Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 49, Number 18, Jasper, Dubois County, 11 January 1907 — Page 3
(i
A,
our possession t. the iMtl weave of b.isket lo the world is disco verod "
tin work of (he Ainu
in
The American Woman in Alaska
Sv Mrs. A. W. Grccly W 'e of Famous Explorer Tells rf Her Experiences in the Far Nor-h A City Where It Is Nearly Always Raining The Gateway to the Klondike Hard.-h:ps Endured by Army Ofi cers' Wives and Other Women.
Hkagway. the te 1 minutiös of the in
land passa.-, ,is truhed mi BBJ in August.
SK.iifWuy resembles .IiiiH-.i in the character of Its roiiKh frar. loi'lilInKf. hut Innre ar fewer Indication!
..iikui win- .,(,, t-tone luildinx attracted our attention. We were particularly struck'wrh the eviIBSM of precaution iffttMl tire. of which there Is a Brent lMt4 in Ala kan town. There is an army post here ami the soldiers h.iv.- act.-d as tii.-m. Ii very efficiently In ln;.ny instances. We attended tin- fcplSOOps service, which was held in a Small room over a store in one of the rougfc hulldinits jMvnillar to Alaska. There were ahout 30 persons in the conicreKatlon. A small parlor StgSS Wat very well played by a Minneapolis woman, a tearher of music in the town, and the choir consisted of low persons. Such a wonderful trip as we had Of! the White pais! Skai:way and Dyea. situated on either arm of Lynn canal, unheard of In June, 1 hOT. wtown of some thousands of Inhabitants the following October. The) irS the gateways respectively of ti.e White pass and the Chilcoot BBSs, The only two convenient en'M-n to the Yukon country, the . pn -were made known to the world by tb misery resulting from the rush through them when (Old discoveries were first made In the Klondike region. As the White pass wa selected for the railway. Skagway steadily pniws,
uioAIED WITH DROPSY. Tha l -art Was Badly Afected When t.'a Patient Began Using Dean's Kidney Pitta,
ANIMALS THAT SHED TEARS.
Travelers' Observations Have Proved That Weeping Is Common.
Mr Dissents afaxwaj Fou.-h itreot. Olyapu,
without set in up, mv
tense BW heart ertloil
, Of 411 West Wt h. says:
over three
years I suffered v-ith a dropsical condition with cut beinR aware that it was due to kidney tn.u ble. The early stages were principally backache and bear ItiK down pain, but I went alone
worrying much until dropsy My feet and nnkles swelled hands i.uffed and became so
ild h:i' dly close them. I bad I to
difficulty in br:a'hing, and my would flutter with the hast ex1 could not walk far without
stopping apain nd again to rest. Since using four boxes of Doan's Kidney I'iils t!n Moating has ; me down and the feelings of distress have disappeared." B ild by ill dealers. 50 cents a box. Fost. r-MiIburn Ca, BttCal , N Y.
HE WANTED LIVE NEWS.
Correnpcrr'crit Had No Time to V; with Vice President.
ste
Tr.-nelers through the Syrian desert have seen horses weep from thlrat, a mule hits been seen to cry from the pain of i Injured foot and ramf.? It Is said. shl tears In streams. Bays a writer in Harper's Weekly A ccw sold by Its mistress who had tended young soko ape used to cry from vexation If Livingston didn't nurse I In his aims when it asked him to. Wounded apes have died crving. and apes have wept over their young slain by hunters. A chimpanzee train! to carry water Jugs broke one an fell a-rylng. which proved sorrow, though It wouldn't mend the Jug. Rat. discovering their young drowned, iave been moved to tears A giraffe which a huntsman's rifle had Injured iietan
cry when approached Sea lions
cf'en weep over the loss of their ycung. Gordon Cumming observed tears trickling down the face of a dying elephant. And aven an oranj; outang when deprived of Its mango was so veied that It took to wee;. in: There Is little doubt, therefore, that animals do cry from grief or weep from pain or annoyance.
