Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, October 16, 1902, Image 7

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    SUFFERED SEVEN YEARS
With Catarrhal Derangements of the
. V - . Pelvic Organs. ' V
MPs
Mis Kate Brown, Recording Secre
tary of the L. C. B. Aaaociition of Ktn
aa, lu a letter from GOTi N. Seventh St.,
Kansas. City, Kan., ari:
"For seven years I wive not known
what It wit to upend a well amy.
I caiij ht a severe cold which I neglected.
It wai at the time of menstruation and
inflammation et in and prostrated me.
Catarrh of the kidneya and bladder fol
lowed, my digestive organ gave way,
in fact the cold disarranged my whole
system.
" pent hundred of dollar with
doctor mnd medicine, but derived but
Utile benefit until I began treatment
with Peruna. I kept taking it for nearly
nine months before I was completely
cured, but 1 kept growing better gradu
ally so that I felt encouraged to continue
taking rerun until my health was re
HOSE who subscribe at once to The Youth's Companion for J903 will
receive all the nsues for the remaining weeks of 1902 free from the time
of subscription, in addition to the 1903 Volume. (SEE OFFER BELOW.)
The November and December Issues will contain a number of noteworthy artl
r. clea and stonca by prominent writer, a few of whom arc mentioned below :
WLtiXJr WINSTON
VP rdkS I a I
HENRY
a PROFESSOR SIMON NEWCO.MB,
SARAH BARNWELL ELLIOTT,
Full Illuttrmted Announcement nt the
ol the ftfter to
Annual Subscription Offer.
Every Haw Subscriber for 1903 who will cut out this slip and aend it at one
with name and address and $1.75 will receive:
FREE AU th ittutt The Con,PanioB ,or the remiBiDK weeka of 100J.
v The Thankaglviag, Chrietmas and Wew Year's Double Numbers.
rKbfa Th Companion Calendar for 1903, lithographed In colors and gold.
And Tha Companion for the fifty-two weeka of 1903, more than 350 stories,
EDCH 50 special articles, etc., till January, 1904, for $1.75.
THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON. MASS.
Jj1ffiTrTnTrTTT"T'TTTfATAT''"'T"A"Aii"i"l,'"'
Mexican MUSTANG LINIMENT
aw war s -
ron,
MAN OH
BEAST
HORSES
MULES
W
Mexican MUSTANG LINIMENT
iii,it..i..mii..n
Attains l.uoil All
Emlle Rathcrmellc, a peasant
woman, baa Just died at Salclne-des-Sus,
Roumanla. Her age was 131
years, the figures being fully substan
tiated by documents Id the possession
of ber family. For the past ten years
she had lived entirely on milk, being
toothless. .
" Everyday, at tbe Vatican, from
,20,000 to 22,000 letters arrive ad
dressed to Ibe Pope.
I I latfis. Soft by annartaia. V I I
C 7 'TJ
to. H. U. H0. 741-42. YORK. HE!
Hundreds of Dollars
ent in Vain Pe
ru n a Cured.
stored. I aend my thanks and blessings
to yoiT for I'eruna." Mitts Kate Brown.
A neglected cold is frequently ths
cause of death.
It is more often, however, the cause of
some chronic disease.
There is not an organ in the body but
what is liable to become seriously de
ranged by a neglected cold. Diseases of
the kidneys, bladder and digestive or
gans are all frequently the result of a
neglected cold.
Hundreds of dollars are spent on doc
tors and medicines trying to cure these
disenscs, but until the trne cause of them
is discovered, there will be no use Id
using medicine.
Dyspepsia medicine, diarrhoea medi
cine and constipntion medicine is of no
good whatever when catarrh is the
cause. The catarrh must be treated. The
cause being removed, the derangements
will disappear.
Peruna cures catarrh of the digestive
organs, the urinary organs or any of the
internal organs.
If you do not derive prompt and aatis
factory results from the use of I'eruna
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case, and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad
vice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
THEODORE ROOSEVELT contribute an article
of unusual public interest on The Presidency,
(This highly important srti.U? was written before Mr,
Koosevcil received his nommstioa at Vice-President.)
C. A. STEPHENS, That Merry Oolden Wcddlaf.
A series of unusual stories.
THE DIKE OF ARGYLL,
The Ventures of Robert Bruce.
JUSTICE DAVID J. BREWER, The Supreme Court.
SARAH ORNE JEWETT, A Thank(ivlni Story.
