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About The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.), 18 Dec. 1908, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075230/1908-12-18/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• TO CURE A COUGH Or Break a Cold In 24 Hours Mix two ounces of Glycerine and a half ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine com- pound pure with a half pint of Straight Whisky. Shake well and take a tea. - spoonful every four hours. The genuine Virgin Oil of Pine com- pound pure is prepared only by The Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, and Is put up only in half -ounce vials, each vial securely sealed in a round wooden case to insure its freshness and purity. 'Ti. Changing Times. Times have changed since 450 years ago, when lIalley's comet, for whose reappearance astronomers are now looking, was in the heavens. Then the Christian world prayed to be deliv- ered from \the devil, the Turk and the comet.\ Now it says the devil is not as black as he has been painted, the Turk is a negligible quantity and the comet would be rather welcome than otherwi se.—Bost on Transcript. Not Anxious at All. \One word of our language that is almost always misused,\ said the par- ticular man, \is 'anxious.' You will hear people exclaim how anxious they are to see a certain play, or anxioas to get a new hat, or anxious to take a trip to Europe, when they are not anx- ious at all, but eager or desirous. If anxious were used only in the right place we wouldn't hear it half so often.\ With a smooth iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder youi 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 iron. Not a Philosophic Enterprise. 'Young Mr. Bliggins is thinking of proposing.' \Yes answered Miss Cayenne; \but I doubt if he will ever do so. The only way for a man to get courage in such matters is to stop thinking.\ The Split Skirt. Patience—I see half of the people call them sheath skirts, and the other half call them directoire gowns. Patrice—Yes; I was sure there'd be a split about it. some men haven't sense enough to let 'sell enough alone. When one girl refuses to marry them they ask an- other. One Thing That Will Live Forever, PE-rfirs EYE SALVE, first box sold in 1807, 100 years ago, sales increase yearly. All druggistsorHowardBros.,Buffalo,N.Y. s To feign a virtue is to have its op- posite vice.—Hawthorne. UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM SOUTH CAROLINA PRAISES PE -RU -NA. Ex -Senator M. C. Butler. Dysfiefisia Zr Often Caused by Catarrh of Me Stomach—Peruna Relieves Ca- tarrh of the Stomach and Is Therefore a Remedy for Dyspepsia. ea-e-...........-e-a.-,. 1 Hon. M. C. Butler, U. S. Senator from South Carolina for two terms, in a letter from Washington, D. C., writes to the Peruna Medicine Co., as follows: ail can recommend Peruna for dyspepsia and stomach trouble. 1 have been using your medicine for a short period and I feel very much relieved. It Is indeed a wonderful medicine, besides a good tonic.\ .--4.-......-.............-....-....... C - ATARR of the stomach is the cor- rect name for most cases of dyspep- sia. Only an internal catarrh rem- edy, such as Peruna, is available. Peruna Tablets can now be procured. Ask your Druggist for a Free Peruna Almanac for 1909. --- PdISDIS Keep It on hand! ceeereasea V 101 . Ze any tnernler of the hirn..y any trine, Many a had mid has bees wiroted and much eickftems sad roaming has Frets saved by_the prompt use oi I 'no • Cure. There is not! rts lire's to break un roughs end cnt, hero is no brow -4W ar kn. trouble that k 5 oat relo-ve, Free kern oriole. or lonsful is. erecters.. F fee clikres. At armrests'. IS eta. RE THE HARDIN TRIBUNE By E. H. Rath bone ' MONTANA HARDIN, Count Zeppelin probably thinks thati the aeroplane is all right as a toy. In 1,000 years, says Nansen, the end of the world will come. Which end, explorer? Male servants in the Argentine cap- ital get 66 cents to $2.20 gold a day and female help 40 cents to $1.10. Count Boni de Castellane has not been saying much recently, but we feel safe in assuring the public that he is not sawing wood. If, as a scientist claims, trees think, It would be interesting to know their opinion of the man who deliberately starts a forest fire. Missouri man has his life saved by a package of cigarettes in his inside pocket. Don't cheer—a brier pipe would have been just as effective. Cato learned Greek at the age of 80 years, owing to the fact that he was not living in a country where every fool was permitted to carry a gun. William Howard Taft will be the only president with a middle name since Chester A. Arthur. All but seven of our 26 presidents have been blessed with but a single baptismal name. Counterfeit $5 bills