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About The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.) 1915-current | View This Issue
The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.), 05 Oct. 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075304/1915-10-05/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
EKES Nothing has ever equaled or compared with the medicinal fats in Sootra Emulsion to arrest the decline, invigorate the blood, strengthen the nervous system, aid the appe- tite and restore the courage of better health. Soote Emulsion is Pure health —build - Mg food, without alcohol or opiate. TRY IT \THE MELTING POT.\ Is One of the Greatest Moving Pic- tures Ever Produced. Walker Whiteside, one of the most wonderful and appealing dramatic ttr- tists of the present day, will appear at the Auditorium theater, Spokane, for one week starting October 3, in Israel Zangwell's greatest play, \The Melting Pot.\ This wonderful pro- duction, picturized by the Cort Film corporation, recently completed a long run in San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. It is claimed to be better than a sermon, is hill of wholesome thrills and the story is a gripping one. It is a picture that will interest students, teachers, ministers and business men alike. In this massive production is a representation of the great Kishinef massacre; also battle scenes, mob raids and cavalry charges. It would be difficult to drive home more forcefully than does this film the lesson of the evils of race preju- dice. David Quixano, a Young .1ewish student of the violin is left an orphan through the massacre of the Jews in Russia, under the direction of Baron Ravendal. Wounded, he seeks refuge in a synagogue, where he is arrested with others of his faith. Vera, the daughter of the baron, quarrels with him over his percution of the Jews, and finally slashes the picture of Alex- ander III before his eyes, whereupon she is sentenced to Siberia, but, by exchanging clothes with a Jewish woman ordered to America, she makes her escape to this country, where she becomes a social worker on the East Side. David has already fled to Amer- ica, and is playing in an East Side mu- sic hall. They meet, and love, and when Daviirs uncle with whom be lives, finds out the love, he turns him from his home. The baron, learning that his daughter is about to marry a Jew, hurries to this country. How- ever, he is unable to stem the tide of his daughter's love, and on the night —thee Davie- -proeleimed .iFt-uttmiletti ge- nius for his great composition, \The American Symphony,\ Vera promises to marry him. Others in the cast are Valentine Grant, Fletcher Harvey, Henry Berg- man, Julia Hurley, Harold Crane and Henry Leone. \The New Henrietta.\ ''The New Henrietta\ will be pre- sented in Spokane, at the Auditorium theater, on Monday evening October 18. The engagement is for one per- formance only. I. B. and Nat Harris, proprietors of the Golden Rule shoe store at Wash- tucna, and who have conducted a jewelry repair business also, will put in a stock of jewelry and enlarge their shoe business. IN STERLING' LIVES A GIRL Who Suffered As Many Girls Do—Tells How She Found Relief. sterling, Conn.—\I am a girl of 22 years and I used to faint away every month and was very weak. I was also bothered a lot with female weakness. I read your little book 'Wisdom for Wo- men,' and I saw how others had been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound, and decided to try it, and it has made me feel ike a new girl and I am now relieved of all these troubles. I hope all young girls will get relief as I have. I never felt better in my life.\—Mrs. JOHN TETREAULT, Box 116, Sterling, Conn. Massena, N.Y.—\! have taken Ly- dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I highly recommend it. If anyone wants to write to me I will gladly tell her about my case. I was certainly in a bad condition as my blood was all turn- ing to water. I had pimples on my face and a bad color, and for five years I had been troubled with suppression. The doctors called it 'Anemia and Exhaus- tion,' and said I was all run down, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound 'Drought me out an ngnt.' ' —Miss LAVISA MYRES, Box 74, Massena, N.Y. Young Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging -down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion,should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Ly- dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. SECOND TO KRUPP'S' British Arsenal at Woolwich Is Immense Plant. Munitions of War. Being Turned Out In Enormous Quantities to Supply Force's Engaged In France and Turkey. When \Good Queen Bess,\ in 1585, decided to establish a store of arms and armor at the old Tower house, a mansion in Woolwich Warren, adjoin- ing the then boggy and unhealthy