T. P. O'CONNOR, Prime Ministers' Wives.
SPENCER CHURCHILL, M. P..
On the Hank of the Army.
VAN DYKE, Keeping Christmas.
Are Other Worlds Inhabited ?
A Christmas Slory.
1903 Volume tent with Sample Coplet
enj nrldrenn. Free.
EtSttkWkVaMt
ENT J
sa.wa
- vBJ w aww
MAN OR.
BEAST
SHEEP ana OXEN
fimw Milk I'rurras.
A doctor of Oothonberg, Sweden,
claims to have discovered a process
of changing milk Into a fine flour
that afterward, through solution Id
a sufllclent quantity of water, may
again do transformed into true milk,
with all Its elementary quallltlcs.
The Klopliawit'a Henaa uf Small,
So keen Is the elephant's aense ot
smell that be can scent a human be
ing at a dstaoce of a thousand yards.
Ely's Crai Balm
WILL OUUf
CATARRH
Drmcsisns, MCta.
V U -
Mustard in Grain Fields.
The plant referred to scarcely needs
description, as It Is so common, al
though the accompanying illustration
will imprest? the reader with its iden
tity. The flowers are yellow and the
Icnves soft, somewhat resembling those
of rape, cabbage, turnips, etc.; In fact
mustard belongs to the same family of
plants as those named. It is one of the
most serious of all the weed pests. This
Is due to the fact that It ripens its seed
before most of the cereals, so that the
ground Is again seeded down for an
other year. Hut this Is not all. The
seeds are ho oily lu their nature that
they have been known to remain In the
WILD MUSTARD IK BLOOM.
ground for a period of twenty-five years
when burled so deeply as to prevent
germination, and yet after this time
have grown vigorously. It Is because
of this chracteristlc that it is specially
important to prevent wild mustard
from seeding. In fields where the plants
are few in number the labor expended
!by way of pulling them up by root
'would be most profltable.
Where It is not practical to pull out
mustard, owing to the large amount
present, It may be advisable to make
the cereal crop Into hay rather than al
low It to ripen. If some such plan as
this Is not adopted where fields are bad
ly Infested with mustard It may be nec
essary in the near future to allow the
land to lie Idle and adopt the summer
fallow system In order to get rid of the
pest This would be an Instance where
an ounce of remedy would be worth
many pounds of cure. Iowa Iioi
stead.
Table for Handling Grapes.
I have seen large, heavy tables for
this work In many grapehouses, upon
which the grapes were emptied from
the trays to be sorted, trimmed and
packed Into baskets. I do not favor
this method of treating grapes. I think
the less they are handled the better.
The packing table shown makes it pos
slhle to take the grapen out of the tray
stem by stem as wanted by the packer
and thus avoid the emptying out of the
grapes. The table Is so constructed
that a tray fits Into It tipped up sutll-
CRAPK I'Af'KINU TAH1.K.
clently to make It convenient to take
the clusters from It. In the Illustra
tion half of the tray Is cut away In
order that the construction of the table
may appear more plainly.
The little block H) on the headpiece
of the tray answers a twofold purpose
it serves aa a handle In place of the
hand holes and it keeps the trays from
dropping off one from the other when
they are being piled up In the store
room or when hauling on the wagon
ilcd. F. Grenler, in Farm and Fire
tide.
Bowing Clover In Corn.
The farmer who sows clover and finds
n the spring that It was winter killed
considers that he has lost time, labor
and the value of the seed. This is not
o, for the growth the clover makes dur-
lno th lulu Kiimnipr mid full hs lidded
'enough fertility to the soil to materially
assist In paying for the time and labor
'Involved. As a matter of fact, there
ought not to be much labor spent In
ceding the clover beyond the work of
putting In the seed, particularly if the
work Is done at the last cultivation of
the corn. Under almost any weather
conditions, except severe and prolonged
flrouth, It may be considered wise to
make a seeding of clover, crimson or
red, at the last cultivation of the corn.
If It goes through the winter, one adds
10 grcntly to the fertility of the soil that
ihey can afford to take some chances.
fthows Lack of Phosphate.
When cattle chew leather, wood or
ld bones It Indicates a lack of phos
phate or lime In their food, which Is re-
ulred to supply bone material. A tea
spoonful of bone meal given dally with
their arrnln will correct the habit and
rtrpply the deficiency whlch Induces
It If the disposition to eat bones la
Indulged In when cows are In grass the
deficiency then evidently exists In tha
mU, and tha pasture will be greatly
benefited by a top dressing of bont
dnat. Two or three hundred pounds to
the acre, sown broadcast, will repay at
tending expenses In a better yield and
in quality of milk and butter.
