THEIR DOINGS AED THEIR + SAYINGS ) po FS = Y ark | A ERP LR HOME MADE CABINET. We all know how hard It is to keep the pantry looking neat. The spices and other articles lying around make it so untidy. Here 1s how I reme- died that: From your grocer get three large, stroug egg cases. Nall these firmly one on the other. This gives you six comphrtments. Now get a 10-cent can of paint, any color you want: mine matches the wood: work in the kitchen. Then make a urtain (double) and put on rod. In one compartment 1 have spices; in another all my articles that come in bags, like beans, rice, ete. This cleans the pantry out and helps fill up the kitchen.—Boston Post. SAVE THE YOLK. 1 break a good-sized hole in one end of the egg. Pour out the white, retaining the yolk by holding a fork over the hole. TI then take the half of an egg shell and fit it over the hole. The little bit the white adhering acts as a glue and the shell is then very tight, enough that the volks are not even crusted over. Two yolks may be placed in one shell if great : taken in tpansferring them. Believe me, they will keep in this way almost as long as a fresh, unbroken egg. Care should be taken to keep the egg in an upright posi tion, preferably in a small cup.—Bos ton Post of 80 80 care is FOR THE VERANDA, The girl who wishes to render the verandas of the cottage attractive should take time by the forelock and make up an assortment of pillow cov ers. One the most tops is a new closely resembles leather in red, blue, green and leather shades made up plainly and fringed with imi tation leather frir Burlay vers are embroidered with flower, foliage and bird des with made by edges of the face and the | top. Linge over ¢ and dotted the ished the tones © have a that makes an serviceable which comes of of and © 180. or the of the feng Ie IS, fringe iringe rie pillows are of all mh of batiste roldery, illed with and rayed flowered lawns with ruffles, Scotch ¢ embroidery and of Any of tty if fin pret are fr 81 Swiss are and so striped wide ginghar color tartan effective rof 2 7 LW them in one broken tone or soli and smart are most att ch shades cham pagne, VanDyke brown and old rose Ecru serim is an excelient mater ial for a porch pillow cover, and is ch: when with Dal matian embroidery oriental color combinations with Cream colored scrim is used without a pattern, as is also the German cross-stitch known as serial work.— New Haven Register eable there p., and French linen ns in su wistaria, catawba, ming decorated in embroidery silk RECIPES. Croquettes- potato croquettes are very quickly and easily made. Wash sufficient of the hot bhotled potatoes to make one pint, beat into them salt and pepper to season, one teaspoonful of onion fice and one iablespoonful of butter &¢o Ju When partly cooled mould into desir ed shap dip into slightly beaten roll in fine bread crumbs and golden brown in smoking Sweet Potato Sweet i ess. fry fat Cranberry Jee—Pick over and wash quart of anberries. Put them a sauce with one quart of water and simmer slowly until the berries burst. Strain through two thicknesses of cheese cloth, and meas ure. There should be a good quart, if not and the juice good strenzth, it may be diluted with boil ing water to make the quantity. Add one pint of granulated sugar, and stir over the fire until dissolved, then set aside to chill. Freeze in the usual manner, repack and set aside for two or three hours. Nougat—Orease a square, shallow pan with butter. Fill with hickory nut kernels, almonds cut in thin slices, cocoanut chopped fine and a few bits of candied orange peel. Boll 2 pounds of sugar and 1 cup of wat er together, without stirring, until it hardens; then add a tablespoon of deep one into pan is of over the nuts. narrow strips with a knife, er and boil gently until it Is thick as desired. This ought to make nearly a quart. It tastes like maple and costs just one-half as much. Use one-half of the cake for 1 quart, or the whole cake for 2 quaris Sponge Johnny Cake--8ift togeth er 34 cup granulated cornmeal, 1 14 cups flour, 1-4 cup of sugar, 2 round ing teaspoonfuls baking powder, 1.2 teaspoonful salt; then add 1 cup of sweet milk, 1 egg beaten very light, and last 1 tablespoonful melted but ter. Beat thoroughly and hake in a shallow pan in a quick oven 20 min utes. Bamboo t do not blossom until thirty vea dad. Jules Verne, author of "Twenty Thousand lL<€agues Under the Sea” required no legislative enactment to make him get up early. He rose at 4 in the morning In the summer. ® A Husban: less Honeymoon. There will hea very unique social affair in Atchison soon. A certain girl has never married, and as all her sisters married and enjoyed pret- ty clothes and wedding presents, her father announces that he wants to do as well by her, and will give her a mock wedding. She will have as much money to gpend on clothes as if she were to pe a bride, and after she has them all made her father