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The Malvern Leader from Malvern, Iowa • Page 8

Location:
Malvern, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Pioneer Storemen their usual Bargains in Seasonable Goods and are commencing to receive the Earlier Shipments of NEW GOODS We invite you to looli in upon us. Have been mailing some changes that will enable us to handle our goods to better advantage and we will be able to show you a fine large stock in all things Yours Respectfully, J. D. PADDOCK Co, COMPLEXION POWDERS (.2.3 rgzzoSmrS THREE MALVERN CHURCHES. Baptist W.

J. Watson, pastor. Preaching every Sabbath at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p.

m. Babbath-sehool at 10 am. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening. M.E. Church-Rev.

Qeo.M. Hughes, pastor. Preaching each Sabbath at 11 a.m. and 7:30 m. Sabbath school at 9:45.

Prayer meeting Wednesday evening. Presbyterian D. B. Fleming pantor. Preaching every Babbath at 11 a.

and 7:30 m. Sabbath-school at 10 a. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening. Christian Pastor- Sunday-school at 3 p.m.

Prayer meeting Wednesday evening. Ctthollo Father E. Hayes, pantnr. Magi is celebrated on the second Bundty In each month at lUiBO a. m.

SOCIETY MEETINGS. A. y. A.M. 8 i', lv rn No.m-Meets at their ball at 7:80 each Thursday evening on or before rail moon.

O. A. R. Milton Summers Post No. Meets the last ttaturday of each month.

uo KOPP. VS 1 0 in I. 0. P. Hull at 7:80 every Friday evening.

i. o.o. T. Malvern Lodee, No. 408-Meets every Monday evening In Odd Fellows' Hull.

K. JB. TIME CARDS. Chicago, Burlington Quincy. WESTWARD.

No. 5-Passenger and mall 7 eg a ni 8-Kxpress passenger 4 15 8 65 BASTWABD. No. and express a 20 a AA r- 1 i gg J. OONNOB, Agent.

St. Louis Pacific. JBABXWABD. 6 8 2 8 5 Beam, Agent. ATBNG Ask for HORSE Nearly every pattern of A Horse Blanket is imitated in color and style.

In most cases the imitation looks just as good as the genuine, but it hasn't the. warp threads, ancl so lacks strength, and while it sells for only a little less than the genuine it isn't worth one-half as much. The fact that A Horse Blankets are copied is strong evidence that they are THE STANDARD, and every buyer should see that the trade mark is sewed on the inside of the Blanket. Five Mile FAEM AND HOME. Growing.

Quite nn interest ia springing up throughout thc'state with reference to wheat growing, and an interesting discussion is being carred on pro and con. The fact that in the early settlement of the state wheat was a sure and profitable crop, the yield being large and the quality excellent, is proof positive to many that with proper cultivation and rotation of crops wheat can yet be profitably grown. The following extract from an address delivered before the Iowa Millers Association at its recent session in Dea Moines, by Jed Sake, of Independence, contains food for thought. Speaking of those parts of the state where fall wheat can be raised profitably, Mr. Lake said: Those who have studied the soil of Iowa know that we have in some parts of the state a soil that is adapted to the growth of winter wheat; that in other parts of the state winter wheat cannot be raised with profit to the farmer.

In those parts where winter wheat can be grown it has been demonstrated that from thirty to forty bushels to the acre can be raised with the proper care and tilth. It is certain that a crop of thirty bushels to the acre will pay the farmer well to put a good deal of time and labor on his land. Now as to how this growth can be obtained. My way is to first grow a crop of clover and cut it off for hay. Then when the after growth is about ten or twelve inches high, put on a good stout team and a good plow and turn it under.

Then use the disc harrow freely until all the ground is well pulverised. Then when it is time to sow the wheat use a drill and mix with your wheat half a bushel of oats with a bushel of wheat and drill it in, giving plenty of seed to the acre. In drilling have your drill rows run north and south if it is possible to do so. The reason that I have for this advice: The clover roots run very deep into the soil and live not much further in the ground than any other thing except corn. The rotting clover and the roots furnish a manure that is peculiarly beneficial to wheat.

