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About The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.) 1908-1925 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune (Hardin, Mont.), 05 Feb. 1909, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075230/1909-02-05/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
WANTS HER LETTER PUBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn.—\ I was a great sufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of What Lydia E. l'inkham's Veg- etable Compound had done for other suffering women I felt sure it would help me, and I must say it did help me wonderfully. My pains all left me, I grew stronger, and within three months I was a perfectly well woman. \I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable (7ompotmd.\— Mrs. Joux G. MOhneN, 2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu- ine testimonials like the above prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis- tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you want Special advice write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. She will treat your letter as s tric tly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping sick women in this way, free of charge. Don't hesitate— write at once. Prophecy Ful \That baby,, madam,' tor to the proud and \will make his mark some day.\ Note the fulfillment \on. In less than 16 years, that boy was the scoreboard artist in a great base' ball park.—Chicago Tribune. filled. ' said the doc- happy Mother, In the world of the predic- THE WONDERSERRY. Mr. Luther Burbank, the plant Wiz- ard of California, has ogi o ginated a wonderful new plant which grows any- where,,in any soil or climate, and bears great quantities of luscious berries all the season. Plants are grown from seed, and it takes only three months to get them in bearing, and they may be grown and fruited all summer in the garden, or in pots during the win- ter. It is unquestionably the greatest Fruit Novelty ever known, and Mr. Burbank has made Mr. John Lewis Childs, of Floral Park, N. Y., the in- troducer. He says that Mr. Childs is one of the largest, best-known, fair- est and most reliable Seedsman in America. Mr. Childs is advertising seed of the Wonderberry all over the world, and offering great inducements to Agents for taking orders for it. This berry is so fine and valuable, and so cagily grown anywhere, that every- body should get it at once. Same Effect. \Cyril said his mother, as they sat down to the breakfast table, \did you wash your face this morning?\ Well, no—mamma,\ said he, slowly, evidently casting in his mind for an excuse, \but he added, reassuringly, 'I cried a little before I came down- stairs!\—Delineator. Professor Munyon has just issued a most beautiful, useful and complete Al- manac; it contains not only all the scien- tific information concerning the moon's phases, in all the latitudes, but -has il- lustrated articles on how to read char acter by phrenology, palmistry and birth month. It also. tells all about card reading, birth stones and their meaning, and gives the interpretation of dreams. It teaches beauty culture, manicuring, gives weights and meas- ures, and antidotes for poison. In fact, it is a Magazine Almanac, that not only gives valuable information, but will affOrd much amusement for every member of the family, especially for parties and evening entertainments. Farmers and people in the rural dis- tricts will find this Almanac almost invaluable. It will be sent to anyone absolutely free on application to the MUNYON REMEDY COMPANY, PHILADEL- PHIA. , — . A cane is an old man's strength and a young man's weakness. F 6 ,,k0.akS c1.1 wti i• Pe , t USe i•1 • ' caisitozE *e•••••••••••••••••••••••••;>•-••••*•••ellkeleore The L *st Button By JAMES FRANCIS DWYER ••••••••••••••••••se****40. - ap****•44. 4 •40.•+.0 , .i'opyright, by Bliortstery Pub. Co.) Somebody has defined crime as \the momentary victory of an hereditary Graving over common sense.\ In the case of the two Gilfillans, the same craving manifested itself in each man at the same moment. This was pe- culiar. The desire came upon each of the brothers to possess two blood horses belonging to a neighbor, and common sense was routed in the struggle to suppress the craving. The Gilfillans got the horses, and, incidentally, the sheriff got the Gil - Miami, A stern judge conducted the judicial inquiry, and, unable to see that the brothers were victims of a craving, handed down from a horse - loving ancestor, he sent them to En - Iota penitentiary for seven years. This was unfortunate. The younger Gilfillan was consumptive, and En - Iota's \Little Hell\ was not an ideal health resort. 