{ title: 'The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.) 1915-current, July 30, 1915, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075304/1915-07-30/ed-1/seq-3.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075304/1915-07-30/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075304/1915-07-30/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86075304/1915-07-30/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.) 1915-current | View This Issue
The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.), 30 July 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075304/1915-07-30/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
WONDERFUL HOW RESINOL STOPS SKIN TORMENTS The soothing, healing medication in resinoj ointment and resinol soap penetrates the tiny pores of the skin, clears them of impurities and stops Itching instantly. Resinol positively and speedily heals ezcema, heat -rash, ringworm and similar eruptions, and clears away disfiguring pimples and blackheads when other treatments haveTheen almost useless. Resinol is not an experiment. It is a doctor's prescription which proved so wonderfully successful for skin troubles that it has beeh used by other doctors all over the country for twenty. years. Every druggist sells resinol ointment and resinol soap. Concerning Eggs. The following is of great importance to the retail grocer as welt as to the farmer. The retail grocers will do well to present the facts as given here be- low to every one of their customers who are in the poultry business. Fertile eggs cost the farmer $15,000,- 000 a year. Farmers lose $45,000,000 annually from bad methods of producing and handling eggs. One-third of this loss is preventable, because it is due to the partial hatching of fertile eggs which has been allowed to become warm enough to begin to incubate. The rooster makes the egg fertile. The fertile egg makes the blood ring. You can save $15,000,000 now lost from blood rings by keeping the male bird from your flock after the hatch- ing season is over. The rooster does not help the hens to lay. He merely fertilizes the germ of the egg. The fertile germ in hot weather quickly becomes a blood ring, which spoils the egg for food and mar- ket. Summer beat has the same effect on fertile eggs as the hen or incu- bator. Infertile eggs will not become blood rings. After the hatching season, cook, sell or pen your rooster. Your hens not running with a male bird will produce Infertile eggs—quality eggs that keep best and market best. Rules for handling eggs on the far. Heat is the great enemy of eggs, both fertile and infertile. Farmers are -urged to follow these simple rules, which cost nothing but time and thought and will add dollars to the poultry yard returns: 1. Keep the nests clean; provide one nest for every four hens. 2. Gather the eggs twice daily. 3. Keep the eggs in a cool, dry room or cellar. 4. 'Market the eggs at least twice a week. . 1 1. Sell, kill or confine all male birds arsoon as the hatching season is over. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and in- vigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated tiny granules. 3Ad. \I have here a handy article that sells- for -10 cents,\ -began the I er. \Don't want it,\ snapped the woman. \I didn't think you would buy it,\ said the caller as he turned to go. ''The lady across the street ffild me your husband never gave you any money.\ \She did, eh?\ exploded the woman. \Give me five of those things you are selling. My husband gives me more money in a day than that old cat gets in ri month.\ Suffered Everything Until Re- stored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- - ble Compound. Florence, So. Dakota.—\I used to be very sick every month with bearing down pains and backache, and had headache a good deal of the time and very little appetite. The pains were so bad that I used to sit right down on the floor and cry, be- cause it hurt me s and I could not do any work at those times. An old wo- man advised me to try Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound and I got a bottle. I felt better the next month so I took three more bottles of it and got well so I could work all the time. I hope every woman who suffers like I did will try Lydia E. pinkham's Vegetable Compound. \—Mrs. P. W.LANsszio, Box .8, Allyn, Wash. Why will women continue to suffer day in and day out or drag out a sickly, half- hearted existence, missing three -fourths of the joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? For thirty years it has been the stand- ard remedy for female ills, and has re - .stored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ail- ments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. It you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi- dential) Lynn, Maas. Your letter will he opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. IP. Ivan 1••• WV 5••• • ow.. mew, rLi us.s..r4 e:eere, attracts cad MU allfllea. Neat, clean, ornamental, conven- ient, cheap. Lasts all season. Slade o f metal, can't spill ortfp over; will not soil or Injure anything. Guaranteed effective. Sold by dealers, or 6 sent by express P. - paid for l. NA.ROLD 110INIR1. 