When member of a fan lot of truth leaks out.
quarrel
pyrifht, Mali by Joseph H. bow lea) iM Henrietta N. Oreely. wife of On. A W Oreely. the distinguished arctic esplorei lias traveled widely and h a resuit '. her obsei aliens him written for publication wtth considerable success.) From the nation's capital to AlasV.a is a fir reach. Crossing the Allegheny's through the mining regions of Pennsylvania, so picturesque except where d laced by man's grimy pursuits: through busy Chicago; rushing over the wnBtSfB plains; across the RoektOI SB I we find ourselves on the erenlnf of the fifth day at Seattle, embarkias n the steamship Humboldt for the famous Inland passage. Here on the ship I am surprised to see how many women are traveling to Alaska Of course, the inland passage has been a favorite trip for
years or more, Dut tne large pro-
I'omon or women among tne excursionists, many of them In parties of two or three without escorts, indicates that conditions have materially Improved in this part of the world. In (act, the ease and comfort w'th " iv.l greatly astonish me.
We were fortunate In having perfpt weather through the three days if! I f..'ir rrirhts of the vo.vage from l " $ - way, Alaska. I deplore the Hxnth ! spaot which forbids my ' I ' m the surpasslncly lmnery. With the exception of occasional passing steamers and tili rarer collections; of rough build-
shores, usually salmon - saw little at human life third day. when we nassed
. - loaded with Initlaii !
In WW tastaoca they had rigged an I wllh a will, making her family of three topromptu and veryprlmitlve sail to 'uK men very romfortabie. their r ia ta which contained some The wife of a river captain, who 12 peri ias, men. women and children, was also the daughter of a clergyman. :' is. the larger proportion was "coming out " after having passed won, rem pning to work In the the winter with her husband in bis ' ' ' The only occupation fori boat tied up at the mouth of Stewart he na-, . - ! the catching, drying and river, which empties Into the Yukon
a new In about miles from Dawson. She
sevi'ial
Returning from Skagway we had a large number of passengers bringing their gold out. The terms "In" and "out" are used exclusively in regard to going into or returning from Alaska or the gold fields. The superintendent of one of the large mines was bringing do WSJ in four small wooden boxes and several little chamois bags $600.000 worth of bullion, the result of a single clean-up of the mine. He had two guards witi him. Kveryone carries a small chamois bag more or less full of nuggets. The habitues of the gold fields are marked by their nugget
jewelry, the men wearing watch chains of it and the women Indulging large! v in necklaces. There were a Sfllber of women "coming out." My attention was attracted, on the passage up, to a family disembarking at Juneau. The man. the proprietor of a shop, after two years alone In Juneau, was returning with his family. The little wife appeared very much dissatisfied with t!,e first view of her new home. I noted that It was the women of the middle class who seem to object most to life In these wilds. The poorer women accept the discomforts as pertaining to their life anywhere and the few women of the higher class who find themselves in .this country rise superior to the small daily trials of life in a new and unBonnes' community. The wife of an old army officer who surprised her son in Alaska b.. a visit found herself coniiK'Ilci to pass the winter in a log cabin 15 feet square, which was the best habitation her SOS. and his two partners In the gold fie!, is were able to offer her. She found the quarters i rather limited for four persons. bu she not only accepted the situation with equanimity, but went to work
Vice President Fairbanks stopped a newspaper man the other day, and good'&atttrcdry asked explanation of an Incident which happened years SfO On that occasion Mr. Fairbanks and the f.irresj.ondent were chatting pleasantly, when suddenly the latter moved away to ne et Senator Chandler cf Maine. The vice president said: "1 have always had gr: curiosity to krow why you deserted me that day." Th" newspaper man hesitated for a BMHttest, SBd then replied: To tell you the truth. Mr. Vice President, you arv a mighty dry source of news. You Bay have a n M fr n?w-?, but I doubt it ; at any rate, you never give u; unv. Now . when a newspaper mac 1 1 pmarHfl f,,r p BSwS he hasn't got time to stop and exchange small talk with a man. even if he be a senator, who would nd know the price of sea if he saw It. ' Mr Fairbanks stalk d. "I thank you for your frank t.es be said1 "I see I shall havo to cultivat. a r.ise for news."