The Fanner's Telephone.
A surprising thing is the development
of the telephone system among the
farmers bore on the prairies, says a
correspondent in Nebraska. An Inde
pendent telephone company has been
extending its lines from town to town
and village to villager The result If
that farmers living from five to ten
miles from town are connected and
within speaking communication with
doctor, storekeeper, bank, grain buy
er, etc. Farmers telephone into town
In the morning for the price of grain,
and if they like It they drive in with a
load or two. For their telephones the
farmers pay from $1 to $1.50 a month,
and as time-savers they are said to he
worth from ten to twenty times theii
eotrt. At the rate the telephone sys
tem Is now being developed it will not
be more than a couple of years til!
nearly every farmer in Nebraska Is ot.
the wire. With cheap telephones, rural
free delivery and consolidation of dis
trict schools Into central buildings,
where there are several rooms, aa
many teachers and grading pupils.
modern life In the rural regions Is no)
what it once was.
Kvaporated or Urietl Potatoes.
"Dried potatoes" Is the name of
new product evolved by the South Car
olina Agricultural Experiment Station.
The potatoes are boiled, peeled ant! ,
evaporated in a cannery, and will re
main in perfect condition for years. The
preserved potato becomes fit for eating
after being soaked In warm water for ,
an hour. I.Ike many other new ideas, :
this promises to be a big thing, and lis.
development may have a great effect on
the vast potato fields of northern Maine.
It Is reported that an acre of potatoes
yielded 357 bushels, which made 10.1
bushels of the dried product, nearly 11
pound to 314 pounds of the raw product.
Although the report we have does not
say anything about It, probably the
sweet potatoes can be subjected to tho
same process. American cultivator.
Cutting Up a Hoar.
After the hog has been killed and
cleaned, cut down on each side of the
backbone with a sharp hatchet, then
with a few cuts
with tho knife at
the lower part, loos
en the leaf lard, pull
It upward and take
It out. Hegln at the
breast bone, and
with the aid of a
knife take out the
ribs. Hun a knife
down between the
lean and the fat
meat of the backbone. By the aid ol
splits spread the hog to its full width
and allow it to hang until It 1ms thor
oughly cooled. The accompanying dia
gram will show just how the carcass is
cut. If the anmnl Is a very heavy one.
cut the sides apart, then take off the
shoulder, then the side meat and finally
the ham. By taking it down In pieces
In this manner I can handle a heavy
hog myself. E. Esterley, In Farm and
Home.
Plowing by Steam.
An exchange tells of an experiment
in plowing by steam near Leuawa
Junction. The field was about eighty
rods long, containing a little over thirty
acres. The engine was attached to a
four-gang plow, which turned furrows
about sixteen inches wide and seven
Inches deep, and it laid them over very
even and smoothly. It took just seven
minutes to make the trip of eighty
rods, with one short stop. The outfit
Is claimed to turn over an acre In an
hour, and uses one hundred pounds of
soft coal to the acre. Kxchange.
I"Hrm Notes).
If you do not have enough manure
for a large field use it on a small plot,
and endeavor to make as much as pos
sible by concentrating the manure and
work to a limited area. Manure may
be wasted by attempting to make It do
service cm a larger space than It will
profitably cover, as well as entailing
more labor than the crop can compen
sate for.
Sheep are one of the best kinds of
stocks to keep In orchards. After a
little practice they will pick up fallen
fruit quicker than hogs; and this Is
often very Important, as the codllnf
moth worm generally leaves the apple
soon after It drops. But, with either
sheep or hogs, sufllclent food must be
supplied or the trees will be barked.
The food thus given goes, however,
where It will do the most good, In the
production of the largest and best
fruit.
There Is quite a difference in the ad
vantages of budding and grafting. The
proper time for budding is any period
when good buds can be procured and
the bark will run on the stocks. Teach
es and roses are always budded, but
grafting Is used on apples, pears ami
grapes. Budding Is sometimes done lu
order to change the tops of quite young
fruit tree. Dry weather is not favor
able to budding, and as a rule budding
Is not as successful as grafting.
