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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1905)
GENEEAL WEAKNESS AND PEVES DISAPPEAB TOO. Bow a Wonmn " " .Van I'roril from Troubles Tlmt IJud Mn ! o Jif.5 Wretched for JUiinyVurs. . The imraediato causes of headaches vary , but most of them come from poor or poisoned blood. In amcmia the blood is scanty or thin ; the nerves are imper fectly nourished and pain is tho way in which they express their weakness. In colds tho blood absorbs poison from tho mucous surfaces , and the poison irritates the nerves and produces pain. In rhcu- 'jnatism , malaria and the grip , the poison in the bl x > d produces like discomfort. In indigestion tho gases from the impure matter kept in the system affect tho blood in the same Avay. Tho ordinary headache-cures at best give only temporary relief. They deaden the pain but do not drive the poison out ; of the bl wxl. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills on tho contrary thoroughly renew tho blood and tho pain disappears perma- nently. Women in particular have found these pills an unfailing relief in head aches cnu.sfd. by anunnia. Miss Stella Blocker recently said : "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did me a great deal ' of good. I bad headache nearly all tho time. Aft r I had taken three boxes of these piHs i became entirely well. " "How long had you suffered ? " she j was askc'l. j "For several years. I can't tell the exact dato when my illness began for it 'came ' on by slow degrees. I had been j ( going down hill for many years. " ' j "Did you have any other ailments ? ' ' ' "I was very weak and sometimes I had fever. My liver and kidneys were af- 'fected as well as my head. " ' " How did come take the you to rem , edy that cured you ? " J " I saw in a southern ucAvspaper a j statement of some person Avho was cured I of alike trouble by Dr. Williams'Pink , 'Pills. ' My physician hadn't done me any good , so I bought a box of these pills. After I hail taken ono box I felt so much ibetter thnt , I kept on until I became eu- 'tirely ' well. " j , Miss Bloelror's home is at Leander , Louisiana. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists. Besides headache they euro neuralgia , sciatica , nervous prostration , partial paralysis and rheu matism. Grateful Change. Clara Did you have pleasant weather at the springs this summer ? Dora No. It was hot , dreadfully so. ' Really uncomfortable , was it ? " "Awfully. Why , the weather was so mirni that when a man with n cool mill ion propped to me I accepted him. al once. " Investigation of the Packers. Very general interest has been mani fested in the government investigation DOAV in progress into the mode of con ducting business by the large packers located in Chicago and elseAvhere. Much has been written upon the al Ieged and improper modes of business procedure connected Avith the packing industry ; but it seems that so far no definite charge of any kind has been sustained and no proof of illegal or inequitable methods has been dis closed to the public. While a wave of severe criticism of this great industrial Interest is now passing over the coun try it might be Aveil to remember that She packers have had as yet no oppor tunity to make specific denial , the many indefinite charges of wrong-do ing having never been formulated so that a categorical answer could be made. The recent report of Commissioner Gariiold , which embodied the results w af an olficial investigation undertaken gi by the Department of Commerce and in Labor of the United States. Avas a vin cl dication of the Western packers , but Sl3 this result haA'ing been unexpected at 11) tempts in many quarters to discredit it is tvere made. In view of the situation as it HOAV jtands , however , attention may proper ly be called to a few facts that owing to popular clamor are now being ap parently overlooked. Fair treatment in this co-tntry has heretofore been ac corded to all citizenwhoe affairs as sume prominence in the public eye and some of the facts that bear upon the relation of the packers to the com w merce of the country may at this time IE be brielly alluded to. It would be IEVi aiflicult to estimate the benefits gained Viki by the f armors of the country result- j kiOi Ing from the energetic enterprise of , Oin the packers , for whatever is of benefit n to the farmer is a gain to the entire commerce of the country. And con si , ' nected wifh their continuous aggres sift sive AvoiTc HO feature perhaps has been } ftre more important than their efforts in rehj Becking outlets all over the world for the surplus products of the farmer. Our tofnl exports of agricultural prodt E nets have gained but little in the past , P twenty yearsand leaving out corn , the j total of ull other farm products was i c far less in IDOo than in 1SU1. But in packing house products there was con P siderable gain during this