Deflame Starch Si-tcen ounces for ten cents, all other brands c nta.a oniy 12 ovseSS for same money.
What ü Ye-ru-na? Is it a Catarrh Remedy, or a Tonic, or is it Both? Some people call Peruca a great tonic. Others refer to Ptruca is a great catarrk remedy. Which of these people are right ? Is H more proper to call Peruaa a catarrh remedy than to call it a tonic ? Our reply u, that Peruna is both a tonic and a catarrh remedy. Indeed, tbete can be do effectual catarrh remedy that is not also a tonic. In order to thoroughly relieve any case of catarrh, a remedy matt not ccly have a specific action on the mu.ous membranes aflected by the catarrh, but it must have a general tonic action on the nervous aystem. Catarrh, even in persona who are otherwise strong , is a weakened condition cf seme mucous membrane. There must be something to stimgthen the circulation, to give tone to the arteries, and to raise tae vital forces. Perhaps no vegetable remedy in the world has attracted so much attention from medical writera as HYDRASTIS CANADENSIS. The wonderful efficacy of this herb has been recognized many years, and is growing in its hold upon the medical profession When joined with CUBEBS and COPAIBA a trio of medical agents is formed la Peruna which constitutes a specific remedy for catarrh that in the present state of medical progress cannot be improved npon. This action, reinforced by such renowned tonics as COLLINSONIA CANADENSIS. CORYDALIS FORMOSA and CEDRON SEED, ought to make this compound an ideal remedy for catarrh in all its stages and locations in the body. From a theoretical standpoint, therefore, Peruna is beyond criticism The use of Perana. confirms this opinion. Numberless testimonials from every qnarter of the earth furnish ample evidence that this judgment is not over enthusiastic When practical experience confirms a well-grounded theory the result is a truth that cannot be shaken.
No rooncr d. s the average man discover that he- has made a mistake than he gets buy and maufacturea aa exj Unation. FI1. St. Vitus Dmce an-! nil Nervous Diseases permanently cured n r Khne' t.-iat Nerve Restorer nl tor W "J 00 trial I otrl.- and tre.it,-. Dr. K II Kline Ld., U31 Anh St.. Phil id bjklria fa
W daily influence each other for good or evil. Let us not be the occasion of misleading others by our ailBOS w hen we ought to speak. J. 1L Newman.
RHEUMATIS
CURED
Take Garlltld Tea. the .fatasra Lisaiv f..r con-Jiriatu n. mdiee-t ;on. liver
and bdnci derajasjeaseata, and eeMs, It is pads ol Herlm. Guaranteed under the Pure Peed Law. Acquiesce In the present without repining, remember the past with thankfulness, and meet the future hopefully and cheerfully, without fcr or suspicion.Dicgenea.
Mi
The Circulation Stimulated
end the Muscles and Joints lubricated by using Liivinveivt
Price 25c 50c 61.00 Sold by all Dealers
"Sloans Treatise On The Horsc'Sent Free
Address Dr. Earl S.Sloan.Boston.Mass.
W3
I
ALMOST A SOLID SCRE. 8kin Dnease from Birth Fortune Spent on Her Without Benefit Cured Her w th Cuticura. "I hav a cousin in Rockingham Co. who one had a skin disease from her birth until she was six years of age. Her father had spent a fortune on her to get her cured and none of the treatments did her any good. Old Dr. (I suggested that he try the Cuticura Ii. medies which he did. When he eosBasSMesj to use it the child was a! most a solid scab. He had used it about two months ar.d
That an article may be good as arell as - heap, and give entire satisfaction. Is proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch, each package containing one-third more Starch th n can be had of any ether brand for the same money. Kinsmen of Immortal George. Many kindred of Gecrge Washington dwell on and about the original Washington plantation In Westmoreland county. Virginia. The present occupant of the plantation is named George Washington.
iTTI
the salmon and Itlj needed.
