Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, January 01, 1903, Image 2
-- V r Be Harn:oavPre.ss-Jjuraal f. aft JTJKKK, rtttirHIETOB til ! ord of the man's brutal Impulse back to . . NEBRASKA Its course, and you will find-weak- rJ&Htf fi&& lFkl .i-i H t ill,.! w. nlro ' flil-ltilVf -" - - Women net-in tu be a'jout all a robber has to fear these days. Witty Oliver Herford is credited with remarking that a liair in the head Is worth two In the brush. Sleep Is the great restorer. It is bet ter to call a wideawake policeman, however, when your purse is stolen. $9f J-" V!ithis seuson may lie forced to buy new i-f' 4f ' . ones much sooner than he exacts. I ,rh-ir'uV4 M nd Iat Profitable Crop. ! Out of 141 correS!M,nd. nts of the i A?..y.' .1 There is talk of another duel between French Deputies. If this thin; keeps up, somebody may be accidentally hurt. The Orown Prince of Siam ha been presenting sacred umbrellas to his American friends. There is nothing so sacred as the borrowed umbrella. Great Britain has Just ordered two more of the fastest and most powerful cruisers afloat. When it comes to ships Mr. Bull always has the price handy. weak. Not in body, but In mentality, in life-purpose, in character. There was trouble between the two. Neither was strong enough to overcome the Instinct of the brute. The stronger brute pre valled. That Is all. This mau and woman stumbled, as men and women have always stumbled, stumbled for thousands of years, over this great truth: .Strni-th of character comes only thrfnb obedience. If you want a strong body you must obey the laws of the tody. If you want a strong mind you must obey the Ihvvs of mind. If you want a strong soul you must obey the laws of the soul. Disobey and you become a weakling. It is Inevitable. Disobey the mor.il law, which by the way is not an arbitrary thing, but laid deep in your nature, and you are a mere creature of impulse a creature des pised of nature and of society, a self created weakling. It has taken ages for nations to learn that liberty comes only through obedience to law. When will individuals learn that not only lib erty but strength comes only through obedience to law? And if this be taken for a sermon, let this be the exhorta tion: "Quit ye like men: be strong." Dr. Gunsaulus says every baby Is a messenger from heaven. Well, we were all babies once and if s taken NBie X us a long time to delirer our messages. Admiral ON'eil knocks the speed madness In battleships. What Is bet ter, he thinks. Is fighting power. But a battleship that fights and runs away may lire to fight another day. A Cincinnati girl declined to marry the man of her choice because he re fused to give up the secret societies to which he lelonged. Some men are de termined to hang onto the night key at ny cost. A great to-do Is being raised over an trticle by Mr. Roosevelt on the presi dency, written wbile he was Governor of New York. What he thinks about the presidency now would be really worth sitting up nights to read. The medical societies might as well cat out their resolutions condemning kissing, because kissing is an insti tution that Is going to flourish right along, regardless alike of doctors and microbes. It will continue as Tbng as there are red lips. Plans are completed for the laying of the corner stone of the new campanile la Venice on April 22. V.m. If the modern structure lasts as long as the old, the people alive In 2903 may say that the builders of the twentieth cen tury were as capable as those of the tenth. In the autumn of 1818 a plain, moth erly woman, the wife of one of tho early settlers of Lndlaua, died, and was laid to rest with the simplicity charac istic of those pioneer days. There was not even a clergyman In attendance to offer a funeral prayer. Eighty-four years have passed since that day. The poor woman would have said, had she been asked, that after so long a time her very existence would almost have passed from the memory of the living. Nevertheless, thousands gathered to dedicate a monument to her memory. The governor of the State, now one of the foremost in the rni n, took part in the exercises in his official capacity. A celebrated soidier from a neighboring commonwealth delivered the address. Special trains brought to the