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About The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.), 13 Nov. 1908, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075230/1908-11-13/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
„ KEPT GETTING WORSE. Flve Years of Awful Kidney Disease. Nat Anderson, Greenwood, S. C., says: \Kidney trouble began about five years ago with dull backache, which got so severe in time that I could not get around. The kid- ney secretions be- came badly disor- dered, and at times there was almost a complete stop of the sow. I was examined again and again and treated to no avail, and kept get- ting worse. I have to praise Doan's Kidney Pills for my final relief and cure. Since using them I have gained In strength and flesh and have no sign of kidney trouble.” Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Poster -Milburn Co.,, Buffalo, N. Y. BUSINESS MANAGER FOR CHURCH Cleveland Institution Plans to Try a New System. The Epworth Memorial Methodist church in Cleveland has decided to try a new system of church management. A business manager has been ap- pointed who will give his entire time and attention to the finances of the cluirch. At1 executive secretary he will collect the benevolences, dues of *sembers, subscriptions, etc., and pay all expenses. He will serve as sec- retary of the standing committees of the church and keep a record of their business for transmission to the offi- cial board. This, it is expected, will leave the pastor free to give atten- tion to the larger plans of the work and to his pulpit and pastoral duties. Epworth Memorial has the largest membership of all the Protestant churches in the city. It has an ex- tensive charity work and handles over $35,000 in contributions every year. Dr. G. K. Morris, district superin- tendent, strongly commends the in- novation. \To my mind,\ he siva, \it is the ideal of church government. I expect to see the plan adopted in many other cities.\ The Doctor's Fee. The average man will give a lawyer plc to $500, together with a lifetime's praise, to keep him out of the peniten- tiary for from two to ten years, and at the same time be will raise a phos- phorescent glow and a kick that can be heard around the world if a doctor charges him $50 to $100 to keep him out of hell for a lifetime. We are the only people under God's ethereal tent to -day who keep open shop 24 hours each day and 365 days in each year. We are also the only laborers to keep on working for people who do not pay. I can carry my part of charity with as good a grace as most men. I can go through rain, snow or mud and do my best, provided the case is one of worthy need, but to reward continually downright rascality, willful drunken- ness and wanton laziness is getting out of my line.—Texas State Journal of Medicine. - - - From Frying Pan to Fire. Some years ago, when the late Judge John Henry McCarthy was a candidate for the bench, says the He- brew Standard, in a district populated by both Hebrews and Irish, there was displayed in an East Broadway win- dow a banner which read: \Vote for John Henry McCarthy—the friend of he Hebrew.\ An Irishman on his way to the polls espied the sign and grew in- dignant. He remarked, \Vote for 'the friend of the Hebrews?' I'll be hanged if I will. I'll vote for the other fel- low.\ And he did, the \other fellow\ being Henry M. Goldfogle. No Time for Details. \Are you aware,\ said the philolo- gist, \that some of these campaign orators split their infinitives?\ \Let 'em alone,\ answered Senator Sorghum, \we'll be lucky if they don't split the party.\ PUZZLE SOLVED. Coffee at Bottom of Trouble. ft takes some people a long time to find out that coffee is hurting them. But when once the fact is clear, most people try to keep away from the thing which is followed by ever Increasing detriment to the heart, stomach and nerves. \Until two years ago I was a heavy coffee drinker,\ writes an Ill. stock- man, \and had been all my life. I am now 66 years old. \About three years ago I began to have nervous spells and could not sleep nights, was bothered by indi- gestion, bloating, and gas on stomach affected my heart. \I spent lots of money doctoring— one doctor told me I had chronic ca- tarrh of the stomach; another that I had heart disease and was liable to die at any time. They all dieted me until I was nearly starved but I seemed to get worse instead of better. \Having heard of the good Postum had done for nervous people, I dis- carded coffee altogether and began to use Postum regularly. I soon got bet- ter, and now, after nearly two years, I can truthfully say I am sound and well. \I sleep well at night, do not have the nervous spells and am not both- ered with indigestion or palpitation. I weigh 32 pounds more than when I began Postsim, and am better every way than lever was while,drinking cof- fee. I can't say too much in praise of Postum, as I am sure it saved my life.\ \There's a Reason.\ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read \The Road to Well- ville,\ in pkgs. Ewer reed the above leiter t A sew one. upper.ru trom thaw to tise... TheY •re Kee hie, trite, sad tall et klaMISIUM Interest, M TO Op) M L 1 Adoniram Corntop Discourses on Pres- ent -Day Extravagance. LAMENT FOR CHANGED TIMES. E.OSTON SCHOOL RESULT OF OLD FRANKLIN GIFT. Big Technical School Built from Fund Accumulated from $5,000 Left by Noted American In Will 118 Years Ago. ---- Boston.