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About The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.), 08 Jan. 1909, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075230/1909-01-08/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
UNCLE SAM'S STATISTICAL EXPERT TWO GOOD HOT PUDDINGS. HURT IN A WRECK., Itle HARDIN TR1BUNI . øy E. H Sathbone HAROIN, MONTANA The iata at \univei sal'' language is vaned \Ido \ But does it? Cranberries and apples are up. You can't keep a good thing down some bow, '['here isgoing to be anairship trade journal published. Why not call it a fly paper? A Chicago burglar stole several hun- dred detains worth of soap. (leaned out the place .‘ as it were. Now they want to put the probe into the cable trust. This is like really diving deep into trust secrets. America lacks poets, says a French critic. What do you know about that? Why, were overstocked. Mr. Pierpont Morgan has 30 sheivea full of Bibles, but it is not believed that he will be able to corner the sup- ply - King Edward orders that \God Save the King\ be played in quicker tempo hereafter. lie appears inpatient fos salvation, Illinois woman hasn't taken a drink of water for 40 years, and is In ex- cellent health. Don't cheer—she drinks buttermilk. Among those jumping all over the comic supplement is Prof. Brandet Matthews, who can get all the fun he wants out of phony spelling. A Chicago paper has a story of a spook that ate a biscuit. We feat some one has been misleading an in- nocent and confiding reporter. Italian newspapers refer to America 118 \a nation of snobs.\ And if we should retort by calling Italy \a nation of slobs\ we suppose they'd get mad. Great Britain has just had one more fit on the subject of air navigation and it likes the thrill so much that it is thinking of having them regularly. - Shall we annex Canada?\ naively asks the Charleston News and Courier. That editor knew that he was beyond shooting distance from the dominion. There are 413 species of trees found within the limits of the United States, the wood of 16 of which when seasoned are so heavy as to sink in water. Admiral \Bob\ Evans has squelched a proposition to give him a house in California. His give and take are confined to the high seas and to time of battle. Canon Yleming handed over the whole of the money he received for copyright of certain sermons to the British Hospital for Incurables and the Gordon Boys' home. An eminent geologist has given warning that the coal supply in the Pittsburg district will be exhausted in less than 50 years. It is about time to develop that substitute fuel. \In Maine a bunter was shot for a squirrel, in Wisconsin for a deer, and In Montana for a bear,\ says the Phil- adelphia Inquirer. By and by the hunter will begin to imagine he's a whole zoo. Now that society is taking up equal suffrage, it seems a little contradic- tory to make a stronghold of equal rights with men in a phase of life where women are practically dictators and autocrats. The Harvard expedition has re- turned from its trip to hunt for Span- ish gold. All of the treasure which ' they found has been invested in cas- tles in Spain, and the hunt for the nimble, commonplace American dol- lar will for the present absorb the treasure -hunters' energies. Simplified spelling has its advocates in France, for the minister of public Instruction has lately ordered that the public schools shall teach the spelling of a number of words In the form recommended by the French academy. The reforms include the suppression of the \h\ in words like \rhinoceros\ and the substitution of \I\ for \y\ in such words as \analyze and of \f\ for \ph\ in \phenomene and similar terms. Mr. Taft, in his address at the dedi- cation of the prison -ship martyrs' mon- ument in Brooklyn the other day, dwelt on the heroism of the revolu- tionary patriots who endured the suf- fering on board the ships anchored in Now York harbor rather than aban- don the colonies and obtain comfort and freedom by enlisting in the Brit- ish armies. It has been customary to dwell on the cruelty of tlie British in treating their prisoners inhumanly; but Mr. Taft wisely and truly called attention to the fact that these prison. ,ers were denit with in the way that was customary at that time. Prison reform Is a modern philanthropy. - - --- A new form of insanity imported from Italy, it is said, has appeared in Ow Soeth, due to eating meal from fermented corn. lint the form of in reinity long known to be produced by 'corn juice - is by *o means a nes- discovery Tie- !intik r het has tak, it smai: hold as yet Wt.!), I be citizens of Mexi- co, especially when amount- of less then $1,000 are comserned They con odder it much easier to pay spot cash than to give a cheek for amounts of $60 and 1100. Oppyrilitit ay Waldya William C. Hunt, chief statistiLian for population of the census soon to be taken by the government is considered an expert in this branch of work. He was an expert special agent in charge of population daring the last cen- sus and has been cornected witt the depaitment of labot for several years. He Is 52 years of age. HAS A NOVEL SCHEME COLORADO MAN PLANS TO REAR WILD BEASTS. Will at Once Start Reservation on Which Will be Bred Game of All Sorts and for All Purposes. Denver, Col.