Bones may be dissolved by the use
of unleached wood ashes, especially If
they are broken or ground. The pro
portions for a fertilizer, used by some
farmers, are one barrel of raw bone
flour, three barrels dry wood ashes,
fifty pounds of gypsum and ten gallons
of water. The materials are placed In
a heap upon tbe floor and stirred with
a boe while the water Is added. Tbe
mast Is kept moist, and In two or three
weeks wtU be ready for nse. Five bar
rels of this mixture la considered an
efficient and cheap dressing for an acre
of gronrxL
The National Malleable Castings
Company, of Toledo, Increased their
1,500 employes' wages 10 per cent.
I.os Angeles will organize a union
labor party, advocating the political
demands of the American Federation
of Labor.
The A. F. of I,, has about 800 op
Kanizers" In the country, while the na
t onal iind 1h-:i1 organizations affiliated
have probably as many more, and thera
Is plenty for all of them to do.
Of 7!8 unions, with an aggregat
nii'mlit rsliip of ti0,5!)0, reporting the
stale of cmplovmpht to the American
federation of Ijibor for the mouth ot j
Ituie, l.'Ml were without employment,!
or l.! per cent. This is the lowest
point reached so far this year.
The slrike fever seems to have
spread to far-away Alaska, and 7i()
salmon fishermen there struck lately
for an increase in wages. Dispatches
say there was a hot fight for five days,
even if the country is cold, and the men
won out, although by doing so the cost
of lish was increased over 100 per
ent.
Union Hgnrmakers are not In sym
pathy with the crusade against slot
mai-hines, as they claim it will hurt
their trade. They will join in the pro
tests against the recent order and in
iluce other unions to do likewise. The
hi-t machine has done much to increase
the sale of cigars, according to the
union men.
It is claimed that eight times as
:11a ny men and boys are killed and in
lured annually in the anthracite coal
mines as were killed and wounded in
the American ranks during the Spanish-American
war in Cuba. Yet the
'oal barons say these men, who risk
their lives for a mere pittance, have no
reason for their discontent.
Terrenee V. l'owderly, formerly head
of the Knights of I.abor, and recently
commissioner of immigration, is now
manager of an anthracite coal mine in
Pennsylvania. "It is not a co-operative
enterprise. In the strict sense,"
lie says, "but It has one feature which
carries out a life long theory of mine.
Kvcry man who works In our mines
must he a stockholder. He either
takes stock or he gets no job. He can
buy his shares absolutely on the
ground floor' basis; but mark you, it is
not given to him it's a plain case of
purchase and sale. Then he becomes a
sharer in the resirosibilities as well aa
the profits of the enterprise. I have
always held that when a man is shov
eling earth out of a hole, If he doesn't
care any more alrout his work than his
shovel does, the chances are only even
of his doing it well. But give him once
the feeling that part of every shovel
ful belongs to hiin personally and he'll
not only dig many more shovelfuls out
in a day, but he'll take mighty good
are that it's thrown where it Is most
needed."
I REV. JOHN HENRY DORSEY.
I Prcontl Native American Nejtro to Be
Kuifted to Catholic Priesthood.
Rev. John Henry Horsey is the sec
ond native negro of the Vnitetl States
to be raised to the Catholic priesthood,
the other being Rev.
It. C. Under, at
1 present a professor
In the Kp!pl...(.
College, Baltimore.
Father Dorsey was
born in Baltimore,
whose negro popu
lation of 100,0(10 is
: the largest popula
j Hon of colored peo
' pie in any coniinu-
, nity In the world. u,v j H I)0KS1,y
During his college
! career Father Dorsey gave evidence of
great ability ami Industry and carried
, off the three honorary degrees in St.
Mary's Sulpiclan Seminary, where he
: took additional courses In theology
! and philosophy, lie is now stationed
at the Catholic Catechistlc School at
i Montgomery, Ala.
j In addition to the two priests named
a third negro lias been ordained a Cath
olic priest in the United States. Over
00 years ago Bishop England, of
1 Charleston, S. C, raised a negro to the
' priesthood, but the latter was not a na
I five American, having been born in
Cork, Ireland.
"Kill Your Dog and Buy a Pig."
An exchange says: "Kill your dog
and buy a pig with the dollar you save
on dog tax. The scraps you feed the
dog would make the pig weigh 300
pounds, and then you could sell it ami
give your wife the- money." Yes, kill
your dear old faithful, mindful, thank
ful, trustful dog and buy a pig. But
when jou come home after a hard
day's toll don't expect that same pig
to meet you two blocks away with a
Joyful little cry of welcome at every
Jump. Sometimes when you feel un
usually "blue" and It seems as If the
whole world was "knocking" against
you, don't expect it to nestle up to your
side, and laying Its head within your
lap wag out its unalloyed sympathy.
