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About The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.) 1915-current | View This Issue
The Mineral Independent (Superior, Mont.), 25 Nov. 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075304/1915-11-25/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
mem BEST PROOF THAT RESINOL HEALS ECZEMA In our file of reports, covering a period of twenty years, literally thou- sands of physicians tell how success- ful the Resinol treatment is for ecze- ma and similar skin troubles. The first uge of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap usually stops the itching and burning, and they soon clear away all trace of the eruption. No other treatment for the skin now before the public can show such a record of pro- fessional approval. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap work so gently and are so absolutely free from anything that could injure even the tenderest skin, that they are ideal for healing the skin troubles of infants and children. Sold by all druggists.-Adv. CENTURY MAGAZINE. Walter Hale, the artist, some of whose recent work has been appearing in The Century, will, it is announced, contribute to the December and Janu- ary numbers a series of personal im- pressions from the front entitled \Notes of an Artist Under Fire.\ The Century sent Mr. Hale to France in June with a commission to make,a se- ries of drawings and lithographs g4 ow- ing the German devastations in the val- ley of the Ilene and along the line north of Compiegne. Br -c Hale, whose reputation is perhaps greatest as an etcher, was given exceptional opportu nities while in France by the heads of the war office and the Minister of Foreign affairs. He was in Reims dur- ing the shelling Of the cathedral, June 27th, and in the trenches and various important battery positions throughout the valley of the Aisne. With Arnold' Bennett and Owen Johnson he was present at Arras during the heavy bom- bardment of the city on July 8th, while the Hotel de Ville was being shelled and the cathedral was on fire in three places. They were also at Blangy, where the French and German lines are only fifteen yards abart, and were the first civilians to be taken through the exposed trenches captured from the Germans on June 15th. Mr. Halo's pictures in The Century will, it is sta- ted, be accompanied by his own text. Magnet signs are the latest kind of window signs. They have movable letters, designed to enable the storekeeper to change the wording of a sign frequently. To the back of each letter is attached a small permanent magnet, so that the letter will stick on any piece of iron or steel. The background of the sign is a plain plate of, sheet iron, black or white, in contrast with the letters themselves. Writing the sign consists simply of putting the letters in the right place on the background; and there they will stay, held by mag- netism. In the same way any iron fixture in the store can be made to carry its sign in magnet letters. -Saturday Evening Post. When a horse is calked In deep snow', apply Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. It will quickly relieve. Adv. American smoked meats are re- ported to be achieving a wide popu- larity in France and England, as a re- sult of increased consumption during the war. In France our bacon has been christened \Larde American,\ which is but one step removed from \lord bacon.\ Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take Do not gripe. 10A.d. Live stock papers and experts gen- erally unite in the belief that the sup- ply of feeding cattle on the farms and anches will be light this winter. This is forecast of small supplies of cat- tle br the markets next spring. If your ltqrse goes lame, rub on and rub in thoroUglily Hanford's Balsam. Adv. Homely, but time is the slogan that featur the \pay \ week ob- servanc gradually coming into popu- lar' in many cities. \You 'pay me and I'll pay you; let's pay our debts and start anew.\ RHEUMATISM IS SLOW POISONING because the entire system becomes permeated with injurious acids. To relieve rheumatism Scoffs Emulsion is a double help; it is rich in blood -food; it imparts strength to the functions and sup- plies the very oil -food that rheu- matic conditions always need. Scott's Emulsion has helped Countless thousands when other remedies failed. No Akeliol. Refuse Substitutes. F. BOWNE 91..nONIF , FL. t.1 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. • .6 •••.4.,CHMall than - Smallpox. Army experience has demonstrated the almost miraculous effi- cacy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination. Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and your family. It is more vital than house insurance. _ d esk your physician, druggist. or rend for \ Rave YOU had Typhoid?