understand the rea son. The atmosphere Is full of micro scopic germs which produce fermenta tion, and, unless they cau get an en trance Into the fruit rot cannot take place. A mere Indentation without a rupture of the outer skin does not per mit of the action of these microbes. This Is a simple reason why the early observation enabled the barreling of apples to be successful. Potatoes as Stock Food. Prof. Heury has a valuable article In the Breeders' Gazette summing up about all that Is knovvu on (lie subject on the value of potatoes as food for live stock. He gives the conclusions of Fjord, the great Inventor of feeding tuffs in Denmark, namely, that four pounds of potatoes furnish as much nu triment to animals as oue pound of rye or barley, and also the result of his own experiment In feeding potatoes to hogs, They were carefully weighed, cooked hi Iron kettles, and enough corn meal used to make a thick pudding or mush. These experiments show that 445 pounds of potatoes arc equivalent to 100 pounds of corumeal In pig feed Ing. He has also shown by experiments that corn meal has somewhat higher feeding value than tiarley, and con eludes that four pounds of potatoes are worth as much as one pound of barley or rye, and almost as much as the an me weight of corn meal for hog feeding. In the Wake of a Drouth. As I see many Inquiries about clover seeding, I will say that our most sue cessful way of late years hus been to sow our clovcrsced on fall-sown rye, as soon as the land Is In a fit condition to harrow, and then to sow the seed and harrow It twice over with a light, slanting harrow. This year we bad a new experience, being left short of pas ture from the drouth of 18K1, says a cor respondent of Hoard's Dairyman. We turned fourteen sows, with one hnn- FIG. 1. ICK SAW. dred and eight pigs, on a thirteen- acre field of rye, which was seeded to clover, as above Indicated, when the rye first started, so as to be good pasture. We turned in eight cows from time to time; of course, we gave up all hope, so far as the clover-seeding was concerned, but to our surprise this fall we had the finest stand of clover. It seems that the tramping, and In addition, manure deposits, had the desired effect, but will add that the land Is sandy land, we plowed four acres of this same lot June 20, and resowed it to rye In order to have new and fresh pasture; It grew finely and made good pasture, but when eaten down It did not continue to grow, as we expected, but died out entirely, showing that winter rye sowed that time of the year will not stand pas turing. Fattening Turkeys. Turkeys for Christmas are shut up In a light dry and roomy house the first week In November, says a correspond ent of the Country Gentleman; troughs with as much maize and good barley as they can eat should always be by them, and they should have two good meals a day of Just us much barley meal mixed with flat milk as they can eat and milk to drink. Sliced mangolds, turnips, sweeds and cabbage are use ful and necessary, and plenty of lime, sand, ashes and brlckdust should be kept In the corners of the house. It Is found to be most Important that the troughs be well cleaned out every morning, and all surplus food removed, for on a farm there are usually plenty of other fowls to eat up what is left by the turkeys. Fed In this way, they rap Idly put on flesh, which Is usually very white in color and fine In texture. The Cow's Stable. This subject Is an ever-recurring one, yet oue which many farmers need to have before them at least once a year, and that Is at the approach of winter. When a stable can be made warm at so little expense It does seem that It might be done, yet careless men still live, who keep their milch cows In stables very little better than none at all, says E. H. Rockwell In the New York Trib une. It is a common saying mat coii' vlnce a man that his pocket book Is af fected by anything, and It becomes an lmnortant stibiect at once. None of greater Importance confronts the farm er than the one of warm stables. While I do not advocate constant stabling, I do think and know that cows comfort ably kept In moderately warm stAbles, free from frost at least, will make more butter and give more milk than those that are shivering with cold. Heater for Ponltry Home. Among the many plans now In use for warming the poultry house. the heater, Illustrated below, supplies heat and ventilation or a supply of fresh warm air. Any kind of a flat top stove or even a kerosene stove will give suf flclent heat The size of the stove should depend on the size of the house, but 40 degrees is a sufficient heat. The illustration shows a closed box a yard square and an Inch deep, made of ordl nary sheet Iron. The box or heater Is placed on a email stove, or If legs arc attached to each corner of the heater. IIICATKII A.Vli VKSTIl.ATOK. a lamp may tie piaceii under it. me cold air comes lu at A, passes through the box, becoming heated, and emerges at the plo B. The cold air pipe Is Inch In diameter and the warm air pipe 1 Inch. The pipe A should be long enough to extend through the walls to the outside, so aa to bring in the pure air. No ventilators on the top of the building will lie required, and the air will keep the house dry. Always bring trie nlr In and discharge It near the roof, as the birds will not then crowd or lieeomc lame as they will when the warmth Is below them. Farm and