Dou't expect it to forsake Its meal of
' scraps" Just for the privilege of being
your companion on a lonely drive or
walk. Don't expect It to do any of
these "little things." There's a vast
lilTerence between your most constant
friend and a pig. Our Dumb Animals.
After a man passes 00 be would be
happier In a town of GOO population,
where he doean't have to walk so fast
keep up, and where the neighbor
remember his birthdays.
I
ST. JACOBS
OIL
g POSITIVELY CURES
I Rheumatism f
I Neuralgia X
Backache
3 Headache
I Feetache S
I All Bodily Aches f
S AND t
I CONQUERS f
I PAIN.
The offspring of two rabbits might'
in ten years Dumber 70,000,000.
To have mot rlellr-lmis, Invel.T, brown
rnkPS for lrrHkfiist iisp nuly cold water with
Mrs. Austin's famous Pancake flour.
Canada's yield of cereals this year
is estimated ab 300,000,000 bushels.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color
more goods, per package, than others.
Nearly 90 per cent of Germany's
railways belong to the government.
A new race of lunatics is fast de-
veloplng. They are the "automanl
acs," who, riding in their automo
biles, are indifferent iegarding the i
rights of pedestrians, and run down'
eveiybody and everything in iheiri
way in their attempts to mak speed'
records..
In Eussia the penalty for ieadlDSj
a strike is the same as that for lead
ing a rehellion.
W. iL. DOUCL
$3&S3P SHOES '
W. L Douglas shoes are the standard 0) the worlt.
W. t. DouKlas made and aoM more men'a AooaV
Tfar Welt (llanil Sewed Proteus) aline In theflraf
six month of 11(0-2 than any other manufartarer.
Mf! fiPft RKWARHwlllhepaldtoanjoaewk
tb I U.UUU ran dKnrore this statement.
W.L. DOUCLAS $4 SHOES
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
!:,,.,r"k'., --". &mooo
Best Imported antl American leathern, Heyl'm
?-.r . ... n.u f lyti leiii (!nmna
Patent uai;, tnamei, nnx w,
Colt. Nat. Kangaroo. Fast Color kyelotn uaa.
. ... T TV1T1QT A W
iailiIM I nan)e and pj-ica stamped on bottonwj
Am9 rJ mm. fJTirn.. ,...... -
W. C DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS.
THE
POMMEL SLICKED
- as. a aaaaaaa aa Has mm I BJV
IN THE nUKLU
, Vy BEARS THIS TRAPC FUMl
'& i rtWFLV
t'SH Mil
THOUGH OFTEN IMITATED,
A5A5AMLCC0AT
IT HAS NO EQUAL
ON SeU. ate.
tvem"" CATAkOCVU TRLl
SHOWINC ru. INt V AKNtMT ANDMATS.
IT""'
AVTOWtR CO.. awrgw.new.44
FREE ELECTRIC BELT OFFER
Al,
till WCallM 'Sji,7Ki'?$
TRIAL Is yr hsais, w furnibh la genuine fts4at
HKIIIItl.KIIKU Al.TIKKATIMi (I HIUiXT Il.lU'lKIC BE1TI XM
any reader of this par1 Ha am ta arivasw, mjtM
s..l,.ltl..r..r..t.. COITS aLMItT NI)TNIMsaaraa
rltll miistallolhrr trHMnfiils. I ari wktm sllalhsr
Iris aslls, llsas ss4 r.4lsa rail, licit 1 1 M tsrawrai
laa so slliu. olr ssrs rsr for all aarvaaa aisaaaaa,
wetssMM and ausrdrni. For romplrtr araleal Sk
Utlt-Rilal cualna-iir, -tlt this ad. out and mall to
8EARS. ROEBUCK A CO.. CNIGAI0.
Gaaolaa tUmotd CCC New sold labi
Bswarsof ths dealer who tries to MB
hut J
, .!JilJaWfrW:l
it
J lull".' II
Freo Rhounatitn Gcro
1 boa- af a aafa antl sltapls raaaadr ffhlak Mr4
taonaaads of florplt parsons aftar all othor laasaaUai
fallad. Bajlaa frao to suSarsra. Atldraaa Jaka C
ailtk. if Osrasaala Balldlai, MIKraakaaTwia,
AS
A.lM
A'WX.V.
mm
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