marshes of Plumstead, she little thought that by. so doing she was founding Britain's greatest arsenal, which 330 years later would be giving employment to 30,000 men, earning more than $500,000 a week for making munitions of war for the greatest con- flict the world has ever seen. That small armory at the Tower house, however, was the origin of the Woolwich arsenal of today, which cov- ers 600 acres, and where guns of all dzes, every form of military wagon, shot, shell, torpedoes, cartridges, bul- lets, war signals, life-saving rockets, and high explosives are manufactured. Even in the bygone days, however, Woolwich figured largely in military history. It was Prince Rupert who protected the Warren with batteries In Charles II's reign, and other forti- fications, which have now disappeared, were added by that king's successor. The Dutch several times threatened the dockyards at Woolwich and at Chatam, while at the end of the sev- enteenth century two French priva- teers were captured off Woolwich. It is obvious that the secrets of the arsenal are most jealously guarded, particularly at the present time. In- deed, the government, since the war broke out, has adetted the precaution of recalling all text -books about the arsenal, although in peace times, when the average number of men employed there is about 14,000, visitors of Brit- iqh nationality, desirous of seeing 'he arsenal, may do so by obtaining an order from the war office. It might be mentioned, however, that among the most effective guns manufactured at Woolwich are the famous six-inch howitzers of which the French speak so highly, while one of the latest time -saving ideas is to dip military wagons bodily in huge tanks of paint and hang them up to Irv. WoolwiCh arsenal is really divliW into three great departments, called respectively the Royal Gun factories, the Royal Carriage department and the Royal laboratory. It is in the lat- ter that every kind of experiment is made with explosives, and where of- Jicere and soldiers learn their Atse-sad• effectiveness, while in the gun fac- tories, which are filled with machinery of the best and most modern kind, guns of all sizes are manufactured for the army and tested over the exten- sive practice ranges which were for- „nerly the Plumstead marshes. Apart from the actual workshops, there are various important military establishments at Woolwich. There Is the Artillery college, for instance, which gives special training to offi- cers of the Royal Artillery in order to fit them for appointments in the manufacturing departments of the arsenal. Then there is the Royal Military academy, the oldest military school in the - 'kingdom, where men destined for the Royal Artillery or Royal Engineers begin their training. The Royal dockyards at Woolwich was closed nearly fifty years ago, but It continues to be used as a military store depot, and it is interesting to note that it was the first, and for very long the principal, dockyard in the kingdom. The Great Harry was built there in 1562, the Royal George in 1751, the Galatea in 1859, and more than 200 other ships. And the curious may spend many an interesting hour in the Rotunda museum, which con- tains the finest collection of military antiquities and models in the world. BELT VAULT FOR THE BATHER Does Away With the Necessity of Leaving Jewelry and Other Valu- ables in a Locker. Made large enough so that it may be used to carry cigarettes and matches, or personal jewelry, includ- ing a man's -size watch, a water -tight Belt Vault for Batners and Fishers case fixed to a canvas belt that Resinol Stops Itching Instantly It is a positive fact that the moment resinol ointment touches any itching skin, the itching usually stops and healing begins. With the aid of resinol soap, it quickly clears away all trace of eczema, ringworm, pimples, blackheads, or similar torment- ing, unsightly erup- tion, leaving the skin clear and healthy. And the best of it is you need never hesitate to use resinol soap and resin - 01 ointment. There Is nothing ip them to injure the tenderest surface. Res- Inol is a doctor's prescription which for twenty years has been used by careful physicians for all kinds of skin affections. They prescribe resinol freely, confident that its soothing, healing action ,is brought about by medication so bland and gentle as to be suited to the most delicate or 'irri- tated skin—even of a tiny baby. Every druggist sells resinol soap and resinol ointment. MANY WAYS TO USE COFFEE Wise Housekeeper Will Not Allow Left -Over Material to Bs Thrown Away. If you have coffee left over from breakfast or dinner by no means al- low it to be thrown away, but see that It is saved from day to day and kept In a bottle, as it can be used in many different ways. One of the best ways of using coffee is in making coffee jelly. But there are other equally as