are in circula- tion. The prudent man will scrutinize his $5 bills before he takes them in, and the truly honest man will look carefully at his before he pays diem out. In the mountain regions of Cuba there are many ridges and valleys of extremely fertile land, nearly all un- touched, and existing practically as they did before the time of the Span- iards. _ A Chicago judge has decided that a baby carriage must have lighted lamps if it is pushed on public ways after dark. This will reduce the terrible mortality caused by overspeeding baby carriages. Prof. Zueblin recommends inter- marriage of the races. It is a cold day when the professor does not bring forth a new idea and the temperature has been noticeably high through this present fall. Two -cent postage stamps of a new design have just been issued, and later those of higher denominations will ap- pear. The two -cent stamp will be adorned with a portrait of Washington In profile from the Houdon statue. Zinc mining in Mexico has become Important only in the last three years. The most important zinc dew:fits are near Monterey. At Calera there is a large amount of mixed suphide ore, while the Tiro General i San Luis Potosi is also producing zinc ore. As a part of the reception to the American battleship fleet, Japan ar- ranged that each American vessel should be met and escorted to its sta- tion by a Japanese vessel of similar rank and power. Could anything be neater, as a cordial hand -shake with the mailed fist? Following the example of the Dan- ish government, the National Red Cross association of America will is- sue special stamps this year for use on Christmas mail. The stamps will not serve as postage, but will carry only holiday greetings. The revenue will go to the Red Cross fund for fight hag tuberculosis. Word came recently from Stefanson the arctic explorer, that he came neat having to spend winter at Point Bar- row for want of matches. The natives would not go farther into the wilder ness with only flints and steels. He finally secured matches from whaling vessels and pushed on. It is an inter esting comment on the material prog ress of the world that uncivilized peo- ple have come to regard comparative- ly modern inventions as indispensable The cruisers and gunboats of the navy keep up their target practice, as well as the big battleships. And the official reports forwarded from the commander of our naval forces in Philippine waters show excellent re- sults. The figures will not be made known until the reports reach Wash- ington, but it is stated in connection therewith that all records have been broken. The Yankee tar continues to be a sharpshooter, no matter what craft he sails in. The ancient Greeks had recom- mended the use of sterilized water. Rufus of Ephesus in the first century of this era taught that \all water from rivers and ponds is bad, except that from the Nile. Water from rivers which flow through unhealthy soil, stagnant water, and that which flows near public bathing places is harm- ful. The best water is that which has been boiled in baked earthenware ves- sels, cooled and then heated a second time before drinking.\ The house of Verona which the guides in that city have pointed out to tourists as the home of Juliet's par- ents and the place whereRotneo wooed her was burned last month. Although the house was marked with a tablet setting forth its relation to the famous story which Shakespeare has immor- talized, scholars have long doubted the Veronese legend. About all that could be said of it, says the Youth's Companion, is that the building be- longed to the right period. Now travel- ers will have to be cantent with look- ing at the reputed grave of Juliet. • *--****--****.************* iluIrtthr usings NI'w*IPe tor44 JI The joyous time is drawing nigh, the time of turkey, pudding, pie; nor do we di earn of after ills, of squills, and pills, and Christmas bills. .10P A girl begins to hang up the mistletoe at about the age when she stops hanging up her stocking. ..10 , A pessimist is a fellow who wouldn't hang up his stocking for fear old Santa Claus might swipe it. V JP Christmas cigars are not always puffed up with pride. JO JP There's many a slip 'twist the Miss and the mistletoe. V' JP Don't make it too strong. Many a man has been knocked out by one good, stiff punch. JP Ask a truthful woman what she enjoys most about Christ- mas, and she will tell you the bargain sales afterward. To sing a rhyme of Christmas time (that line is but the first of it), here's hoping eeu may not feel blue because you get the worst of it. When a child writes a letter of thanks to Santa Claus, it should be cherished like a rare plant. That kid isn't long for this world. 