The oats sown with the wheat will grow luxuriantly in the fall and when the snow comes will fall down and cover the roots of the wheat and prevent the spring killing that is the great danger to the winter crop. In making the rows north and south the sun strikes both sides of the row more evenly and thus it gets the better warmth and benefit of the sunshine. The pulverizing of the" ground enables the roots of the grain to get the benefits sooner that it would if left to the action of the elements to decom pose it. This kind ot cultivation will not make a big growth if you use poor seed or any kind that is not adapted to your soil and climate. It requires care and the selection of good seed and the selection of good soil for wheat.

On nearly every farm there is soil on which wheat will not do well, while at the dame time it might do well on land very near to that. So I do not wish to have it understood that this method will at all times and under all conditions produce good crops; but do want the farmers to try this way and aee if it is not productive of good crop of wheat and that which will be profitable to raise for a num ber of years. Speaking ot Spring wheat Mr. Lake advises that it be sown as early as possible in the spring on soil plowed deep and thoroughly pulverized with the disc harrow in the fall. This is certainly a subject in which the farmers of Mills County are inter ested and THE LEADER would be pleased if the farmers would use its columns in discussing the matter.

It will soon be time for spring sowin and such a discussion as we invite might be greatly beneficial to the farm ing community. Who will open the discussion? You WANT THE BEST, Boss Electric Extra Test Baker LANKETS ARE THE STRONGEST. 100 STYLES at prices to suit everybody. If you can't get them from your dealer, write us. Ask foi the Book.

You can get it without charge. WM. AYRES SONS, Philadelphia. YOU WANT TO BUY OR RFT autuin Denison Review: Wo see that a bil has been introduced in the Iowa Legis lature authorizing the building of town ship halls under certain prescribec conditions. We have little faith tha it will become a law, yet wish to give the project our endorsement.

The people of the towns have their church es and public halls at which tc gather to hear speeches and discuss matters of common interest. Not so with the farmers. They must meet in small school houses, sitting on seats and benches made for the children anc therefore uncomfortable for grown people. These are illy warmed unc ventilated, and dimly lighted. Thi use of the school house for publii gatherings is hard on the building.

I is often left in no condition for th children and teacher to occupy in tin. morning. There are many good reas ons why citizens in the country neigh borhoods should have a good publii hall to be used for all gathering where the grown people come together On behalf of the farmers of Oruwforc who live miles from the towns we urge the passage of the bill mentioned. Many persone.who have recovered from In grippe are now troubled with a pisrsls tent cough, Oljamber)ain' 8 Cpngh Hem ecly will promptly loosen this cough nm relieve the lungs, effecting pertunuen cure In a very short lime. 35 and 50 ceu boltlta lor sale by Afunger Goodwin, Goes the Price on all Winter Goods NEXT 30 DAYS Baker Kneel; nd.

Country Beads. G. W. Franklin, one of he best agricultural writes in the statd, editor of an interesting Agricultuea Department in the Atlantic Telegraph, indulges in the following observations on the subject of road making: Everybody will agree that there is something radically wrong in the way the roads of Iowa are worked. The merchant feels the need of good roads as well as the farmer.

ieu the farmer cannot have good rodds 9ver which to move his produce, it causes stagnation in the trade enjoyed by the merchant. There has not been ten days in the past two months when the roads were even passibly fair for moving farm produce on wagons. There is an attempt to have the present law changed in the manner of collecting and disbursing the road funds, and to make a change in the manne- of having the roads worked. The present law requires that the farmer shal. work out his road tax under the su pervision of a boss.

