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About The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.) 1915-current | View This Issue
The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.), 26 Oct. 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075304/1915-10-26/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Cut the Cost of Living! A plate of hot biscuits or muffins, a fresh, home -baked cake, a loaf of brown or nut-bread, rescues any meal from. the commonplace, and more expensive things are never missed. With K C, the double acting baking powder, good results are doubly certain. There's economy too, in the cost of K C. Mil ars URIC ACID NEVER CAUSED RHEUMATISM CWANT to prove it to your satisfacean. If you have Rheumatism. acute or chronic—no matter what your condition—write today for my FREE BOOK on - RHEUMATISM—Its Cause and Cure.\ Thousands call it \Fhe most wonderful book ever written.\ Don't send a stamp—it's ABSOLUTE- LY FREE. JESSE,A. CASE, Dept. 896, Brockton, Mass. Higher Crowns in Women's Hats. Variety is the keynote in the mil- linery situation and the new hats for fall are entirely different from those of last season. High styles are com- ing in very strongly and it is in these effects that perhaps the most notable changes are made, says Drygoodsman. The high Russian styles are the fore- most sellers in turban effects and the wide fur Russian brim is one of the outstanding fashions. Sometimes the brikp is made of an- other material than fur and when this is the case the crown is usually made of fur. The familiar poke shapes are considerably higher than they were last season and so much is this the case that it seems difficult to recog- nize the poke. They were frequently resemble turbans. There are a number of high draped effects among the new hats, the height being secured by the draping of rib- bons or feathers. The new derby shape with a very high crown is a strikingly good num- ber. Velvet trimming maintains its place in the lead whether in panne or regu- lar velvet. Beaver trimming is coming into pop- * ularity and is one of the leading furs for millinery purposes. Velours are also frequently em- ployed as millinery trimmings. There is a great vogue on at the present time for fur birds, sometimes made entirely flat so that they can be appliqued on the hat. Beaded novelties are also very large- ly employed. The smartest floral trimmings in velvet, silk or metal are frequently appliqued with color or metal beads or embroidery. P , t.of ribhons_are used. as millinery trimmings and sometimes entire hats are made of ribbons. Ostrich trimmings are becoming stronger as the season advances. Why Sweet Potatoes Are Sweet. In the beginning what we call sweet potatoes are really not very sweet. During their growth the roots contain only a little more sugar than other varieties of potatoes and the reserve materials from the vines are deposited almost wholly in the form of starch. But immediately after the potatoes reach their full growth and are har- vested the starch in them begins to be rapidly transformed into different kinds of sugar. This transformation at first seems to be due to internal causes, one of ARE YOU SICKLY? COMPLETELY DISCOURAGED? IS THE APPETITE GONE? IS THE DIGESTION POOR? ARE YOU RUN DOWN? YOU SHOULD TRY HOSTETT(R'S STOMACH BITTERS AT ONCE. IT REALLY HELPS sa which is very probably the sudden ces- sation of the flow of materials from the vines. Even when potatoes are kept at as high a temperature as 86 degrees, sugar continues during this initial period to accumulate in excess of the quantity used by the tubers in respiration. When stored in the average cellar, where the temperature is from 53 to 62 degrees, there is a gradual disap- pearance of starch during the first of the season. From October, which is the usual harvesting time, potatoes stored at this temperature grow sweet- er and sweeter until about March, when starch begins to form again and the sugar to disappear. This process continues until June, when decay be- gins to set in. In sweet potatoes kept in cold stor- age, science has discovered that there is a much more rapid disappearance of starch and an accompanying in- crease in sugar. Whether the tem- perature is high or low,' the starch in sweet potatoes is steadily converted into sane sugar for the first five or six months after they are harvested, and it is upon this change that their sweetness depends. At first thought it may seem hardly worth while for scientists to take such pains to ascertain just why sweet po- tatoes are sweet and just when they are sweetest, but, as a matter of fact, it is one of the greatest importance. The more we know about the chemical and other changes which take place in our fruits and vegetables after they are harvested the better we shall know how to store them so as to lose the least possible amount of their appe- tizing and nourishing qualities. DON'T WORRY ABOUT THAT ITCHING RASH Don't worry any more about that itching skin -trouble. Just spread a little resinol ointment over the sick skin and the itching disappears as if you had simply wiped it away! And—even more important — this soothing, healing ointment gets right to the source of the trouble and rarely fails to clear away every trace of the unsightly, tormenting eruption. Doctors have prescribed resinol oliatment for_over twenty years ,_and thousands owe - Weir clear, healthy skins to its use. It contains nothing that could injure or irritate the ten- derest skin. Sold by all druggists. Land Taken by Homesteaders. More than 11,200,00e cares of land were eliminated from the public no - main during the past fiscal year by homestead and other entries and sales to individuals, the annual re - Port of Commissioner Tallman of the general land office shows. There are still, however, open now or will be 279,544,404 acres, \unappropriated and unreserved, of which 172,987,912 acres are surveyed and the rest unsur- veyed.