It
hills the
lau I -
lean, u Ionian.
-n Ute third day we reach : ;-leita which 1 Douglas isI the great Tread well gold is remarkable thr tho trt.
' damp mill In the world should be found in this wild. An act of con- ' ids -rum aS the capital of f The ,nn 13 tia i I r on the side W hill so ateep that the houses seem '" ' hanging from it. Hack of this
narp range of higher thai form a barrier protecting
"n from the Immui in.
... aaa f 'he great mountains, which, rlas i-erpeiidleuiariv behind iral wall. i' rating the weather of .Tuis said that an old Indian 'H being askerl if It nlti'ova
- atin Juneau, after a moments itati :n. refilled: "Hi iiallm o
" -fc - I r l i - I " . nows it was raining as we entered . harbor, hut we were not Atta
' roll through the town. We Qfl SVkftd ntamti 11 .
- i-ur ".UhN ami s:iw Kfitne
art ist io little houea ul
I itl. an effort at an-hl-1 struck by the frequent ( CS of srosossrl hand in tho pot- . l nte in many windows, while
anq children whom
' ".n-eii ,,. by btnK " cms Would meet in
- ii town, a few
' filing curios
ewepuoa. The na.!;e
B o- , In'Kely discarded t ry:: Produce the
K i . l . ""on Aias
hf
frr,
IT' Ii'
MSBsSd a very superior woman and her experiences were most interesting. She told me that she had absolutely enjoyed the winter, although he had not seen a human beinK bit' her husband and the five employes of the boat throuuh the entire sea on. The captain and herself had read aloud to each other and plaved end-
loss games of piquet and other games. ThSf had walked regularly twice a day on land, although snowshoc were necessary. She had done a lai.-e amount of beautiful embroidery, nocesarily by lamplight, and had busied herself in the care of bouse plants. When she determined to pass the winter on Stewart river, finding a great demand for well made SYSSSSS In Dawson, this lady dlSBOeed Sf the greater part of her wardrolie at prices far beyond cost. On lo-r ret irn to Dawson in tho spring a luncheon wa given her by a number of friends, and being asked what special delicacy they could provide, she expressed a wish
for something fresh after season of canned goods.
melon was the result of the confer- : medicine. They are sure because
the child was well. I was there when they commenced to use your Cutlcura B I stayed that week and then returned home and pfa:ed two we- land th. n went back and tared with thesn two treeta longer, an ! when I Wi at hcrr.o I could hardlv
believe :.e wa- th s:.me child. Her - f :i vas as soft as a baby's without a car on lt. I have not seen her i In serentees yer.rs. but I have heard ' from hfr and the (SStttsSS I heard from I f ;he w as sreL Mrs v". P Ingle, IJurlingtoa. N C. June 16. i . . I, j French Pres ent s Double. M Paiilerei e ntll recently believed to be the only president of the French republic wi. Pad no double, but his OSVBterparl has he n found. The maa who BD t resembles him I'b- aily is a respectable merchant of the hue Saint II. ".ore. who plays his i art with !. ... :;-n nd dignity He Tears ssactl) tbe same kind cf blue butterfly necktiv with SrbttS dots as . Ike areeWeaL the suns kind sf hat and exactly so oddly cut S iard And on his proSMSasV I ba is always aclomi anied by a friend who could easily be taken for th residents private secfetary Digniried and with measured Steps the enviable doable walks ' throtiKli the fflSnbOOTl Saint Honore and fei !r OTSfJoysd at being saluted on all sid s
to tbt bt ' m'rt
Of oni-v Citt r Toledo, l I . .-rri i
FKtsi 1. Heir tiitkc
rrt: rr of tb tr n at 1 I uisir 6 C-.. a '.ug iiu:nm Id Um lltf of TahSB. iVioty (ud Sii r r4'4. and IBM Mid flrtu via pay the mm of "M. Ht'HOBKO tK-LI.Vll fur tvb ae4 ntrj . e "I UaTaaea tUa- ca&aot be curaj by Ue uw uf Hall'i CaTasaa Oesus. fbwkj encstrr wrin af es BM aod intwcr. rd .a ni) precuc. tii. :h .ajr uf Lit-ceaHxr. A. 1. i. . A-W.GLEA'oV. Soraar Pcaiac. II ( tarrh Cur Ii takes tnteroaJ'y led art! dl-f '.f i-a Dir M - 1 and M St arface uf ttie BfSMSL aead far leT:m nil.- fnef. F J i HLM.Y C . T .tdo, O. vld jr a'.t rtru:-oi TV 1 uc U.. 1 aui. jr Ftlll for coatttpatlus.