'Three months after sentence the boy was sent to the jail hospital, and became firmly. imbued with the feeling that he would not re- cover his health. The sentence had smashed up the last ounce of vitality that was holding the fort against the disease, and the prisoner was sinking rapidly. Now, prisoners in jail hospital re- ceive no tobacco. Whether the prison medico believes that the brand sup- plied to the numbered inmates is a compound that can only be safely con- sumed by the physically strong is not known, but the weekly supply allowed to a prisoner on the \works\ is im- mediately cut off if he is taken to the hospital. The dearth . of tobacco af- fected the consumptive Gilflllan, tle craved . a \chew and in distress he acquainted the brother of his craving by what is in jail parlance known as a \stiff.\ With a pin the sick man scratched his wants on the loose leaf of a hymn book, and in due time the pitiful note, after passing through the hands of a dozen prisoners, reached Ripped a Buttcifi from His Striped Jacket. theory by which the mental agony pro- duced by dark cell treatment could be considerably relieved. He advised all prisoner friends who might visit \The Doghole\ to toss a button into the air, and while away the time by searching for it on hands and- knees stoat' the value of little things, and he recognized the fact that a con- tinuous hunt for a missing button would drag the mind away from the black abyss of insanity. the healthy brother, who was learning to manufacture boots in the prison workshop. The elder Gilfillan had deep pools of sentiment beneath a rough ex- terior. Furthermore, he tgok no heed of consequence. He picture the sick brother, waiting tobaccoless in the dreary hospital, and he took a chance -to supply him. The chance was a risky one. While passing the barred hospital yard he dexterously jerked a small cube of tobacco to the white- faced brother, who happened ,to be walking up and down inside, and he breathed a tremendous sigh of relief when he became certain that the warder in charge of the squad had not noticed the action. The elder Gilfillan was not afraid of any - punishment that might fall upon himself; he waaafarid lest the morsel of tobacco would be taken away from the sick youth who craved the delicacy. But Nemesis was galloping on the heels of the two Gilfillans. Warder Bulatrode, looking down from his perch on the south tower, saw the movement, and Buistrode was a con- scientious officer. Five minutes after, the younger brother was strippea of the miserable gift, and the giver was dragged before the chief warder and sentenced to seven -nays' dark cell for a breach of prison discipline. In jail, charity is a virtue that is promptly smothered when the powers that be become aware of its existence. It was the elder Gilfllian's first intro- duction to the dark cell. When he was pushed into the windowless cham- ber, the horrible, intense, suffocating darkness closed in upon him like a smothering pall. Blind and stupefied. he groped his way around the bare walls, the horror piercing him through and through like an icy sword.' \After- wards he Ming himself on the stone floor and lay like a man shinned by a terrific blow. Some hours later he thought of the button. A medical student, who had once undergone a term of imprison- ment at Enlota, had promulgated a Gilfillan, groping blindly in the darkness, remembered the advice. He ripped a button from his striped jacket and tossed it into the thick air. Listening intently he heard it fall in a far -away corner of the cell, and on hands and knees he started to search for it. The sport fascinated bin. When he discovered the metal disc he spun it up aid again started in ftursuit. The leaden hours milled by slowly, but the game continued. Gilfillan blessed the button. He began to feel a love for it. He called to it when it hid from him in the cracks between the cold atones, and he cried hysterically over it when he discovered it after a long search. It seemed alive. It became a corn' minion to him in that horrible, black vault into which not one single ray of light came to pierece the darkqess. It was on the evening of the sixth day that Nemesis clinched with Gilfillan. The prisoner had, up to that moment, thrown the button up a thousand times and found it in each occasion by laboriously searthing on hands and knees. But on the evening of the sixth day a peculiar incrident hap- pened. The prisoner threw the button up into the blackness, but it did not come down again. . Gilfillan waited with aching ears to hear the tinkle of the metal on the stone, but be heard no sound. The button didn't fail, and