period , be " cause an organized and powerful force has been behind them seeking new 5ci r In ' ] and broader markets. ci i Besides the benefits reaped by farm ers on account of the enterprise and te energy exercised by the packers in at teh taining commercial results by foreign ui trade. lh great development in the manufacture of packing house by-prod ucts has added enormously to the value of all live stock raised in the United States. The waste material of y twenty years ago , then an expense to m the pucker , is now converted into ar fr ticles of great value and. as an eco 81 nomic fact , this must correspondingly 81W increase theilue to the fanner of every head of cattle marketed at the d numerous stock yards of the country. Let these facts be remembered while & now it is so popular to regard the TV great packing industry as deserving of TVb condemnation. At least it must be ad- b > milted tluil , so far , there is no ade quate reason for the almost unani m mous ho\vl that may be heard every / I where in ( he face of the C-artield re port above alluded to Avhich practical ly exonerates the packers from the ob al scure and Indefinite charges that hava ci been for some time past made the sub ject of popular comment , f l § > < 4 Unions of Great Papers 03 lnportsot Sobiects. Jf & & &ww < &w&ww&&w& & & & & & & & & & & & Strain of Modern Living. ' LL kinds of rubbish is being written about the awful strain of modern life and its dis astrous effects upon those who are forced to dwell within the limits of a busy civilization instead of flying to a lodge in some vast wil derness. In fact , there has been so much said , by one person and another about the degen eracy that is certain to follow life lived in the thick of things that any number of men and women are beginning to feel sorry for themselves. j ! i Feeling sorry for yourself , it is worth while saying , ' 'can invest more time and sympathy with less profit than any other occupation a man can take up. If a man drinks cocktails before each meal , highballs between meals , tea and coffee at regular intervals , smokes numerous strong cigars , oaN ioo much , is out in the open air not at all and ends his d. y with a bottle of wine and a midnight supper , something disagreeable is corning to him If he will only keep it up long enough , But he need not lay th1 re.Mill of his own gluttony j abuse of alcohol and tobacco ai : l other habits of the sort to civilization or to the awful strain of life in the twen tieth century. The proof of it lies in a decreasing death rate all over 'America and Europe. A really degenerate race begins to die out it does not go on living longer and longer. It may be true that there are more men and women In rest cures than there used to be but as there used to be no rest cures for them to iro to it is reasonably clear that there are lives being saved now that had to be given up heretofore. It is also said that th ° re are more insane persons than formerly. Insane persons used to die in a comparatively short time , and comparatively few of them were ever re stored to health and usefulness. Many more used to die before insanity showed itself , who are now preserved. Sta tistics of that kind are generaliy misleading , since they Like only one aspect of the case h.io account. Men who do not eat and drink to excess , who make play a part of their work and who ? tiek to life in the open whenever they get a chance , need not worry about stress and strain in rnc < Ie-n or any other life. Chicago Journal. The Rod b School. CHOOL principals are naturally divided over the restoration of corporal punishment in the ischools. but the majority in favor of the rc- jquest is very large. That ought to be con- sivo with the Hoard of Education , for the saoSy. Jsimple . . reason . . . that . the principals . who do not behove in whipping , or who can govern with out It , will not have to resort to it because the board per mits it. It is a matter of discretion , and every tendency toward reposing a larger discretion in the principal , and then holding him accountable for the results , ought to be encouraged. Some men can govern boys without the rod , and any man eaa govern soir.e boys indeed , most boys without the rod. I ut ihoro are exceptional cases among boys and among principals , and The rules should make allowances and give authority for those special cases. The fact is that our schools have run mad over the Idea of uniformity. The tendency everywhere is to seek to turn out children as muoh alike as two patent rockers from the same factory. Now. children are not alike by nature , and the chic value of education is to train a child to use advantageously those faculties in which he is strongest. The moment the fact is discovered that a cer tain percentage of children can do so much work in a certain time , the course of study is gauged up to that speed , and the teachers are expected to