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About The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.), 12 June 1908, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075230/1908-06-12/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
avi p. HARD IN, THE HARDIN TRIBUNE By E. H. Rathbone MONTANA All the world guys the lever. How could a breathless man be without pants? in a favorable wind a fox can scent a man one -quarter of a Mile away. The number of victims of tubercu- losis in Germany exceeds 120,000 a year. . _— Spain is spending $40,000,000 On new battleships and lockyard con- struction. Fortunately the girls aren't wear- ing the old-fashioned hoopskirt along with the Merry Widow hat. The largest quill toothpick factory is in Paris. It was originally started as a manufactory of quill pens. When a tornado makes one of its flying visits unannounced you have to forego all previous engagements. The Sunday Rest league. with head quarters in Sacramento, is spreading rapidly all along the Pacific coast. San spots are causing a great. deal of talk among astronomers, and also, it may be remarked, among beauty doctors. Remember that while your own home city is the fairest in the land,. all towns must look alike to the rail- way manager. The Colorado man who pawned his false tooth for food may have planned for a case of dyspepsia which would . make fasting easier. Culture, said Prof. Sheller Mathews, is going to hum in Chicago, and then retired when George Ade read one of his fables in slang, thus giving cul- ture a running start. The power of mind over matter may be seen in the fact that what Presi- dent Eliot has to say about athletic:- is attracting a great deal more attention than anything John L. Sullivan might have to say about education. Count Tolstoi naturally considers that a jubilee will hardly add to his honors. Besides, propriety at such an event might require that he wear shoes, and, at his age, he has no in- tention to court unnecessary misery. A French physician claims to have photographed the soul of his wife 80 hours after her death. He explains that the picture shows a nebulous globe. This being the case, the wear- ing of corsets cannot have any effect on the soul. Ten years ago at this time the schoolboy who could locate the Phil- ippine islands would have been rated as a class wonder. To -day the geogra- phy of that quarter of the globe is al- most as familiar to the average Amer- ican youth as that of the baseball world. By a new law in New York hunters are not allowed to shoot other bun- ters a' guides by mistake without be- •ing charged with homicide. This looks like a 'retrograde from the governing principle of the game laws, that all other rights must give way to the supreme cad of hunting. A new kind of gas which can be bought by the bottle and used for il- luminating purposes has been invent- ed by a German. Fifty cents wbrth of it will furnish a 60 -candle power light eight hours a day for six weeks. People aho have their money invested in gas stock will regard this inven- tor as a menace that a should be suP- pressed. The markets have been famed all over Italy. for Many centuries. Once a Veronese guest of a Milan nobleman for a joke bought out the Milan mar- kets three times in one day, so his host could not give him, a dinner, but in spite of that the hucksters and butchers supplied the hot with ma- terial for the best dinner the guest ever bad. This is going to be a giddy world. It was but lately given out that the north pole is gradually shifting its position.. Now comes the hint that before long the majority of the na- tions may agree to adopt some other Initial. mericlian than that which Pasties through Greerf*ich, from which point we now number the de- grees' Of longitude. It t Will be the equator's turn next to brace up and get a move on. a The man who goes around croaking that . the worst is yet to come either has a vie!!'