The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, November 03, 1898, Image 7
1 hjhk KKS get up with a bad taste In Do you headache? la there a your mouth? Then you have a poor appetite and a weak dila tion. You are frequently diiiy, always feel dull and drowsy. You have cold hands and feet. You get but little benefit from your food. You have no ambition to work and the khnrp pains of neuralgia dart through your body. What is the cause of all this trouble? Constipated bowels. P will Rive you prompt relief and certain cure. Koop Your Blood Purm. If you have neglected your case a long time, you bad better take Ayr's sarsapirllli 1st). It will remove all Impurities that have been accumulating in your blood and will greatly strengthen your nerves. WrUo I ho Doctor. Thrt tnJ b oini?U.inf Abttlt tour "U do quit ut.tlr uud. Wrfl tin ltr frlj: ml him hrm ym art nlTrili. Yu w.il promptly rr-W til bMI mtUlrjil n'ltii.. Aluri, Hr.J.C. Ar, Ltnrdl, Xta. f jran Whiskers Dyed A Natural Black by -f". A. Ac - White Wmndoti, It Is probably a fact that no variety of fowl has so quickly mid so com pletely lakeu captive the heart of the practical poultry keepers as have the White YVyandots. They are encroach ing upon the popularity of the Barred Plymouth Hock, which for a decode has been the most popular breed of poultry, by far. In the list The reason for the high estimation In which the Wyandot Is held Is not far to see. In the first place, !t has a splendid market form and is, moreover, a most excellent lay- Til TIT' .u 4'. 9 Vi vi'l: tnge to have what Is teiincu a "ii!it feeder," a It Is Impossible for a cow j to yield milk in large ijuautitics uulrsi alio consumes sulllcleiit food from which to produce the milk. Io uot re-! duce the food because of a scarcity, but buy bran and linseed meal. Economy In the saving of food means a loss In the product. Fond bi ought on the farm Is not only an addition to the raw ma terial to be utilized, but Increases the manure heap. A frapp' j of Ladders. One of the most Important things In harvesting fruit Is to have a good sup ply of ladders. The modern methods of pruning trees do not requlr the long and Inconvenient ladders thnf were for merry used by leaning them against the tree and picking the fruit from the out side. This always had the effect of destroying many small limbs and strip ping the bark from larger ones where the ladder rested. Light, self-supporting ladders that can be set under tree, so that the picker need not climb through them, are what are needed. The saving In fruit by picking from these self-supporting ladders will repay their cost any year when the fruit crop is abundant. VAiiiATi J 4 i I.I LirtdATUaE. jrir WHITB WTASDOTB. er. The fowls are quiet and the hens ninke excellent mothers, In fact, they cannot be excelled In this respect. When wanted for market, the Wyandot Is always pluiyji and fat, and this Is a condition, too, that is true of them at almost any time after they are ten weeks old. Another point, in favor of the Wyandot Is Its quick maturily. It can be got to laying In live months after hatching. All varieties of Wyandota are of great practical worth, but the white variety is accepted everywhere as being the practical fowl par excel lence. .New England Farmer. Trie M ceuU of all druKgtiU or K. I tUU Co., Nlio, N. H. Avoid Kitreuiri, Extremes are dangerous. Oneo'aso! tanner do not f ed enough tor profit, especially alter grass is gone, whi.e the Other claas believes ill the theorv of "th mote feed the more product." Both ae wroni An animal may consume mora lood than it can digest, making 'he pro duct expensive. Feeding depends upon variety. Too mU'h corn or eround grain In i he summer season wi!l isuee bowii difficulty, and an excess In winter with out the addition of bulky material givei no corresponding be-ient, as it is voided. Give the animals a sufficiency, but not exclusively of One kind of food. ( Hall's Catarrh Ci re la taken internally. Price 75 cents. feminine head that Tho On?rney. If there Is what Is commonly called a special all-purpose cow. that Is. one which is excellent for the dairy and good for beef. It is doubtless the Guernsey. It belongs to the so-called Channel Island races, rhe origin of which H'Hms to have been the cattle of Normandy, the nearly adjoining pro vince of France, but being a part of Great l'.rludn