NO MORF-: THC SCIXN
Ml 'ST ARD PLASTERS TO BUSTER. FiC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER- RR.TANT.
CAPISICUM VASELINE EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT a ouick. sure:, safe and always RFADY cure for pain-frice 1 5c IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES AT ALL DRUGCITS AND T EALERS CR 2-Y. .M.AIL J-REEiPJMCF. 1!c ,N POSTAGE S'AMPS DON'T WAIT TILL THE PAIN Cu MLS- KEEP A TUBE HANDY. A subitituts for and supercr to mustard or any other plaster, ar.d will net t saSsf me n ost deucate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the artic-eare vcnderful. It w. J stop the toothache st eres, ar.d relieve Heaaacr-.s ana Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and ratest eiternal counter-irritant known, also aa an external remedy fcr pains In the chest and stomach ar.d s.l Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty corrpiair.ts. A trial will prove what we claim for it. and it Brill be found to be ir.valuak'e in the household ana fcr children. Once nsed no family will be without it. Many people say - it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation cf vase'.ine un ess the same carries our labe! as otherwise it is not renuine. SEND YOU K ADDKESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASELINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU. CHESEBROLGH MFG. CO. 17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY
We frequently fall Into errror anrt folly, not because the true principles of action arc not known, but because for the time they are not remembered.
GALL-STONE CURE. "Craemer's Calculus Cure'' . It i Cttm cmnr FO GALL TONES, ii the B rtnere. rnelntbt rinr r tr , r .rar . II. ,,, r .. , ,... Juillc end .l Tn .. -.,, 'iSSJe ""'- WHIr for rlr.-l.r S. (IIA an IH. 400 artb Umd Atlr. UT. I.UI 1, MO. (PILES no money till cured I M aaatafceliaMe DBS TBCBKTOW a HIWOn oaoOa 3t. kasbas Oty Ho. ;.,. r
lor Infants and Children
Safe. Sure and Speedy. No SStStnsI rSSW IjT SSSI yet devised hSS so fully and unquestionably met these three prim.- conditions as Snsessafsllf ar. nHSBCsYl Plasters. They are safe because they contain
her Ion? no SeleterlOM drucs and are manuA water faeturcd ail"ti scientific principles of
Bears L
w IMA'"
T UtlU COIl
In Use For
Over Thirty Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
THE CANADIAN WEST IS THE BEST WEST
S3
mm
ls t it a
r ml tor M imi
I MO H- rri I'RI'E i rTt-r; tub tet ctUer.
Some of the Advantages
II IfUI-KAT iHIIT. MW Ton fc ITT.