—M F. Kendrick of Denver, has established a reservation on which he will rear wild beasts for market. He plans to sell the animals to the states that are actively engaged in the preservation of wild game, but he does not intend to confine himself to this single source of demand. He be- lieves that even were there no states Interested in producing game the gen- eral market svauld warrant the found- ing of this novel reservation. It wasat the suggestion of Dr, Will- iam T. Hornaday Of the New York Zoological society, and other noted naturalists that Mr. Kendrick estab- lished the preserve, which will be con- ducted by an association known as the Kendrick Pheassantries and Wild Game association, For several years the founder of the new enterprise has maintained a pheasant exhibit at the city park in Denver, expending for that purpose several thousand dollars of his own money each year. It was his love for and surpassing knowledge of birds that inspired him to start the wild game preserves, on which many thou- sands of pheasants will be raised each year for the market. For the first few years only animals that inhabit North America will be raised, but in time lions, tigers and even elephants will be supplied for the market. At present the farm will be stocked • 'with deer, elk, antelope, buffalo, mountain goats, bears, etc. The association has bought 1,600 acres of land nine miles south of Den- ver. A lake 60 acres'in area will sup- ply the water, as will also the Platte river, which flows through Skeleton farm, as a part of the tract purchased is known. An electric line now runs near by, and it is expected that the reserva- tion will become as much of a re- sort for sightseers as is the famous ostrich farm near Los Angeles. \It requires no more feed to pro- duce one pound of buffalo or elk than the same of cattle and sheep,\ said Mr. Kendrick, \while the care and pro- tection in housing are less, and the prices are high either on the foot or the butcher's block. Buffalo meat re- tails at from 60 cents to ;1 a pound; elk meat brings nearly as much, and venison sells at about half these prices. The association will not lack a good market at good prices, even if all its product be not taken by zoo- logical parks or game preserves.\ Mr. Kendrick has been Invited by the United States government to send to the national chemist the body or any bird or animal that has died of a disease with which he is not familiar, and the government agrees to send him withere coat a full description of the disease and its cure. FINGER MADE INTO NOSE Unique Surgical Operation Performed on New Jersey Man. -- Paterson, & J.—Cornellus Snyder of 132 Mille I oad. Hawthorne, will soon be going about wearine a finger reit off one of hP wn hands in place of Ilk nose. provided one of the most in- teresting and unique sereical opera- tions ever p•rfortued in this city he successful, and at the present time there ift every lodleation that it will be Snyder was a sit !Tot Cr front ancer of the nose fel sever in years. and a year ago an operation was performed In which the larger portion of his nose WAS amputated in order to complete- ly take away the cancerous erowth 'oh C. Nfl Coy performed the operation to substitute the tinge for the taan's nose in the Paterson general hospital. The flesh about the remainder of the nose -was scraped and laid open. The nail was taken from the third fin- ger of the patient's left hand and the skin and flesh back of the finger cut and laid open. The finger was doubled at the middle joint and laid s in the nasal opening and securely fas- tened. The entire upper part of the pa- tient's body and head were then in- cased in plaster casts and bandages to assure the utmost rigidity and to guard against disturbing the sutured parts. When this is assured the finger will be amputated at the middle joint, and when the wounds are healed it is ex- pected that Snyder inn leave the hos- pital with a nose as nearly perfect as the one he originally had. GAVE HORSE PEACEFUL END. Kind -Hearted Man Bought Amp al to End its Sufferings. - Philadelphia.