.: spine or knows of some- thing that he would like to get at a nria'rk4d-down price. This- from the Chicago Record -Herald, which moves the New York Herald to remark: And the beet part of it all is that the \croaker\ is finding everybody too busy to listen to him. The surest sign of good times is the fact that people have,teased to talk about hard times. There have been horrible records to write of ihe , sea when such menace 'Aireatetied is caused the boats to be lowered—records of briittif contests to be first off a doomed Vessel; of cruel attsault to beat away' s •the 'help- less. Such chronicle's 'would nevOr be written were all craft governed by the discipline of which the crew of the gave a notable rszample. -England, remarks .the Philadelphia edger, weltaafford to lope a lit tie arils& toalerbenserate the,c4nti - ae- ttir Of its naval personnel, officers and men alike. PROMINENT HOOSIER DEMOCRAT Ca. py right by Weldon Vsweirtt. The name of John W. Kern of Indiana has been mentioned frequently in connection with the vice-presidential nomination on the Democratic ticket. Mr. Kern is a well known lawyer in his native state and was the unsuccessful candidate for governor in 1900 and 1904. He received the complimentary . vot? of his party for United States Senator in 1905. WOULD REFORM THE MEN MUNCIE, IND., GIRLS WILL DE- MAND GREATER DEFERENCE. Young Men Must Stand with Bared Heads When Talking to Them in the Street Under Penalty of Social Ostracism. Muncie. Ind.—Having reached the conclusion that the young men of to- day have become too lax in showing deference to the weaker sex, the Leap Year club, composed of a number of IV-- • • • girls of the younger society here, have declared for . a reform in ,men'e man- neis and have established a, set of rules which they 'require them to live up to, the penalty being social' ostra- cism. The first rule is that every young man on meeting a girl acquaintance in. the street or a public place shall lift his hat, removing it entirely from his head. The . Perfpnctory salute, as if the young men were privates in the artily recognizing an (Aker, will not go with members of the Leap ,Year cacti hereafter. But they still go fur- • ther. When a young man meets one of the young women of the club and stops to talk with her, he must re move his hat entirely from his head and lipid iç in his hand while the cony versto ion coati ti ries. The only exceetion to be made to this rule is in ease the young Ulan is when he may be allowed to replace the hat on 1.is head after be has once doffed it. There are other rules, such as re- quiring young men friends to give up seats in in street,cars. to any woman who may he standing,' and removing their hats in public elevators; hut the young women r.ay these customs are com- monly observed nova \The Indications are that the aver- age young man is losing the old time respect for a woman merely because ,he is -a woman,\ said one of the mem- bers of the Leap.Year club, \The•cus- tom in the small towns of doing away with chaperons, the co-educational in- stitutions and the camaraderie that einst i s lietween , Anaericati boys and gigls and yonag men and 'women have hid a thtiency to break down the na- tural baxile&s , that e t ho . uld be kept up. \When the- •• 4 a.Verage young man meets in the street a girJ that he knows pretty well, for instance, he raises -his hand to his hat, but that is about.all. - if he stops to talk to her, the:chanees areahat.he daes.not even do that. but merely says. 