—One thousand pounds be- queathed to the city of Boston by Benjamin Franklin in 1790, and hell(' in trust for 118 years, until it amounted to over $400,000, has beet' devoted to the erection of a magnifij cent industrial school, the Franklia Union, in which the young mechaniq may be trained in practical handi- craft; $400,000 was added by Andrew Carnegie as an endowment fund. • \I have considered that among ;l rtisans good apprentices are most ikely to make good citizens.\ So 'wrote Benjamin Franklin more than 118 years ago, in setting aside in his will the sum of £1,000 for the \town lot Boston,\ to help advance \young men that may be serviceable to their country.\ Since 1790 when it was turned over to Boston, the sum has grown to generous proportions; and ty means of it the city is now to open a magnificent structure, the Franklin Union to its deserving young men, in which unexcelled advantages are offered to become practical in their chosen pursuits. Franklin stated in his will that the 'principal and interest at the end of 100 years would probably amount to t about $650,000, of which $500,000 was then to be used, and the balance, about $155,000 allowed to accumulate for another hundred years. He fig- ured that, at the end of the second hundred years, the amount would be about $20,305,000. In making the bequest, he stated that it was in recognition of financial aid given him by his Boston friends which enabled him to begin business in Philadelphia, and which was the foundation of his fortune. That young men in similar need might have the z•dvantage of a helping hand, and be - Franklin Union. come \serviceable to their conntry,\ he devised that from the date of its acceptance small sums of the principal should be loaned, at five per cent. in- terest, to young married apprentices of Boston. The trustees who were named by him were to be the select- men, with the three ministers of the eldest Congregational, Episcopalian and Presbyterian churches. Toe legal status of the trust, which now amounts to over $400,000, was definitely fixed by the courts in 1904, and a board of managers appointed to ;control it, and expend the available fund. This board, created by legisla- tive act and designated the Franklin Foundation, is composed of many of the foremost citizens of Boston, among them being former Secretary of State Richard Olney, and James J. tbrrow, president - Ott/Le Boston Mer- chants' association and vice-president af the chamber of commerce. The new structure is located in the geographical heart of the city. It is a five -story, freprof building of steel and concrete, with outer walls of Bedford stone and brick, following the colonial style of Franklin's day. Its length of 160 feet and width of 100 feet gives ample room for the com- prehensive courses of study to be un- dertaken. The utilitarian features of the build- ing include a lecture hall, with a gal- lery, of a seating capacity of 1,000, laboratories for every branch of me- chanics, 13 classrooms, a library, etc., all equipped. with the latest devices. Instructors selected from the leading manufacturing industries will train the pupils in the practical side of me- chanical drawing, machine details, which means taking apart and assemb- ling of all kinds of machinery, mech- anism, or the problems of pulleys, cams, gears, etc.; architectural draft- ing from the builder's viewpoint; shop formula and industrial arithmetic; practical mathematics for carpenters and builders; industrial chemistry, with special reference to important commercial products; steam engines and boilers, dealing with their con- struction, use, and heat generation; Industrial electricity; and the common application of mechanical principles. The courses are open only to those who are employed during the day. \Yes sire°, Bill, times is changed since you an' me was doin' our coin - t- iny said Adoniram Corntop, with' a note of sadness in his voice, to old Andy Clover, who had come over to \set a spell.\ \When we was deft-. our courtin', Andy, a gal thought she was bein' treated right harnsom if a feller , bought her ten cents' wuth o' pepanints once la awhile, an' if he tuk her to any do'n's in town she didn't expect him to go down into his jeans to the tune of a dollar or two fer ice cream an' soda water an' candy at fo'ty cents a paound. My son Si tuk his duckey- doodle to the band concert in town ylstiday an' there wa'n't a quarter left of a dollar bill he struck me ter time he got home. Beats all the way young folks throw the money away nowa- days. I tell ye times is changed mightily since we was boys, an' the Lawd only knows what the end will be with a feller layin' out 75 cents on a gal in one day.\—Puck. Modern Advertising. Circus Manager—The bearded lady threatens to quit unless we give her more money. Proprietor—Bosh! Where can she get as much as we're paying her? Circus Manager—She says she's go- ing to write testimonials for a new safety razor. Unhappy Woman! Miss Bane—Then you don't believe ,in higher education for women? • Mr. Grouch—Certainly not. I think it's a shame to teach 'OM how to read, even. If they couldn't read the bar- gain advertisements they wcaldn't be so unhappy over the lot of things they oan't afford to buy. 15 YEARS OF SUFFERING. Burning, Painful Sores on Legs— Tortured Day and Night—Tried Many Remedies to No Avail —Cured by Cuticura. \After an attack of rheumatism, running sores broke out on my hus- band's legs, from below the knees to the ankles. There are no words to tell all the discomforts and great suf- fering he had to endure night and day. He ased every kind of remedy and three physicians treated him, one after the ether, without any good results whatever. One day I ordered some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent. He began to use them and in three weeks all the sores were died up. The burning fire stopped, and the pains became bear- able. After three months he was quite well. I can prove this testimonial at any time. Mrs. V. V. Albert, Upper Frenchville, Me., July 21, 1907.