the silence that filled the cell as he stood listening, hurt him. He clenched his teeth to strangle a scream of terror that fear pushed to his lips. Whit was wrong? The prisonerlatrembling knees gave way under him aid--„ne sank to the floor. His hands moved out into the darkness and commenced to kel the stone flooring, but every nerve was taut. On every other occasion when he, had tossed up the button he had heard it fall distinctly, but he was certain that there was not the slighest sound after the last toss. Still, he would, search. The hot hands crept over the stones eagerly, feverishly. The fingers worked Madly, but the bare floor mocked their search. There was no button. Again and again and again the prisoner searched. Through the cold hours of thr night he crawled backwards and forwards till each Join- ing between those tombstones of Hope seemed familiar to his blind fingers. But there was nothing on the floor. The button had not fallen after he had jerked It into the blackness. Gilfillan tried to think. Why had it not returned? he asked himself. What had happened to it? There was nothing abovejiika but bare walls, and yet -1 Wheri was it? Again and again he whispered the question of the thick black palV that seemed to heave around him. He asked it in a louder tone. He screamed it. Then some- thing like a laugh came from one corner of that brain-destroying pit of horror, and Gilfillan was panic stricken. Imagination, contrary to the. opinion of scientific experts, lies in the stom- ach, and the bread and water diet that Gilfillan had been receiving was not sufficiently weighty to keep it down. The prisoner began to see things. The thick waves of curse -incrusted dark- ness welled up from the corners and smothered him. Invisible hands grasped his throat and strangled him. He kicked at the door leading into the dark corridor opening into he main wing, but Warder Tomlinson, of the night watch, was slightly deaf, and did not hear him. He raced around the cell with Terror—grasping, gibber- ing Terror—at his I . heels., and the stone vault echoed to his wild screams of agony. When Warder Dunworth opened the door on the morning of the seventh day to acquaint Gilfllian of 'the fact that his term in dark cell was over, the hands of Terrot had completed their work. The prisoner's face was battered beyond recognition where he had dashed against the wails in his mad race, and he shrieked wildly when the warder attempted to drag him into the light. Eleven years afterwards, *bee an enlightened prison- controller did away with the dark cells, the masons, tear- ing down the black vault at Enlota, found a jacket button securely fastened in a thick cobweb near the ceiling of the cell. But In the crim- inal ward of Enlota insane asylum a prisoner still spends , his days and nights hunting for that button Marriage Licenses. Marriage licenses are required in all states and territoties except Alaska. New .Jersey tif residents, otherwise/re quir•01, New Mexico and Sonde Caro lins. COFFLe BRULO 111 EXCELLENT. Popular Beverage That Had Its Origin in New Orleans. In this couptry coffee brut° seems to have had its origin in New Or- leans. On the other side it has been popular for yearg, eepecially in France anti liengary. A tray is brought the hostese, bearing - the coffee urn, a sil- vet bowl with .a wide mouth, a small little, bowl of lust sugar, a little dish of whore spices, cloves, cinnamon and canna buds, and another with the peel of a mandarin orange minced One. There Is - also a -little flask of brandy. The hostess, counting noses, puts into the wide -mouthed bowl a lump of sugar for each person, then the cloves, cinnamon and orange peel. Over this a little brandy Is poured, 'which is then lighted and allowed to burn until the alcohol has all disap- peared. During this burning it must be occasionally stirred. As soon as the flame has disappeared the coffee, black and strong is poured in until the howl is full. A final stir and this is tailed out into after dinner coffee caps. - tp TELL WHEN MEAT IS DONE. Scientific Device Worthy a Place in Every Kitchen. Cooks are accustomed to cut into a piece of meat whe'n cooking, to prod vegetables with a fork, and to use similar primitive methods of ascertain- ing the stage to which the roasting or boiling process has advanced. The first realty scientific device to mea- sure the temperature inside a piece of cooking food has recently been invent- ed in Copenhagen, Denmark. It is called a \thermo needle,\ and consists of a thin metal tube, pointed at one end and containing a spring held in tension by an alloy - melting at a speci- fied temperature, which is that de- sired for