will give her a party and notify all the kin that they must carry presents as if to a bride. Then he will send the gir! on a trip to the #ea coast, where she can wear her new clothes and have more fun than if there were a man tagging along. —Atehison Globe, the automobile is to the States the motor boat is to Canada, especially along the St. Law rence and in British Columbia. What United It won't cost you a penny to reach out a helping hand to a great army of honest, hard-working and deserving and women st your moral support will insure a living, and comforts which are pow either partly or wholly de- nied them, How so? Come on, let's have a look. many have been commanded by vertisements or otherwise to to buy anything unless it bears union label.” Looks harmless on its face, doesn’t it? It really boycott the cent. men and women, fees to, and obey th union | it demands that chant for label,” thus to | ing “refuse is a prod ou “demand” that yon ucts made by over 890 American working- who decline to pay per of e dictates of the aders ask the mer- the mpress him you articles with “union with its wrtance It seeks to tell you what to buy and what to refuse The d«¢ are sometimes a “holler tha: mands with most Is that clear? Why should a emall body men ask you of work- to help larger arve the body? There must be some “union label” scheme Run over in your mind and remem- ber how they carry on thelr work During a discuss about working or striking In the regions, about 25,000 men preferred to work, they bad wives and babies feed. The union men said openly vention that if the emg discharge these men they men) would kill them So they dynamited a homes, malmed and children and scores of these ind The big bx ueght to UROL ion n al n al to loyers didn't {the union bout a dozen crippled women assaulted ependent workers {th men were school children the Independent men How would you like to have yous grown from the used to sit on your lap and love "Dad- dy” pounded some big builles on her way from the school where | he had gone to try and please Daddy hy learning to read? The little bruised would first need and brutally 8 ¢ ee union eT, | ta youna of the iy r who by home face tender care while you the inscription writ deep in aster and Guide to all human compass.on, “Inasmuch as have it one of the least of these My brethren ye have done It unto Me.” Then perhaps you would drop to your knees and pray Almighty God for strength in right arm to strike one ponder vour heart, by that M ye done unto manly and Ojibways' Independence , Ojibways of the Misalisippi band! have regularly each year since 1868 celebrated thelr acceptance and occu. pation of the White Barth reserva. tion In western Minnesota. Within the limits of its boundaries in northern Minnesota these people have come out of barbarism into an advanced stage of civilization. From being American wards and helpless children they are now citizens and owners of the land, with deeds duly signed with their own signatures proving their claims. Even to this year the davs of June 15 and 16 are celebrated instead of July 4, though it is possible that here after the Americans’ Independence day will be accepted as thelr own time of rejolecing.—Fur News. Millions From Hunters, } A deer In the bush is worth more than a deer In hand, for the live deer attracts the tourists and the sports. men, who leave money behind, money found because it cost the State noth ing. This is borne out by Germany, where 600,000 people yearly pay for bunting in the forests. The returns from hunting licenses and rentals amount to $32,600,000 yearly for Ger. many. Germany is ahead of the United States in this respect. Only one State approaches Germany In revenues from hunting and tourists. Maine's 250,000 tourists yearly leave $25,000,000 behind them. Alabama collects yearly $25,000 in hunters’ fees. —QOuting. The clock in the tower of Colum- In the so-called “free high schools” of Illinois 5965 Ilinols students pay | private tuiillon. bia University, New York, is sald to be one of the most accurate in the world, varying but six seconds a year. What Bhe Enjoyed. Mr. Crimsonbeak-—1 wish to gra cious you'd take that bunch of hair pins out of your mouth when you're talking to me. I can't understand a single word you say. Mrs. Crimsonbeak-—There you go! you hate to see me have the least little bit of pleasure!—Yonkers Statesmen. Greenhornes Cautious. “1 am afraid to go with you. Do you understand managing a boat?” “No.” replied the youth, “but I no tice that the fellows who know all about it are the ones that get drown. ed."—Philadelphia Ledger, In The Home Circle. When a boy marries, two opinions prevail at the home he is leaving: His mother thinks he is throwing himself away, and his sisters think the gir] is.