\ Time's Wonderful Changes. Harry Lauder says that when Sir Alexander Ramsay was constructing upon his magnificent estate in Scot- land a piece of machinery to drive, by means of a small stream in his barnyard, a threshing machine, a win- nowing machine, a circular saw for splitting trees, a hay press, an oat roller, etc., he noticed an old fellow, who had long been about the place, looking very attentively at all that was going on. \Robby said he, \won- derful things people can do nowadays, can't they?\ \Ay said Robby; \in- deed, Sir Alexander, I'm thinking if Solomon was alive now he'd be thought naething o'!\ A Queer Harvest. Et was little Ethel's first visit to charch, and the sermon had for its text, \As ye sow, so shall ye reap.\ But on her return home she could not remember it, and in consequence was chided by her mother for being stupid. A fortnight later a seamstress came to the house to do a day's work. After watching her for awhile fashion old- style garments into those that were th evogue, Ethel suddenly exclaimed: \0 mamma, I know now what the preacher said. It was: 'What you sew in the winter you shall rip in the sum- mer.' \ Starch, like everything else, is be- ing constantly improved, the patent Starches -pat -ea the market 26 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the,present day. In the lat- est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in- jurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, in- vented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never ap- nroached by other brands. A woman cap always keep a secret if you don't tell it to her. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gurus, reduces In- flammation, shays pain, cares wind coliu. 25e • bottle. Many a man lies in an effort to stand up for another. la Cures While You Walk amen's Ifoot-Wose for corns and bunions. hot. sweaty oaLuu* aching feet. 25c all Druggist*. - - Before attempting Co get what you want find out what you want. Savagery in Civilization. It is no time to say that man can- not, in civilized society, be guilty of cannabilism. I tell you there are more cannibals in New York than in the isles of the Pacific; and if to -day you were suddenly to take away the support that comes from eating men, there would be thousands and thou- sands of empty maws to -morrow in that city.—Henry Ward Beecher. I. The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great im- portance. Defiance Starch, being Tree from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on tine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffen- er makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new. Conquering One's Self. Every *On thou slayest, the spirit of that sin passes into thee, transformed into strength; every passion subdued by a higher impulse is so much char- acter.—Robertson. Lewis single Binder straight Sc. Many smokers prefer them to be cigars. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, l'eoria, Ill. There are two sides to every story —and some have four and a ceiling. WE SELL GUNS AND TRAPS CHEAP & buy Furs & Hides. Write for catalog 105 N. W. Ride & Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minn. The obedience of the heart is the heart of obedience of the mind.— Hugh Black. Give Defiance Starch a fair trial— try it for botn hot and cold starching, and if you don't think you do better work, in less time and at smaller cost, return it and your grocer will give you back your money. An Expert Witness. \Money talks,\ observed the man who likes catch phrases. \That may sound all right to you bachelors,\ replied Mr. Enpec, \but I've got a wife and a graphophone.\ —Exchange. With a smooth iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder your shirt- waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will be less wear and tear of the goods, and it will be a positive pleasure to use a Starch that does not stick to the tron. Disgruntled Dad. \I see,\ said the Wall street man, \that you are engaged again.\ \I am,\ admitted the son and heir. \Just when violets and theater tick- ets are due for their fall rise. Why must you always fall in love on a bull market?\—Kansas City Journal. raundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces- sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear- ing quality of the goods. This trou- ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great - t' strength than other makes. A Cure. The sinn.?.r walked along the rocky road, his bare feet torn and bleeding from bruises and wounds. He met a stranger. \Friend he exclaimed, \I have sinned and done wrong, I m - ast pa- tiently suffer the most extreme agony to save myself from eternal damna- tion. Can you tell me some supreme test of repentance?