Home. When to Water Home. F.xperlmcnts at the Utah station gave results as follows, as rejiorted in the Philadelphia 1cdger: Horses watered before being fed grain retained their weight better than when watered after. They also showed a better appetite In eating more. But horses watered after eating grain seemed to digest their food Just as well. It seems desirable to give water both before and after. Whole grain was as effective as ground grain. To compeusate for the labor and time In grinding ground grain should (five 10 per cent lietter results. Pure Air for II KHniihoi'ac, Now that the liiv are started, care should be taken to have the air outside the house healthful that is, to rid the Immediate vicinity of the dwelling of all putrefaction, whether animal or vegetable, and to clear all drains. The heated air of a house will attract the outer air every time a door Is Opened, and If that outer air holds disease germs, the warm air will serve to mul tiply them. MADE HIS CWN MONEY. Joseph Shoemaker Wanted More Val uable lollara t ban Uncle Bam'a. Joseph Shoemaker, of Grayson, Car ter County, received the other day In payment for a horse sold to an old fann er, living near the Lewis County line, 46, among- which were three of the famous "Sprinkle dollars" of the early ao's. It bus been more than twenty years since any of these peculiar coins have been found In this section, and the production at these will recall a queer character who flourished in the earlier part of the century, and went down to bis grave with a secret that has never been unearthed. Joeiah Sprinkle, the party In ques tion, lived In one ot the roughest sec tions of Lewis County, and on a line probably fifty miles from Grayson. In his day Washington, the county seat of Mason, and one of the oldest towns In rule end of the State, was thriving. One day Sprinkle, then well along in years, appeared at Washington with a buckskin pouch full of silver dollars of his own make. In every respect they appeared the equal of the national coin. The weight was more than present, and the quality and ring of the metal were all that could be asked. He spent them freely, and they were takea upon the assurance of Sprinkle that there was nothing wrong with them beyond the fact that he and not the United States mint had coined them. Asked where he got the silver, he laugh ed, and shook his head knowingly. "It doesn't matter so I get It, and there's plenty of it left," was as much as he would ever offer In explanation. The Inscription on the coins was rudely outlined, and in no wise was any at tempt made at Imitation of the legal coin. Itudely outlined on one side was an owl, while a six-cornered star show ed with more accuracy upon the other. The edges were smooth, no attempt having been made at milling. The coins were considerably larger than flie regulation article, and thicker as well. Upon various occasions Sprinkle afterward visited the town, and In ev ery lnwtance he spent them more and more freely. At one time he volunteerd the fact that he had a silver mine In the hills, but no one ever succeeded In inducing the old man to allow a sharing of his secret. Finally the Government agents learned of the matter, and came on to investigate. Sprinkle was arrested and brought into court, but the dollars were proved to be pure silver without alloy, worth in fact a trifle more than $1 each, and after an exciting trial he wa.s ac quitted. Upon the verdict being an nounced, Sprinkle reached down In a cavernous pocket and drew out a bag of fifty of the coins, and promptly paid his attorney in the presence of the as tonished offlclals. Spi Inkle was never afterward bothered, and continued un til his death to make the dollars, how and where no one ever khew. He lived practically alone, baring his hut away from his relative, who lived close at hand, and died suddenly, carrying the secret of his find to the grave wiTli him. Ashland, Ky., special to Cincinnati Enquirer. Monster Water Wheel. A water wheel of remarkable con struction has been Introduced In the North Star mine, Grass Valley. Cal. it Is IS fet In diameter, weighs 10.500 pounds and develops 250 horse-power, running under a 750-foot head, nt 100 revolutions, and Is directly connected to the shaft of a duplicate compressor, coniHiuiid tandem type, of same i-a-Itaclty. The design of this wheel Is novel. From a cast-iron hub radiate twenty four steel spokes, which are connected to a rim made up of angle buckets. properly shaped, having a slat for the bucket, which are bolted to tthe per iphery, the strain Iwing taken by four heavy steel truss rod. The large diameter of the wheel Is for the purpose of giving proper speed to the compressor under the high head available and the water Is applied to the wheel through a variable nozzle, controlled by an automatic regulator, the latter maintaining a uniform speed ou the wheel. The Paper Mill. Before They Hlept. It was the 1 o'clock midnight of the down town saloon. Two men slid out of the side door. Their coats were but toned to their clilns, their hats drawn far down and their hands hugged their coat pockets cloee together in front leaving stretches of bare, red wrists to lie bitten by the Icy night air. They shambled silently up the street and around a few gusty corners, with their shoulders shrugged high. They were not dnmk . but It was not their fault. Reaching the dry hall, they entered the