'Hello, Mar- gy - a and Jets it go at that. -- \What the girls of this club desire to do is to get beck ire .a some email eceasufe tO the custofita 'of chivlary. Of course, we don't expect a modern young.man in pressed Aroueerri, -patent leather shoes and high collar to buckle on a suit of armor anal:fight somebody for us, but we 'do belleae; and we think that every woman thinks the same v6tiy, that he should treat us with a - little 'more deferenc l e than he does his young men friends.. ,But even so, the boys ar'e ,not- altogether to blame. In being anxious to be regarded as 'good fellown,` - sdaie oethe young Wo- men -have rather- encouraged these lib- erties,' and so' the young men have fall eal intik ungallant ways.\ \Do you think your plan will work?\ was asked.' • alt Will . have to work with' the bow We know -or we'll have to hunt other young men friends,\ was the firm re- ply of the pretty miss of -20 years who was the speaker. \But you must ex- cuse me, for l'in. going to 'rave com- pany to -night.\ : • ' \Probably a modern knight errant,\ was remarked. , \Weil if he Isn't, he'll learn to be.\ $40,000 CT CHLOROFORMED. One of the Heirs of Man Who Left Fortune to Care for Two Pets. Wilkesbarre, Pa.—After enjoying for several years a fortune of $40,000, Mackie, one rf the'two cats of the late Benjamin Dilly, was chloroformed and is now dead, aged 164 The act of mercy was performed after physicians had pronounced Blackie's illness hope- less .and with the consent of the- ex- ecutors of the will. Dilley, who died in 1905, had made Mackie and his sister Pinkie pets since their birth in 1892. In his will he left the income of a $40,000 proper- ty to provide for them and appointed Miss Addle Ruch at $75 a month to care for them, giving her this through life. The cats had the daintiest of food and the house' where they lived was arranged for'rtheir convenience'. \'They grew big and fa* and lazy, neVei being allowed to run at large or associate with other' eats. Pinkie died two sears, ago. Miss Ruch. was taxen seriously three weeks ago and is in the hospital. Her departure affected . Mackie and some days ago he, too,.bhcame seriously sick. When the estate is divided most of It will.golo charttable institutions and $5,000 toward providing \a fountain for human beings, birdsand animals,\ as the will extireaSed it. NEXT. _GENERATION TO FREEZE/ Prof. Steinmetz Says Fuel Supply Will Be Problem for Coming People, . • New York --Dr. Charles Pioteus Steinmetz, professor - of electriCal en- gineering at Union : College in Se - Ileum- tady, took a look' into the future in a lecture the Other afternoon ' at the American Institute of Eleetrical Engi- neers. .1* ,seld a handicap against electricity now la its high cost of pro- driction: \The time will come,\ said Prof. Steinmeti, \when we will baVES no more coal, and it is not far in the fu- ture. Anthracite will .not last long, and. many of us who are here will he altve when the last Is gone. Marty of us will see the time when there is ouli soft coal. \Some Of you may see the 'time when soft coal is 'exhausted. ably not, for there ftesfirupplY• of \:titit; even in Greenland's • icy mountains. But nevertheless we can. seh 1.11e'ehei, and when we approach it., what afe we going to do to keep from freezing? That seems to be.the problem title next generation will bare to meet„,• •and Maybe we ourselnes.'\' . . .. ' afTo • -:' -; .; .1 . Dogs Barit, _ Altoona, Paa-LA viciona dog a ima, get and snapped at the heels otraahoeset ridden by Adlon.Da,vis and lhei•litorse kicked at the barker with 'se/OS*104e that' it tkretv a shoe, which struck dr pasting horse on the side, wising it to lam away. its le tined* at a break e neck speed down a Swet ittphalt street it slipped nfid fell; sPopptittr Itrd- denly that 'it threw if's drintli, tatter Jemista, over' the daslthonstl*.ell• tte birggy. Jamieon landed on the . .pros- trate horse and escaped in.iarY., YOUNG GOVERNMENT EXPERT , re • • • .aer 1 11\; • A , r Copy r lght by 'Walden Freree3. • -- Or. Bristol is the brillitnt s young ohemist of the United States forest vice who has charge of•tpe eaverr:iyient i experiments for wood