1.55 D•Lalb •••., ltrooklyst, N. T. §. N. U. 1915 No. 31 LONDON WOMEN RIOT AGAINST GERMANS ' knetss, ocene in a London street during one of the recent anti -German riots. The vioman in custody of the two con- stables was one of a mob that had wrecked German shops. MEN AND SUPPLIES FOR AUSTRIA'S BATTLESHIPS • This photograph, taken at Pola, Austria's naval base in the Adriatic. shows boatloads of marines, supplies and ammunition being hurried aboard the battleships and transports. - — NEIGHBORS OBJECT TO THIS PET his is Max Gould of Patersan, N. J., anti his pet lioness cub Queenie, to which Max's neighbors have raised objection, appealing to the health board. Max says Queenie is as harmless as a kitten. HIS DAItY NONALCOHOLIC' GROG Russian soldier taking his daily \grog which is nonalcoholic Once the Issuance of the czar's decree azainst vodka. WENT TO CHINA TO MARRY Miss Ida Miller Taylor, daughter c: Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Taylor of New Rochelle, N. Y., recently journeyed to China to be married, and in the Pro Cathedral at Shanghai she became the wife of Rev. Francis J. M. qetter formerly of New York. For their hon- eymoon trip they went up the Yangtse river to Kuling, where they will spend the summer studying the Chinese lan- guage. In the autumn they will re- turn to Wuchang, where Mr. Cotter is in charge of St. Michael's church. An Easy Choice. Bishop Sanford Olmsted ° said at a dinner party: \The charge that the church is gov erned by mercenary motives is an insidious one. I think the charge was best answered by the prison chap- lain. \A chaplain was addressing a con gregation of prisoners, many of whom had given more than 'one proof that they were profiting by his visits. But there was a certain rough, brutal -look- ing fellow who always scoffed and sneered. And today this fellow, when the chaplain greeted him, said: \'No I don't want to shake hands with you, parson. You only preach for money.' \'Very good, my friend; have it so,' the chaplain answered. 'I preach for money. You steal for money. Let God choose between us.'\ As a$ sure - to rise You can't always make everything \lust so.\ Sometimes you will get In more shortening than usual; or make the batter a little thin; or it may not be convenient to put a cake in the oven the moment it is mixed; or your oven may not bake evenly and it is necessary to turn the pan around—none of these little uncertainties make the slightest difference in results if you use This modern, double -raise baking powder has unusual strength and is absolutely certain to raise your biscuits, cakes and pastry light and feathery. It generates an abundance of leavening gas both in the mix- ing bowl and in the oven. The, raising is sustained until the dough is cooked through. Housewives who use K C never have \bad luck\ with their baking. Try K C at our risk. Your grocer will refund your money if you are not pleased in every way. 57 1M1111.111111111\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ THIS CITY FARM combines the advantages of city -life with the pleas. ures of the farm. Strictly modern 7 -room house;large sitting room with fireplace, bookcases, etc. Splendid dining room, bed room and kitchen down stairs, Two bed rooms and bath room up stairs. Large porch, CITY WATER, furnace and other conveniences. Two acres In mixed fruits and garden. Three large chicken houses and six or more small ones. Only 11 miles from city; 10 minute car service This property is offered ate very low price. Ask for particulars. Write to Department 1 PliCENIX LUMBER COMPANY, Spokane,Wn. Bucking Mail Order Business. Coming, as it does, from the/mer- chandise man for a store in a Montana center of little more than 1,000 popu- lation, this article published in the Dry Goods Economist, in regard to bucking the mail order house competition, should appeal very strongly to a great many of our readers. It will be seen that the merchandise man who has contributed this interesting and sug- gestive statement takes an optimistic view 91 the retailer's opportunities for heading off mail order house competi- tion. And, in part at least, he sug- gests how this is to be done: There has been for some time, and is yet, grief among small-town mer- chants, owing to the large business done in their locality through the re- taiLmail...or der _ houses.