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'trwm+ivm.f* vm I*? •f 1 f, S|. •Hf. 14. 3» ft *.r &v- .t h* #, I vi i'f V! I if •ii PAGE TWO J. W. Foley in The Bismarck Tri l»une: The state chemist is publish ing a list of impure foods that are on sale in the state, making several col umns. What, ho! Have you read the poor food list Subscribed and sworn by the state chemist. There's analine In the soup tureen And borax thick on the gay sardine. Ob. never a food should you dare to eat But you've checked it off on the poor food sheet. For the poor-food tract And the pure-food act Will keep your di-ges-tion intact. Pray cut it out and paste it up Where you may read as you dine or sup. Then when they pass The meat or sass Tou can se\ if it's down in the poor food class. There's saccharine in the jelly sweet. Formaldehyde in the potted meat, From what I've seen And read. I ween They paint canned peas to keep them green. Oh, Man. self-proud, your roast and stew The animals don't envy you. For note the ass. He eats his grass And knows it's all in the pure-food class —Foley. Among the Grand Forks crowd who went to the fair at Fargo today were Miss Kate and Mr. Hugh Ryan. Mrs. C. H. Jenks of Crookston was the guest of friends here on Monday. Mrs. D. H. Beecher and daughter. Miss Gertrude, left last evening for Binghampton, N. Y., for a visit They will attend the wedding of a neice of Mrs. Beecher's. Mrs. Carl Gowran's breakfast party complimentary to Mrs. Corliss' guest, Mrs. John Cochrane, on Tuesday, was a delightful affair. Covers were laid for fifteen and around the table were some of the old-time residents here now having homes elsewhere. This made the affair an unusually pleasant one for the honoree, and she could well say with Moore, "Ah! doth not a meeting like this make amends for all the long time we've been wandering away." The table was beautifully decorated in sweet peas and the daintiest of breakfasts served. Among -the out-of-town guests present were: Mrs. C. H. Jenks, Crookston Mrs. Fred Fulton, Chicago Mrs. C. M. Cooley, Minneapolis. Mrs. J. McKenzie of Duluth is the guest of her sister, Mrs. T. D. Allen, and will remain about three weeks. Mesdames Campbell, Bangs, Coch If?- •V ini i'.Aji'jftAKift'* •ma. A. P. PAOB, Society Editor. Imm Teleprone. JM S. W. Office Phoaw, Both Now li The Pare Food List rane. Gowran and Burr will go to Crookston tomorrow to spend the day with Mrs. C. H. Jenks. Mrs. Mix and Mrs. Lovejoy enter tained Tuesday afternoon in honor of Mrs. E. W. Merrill's sister, Mrs. Samp son of Charlotte, N. C., and her mother, Mrs. Merrill from Minneapolis. Mrs. Fred Fulton of Chicago is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Robert Car rothers. Instead of closing the cuff on one of your summer gowns, let the two em broidered edges come together on the outer side of the arm and insert a narrow lace ruffle between. The work of embroidering white belt and collar to match to wear with shirt waist suits is employing the spare moments of many young ladles who are energetic in spite of the extreme heat. The fancy for bright plaid wash tie and belt has not yet been very widely adopted here, though it is a pretty idea for younger womein especially, the best eflect being obtained when the tie is worn over a white stock and the edges of both tie and belt bound with white. Dotted point d'esprit with a simple design in lace braid makes a cool and dainty collar. The braid should fol low the entire edge of the stock for a finish. The quill has found its way to the lingerie hat, and its pert style is much more appropriate among the bows than are more pretentious forms of decoration. Slip rolls of biscuit into a paper bag to heat, and if they are not quite fresh, they will emerge in a much improved condition. A surprisingly young-looking and energetic old lady of eighty years was asked how it was she kept her youth so wonderfully, says Health, and this was her reply: "I knew how to forget disagreeable things. I tried to master the art of saying pleasant things. I did not expect too much of my friends. I kept my nerves well in hand, and did not allow them to bore people. I tried to find any work that came to hand congenial. I retained the illusions of my youth, and did not believe 'every man a liar' and every woman spiteful. I did my best to re lieve the misery I came in contact with, and sympathized with the suffer ing. In fact I tried to do to others as I would be done by, and you see me, in consequence, reaping the fruits of happiness and a peaceful old age." White Frost Sanitary Refrigerator A refrigerator that will not offer shelter to disease germs or microbes, or from any cause taint the article it contains." A refrigerator which is constructed on scientific principles of sanitation, giving the free air currents, yet main taining the frigid temperature with out dampness—cold, pare, sweet air— a reliable preservative of perishable articles of food. The White Frost Sanitary Refrigerator is all this. All metal, white enameled revolving cen ter. Call and see it for yourself. SEWING MACHINES We are Northwestern Agents for a full line of Reliable Machines and can save yon the Agent's profit Standard New Home Wheeler ft Wilson Domestic and Others SPECIAL DURING MAY— A regular $2500 Machine which we will fill mail or city orders at $18.00 Victor Talking Machines The Victor Talking Ma chine is so perfect it is often mistaken for the human voice. No matter how much entertainment there is at home the Victor is always welcome. Victor Talking Machine .Records 7 and 8 inch 3S 10 inch 60 12 inch fl.00 Largest Office, Bank and Hotel Outfitters •V, MASTER'S voier- A Sew Care For Ivy Poison. I woke on the wedding day of the nicest girl in town and found on one side of my face a large and growing patch of blistery red. Poison ivy! Fortunately, my home is under the roof of a good physician when'I ap peared at breakfast, very patchy, and supremely cross, the doctor said: "We'll try the Minin ray." it was a violet ray of hope for the Minin ray comes from an ordinary incandescent light through a violet globe and is made to shine copiously on the diseased part by means of a reflector. The whole arrangement is fastened to any electric fixture by a long flexible wire and can be held at any part of the body. I knew that this light had done won ders for several totally different ail ments. I knew also, that one of its latest feats had been to heal' a case of poison ivy in its last stages, but I was by no means sanguine about its doing anything for nie. However, I went into the laboratory after break fast and let the doctor show me how to hold the light near my face, but not too near and I sat for fifteen minutes on a laboratory stool, not at all like patience on a monument, and scowling at everything. But when I left my perch to look in the mirror, I did smile and that not at grief, for I saw that the burning patches which had nearly covered my ieft cheek were now a dull red and looked as if they had stopped spread ing, while the patches under my chin, which I had .forgotten to expose, were more fiery than ever and ready to spread all over my neck. You may be sure that I ran cheerfully back to my monument. Later I went to the wed ding, where I had a very good time and could not get any one to believe I had been poisoned.—Rachel Capen Sehauffler in Good Housekeeping. A Unique Holiday. It seems an odd way to take a hol iday, but some English titled people have taken to touring shires in gyp sy wagons. The wagons are gay with red and green paint and the freshest and daintiest of white window drap eries, and Lord Dash sits up in front and drives the first and biggest one, and Lady Dash brings up the rear with the smaller. They carry a tent along with them and several pet dogs and are taking in all the golfing, fish ing and hunting that they run across. It brings to the little one that price less gift of healthy flesh, solid bone and muscle. That's what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does. Best baby medicine on earth. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents.—Lion Drug Store. SOME NEW STORIES. S $ .J $$•§$.$ $ •$ Rejoicing. "What are you looking so happy over, old man?" "I am rejoicing over the birth of twins." "Great Scott! I congratulate you!" "Don't congratulate me, go and con gratulate Jones he's the luck man. I never did like that chump." Terrible. If strawberries drive folks crazy, Don't it strike you it would be Awful what a green cucumber Would do to one? Hully gee! THE EVEN1NO TIMES, GRAND FORKS, N. D. II CROP EXPERTS' IT OF IDE YIELD H. V. Jones Makes Estimate of Over 700,000,000 Bushels of Wheat. H. V. Jones, the Minneapolis crop es timator who has been out in the fields for many weeks, has returned ta Min neapolis. Fifteen years of experience has given Jones prestige and business men generally follow his reports as Indicative of conditions to come. Jones says there is a bumper crop, and not only that, but it is so far along, gen erally, that nothing but some calamity unforseen can put it down To the Minneapolis Journal Mr. Jones said: "The danger period for northwestern wheat is closing up rapidly. Ten days to two weeks without injury will give to the country the largest wheat yield the three northwestern states ever raised. It is not wheat alone thnt is in high promise, but oats flax and bar ley, with corn making excellent prog ress, on the whole. Corn will be un even, however. Two Factors to Fear. "The only two factors to fear are black rust and blight. While an oc casional showing of black rust is found, the weather is not of the char acter, in my judgment, to warrant the expectation that much damage will re sult this year from the ruct. Every day is closing up hundreds of wheat fields beyond injury, and a week of go6d weather will go far toward mak ing a large part of the territory safe. "There is a considerable area open to injury by blight, should a hot wind result. North Dakota is comparatively free from hot winds, and the crop in South Dakota will in part be past dan ger in a week or ten days. The prospective yield is so large that mod erate damage by either blight or rust would still leave a large crop. "The new crop year is opening bright for business. If the crop ma tures, the railroads will be unable to move it with any promptness, and the car shortage will be beyond their abil ity to control. The crop area is very full. Wheat, oats and flax have in creased in area materially, and barley has decreased. Once the crop is sure, business men may arrange at once-for ian enormous business. The demand •for money will be large until the farm er can exchange his products for cur rency, and once the exchange is made, the banks will carry a large surplus of cash. BilUon Bnshel Marls. "The United States and Canada •give indication of crowding towards the billion bushel mark for v/heat pro duction this year, together with the old stocks carried into this crop. It is reasonably safe to count on 900,000,000 bushels and upward. This is a result that has never been approximated in the two countries. The United States has never raised 700,000,000 bushels. The government credited the country Young's Furniture and Music House WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Priced so that the wa^e earner can make home what it should be Cash or Monthly Payments with 748,000,000 in 1901, but the anal ysis of the distribution showed an er ror easily amounting to 50,000,000 •bushels. "The crop of the United States this .year will exceed 700,000,000 bushels by several millions. The winter wheat yield was a record breaker, so that all parts of the country have been favored. There is yet the corn crop to gather, and it promised to be large. It is easy to draw the conclusion that a year of prosperity must follow a showing like this. Value of the Harvest. "It would seem to be conservative to place the value of the wheat, oats and flax crop on the farms of the northwest this year at (160,000,000. To this can be added the return for bar ley, potatoes, hay and live stock the two latter being a much more impor tant item than is generally considered. "Of the three states it would be our impression today that South Dakota will make the largest average result. A large Immigration movement Is in progress In that state, especially to the lands west of the Missouri which the railroads are now opening. Important railroad extensions in North Dakota are opening a large territory in that state that has hitherto been neglected. "Minnesota Is the most backward of the three states in pushing immigra tion and calling the attention of the people to the advantages the state pos sesses in an agricultural way. Minne sota is one of the important states in the union that has no system of sta tistics to give to the landseeker. In fact none of the northwestern states are as well organized as are the south western states, where it is possible to secure data at a moment's call for any county, both as to production, charac ter of soil and value of the land. The state of Kansas is the most perfectly organized in this particular in the union, and Minnesota could well afford to follow here example. The Great Markets. "Minneapolis and Duluth will handle the largest amount of grain the coming year in their history. The sup ply will be sufficient to warrant the expectation that the United States will again take its place as a liberal ex porter of grains. This means pros perity for the miller as well as the farmer, and will mean prosperity for the retailer, jobber and manu facturer, while the railroads will be taxed to the extent of their facilities to take care of the outgoing and incom ing freight. Only a calamity that has not shown its hand as yet will change this prospect." A Brave Woman. A great crowd, excited equally by surprise and admiration, surrounded a young woman at Sixth avenue and Twenty-third street yesterday after noon. One heai'd such comments from the shoppers as: "She is a heroine!" "How brave she is!" "She dares to appear thus!" "There is no other woman like her!' Only one person, whose elbows were as sharp as her chin, sounded a dis cordant note. She cried acidulously: "Her arms are misshapen, perhaps." Curious ones .on the fringe of the crowd, asked each other: "Who is she? What has she done? Why do they acclaim her?" "Do you not see," exultantly shouted a man who thrust himself out of the crowd. "She is the only woman in New York with nerve enough to wear long sleeves."—New York World. Subscribe for The Evening Times. 125-126-129 South Hiird St* Grand Forks, North Dakota $3 to $39SS Everything w*T^^t ^hw tr Of Interest SUGGESTIONS FOR SUMMER. Meat After Sundown. Never to eat meat in summer till after sundown is a simple rule which, if followed, would stave off many an hour of suffering. Every year sees more persons coming to some such un derstanding with themselves, but some are inconceivably slow about adopting a custom of this kind, even after they have experienced itB advantages. Fruit, eggs in some one of the many appetising forms in which they can be served fish, either fresh or salted bread, in all the immense variety of rolls, and some of the cereals, served Ice cold, ought to make up a breakfast menu sufficiently rich and varied for the most exacting. But it is lunch eon which offers the greatest tempta tion to meat eating. Thousands who eat their breakfasts at home for six days a week eat their luncheons in restaurants, where they are at the mercy of the chef, who seldom, alas! shows much appreciation of the differ ence between summer and winter. Why not a\ tomato and lettuce salad with mayonnaise dressing as the piece de resistance of a July business lunch eon? Or a Welsh rarebit? Or cheese macaroni? Or a lobster Newburg? Or salmon salad? Or a bowl of bread and milk, if worse comes to worst? There a are a score of different cheeses, any one of which, with bread and butter, a glass of milk or grape juice or a cup of cocoa, would supply sufficient nourishment and bulk for a hot weather luncheon. Dishes of the macaroni and spaghetti family are al most ideal from the dietetic point of view. With a little thought one could mention many dishes that are com monly overlooked in favor of ham and beans, ham and eggs, heavy meat soups and hot cuts from the joint. When the sun has set and the work of the day, like the heat, is practically over, and the rest and relaxation of evening h'ave come, bring on your meat. But till then try living on a diet of eggs, cereals, fruit and flsh and see if summer is not rendered more tolerable thereby. W. E. New York City. Sound Sleep In Summer. Whether you are packing your trunk for two weeks or two months in the country, remember that next to whole some foot no one thing counts so much toward the value of the sum mer's outing as good, sound sleep. In these days of nervous breakdowns, In ability to sleep has wrecked many a woman and eventually landed her in an insane retreat. Tired nerves clamor for rest, and the doctor, under pressure, prescribes harmful narcotics. Friends advise one to eat, drink or bathe before retiring, which are of little avail in the long run. Now, there is a remarkable remedy which can be applied by all those who own country homes, and by many oth ers who are ingenious enough to get around circumstances. This sovereign remedy is sun aired bedding. Few people who actually live in the coun try have the faintest conception of what really aired bedding means. This article will not appeal to the proverb ial good housekeeper who makes the beds an hour after rising, and, as if to still her conscience, has the maid open them up an hour before retiring Pianos Life Is what we make It Music lOMclhlsj we all love can't do with* out GO-CARTS designs and latest improvements 1 The Artistic Krell Auto Grand Angelus Emerson A. B. Chase Poole ft Crown Pianos Now Retailing at W O E S A E I E S A Few Household Necessaries Bed Room Suits New Dining Room Sets Davenports, Dressers, Brass and Enameled Beds Mission and Fancy Rockers Leather Rockers and Couches Parlor Furniture ^t*, 3* $ }. '•'•-v\-esfV. .• •"'i .:" -*!. ,., ,i\ WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1906. If you belong to this class read no farther. When the sun is allowed to pene trate the woolen blankets, sheets, com fortables and pillows spread on the plana root or on the grass in the sunny backyard, it will carry away all the sleep destroying odors which ac cumulate each night, and the clothing will absorb the sweet, fresh air and the life giving properties of the sun. Woolen blankets from their porous na ture are especially susceptible to bad odors, and should be dally cleansed! by the sun, which renews the lifelike elasticity of the natural wool so sooth ing to tired limbs and worn nerves. One who has never slept on a mat tress baked in the sun and turned like a griddle cake on the veranda roof has little Idea of the luxury In store. The mattress does not necessarily hold the heat after its sun bath, but re tains for hours the sweet freshness of the outdoor world. Refreshing slum ber as soon as the head touches the pillow is ample reward for a few moments' inconvenience, and if one has the care of a semi-invalid the time could not be better spent ¥WO RECIPES. New Puddlng Recipe and Some Col Inary Hints. Ntnelrofc Puiitar. For this famous pudding, which is in reality not pudding strictly spea-k but an ice cream, use* one pint of shelled almonds, ohe and one half pints of pine apple, including juice, the yolks of ten eggs, half a pound of fresh candled fruit, one tablespoonful of vanilla extract, four of wine, one pint of water and one of sugar. Boil the chestnuts for half an hour then take off their black skins and pound them to a paste in a mortar. Blanch the almonds and pound them 'also. Boil the sugar, water and the juice of the pine apple for twenty minutes. Beat the yolks of the eggs thoroughly and stir them into the syr up. Then set the saucepan that con tains them into another of boiling water and beat the mixture with the egg beater until it thickens. Then re move from the stove place it in a pan of cold water and beat again this time for about ten minutes. Mix the al monds and chestnuts with the cream and rub through a sieve. Add the pineapple pulp and the candled fruit. The pineapple should be cut into small pieces. Then mix the whole with the sugar, yolks and juice. Stir in the flavoring and add a pinch of salt Freeze in the usual way—as Ice cream is frozen. It seems strange to think that some Ice is colder than other ice. The term "Ice cold" always seems to signify temperature. All water under similar conditions freezes at a certain definite temperature. But when the thermom falls, below that it continues to affect the ice, making it harder and colder. The test has been made by placing a piece of ice from the north and a piece of ice formed in this vicinity near a. stove together. The former took much longer to melt than the latter. It Is said that lettuce has a proper ty it that it tends to,soothe the ali menary canal and the entire nervous system. Library Furniture SPECIAL PRICES Carpets Rugs Linoleum ALL GRADE8 SsHaffts Lace Curtains Kk "jft 1 't