\ telling of Typhoid Vaccine, results from we, sad danger from Typhoid Carriers. Mr CUTTER LABORATORY, BeitrarY, (Al.. escaucise rACCUICS • Issues tiaras a. s. sec UMW. - at S. N. U. 1916 No. 48 I MIN SUMMARY OF THE WORLD'S EVENTS IMPORTANT NEWS OF BOTH HEMI SPHERES BOILED DOWN TO LAST ANALYSIS. ARRANGED FOR BUSY READERS Brief Notes Covering Happenings In This Country and Abroad That Are of Legitimate Interest to All the People. Governor Harris of Georgia has signed bills from the legislature that will cause the state of Georgia to go dry May 1, 1916. William Dean Howells of New York Friday was awarded the gold medal by the National Institute of Arts and Letters for distinguished work in the writing of fiction. The cost to Switzerland to the end of October of guarding her neutrality w as $51 000,000. This figure is given in an official statement. The govern- ment proposes to raise $5,000,000 more annually from tobacco. Federal Judges Sanborn of Minneso- ta, Munger of Nebraska, and Elliott of South Dakota, who recently heard ar- guments on a case involvilfg the con- stitutionality of the new blue sky law of South Dakota, have filed an opin- ion holding the law was unconstitu- tional. Charles B. Munday ,vIce president of the La Salle Streeb Trust & Savings bank of Chicago, of which Wm. Lori mer 'teas president, was found guilty Monday of conspiring to wreck the in- stitution, and his punishment was fix- ed by a jury at five years' imprison- ment. The 12 federal reserve banks earned $221,954 during October, while their current expenses during that period were $134,017, according to a state- ment issued by the -federal reserve board. The earnings were about 5\ 000 greater than any previous month shown and the expenses were greater than those in September and August but less than those in July. Only one bank, St. Louis, failed to show an., ex- cess of earnings over expenses. SPORTING . ITEMS I Leach Cross defeated Johnny Har vey of New York in a 10 -round bout The annual Pacific coast amateur boxing tournament with the best box- ers of Seattle, Portland, San Francis- co and Los Angeles competing, was held last week at Los Angeles. In the first hell of the amateur han- dicap at the opening of the six -day bicycle races at Chicago, Friday night, Louis Kuehl was killed when he flew over the rail and tumbled 30 feet to the concrete floor below. Herman Hoffman, who was leading, started to slip and Kuehl swung high to avoid him, skidding over the rail. SATURDAY FOOTBALL GAMES. Syracuse held Dartmouth, 0 to 0. Another Harvard football machine crushed Yale, 41 to 0, surpaOsing all previous scoring records against the Ells. The \Big Nine\ football season end- ed with the championship honors di- vided by Illinois and Minnesota. Both Gophers and Illini came through the season' undefeated. With the field a sea of mud and a deluge of rain from start to finish, the Oregon university eleven outplayed the Oregon Agricultural college team, the score being 9 to 0. UTAH DEMANDED JUSTICE. Executed Hillstrom for alleged murder of J. G. Morrison and Son.. Salt Lake City, Utah. -Joseph Hill - storm was executed by shooting here Saturday for the murder of John G. Morrison, a grocer, and his son, Arl- ing, who were killed in Morrison's store, January 10, 1914. Hillstrom's case attracted wide attention, having been once reopened by the pardon board at the request of President Wil- son on behalf of the Swedish minister. Her Cattle Slain; Asks $100,000. Waukegan. -Secretary of Agricul- ture D. F. Houston and Gov. Dunne were among the officials named as de- fendants in a suit for $100,000 filed on Monday by Grace G. Durand and Scott S. Durand, whose herd of valuable Guernseys were killed because they were suspected of having foot and mouth disease. THE FIRST • THANKSGIVING By T. C. Harbaugh Long ago the Pilgrim Fathers In the forests cold and gray, With the tempests roaring 'round them, Kept the first Thanksgiving Day; Near their homes the war - whoop sounded, But they heeded not the cry, As they knelt with prayer and anthem 'Neath the dark and stormy shy. Fleeing far from foul oppres- sion, Unto Freedom's land they came, Where they raised their holy altars Burning with a sacred flame; And they taught their gentle children, 'Mid the dashing of the spray, To loving keep and beautiful, Every year, Thanksgiving Dry. In the dim aisles of the forest, Where the oaks their branches spread, The wild deer and the panthel Heard the words the Pil- grims said; And the hymns that floated skyward Echoed sweetly far away,* -Till the dusk, descending softly, Crowned the first Thanks- giving Day. They were stern, those grand old Pilgrims, Men who harked to Free- dom's call, And amid the snows of Plymouth Kept the Day beloved by all; in the bleak New England woodlands, Lit by Autumn's fleeting ray, To Columbia's chosen children There they gave Thanksgiving Day. We hold it sweet and holy stili From where the pine - trees grow To where the golden orange swings In lands devoid of snow; From the _rocks .if proud Atlantic, Where the tempest flings its spray, To the sun -kissed, mild Pacific Millions keep Thanksgiving Day. Blessings on the Pilgrim Fathers! . They who sought a home afar, And