cooking. The melting of this alloy releases the spring and shoots up a pin as a signal that the desired tem- perature exists in the interior of the food into which the \needle\ has been thaust. As the instrument is with- drawn, the pin is pushed down and held while the fusible alloy \sets when the device is ready for use again. INGREDIENTS FOR LIVER LOAF. Variety Needed, But the Finished Product is Delicious. Soak a lamb's liver and heart in cold water until the blood is dis- gorged, then place a stewpan with one calf's tongue and one-half pound of lean fresh pork. Add one scant tea- spoonful salt, a dash of pepper, and, tied together in a thin bit of muslin, four cloves, six allspice berries, and half of a bay leaf. Pour over barely enough boiling water to cover, and simmer gently four hours. Trim off all fat, tubes,. and gristle, and chop fine. Add a little more salt if needed and a shake of pepper, and 'Just enough of the hot liquor to moisten. Pack in a greased pan, cover with a plate and weight, let stand over night, when it will be ready to slice. It is the best way to let it cool in the liquor in which it was cooked before chop- ping. Stewed Spanish Onions. Two pounds of Spanish onions, one cupful of milk, one tablespoonful of lidur, one tablespoonful of butter and seasoning of salt and pepper. Peel the onions, put them into a pan of boiling water and boil them until they are tender; they will take from one to two hours, according to their size. Next drain off the ,Water. Melt the butter in a saucepan, stir in the flour smoothly, then add the milk, salt and peppea Stir this over the fire until it boils and let it cook for five minutes. Now put hi the onions, reheat them thoroughly and serve in a hot vege- table dish. Apple Pucker. Roll oyt your pie crust a little thick la than for a pie, line a granite or crockery basin with the crust, letting It fall over the sides of the basin to touch the table. Fill basin with sliced apples, sugar. pinch of salt; bits of butter, and cinnamon as for an apple pie. f put cinnamon through the mid- dle and again over the top of the apples. Then pull the paste up over the apples, letting' it pucker or come as it will, only don't let it meet. If there is too much paste cut' it out so there will be a hole in the center as large as the bottom of your lamp chimney. % Bake same Ms a pie. Do not use a large deep\ basin, but rather a shallow one. Potatoes Baked in Milk., Pare and cut in thin slices cross - Arise one dozen potatoes, slice two large onions and add about one-half parsley. Put the whole into a granite pudding dish and cover with milk, put- ting pieces of butter on top. Bake in a hot oven for one-half hour. • Salt and pepper should be added when served, as the milk is apt to curdle if it is added before cooking. This recipe is also good if canned tomatoes are used instead of milk EVERYTHING FAVJ11ALE SORRY HE DIDN'T MOVE TO WEST- ERN CANADA BEFORE. Mr. Austin was a man who hid never had any previous experience in farming, but Western Canada had al- lurements, anti he piolitt'd He got a by, rate certificate front a Canadian, Government agent, and then moved. What he says is interesting: \Rartfurly Alberta, Ma) 10-08. \.1. N. Grieve, Esqr., Spokane, Wash- ington.—Dear Sit : After a dozen or More years of unsuccessful eifort in the mercantile business in ‘Vestern Washington, in August, 1903, decided to come to Alberta with a gentleman who was shipping Iwo cars live stock to Edmonton. I assisted this man with the stock over .one hundred miles out in the Birch Lake Country, East of Edmonton. indeed, how sur- prised, bow favorably everythiug com- pared with my dream of what I want- ed te see in a new country. \Had never had any experience in farming, but I was immediately con- verted into a farmer. And from that moment I have prospered. Selecting a homestead near Birch Lake, I re- turned for wife and three small chil- dren and freighted out from Edmonton in March following year we shoveled a spot clear of snow and pitched our tent and commenced operations, at that time we had no neighbors. Four years have passed, the locality is well settled, two miles from railway sta- tion, with churches and schools, tele- phone and good road accommodations. \We are enjoying . the privileges granted to any rural district in Washington., The Birch Lake Coun- try is no exception, this great trans- formation is rapidly going on in every district in Western Canada. \I estimate that every quarter sec- tion in every direction is capable of producing a comfortable living for a family of ten forever. After paying for two horses and a cow, had just $10.00 to go on. Did my first plough- ing in my life. I was very awkward in my work, but nature was glad and I was abundantly paid for my efforts. Our cattle has increased to about fifty head, which was very profitable on ac- count of the abundance of forage. To farm was compelled to buy about four hundred dollars' worth of farm ma- chinery on time, and the payments fell due last fall, and you may wonder how I expected to pay for them when we had such a bad year. 