Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, November 28, 1907, Image 7
3A3JY ITCHED TEBSZBLY. Covered tvltli In- Skin Doctor.Xo Avail by Cutlcura Hemc lle . "My Vaby's face aiid neck were cov ered with kching skin similar to ec-ze- sna. and she suffered terribly for over ' * year. I took her to a number of doc- 'tors , and also to different colleges , to BO avail. Then Cutkrura Remedies were recoaasaended to me by Miss G . I did not u : > e it at first , as I hud tried eo many other remedies without any favorable results. At last I tried Cuti- cura Soap , Cntieura Ointment and Cutkura Re-'Olvent Pills , and to my surprise noticed an improvement After usii g three boxes of the Cuti- cura Oiatrneat , together with Cuticura Soap aad Pills , I am pleased to say she Is altogether a different child and the picture &f health. Mrs. A. C. Krestlin , 171 X. Lincoln St. Chicago , 111. , Get 2U and 30 , 100C. " Clanxed rt an Antique Alno. A charming in > stess of oue of the * * blg k t > e6 , " as tiiey are called by tlwuse who are welcomed into them , has the added beauty of prematurely white lialr , says the Washington Star. That which see&s to her contemporaries an added charm ay appear to the crude ly yeoag a mark of decline , at least so it apfhi rs in oe instance of which the faosteae kerseif tells with enjoyment. The lady is a coaaoisseur of an- tk ) &g. At o e of her teas a debutante rkrii witk the glow of youth , but ssidly ctMBtraiaed with her sense of her own n v ity , was Itamled a cup of tea. The cu was beautifully blue and wonder- fanr ekL The hostess , desiring to Ifghtea the strain of her youthful guest by a pleasiag diverting remark , said. "That little cup Is 15.0 years old. " "Oh , " caiae the debutante's high , etraiaed tones , "how careful you must' be to have kept it so long. " Beware of Ointments for CatarrI ; that Contain Mercury , as raercary will surely destroy the sense of emelt aad completely derange the whole ysteca waea entering It through the mu cous surfaced. Such articles should never be ased except oa prescriptions from reputa ble physicians , as tha damage they will do ! tcMfekl to the good you cau possibly derive trees , them. Hall's Catarrh Cure , siaaefaetared by F. J. Chener & Co. . To led ® , O. . contains HO mercury , and Is taker internally , acting directly upoii the blood aad zT'uceos surfaces of the system. In buy Inr Hall's Catarrh Care be sure you set the eeaaiB * . It is taken Internally and mad" la T 4ede , Ohio , by F. J. Cheney & Co. Te tiflMBials free. Sold by Drussists. Price. 73c per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. In a Mexican Hat Store. Half a million straw hats is no un- com * oa sirht to be met with at onetime time im the hat stores of Mexico. Tha hats are made of a long pampas grass which grows nowbero else in the world. It is specially cultivated for the hat iadestry. So rapidly are the hats made that so e skilled workmen can turn oat te or a. dozen a day , and they are the * s at to all parts of the world. They cost about fourj > ence each to make , are retailed at rroin 1 shilling sixpence to 4 shillings and are so dur able that it not infrequently happens that those of an economical turn of mid ake a single hat last ten years. Leaden Queen. New and Liberal Homestead Regulations IN Western Canada NEW DISTRICTS Now Open for Seiilemeni of tfe * ci-iwst U-is In t a train feete * at .iaacit-h'swan an i A cert a have recently been efr.s .t u.-fcterth Revised Homestead of Ci = i < S2. Thousands of homesteads cf 1 1 > & 2 res eark are novavaiiaMa. Tha new regula tor wttit tt pombfe for entry to ba rrjis by proxy. Iba MMTMBky tkat nuny in th Unkod States have bee * waiting icr. Any member of a. family may make eairy 4 r ay other member ef th- > family v/homay k emtH'ad te mzk entry for himself or hersel. . Easry taay ew be nado bef-xo the Agent or Sub- Ace t < tb Di3cr ct by proxy < an certain conditions1. fcyth # fztfcar r-ker. KM. daughter , brother or sis ter of i * tetaa&ac bccne steamer. lijr erea cambeied section of Dominion LVi is Manitoba er the North-West Provinces. excvp& S aad 26. nt reserved , may be home- teaded by aay person the sole head of a family , rtsaleerer ISyeajs of ace. to the extent of a. of 160 acres , more or less. " T > * f * * te eack case wffl be SI 0.00. Churches. arkets convenient. Healthy climate. and good laws. Grain growing ar.d Fee twctber parttoiiars as to Rates. Routes. Best tea Co & d V."ksre to Locate , apply to W. D ScMt. Sup natrckieat of Iramizrauon. Ottawa. Ca&ada. or E. T. Holmes , 315 Jackson S > .St. Pa J. MMB. xad J M. MacLachlan. Box US. Wavrrto s. io. Duotn. Authorized Gorera- tM jT rtl ai at. Skin ef Beauty is a Joy Forovor. R. T. Follx Courud's Oriental D Cr am or Magical Boautlfler. Tw. Plaplea , ' irtctki. Mwth Fttcbei , sd Mtla Diojes ! , tsA every bltmUh oa beauty , nrd dt- flei ( Seuctiaa. It h& Hood tie ten ef tt ynrt. ai Is ! a pr rer'T raid * . Aectpt no coaater- ttH eT ilmttor time. Dr. L. A. Sa.nx tfctl ta a liijr cf the hict- tca ( a pattest i : * * A yea l dit thta. r * x * rc VEna CMU Cre m * tt * t'ut b&rafai cf all tha ta"li.e r k4 Sum. Ca3Ai lad f j L.rlj ' T.TF . - ir t" - = \ 10X < ; Th Domosday Book , a general survey of England , combined. 10i'i ) Malcolm Canmoro , King of Scot land , slain in battle at Ahnvlck. l.51."i S\vlss defeated the Austrian.at battle of Morgsirten. KJ40 Moors defeated at * battle of Tarifa. in southern Spain. 13S1 Adolphns. Count of Cloves , found ed "The Order o Fosls. " lilS ( Sir Walter Kalwjjh beheaded at Westminster for high treason. HJSli Treaty of neutrality be'\veen Eng land and Franc * * for America. 171.1 Tiie Uarrier treaty i-onchuled at Antwerp The Xi'thorlnmK. Na ples. Milan , etc. , added to the Aus trian dominions. 17l7 New England shaken toy an earth quake. 17GI Th ' ship L'Augusrc wrecked off Cape lireton. ll-l lives being lost. 17 jo Mason and Dixon arrived fiwn England to survey the Pennsylvania and Maryland boundary. 1770 11 nice , the African explorer , < 1J - covered what he considered to be the source of the Nile. 177.J Benedict Arnold , with American troops , arrived at Quebec to lay siege to the city. 177(5 Britisli under Howe attacked Fort Washington. 1777 Washington retired to , White Mar-h , below Philadelphia. 1S)0 ( Lieut. Pike first sighted the Colorado rado mountain which bears his name. 1S10 First steamboat onvesrern waters left Pitt > bnrir for New Orleans. 1S1-1 The "Robert Fulton. " the' first steam war vessel , launched. ISoo Remarkable display of meteoric star- ; seen over a large part of North America. iSlii ) Khelat. capital of Beloochistan. captured by the British. IS-IH Cracow annexed by Austria. IMS Count Rossi , minister of the in- tei-ior. assassinated at Rome. 1S49 The ship Caleb Grimsnaw burned at sea with great lo > s of life. The < ! rand Trunk railway of Canada opened. Major Robert Anderson of Ken tucky ordered to take command of the Federal forces in Charleston har bor. ISfH flen. Sherman Ijesan his march to the sea..Gen. Sherman cut th ' wire connection between Atlanta and Washington Gen. Sherman burn ed a part of Atlanta. 1SX1 Trial of Charles Gnitean , the as sassin of President GarlieM. began. 1SS. > Servia declared war ngtiinst Bul garia. 1SXS Friends of the condemned Bald Knob outlaws in Missouri lynched live of the leading witnesses. lsS : > Revolution at Rio Janeiro and n republic proclaimed. 1XI : : Demonstration by Chicago anarch ists. 1 ! > 1 Secretary Carlisle called for bid- ; for a second issue'of ? oO,000.000 of bonds. 1SDS Earl of Minto sworn in as gov ernor general of Canada. 1IH.H > Tinted States cruiser Yosemite \\reoked at Guam by typhoon. 1001 Execution of Czolgosx for the mur der of President McKinley. I'.HUi Attempt made on the life of King i Leopold of Belgium. Noxv Volcanic If le Readers will recall the discovery last July of a new and steaming hot volcanic i-land to the vicinity of Tnal.iska by the revenue cutter McCulloch. in command of Lieut. B. 11. Camden. Lieut. Cainden now reports of his second visit to the M-en < \ three months later. The cloud of steam had vanished and one of the two pr.iks. named McCulIoch. . ' ! ) . " > feet high , had entirely disappeared , leaving the half of the other peak , known as Perry , "with its perindicular wall standing in grim silence as a hcad.stone at the grave of the departed peak. " The rugged outline- ; of the island had been softened by a pad- d'.n-4 of lava dust , while the sand spit which connected the two