These supervis ors may be one, or more to the town ship, this provision being discretion ary with the board of trustees. The proposed new law requires that the taxes shall be paid the same us any the other taxes and that thi ire shal be but one road supervisor to each township and that he have tte power to work the roads by contract or by day labor. This proposed law has its drawbacks as well as its goods feat ures. It would relievo the transien' young men of the country of compelled to do two dayV work And it would materially disturb the love that lurks iu the breas; of the neighborhood story-teller. He would be out of a job.

It seems tq us tha this system of working the roads would give better roads aether would give better satisfaction He would be necessitated to money instead of the labo would inconvience a greit farmers. There is something wrong with the roads and the besli righting them will be to matter some thought and discussion and it may be that there uan be som better system devised, Laud for Sale. I have a section of land ii County, Neb, for Bale, or wjl real or personal property in Mil Anyone desiring a home in will do well to see mo in pers dress me at Hastings. I also wish to advertise foi curly setter Bird Dog with a lar on, with J. Ward's name The dog was last seen at Weal on Sunday, Jan.

24, Anyone formation of his whereabout i liberally rewarded by Vor Hale. Six hundred and forty acres uey County. Kansas; four les 7l 1r oa 9 and county seat; tifcte Wil trade for well improved Mills or Fremont County. Ui Ai PefcAVAN) Tt I i or not th which man pay way thi Greelej trade fo County the wes or ad a blacj 3hain col collar Chape giving in dropping me i WILBON, Bastings io Rear from perfect land in dress la. CLUB OF THE FUTUBE," CATE FIELD'S IDEA OF AN ORGANIZATION FOR BOTH 8EXES.

The Necessity of Such nn Institution. Reasons Why Should Enjoy tho Benefits of Clnb I-lfo as Well AD Men. life Will Be Plcftsitnter for All. Some of ns were startled a while ago by reading that certain New York wxnn- had founded woman's club. I very glad to learn of the innovation, and lave been fighting in its defense private- ever since, as the idea seems to be par- obnoxious to the average intel- ect.

Why should there not be clubs lot for men only nor for women only, rat for men and women, which could )ecome social centers in the elongated of New York? Only the very wealthy can now afford to entertain. Well to do intelligence starves for lack of a natural interchange of ideas and sympathies. Occasional theatre parties and suppers, while significantly expen- live, no more nourish healthy friend- ihips than lightning nourishes the grow- ng grass. Confine the healthy ebullition of social nstinct, and explosion ensues. If women are to be helpmates to their husbands, if are to be wise mothers, they must mow the real world by actual contact.

Without freedom there is no intelligent irtue. Many a man, from inherited mints of thought, entertains oriental deaa without knowing it. FEATURES OF 'THE CLUB. Bank treason, I dare say. Hence I am prepared for many feminine shriek of disgust, for the liowl that will rend many a manly bosom, for the scorn that will sit upon many a manly countenance, for the anathemas against the tmsexing of the sex that will proceed xom many a manly tongue; but howl, scorn and anathema are not argument, and argument is what I want.

Women require relaxation as as men; women need the friction of intel- igent minds more than men, for the reason that their lives are more secluded; women, especially those who live in the suburbs, need a place of rendezvous where they can read papers and magazines and encounter their friends'un- ceremoniously. More particularly do ihey need a restaurant where they can obtain palatable meals for reasonable mces, and where they can invite friends breakfast, lunch or dine without mak- ng great inroads upon their purses. Year by year the army of professional women increases. All of these women are more or less clever; few are blessed with fortunes. All feel the necessity of a club, but to start one is not feasible.

What is less impossible and more natural is such an addition to the present system as will give women all they desire without depriving men of their inalienable right to smoke, drink and wear heels higher than their heads. A vivid imagination can picture a club, ionsisting of two or more houses, with rooms exclusively for men, rooms exclusively for women, a general reading room and restaurant, private dining rooms and general'reception zooms. IT is coMmct. Men who hate women and women who late men need never encounter one an- jther, while men and women who be- ieve that two halves make a whole could exceed the Century club of New York in the brilliancy of their Saturday nights. Society is becoming more and more complex, and today there is far less chance clever men and women meeting in big American towns than there is in London, because people in this country rarely have leisure.