3/ No Christmas present is so useless that you can't pass it on to some one else next year. Remember that it is better to give than to receive—the things you don't want. No JO Take off the tags. Many a friendship has been severed by the price mark on a Christmas present I have often wondered wherein consisted the wisdom of Solomon when he had a thousand wives. I am now convinced that it must have been in living in the days before Chriatmas was celebrated. JP Air It's all right to pity the poor at this peace -on -earth season, but it is also well to remember that sympathy doesn't fill an empty stomach. ii , r1964*****ikkif-ii..*•7W-4(- - AL*4(44 RULES FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING Give willingly. Give tactfully. Put thought into your giving Don't consider return gifts. Never give to others what you wouldn't want yourself. The unexpected gift insures a spe- cial appreciation. To give ostentatiously is the height of bad taste. Give to the sick and the sorrowful if you would know the true joy of giving. Never give more than you can af- ford. Your friends know your circum- stances as well as you do yourself and the pleasure of both giving and re- ceiving is lost. i&I.414 0 S 1 -5. A Question in Finance. Are you good at arithmetic, my dear?\ asked Mr. Perkasie of his wife. \I was- accounted the very best arithmetician at school,\ replied Mrs. Perkasie, with a touch of pride in her voice. \I have a problem for you.'' \State it.\ • \How can I buy $50 worth of Christ- mas presents with $10 in cash and no credit?\ MR. STAYBOLT AS SANTA CLAUS; Some Things He Would Like to Give If Ha Could. \Do you know the Christmas 'pres- ent, I'd like to make if I could?\ said Mr. Staybolt. \I'd 14ke to give cheer- fulness to the downhearted, courage to the timid, end strength to the weak; the power of self-denial to those who yield too easily, and a desire to work to the lazy. \I have often thought what a pity it 18 that you can't buy all these things, these helpful qualities, already put up and at such a price as to put them within the reach of all; canned cheerfulness, bottled hopefulness, courage in tablets, and strength, say, in the form of a powder, and so on; or you might, I suppose, put 'em all up canned, for that matter. \But in the absence of such market preparations and our consequent in- ability to buy such things and send them as gifts to those whom they might most benefit perhaps you will permit me to offer to each a word of suggestion. \To the dispirited take a cheerful view. To the downhearted, don't dwell on the doleful aide. To the timid, don't be afraid. To the weak, or those who fancy themselves so, try your strength. You'll be surprised to find how much you've got. To those who yield too easily, deny yourself once, and again, and feel the joy and strength that will conic back to you. To the lazy, get a job with a shovel, in a gang of laborers, under a driving boss; and if you are not glad to get back to your , present job to do the beet you know how at it, I miss my guess. et - \I can't send you these things in cans or bottles; but if anyone of you will take my- advice and stick to it, you'll think that Mr. Stayboit was a very kind Santa Claus.\ CHRISTMAS PROVERBS The love -light in the eyes of the precious ones of the household is the most brilliant of Christmas illumina- tions. The soft Christmas light is not the least welcome where the shadows of bereavement have fallen during the year. The Christmas angels hover over such dwellings of sorrow in min- istrits of divine love. It was the Christ who said: \It is more blessed to give than to re- ceive.\ Again, he said: \Inasmuch as ye have done it to one of the least of these, my brethren, ye have done it unto me.\ e Are )1, •=e-; Thr J7COD ZIALATH me TIAITIZTOt HP New TO DO POP HE 1.91.1\ ONLY FIVE FEET 24U .4)%0 JHE m,i.s 40 , . FEE7 TWO At the Manger. When first, her Christmas ivateh to keep. Came down the silent Angel, Sleep, With snowy sandals shod, Beholding what his mother's hands Had wrought, with softer swaddling - bands She swathed the Son of God. Then, skilled in mysteries of Night. With tender visions of delight She wreathed his resting -place. Till, wakened by a warmer glow Than heaven itself had yet to show, He saw his mother's face. -John B. Tabb, in Atlantic. 3 it tbe ebristmaz * * * Christmas is the season of kindness. Tor Christmas celebrates the coming of Christ in- to the world, and the heart of the Christ message is love—love expressing itself in homely channels of friendliness and good will, love that \suffereth long and is kind.\ If we have kindly emotions, let them have their way and blossom into kindly thoughts and kindly deeds. Let the free child spirit of open-hearted friendliness prevail. 