builded them an altar In the beams of Freedom's star; Let their memories be sacred, Though their graves are far away, For the legacy they left us Is our first Thanksgiving Day. (CopYright.) The simple idea that - makes the in- ventor successful is illustrated by a new vest pncket screwdriver capable of fitting screws of any size. It is nothing but a disk of metal about the size of a large coin. The edge of the disk is raft into the slot of ari;oraur like the blade of an ordinary screw- driver. One edge is thin, for small screws, and another is thick, with a graduated thickness between the two extremes for the purpose of having an edge that will fit any slot. A hole in the middle of the disk gives a chance to slip in a nail or Pocket knife, or anything else handy, to be used as a lever on tight screws. WHO SAW TURKEY? 4 . I.. Pea. pa It• *- A n t s kok i • \r-whip—tk A Thanksgiving (Re)Treat. ay. * * * First Thanksgiving Service. So far as is known, one of the first \Harvest Thanksgiving Services\ ever held _ta r modern times was that pro- vided for in an official document, en- titled \Form of Prayer and Thanksgiv- ing to Almighty God, to be used in all churches and chapels in England and Wales and in the town of Bethwick-on- Tweed on Sunday, the 17th day of Oe tober, 1847, being the day appointed for a general Thanksgiving to- Al- mighty God for the late Abundant Harvest, by Her Majesty's Special Command.\ With the exception of one in November, 1769, in gratitude for various successes on sea and land, Including the capture of Quebec, and for \an uncommonly plentiful Har- vest,\ this was probably the first serv- ice of the kind held in modern times. Cadences of Song. As the custom is among certain Amiga barviernan +be s as the sun goes down for each to call to the one above him, through his horn, \Praise ye the Lord,\ so across , this land, through its valleys and over its plains and up its mountainsides - everywhere ought to ring the note of praise to the declining sun of another year, and to the ever -rising sun of ns. tional greatness and destiny. QUEER OLD MAXIMS Instructions to Housewives That Were Considered Apt by Our Forefathers. H ERE are some, queer old marlins to housewives which are suitable to copy on dinner cards or to be read at the Thanksgiving dinner: \Good housewife in dairy that needs not to be told Deserveth her fee to be paid her in gold.\ \Keep kettles from knocks, set tubs ° out of sun For mending is costly and crackt is soon done.\ \Though scouring be needful, yet scouring too much Is pride without profit and robbeth thy hutch.\ \Three dishes well dressed and wel- come withal 130th pleaseth thy friend and becom- eth thy hall.\ \Save wing for a thresher when gan- der doth die, Save feathers of all things the softer to lie.\ 'See cattle well served without and within And all things at quiet ere supper bar gin.\ \Wife make thine own candle Spare penny to handle.\ \Provide for thy tallow ere frost Wm- eth in, And make thine own candle ere winter , begin.\ \Maids mustard seed ing too ripe And nrather lt\ - wvffr Ift -- efe - It a stripe, Then dress it and lay it in soller Up sweet, Lest foistness make it for table =- meet.\ gather, fore be. \Wife make us a dinner, spare flesh, neither corn Make wafers and cake for our sheep must be shorn.\ \Whmany do feed Save much they had need.\ \Buy new as is meet, Mark blanket and sheet.\ \Save feathers for guest, These other rob chest.\ -National Food Magazine. Quickly Popular In West. As the first new states of the West were quite generally settled from New England, the festival was perpetuated and .soon became a custom not only in these, but in oVier western states as they were formed. In the South there was no recognition of the custom un- til after 1858. In that year eight gov- ernors of southern states isued proc- lamations after the model of New Eng- land, calling upon their people to ob- serve the last Thursday in November ari_8 • _day Jur thanksgiving. But _the Civil war was at hand and the bitter- ness engendered in the long contro- versy over slavery caused many vio- lent opponents of the North to oppose the proclamations because of their in- troduction of a \Yankee custom.\ We Thank Thee. For flowers that bloom about 9ur feet; For tender grass, so fresh, so sweet; For song of bird and hum of bee; For all things fair we hear or see, Father in heaven, we thank thee! For blue of stream and blue of sky; For pleasant shades of branches high; For fragrant air and cooling breeze; For beauty of the blooming trees, Father in heaven, we thank thee! -Ralph Waldo Emerson. • King of Festivals. The king and high priest of all - festiVals was the autumn thanksgiving. When the apples were all gathered and the cider was all made and the yellow pumpkins were rolled in from many a hill in billows of gold and the corn was 1.usked and the labors of the season were done and the warm late days of Indian summer came in dreamy and calm and still, with just enough frost to crisp the ground of a morning, but with warm traces of be- nignant, sunny nours at noon, there came over the community a sort of genial repose of spirit, a sense of something accomplished and of a new golden mark made in advance, and the deacon began to say to the minister of a Sunday, \I suppose it's about time Tor the Thanksgiving proclamation.