spur up the dullards toM it so as to make a good showing of ' ground covered. " Most children be can governed without corporal punish ment , and the srnno effort to adapt nil children to this ma jority rule resulted in prohibiting flogging. Undoubtedly , flogging used to be overdone , but the effort to get along without it is as mischievous as tiie overdoing , because , it gives an ugly boy an undue sense of his own power and importance , a trait which is sure to lend him into mis chief : in the outside world. Neither parent nor teacher should Hog a child in a temper , but it must be remembered that tho offense which t nds to rouse the teacher's temper not committed in the presence of the principal. He TIME fOR PLAIN SPEECH. | A clever insurance agent had la- jored long to close a contract with a vcallhy merchant whom he wished to nsure for $100,000 , says the World's ft'ork. The merchant was what is mown among agents as a "tough prop osition , " and the solicitor's eloquence an from him like water from a duck's wick. The agent , with all his profes sional pride roused , redoubled his ef- "orts. At last the merchant swung ouml in his swivel chair , and fixed lim wvith a cold , gray eye. "i'oung man , " he said , "if you can satisfy me on one point I'll take the )0licy. < " The agent braced himself for the en- jounler. "I guess I can , " he said. "Well , then. " said the merchant , Minting a big finger sternly at him , 'how 1 much do you get out of this first 14,000 which I am to 'invest' as you rail it ? " "I have no objection personally to elling you , " said the agent , "but I uive agreed not to give the exact fig- ires. " "Is it half ? " "Yes. more than that. " "More than half : And will you kind- Inform me why I should pay you nore than $12.000 ? Do I get anything i-oin It ? What reason is there for uch an absurdity ? " The merchant vas angry , insulting. Iriumplmnt. The agent rose. lie felt that the ieal was off anyway , and thnt he hnd earned the luxury of a few plain vords. "Well , I'll tell you. " he said. "I've een here twelve times , have I not ? " "I can well believe it ! " snapped , the nerchant. "And 1 have spent hours and days ou know nothing about finding out all .bout you and your affairs , ami laying rut my facts so they'd appeal to you. " "Well ? " "Well , if the world wasn't full of meets the offender in a cool and unbiased stnte of mind , like a court of appeals. Under such circumstances the chance of a principal's Hogging a boy unjustly to gratify either his sense of power or his own brutal nature is very slight. If a principal flogs ii such a spirit and Avithout enure , he ought Co be tried and dismissed. Because one man in a hundred misuses n power is no reason why the other ninety-nine should be deprived of the power when they need it to maintain discipline. The principals say they do need the liberty to Hog in emergencies , and they are the best judges of the situation. Brooklyn Eagle. Electricity en the Farm. j utilization of Avindmills for the production | iof electrical energy for farm lighting and farm ii work has been one of the dreams of those Avho have been watching the development of electric j lighting and electric transmission for inechan- IjSsS I - Jical purposes. The hope behind this dream ing has been strengthened by the introduction ! of the telephone in rural communities , Avhere sometimes the wire fences are utilized for lines of communication. Windmills are now generally used on farms for the lift ing of AA-ater for the stock and for fire protection. They have been so improved by inventive genius that they are noAv almost as efficient as steam engines for the purposes for which they are installed. It is therefore not extrava gant to believe that some day farmhouses Avill be lighted Avith electricity developed by the Avind , and perhaps in some instances certain light farm machines may be op erated by electric currents from storage batteries Avhich are replenished Avhenever the u'inu is strong enough to op erate the dynamos. The Danish government has been experimenting in this direction , Avith satisfactory results. It found that the dynamo could not be coupled direct to the motor with good result , but that a regulating device Avas necessary. This was provided by the use of a belt whose tension Avas kept constant by a movable countenveight. A switch Avas in terposed between the dynamo and the battery , to open and close automatically and keep the charging current con stant. A Avriter in the Canadian Engineer explains these experiments and states that a small plant installed in this way has been operating at Askov and supplying the in habitants of that place with light. The plant has a gaso- line engine as : i reserve , for use when the Avind is light. It is said that this plant has brought in a net revenue o * 122 per cent on the original investment. The use of gasoline vapor power as an auxiliary in this ease