'Tor this is the child's festival, celebrating the birth of a child, the wonderful Giver who gave himself for mankind. Let us carry the Christmas spirit through all the following days that come and go with all their meas- ure of care or pain or pleasure, and bear in our hearts the inspiration and hope of the blessed Christmas fstival of love, bearing ever ringing above thz sounds of earth and sense, the song of ill; angels heraldini in the birth of the Saviour of mankind. 'C ,.- '. dEPO , 4., Ir k ir t . )10. .4 • irOf 4 e*Of Of 4 e' • PROVED BY TIME. No Fear of Any Further Trouble. David Price, Corydon, la., says: \I woes in the last stage of kidney trouble —lame, weak, run down to a, mere skeleton. My back was so bad I could hardly walk and the kidney secre- tions much disor- dered. A week after I began using leean's Kidney Pills I could walk with- out a cane, and as I continued my health gradually returned, I was so grateful I made a public statement of my case, and now seven years have passed, I am still perfectly well.\ Sold by all dealers. 50c a box. Foe - ter -Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. WHAT WOULD HE HAVE SAID? \Get up, Jack. like a baby! You're You know if I fell cry, I should merely \Yes I know, pa; Sunday school—and You mustn't cry quite a man now. down I shouldn't say—\ but then—I go to you don't.\ Sniffles and Nerves. Keep to yourself during warm, nerve -irritating weather. It is related that an Atchison man and wife dearly love each other. She is a perfect lady, and apologizes when she says \shucks.\ But one night, when they were sitting on the porch, presum- ably enjoying the tender twilight, she suddenly picked up a stool and threw it at his head. \I am not insane,\ she said, calmly, when he turned a fright- ened gaze on her; \I am simply worn out by the manner in which you sniffle at the end of every sentence!\—At- chison Globe. Sheer whIts goods, In fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beau- ty. Home laundering would be equal- ly satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the Improved appearance of your work. Why He Remembered. By some shuffling of the social cards the clergyman and the dog fan- cier were at the same afternoon tea. The wandering talk unexpectedly re- solved itself into the question. Who were the 12 sons of Jacob? Even the cleric with the reversed collar had forgotten, but the doggy man reeled off the names without error, from Reuben down to Benjamin. The clergyman looked surprised. \Oh I'm not great shakes on Scrip- ture,\ said the man with the fox ter- riers, \but those are the names which some chap gave to a dozen puppies I'm willing to sell.\ Expert Pocket -Picking. An old lspdy was accosted in a Lon- don street by a well -dressed and re- fined -looking stranger, who effusively claimed her as a friend. \I really don't believe you remember me!\ she exclaimed, reproachfully, and the old lady, never doubting that her memory was at fault, confessed that she could not quite recall the name. \Ah but I have changed it since you knew me,\ said her interlocutor, gayly, and after a few more lively speeches she passed on, having possessed herself mean- while of the old lady's purse. - - No Deception. \I bought some boom.lots in a coast town. Feller wrote me the land might all be gone in a week if I didn't buy quick.\ ''That's an old dodge.\ \But he told the exact truth. The ocean is carrying it off in chunks.\— S. Louis Republic. CAUSE AND EFFECT Good Digestion Follows Right Food. Indigestion and the attendant dis- comforts of mind and body are cer- tain to follow continued use of improp- er food. Those who are still young and robust are likely to overlook the fact that, as dropping water will wear a stone away at last, so will the use of heavy, greasy, rich food, finally cause loss of appetite and indigestion. Fortunately many are thoughtful enough to study themselves and note the principle of Cause and Effect in their daily food. A N. Y. young wom- an writes her experience thus: \Sometime ago I had a lot of trouble from indigestion, caused by too rich food. I got so I was unable to di- gest scarcely anything, and medicines seemed useless. \A friend advised me to try Grape - Nuts food, praising it highly, and as a last resort I tried it. I am thankful to say that Grape -Nuts not only re- lieved me of my trouble, but built me up and strengthened my digestive or- gans so that I can now eat anything T desire. But I stick fo Grape -Nuts.\ \There's a Reason.\ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read \The Road to Well- ville,\ in pkgs. Ever rend the above tetterf A mew mse appears from time to time. ?bey are genuine, true, and fall of Mumma liatarest. Potatoes Peeled Overnight. Sometimes it Is more convenient to peel potatoes the evening before use. When doing so add, a little milk to the water in which they are placed. This keeps the light from them, and so pre- vents their turning black, and they are as fresh as when newly peeled. Recipe for Soup. Cold peas, beans and potatoes should be boiled together for half an hour, strained and the liquid seasoned with butter, salt, pepper. Prepare a cup- ful of macaroni to add to the soup. Nebraska's Meeting Place. That's what people are now calling the city of Lincoln. Nearly all so- cieties of every sort meet sometime durng the year in Lincoln, and this gives The State Journal a peculiar Interest to state readers, as it devotes' more space to such meetings than any two of the other state papers. Thel recent teachers' association called to- gether nearly 5,000 of the state teach - era and every home that has a school! child was interested in the reports of their doings. Especially was every; member of a school board interested.1 Soon will come the great agriculturall meetings and columns of facts will be printed in The Lincoln Journal that affect the earning power of every. farmer. Then of course the legisla- ture will be here for three months and surely you will he interested in what It will do in regard to regulating the liquor traffic and guaranteeing bank deposits The Journal spends more money for and devotes more space to Its legislative reports than any other paper. It's a Journal specialty. The Journal is not a city paper, it's a state paper, and its energies are pushed in the direction of dealing with state affairs. Whatever inter- ests you as a taxwyer, interests The Journal and you *ill find the impar- tial, disinterested facts in its columns. A Boy's Story. The Lippincotts lately published \Daniel Boone: Backwoodsman,\ by C. H. Forbes -Lindsay, whose \John Smith; Gentleman Adventurer\ was issued by this firm last year. The new book is intended primarily for the young, but like its predecessor, 't is of such a character as to appeal to grown-ups as well. While the work s a true account of the life of its hero, the material is woven into a sort of historical novel. The book is Illustrated from drawings in both color and black and white by Frank McKernan. The recent disastrous storms have emphasized the necessity of protection against fire, lightning and tornado. A good company for farmers to insure in is the Farmers & Merchants of Lincoln. Their policies are easy to understand and prompt settlement& are made after adjustment of claims., Thousands of satisfied cuetomers have received benefits. The first edition of 100,000 copies of John Fox, Jrs', great new novel, \The Trail of the Lonesome Pine,\ is now ready. This tremendous story of love and fighting in the Kentucky mountains, with its fascinating hero- ine, \June is a novel that in dra- matic power, beauty and interest sur- passes even \The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come.\ Chas Scribner's Sons, publishers. The Peril of Reformers. Many a reformer perishes in the re- tnoval of rubbish and that makes the of- fensiveness of the clasa. They are partial; they are not equal to the work they pretend. They lose their way; in the assault on,the kingdom of darkness they expend all their en- ergy on some accidental evil, and lose their sanity and power of benefit.— R. W. Emerson, in '\New England Re- formers.\ Greek Mythology. In Greek mythology, Narcissus is a beautiful youth, a son of Cephissus, and the nymph Liriope metamor- phosed into a flower. For his insen- sibility to love he was caused, by Nemesis, to fall fn love with his own Image reflected in the water. Unable to grasp the shadow, he pined away and became the flower which bears his name. The nymph Echo, who vainly loved him, died of grief. Temperature of Ice. Ice does not retain a fixed tempera- ture below the freezing point. It can- not be heated above the freezing point under ordinary circumstanaes. Like any other solid, ice is cooled in the winter to the temperature of the air, be it zero or below, and becomes warmer as the temperature rises till its melting point is reached. Then it cannot be warmer. It changes its con- dition to the liquid form. Noise. Natur duz awl her big and little jobs without making enny furse; the earth goes around the sun, the moon changes, the eklipses, and the polly- wog, silently and tallessly, bekums a frog, but man kant even deliver a small sized 4th ov July orashun with- out knocking down a mountain or two, and turning up three or four primeval forests by the bleeding rutes.—Josb Billings. Be Ready. The man who is prepared trebles his talents. Lincoln Directory HERBERT E. GOOCH CO. BROKERS AND DEALERS Grain, Provisions, Stocks, Cotton !UM Office, s04-305 rraternIty Bldg. Lincoln, Nebraska. Bell Phone 512 Ante Mons 11669 Largest Rowe in State .- 11 C Y ;I. L. HOTEL 'ill\ „f,L, ? l'i!,7°17, 15. liut„, ;.i.,„c‘,,,.. Lists. SIMMS & CO.. ftist.