\ - Harriet Beecher Stowe's \Oldto- Walks.\ Ytia. '- ,AN GU . e.t . .er $ \ t ! \4111 %014121 4 -010 1.3 \/ 6• - Power behind the dough You may use an old favorite recipe and the best of materials and make IV carefully, the oven may be just right, yet you will have a failure if \The -Power behind the Dough\ is not the right one to leaven it property and make it light, digestible, wholesome. Good baking without good baking powder is out of the question. K C Baking Powder has wonderful leavening power, and the double action -'-in the bowl and in the oven -makes good results doubly certain. Take no chances of failure -use K C 6; - and have \good luck\ every time. At all Grocers. California Rice Crop. Approximately 34,350 acres were sown to rice in California in 1015, ac- cording to government - estimates. This is more than double the acreage of last year and is a remarkable in- crease in the three years since 1912, when the industry began in a modest way op abode soil near Bigger in the Sacramento valley. Since that time the United States department of agri- culture has been studying the prob- lems confronting California rice grow- ers and a new bulletin of the depart- ment, containing the results of the in- vestigation up to the present time, has just been published. At present the greater part of the California rice crop is grown on black abode soil, which is approximately 50 per cent clay and very close and com- pact. The Sacramento \silt loom, found over large areas in the eastern part of Colusa county is well adapted to the crop, which has also been suc- cessfully grown on the Willows clay and on the Almo clay -loom adobe. In general it may be said that rice re- quires a clay soil with an impervi- ous subsoil, lying in level tracts and capable of good drainage. Shallow soils are preferable because lea's water is needed to submerge them. In 1913 the average yield from the (1,000 acres in rice was 3,200 pounds an acre. In estimating the cost of pro- ducing rise, however, the government estimators hare taken as a basis • yield of 3,500 pounds. On this basis the average cost per acre is placed at $36.25. FREE UNTIL 1916. Have you subscribed yet for The Youth's Companion for 1916? Now is the time to do it, if you are not al- ready a subscriber, for you will get all the issues for the remaining weeks of 1915 free from the time your sub- scription with $2.00 is received. ' The fifty-two issues of 1916 will be crowded with good reading for young and old. Reading, that ia-s.ate.rtain , ing, but not \wishy-washy.' If you wish to know more of the brilliant list of contributors, from our ex -presidents down, who will write for the new volume in 1916, and if you wish to know something of the new stories for 1916, let us send you free the Forecast for 1916. Every new subscriber who sends $2.00 for 1916 will receive, in addition to this year's free issues, The Com- panion Home Calendar for 1916. The Youth's Companion, Boston, Mass. Want China in. Gieat, Britain, France and Itussia have united in an effort to add China to the entente alliance in order to preve4 poasible friction in the future between Japan and China and to pre- serve the peace of the far east. If China agrees to the plan military par- ticipation in the present war is not ex- pected. Alexander Greenleaf Jackson, a pil- lar of the colored church, was enter- taining at dinner the pastor and some of the prominent members. After grace, Alexander began to carve the chicken, and the pastor waxed face- tious. \Brudder Jackson,\ he asked smil- ingly, \do de white folks around you keep chickens?\ . Alexander pried loose the second wing. \No sah,\ he responded, \dey does not; but dey suttinly tries hahd enuff to.\ In treating wounds containing dirt, always wash them out with warm soft water and castile soap, drying before applying Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. Adv. Japan can send several hundred thousand of the very best equipped soldiers to Europe if the allies need them. For all external injuries to horses, cattle or sheep, apply Hanford's Bal- sam. You should always have it on hand for accidents. Adv. In 1914 the United States produced 290,312,535 barels petroleum. Bought and Paid For. The new Ern.mt Wilkes Stock com- pany opens its third week 'at the American theater, at Spokane, next week in George Broadhurst's famouS drama, \Bought and Paid For.\ The Wilkes company has set a high stand- ard presenting for the first time in stock in the Inland Empire high priced royalty tays which played the Audi- torium theater at top prices. Follow- ing \Bought and Paid For\ will come \Rebecca of Sunnybrooke Farm\ and \Stop Thief.