parts of the island had attained the height of from 20 to 100 feet. At intervals while they looked on. masses of lava dust jarred from crevices high up crashed downward 'o the beagh. Vaudeville Deal Denied. A. L. Erlauger , head of the theatrical trii-st. has denied most emphatically the rejxjrt that his vaudeville campaign had been abandoned and a deal made with the Keith people , although he admitted that he lattrr had tried to buy him out. Xeiv York Skyxeruper Limit. Drastic regulations adopted unanimous ly by the Building Code Revision Com- mis .iou of New York City to be in effect after Jan. 1 provide that no now building s-hall be over 2. > 0 feet in height. This is expected to end the mad race of builders for the prize of "the highest building. " if the regulations are approved by the Board of Aldermen. Already more than twenty buildings in New York have exceeded this limit. This action is in response to the warning recently sounded by the lire nn- < kr\vrilers and by t'ac fire fighters. i 0 Spinach for Market. Early sown spinach should be ready to cut in October. Watch the market nud rush it in. A heavy freeze will nitn the growth alreadjr made. The Collard. The southern collard is the surest mid safest vegetable product known to the gardener , and there is a market fcr collards in every town containing business men who were country boys. Texas Farn and Ranch. Tielile Grass. The stand of wild barley , or tickle grass , as it is sometimes called , is ful ly up to if not better than the stand last season , says a farmer in Iowa Homestead. The acreage has increas ed , and no doubt there will be many tickled people when the crop is bar- vested. V.'oincn ami Dairy Wssrlc. The lady manager of a dairy makes a point of getting her milk only from farms that are under medical supervi sion , and carried on exactly as they would be were they directly supervised by her. Then the vital pnrt of pre paring the milk for delivery to the pub lic she is able to give her undivided at tention. And one can he quite sure that instead of the pernicious system of adding drugs to It to make It keep In hot weather , she will use the infi nitely more hygienic , if more trouble some , method of pasteurizing it. Wom an's Life. Two Fine SlravrberrieK. Oue of the best of the newer straw berries is the Senator Dunlap , says an Ohio man in American Cultivator. It is a very early kind and keeps in bearIng - Ing long enough to be classed also as a midseason variety. It is as reliable and productive as the Ilaverland and lias a good color and pleasant uavor. The Dunlap and a good late kind like the Granvllle make a fine team for tn > srr.nvberry grower. An important practical point is to put ou straw tnougb for mulch and winter protec- Utn to last until the bearing season fmd keep the berries clean. Snece.sa of KliarlcoJ. About four years ago the - Department ment of Agriculture began a systematic distribution of the Kharkof wheat , and extensive trials of this variety in co operation ATith the State experiment stations. It is the hardiest winter wheat yet grown in this "country and Is now thoroughly establishes. By its use the area in which winter wheat can be successfully cultivated lias been much extended to the north ward and westward , particularly in Ne braska and Iowa , while a considerable amount is now grown in South Dakota and Southern Minnesota. It will be conservative to state that , wherever this wheat has been introduced , the yield per acre is being increased on an average of five bushels. Horse uiicl DOJV 3Iont. In 100G there were slaughtered for food in the Kingdom of Saxony 12.022 horses and 3,73G dogs. This was an in crease of 224 horses and 133 dogs over the year 190o. In the whole empire In 1900 , accord ing to the Southern Farm Magazine , there were slaughtered for food 182- 000 horses , and it is estimated that about 7.000 dogs go into food in the empire annually. "Horseflesh is very generally adver tised in the German newspapers , es pecially in those of the large industrial centers , " says United .States Consul [ fft , "and most German cities have at least one market which makes it a spe cialty , claiming for it a higher percent age of nourishment than that of either beef , veal , mutton or pork. Neither