scene thousands of school children, each car rying a flag. "What have I done?" then simple pioneer woman might well have asked. The orators of this day would reply that she had given Abraham Lin coin to the world, and had, with her husband, trained him during those early years when impressions for good are most lasting. She died before he was ten years old. In similarly appro priate recognition of the part which falls to mothers in shaping the charac ter of the child, the mother of Washing ton has been honored by a stately raon' ument at Fredericksburg. Among thos unknown to the larger fame, the worldj is constantly paying its tribute to moth ers whom It has never seen. Mm pie Poultry Brooder. K. A. McNear, of Melrose. Mass, lends plans of a brooder which is his jwn Idea and which he claims will alxe verv chick nut into It. It can be made anv length, partitioned off, md the chicks can go in and out of '.he sides instead of the end. Take a K)X 3 feet long. 1 foot wide and lMi fet deep. Cut a round hole In each snd six or eight Inches In circurnfer nc. according to the size of the stove -dr.,. t nf. piirht-inch common tin pipe, the same as they nse on a fur 3 FiMPI.K BftOODi.K. THE OLD FOLKS AT HOME Are Never Without Peruna in the House for Catarrhal Diseases. Peary has come back from the Arctic circle convinced that Um region of the north pole has great possibilities as a health resort He regards It as the best possible place for consumptives, and declares that ordinarily healthy men gain weight there unless they are exposed t great and unusual hard ships. His conclusions are In line with the experience of many physicians who arc sending consumptive patients Into cold regions and keeping thutn In the open air with excellent results. Another outrage has been perpetra ted upon the poor automobilist. A Mr. Marble has been fined $1 and sent to Jail for a year for running into and killing a careless driver of a delivery wagon. Mr. Marble cheerfully agreed to pay the dollar, but remonstrated against a Jail sentence as seitlng an extremely bad precedent.' The fact that the victim drove a delivery wagon had been taken into account, however, and the Judge felt that he could not further diminish the sentence. It is apparent that if chauffeurs learn that for every death caused by them they must go to Jail for a year, much of the sport of the automobile will be lost. What's the use of wealth and a $10. JV)i) conveyance If the petty laws asalfWt careless driving are to be applied? Emerson's law of compensation holds. For Instance: Edmund J. James Is president of Northwestern Univer sity, lie has positl n, honor, fame, but be Is not happy. Neither is Ids wife. They have a crippled cblM. Their daughter Helen will never romp about as other children. She Is suffer ing from congenital dislocation of the hip. Dr. James and his wife bad hoped much from the skill of Dr. Adolph I.o- rens. who came alt the way from Vi enna to perform the successful opera tion oa the Armour child. When the examination was made by Dr. Loreuz he snook his bead dubiously. "She is too old for a successful 'operation. A long course of treatment must precede and even than It Is problematical." Dr. Jtmss offered t large sum, all his sav ings, la fact. If the physician would slay and treat his 18-year-old daugh ter. Bat tb eminent physician said It was lsaposstble. At the time of the caul's ssa ml nation tbs president of Horfawsstsra was being installed In Ma MC aaVa, aad tbs attendant eere awrJafl vara awat laroreaalva. ..What war tfeta poatp aad circumstance of MMtaSatioa ta Dr. aad Mrs. James be- tfatkatr aaxlaty aad ptty aad lots for ttair trstad daugntarT Aad always eaar wa ha a sob ta taalr Saarta warn Ctf aaa Vatnr ealld a aepalaai invalid forK TB,aaiawar The rare combination of genius, cour age and energy that made up the char1 acter of Mrs. Elizatetb Cady Btanton would have made any man great In his otto generation. It has made a woman great In her century, and has stamped an enduring impression upon the age. Var fifty years this woman and bet work have stood in the limelight of public Inspection, and been marks for ridicule and open, often bitter, opposl tion. But she never faltered. She liv ed to see her movement respected and receiving the