long corridor, stepping over the prostrate, slurring ImmiIos of a wore of men who resembled them In unkempt lieards and nhatury hair. Close to a radiator they spread down some soiled newspapers, whU.h they drew from their pockets. Then they removed their shot's, bunched rhelr coat and made pillow on which to rest their heads. In the warm air from the radiator they slowly expanded like angle worms in a s)iiing shower and at last their tonguee loosened. . "Say, pard," asked one of them, anx iously, "yer didn't ferglt to tell the clerk w'en ter call us, did yer?" "Naw, I tole 1m not ter disturb ns 'fore 8 o'clock we wiuurt 'customed lesvln' our sofy cuishins 'fore that, Tabble denote breakfus' at S, yea know." "Yer get that there little blsneea flxei up wit Phil Armour to-day, Jerry T" j "Cerf ; I tole 1m I wouldn't take lean $50,000. "Terns my lowls' flggira 1 sez; an' he sez, 'I know yere a man ca yer word, Jerry, an' I taltes yer,' ha' set. Havln' received fe coin, I srf haf office. How's yer trade wit U arenas Field r "Fair, Jerry, fair. Ill brine; la around. He's hagglin' ter a couple fouean yet" j There wes a moment's alienee. Jes rys toes wiggled comfortably through the holes In his remnants of eocfca, "Say, pard, yer didn't blow eat the gas, eh r ; "Naw." "An' yer ordered a Boasdaa baf raf fe momln'?" "Yeas." "Well, good-night, Jerry." "Good-night, pard." Two Chins lopped down and two l grew tuneful. Chicago Kecord. How to Live Long. Some curious figures have lately been made public by a celebrated Berlin physician, which seem to point to Us) fact that if a man wants to live long and preserve his health and strength he ought to marry. Among unmarried men between the ages of 80 and 46 the death rate Is 27 per cent. Among married men between the same ages It Is only 18 per cent For forty-one bachelors who live to be 40 years ef age, seventy-eight marled men trium phantly arlve at the same period. The difference gets all the more marked as time goes on. At GO years of age there are only twenty-two bachelors to forty eight married men; at 70 there are eleven bachelors to twenty-seven who were married, and by the time they reach 00 the married men are three te one, for there are nine of them to every three bachelors! And yet, in the face of. facts like these, we still find men dat ing to remain single! It really la as much as their lives are worth, if they only come to think of it. Men may talk of their lives being shortened by domestic worries and anxieties and cares. That Is all rubbish. Statistics must tell the truth, and these statis tics of the Berlin doctor say that the man who Is a bachelor stands in fat greater risk of a shortened span. Spare Moments. Do Not Neglect Physical Needs. President Eliot, of Harvard Unlvefc slty, gave a good piece of advice to eta dents In general when he spoke before the Baltimore Woman's College re cently. He claimed that the ability Is eat three men Is a day was not only an innocent satisfaction In itself, but It provided the necessary foundation for all other satisfactions. Said be: "Be ashamed not of enjoying your meal, but of not enjoying it." This Is a sim ple truth that too many people and especially college students are apt to forget. In their haste to cultivate the Intellectual they Ignore the physical, and the consequence is a sucesslon of Ills In after years that seriously weak en the working powers. In some col leges It Is the custom for the President or one of the older professors to give the freshman class practical hints on the subject. These with compulsory gymnasium work have done much to change old Ideas on the subject of health. Rut much more can be done In the same way, and President Eliot should be hesrtlly commended for cor recting the Impression of college stu dents that if the intellectual is looked after the material will take csre of Itself-Philadelphia Press. Carved Mis Own Coffin. A colli n yarn from England Is this, from a .Nottingham paper: "The hob by of an old gentleman, who has Just departed this life In Dnddleetone, was wood carving. Being of Independent means he was able to devote his time to the craft and been me a very artistic craftsman. After filling his house with hand-curved furniture he turned his at tention to the carving of an oaken coffin, lo contain his remains. Over tbe richly carved panels he spent much loving care. In tlds coffin de luxe be was burled the other day, and, In ac cordance with minute. Instructions In his last will and testament, was fol lowed to the grave by oue mourner only a young man to whom he bad left the bulk of his property, Ignoring all of hit relatives. The coffin was conveyed to the churchyard In the old gentleman's private vehicle, drawn by hla favorite pony," Singular Ixma of Memory. A curious Instance of sudden loss of memory Is Reported from Brighton, En gland. While sitting on the sea front a woman felt something break In her head. She therenpon became unable to tell her nnme, address, Or anything connected wltb ber past life. She Is at present In the Brighton workhouse, her continual cry being: "Oh, shall I get my memory again?" Her clothing does not contain a single mark or Ini tial whereby she might be Identified. Whenever you hear a fellow begis the conversation by saying, "There 1 no nee talking," prepare yourself for a flood. The man carried away by enthusiasm Is frequently brought back by disgust U": 4 1 TV