for many centuries. The cut Is one of a prize cow which re cently gained the first prize at the Eng lish dairy exhibition, and the Lord Mtiyor's cup In a milking contest In London. She Ib an excellent type of this breed, w hich Is noted specially for the high quality of butter, and IU fine color, boating the Jersey In as regard the fine grain .and high rich flavor of her product This cow will aurpMS the Jersey, one half at least. In the weight of carcass, and still more In the quality The V.emt l'ayn Hett. A Canadian dairy farmer found out what the B;i brock test would do for him. He had twenty-four cows and two hired men. He tested the cows and found that eight of them did not pay for their keep. He dlsjswed'of the eight and one hired man. At the end of the year he found he had made as much money as when he had kept the twenty four cows and two hired men. He re duced his herd sliil further to twelve first-class animals, and from them ex pects to get as much Income as he used to get from the twenty-four. For Menilinz Harness. Take two pieces, 1x5 Inches, 2 feet long, trim one end of each to a nice edge to hold leather, and nail to block 4x5 Inches, cut five inches long and (hampered off so as to bring points of board together at top. Saw one board off one-half inch below top of w JIAIIVKSS CLAMP. Uneasy lies the wears a last year's bonnet. It Can Be Mads to Go. "Th melancholy days have come baa rheumatism come with them? II can be made to go right off by the use of Bt. Jacobs Oil, which cures and leaves no trace behind; All's (air in love except flirtation; and that's only halt fair. DKWET PUIII.IHIIINI1 COM PAST. Wwlfluld MM n ifiiu err.r U,r lilt of Aln.lrl (icuw Dr oa Uwjr rmllr HbUir)r1 hiiiO.mclT lllu ' Pafe Ixito I,-ltrr Ink. "Ink sultsble for love letters" la ad vertised by a I'arlslan stationer. It la made of a solution or Iodide of starch, tnd characters written with It entire ly fade In four weeks. TIIK OUKIIN6KT COW. block, and rejoin with hinge of leather or rubber belting. Nail two strips 1x2 Inches and 20 inches long, one on each end of block to make stand up. Make hand lever, as figure 1, with a cylindri cal roll at end, 2 Inches in diameter and 2 Inches long. I'ut hole one-half Inch from upper side, fasten In place with two' pieces of stray Iron running through slots In clamp boards, and with holes In each end to receive slxteen- penny wire nans, one mrougn nana lever and one on outside of opposite board. An old bed spring will do for spreader. Practical Farmer. Prfint Ir' Literary lm'tatloa of Mimi cal Cumpixltiotiii Common Yrnrs Ai;o.i f-'otne twenty live yea 8 ago t! ero was a Btyie of musical composition much in .vogue known as varia tions," says a writer in the Atlautic Monthly. It ap.ieaied in dozen paged sheets entitled ''Home, !weet Home with Variations"; "Coming Through the Re with Variations"; Let Aie Kiss Him for His Mother" (also "with Variations")-, and scores of ctheM, all 'w.th Variations." The distinctive plan of the-e com po sitions and whatever their individ ual characteiiatic, they were, as a whole, without variation consisted, hrt, In a nrauft or two of banging prelude, closely followed by a simple little air that somebody else had written. This delloitui.v announced the theme to be "varialed," which was next hea d behind a thin screen of artfully arranged arpeggios. Then it donned a deep disguise in the bass, to become! barely reoogni able In the trcu.e with triils, ditto in bass, in the trelrle with runs ditto in bass, and finally lot itsoir in a company of crashing chords so overpowering that one could not be certain whether the original air had been "i 'omins Tlirough the live" o:' "Let uie Kiss Him for His Mot.be ." A similar sort of treatment has now invaded the art of loiters; that to sav, It has ati'ected the entire twenty-six, as well as the select seven to be iound upon the piano keyboards It doesn't nowadays ratisfy a writer to say morel v, "One summer niorn- inr, tine and early, 1 was walking through the woods." lie immedi ately goes on (taking the word "early" as his keynote), 'Jhe sun h;;d not been long abose the horizon and the air was yet migrant with at night's dew." Then, with "line" and "summer ' as texts, lie tells us, Everywhere were the green and luxur.ant footprints of light-stepping summer." r-Urting next from (1) I." ,'.'1 "walking" and ('') "woods," be informs us, -As my feet pressed e suit moss faint forest odors filled the air. the crackle of a dry stick was heard and a startled gray squirrel scatnperel up me giant ork on mv left." liacapo, 'On such a giortous murning I was glad simply to he alive, and were we ail young-risen sun, trees flowers, moss and little gray snuinel." 