'Twits a little bad for Western Canada or for a Mis- sourian. But is not 35 or 40 bushels oats a pretty good yield per acre in many States? Then the price of grain went out of sight, so when I had sold, my crop I found I was able to make my payments nicely, besides we had lots of feed. No one has any busi- ness raising cattle without growing grain, or vice versa. As to the winters, did not feed my cattle, excepting the calves, a fork of hay until in March. Have found the winters 'much more pleasant than we did in Western Wash- ington. This is strange and hard to explain, but 'Us true, nevertheless, at 40 degrees below zero we have more comfort than you would at 20 degrees above, .so still and dry—with bright, sunny days. My wife says that the only regret she has is that we did not come here ten years ago, as we would now certainly have been in a position to retire from hard work. Most wom- en soon become satisfied as neigh- bors begin to come round them. Have 98 acres in crop this year, besides two acres potatoes, which have always brought me a fair price. We find a ready market for everything we produce. To the Poor Man—Here is a chance to establish yourself. To the Rich Man—Here is a chance to•lyny land for $10.00 to $16.00 per acre which will produce more crops than a half dozen agree of your $60.00 to $75.00 per acre land. And if not very much mistaken, this year will prove an eye opener to those who are a little sceptical. The trouble with me is that I have so much to say so favorable to Alberta 'Us hard to be brief. Respectfully, (Signed) \P. S. AUSTIN.\ - Italian Meat Balls. One pound of hamburger steak, one cup bread crumbs. one-half cup grated cheese, two eggs beaten until light, one tablespoon chopped parsley, salt and. pepper; mix in balls size of an egg, then drop in soup stock, and boil ten minutes, and then add two beaten - eggs, one spoon grated cheese, and stlr In lastly for thickening; serve. Creamed Boiled Ham. The next time you have a boiled ' ham try cutting some of it in thin. small bits and creaming like dried beef. This is a (Bah our English cou- sins are fond of and with baked pota- toes makes an excellent luncheon. ' A neivsnaner contributor living in Chicago, has leceived word from London th:tt he has b aunte hetr to over $8,000 of the. Mrs. Martin callen estate. This is a reward nalila kindness to Mrs. Cellos after an acci- dent in Loudon In 11101. uncle gam has *pent somsthine, like $10,00o.000 prosecuting . the Standard Oil company. Silly Question. Him—Am I the first man you were. ever engaged to? Her—Don't insult me. You know perfectly well that I am 25 years old. Do I look like a lemon? _ $100 Reward, $100. The reader:1 of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at Meat one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages. and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive Cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beim a constitutional disease. requires a constitn- MOO treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure M taken tn- terriiity. acting directly upon the blood and mucous Airfares of the system. thereby destroying the fouculatkm of the dimmer., tkm1 giving the patient Strength by 1 ,, n ,, ee up the constitution and assist - log nature IT. stork. The proprietors bays ap much faun curative powers (list they ones 000 Hundred Iketi:..rs for any caw that it fails to mum fiend for list of testimonials Address F. .1. (7HENEYa CO. Toledo. 0 Sold by all Druggiets. The, Take Hairs Family Pins kir constipation. Man gives every reason for his con- duct save one; every excuse for his crime save one; every plea for his safety save one, and that.is cowardice. Red, Weal', Weary, Watery Eyes .Relleved by Murine Eye Remedy. Coin - pounded by Experienced Physicians. Con- forms to Pure Food and Drug Laws. Mu. rine Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain. Try Murine in Your Eyes. At Druggists. The hand can never execute anything higher than the heart can aspire.— Emerson. - - PILES MIRED lig 6 TO 14 DAYS. \AD) 01 WIIIIIIT guaranteed to rare as, cage of itching. Bern, lUstultag er_erekrittliglit Plies is g to II dare or meter returnee. sea _ Water from the River Styx should be fine for preparing mucilage. When you are convinced by an advertisement . that the article IpN% hat you NI kb insist on getting it. f — • THE CHILD'S SAVING INSTITUTE. 