nice. For instance, there is cof- fee souffle, the recipe for which I stumbled upon quite by accident not so long ago, and which I have used many times since, always with good success. Take a half cupful of milk, one and a half cupfuls of coffee, two- thirds of a cupful of sugar, one table- poonful of gelatin, a good pinch of salt and three eggs. First, soak the gelatin for an hour in cold water. Then, mix with the coffee, milk and half of the sugar. Heat in a double boiler. Beat the yolks, of the egg slightly, add what is left of the sugar and the salt and pour slowly into the coffee mixture. Cook until the mix- ture becomes thick and then add the whites of the eggs, beaten stiffly, and half a teaspoonful of vanilla. Beat the whole thoroughly and turn into a mold. Then there is another: Take seven lump of sugar, half a cupful of cot - lee, half a cupful cf Santa Cruz rum. Heat the coffee, mix the rum and sugar with it and allow it to stand un- til cold. You have made a most de- licious cordial, which may be served after dinner.—Exchange. CHICKEN INSPANISH STYLE Variation From N ACe‘epted Method Which Is Familiar to the,House. wives of America. N - It will be noticed that in Spanish cookery white onions, tomatoes and olive oil play a prominent part. Lit- tle butter is used for frying. If good olive oil is not obtainable they pre- fer a vegetable fat. This way of stewing a chicken is delicious and makes a pleasant varia- tion from any American style. Put one large cooking spoonful of olive oil in a frying pan; cook in it until tender one large peeled and sliced onion and one tomato (or half a cupful of canned ones), and half a banana. Pour this boiling hot over the chicken in a stew pan. To a four -pound bird add one and a quar- ter quarts of boiling water, one table- spoonful of salt and an eighth of a saltspoonful of white pepper. Wen the meat is done stir in the thicken- ing, cook and stir for two minutes and drop in one tablespoonful of minced parsley. You may require a little more salt and pepper; that is left to individual taste. Serve in a deep dish with the sauce poured around it. Sometimes half a cupful of rice is used (uncooked of course), then boileVin it for the last 20 minutes. In this case omit the thickening. Farmers in some parts of Oklahoma have such tall corn that they are ad- vertising for very tall men to help harvest the crop. Renew straps about the body has been de- vised for bathers. Its use precludes the theft of money or other things of value which otherwise would be left Stomach Bitters in a locker.—Popular Mechanics. • Your Health Back of all good health there must be perfect di- gestion, liver and bowel activity and pure blood. Vol, OA n twin Niai-ii-ina I bring about this condi- tion with ROSIE TIER'S DIED LIKE HEROES Two Companies Hold Position Five Days Without Relief. Only Handful of Wrecks Left of As. saulting Party With Mission to Capture Chapel—They Cap- tured it How two companies of French in. fantry took a chapel defended by Ger- man trenches and held their narrow strip of captured groand for five days under a continual fire tom German artillery is related in a letter pub- lished in the Figaro of recent date. The letter was written by the officer commanding the party, who was one of the handful who remained when they were at last relieved. The ap- palling gruesomeness of modern war- fare is told in thrilling phrases in this recital of a heroic act. Parts of the story have been elided by the French censor, but enough is left to give a graphic description. It is as follows: \There was much agitation upon the plateau. The order had been given to my major to take the chapel at all costs. My company had the honor of being designated as the attacking company, and I am sent to reconnoi- ter the point of departure. — 1 - he chasseurs who man the trenches from which weaare to leave look at us with interest, because we are going to give the final blow, and because* everyone is sure that the chapel has been mined and that the storming company will be blown up with it. \I give my last orders, then the whistle signal and we start off on the run For two hundred yards, a great distance in an attack of this kind. we run through shell holes at points deep as a man's height. We take three trenches that are not heavily defended. But by the time -we -arrive at the chapel half the company is down behind us, for we made the trip in the cross fire of three machine guns. \My sub -lieutenant, a cashier of the flank of France in times of peace, but a lion en the battlefield, at the head of ten men, jumps into the little trench that surrounds the chapel and drives out the German sections. We have taken the chapel, but it has been a he rd task; then my lieutenant signals to Captain X's company. Without an Instant's hesitation he leads his com- pany= behind - hififerthrough tured