\ All this is in the 25 public land states, and in addition to this enor- mous area there are approximately 300,000,000 acres in Alaska which will be available to American citizens. Nevada is shown to have the most public lands, 55,417,746 acres, of which almost 30,000,000 acres are al- ready surveyed, and Missouri, with only 923 acres, reports the least pub- lic land. Michigan has 76,030 acres subject to entry. Kansas 75,214 acres; North Dakota 493,667 acres, and South Dakota 2,680,828 acres surveyed and 53,781 unsurveyed. The total of all public lands re- maining in the other states embrace: Alabama, 47,940; Arizona, 36,810,327; Arkansas, 278,133; California, 20,- 635,923; Colorado, 17,236,114; Flori- da, 268,844; Idaho, 16,212,273; Louisi- ana, 101,016; Michigan, 76,030; Min- nesota, 943,831; Mississippi, 36,882; Montana, 19,065,121; Nebraska, 192,- 358; New Mexico, 27,788,357; Okla- homa, 42,177, Oregon, 15,442,178, Utah, 33,363,837; Washington, 1,144,- 605; Wisconsin, 6,758; Wyoming, 30,- 929,969. , Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated tiny granules, easy to take as candy. 6Ad. According to a recent census, the population of New York city has reached 5,000,000—an increase in the past five years of about 300,000. e* c ilervousWornen Are trouliled with the \blues\—anxiety—sleeplessness—and warnings of pain and distress are sent by the nerves like flying messengers throughout body and limbs. Such feeling may or may not be accompanied by backache or headache or bearing down. The local disorders and inflammation, if there Is any, should be treated with Dr Pierce's Lotion Tablets. Then the nervous system and the entire womanly make-up feels the tonic effect of 'DR PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription Take this In liauld or tablet form and be a welfwomen1 con- dition for several years. Scffered from nervousness and a great deal of pain at certain Mrs. Eva Tyler of So. Geneva St., Ithaca, N. Y., says, \I have been in a run-down periods. Have taken several different medicines but found your 'Favorite Prescription' has given the most relief of any- thing I have ever tried. Am very much better than I have been in some time. I gladly recommend this remedy to any woman in need of atonic.\ Writs Dr. V. M. Pierce, Mtge, N. Y. regulate stomach, liver, bowels D. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets viresomes. Ameeenessossolsomireee Motherhood In Girlhood Womanhood RUINED RUSSIAN g i fFENSES AT- JAROSLAU ..1 an ehort to check the Germans, the Russian forces intrenched tnems elves in what they believed was an Impregnable position just behind Jaroslau, a fortified city in Galicia. The Germans forced their positions, however, and compelled' the Russians to flee before them. In the upper photograph a group of German soldiers are seen ap- proaching the scene of death wrought by their guns in driving out the Russians, while on the .lower photograph two German officers are seen contemplating the havoc wrought by the forces in their successful forward movement. GALICIAN JEWS RETURNING TO THEIR HOMES , In the rear of the German army which triumphantly m its entry into Galicia and Russia were thousands of Jewish refugees who had fled from their homes before the diers of the, czar. Believing that they would be permitted to enjoy privileges under the Germans which w e denied them under the rule of the czar, the Jews looked upon the triumph of the German forces as another of the blessings heaped upon the \Children of Israel.\ NAVAL HONORS FOR TWO KILLED IN HAITI Boston accorded naval honors to William Gompers of Brooklyn, N. Y., a nephew of Samuel Gompers, the president of the American Federation of Labor, and Carson Whitehurst of Norfolk, Va., both members of the crew of the II. S. S. Washington who were killed July 29, when some Haitian rebels resisted the landing of the American sailors at Port-au-Prince. The picture shows sailors firing a volley over the flag -draped coffins on the pier at Charlestown navy yard, Boston. WHISTLING BURGLAR CAUGHT Bandit Who Went About His Work Quite Merrily Now In Redding, Cal.—John Hooper was ar- rested at The Dallas, Ore., charged with being the \whistling burglar\ 'who compelled Gordon Jacobs. mans- ger of the wail company store at Hornbrook. Cai., sear here, to march from his home to the store, open the safe and permit the robber to take with him cash and gold dust to the amount of $700 and on his way out of town with the loot the robber whistled merrily and aroused no suspicion. The robbery was committed on June 23. Hooper, according to the police at The Dells., was paroled from Folsom penitentiary last year. HEAVY ITALIAN ARTILLERY Toe Italians, having found the Aus- trian frontier well fortified, are now making use there of their heaviest ar- tillery. One of the big guns is here shown. \DEAD\ MAN WALKS TO COURT Identification In Chicago May Be Only Mak of the \Heathen Chinee.