—Albert H. Krouss of St. Peter's, Chester county, came to Philadelphia to buy a horse. He found one for 68.50, and started to drive into the country late in the afternoon. Krouss got as far as Thirty-sixth and Chestnut streets when he discovered that the equine was quite lame and to drive it further- was cruel. A crowd returning from the Army and Navy game came to the same conclusion and gathered about the indignant horseman from St. Peter's to tell him so. Krouss was both embarrassed anti angry. \How much did . you give for that horse?\ asked William R. Green, a manufacturer, who was in the crowd. \Eight dollars and fifty cents,\ ad- mitted Krauss, somewhat abashed \Will you take that amount for him?\ asked Mr. Green. \Glad to get it,\ responded the Ches- ter county man. The sale was con- cluded, when Agent Lepper of the Pennsylvania S. P. C. A., who had wit- nessed the transaction, made himself known to Mr. Green. \What are you gedng to do with the horse?\ asked Agent Lepper. \Turn him over to you so that he may be dipposed of kindly,\ said Mr. Green. Agent Lepper led the horse away to a peaceful end. ICO-EDS IN \CUT-UP\ FAIR STUDENTS LEARN SOME. THING ABOUT BUTCHERING. College Course, a Little Out of the Ordinary, Proved Fascinating to the Young Ladies at Brown University. Providence, R.. 1.—Thitty fair eta Ws of Pembroke hall, the Women's college of Brown university, have just participated in the biggest collegiate \cut-up a big, beefy row being carved into steaks, toasts, chops and other meat 6, while the girls stood eagerly around to learn all about meet - cutting. Not one of the girls flinched, hut ail stayed through till the cow was re- duced to slices and rolls of meat. The girls were keenly interested In the W hole process and glinted much infor- mation about the way to order meat and to tell one kind of steak from an- other. One ot the girls 5ll1111.11Cd up the general opinion at the close when she said• \Well I guess we all know now why is a cow.\ The girls are tithing the college course in euthenics, which includes the biological sciences and household econentes. The class is in charge 01 Miss Alice Wilson Wilcox, instructor In physiology and household eco- nomics. Miss lemma Morgan, Miss Madge Lee and over two dozen others are taking the course. When it was sug- gested that they go to one of the local markets and see steaks carved from the \original package,\ so to speak, the idea was enthusiastically adopted. Arrangements were made with the Algonquin market on Hope street for this demonstration in beef. Henry L. Read and William Hamilton, of the market s were the demonstrators. Mr. Read did the cutting and Mr. Hamil- ton explained. Mr. Wilson also talked to the girls, telling why some portions of the \critter\ were preferable to others. For over an hour the girls saw the cow gradually dwindle down to mar- ketable proportions. Mr. Hamilton showed them why sirloin costs more than rump or round, saying: \You know, young ladies, that the part least used is the tenderest, though perhaps not the most juicy. Because it is render you pay more for it.\ He then told them why top of the round sells at 22 cents, while bottom round brings only 18 and vein' only le cents. He explained to tle , fair co- eds the relative values of the thin rib, the sticking piece, the thick plate on first and second cut, chuck roast, Ill) sirloin, porterhouse and so on. Some of -the girls knew a thing or two about the \beef critter\ also. One wanted to see the fifth rib cut. An- other called for a three -rib roast. When the poor cow was all \cut up,\ the girls departed for Rhode Is- land.hall to attend Miss Wilson's lec- ture on \Economy. Tenderness and Food Value.\ Several of the market's regular cus- tomers also witnessed the carving demonstration and were highly inter- ested from a practical standpoint. One of these housekeepers remarked at the close: \Those college girlis s are lucky to have this taught to thein when I had to pick up all my knowledge of meats noun daily observation and from learn- ing by my own mistakes. \It's a splendid idea. It will make those girls good housekeepers. I wish all girls could learn as much. There might be fewer divorces.