is it unusual to find adver tisements of dog meat or for the pur chase of dogs for slaughter. Nor is it possible to read the German newspa pers for any length of time without coming to the conclusion that a great many dogs are killed and eaten that do not give up their lives under oflicial In spection. "News Items detailing the arrest , trial , conviction and punishment by fine or imprisonment of men charged with killing and eating dogs that be longed to others , sometimes valuable animals or cherished household pets , are not infrequent. " Bitter Milk. Abnormal flavors In milk and milk products may be due to a number of causes , as It is well known that certain weeds eaten by cows impart a charac teristic flavor to the luilk. Wild onion or garlic is a noticeable Instance. A recent bulletin of the Ontario Ex periment Station gives some interesting observations on bittexmilk. . In this case , however , the bitter flavor was caused by a form of yeast rather than by bacteria. Numerous cheese facto- rlco In Ontario were annoyed by the development of a bitter flavor in mill : rind curd. From a sample of such curd u yeast-like micro-organism designated Torulfi ainara , or bitter torula , was isolated. This yeast , when separated from all other micro-organisms and ad ded to milk which had been rendered sterile by heat , produced the charac teristic bitter flavor. Cultures of the torula were added to milk , and the cheese and butter manufactured from it also possessed the bitter taste. In preventing such troubles as bit ter milk , proper care of the milk is essential. Milk cans and all other uten sils should be thoroughly washed and sterilized by heat , the milking should be done under the most favorable con ditions for lessening contamination , ; the milk should be cooled -promptly , and guarded as carefully as possible from all known sourcvs of Infection. A Fanners' bulletin of the Department of Agriculture contains suggestions for the cure and handling of milk which , 1C followed , may be expected to lessen or prevent such troubles as arise from the growth of undesirable forms of micro-organisms in milk. This bulle tin may be bad free on application to the department at Washington. The Art of There is an art in plowing. In other words , there is a way to do the work and gel the best results , and there is a way that will be quite the opposite. I On the ground that does not need i furrows for drainage , plow from the center , and to the center alternately , and in this way keep the field free from- furrows and ridges , especially at the corners. S. R. Ilartman , an experienced farm- , or. says be has seen fields having the " soil so plowed away along the lines running from center of field to outside , corners by continually throwing fur rows toward the outside of the field , that crops would hardly grow on a strip S or 10 feet wide , while much good soil was piled in a ridge along the fences where little use could be made of ft ex cept to grow briars and weeds. Starting - . ing the field In the center a few times t will correct this. Some attempt to ! correct the ridges along the fences by plowing lands along each side. This throws the furrow from the fence , but creates a ri-3ge along the tyick furrow and docs not fill the low places at the corners. By doing a little measuring before starting to plow , and occasionally while the plowing is in progress to see that all sides aud corners are kept equal distances from the fence , almost any shane of lot can be plowed from the center. The furrows left from the last plowiug will also help in plowing from | the center. It is better to plow rather shallow in case the soil is dry , in the spring , than to plow deeper , say 7 or S inches. ' But it is best not to turn up too much I subsoil excepting where it is intended j to fertilize heavily , or where it is in tended to get the surface soil deeper than that already ou the field. Plowing is not so simple an opera tion as it would appear , and it is surprising - | prising how few farmers are really good plowmen. Winter-Ulnae Butter. You cannot produce first-class win ter butter unless you churu often. To churn every other day is better than once in three days , while to put it off to every fourth day is execrable