utilization. , • ser- •••••••\•••••••• SILENCE A CURE FOR DISEASE. s • • ' •—,,, 1 . .... , • • , . $‘• • ' I t xc es s 1 v e TalkOg Held to Se Dtlin in robust health, only to be sent back ' on Vital Energy. a ro'tnplete'wreck. - - ' . again -at tbd'end of a a fbrtnight's time • Lonliensea:testrive - talking 4. held The case was quite simple. tier wo, reeptingible-rhysthe IkeV.aff?S.I . .6mbard, men friends had known her as an in• !lint\ ar-AllaHellottrie GoapellaOak, N. valid, and finding her playing on the ardor the manamervourodiseasea ad gola Balks in perfect health they came •the a ,inezeasIn$ . emetrot of . insanity 'to 4titt'ller'nll afirint her treatment, esPieh stffeeta, modern. reaaleiaa.• • . , • - . untia. the pRoc . v. - 094,9 ,was ao, vr,orn olit,, ., This ner4 ,theory pf- disease ayes with falling that the rest and silence hilvanceil l ia_a Le'et uro pn ,\Silence as a treatment wife' far' 'the Utile Deltic' KtZtor ,iri a J•lenang,\\g)Vin . 4 the p a y ' ,trarted .' • •1' ''. - . • .......... ,. , Chi)'''Th4lipaiitie : societ y 1 . It. vias t .pos- 7 . , Church Buys Saloon ,Degan. Bible, he 'sal& to waste an enormowi' l amount of vital energy by excesspe 41 Ishpeming, atich.—.\ lauge„and. cnal.. talkinik- ittrd the 'exeessl ve • talker wikip lY pipe organ, which was Abe . great aattraction at A llie Board ol . Trade sa- a tt.timan vampire sapping the/414mi: siiii lialin 'grircteti 7at', HOughtona ,ffirg/ Of, .thoie, around him, loon witfeh has _eloadd: has 'been' bciught eople who are silept-, /f 9I P PP . ' .the Grace Methodist church of 'gre seldoiu explaib e ed tjpfkinia, 7tery often those whOm the .k s i p istig 'receive 'in, I.Opsultftif •arkarrieti t liy talking filit)bfri• ififfrfic Irian h .k.yinptorne telik - - eihoet gek OPtii it a , i4e:n fatal belsitY2 ••!' ‘• Ishpeming and Justaired in itfi orgatt loft. faiser.edornseis will- henceforth peal from 'tit pipesainatead of ragtime selec-, Bons. - ..• • - --- - 7 ' . 1 4 4 10 11 #4$ 00 # 1 9 16 ' atml••• ! ‘a• As an inqtapcp Inf. talking stsa a lac- ,. eardstown: fl --While digging /tor in ,diahaele Me. alikmniPsrli <4-ented eNigLin the streets the other afterrioon the case of 4 lo.dy . , ypp : fs#11 to. his ap be aaaed lu strengthening the levees.. house jb a rE5ille Condi A cloA qf break- 4 44041;4Am aaeovered 24 skeletons. The don't!. - She tad i . A. )4e:ia . i lpaciaiist l presence of the skeletons cannot at 01 tiff#r*lirerl'aiisl,Vlh fli 1 ite!sa,lt, arid this time Ale explained, hut it Is stip- 'eatifeltti' Mt; Cirtfh(l• itpt Ittill 14 -6i- - the 'I weed -1 he' place - was once; lin 'Indian allench. \1-irre!\ •Attct Marin 'feel-Mufti:I ground. .1 . 1rie gruesome Milroy some tinietsbell4t pdilectPyrn4d.ad l' cry ; created excitement for awhile. . . Meetilig the Unusual. Mr. Slide—Do you see those three people walking together down there? Mrs. Getup—Yes; who are they? Mr. Sinio—One is a.somnambaltst. One is a kleptornaalac sad one is a plagiarist.\ Mr Sinic----Law sakes! I never dreamed we were going to meet so many brainy people in a bench.— Baltimore American. There Is more catsern In this section of the wenn, than al i other diseases put together, and until the last few year* was supporred to be Incurable. Fur a tree* many years dor tors pronounced it a local Meese* and prescribed local remedies, Imo try coustsosly falltos lo owe with Wail treatment, pietism need is icon rehire. Science has proven Catarrh to a ouna(ttu Waal die - ease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hairs Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cbeney 6 co., Ts rogue Obis, IS thy only Coast Ito Marl tura on the market. It is masa sate:many le doses from 10 drotia toe teaspoonful. It acts directly en the hiciod and mucous surfaces of the system. They oder one hundred dollars for any case It tails to cure, deed tor clrc slats and tostiutonlals. 