\ Cat Can Eat Hatpins. Reading, Pa. --At the most unusual meeting of the Schuylkill Valley Vet- erinary association here Ur. John W. Adams of the University of Pennsyl- vania gave an interesting account of a cat which swallowed hatnins and a dog that had made a meal on poker chips and glass. Ile said that the chips alone in the dog would not have hurt him. Dr. Hoskins, secretary of the state veterinary board, told of a eat that consumed'patent black thread and needles. SOLVING THE THE UNEMPLOYED -WOMEN PROBLEM Pooch Delight and Queen Pudding Can Seth Be Recommended. Peach Delight —Buttee the bot- tom and sides of a shallow baking dish. Slice stale bread rather thin and cut in a round shape with a tin cutter. Cover the bottom of the dish with these. Open a can of peaches and on top of each piece of bread lay half a peach—the side from which the pit has been removed uppermost. FM each cavity with a spoonful of brown auger and a small piece of but- ter. Put in the oven and bake slowly, occasionally adding more sugar. Just before they are quite cooked add a teaspoonful of any kind Of 11Weet ULM, to tomb peach. Serve In the pudding dish hot with whipped cream or a rich foamy sauce. Queen Pudding.—Take one pint of bread crumbs, one quart of milk, a coffee cup of augur, the yolks of four eggs and the grated rind of one large lemon. Beat together the yolks of the eggs, the sugar and the lemon until thoroughly blended, then add the bread crumbs and milk. Bake until a golden brown. When the pudding is done beat the whites of the four eggs with four tablespoonfuls of engin until per- fectly stiff. Now over the top of the pudding spread a thick layer of cur - runt jelly or 8 tart raspherry jam and, over this spread the whites of the eggs. Set in OVVII again long enough to brown the top. _ BOTH CAKE AND CANDY, Marizpan Cakes One of the Most Pop- ular of Confections. These ars a cross between cakes and candies and perhaps the most popular of all the confections. You will require for their making, one pound sweet almonds, one pound pow- dered sugar, a half ounce of butter and rose water to flavor. Blanch the almonds and spread on a fiat dish to dry. '['his will require at least 12 hours. Pound fine in a mortar until like flour. Add the sugar and enough rosewater to make a dough that can be rolled out. Divide into two parts and having dusted the molding board with powdered sugar put one-half on the board and fonn into flat round cakes like macaroons. Put the other half on the board, roll out to a half - inch in thickness and rut into little strips Moisten the edges of the first cakes with a little rose water and Place the little strips around them to form cups. Set these on a greased pa- per on flat tins and bake in a very slow oven. For the filling, mix one pound pow- dered sugar with rose water to mois- ten and beat until stiff. Fin the cups and brown in the oven. Or, if pre- ferred, put the beaten sugar in the cups, top with a candied cherry or violet. In this case do not brown. Emma Paddock Telford. Turkey Croquettes. Chop the fragments of turkey, add - lug for seasoning a small portion of bologna, harp, or tongue, together with a bit of fine minced onions, salt, pep- per and parsley. Make a thick cream sauce, allowing for each pint of the seasoned meat the following portions: A heaping teaspoon of butter and two' teaspoons of flour. When blended, pour in a cup of hot milk, stirring un- til thick and smooth. Salt to taste, add the meat, and beat well until mixed. Season more highly if desired, i then set in a cold pleee until rend and stiff. Form into cones, dip in beaten egg, roll in fine crumbs, place again in cold place. Fry hi deep fat and stick a little piece of parsley in the end of each cone before serving. Fish Turbout. Take a small whitefish and pet in boiling water, to which has been add- ed one tablespoonful of salt and a very little vinegar. Let this simmer half; hour Take ont the fish and let It re- main until perfectly cold. Then pick it into -small pieces, putting them into a well-buttered dish. Take a pint of milk, bring it to boiling heat, add half cup of melted butter with a table- spoonful of flour beaten in; squeeze ill the juice of a small onion, with salt and pepper to taste; pour this mixture over the fish. A cup of sweet cream will improve it. Stir up well, adding a few crumbs of bread; put three or four pieces of butter on top and hake in a slow oven 15 minutes. Prune Marmalade. Take one pound prunes, cook until soft so as it will be easy to remove stones, then put through meat grinder, which makes it easier than chopping; add one cup sugar, one-half cup cream, two teaspoonfuls of vanilla, then beat until nice and light with egg beater; serve cold. This is a delicious and in- expensive dish. _ nuckwheats for Two. Many persons think buckwheat cakes are heavy and unhealthy. Made in thie \ way they are light and nutritious. For two persons allow three hearing table- spoons of buckwheat and one of wheat lour, one teaspoon baking powder, one '.