'And so, dinning and further di luting tin idea, it is hard to tell just what deurceof strength It may origin ally have possessed, rhe strength of the w.-ite1, It Is, however, more easy to determine. i ki.i. Lou &jecj. t)o not have too much air blowing ,hrui:;;h your room at uiglu. or Neural pi a may creep upon juu u;w uu 1 deep, hut if it conies, use St. JacoM :Oil; it warms, soothes and eurei promptly. Deliberation H a m:ghty good thing in Its way, but it has broken mighty few r cordi. Gladness Comes ! - - t 41. m With a better undersianuing u. v. transient uature of the loun.v phys ical Mm which vanish before P"'" fortj-tfentleeffort-Ileuterts-- ria-htly direeted. There Is coaiion . the knowledge, that so many forrns ol ikknaasaraaotdueto any actual dis IWbut simply to a constipated condi UoToitha.ystem. which t e ple feallT laxative, Kyropof Figs, prompt, IzTT' ti. la w ir It la the tmly Sy -th mlllionaof -' arervwhere esteemed ao bigbly by al wl W th. lis ocneucwi r.:"'"" iia. that M the ODTremedy which promote inter". zrT.Jr.TZ.' i.Kn lh tatlng the SST whlchitita. It is therefore alTlmportanl, In order to (ret tcUl efffcU, to note when yon pur Sit. That you hlCU EcaU: U, which is manufactured by the Call foniU Vig Hyrup Co. only and sold by all reputable druUU. II In ths snjoymeii of gjd stnt, ana the arstem 1s rejrular. Iaxat' X, remdlea ara then not needed U JUoUd with y.i'SiiMW May be eommetided to the Syalcl.na, but if In need of a tmttra Sis should hars tba bast, w th. of the meat. In this respect mis nreea stands very blgh, and very nearly ap proaches the Devon. This cow gave 275!4 pounds of milk In a week, of which was made sixteen pounds of butter weighed before sailing. The brew! generally Is noted for gentleness and good disposition. Ituttor Mnklna. Itutterlne cannot compete with good butter. There Is no ucn ining as me dium butter. If it Is not choice it de serves no place In the market. Much of the butter sold Is unlit for use, and the cause Is Ignorance In making it. In Kurone dairy schools have been es tablished for many years, the result belnir ft rapid advance In the methods of butler -making, lu this country dairy schools are beginning to be established nml are well attended. Ilutter-tnaking begins when the milk Is drawn Trom the udder, the strictest clennlluess be ing observed. 1'ilth and carelessness are the obstacles In the way of good butter. , foil for Itulba Dutch bulbs are the easiest of flow era to grow. Those who have failed with almost every other kind may count on success with these. Hut even bulbs like ctrtaiu things better than cert u in other things. Kor Instance, In fertlllr-crs. the Dutch gardeners long ago showed us that rotted cow manure Is preferable lo any otner. Where this Is used some sand )i-uld be mixed with It to lighten the soil. Hull do nol bki a soil that is either extremely wet or dry. Any soil that Is well suited to vegetable culture win, u " i nc, : answer for growing the Dutch bulba to pcrfeetlou.-Vhk's Magazine. Rriiiitna I'cach Trc. It Is usually done In the spring, though It can he done In the late fall, but with the liability of some of the branches beli.B " inter killed, thus ne cessitating cutting a.a!!i In the spring. ri.e U-st form is lo leave l.ie trees rain- r open in the center, so as to admit the annllfht snd permit of free circulation of air. The peacn tree can rnmire r- fere pruning and aeems to uinve wnen tuch la done- All dead limit, or tnose that art diseased, niuai ue nmmwi ai onca. . j Light rsMlaat, Utile Milk. Tt has been demonstrated that a row will sat as nvrn aa seventy five pnuuds of graaa food In ons day. This apiesri aa a largs quantity, but such cows sre also prodncsta of mora aallk than cows which sat but llttla. It Is of ns advaav Temporary I'cnclnu. The zigzag plan of building tempor ary board fences Is recommended by a correspondent, who says: If the boards are 1(J feet long, set the posts iy feet apart and In a straight line. Put the boards on as shown In