trenches. He joins me and is killed just as he shakes my hand. I take command of his company as well as mine, and throughout the night a savage struggle takes place. \The positions we occupy are in the form of a.apoon„the..c.nterod_treachea. form the handle and the chapel the large end. Through the trenches am- munition and food are sent to us, as we are being attacked on three sides. \The next day, seeing that they could not drive us out by assaulte and not having been able to blow us up, for the precaution had been taken to cut all electric wires which the shell explosions revealed, the Germans be- gan bombarding. All their artillery in that neighborhood was concentrated upon the small space we held, and I humbly pray to GNI that I may never again find myself in the midst of such a hell. \Huge shells burst among the liv- ing and the dead uninterruptedly; we breathed only a thick and nauseous vapor Everything was burning, every- thing was whistling all about The reinforcements that were sent in to me melted away and I was obliged to send again and again for More men to add to the handful of heroes whom I have the 13: - nor to command. \We coula no longer get supplies, and for more than twenty-four hours we had to go without food or drink. \What a sight! When, both day and night, hands and feet slip cease- lessly upon unnamable things which once were human bodies; when of these things one has before one the thickness of four men, one realizes how small one really is in the scheme of things, and it restores religious ideas to the most skeptical. For five days that continued, and for five days my colonel, who was watching the bombardment of the chapel, kept say- ing to his staff officers: 'How can you expect a company to hold out in that hell? It is not possible!' \But hold we did! We held until the moment when a huge twenty-one centimeter shell struck three yards away from me, tearing everything about me to a horrible mess and bury- ing me with five other soldiers. We dragged ourselves out, and finding that no one of us was wounded we took off our kepis and on our knees we thanked the Blessed Virgin for having saved us. \Shortly afterward we were relieved. And when I descended that slope to the plateau with the handful of men left from what had once been two full coMPanies we were all crying from fatigue and shattered nerves. ,\Some of us, with eyes sunk into our heads and contorted mouths, were chattering our teeth, without being able to stop. With our clothing torn and covered from head to foot with blood and brains we were horrible ob- jects to see. But the chapel was ours!” Post Office Cupid's Friend. Redding, Cal.—For the fifth time the lumbering town of Lamoine has lost Its postmistress by matrimony. It is a position that tuts always been filled by a woman. Sooner or later you willte Wrong in every organ Of your body. It is a well known fact that over 95% of all sicknesses are caused by ailments of the digestive organs. If you have the slighest suspicion that your stomach requires treatment, don't delay a moment. Little ills soon grow into serious ins. DR. PIERCES Golden Medical Discovery soon rights the wrong. It helps the stomach digest the food and manu- facture nourishing blood. It has a tonic effect and soon enables the stomach and heart to perform their functions in a natural, healthy manner, without any outside aid. As Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery contains neither alcohol nor narcotics there is no reaction. For over forty years it has stood the test of both use and abuse and is today the greatest remedy of its kind in the world. Begin now. Take it home today. Sold by Medicine Dealers in liquid or tablet form, or send 50c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for a trial box. For Sic you can get tbe Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages — clone bound — to pay coat of meaning. Write Dr.Y.BLI•ierce a nuttakern. The India Rubber World says: \It is estimated that there are 1,623,555 pleasure cars equipped with pneu- matic tires now in use in the United States; but as it is always wise to be conservative when venturing into statistics, we will call the number an even 1,600,000. Assuming that the average cost of properly tiring a car is $25 a wheel, or $100 for the car, we have an aggregate cost of tire equip- ment for pleasure cars of $160,000,000. But what this paragraph is particu- larly concerned with is that fifth tire which is not in use, but which is necessitated by the always impending puncture. Those 1,600,000 extra tires strapped to the side or to the back of the car as a sort of insurance policy against possible nails or broken glass cost the car owners $40,000,000 a year.