prac tice. And yet a vast amount of butter manufactured on the latter plan is mar keted every winter , much to the dis gust of the dairy trade. It is found primarily in country stores , where it has been exchanged by small dairymen at a second-rate price | 1'or groceries. , j The tradesmen ship it in lots to the city market , where all the way through , whether it ends in the larder of a baker or on the table of the poor workingman , it is classed as inferior and sells for a low price. And yet the original material from which this butter was made was as good as that which is employed in turn ing out the 2.1 anci 80-cent article. I The inferiority of quality and con- ! squent los to dairymen follows , be cause they ignore the right principles j of butter makirg. Suppose that a farm er , after raising a fine crop of potatoes and digging trom , should allow the tu bers to lie a day or two in the sun be fore storing them In the root cellars. Could ho expect to sell the green , bitter vegetables for full market quotations ? Certainly not , and even the most ob tuse are thoroughly well aware of this fact. fact.And And yet , those who use common sense in this respect , with inconceivable folly , will spoil good cream and butter by wanton neglect , as outlined above. It Is pretty costly neglect , too , as it for feits from S to 10 cents on every pound of inferior butter. This could all be obviated by churn ing cream when it is fresh and pure , I. e , slightly matured , but not bitter , and manufacturing It into butter ac cording to modern principles. Cream should all be secured from the milk in at least twenty-four hours , and churned within the next twenty- four. This can be done usually by keeping it at a temperature of between 150 and 70 degrees. It is where cream is kept at near 40 degrees , and for sev eral days , that it develops that bitter flavor ruinous to bu er quality. George E. Newell. Familiarity in CUN : > IC.I < I. "Familiarity , in business or out , breeds contempt between r.ien and wom en , " says Anna Steesc KHuirtlson in a remarkable article on "The Influence of "Women on Business. " in the Woman's Home Companion. "It is all very well to say that the modern girl is happier in the end for losing some of ht > r illu sions regarding men. Perhaps. But it' she gains along this line she loses by having no more illusions about wom anhood. w5fch > o < ! and motherhood. Onlv the woman wio can hold these sacred for herself and the man she loves MI- riches the home life in America and leaves to her country the heritage of well-balanced sons and daughters. " "be woman embittered by the con- ten pt which follows familiarity with me in business sees in matrimony only relief from irksome toil. For her. mar riage does not represent the fulfill ment of her highest destiny , the most wonderful opportunities of womanhood. She is not reaching out for the crownIng - Ing happiness of her life. She is grim ly trying to choose the lesser of two evils. " Deduction. Farmer Mcdclorgra.ss ( reading paper ) Thet Vaudeville must be a great sho'.v town. town.Mrs. Mrs. Meddergrass Why so , p.i ? "W'y , I see here where another one of our gro-atest actors has made arrange ments t' stay right thar fer a hull season. " Puck. y g * Et. Vltni' D-mca and all Tiertai * TUfttt'.t F8 fl VJ Permnncntly Cured by Iir Kli.i. i Ur i t'erro Rentnrcr. nrt for i'rec d" trial Ixittn and treatue Uii. K. U. EIiLNE. Ld. . 031 Arch Street , PhlUdalpbli. I' * About $80 per year is charjrod for an unlimited telephone serviro in Paris , but in addition to tin's the subscriber must purchase his own instrument , which may be any one of a number of different kinds. Mrs. Wiiislow's Sooth Syrup for Children teething , softens the tfiinis. rodm-ps inihim- I uiatlou , allays pain , cures wind colic , Uoc : > t bottle. "Wrons : Idea. Customer ( at department store ) Where is your complaint department ? New Salesgirl Complaint ? Guess you've come to the wrong place , mister. This ain't no hospital. Ilidos , Pelts and Wool. To get full value , ship to the old reliable X. W. Hide and Fur Co. , Minneapolis , Mirn. TVhen They Fail to Match. "I suppose , " said the visitor who had paused at the door of the jokc- smith's cage , "that your work is easy. " "It