4111100.• : T. J. CligNEY a CO., Tolerk„ Ohio. Sold by Druggists, Tete flail's tor coastipetiom Overdoing a Fad. Mrs. Graham is an estimable lady whose hobby is house decoration. One day, the lady was ca4:eleaenotigh to drink. a glass of red r Ynk, believing It to be claret. She was a good deal scared when she discovered her niis- take, but no harm came to her. The doctor who was summoned, upon hear- ing what had happened, dryly re- marked to her: \Mrs. Graham, there's . sa such a thing as pushAng this rage for decoratrag inteidorit too' fail\ Self -Denial. Margie is six years old and her Tarn - family ar Presbyterians. Some of Margie's little friends are Episcca paltans, and Margie' was mulch . im- pressed witia their - . Lenten, sacrifices. On' Ash Wedneeday she announced ,tat she would ,eat candy for 40 day's. A few hog -s .later Margie with_ a large peppetmint stick. . .\Why Margie,\ said her friend, \I thought you had given up candy for .Lent.1\ ' • -\I did mean to,\ admitted 'Margie, 'but changed my mipd. I'm gtv - lng up profane ,lauguage.\—Montrea) Herald. . In the flam,e Boat. \We get some sad cases,\ said the attendant at the 1.urnpton lunatic . asylum to the interested visitor, and opened the door -of the first Inside was a man sitting on a three. legged stool, gazing vacantly at the wall. \His is an unhappy story,\ said the attendant. \He was ha love with a girl, but she married, another man, and he lost his 'reason from grief.\ They stole out softly, closing the door behind them, and proceeded to the next Inmate. , This cell was thicklaapadded, and the man within was. stark, staring • \Who Is this?\ inquired the visitor. \This?\ repeated the attendant. \This is the other Iman!\—Tatler. IS IT POSSIBLE? ,\And were the people who first thought of musk, auntie?\ \Why child, they are considered to be Prehistoric:\ \Oh auntie, how well you do re. member!\ THE F . )13ST TASTE Learned to Drink Coffee When a Baby. If parents realized the fact that cof- fee 'ccMtairis a' drug-Lcaffetne--wilch is especially harmful to children, they would doubtless 'hesitate before glv- Ing the babies .coffee to drink. \When 1 was a child in tri'y mother's arms and first began to nibble things at the table, mother used to give me sips of coffee. As my parents used coffee exclusively at meals I neher knew there .'was anything to drink but coffee and .water. \And so I contracted the coffee hahit early. 1 remember when quite young, the contiatial use of coffee so affected - my parents that they &fed roasting wheat and barley, then ground it in the Ooffee-mill, as a substitute for coffee! \But it did not taste right and they went back to coffee again.. That Was long before Postuin was 'ever heard of. continued to use 90,fre,e lint.11 I was 27, anewheri 'I got info office work, I be- gan to have nervous spells. 'Especially after beeaktstat• r• was. so nervous I The Face and Fashion. Each nation has its own particular kind of face, and somehow fashions adapt themselves to it. No dress that Is- obviously Fre-ch looks suitably on an Englishwoman, and no dress that is distinctly English becomes a daugh- ter of Gaul.—Lady's Fie•tortel. Mint Sauce. Take three tablespoonfuls of freshly gathered mint, chopped fine; dissolve two tablespoonfuls of s 'gar lit three tablespoonfuls of vinegar; mix all to- gether. Serve in sauce boat.. First \Dress Suit\ in Kansas. The first dress salt tht ester came to Kansas came with the \aid\ from Boston during the dry summer of 1860. Some rich man in the east con- tributed having putgrown it, and a fat -roil. named Pashiall, in ..KaPlorna township, in this county, plowed corn In it all Gunmen—Atchison Globe. Work . gone ,lq TIme's Fractions. All our great men who attained their ambition early reilized the value of time, to them the minutes were the stepping stones on which they crossed We' river of life to the embankment of success. They never lie abed when they should.be up and doing. Perseverance. During a divorce case, recently tried in Syracuse, the pretty plaintiff, after shedding copious tears on the wit- ness stand, was later detected in an attempt to pass her two tear -soaked handkerchiefs into the, jury room — Illustrated Sunday Magazine, The Firefly. Th,. light is phosphoric, and is sup- piuied to be displayed or Withheld at the will of the insect. Only the fe- males are phosphorescent. Scientists tell us that its sole purposi•it'sto,at- tract the male.