serious consecration of the best men and women of the time Without In the least degree divorcing herself from the duties of wifehood and mofherhood, she has Immeasura bly sweetened the meaning of thosj sacred words in the mind of every1! thonjrhtful man and woman lu th land, and at the same time has made U4 see that there is a sisterhood which Is far broaier than the environs ol blood relationship, and the spirit ol which stands for letter manhood. bei ter womanhood, better citizenship. We say there are no miracles any more. Yet a woman with an idea arose among us. won to herself a few associates, called conventions, set on foot a prop aganda, perfected a great and con stantly widening organization, system atized It into a powerful Influence at the polls in many States snd a potent, abiding moral Influence In every sec tion of the land. If this 'm no miracle, It must be almltted that a new human force has come into existence and has come to stay. There is no mcic or op ponents still to the movements that Mrs. Stanton fought for. But there are few earnest men and women to-day who doubt the sincerity of her pur poses, the high moral attitude of her spirit or the Infinite possibilities sug gested by what she actually accomplished. nace to heat a house. The cover anil bottom can be on hinges, so they can be let down or lifted up and cleaned In two minutes. The pipes should have two ellwws. The one at the back should turn down, and the one at the other end should turn up, so there can be a cover to It. with two or three mnall holes punched in the cover so as not to waste too much heat. I use a single burner oil stove. This stove will heat a brooder ten or twelve feet long. Poultry Keeper. Shaker Iairyina. The Canterbury Shakers of New Hampshire have some 4.(KX acres of land, and the community numbers ibout 100 persons. A large quantity of dairy products is consumed by a family of that size, and some years igo with an ordinary dairy and meth ods, some butter had to be purchased for borne use. That necessity caused more attention to lie given to the dairy. Poor eowB were wild and more scien tific methods of feeding adopted. In srder to further Improve the herd and Increase Its butter capacity, two thor oughbred Guernsey bulls were pur chased about four years ago from Mr. Mixter's, of Ilarre. Mass. By constant ?are, and the raising of tlie best helfi-r calves, the dairy lis;s steadily linprov-! ed. until la-it season, with a dairy of forty cows, fifteen of which were two-'; year-old heifers, an average of ."JiiO pounds of butter n-r cow was made. Instead of purchasing nutter for home consumption. Sl'.ixK) worth of butter was sold and worth of stock. They have now atsiut l-! had of cat t.le..slxtecn of which tire pure bred , 'Jtiernseys. The sisters take entire care jf the milk after the milking Is done, tin tlie separator, including the engini Board of Agriculture sixty two culled potatoes the most profitable; and twen ty-seven called them the least prollt aide; eiht called corn the most profit able and sixty-four thought it the least j profitable: forty-one consider hay tin most profitable; thirty two apples; ten oats; seven tobacco; wven cranber ries; six cabbages; six sweet corn; sij strawlM'rries; four each favored on ions, tomatoes, beans and fruit; threi each peaches and pears, two market garden crops and two asparagus; ont each for rutabagas, forage crops, eel ery. milk, plums and root crops; nlnt thought hay the least profitable; neves tomatoes; six apples; four each said squashes, cabbages and sweet coin three each milk.cranlierries and ticans two each said onions, jiears and cu cumbers, and one each asparagus, grapes, cauliflowers, beets, melons, peas, small fruit and market garden crops; sixty-two considered the seasoc to have been profitable; eleven at above the average for profit; sixteen as an average for profit; eighteen fair ly profitable, and thirty-seven thought It had been an unprofitable one. Thu It will be seen that much depend utKin the location, and more perlmpt uiKin the individual as to the profit on crops. In nearly every country corn and potatoes were less than an aver age crop, but the loss on amount in potatoes was largely made up by t lie high prices. Massachusetts I'lougU- man. Farm