\ The American theater is the fifth leased and operated in a chain of theaters by the Wilkes com- pany, the other houses being in San Francisco, Butte, Sacramento, and Salt Lake City. In the near future Mr. Wilkes expects to open theaters in Se- attle, Portland and other cities in the west. The Spokane company, according to many critical playgoers, is the strong- est stock aggregation ever to come to Spokane anti the plays offered assure the public of a good run for their money-. An investigation by the pure food department of Idaho on the sanitary condition of second-hand kegs used as containers for cider and syrups at soda fountains is liable to lead to a ruling brohibiting the use of second- hand kegs for such purposes. ,Refer- ring to this matter Commissioner White says that in his opinion this is one of the most unclean, if not filth- iest things connected with the bot- tling business. Nine out of 10 pool room men take these cider and syrup kegs when empty, he says, and throw them in the backyard where mice, rats, dogs and flies set up house- keeping. Some are taken into old, dirty, damp cellars or basements, where they are used by bugs, worms and ants as cemeteries. Others will set them in the rear of the store room or pool hall where the pool and bil- liartl'.plityers -sii-weif - as -- thiart0iferir - — amuse themselves spitting tobacco juice at the bung hole and throwing cigarette butts into them. Have Healthy, Strong, Beautiful Eyes Oculists and Physicians used Murillo Eye Remedy many years before it was offered as a Domestic Eye Medicine. 'Amine is Still Com- pounded by Our Physicians and guaranteed by them as a Reliable Relief for Eyes that Need Care. Try it In your Eyes and in Baby's Eyes— No Smarting—Just Eye Comfort. Buy kfurine of your Druggist —accept no Substitute, and if Interested write for Book of the Eye Free. MUKINE EVE itEDIEDY CO.. CHICAGO Little electric automobiles are now made to haul trucks round factory building a and grounds. One of these will haul a train of a dozen trucks hooked in a row, storage batteries on the automobile furnishing enough power for several miles of travel. It has been found practicable in some factories to make up a regular sched- ule of trips for the little automobile. At certain points trucks are unhooked and at other points trucks are con- nected to the train and delivered to some other part of the factory on the regular stop there. -Saturday Evening Post. Shake into Your Shoes Allen's Foot -Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting, sweat- nig feet. Makes new shoes easy. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. Don't ac- cept any substitute. Sample FREE. Ad- dress A. S. Olmeted, LeRoy, N. Y. Ad Charles had been instructed to clean the back yard, and when his father inspected it that night it was in per- fect condition. The following evening, however, it looked worse than ever. \How is this, son?\ asked his par- ent. \Yesterday you cleaned the yard finely, but today it is awful.\ \Gee whiz!, It aint my fault,\ ex- plained Charles indignantly. \I fired everything over the fence next door, but today that fresh kid that lives there fired 'em all back again and a, lot more besides.\ Hanford's' Balsam has been success- fully used since 1846. As a liniment for domestic animals it is unsur- passed. Adv. Easy street is only reached through the Avenue of 4 -lard Work. Nervous Emotional ,Dizzy Depressed Mrs. Addle Curfslager, of Cedar St., Cairo, Ill., wrote DoctoP Pierce as follows: send 31 cents for your 'Com- mon newe Medical Adviser' for my daughter who has recently married and I know the book will be of much value to her. I have read and used for 25 years the valuable treatments contained in the 'Medical Adviser' and have taken many bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and have been res tored to heal th each time I used it. It is a great remedy for women ass strength builder, fine for the nerves and general health.\ WOMEN who are restless, with constant change of position, \fidget- iness,\ who are abnormally excitable or who experience fainting or dizzy spells, or nervous headache and wakefulness are usually sufferers from the weaknesses of their sex. DR. PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription is the soothing, cordial and womanly tonic that brings about an invigorating calm to the nervous system. Overcomes the weakness and the draw- ifttilis resemote the pains of rheu- matism. Thousands of women in the past forty years can bear witness to its benefits. Your dealer in medicines sells it in liquid or sugar- coated tat let form; or you can send 60one-cent stumps for a trial box of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription tablets. Address Dr. V. H. Pierce, Invalids' Motel and Surgical Institute. Buffalo, N. Y. 1111111111111111:1111111111111111111111E1111111i11111111111111111111 Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets -Regulate and Invigorate Stomach, Liver aad Rowels, Sagu-Coated Tiny Granules. ummiminiumnimumuummiliwumiummiuni