\ Ohleago.—As the jury was completed to try Harry Eng Hong, charged with the murder of Mock Chung in a Chi- nese gambling house in 1911i, an Ori- ental walked into Judge Barrett's room in the criminal court building and announced that he was Mock Chung. His announcement caused a sensation. The attorney for the defendant told the court that the man who was killed was Jung Long and a marriage li- cense also would be introduced la awl - C. _ _ t)'n rtrndlOA 111111.- dered man is among the living. According to Assistant State's At- torney John O'Brien the state MIMI to prove that Mock Chung was redly murdered and that the man who ap- peared In court possesses the mane name as the dead man. ) 11roothial Coughs The prostrating cough tears down your strength. The dogged air -tubes directly af- fect your lungs and speedily lead to pleurisy, pneumonia, consumption. scorrs EMULSION overcomes bronchitis in an easy, natural way. Its curative OIL -FOOD soothes the Inflamed membranes, relieves the cold that causes the trouble, and every drop helps to strengthen your lungs. All Druggists Raw It 14-14 REFUSE SUBS T7TU7ES Su & BC_ NE. New Semi -Indirect Lighting. One of the important questions every retail merchant asks when re- modeling or building is what kind of a lighting system shall he install— because a well lighted store means a great deal to the merchant, and the tendency today is to get a light that is as near daylight as possible, which means that the lighting system must do away with the glare which was so common when direct lighting was used, says Drygoodsman. Manufacturers and illuminating en- gineers have devised many kinds of equipment, among which the indirect and semi -indirect lighting fixtures have taken first rank. One of the latest lighting fixtures is of the semi -indirect type and pos- sesses features worth while studying. It has an inverted bowl, which holds the lamp, this being a diffusing bowl. The light filters through, but is softened. Directly above this bowl is a larger flat shaped bowl used as a reflector of the same diffusing ma- terial, and because of these two bowls being alike, the light radiating from them is white and soft. Another thing, ceiling conditions do not bother, as the light comes through the top reflector, thus light- ing above as well as below. These lights are very easy to keep clean and will illuminate perfectly 800 square feet of floor space at an aver- age cost of 2 1 / 2 cents per hour. The principle of this system is this: Inverted bowls and containers are used, and the upper is brought into play, but some of the light is allowed to filter through upon the room, be- cause a translucent instead of a metal or opaque, glass material is used at top and bottom. Thus the upper portion of the room is lighted just as well as with indi- rect lighting, while in the lower por- tion of the room the gloom observed In indirect lighting is dispelled by the soft, white rays that filter through the translucent container. A perfect, equal distribution of light is secured, the good features of both the direct and the indirect sys- ien — irieTiii errfpTo - yed with none d! their evils. MRS, THOMSON TELLS WOMEN How She Was Helped During Change of Life by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Philadelphia, Pa.—\I am just 52 year of age and during Change of Life I suf- fered for six years terribly. I tried sev- eral doctors but none seemed to give me any relief. Every month the pains were intense in both sides, and made me so weak that I had to go to bed. At last a friend recommen- ded Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound to me and I tried it at once and found much relief. After that I had no pains at all and could do my ho use work and shopping the same as always. For years I have praised Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetahle Com- pound for what it has done for me, and shall always recommend it as a wo- man's friend. You are at liberty to use my letter in any way.' '—Mrs. 649 W. Russell St, Philadelphia, Pa. Change of Life is one of the most critical periods of a woman's existence. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to carry women so successfully through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkbam'a Vegetable Compound. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pink ham Med- icine Co. ( confidential ), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence, TYPHOID is no more necessary than Smellpox.:Srmy experience has demonstrated the almost miraculous effb tacy, and harmlessness, of AntItyphold Vacchsatkirs. Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and your family. It is more vital than house insurance. ,Ask your physician, druggist s or seed for \Have ytiha1 Typhoid?\ toning of TY, bia id Vaccine, tesults from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers. 011TER LABORATORY, BRIRIELLT. CAL 11 , 110•11CJA• • WWII C. S. SOT, UCtISSIII Your patent must be strong and valid. DO not Maly, al strong patent maY be worth a fortune. Patent obtained or fee refanded. No extra charge for drawinga Patents secured in any part ef the World. Free search Bomb's. HILMIIIIIRT S. SMITH Pto.l.red Alitornsy pekea., Wank. S. N. U. 1916 No. 44 4-,