is inteiv-sting. It Avill strengthen the belief that the utilization of electricity in rural communities and on the , farm is not far distant. The gasoline motor is being deI I veloped to a high state of efiiciency by the demand for speedy automobiles and auto-boats , and eventually these engines may be utilized with profit on railways as well as on boats of commercial size. Electricity Avould reduce the danger of fire on the farm , by enabling farmers to light their barns without the use of lanterns , and to do away with matches and lamps in other wortc in the neigh borhood of inflammable materials. Milwaukee Wisconsin. Christianity in Japan. IIEUK is nothing very remarkable in the report from Japan that a movement is on loot , sup ported by many eminent men. to found a church pro-Christian in character but inde- in its lines. When Buddhism Avas dis- established and disendowed in the early ties"of the last century , owing ro the momen tary ascendancy of Shinto , which is merely vague ancestor and nature worship , it was prophesied by acute foreiun observers that Japan would either adopt Christianity or ire- ' come frankly materialistic. It will not be owing' to any lack of energy on the part of European and American mis- sionaries if the former course is discarded. Here is one forecast published just fourteen years ago : "To make all Japan Christian by edict some fine mornini * Is not on the program of the Japanese statesman of the hour. But thnt something of the kind should happen within the next tweii- j of ty years i-s not nearly so unlikely as many things that ii have actually happened in this land of realized iuiprobn- ! bilities. " London Chronicle. I * obstinate idiots like you , who have to have n good thing hammered clear through their skulls before they rec- ogniza it , my company wouldn't need to employ men of intelligence like mo to do the work. " The merchant looked apoplectic for a moment ; then as the humorous side of it struck him he began to chuckle. His chuckle grew into a laugh , and with his good humor restored he saw I n new light on the agent's figures. The solicitor was as surprised as his A-jctim when he went away with the signa ture he had been working for. Caught by the Cry. "Goo-o-e" is tho curious cry that was one of the signals of the native blacks of Australia. The cry was speedily adopted by the invading whites. Thejc final "e" is a very high note , a sort of prolonged screech that resounds for long distances through the bush and thus enables separated persons to as certain their relative positions. On one notable occasion this peculiar cry was heard in London. A daring bushran ger made his appearance one morning in front of a bank in Ballarat and coolly posted a notice on the door to the effect that the place would be clos ed for an hour. Entering , he terrorized the officials with his revolver and got clear away with $ . ' ! 0OvO. Some time afterward the authorities received information that the man had been seen in London. One day a detective thought he espied his man in the Strand : but , not being quite sure , he hit upon an expedient. He uttered ai piercing "Coo-e-e. " Passersby stood fixed in astonish ment , but the Australian , acting on the spur of the moment and recognizing the familiar sound , hastened to the per son who uttered it. lie Avas promptly arrested and AV.IS taken back to Aus tralia. Chicago News. After a woman dies , her husband usually makes a trip back to his old home , causing the suspicion that he remembers a sweetheart he used to hav . MEDIAEVAL RELIGIOUS WARS. i 'at ' Indiscriminate Slaughter and Pillago fe Justified by Holy Writ. fa On both sides of the great contro bn versy which took such fearful shapo hii in the middle of the seventeenth cen re tury , but especially on the Protestant he hem side , the minds of men Avere devoted , m not to seeking that peace which Avas fa breathed upon the Avorld by the N fam Testament , but to finding wnrrant for if war and especially the methods of the I chosen people in the Old Testament. Se Did any legislator or professor of law- to yield to feelings of humanitj * , he AA-as so sure to meet Avith protests based upon SCJ authority of Holy Scripture. Plunder dis and pillaire Avere supported by refer ence to the divinely approved "spoiling of the Egypt ian.V by tho Israelies. The Sti ricrht to massacre unresisting enemies five was based upon the command of the in Almighty to the Jews in the twentieth fa chapter of Deuteronomy. The indis gii criminate slaughter of Avhole popula scl tions Avas justified by a reference to It the divine command to slaughter the tion n.