lnvetraenl, Investors ought to tie satisfied with a low rate of Interest In agricultural investment on account of its rclativf safety. As vet It Is a little soon lu out history to expect that the new agricul lure of the future shall have any spe cial attractions for capital. But tb time will come when all of our old depleted lands will be regenerated and revived, through the era of Invested capital. There Is very little chance foi any regenerative work in agriculture without stub Investment. The pool man must either keep to the skimming policy, or work for others until h has put by enough to be a capitalist himself, in a small way at least have always been averse to recom mending any man to go in debt foi anything. Yet most of the success of this world are made by those wbt venture In this respect A never for gotten remark I once heard by a nlc old capitalist was to the effect that h always loaned money to the man wh wanted to buy manure with It Hoard's Dairyman. IlamlT Garden Baket. Every firchard and garden shoult have a supply of wire baskets of dif ' ferent sizes and shapes. They are tht cleanest and most dura ble, besides allowing thi free circulation of all through their contents In use in a gardci where a water tank ant hose connection an available they are t great labor saver. Tin be tilled with potatwi retables, the hose turnc( MR. AND MRS. J. 0. ATKINSON, INDEPENDENCE, M0. NDEIl data of January 10. 1W7, Dr. llnrtman received the following IcttiT: "My wife hnd been suffering from J complication of diseases for the past 23 years. "Her case hnd bntiled the skill of mini of the most nted physicians. One of her worst troubles wns chronic consti pation of several years' uUndiiig. "She also was pnssing throuirh that most criticnl period in the life of a woman cluing of life. In Jane, 1N05. 1 w rote to you about her case. You ad vised a course of I'crunn and Mnnalin. which we at once cnniiMcncetl. and hnve to say it completely cured her. She tirmly believe that she would hnve been dead' only fur these wonderful remedies. "About the same time 1 wrote yon jiliout my own case of catarrh, which hud been of years' standing. At tunes I wns utmost past going. I commenced to nse 1'erunfl according to your instruc tions, ami continued its use for illwiut a year, and it his completelv cured me. Your remedies do all that you claim for them, and even more. Catarrh cannot exist where Peruna Is taken according to directions. Succesa to you and your remedies." John O. Atkinson. In a letter dated Jnnmiry 1, 1900, Mr. Atkinson sais, sfter five years eap- rience with 1'ernns: , will ever continue to speak a good word tor Peruna. In my rounds as a traveling man I am a walking adver tisement for Peruna and have Induced many people during the past year to use Peruna with the most satisfactory results. I am still cured of catarrh." John O. Atkinson, Box 272, Independence, Mo. When old age comes on. catarrhal dis eases come Im. Systemic catarrh is al most onirentnl in old people. This explains why I'ernna tins become so indispensable to old people, ('prima is their safeguard. Pernnn is the ily remedy yet devised that meets thes eases exnctly. Such rases cannot be treated locally; nothing hut an effective systemic rem edy could core them. This in exactly what I'ernna is. If you do not receive prompt and sat isfactory results from the life of I'cruna, write st once to Ir. 1 1 art man, civiiig full statement of your case, and lie will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Ad'tro Or. Hnrtmnn, President of Th Uartman Sanitarium. Columbus, O. "Love letters should be avoided." says the "Hon. Doc." Ilrown, (;f the Kentucky legislature. "Never make love to a womao out of an h lc bottle Vnlioililn Ke.llr for Mmtemn. Tlie National Museum at Relgradi has come In bo possession of a collec tion of (ic.ooo Roman copper coins re- be advised Id a recent political cently uuearlhed pear a Servian -speech. "Why, when I courted niy j lae. The oldest of them belorj to wife, I lust grabbed bold of her and 1 . the time tf Caracalla. aid, 'Sallle, yon are the sweetest thing on earth, and your beauty baffles the skill of man and subdues bis ferlous nature.' and I got her." Chemical vinegar, catsup and table sauces contains no vegetable matter whatever. When SanMirr sre Ready. The butchers of Merlin bare a curious way of informing their cus tomers of the days on which fresh sjusages are made, by placiog a chair, covered with a large, clean apron, at the side of the shop door. baskets may and other v: on and the contents Immediately wash ;he cream and milk ami make the but f.r.Xevv Enffland Farmer. For Ilii-.'