--bieve- ise• the parcel post system has come and also the reduction in express rated throughout the United States. The question is: What is the main cause of this condition? I have been located with small-town merchants for some time and have made a careful investigation of this condition which, I know, exists, and I believe, and will say, that I know that in niney-nine cases out of a hundred the merchant himself is to blame. He has, if I may say it, fallen into a rut. He 1;as many dollars tied up with old merchandise which he cannot move, and will not buy any new goods because he has not sold his old stock; and besides, he argues, the mail order houses are doing the largest amount of business in his town and district— which he ought to have. In other words, his store is full to the doors with unsalable merchandise, and the people are tired of seeing it. With all the national advertising that is done through the magazines and newspapers the people are in- formed of the newest,\iip-to-date styl- ish wearing apparel, shoes, hats, etc. That is what they want, and they will have it because it is the newest thing out. And if their home town store has no such merchandise where are they going to get it? They look through the catalogs which the mail order house has so kindly sent them, pick what they want out, send a money order, and in a few days the newest styles are delivered to them. Even if it Costs a little more by parcel post, they will have it. Now, then, if Mr. Small Town Mer- chant will open his eyes and take a good look at his store and stock, put his old merchandise out at prices that will move it; if he will change the stock around should it be necessary— and I know that changes sell merchan- dise; if he will make attractive win- dow and ledge displays, and buy new, up-to-date, stylish merchandise, he will find the largest amount of his mail- order competition disappearing. It is only right that the merchant should have the business of his town and surrounding locality, 'and it is up to him to go after it right—and get it. Recently I have been watching the customers very closely while making purchases, and in many cases they say: \I can never get what I want in this store. They never have anything new. I might haver known better than to come here. I shall have to send to the mail order house for what I want.\ The result is that the merchant has probably lost a good customer for good and that every, day he is driving others away through these conditions, which I know to exist. , I know of one merchant who has a sizeable general merchandise store and also has the post office in his store, and it keeps him so busy writing out money orders for the mail order houses and receiving mail order' pack- ages for the people in his town that he has no time to wait on the little trade he has left, but which a fast gelttng away rom m. Now then, Mr. Merchant, it Is- Up to you to get busy and get what the tieo- ple want. They are tired of seeing old stock; it must be new, up to date and stylish—for this day and genera- tion. FARMERS, RENTERS HOMESEEKERS BE INDEPENDENT1 OWN YOUR - OWN FARM! Why pay rent? Why slave away to make a bare living on high-priced lands when you can buy the choicest farm land, in most any locality you desire in the Canadian Northwest, for one -twentieth of the purchase price down and privilege of 20 years to pay the balance? The Canadian Pacific Railway makes the buying of a farm far cheaper than paying rent. For Settlers' Rates and Information apply CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY CO. Land Branch 705 Sprague Ave. Spokane, Wash, The American Feed Manufacturers' association has organized a campaign for increasing the meat stpply of the United States. The seriousness of the situation is set forthyt the president of the association, G. A. Chapman, who says that within the last 15 years the number of beeves raised for market has declined nearly 50 per cent in pro portion to the market demand. At the close of the forenoon session of a ministerial conference in Phila- delphia, in announcing the opening subject for the afternoon, the presid- ing officer said: \Elder Jones will present a paper on 'The Devil.'\ Then he added earn- estly: \Please be prompt in attend- ance, for Brother Jones has a care- fully prepared paper, and is full of his subject.\ Come With Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery This is a blood cleanser and alterative that starts the liver and stomach into vigorous action. It thus assists the body to manufacture rich red blood which feeds the heart—nerves—brain and organs of the body. The organs in oil. You feel clean, strong an strenuous instead of tired, weak and faint. Nowadays you can obtain Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Tablets, as well as the liquid form from all medicine dealers, or trial box of tablets by mail, on receipt of 50c. Address V. M. Pi erce, M.D., Buffalo, N.Y. D. Pierce's Greet 1008 Page Illustrated Cowmen Sense Medical Adviser will be Mali FREE, CIrds Bowed for 31 Overcoat Stamm.