-Jions round about Israel. Torture and mutilation of enemies was sanc wL tioned by the conduct of Samuel jjc against Aung , of King David against gp the Philistines , of tho men of .Tudah against Adonibezok. Even the slaugh- ' tor of babes in arms was supported by ities a passage from the Psalms "HappyItie shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones n gainst the stones. " Treachery and assassination were sup- ported by a reference to the divinely CdLi approved Pkinehas. Ehud. Judith and Jael ; murdcrinir the ministers of un- npproved religions , by Elijah's slaugh vai ter of the priests of Baal. Atlantic the Monthly. lee How Sheoii Out. = ( I lady s I'apa says you're a loafer , Jack. | Jack What reason has he for enter- , ( taining such an opinion of me as that ? ! bei Gladys H < ! pays you spend , three orj so four evenings here every week wlthi stars out having any apparent purpose In. flaj coming. Chicago Tribune , v _ Self-government is gradually devel oping In the Philippines. In 1902 Con gress passed a law Avhich provided that a census of the population of the Islands should be taken , and that with in two years after the completion of the census a representative popular assembly should be elected. The cen- sus Avas completed on March 27th of ' the present year , and on that day Gov ernor Wright Issued a proclamation fixing March 27 , 1007 , as the date for the first general Filipino election. The legislative body to be chosen Is to contain between 50 and 100 members , elected by popular vote , and is to form , Jointly with the Philippine Com mission , the two-chambered legislature of the new government. This legisla ture , besides making IIAA-S , is to elect two commissioners to represent them j In Washington. It is expected that ' these commissioners will be allowed to sit ! in the American Congress much as the territorial delegates now have seats ' there. Moroccan affairs continue to hold an important place in viiternational dlsk cussion. The desire of Germanj" , as stated. In a memorandum to the United States , is for the maintenance of the I "open door" in Morocco , for the preserb ! ration of the status quo , and for the protection of the commercial interests of all trading nations. It is pointed j out , however , on the other hand , that t the Anglo-French agreement of April , 1904 , expressly declared for the princl- f pie of commercial freedom. April Gth , ! King EdAArard , on his way to join Queen Alexandra at Marseilles , paid a brief visit to President Loubet at Paris , and the Incident , following so soon upon the call of Emperor William at Tangiers , was Interpreted by the French press as a reaffirmation of the Anglo-French agreement. A reduction in freight rates on the , Panama railway was suggested to Sec retary Taft by the ministers In Wash , ington of the republics in Central America and on the Avest coast of South America. They said that it cost much more to ship goods to New York , by way of this railway than to send , the same goods to London by the ' Straight of Magellan. _ They also asked that equal facilities be granted to goods shipped by all steamship lines , and charged that under the old man agement that Is , before the United States gained control of the road various lines were discriminated , against Secretary Taft promised that tho discriminations would cease at fie once , _ _ The President has , by proclamation , im-ited "all the nations of the earth to take part in the commemoration" of the 300th anniversary of the first English settlement In America , at Jamestown , "by sending their naval vessels to the said celebration and by making such representations of their military organizations as may be prop- ' er. " The festivities are to last from May to November , 1007 , and are de scribed as "an international naval , mil itary and marine celebration. " Gen. Fitzhugh Lee , the president of the managers of the exposition , at the time his death , was engaged In persuad ing the various States to be represent CO ed at the exposition in some official AAay. la - : - : - i er John Hay , when an undergraduate j w. Brown University , assisted in de- fending : some lower classmen from tinas ; fair treatment in a hazing episode ; I but when a classmate recently wrote j fa him about the Incident , he humorously - ' replied ; , "I remember nothing of my fo heroic conduct in the Gordon case. B" * my : recollection of eAerything In tho- far-off days is dim , and heroism was AVI my : daily habit. I couldn't sleep nights I hadn't saved somebody's life. Now only save a nation now and then. " is Secretary Hay , just before he replied the letter , must have been reading bej some Washington correspondent's de F. scription of how he had prevented the dismemberment of China. In the Sunday schools of the United th States there are fewer pupils by about co millions than the number enrolled hv the public schools. Putting the ! < fact < In another form , of every three sei girls and boys who attend the day Fo schools , only two go to Sunday school. lie. : would be a delicate task to appor fai the responsibility for this state of un but it is fair to suggest that wheff-children stay away from the pub schools their parents are held re an sponsible. ( . . . * - Persons who are close to the author his at Washington assert that no at tempt will be made to change the lo cation and general direction of the Rocky Mountains until the Panama canal job is out of the way. The government of P.razll has ele if ! vated Its legation at Washington to rank of an embassy , and has se 3 lected its Minister at London , Sonhor ; j Nabuso , as Its first ambassador to this country. 3 I Congress did not increase the nur * 3 of stars on the flag , but Its failure to do was not because of a lack of nor of a lack of room on the Led All the Guoats. In the days of King George III. of England the Persian ambassador to hlg court demanded , but AAMS denied , prece dence over all other foreign representa tives. He refused to go to court , caus ing It to be reported abroad that ho was ill. He met the Prince regent at the house of the Lady Salisbury of tho time. "I am very sorry to offend your royal highness by not going to court , " he said. "Now , sir , my sovereign , ha tell me I go first ; your people say I must go last. Now , this very bad for me when I go back to Persia. " So say- ing , he made a significant pass toward ' his head , expressing decapitation. The prince tried to appease him. "But , sir , you still angry with me. You have not Invited me to your party to-morrow- night. " The prince explained that It was only a children's party , but the ambassador might come if he chose. He did choose , for he went and , being the only ambassador there , led all tho guests , thus scoring heavily for Persia , which made him comfortable about the neck again. HAPPY WOMEN. Mrs. Pare , wife of C. P . Pare , a prom- i n e n t resi dent of Glas- g o AV , K y. , says : "I Ava.sc sufferings from : a coin- | plication o f J kidney trou-s bles. Besides a bad back , j had a great deal of trou ble with the s e c r e tions , which Avere exceedingly ; variable , sometimes exces sive and nt other times scanty. The color was high , and passages Avere ac companied with a scalding sensation. Doan's Kidney Pills soon regulated tha kidney secretions , making their coloz normal and banished the Inflammation which caused the scalding sensation. I can ! rest well , my back is strong and sound ( and I feel much better in cverj ; way. " WP For sale by all dealers , price 50 cent * per < box. FOSTEK-MILBURN CO. , Buffalo , N. Y. Paste Jewels. Bookworms spin gold for publishers. Advertising makes authors. An unprejudiced critic never reads a book until after he reviews It. Most of the rose-colored dreams of romance < are yelloAA'-backed. The only effective place for a heroine to faint is In a hero's arms. In novels , as in real life , there.'s many a slip betAA'een the engagement and the wedding trip. Many a spring poem has been punc tured with a blue pencil. It is better to have your hero born great than to thrust greatness on him lr the last chapter. lrcl A good press agent is rather to bo chosen than a great plot. New Or leans Picayune. Private Uar Liiiies. The railroads seem very willing to have the private car lines brought un der ( the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce ( Commission. A railroad president is authority for the statement that lines are paid mileage , without discrimination , and the question of ex cessive charges is a matter for the shipper to settle with the car lines , so long as there is no law to govern their rates. Car mileage paying has been de cided to be as legal as the payment ol rental for property. A Dry Country. A practical illustration of the cur- re t saying , "as broad as it is long , " comes from the Denver Republican. A man who drove across the country last summer to a little town in West ern Kansas met a farmer hauling a wagon load of water. "Where do you get water ? " he asked. "Up the road , about seven miles , " tba farmer replied. "And you haul water seven milea for your family and stock ? " "Yep. " "Why in the world don't you dig a well ? " asked the traveler , excitedly. "Because , stranger , " the farmer,1 said , calmly , "it's just as fur one way the other. " I find Pico's Cure for Consumption the iestmedicine for croupy children. Mrs. Callnhnu , 114 Kail street , Parkers- itirg , V , ' . Va. . April 1 J , 11)01. ) Hissing in the Theater. Formerljthere Avas no hissing in the heater. < The benevolent audience were content ; to yawn and fall asleep. The nA'cntion of hissincr is no older than ' , H ) and took place at the first repre sentation of "Aspar , " a tragedy of , "ontenelle , so we are told by the poet. oi in his "Brevet de la Calotte. " A arce AVP.S produced in Bannister's time mder the title of "Fire and Water. " "I predict its fate , " said Bannister. "What fate ? " Avhispered the anxious tuthor at his side. "What fate ? " said Bannister. "Why , rh.it can fire and water produce but a ilss ? 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