1 -is' Single Binder - - the limey - straight ac cigar/ always best cptalin Your ilealer or Factory, Peoria, Ill. And the pretty girl usually has plain sailing. • Engaged in the Noble 'Veva:on of Protecting and Saving Desti- tute and Helpfccs Children. The chief object of the work of the Child Saving Institute is to eavu and protect destitute and helpless chil- dren. For the most part it. is support- ed by the free gifts of philanthropic men arin women of Omaha. Such an institute could not long survive in a small community where the people are as a. rule unable to make largo contributions. Experience shows that charitable organizations of the manna tuie and effectiveness of the Chile Saving Institute can subsist only in large population centers, where, of couree, there is the greateut need or its Mild officer. In the absence of such organization in the small towns dependent children must be taken into the homes of benevolent 121t and women who thus assume the burden for the community and in some cases these good people can ill afford to do so. In every town and village there are examples of this Work ,of humann ty, so that everybody has come to know and to realize the absolute necessity for providing some system- atic means of caring for unfortunate children. This is why well-to-do people in the• country towns express a willingness to contribute to the sup- port of the Child Saving Institute which has from its origin receiveh destitute children from many places outside of Omaha. In every Case Of this kind the histitute not only re. lieved the local community of the burden of caring for such children. but it brought to the relief of the children a systematic, efficient means of protection and care as the result of much study anl experience—an ellen,- ment impossible to a small town. The officers of the Institute do not stop to inquire whether the people of any community have done their full duty by the dependent children re- commended for admission to the In- stitute; they are taken in and given' the best possible care, and later 'placed into good homes in this or some other community. It is purely a work of humanity, deserving of the • sympathy and support of every man and woman in the west. The board of ,trustees make an appeal to ben- evolent -minded men in the towns and villages of Nebraska for contributions In support of the Institute and to help erect a new building now contemplat- ed and which is a necessity to the ite creasing demands of the work. 54-40 or Fight. A new book by Emerson Hough, author of the Mississippi Bubble. Dedi- cated to President Roosevelt. Illus- trated by Arthur I. Keller. The Bobbs- Merrill company, Indianapolis; A real sensation has been sprung upon the reading public in the book bearing this curious title. If your memory of Tyler's and Polk's admin- istrations is fresh, you will recall \54- 40 or Fight\ was the ringing awl alliterative slogan of tht jingoes in the Oregon boundary dispute with England. It is the \inside\ history of this dispute, together with the diplo- matic intrigue connected with the an- nexation of Texas, that the author has turned to splendid romantic advan- tage. Cloth, ;1.50. While the February Century is to be a Lincoln centenary issue, and so given up mainly to Lincoln features, the number will offer also authorita- tive discussion of two important public questions: \The Menace of Aerial Warfare\ by Henry B. Hersey, United States weather bureau inspector, and \Dangers of the Emmanuel Move - men!' by the Rev. Dr. James M. Buck- ley, editor of the Christian Advocate. From the Jonesville Monitor. A \Yowls; Mother\ asks our opinion of \the alleged injurious effects of rocking on babies.\ We must frankly say ULat we consider it a brutal prac- tice. As the father of a great many babies, of all ages. we never rocked on any of them intentionally, and we would probably be arrested if we ex- pressed our full opinion of any woman who would presume to do so.—Febru- ary LippIncott's. If you are in need of old line life Insurance, or wish an agency to write life insurance, correspond with The Midwest Eire of Lincoln. The opinion is very general Gist sittlng on a young walla; knee will not be near as 'enjoyable, now that an Ohio judge has decided that it 14 entirely proper. A Denver man was boiled In the bath tub at a fashionable apartment house and there are those ernel enough to • that the story is mere :Id\ Lincoln Directory fl r,,v, ace going to lin v , tr STALLION 'ii' our pi , t, , ral 'be horse fres. ite.ntion !hp. 51:10511107 L. %El a