-KillliiB l'e. A. J. IVrry. of Ilami ck County. In l!ana. writes Iowa Farmer: As the lime for butchering is approaching there will be a desire to know of sim- whlch furnishes the power, care for wj without touching the vegetables bt band. When not In use they arc easilj hung up out of the way. Exchange. Milk and Hok Cliotrra. During shs lis whi n hog cholera h prevalent It has been Tiotcd that wha are known as the creamery and dairy sections of the country suffer much les pie and yet l.andy devices for aiding fr,n disease than those section, the work la butclii-riicr. I have made where the steer takes the place of th' lit a very little ep -:ise a very com- (i;1)ry cow. The reason assign d Is tha: plete arrangement for butchering hogs n tue iry sections get a gooc jnd my neighbors enjoy It ns much as ; r!ltjon 0f skirntiiilk. one of the best bal a need rations to be had, and arc thui better fitted to resist the disease that purely corn-fed hogs. Creamery Jour nul. ta f tZ iltO la me an aloe tfcfr- " Sm t Nature Glories. Oeorgle's aunt was worried becauM he failed to understand or sppreclaU anything not strictly practical. Har- per's Magazine tells or an experiment she tried to test his esthetic powers. In her desire to rouse him to per ception of better things ehe took him to Niagara Falls. The train brought them Into sudden and magnificent view r .he rreat wonder. Hhe watcneu mm BL'TCIU-RIAO UF.V1CE. j Popular In Iowa. Grand View. Iowa. Iiec. 20,-The most complete satisfaction is expressed in this district over results obtained recently by using Jiodd's Kidney Pills for those complaints resulting from dis eased Kidneys. This satisfaction finds 'frequent expression in words. People 'who have been cured seem to take pleasure It) telling of It. Take what Mrs. I.ydia Parker says for example: "I was troubled with Backache," says Mrs. Parker, "aud all the time when I was stooping over a stitch would lake me in the ba--k and I could not straight en up for a while. "I sent and got a couple of boxes of rioiid's Kidney Pills, and b.'f.ire I nad finished tak.Dg the first, the stitch had gone and it has n-t been back since. Other people In have had similar e.xp'ieticcs with lludd's Kidney pills, and their p pularliy-is steadily on the Increase. 1,1 Ul Light From Moon. v If the sky were filled with fufl moons the light would be no bright er than that of ordinary daylight. About (40,000,000 eggs are annually sent from Ireland to England. rrtiry That ray. Id 1W,8 Hungary's forests returned little over a million florins a year. Today, own g to careful administra tion, the yield Is over three million fiuritiS yearly. A family of unusual sb.e lately passed through Kansas, cnioute from Iowa to Oklahoma. It was com posed of Michael StreckeDdorfer, with sixteen sons, two daughters, and grandchildren enough to almost till a cai. It costs 2 cents to cook a breakfast bv rlcctlclty aud 10 ceuts to cooks dinner. Fin O acxera In Monlnnn. Hut faw people arc aware Uiat (here is in M'int;ina ionic of tlioliuest gla ciers In the world. t do. It is made by taking a large pole ibout thirty feet long for a lever and mother almut ten feet long for a post which Is set In the ground. A clevls thaped Iron Is made for the top of'the post to support the lever and permit :lng It to swing around In any position. The lever can lie used In lifting the closelr a the moment for the test hog In any part of the butchering op- rwwar snd was delighted to sea (ration. It can be swung from the him press bis race to toe wmww, n.,u keep It there. Then he turned to her with beamlni countenance, and pointing to a hill side In the background, said, "Rsy see them goats!" Helsetf to Hurt Mule. "What do jroo think ought to b 4on with the trusts T "I don't know." answered Bcnstoi Wchiim. "Heaven knows. I've don say best to make 'em give np some of tksir BM7. WaSDingroa star. It Ii