•iaspoon molasses, one-half teaapoon of salt; make as thin as desired with cold water. Brown Bread. Chop finely one-half cup seeded rai- sins and E'nelleh currants, then add two cups sour milk, one cup molasses, one teaspoon soda, one teaspoon gait, one cup graham, and ten cups corn men?. Steam I i hours In baking powder cans or throe hours in loaf Paris is attempting to gt .ve the problem of the unemployed women by erecting notice boards on wh , r), are placed. free of cost, announcements ot situations vacant. Every type of women -worker is catered for in this way by the municipality. arid the board is an Institution that promises to be of the oreatest valve • Useful Kitchen Knife. A glazier's knife will be found art excellent thing with which to scrape and clean the bottoms of pans and ket- tles. This need only be tried to prove s Kidney. &why injured and Health Se- riously Impaired. ...m1.•••••• William White, R. R. man, Cll. 00b• stentlue Street, Three Rivers, 111th., says: \In a railroad collision my kidneys sausf have been hurt, as I passed bloody urine with pain for a long Urns after, was weak and thin and tfo, I could not work. Two yeatit after I Went to the — pit al and remained al-. Most six months, but my case seemed hopeless. The urine passed involun- tarily. Two months ago 1 began tak- ing Doan's Kidney Pills and the im- provement has been wonderful. Four boxes have done we more good than all the doctoring of seven years. I gained so much that my friends won- der at it.\ Sold by all dealers. 60c a box. Fos- ter -Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Cut Oft in His Prime. That the negro residing in the north has the fondness for euphonious words --regardless of their meaning—that characterizes his brother in the south was illustrated by a remark overheard a few days ago. Two colored women stood chatting at the corner of Eighth avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth skreet. One of them, ostentatiously clad in mourning, said with a doleful shako of the head in reply to a query front the other: \Yas he died in de height of his stneith.\--Washingten Star. _ How's This? We otter ODe Hundred Dollars Reward for isay eilae ot Catarrh that caltnut be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, F. J CHENEY & Toledo. O. We, the underslened, have known F. J. Cheney got the hot U. years. and believe him perfect/y hon- orable in all hugeness transactions and financially table to carry out tiny oblteatioue made by ha arm KINNAN * Ii.hotqaale TOtado, O. Hairs catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoue aerface1 ot tne gystem. 'resthnooL‘is scut tree. Price 75 cents pa bottle. Sold by all ilrugatets. TaNa Wars Family Pills tor eoosUpatioe The Ruling Passion. The Late Corner (anxiously )'—How Car have they got with the program? Maj. Styme (an ardent golfer) --Sev- en up and two to play.- -Harper's Weekly. Long before a woman acquires any jewels she likes to worry for fear they may be stolen. Lewis' Single Binder costs more than other Sc cigars. Sesnktes know win. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill. Many a man with wheels thinks he is the whole political machine. COUGHS AND COLDS. I Took - Peruna Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen:--! can cheerfully recom• metal Peruna as an effective cure for coughs and colds. You are authorized to use my photo with testimonial in any publication. Mrs. Joseph Hall Chase, 804 Tenth St, Washington, D. C. Could Not Smell Nor Hear. Mrs. A. L. Wetzel, 102:301tio St., Terre Halite, Ind., writes: \When I began to take your medicine I could not smell, nor bear a church bell ring. Now I can both smell and hear. \When I beesn . youir treatment, my head was terrible. I had buzzing and chirping noisee in my head. ''hollowed your advice faithfully and took Peruna as you told me. Now I might say I \I want to rn g- w o e rt i n l. d visit my mother and see the doctor who said I WaFt not long for this world. I will tell him it was Peruna that cured me.\ reruns is manufactured hy The Peruna Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio_ Ask your ()runlet for a Free Peruna Almanac for 1909. kemp's Balsam Will stop any cough that can be Mopped by any medicine and cure coughs that cannot be cured by any other medicine. II is always the best cough cure. You cannot afford to take chances on any other kind. KEMP'S BALSAM cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, asthma abd eonsgunp- tion in first stages. ft does uot contain /deo- boa. opium, morphine, ar any other narcotic, potsea. mos or bargolul drug.