is at times. " replied the funny man , "but when 1 have in stock a good joke without a point ami a good point without a joke and can't get them to double up the mental strain is some thing fierce. " The L.iic.st. Customer You say , then , that this material is the latest ? Shopman The very latest , madam. Customer But will It fade in the sun ? Shopman I Why , it has been lying in the window ! for two years , and look ho\v well it has I stood. London Mail. j I'lcy oepcrmancnil overcome ov proper personal everts v/ithme a of Income truly bcncjJciai remedy , Syrup ojngs \vmcK enables onelojfovm regular * , bnnt ! $ aily SotKat assistance to na ture may oe graduafy dispensed * \vhen no ( on cr neecW astKekest temcdics , when vcauired , arc to assi ttaCurc and hot to supplant the ftat of functions , vnich mustaepcna u matcly upon propernour.isrimer tl , proper eovfc7andri ( Kt living Jo etits beneficial effects , buy the genuine manufactured ty U\e Fxo Co. ONLY SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS otic size only , regular price 50 < ? f er Positively cured by tnesc Little Pills , j They also relieve Dis tress from Dyspepsia , In-l digestion and Too Hearty Eating1. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness. Kansea. Drowsiness. Bad Taste In the Houth. Ccat l Tongue. Pala In the Sided TORPID LTV'ER. regulate too Bowels. Purely Vegetable. ' SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE , SMALL PRIGS CARTERS Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature ITTLE iVER US. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES * "Having taken yonr tvonderfnl "Caaeixrflt " for- throe months and boinc entirely cared of storanck * catarrh mnd dyspepsia. I think a word of praiao Iw dueto"Coscarets fortheirwonderfulcomposition. I have taken numerous other so-called r mede ! but without avail and I find that Cnscarftsrelieve- more in a day than all tha others 1 have tukaa Trould in a year " James McGune. 10S Mercer St. . Jersojr City , N. Jo- Best For The Bowels Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do G Kevor oicken. Weaken . , , . or Gripe. lUc 23c 50c. Neve told in hnllf. . The gennine tablet stamped C OO < Guaranteed to euro or your money back. Stcrline Remedy Co. , Chicago or N.Y. egj > . , TEH MiLLIOH SOXES MENTION THIS PAPER WHIM wxmj n > ADTIZTUIU. S. C. X. U. - - Xo. 48 1007. WET AND DAMP CAUSE COLD IN THE JOINTS TAKES OUT THE PAIN AT ONCE.REMOVESTHE STIFF NESS. PREVENTS ITS RETURN , TOO. FINE FOR BRUISES , SPRAINSAND SORENESS. Price 2sc and 500. NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER f THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. A 3 ; II N III ' li " ' COMES KEEP A TUBS HANZ5Y A QUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN PRICE 15c. IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE TIN AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster , and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once , and relieve Head ache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counterirritant - irritant known , also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic , Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we claim for it , and it will be found to be invaluable in the household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say " it is the best of all your preparations. " Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label , as otherwise it is not genuine. Send your address and we will mall our Vaseline Booklet describing our preparations which will interest you. nStatoSt. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. New York City SHOES AT ALL ' PRICES , FOR EVERY MEMBER OFTHE FAMH.Y , MEN , BOYS , WOMEN , MISSES AND CHILDREN. W. L , Douglas mattes and KO//S more men's $2. GO , $3.JO and $3.SO shoeo than any other manufacturer ! n the vtoeld , because ihoy hold their shape , fit better , wear longer , are of greater value than any othsf shoes Tn the world to-dzy. W.LDou0as $4 and $5 GIK Edge Shoes cannot bo equalled at anyprtco. 3 ? " CAUTIQX. "W. L. Dontrlaa name and price is stamped on bottom. Take No Sub- Ftituto. Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to anypax& of the world , lilustratsd catalog frse. IV. L. DOUGLAS , Krocktou , Mass.