gmtsr Wf wd to wwho iM mmaatma Otdst f eSVTjdJaf DM tcalding vat to the scraping tsble. '.hence to tlie hanging bracket which ;an bo made for several hogs If de llred. I believe this to be the simplest ind most Inexpensive arrangement for lutcherlng hogs Work In Winter. There Is plenty of work to do In win- tor If the farm Is rightly msnnged. It la tbo season of the year for all re pairs and renewals. Every Implement sr irloco of machinery should bo oror- fcamed and all repairs ordered, so ss to bo ready for spring work. An Inv ilianrr that to la good order ssves labor aad enable tbo farmer to burr ortta tbo tart work whoa ovary day to Talaabto. Tbo faraer wbo doos not Farm TSolcs. I Ite full plowing Is what hard, stifi soils need. Very dry road dust Is the only form of earth that will kill lice and thai hens will bathe In. The short peppermint crop hat brought the price to the highest point ever recorded, according to a trade authority. Churning is not agreeable work, but considerable time can be saved by th use of a thermometer. Mutter comet rapidly or slowly, according to th temperature, and a thermometer savei lnlior and costs but little. But few use the thermometer when churning yet It Is almost Indispensable In th making of choice butter. Every farm should have at least s small flock of sheep as scavenger There are so many things that sheer will consume that tbey are considered necessary adjuncts to farming, II waste materials are to tie utilised. A well-managed flock will pay a larg dividend on the capital Invested tb first year. The small and unsalable tweet pota toes are Inst as vsluable for tbe fat tntnc of boa at those that art of marketable site. Kweet potatoes con Ula a torre proportion of sugar, and are, therefore, very suitable for tbe fattening of stock. Tbey should be cooked aad braa added. Being very Clilnmry Sweeps Ml' ml t'p. London (hitiuicy sweeps, who are prohibited from s Melting custom by knocking at doors and also from using their familiar cry In tlio streets, will voice their grievances at a demon stratloo in Trafalgar bquare shortly. Catarrh ami liar I'cver. Liquid Cream Halm is becoming l"it ta popular in uniiiy lociiluics ns l-.ly Cream Halm solid. It is prepared for use In tomiwrs. and Is highly prized by those who Imve been accustomed to cull Upon physicians for such a n.-iitmcat. Many physicians are usma mm piei.nu. Ii All the medii-inii nil nert les of the celehrat-d Cream Halm are contained in the laoni'l lorm, which is i.i cm., hi- finding spraying tube. All druggists, .or by mml. Ely Hrolhera. r(! Warren ttr'el, ivvi i or. Messrs. ELY IlltOS.: I sold your Liquid Cretin Halm to Mr. Win. I.nmber- toll, toil ieinriiine siroei, or lean; he has nacd two bottles, giving him mt sntisfnetorv result. GEO. W, M'lt:FK. Phnrtnaclat. Norwegian farmers are wise, and are eager to pov-ess farms at the earliest opportunity. Instead of work log for other people. There are sbout I20.0O0 tanners In Norway, and 109, 000 of them own farms. CASTOR I A For Iaiuta aad CUUraa. Th Id Ya Ltj kVsvji Ctl -j - Miss Alice Bailey, o! Atlanta, Qa., tells how she was permanently cured of inflanri tion of the ovaries, escaped sur geon's knife, by taking Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound. "' I hud suffered for three years with, lerrible pains at the tim of men ilruation, and did not know wha l',io trouble wu until the doctor pro siounecd it inflammation of the ovvics, and proposed an operation. ' I felt to weak and sick that I fait mi re that 1 could not survivo tlie or deaU The following week I read an advertisement in the paper of Lydia) II rinkham'e Vegetable Com- round, in such an emergency, and so decided to try It. Great was my joy to And that I actually Improved after taking two bottles, and in tbs end 1 was cared by it. 1 had gained eighteen nrmnda and was in excellent health.". Mist Alici Iiatijcr, W North Boule vard Atlanta. Oa. ttOO0ffMfhrlma f itaMStl arafat (MkImwi mmmM at ssa. aWMsf Th rnetoBU of Inilammtytloas mid disease of the orariee ar dull UirvODIBB; pan m anii uirowuii pmu . -ponied by a aenao trf teadtrtri and beat 'low down la tatj et4 with occa atonal tbooti-t Wh. tr to t twttoa LsJh oarer at wMeaome, tbey may be fed liberally ww van rTT JIVM.. CantlOita V A