we
quite like any small
Indian women
Binottf which bas-
In baskets
l,,K
lti un L' ri r
" iui( K PI
elert
In a
ketrv
for
:rav
most readable
nttlcle
Y'Z r,f he northwest. Mrs L i?S tel., V
on ban
litt I. ' " .2" ,,s ht "in
0H w,.,.: of A. the
, ii!P Aleutian ,.anHw
remote and Isolated of
ol the most
-n-e, which later th- was startled to lentn had cost $7.r0. This waa not so bad. however, as $2.1 hrol BBSS ;..iil in Dawson for a single mvlon. The ever fSlSlllISS servant question
Ih tiai.r illy more acute In .Mask;: than 1 sew here. Wages vary with one's abi'lty to pay. The wife of an IfOsf ifflct. stationed at Fort Hflnil. who b.i-l brOttght In a Japanese coik. under contract at $73 a month, was fieree1 to part with him at the end of a few wi cks, as he was offered $123 a MOatS. tile wives of the offlcei. at Skustv i wer doing their own work havinK also lost for higher wages the servant they had bnuixht to Alaska with theni. Iltit no hardship 81 difficulties seem to deter the Amerir.iii woman, particularly of the army, from what seems to be her place nn-l duty. There Is scarcely a camp In Alaska, however remote or unpromising, th . Is not graced by the presence f re fined SfSSnee
nothing rM ' into th- m except ItiKre-
dlents which are exactly adapted to the purpost I for wbich a plaster is required They are speedy in their action b cause their medicinal qualities go ripht to their work of relieving pain and restoring the natural and healthy performance of the functions of muscles, DirvSS and skin. Allcock's Planters an- the original and genuine porous plasters and like most meritorious arti l I have been extensively imitated, therefore always make sure and get the genuine.
Restored by American Money. Charlton, the ancestral home of tho earl of Suffolk. Is once more tbe scene of glories of the olden time since the marriage of the earl and Miss Daisy Ieiter. It is a fine Jacobean mansion of dark sandstone. ".Ith mullioned windows and carve 1 stone portals, and contains many treasures of art, lnclud ing the family portraits.
SICK HEADACHE
nf the H'untri th r rrai h - r rburrh, . market, rhr- fui-i od eeiy oi-oeia - V MILLION Hl-tl M. WI1KAT HOP bit ymr Dif-ant Br ur.itw ! ibr rm r of lern l nd. apart Iron -.be rvtulu ul oibee i and eaiila.
Ki t .1t,r and informaiM.n i,iiim ihr - I rru.
I N r KN IKNT i I M Vll. KATX i.N'. Ottawa. l aCkda.
Sr.
CARTER'S
Tat oiu
to vi it l oi n . oi: iat
i i.A.VATiVK BnuMuQa a ae ta e-
Positlvelr COied by these Little Pills. They aso reUrre Dtatrres from Pyrpcpeta. IndlfFstloa sad Too Hearty KaUrg. A perfect rcn edr for Dtzdness, Nausea, Prowslness, Had Taste in tie- atTUth. Oati-d ToBgoe. rain In Ute side. T üi'lD Livrit. Tbear
regolate tbo Bowrta. Purely VegetaBsa. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
f
ITTLC IVER PILLS.
t arif anth'-r i, J. S. CRAWFORD
Kaatat City. Mittowi
teasi 430, Qau-cy BaJd.af , CLcago, HI meii.
No. 125 W. Niartb Street,
or I. J. bHUi (.11 IUN.
Many a man who prays for rain r.otild doubtless stral his neighbor'! un.brella if his prajcrs were auswered. I-wi' Single Binder ( isrir ha rirA tate V iur dealer or Lew' Factory, IV. r.a. 1U.
CARTERS
WITTLE I IVER PILLS.
Genume Must Bear Fac-Simila Sig'iUii5 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
cores F-enir)arim hy tthinr th. -ie .rid thoronehle out of lb. lern, that removingIbe Cue. r f itr rfiee Ii ive rnmplete relief wilhoni mint r to heart Of tromarh
Tmrtmrlltf'-.m
ltanre toil . i I nm-.rir. i.l.
1 It I I
H H lL: n'Mr kwtlrl mm IWcarr llkiTiiUn r I mm ,..t.
l-IMuit lotliwnnLi.alMinti a
loir .lim for Ihr t urlnr I It hi ate t n i
N. thing hurts bcitit; ignored.
a cunct-ited man like
P une men can't even do their dutj without making a fuss about It.
DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch
makt-s laucur; work u piCasura
Mos. pa, iuu
If iffl'itld wllh I . aj u, BM I
A. N. K. B
Thompon $ Eye Water (19072) 2 60.
B cause of those uajly, sjrlxxly, ray halre. Use LA CREOLE ' HAIR RESTORER. Prloe, tl.OO, retell.