\ \Certainly answered the other, with an air of experience. \Go to a boarding house and live there for a year.\ $100 Reward, $100. The renders of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all Its stages, and that im Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a coturtituttonal disease. requires a i , ...titu- Donal treatment Hairs MIAMI] Cure 18 IA In- ternally acting directly upon the blood and ,,• surfaces of the system, thereby destroy foundation of the disease, and giving the strength by building up the constitution , trig nature in doing its work. The propriel ,, so much faith in its curative powers that n One Hundred Dollars for any ease that It , tsi mre. Bead for list of testimonials Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists. 75e. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Greek Architecture. It is astonishing that students of Greek literature and Greek thought should not be definitely trained in the knowledge of Greek architecture. He who knows only the literary expres- sion of ancient Greece, great as that is, knows but one-half of the achieve- ments of \the supreme Caucasian mind.\—The Builder. Revelations of the Breakfast Table. - To girls about to :Tarry one would tender the adyble that they study their intended vi..tim at breakfast. If he is feeding like forty, reject him as the direct descendant of Circe's herd of swine. If he is melancholy, be- ware of the abrupt curves of his tem- perament If he be boisterous and facetious( remember that an empty drum gives the greatest reverbration, and a chatterbox at 8 a. m. is as tire- some as Chanticleer at 3 o'clock in the morning. By their breakfasts you shall know them.—Saturday Review. FREE Well Prepared. \I learn,\ she said reproachfully, \that you were devoted to no fewer than five girls before you finally pro- posed to me. How .'do I know that you didn't make desperate love to all of them?\ \I did,\ he replied, promptly. \You did!\ she exclaimed. \Certainly he returned. \You don't suppose for a moment that I would be foolhardy enough to try for such a prize as you are without prac tieing a little first, do you?\ ALCOHOL -3 PER CENT AVegetable Preparation for As - simila t ing the Food and IleOula - , • Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ness and Rest Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC Rerre of aid DirSINTIEL.A7CATIP l4tev.4ies Sled - Aix liorAdle Sat., - Anus Seed Apperneted - BiCaniesetaleSseles - C/o,i;ed ye , Itiiolorrres Flavor A perfect Remedy for Constipa- tion . Sour Stomach,Tharrhoea, Worms ,Convulsions .Feverish- ness and Loss 01' SLEEP Fat Simile Signature of THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW \ Exact Copy of Wrapper. Ur.' sunny Severe Drought. The water in Lake Champlain during the recent drought reached the lowest point recorded in local history, nine feet below high water mark. Steam - era were obliged to abandon many of their trips on account of the impossi- bility of making landings at the docks. The mountain brooks became almost dry, and the beds of some of the larg- est rivers were mere threads of wa- ter. The drought and forest fires were ruinous to agricultural it tercets.— New York Sun. cAsT Rift For Infants and Child re n. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signattirn of In Use Over ty Years STORIA Ts! 0 [MAIM 00/111141.111111. New teas env. Sloan's Liniment is the best remedy for sprains and bruises. It quiets the pain at once, and can be applied to the tenderest part without hurting because it doesn't need to be rubbed—all you have to do is to lay it on lightly. It is a powerful preparation and penetrates instantly —relieves any inflammation and congestion, and reduces the swelling. HERMAN REEL; illwauaee, CENT/address of two fur trappers 1, ..• and we will send you free a mink stretching pattern. Writ, for prices on RAW FURS AND FUR GOATS. Put new ...hoes on the youngster. Lim:•6-, at them in a week. tisualiy battered, scraped, almost ck1pc1,-ss. Get a pair of Buster Brown Shoes. ripiniz, kicking doesn't mar the -m --they thnve on knocks. They wear. BUSTER BROWN Blue Ribbon SHOES For youngsters, $1..7)0 to $2.50 , , M, Elite House Shoes for grown-ups. 04 Ask your dealer for them. THE BROWN SHOE CO., Makers , 9 t, , • ST. LOUIS., V. p. A4 519an's Liniment is an excellent antiseptic and germ killer—heals cuts, burns, wounds and contusions, and will draw the poison from sting of poisonous insects. Price, 25c., 50c., and $1.00. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., U.S.A. Sloan's book on horses', cat tl sheep and poultry sent trees FURS e liNDSc for trial at se \ Betterbst Best In the world for catching , I, Fox, etc. Mend for Price List ,,f iw Furs. Mention this paper. HERMAN REEL 9 111,41 NUL IS. 9 LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IRSIlk, 41110=1 TN GREAT VARTETY FOR, SALE AT TN?. LOWEST PRICES nv A.N.IFtLOGONEWSPAPre 73 W. Adams St., Chicago DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch , maxes laundry work a piss -sores. 1601 1,,Lg BAIT Young Men Wanted in California Business positions at teed. THE POLYTI- LEGE, of Oakland, young men from this . nese positions. Ever, ales from the husine , of this Institution isis This college has a hi v; monsrpossed in board and all ex I , par `ronnd. Writ,. Ws E. GIBSON, 306 1 \ Defiance Starch—NesvPr the iron—no blotch •-• tin- tor - makes ironing es, \ mit In jure the gnoda. N it , LINCOLN, NO eis, ' ••