Unless they give themselves up to dinner knowing beside whom they are to sit, and generally Longing to be at the other end of the are frequently doomed to go through an entire season without an interchange of ideas with their best friends. Suppose all this changed. Suppose women know that on a given night in the week they are almost certain to encounter not one but many male friends, who are things of beauty and joys forever; suppose men know that on this same evening they are sure of seeing many women who are never at home when they find time to call; how simplified society becomes! And where is the unwomanliness of this proposal? In the club of the future only such persons will be admitted as are in the habit of behaving like ladies and gentlemen. I fail to perceive why men and women of acknowledged position and intelligence, who conduct themselves properly in drawing rooms and public balls, should become transformed by occasional contact at clubs. In all probability the club of the future will not be bom during the reign of the present generation, but that society will eventually resorii to some such device as I have suggested is as certain as that lunches and 5 o'clock teas are death to digestion and impossible for workers.

Field's Washington. FOR 8 LEBYJ. A.KT, MALVERN, IOWA. A Wonderful Picture. Directly after the great Johnstown flood, some time during June, at any rate, D.

S. Wingrove, superintendent of the marble yard at the penitentiary at Baltimore, found a slab of marble with lines and veins which made a perfect picture of the fated city of Johnstown and the surrounding cduntry, The eky is plainly marked, as are also the hills and mountains surrounding the town, Piles upon piles of ruins are marked, with an occasional steeple or toppling wall overhanging the scene of awful destruction. Taken all in all, the scientists consider it one of the most wonderful natural formations ever found in Louis Republic, Sam Clark, the brilliant editor Of the Gate City, recently had a characteristic article in his paper, condemning as hurtful to the farmer's interest the attempt being made to legally prohibit speculation and option buying of grain. He claims that whatever the speculators pay over and above the real market demand is just that much clear gain to the farmer, because it enhances the value of his grain just that much. Without disputing this proposition is it not true also that the price of grain is often forced down by this same system of futures and option dealing, below what the market, uninfluenced by such speculators, would pay the farmer? Do not speculators thus many times force down the market, until they are "loaded up" with a certain product, and then force the price up to afford them an opportunity of unloading at a good profit.

This is generally supposed to be the case and if it is it injures the farmers as a class, because they are often compelled to sell at the low price because unable, without considerable expense, to hold their'products for a rise in the market. An even steady market, governed by the law of supply and derhand, certainly would prove more acceptable to the farmer than the haphazard of the speculative market. LA GRIPPE. No healthy person need fear any danger ous consequences from an attack of la grippe ff properly treated. It is much the same as a severe cold and requires precisely the same treatment.

Remain quietly at home and take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as directed for a severe cold and a prompt and comple'e recovery is sure to follow. This remedy also counteracts any tendency of la grippe to result in pneumonia. Among the many thousands who have used it during the epidemics of the past two years we have yet to learn of a single cose that hris not recovered or tbu has resulted' in pneumonia. 25 and 50 nenl bottles for sale by Hunger Good win. A LEADEE.

Since its first introduction, Eleetric Bit ters has gained rapidly in popular favor until now it is clearly-in the lead amonf pure medical tonics and tninine nothing which permits its use as a beverage or intoxicant, it is recognized as the best and purest medicine for all ail ments of the Stomach, Liver or Kidneys It.will cure Sick Headnche, Indigestion, Constipation, and drive Malaria from the system. Satisfaction guaranteed with bottle or the money will be refunded. Price only 50c per bottle. For pale by Munger Goodwin. Our exports of domestic merchandise for the month ending November 30,1891, amounted to $109,167,123, as against $88,047,697 for the same month of the year preceding.

All persons found hunting on my farm in White Cloud Township, known as the Hinchman farm, or on my home place, will be dealt with according to law. A. W. RAINS. "In buying a coup!) for children," says II A Walker, a prominent druggist of Ogden, Utah, "never be afraid lo buy Chamberlain's Cough Remedy There is no danger from it and relief Is always sure to follow I particularly rec- ommennd Chamberlain's because I have fount! it to be safe and reliable.

25 and 60 cent bottles for si.le by Munger Goodwin, BUCKLER'S ARNICA SALVE. The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Bores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required, It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or monqy refunded, Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Mungor Goodwin. (82yl) GEORGE THEIL, STRAHAN DEALER IN GROCERIES AND FLOUR. DRY GOODS.

BOOTS, SHOES RUBBER SHOES A SPECIALTY. HENRY BOYER MANAGER OOD AND COAL I keep constantly on hand a supply of iTooca. coaxi. Ooetl, which can be had at my yard or will bo delivered at prices to suit the tlmos. Have Iowa and Missouri Coal of best quality.

(latf) J. U. TALBOTT. MALVERN NURSERY. AH kinds of nursery stock on hand.

Fine lino of apple trees. One mile Bouth of town, on road loading south from she elevators. Orders by mall will receive-prompt attention, U. IIAMIUO.ND, Proprietor. Eye, Ear, Nose Throat E.

T. ALLEN, M. p. OMAHA, NEB. Write for terms.

Scientific American Agency for CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, DESIGN PATENTS COPYRIGHTS, etc. For Information and free Handbook write to MUNN 861 BnoADWAY, NEW YORK. Oldest bureau for securing patents In America. Brory patent taken out by UB Is brought before tlio public by a notice given free of charge In the man should be without It. Weekly, S3 (ft) a year! $1.60 six months.

Address MUNN tuDLlSHBHS, 301 Broadway, New York. MOORE'S TREE OF LIFE. Moore's Tree of ulfe is a positive cure tor Kidney and Liver Complaint and all blood, diseases. Does It pay to suffer when you can be cured by using Moore's Tree of Life, the Great Life Komedy? "Let another man praise theo and not thine mm mouth; a stranger and not thine own lips," Rov.George Miller, Carlisle. Iowa; Ilov Anthony Jacobs, Sidney, Iowa, Rev Cnrter.

Pleasant Grove. Iowa; Rev IS Perry. Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Rev Lile, Leaven worth, Kansas; Rev TMuuford, Emerson, Iowa Rev Cathcart, Emerson, Iowa. Rev man Parker, Emerson, Iowa; Hon Abel DecatuiVIlis; A BlufflS Y. ho 1 uoh en as the above have houses say they have given entire satisfaction where they have been sold, what better evidence do you want? Why should you Wisdom.

Little Hightone says our preacher is austere, What does that mean? Little You girls don't know beans. If she gays our preacher is a steer she he's bnlly preacher. York Weekly. GUARANTEED CURE. We authodae our advertised druggists to sell you Dr.

Kiug's New Discovery for Consumption, pouglis and colds, upon this condition, If you are afflicted with La Grippe and will use tins remedy accord" iog to directions, givlug Ha I'tiir Iriol, and experience no beneflt, you may re! urn the bottle and have your money rpfupded, We make this offer hecausfl the won- dgrful success of Dr new ery during last season's opo.deuiio. Have bdard of no case in whicli.Jt faled. Try it. Trial bottles free at Muuger Goodwin's drug store. Largo size We and ft 00.

IT CURES IN MAN: LUMBAGO NEURALGIA STINGS BRUISES THE AILMENTS OF MAN BEAST HAS STOOD THE TEST OF IT CURES IN BEAST; Mustang Liniment penetrates the muscles, mem- branesand tissues, thereby reaching the seat pf disease, hich is a. property npt found in other liniment. The ousewife Farmer, $tpck Raiser or Mechanic cahnpt afford to be without it Jt should be kept in every household for emergencies, It will save many doctors' bills, For sale everywhere at 2 and $1,003 bottle..

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About The Malvern Leader Archive

Pages Available:
29,258
Years Available:
1890-1977