\ Lloyds Register of Shipping for 1915-16 shows that, notwithstanding the extraordinary vessel losses of the past few months, the tonnage of the world in vessels of 100 tons and up- ward has actually increased from 49,- 017,627 tons in 1914 to 49,261,769 tons. Of this increase steamers alone have accounted for 122,113 tons, their total Your patent must be strong and valid. Do not delay. A strong patent may be worth a fortune. Patent obtained or fee refunded. No extra charge for drawings. Patents secured in any part of the World. Free search service. HERBERT E. SMITH Registered Attorney Spokane. Wash. S. N. U. 1915 No. 41 One evening the young minister, who had seemed rather attracted by \Big Sister\ Grace, was dining with the family. \Little Sister\ was talk- ing rapidly when the visitor was about to ask the blessing. Turning to the child, he said in a tone of mild reproof: \Laura I am going to ask grace.\ \Well it's about time,\ answered \Little Sister\ in an equally reprov- ing tone. \We've been expecting you to do it for a year, and she has, too.\ You Can Get Allen's Foot -Ease FREE Write Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., for a free sample of Allen's Foot Ease. It cures sweating, hot, swollen, aching feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A cer- tain cure for corns, ingrowing nails and bunions. All 'druggists sell R. Don't ac- cept any substitute. Ad Michigan ranks first among the states in producing salt. Four large plants now turn out 6,000,000 barrels annually. INCHLITIA FACTORY LOADED SMOKELESS POWDER SHOTGUN SHELLS Good shells in your gun mean a good bag in the field or a good score at the trap. Winchester ' , Leader\ and \Repeater\ Smokeless Powder Shells are good shells. Always sure-fire, always giving an even spread of shot and good penetration, their great superiority is testified to by sports - Inert who use Winchester Factory. Loaded - Shells in preference to any other make. ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM • tonnage having risen from 45,403,877 to 45,729,508. Sailing vessels show a decrease in number from 6,392 to 6,- 212 and in tonnage from 3,685,675 to 3,532,561. Another feature of the new issue of the shipping register is that the United States has assumed sec- ond place in the rank of tonnage of vessels owned, says Bradstreet& Production of pig iron for August aggregated 2,779,647 tons, or 89,666 tons a day, against 2,563,420 tons in July, or 82,691 tons a day. The out- put for August is the heaviest re- ported for any month since May of 1913, and it`le the largest on record for any August.. Only four other months than May, 1913, furnished larger outputs than that of August this year, the four months being De- cember, 1912, January, February and April, 1913. Production is at the rate of 33,500,000 tons a year, against 18,- 000,000 tons on January 1, according to Bradstreets. Marriage was the subject under ills- . cussion at the sewing party. \I could never understand the Bible reference to marriages in heaven,\ said Mrs. Jones, thoughtfully. \Why do you suppose there is no marrying nor giving in marriage there?\ \That's easy,\ said the sarcastic spinster. • \There probably isn't a man in the place.\ Oregon grocers and hotelkeepers have almost uniformly given favor- able replies to requests for co-opera- tion in the conduct of \canning clubs.\ The idea is to have members of the clubs, who are students in the public schools, prepare fruits and vegetables under a uniform process, and holding to a high standard, these products to be given preference by merchants and large consumers over canned goods shipped in from outside the state, thus boosting the \Made in Oregon\ slo- gan. Howard E. Burton, Assayer and Chem- ist, LeadvIlle Colorado. Specimen prices: Gold, Silver, Lead, $1.00; Gold, Silver, 7643; Gold, 60c; Zinc or Copper, $1.00. Mailing envelopes and full price list sent on appli- cation. control and Umpire work solicit- ed. Reference: Carbonate National Bank. According to a report of the Iowa State Dairy and Food Commission, just issued, the value of the egg pro- duction of that state for the year end- ing July 3, 1915, was slightly over $19,000,000. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and in. \ vigorate stomach, liver and bowels— -2 Sugar-coated tiny granules. 3A1.. \Some day we'll be telephoning through tjie air without wires.\ \Maybe. But won't it seem queer to have an operator call back to you and say: 'The air is busy now!'\ Washington Star. ••••••. ••••• You can't always make everything \just 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 tarn the pan around—none of these little uncertainties make the slightest difference in results if you use KG BAKING POWDER This modem, 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 open. Thee, 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 W14 not pleased in every way. 67 ///////////////1111111 1 1 111111111\\%%\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ •