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The Rathdrum tribune. (Rathdrum, Idaho) 1903-1963, September 24, 1915, Image 4

Image and text provided by Idaho State Historical Society

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn88056093/1915-09-24/ed-1/seq-4/

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REMEMBER
When
Zufall
At Our
Drugstore 1 ^
I
Mr. Robert H. Norris, No. 1333 Hen
ry St., North Berkeley, Cal., writes:
"We have never had any other medi
cine but Peruna in our home since vre
have been married. I suffered with
kidney and bladder trouble, but two
months treatment with Peruna made
me a well and strong man. My wife
felt weak and was easily tired and
was also troubled with various pains,
but since she took Peruna she is well
and strong."
HEALTH TALKS
(By Dr. R. R. Daniels.)
HEALTHOGRAMS.
Coffee, lubacco, and too much
heavy food bring on old age rapidly.
Pie Is an expensive food; It. forces
the stomach to expend a large amount
of energy that should be used In di
gesting real food.
If your chicken dinner disagrees, it
Is not because of the chicken. The
dumplings or stuffing, the thickened
gravy, and the dessert are the real
miscreants.
The fall is not necessarily an un
lieallhful season. It is the time
when the body begins to show the
bad effects oT the usual heavy diet In
hot weather.
Sweets are not a good food to eat
With a meat meal, the sweets affect
the lining membrane of the stomach
in such a mam er as to prevent the
pmper secretion of the digestive fluids
that digest the meals.
The lean portion of pork is hard to
digest, when frier! it is almost indi
gestible. The fat, quite lo the con
trary, is easily digested; in fact, the
fat of pork is the most easily digested
of all meat foods.
The average hot cake contains the
same amount of (lour as the average
slice of toast. But the hot cake ines
up four times the digestive energy,
and since at beit It can bo only par
tially digested, It furnishes the body
much less food than the toast.
Milk Is a food, one which contains
fpr more nourishment than is usually
supposed; hence it should not be used
as a beverage, it should not be drank
at any and a'l times. When you
eu' itig fluid, which means that you
me either Interrupting the digestion
the
drink milk bet,wren meals you are
of the previous meal or robbing
stomach of the rest necessary to the
d'gcs.luu of the next meal.
Ar« You Looking* Old?
\ Old age comes quick enough with
out inviting It. Some look old at
forty. That is because they neglect
the liver and bowels. Keep your
bowels regular and your liver healthy
and you will not only feel younger
but look younger. When troubled
with constiputlnocor biliousness take
Chamberlain's Tablets. They are In
tended especially for these ailments
and are excellent. Easy to lake and
most agreeable in effect. Obtainable
everywhere.
Fire Oa Train.
A rather comical explanation Is
given, upon further Investigation,
for the cause of the fire In the S I.
passenger coach last week. It ap
pears that Tutu English hoarded the
irain at Sandpoint with two 2-quart
hollies uf alcohol In his possession.
After entering the car he had the
misfortune to drop both of them on
the floor of the car which aroused his
ire to the extent that he tried to
destroy them utterly. lie kicked
viciously at one of the bottles, the
calk of his shoe strikiug the metal In
the* floor of the car causing a spark to
lly which igniied the a'cohul. The
draft through the car caused by the
speed of the train fanned the blaze to
the exteot of setting Are to all the
laflaruable material available. The
train wras stopped and the lira ex
tinguished betöre any serious damage
resulted.—Kootenai Valley Times.
Chamberlain*») Colic, Cholera and Diarr
hoea Keiuedy,
This Is a medicine that every fami
ly should be provided with. Colic
and diarrhoea often come on sudden
ly and It Is of the greatest importance
that they he treated promptly,
sider the suffering
dured until a physician
medicine can be obtained. Chamber
lain'* Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy has a reputation second to
atione for the quick relief which it
^wTords. Obtainable everywhere.
Con
ihat must be en
arrives or
HIGHEST COURAGE.
IIIWIIÜV I vww.ni»
--—
The Bravery That Goes Hand ki j
Hand With Cowardice.
A MEDICAL VIEW OF HEROISM.
__
,
Th. World'. Estimate of True Valor, |
It Is Claimed, Is Superficial and Silly,
!
:
That Whioh It Stamp. With Ap
proval la Lack of Sensibility.
as
"What is true courage ?" asks the ,
American Journal of Clinical Medicine.
and answers that the world's estimate
"Highest in the world's scale of hero- i
lam " IV anva "Is the cool careless au
lsm, It says, IS tne coot, curettes au ,
daclty that marches up to the mouth |
of the cannon with a flower In its cap j
and a frivolous song on Its lips, as
serene as on parade. Such pravery Is
really the very lowest In the scale, If j
Indeed It be In the scale at all, except
In the sense that zero Is a part of the
scale. It Is not courage at all, but
sheer lack of sensibility, either from
ignorance or from accustomedness. It
Is In quality the same mental attitude
In which the Ignorant, Impassive mine
worker walks around In the Are damps,
and when they explode he, too, be
comes n popular hero.
"Next highest In the world's gauge
next lowest In the true scale—Is the
courage that dares a quick danger In a
sudden emergency. In itself this is
hardly a more genuine brand of cour
age than the first, except that it In
volves a more or less unselfish disci
plining of the man previous to the de
mand that Is made on him. Even so,
It Is more a matter of habit than of
quality. The fact that there is no time
to count the cost robs it of any delib
erate merit. Many a man, In fact. Is
surprised Into a heroism which Is real
ly no part of him. Certainly It Is no
high grade of courage. Rather, let us
say, It Is a negative sort of quality, to
which If a man does not respond on
demand we conclude there Is some pos
itive quality of poltroonery about him.
"Still lower In the world's estimation
of courage is superficial und silly.
—still higher in actual worth—is the
courage which calmly and deliberately
holds its course of duty in the face of
almost certain calamity and misfor
tune, the quiet resolution to meet one's
fate in the face of foregone disaster
and disappointment, the steadfast set
ting of one's face to go to Jerusalem.
Of all forms of heroism none will so
surely win the love and confidence of
human hearts, which is worth a hun
dred times the admiration of human
minds, than this.
"Higher yet In the true scale—lower
yet in the popular guage—Is the cour
age that sustains itself, as it were,
upon nothing but its own unconquera
ble stamina. The man who, though his
fights be all defeats, still fights, who,
though he has been a failure In the
past and knows himself (as many a
keenly sensitive man kuows hUnself)
to be a failure and Is doomed to be a
failure for the rest of his life, rises pa-
tiently and Indomitably every morning
to face the inevitable defeat of the day
with equanimity and sweetness—there
a courage, my masters, of which the
kings and victors of the earth are not
capable.
"But there is a yet higher quality of ,
courage, the highest of all in the true
scale, but so little esteemed iu the pop
ular mind that it will hardly he ac
corded a place In the scale at all un
less, as I said in respect of the first
type, to be zero Is to bo a part of the
gauge. It Is the courage of cowardice,
the bravery of the man who is afraid,
but who in mortal funk and abject
fear, with throbbing heart and sweat
ing brow, forces himself to do the j
thing from which lie shrinks. This, j
which the world sneers at as coward
ice, is the highest courage of all. In
fact, it is the only true courage, for it
sets all the agonized effort of a man's
soul against all the fears and terrors
that the powers of darkness can bring
upon him."
First Indian Went Pointer.
The first Indian to receive an ap
pointment to West Point wns Dnvp.l
Moniac, a Creek. He was born In Ala
bama and was a cadet of the Military
academy from Sept. 18, 1817, until July
1, 1822, when he was graduated and
appointed a brevet second lieutenant in
the Sixth Infantry. On the expiration
of his graduation leave on Dec. 31.
1822, he resigned from the army to be
come a cottou planter In his native
state. During the war In Florida In
1836 against the Semlnoles, Monlae be
came captain In a regiment of mounted
Creek volunteers and became a major
in that regiment Nov. 15, 1S30. He
was killed six days later In the battle
of Wahoo swamp.—New York Sun.
A Rival to the "Marseillaise."
Writing In Musical Opinion. Gerald
Cumberland says; "The records of his
tory contain but few examples of great '
works of musical art created during a !
time of war. The 'Marseillaise' Is one
such example, and Sir Edward Elgar's I
'Chantons, Belges, Chantons,' Is an- j
other. Greatly as I admire the former
undying melody, I do not believe It Is
In any respect greater than the latter." j
Real Chivalry.
"I want you," said the fair society
leader, "to give me a * plalu opinion
about my picture."
"Madame," said the gallant cavalier,
bowing, "to speak In plain terms of
that portrait would be Impossible."-
Baltimore American.
Always take the short cut. and that
Is the rational one. There
do everything according to the sound
est reason.—Marcus Aurelius.
>ro say and
Advertise In This Paper
I
NOTICE OE SALE
Idaho, on U.« Sud d»y otSoptemtKT. 1K15. 1.
the undersigned administrator of Jh* estate
of Eil*a»x>lh Smith. dw>;i«-d. will soil at
private sale, for cash, to the highest bidder.
■ prdper,y
All of tbe K.irit one hilf (ESi) of Block «
*v«*n <7> of East End Addition to the Town |
of Rntiidruin, having 52H f*'«t front on Main
street and depth of Four Hundred Twenty
the East, said strip having Nine (9) fret front
on Main St. and a depth of Four Hundred
Said properly being in the Town of Hath- I
! drum. Kootenai County. Idaho.
Personal Property :
All of the Household goods contained In
: the bulluings oh the above described prem
I
, ;*es.
^aWsalewlU be made onor
reived at the residence of the administrator
tu Coeur d'Alene. Idaho, or may be left In
the office of the Clerk of the Probate Court
i at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.
Terms of sale are cash, and upon conflr
, mation of sn.lc by the Court, a doeu will
| issue to the purchaser,
j Dated this 9th day of September, 1915.
AdminisSkw/S'U.eSe of
Elizabeth Smith, Deceased,
j it g ept 10,17,34.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Notice of Proof of Application of Water to
Beneficial Use
Notice Is hereby given that at 10 a. m. on
the 1st day of October, 1916. at Rathdrum,
County of Kootenai. State of Idaho,
before W. H. Edelblute, a Notary Public,
proof will be submitted of the application to
beneficial use of .5 of 1 cubic feet per
second of the waters of an unnamed
stream In Sec. 24. Tp. 52 N., R, 4 W. B. M., In
aocordance with the terms and conditions of
Permit No. 9580 heretofore Issued by Hie
State Engiueer of the 8tate of Idaho.
1 . The name and postofflee address of the
person or corporation holding said permit
are John Jacobson, Garwood, Idaho.
2. The use to which said water has been
applied is Irrigation and Domestic.
3. The amount applied to beneficial use is
.5 of 1 second foot.
4. The Diace where said water Is used is (If j
for irrigation, give full and accurate de- j
serlption of the lands irrigated) The E'4 of
the N WS4 of the NEK of Sec. 24. Twp. 52, N , I
. B. M., eontalniug 10 acres.
R. 4 w
5. The name of the cfinal or ditch or other
works by which said water Is conducted to
such place of use is Jacobson's ditch.
fl. The right to take the water from such
works Is based upon Permit No. U5K6.
7. The source of supply from which such
unnamed stream In
water Is diverted Is
Sec. 24. Twp. 62 N., R 4 W, H. M.
8. The date of the
user Is prepared to esta
1913.
which said
August 18,
priority
Llish is
J. H. SMITH,
State Engineer.
4t Sept. 3-24
, Tribune.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION
Notice of Proof of Application of Water to
Beneficial Use.
Notice is hereby given that atlO a.m..onthe
Ninth day of October, 1915. at Athol. County
of Kootenai, State of Idaho, before Carroll
Skeel, proof will be submitted of the applica
tion to beneficial use of one and one-fourth
cubic feet per second of the waters of
BuikercreeK, in accordance with the terms
and conditions of Permit No. 5318.
heretofore issued by the State Engineer
of the State of Idaho.
1. The name and postoffice address of the
person or corporation holding said permit
are J. B. Streeter, Athol. Idaho.
2. The use to which said water has been
applied is irrigation and domestic.
3. The amount apolled to beneficial use is
one and one-fourth cubic feet.
4. The place where said water is used is
NH NEK, NK NWfc. Sec. 20. Tp. 6.i N. It 21
West Boise Meridian.
6. The right to take the water from such
works is based upon Permit No. 5318.
7. The source of supply from which such
water is diverted is Barker creek.
priority which said user Is
fish is October 13th, 1909.
J. 11. SMITH, Slate Engineer
8. The datii of
prepared to est ab
41 Sept. 3 to 24
Rathdrum
«©-Subscribe for TnK
Only $ 1.00 per year.
tf
j
j
THC STATION AGENT SHARES HIS PLEASURE WITH THE
pood oupaE-1
SAY JUDGE HEAR.LV ALL'
THE TRAINMEN ARE USIN6
THE REAL TO BACCO J -
CHEW NOW. (
VOU TOLD TOUR FRIENDS^
about rr oust like p 1
OTHER PEOPLE DO
u
V
\
I^IOOD news travels fast—
it's the users that are boost
ing the Real Tobacco Chew .
Well, we've said all along that tobacco
chewers are just waiting for a smaller,
more satisfying chew.
No virtue in the big wad. They want
less size and more substance—just what
the Real Tobacco Chew gives them.
A little chew of pure, rich, mellow tobacco—seasoned
and sweetened just enough—cuts out so much of the
grinding end spitting.
'
!
I
j
j
1HE REAL TOSACCC CHEW IS NOW. CUT TWO WAYS!) Ift
W-B CUT IS IPHG SHE5. RKiHT-Cirr IS SHORT SHRED. H I
-*•
Take less than cne-quarter the old size chew. It
v-id bs more satisfying than a mouthful of ordinary
tobacco. Just take a nibble of it until you find th»
ctrcngih chew that cuits you, then see how easily and
evenly t c real tobacco taste comes, how it satisfies,
\ Low much bos you have to spit, how few chews you
> «ri 0 , he to P acco satisfied. That's why it'is The
Ä, llcalToMUCo Cites). That's why it costs less in the end.
J lid c. pure, rich tobecco docs not need to bo covered up# An
excess of Lconce r.cd sweetening makes you spit too much.
One small chew takes the place of two bier
clicv.-s cf the old kind.
m
-
££Na'lce houv the salt brings
otîî tîie rieb tobacco taste.))
Vr&VH Afi- lRFTOK COMPANY, 50 Union Square, New York City
(,. fJ IJY from healer OR SEND 10*7stamps to us^l
I
t^r^sasaHSBsasEBSB
9
1
f
1
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1
I
GOOD
PRINTING
I
:
IF YOU ARE IN ANY KIND OF
BUSINESS YOU NEED STATION
ERY; AND TO BE UP-TO-DATE
YOUR STATIONERY SHOULD BE
printed, so that it will help to advertise
your business. For good quality note
heads, letterheads, half letter heads,
bill heads, statements, envelopes, busi
ness cards, etc., neatly printed and . at
reasonable prices, call
j
j
, I
to
at
is
is
21
Is
The
Tribune
Office
Advertising Rates.
DISPLAY ADS.
One week per Inch.
Professional Card one month.
" *• Per year.
Solidly set advertising at local rates.
Looals, Five cents per line,straight.
Legal advertisements at legal rates.
I .10
il
8 I ■
Gr©t
Your
BUTTER
WRAPPERS
AT.
THE
TRIBUNE
OFFICE
PRINTED ON GOOD
PAPER AND WITH
PARCHMENT INK
PRICES:
125 for 50c
300 for $1.00
500 for $1.50
1000 for $2.50
E2r > All mail orders given
prompt attention.
Address The Tribune, Rathdrum
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
Cures CoUJa, Croup and Whooping Cough. '
DIRECTORY
STATE OFFICERS
Governor
Lieutenant Governor
Secretary of State
At'orney General
State Auditor
M. Alexander
Herman H. Taylor
George R. Barker
Joseph H. Peterson.
Fred L. Huston
Supt, of Public Instruction. Bernice McCoy
State Treasurer
John W. Eagleson
Robert N. Bell
Slate Mine Inspector
.Supreme Court
Alt Budge,
Congressional
Congressmen— Hobt. N. McCracken, Addison
T. Smith.
U. S. Senators—William K. Borah, James H.
Brady.
I. N. Sullivan,
Wm Morgan
COUNTY OFFICERS
Judge of District Court
State Senator
R. N. Dunn
J. It. Frazier
Members of House of Representatives—
William II. Edelblute,
J. C. Hunt,
County Clerk, Auditor and Recorder—
I). E. Danby.
County Attorney
County Assessor
County Treasurer
County Surveyor
County Supt. of Schools
Sheri If
M. A. Kiger,
II. .1. Hull.
N. D. Wcrnette
F, A. Wonnacott
W. A. Thomas
N. Coventry
R. C. Egbers
T. L. Quarles
A. Oalrtu.
J.F.
Coroner.
County Commissioners.—1st District,
Ferguson; 2nd District. F. W. Esgate;
3rd District, Citas. Waggoner
U/I?ei7 You (jo to SpoRarçe
STOP
AT
THE ARLINGTON HOTEL
European Plan
New Building. New Furniture, Steam heat,
Hot and Cola Bathe
Meals 25 Cent»
Electric Light,
«©-ROOMS 50c and up
Opposite N. P. Depot.
SPOKANE.
WASH.
McCall's Magazine
and McCall Patteriis
For Women
Haw* Mora Friends than any other
magazine or patterns. McCall s is the
reliable Fashion Guide monthly in
one million one hundred thousand
homes. Besides showing all the latest
designs of McCall Patterns, each issue
is brimful of sparkling short stories
and helpful information for women.
Sava Mon.y sad K.*p in Stylo by •cbacTibin*
for McCall'. Magazine at once. Cotta only jo
centt a year, including any one ol «he c*labrat*a
McCall Patterns free.
McCall Patterns Lssd all other, is tty
■implicit,, economy and camber sold. More
dealer, tell McCall Pattem, than sny U"
make, combined. None higher than i J cents. Bay
from your dealer, or by maU from «
McCALL'S MAGAZINE
236-246 W. 37th St, New York City
H », email Oofr, hm, ti.ni<n« Mi Moi Ca u l am **
» »»I«*

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