sketch, nailing one panel ou one side of the post and the next one on the other, with the post In the center of the board on the oppo site side of the board. This method of putting on boards bends them slightly, and the boards are Inclined to bug to the post. In case an animal pushes a hoard loose from the post If It Is not broken It will spring back to Its place, making It appear tight, thus present- lifffllb r: ,ijv EIO.AO IIOARK FBNCK. Ing no Inducement Kami and Home. to stock to Jump, Frank In a Diplomatic Way. Edith There Is one thing in particu lar that I like Mr. Tactln for. He Is so frank, you know, lie always tells me of my faults, without the least hesita tion. That was the agreement I cauaed hlin to make. Kertha And you mean to say that you do not get angry with him? Edith Never. Bertha Tell me some of the faults he has found In you? Edith Oh, he hasn't found any yet When I ask him to name them he al ways says that I am faultless. Boston Transcript I know that mv life was save! by Piso's Cure tor Consumption. John A. Aliller, Au bable, Michigan, April 21, 19D. About the moet iin possible thing possi ble iB the milkmaid in a comic opera. FITS' rtortT. H:,c for Kl, K.f : :. trial tx.UI,' r,d treti. ju. U H. KLINJE. Ltd., '-til Ait-1) Str,-ut, 1'luiu.ielpiiiu, l'a Any man who ie bdious is more or lees pessimist. SJra. Wlnslow'gHoOTHiNG Strup tor child- en Veethiug, softens the sums, reduces lnttum nation, allaya BHin, cureswiud colic. 26c bottle Some men are born liars, while others are compelled to acquire the art. WA.NTKD.-Cawof llu-1 Ural . Ii that K-r-P'A'H wtll ool h.-iiflt. Si'tnl f, feTHs e Hlfi.-iii Chemical Ct New York, for 10Rainpit-8an,l l.-r'i t.-stilnoiUals. 81'OiiIES UF RELIEF. Two Letters to Mra. Pinkham, If cos in Hummer. The cheajiest way to keeps flock of bens in fcummer ii to turn them on a range and let them pi k up all the food required, aa they will fill their crops several times a day with buge.graas Beed, worms, etc. When led grain during hot weather the fowls are liable to become too fat, in which condition the bens do not lay and are then also more liable to disease. Egg mav not be high in sum mer, but they can be produced at a very luia l coat at that season if the hens are ma'ie to fees ini'ir iooh Mrs. Joitv Williams, EngHshtowii, N. J., writes : ' D::ar Mrs. Pinkham: I uannotb gin to tel. you how I su.'fered befora taking your remedies. I was so weak that I couldhardly walk across the floor without falling. I had womb troubla and such a hearing-down feeling ; alao suffered wilh my back and limbs, paia in womb, inflammation of the bladder, piles and indigestion. Before I had taken one bottle of Lydia E. I'inkham'a Vegetable Compound I felt a great deal better, and after taking two and ona half bottles and Jialf a box of yon Liver Pills I was cured. If more would take your medicine they would not have to suffer so much." Mrs. Joseph Petekso-V, 513 East St., Warren, l'a., writes: '"Dear Mrs. Pinkham: I have suf fered w ith womb trouble over lifteea years. I had inflammation, enlarge ment and displacement of the womb. I had the . backache constantly, also headache, and was so dizzy. I had heart trouble, it seemed as though my heart was in my throat at times chok ing me. 1 could not walk around and I could not lie down, for then my heart would beat so fast I would feel as though 1 was smothering. I had to sit up in bed nig-iits in order to breathe. I was so wak I conld not do any thing. " I have now taken several bot tles of Lydia E. Pinkham 's Vegetablo Compound, and used three pack ages of Sanative Wash, and can say I am perfectly cured. I do not think I could have lived long if Mrs. Pink ham's medicine had Dot helped me." Nemesis. Edna Blimbir stole a ball bearing cliainU-ss wheel, didn't he? Mddred Yes, dear, and now ba't wearinn a ball bearing wueellesa cbaia New York World. Other Method. "Well, baby, did dear papa sing yoi to sleep last night like mamma does?j "No'tn. lie played he wua a big blacl bear an scared me "o sleep." Detroit Free Press. Hint for i:eckeerer. Moth worms bother Italian bees very little. Spring dwindling Is the result of bad wintering. Bees require ventilation In the hive during the winter. The nourishment of the bee consists of honey and pollen. Honey will ripen Just aa well outside of the hive as In It. In wintering It Is always beat to take away oil but one queen. With good care combs may be mad to last a good many years. The size of the wits does not deter mine the sex by any means. A piece of ground taken up with bee hives Is of little value for anything else except fruit. Bees when building comb commence at the top and hang In heavy clusters to their corubs. Keep the brood as near ths renter as poanlhle, and the honey nearest the out side frames. Coort chaff hives are quite a protec tion to nrly brood rearing If ni..:iaged properly. The queen, no matter how prolific, should he confined to the apace occupied by the cluster. Do not allow any drone comb to re main In the hive except ths colonies you wish to breed from. The pure Italian Itees show three yel low or golden bunds encircling the body when the bees sre Ailed with honey. Ths blvss should not be shifted around from on plaea to another, aa the bees will get confused and It will often Incite robbing. at. Louis Republic litisiine Is a l,on"lv Tnnjne Mill. The question, Who are the I'.asques? that mysterious people who give their name to the 1'.. y of U s av is nlways cropping up, and l'rof. von dertiabcleiu. has recently endeavored to show that, the Basque lunguage belongs to the African Berber family of speech for example, the Kabyle and . Tuareg. II is evidence only amounts to a few culture words being identical in the Basque aud Berber languages, and certain analogies in the laws of phonetic change. More over, he assumes that the Basques and Iberians wore the same people. But, as Canon Isaac Ta.vior points out, the Iberian tongue, according to our highest authorities, was different from the Basque, and the French Basques are a different race from the Spanish Basques, who are a feebler people of the Iberian type. If we assume that the Basques con iuered the Iberians we can account for the resemblances noticed by l'rof. vonder (iabelenf, btcau-e the Iberians, of Berber origin, in a" uiring the language of their conquerors, would retain their own phonetic tendency, ami aNo some ctiUu'e words in v;oth languag s, As CanottTaylor remarks, we mav still believe tint the Basque language Is allied to the L'ral-AlUic type. 1 otidoti U'obe. IMtic Needles Vs. Moths. The sea -on for packing away cloth log Tor the winter has come and moths sometimes do damage in the fall and w ntcr as well as spnng. The following from a writer in the In dit'i'a t anner may, therefore, be use lul: ' I have Just been circumventing the wily inoih, and as I dislike the odor of camphor and tar as much as ever they do, 1 seldom use either. I once packed a balsam Hr pillow away among my woolens, and negicei-en w take any precautions again-t moths In that trunk. 1 was almost afri id to open it the next fall, ex pecting to tlnd thing In It ruined. hut a fragrant oc.or or pines greeted my nostrils and not a sign of uioth. took tho hint and ever since nave used pine needles in place or trie odious ciirbolated preventives. Every one knows they won't go near cedar. 1 wish my lady readers would try my plan and make bags of pine needles to put umong their packed away woolens. An ither delightful pre ventlve Is to mU sachet bags of ground spices, cloves, cinnamon, all- sd re. and orris root. Tiiis.ot course, is quite expensive ami is useu oniy for iuj especially n ee ihlns." Pemember tiie name y when you bay again. "A Handful of Dirt May Be a Houseful of Shame." Keep Your House Clean with SAPOLIO Had an Katenslve Circulation. '.lack" McCorthy Is a character up In Hazleton, where ho runs the daily paper. Ills advertising methods re original, as well as ellcctual. He whs anxious to get business from a Urm that advertised In his Held, and wrote soliciting an order for bia paper. The reply came: "Where does vour paper go?" With promptness, Jack answered: "To North and Kouth America, Europe; Asia and Africa, and It is all 1 can do to keep It from going to HSDaElSvSs I I J i F 5 NCZZ Ife got the Dispatch. contract Nw York Ir slander be a make. It is winged one, I flies aa well as creeps at SLICKER The SaaM - I KcM both fMar an4 ttii per I 4 lvH Jv In OtM ar4eaft atormc. LrVl iSm Flak BranS Pwtimal Slicker f l la tiffinl? new. M act (or male hi v iiniir fcnM ni, m riunrut m A. J. TOW6K. Bettor, Man, cm mxsEiPt Vm Bw i aaawaatal MaMBMaja laMaMauaa. In liali laa er Tfiaraang ajaai f paaaaaaaa. n. a u m. IIS -44 YCZX K4