—New York American. Changeableness 'of Fashion. If fashion were only limited to dress! Unfertunately, there Is a fash- ion in art, and a fashion- in liter- ature as changeable as the style of heti and gowns, and often as absurd. —Gaulois, parts. • First Subscription Library. In 1731 Benjamin Franklin founded the . 1 4 ibrary' Company of Philadelphia, which' he called \the mother of all North Amer lean subscription braries.\• • When Beauty Speaks. What -a . strange. Illusion it Is to suppose that beauty is goodness. A beautiful woman utters absurdities; we listen, and, we hear not the ab- surdities, bet wise thoughts.—Tolstei. Eternal Vanity. . A man has an awful hard time try- ing to make himself believe that all the girls are not crazy, abput, him,— Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. The Worth of Gold. Writes one to the Times: \Gold regulates the price of everything— what regulates the price of gold?\ Why, everything, of course. , Better Than Mere Wealth. A man who'gives his children hab- its of industry provides for them tk.t- ter than by giving them a fortune.— Whately. Lout Confidence. Other_ pooule have generally- beaten him to it when a man loses confidence In himself. The Main Trouble. Most people would be satisfied with the kina of living they are making'if other people were not ltving better. To Thine Ovsnself Be True. A - mind . conscious of int'sgrity scorns to say ,mOre than it me'rins to perform. Distinction, of,' French Capital. Paris poesesses the largest public gardens and the asest hospItal. Lincoln Directory Highest Price For Cream Call at Our Receiving Station Beairice Creamery Coaipany •••••••••^ •-••••••••••.- ceuld, scarcely attend to my corr , e- apbndence. :',4i„tit i ght, after haring coffee for. supper, I could hardly sleep, and bn rising In the rhorniag would feet weak peryous, • • , • . • r '\A friend persnaded me to try 'Pott- urn. My wife and I did not like it fIrst, - - . _ but late'r'' when boiled goied, and strong it was fine. Now we , Woold nor War Pnet ;Ira for die , Name givrn by Postum \Platt/a' Clieek, Welt. Read \The Road to Well. vine,\ In pkgs. , • Ever read the above letter? A nrSet one appears from time to time. They . , are gcnuine, true, and full of human Interest. •o f rti- • t ' \'%) ‘ 44\ • .gra,-1..v--4.%'.....fr-r 44.AI f '4 ,1 41A:a s. „ • • ••best coffee -Ise ever twisted. \I can now get good sleep, Ain ftle from riervousn,e,as: and boadaches. ' I 'recommend Fotrtuin to 'all \coffee ers. , \There's a Reasoh.\ ' • USE TAR PAINT To paint your s eroultry abed. It will oat lice. Preserve your' fence posts by _pa Ong them with tar paint before setting. rap yonr shinglee in tar paint -it preeerves them. Sold in OgritIlon barrels for $-5 VIC4 nAltRIfie Sold in- s -gallon' cane for Slop per cad.- Tor is cheaper than slat ht.-- is. mot e e octtee eked Hyde longer Beetin the world for uorrogated iron. -tJRO1I. (IA3 A ELECTIII6 LAE CS. ! HERgERT r.. GOOCH i BROKE:A AND RIV‘I.ER Grain, Pralftlianisi Stacks, and Collo,' lain Office, xis Fraternit y Lincoln, Nebraska, iste i Phone 512 \ -mato Pitieesa. , HOD e t e ommumi t ' e GOOD AUTOS, CHEAP On count of taking in sereral4r•hivel W 'fur bet the, week. , we eau 13 L. THEM i ii656 4 A t'To- MOBILE CV., Lincoln. Neb. •. db. t • 0.. ollo • * 1. .• a ..•.• • .1 -