~Pueblo Chieftain. In Wellston, Ohio, thirty Amer- icans sought employment in a factory. They were seeking to earn food for | their families. They were bombarded | by rocks and pounded with clubs in the hands of union men. One of the Injured, John Branni- | han, was taken to the city hospital] with a broken jaw, erushed skull and | other cuts and bruises. He was the| father of two children, and was! thought to be dying. Perhaps he did. | I don’t know, but I sometimes wonder | what the children sald to Mother when “Papy” didn't come home, and how they and the little woman got food, and how they could place their wrongs before their own Amer. ican fellows i Maybap sometime some kind per-| son will equip a home where the or-| phans and widows of the victims of the Labor Trust may be eared for and fed. It would take a big home. It has been sald there were 31 Americans, many of them fathers, killed In one strike, (the teamsters in Chicago) | and over 5000 maimed, many for life | That's only one “lesson” of bullies. There are literally thousands of cases wherein your fellow Amer- ican has been assaulted, maimed or] killed by these men. The same work | is going on day by day make a practice of picking out each day from the papers, acrounts of bru- | tality to American workingmen who | prefer to work free from the impu- dence and tyranny of self constituted | | | i i these Suppose you | you went to death for it. Helpless children flends, teaching Independent Ameri cans that they must stop work when “labor.” Thousands of men, women und children have been treated thus, From somewhere, Oh, Father of us with pitying eyes upon these brutal blows, cuts and scars on the many human bodies made in your likeness and image, They are beautifully and wonder fully made, each the dweliing place of a Divine Soul. Is it Your wish that they be crushed by iron shod heels, cutwy knives or torn asunder by bullets and dyna- mite? May we venture to think that a long suffering putience is extended in the hope that the men and women of America may some day wake to a realization of the awful erueltios per- petrated by this spirit of oppression to their beck and call, pay them fees | and be told by them when and where | to work, and for whom. You will] discover the same general conditions | underlying all these dally attacks In every case the workingman pre- | fers to be free. He has that right. | He then tries to go to work He and | food or he wouldn't run the risk of | his life. Many such s man has wiped | the tears away and quieted the fears of a loving wife, Jeft with a kiss on her lips, set his manly jaw and walked into a shewer of stones and bullets to win food for the loved mother and babies i A good many have been brought! home on stretchers with blood oozing from nose and ears, some cold, while some gradually recover, and carry for life the grim marks of the “union label.” They are your fellows, my friends, and you supinely read the ac. counts and say “too bad." Have you grown so calloused that you care nothing for the sufferings of | these men who need food and these! helpless ones who rely on the life and strength of husband and father? : Let us hope that soon you may be moved by a just God to rice in your might and by voice and pen, by vote and right arm you will do a man's! in protecting yourselves and your brothers from this onslaught on | American citizens, This cruel war- fare is carried on not always to raise but to establish union con- yot : 1 and establish the “label.” Unfortunately the “Labor move. ! ment” which started many years ago! fallen under control of a lot of tyrannical, vicious “men of violent tendencies.” There are too many to attempt to name. You can recall them. They include men who have planned the murders of miners, teamsters, press. men and carpenters, shoemakers and independent workmen of all kinds. Many of them have escaped hanging by an outraged public only because juries became terror stricken and dared not convict them, Some have been punished slightly and some, Including the principal ofil- cers of this nefarious crew are now under sentence to imprisonment but have appealed their cases, Right here some apologist rises to Bless your dear cal acts against American eftizens and haven't told half the tale. it becomes necessary to say for the scores of honest law-abiding union men who deplore and are in responsible for the long infamous rec. ord of the “Labor Trust” under its present management, but they don't seem to stop it The strings men who manage, who pull and gulde the made the record and made by the tay policy it stands, as them. of a string of members of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor and you will view a list of crimes against Amer defy the | incite AWE, at mobs and avowed enemies of the peaceable citizens of all classes This band wields an {ron bar over their subjects and them to idleness whenever they want to call a strike exact sneer are drives or extra pocket Men don't want to what can they do when the slugging and murdering committee stands al- ways ready to "do them" if they try to work The poor women and helpless chil- dren their case to the public. suffer and no one dares present They must suffer in silence for they have no way right th the no- torfety-secking leaders carry out their work These to eir wrongs, while men cannot thus force pression on the weak and innocent or use them to bring newspaper notice to 0 03 line.” Therefore, with the craft of the fox the “union label” and tell the public to buy only articles carryin abel Smooth scheme jan’t it? They extract a fee from Alon It these poor wageworkers wil Will you reach out a hand to help earn food Or will you lessness allow work ana they ros st tion rican labor? i i independent workman for his wife and bable apathy to thrown & suffer until themselves dous and tyrannical leeches upon honest mn 8 $OL B ¥ i ¢ i and care him be out of 4) # 1 a trate before this pen- ARRTeR 4 Ba o& i Ward mouth Church, Brook- The pguccessor o enry *1y iyn, says: “Union labor hatred for labor burns ilke eats like acid, Is malignant beyond all descrip- But af woman union visited Plymouth Church a certain in- this union fon women he fires of hell.” and non-union the mar- a flame, nitric tion the other day, certain many fi: asking stitution. non-un burned in he She was p tirelessly pursuing the women and men to destr ket for goods, and to starve them out, In the French Revolution per cent. of the French lieved In violence. The § disclaimed violence and per cent. allowed the fill the streets of Paris with festering corpses, Se with dead r like t itiiessly, relentiessly iene] y 10 yy " a only Hee. + neonle peQpie per cent 9% = yet the 2 per cent, to ine to clog the Ooveying Orders. “Tomorrow you may have somo thing to eat,” promised the doctor the patient, who wa: now ing and correspondingly hungry. che patient realized there would be a restraint to his appetite, yet he hoped for a modest steaming meal, “Here is dinner,” sald the nurse next as she gave the pa. tient a spoonful of tapioca pudding; “and the doctor emphasizes that ev- erything else you do must be in the same proportion. Two hours later nurse heard a frantic call from the bedcham? “Nurse,” breathed the man, heavily, “lI want to reading; bring me a postage s‘amp.”--Tit- Bits oO ) CONnvalescs that your day, the do some The “sacred running oxen” lon never, it is | greater height of Cey- stated, thirty than 5 10 | | i i i church org i had been seiz { heartless industy , and now moving the law so their ne heaven be more safely carried on But You. Why : out and demand defense for lows? don’t Put your prosecuting test and insist that sworn duty, and protest to ¥ gressmen and repeal of the officers they legislators n Sherman Anti-Trus Its repeal is being push bor Trust and some big capital trust in order to give each n oppress Do ad In this great American r Ore your duty bodies, factory Paris, starved by the score The small per cent Labor Trust which to destroy the large per cent. of inde- to shut up until the every in laborin classes element in the tries to boveott thelr products Ir they could bind every one it would bring suffering upon hundreds of thousands, immeasurable ruin upon under control of the men now at- the force inde- hold and out all monthly fees, they must workers in “the union” manufacturers to kick pendent men. Cay anyone devise plete and tyrannical trust? no matter how perfectly they be made. Then, when the factory has been forced to close and the employes get hungry enough from lack of the workers must supplicate union leaders to be “allowed” to pay their fines (for not becoming mem- bers before) and pay thelr monthly fees to the purse-fat managers of the Labor Trust: Thereupon (under or. ders} before the factory be allowed to start they must force the owners label” or strike, picket the works, criminals towards the Independent workers who might still refuse to bend the knee and bow the head. In the meantime babies and moth- ers go hungry and shoeless, but ‘who cares. The scheming leaders are trained to talk of the “uplifting of la- bor” and shed tears when they speak of the “brotherhood of man.” mean ing the brotherhood of the “Skinny Maddens,” "Sheas,” "“Gompers,” et al, always excluding the medium or high-grade independent workers, Perhaps you have noticed lately that the makers of the finest hats, shoed and other articles have stoppea putting on the union label, Natural- ly the Labor Trust managers have or- dered their dupes to strike, lle idle, scrap, fight, slug and destroy proper- ty to force the makers to again put on “the label,” But fer some reason the buying public has been arousea to the insults and oppression behind it, and in thousands of cases have re. fused to buy any article carrying, what some one named the “tag of ser. vitude and oppression.” man freedom and liberty” was given { heart, it lant the honest and real by God and must be defended even to workman who does these things, it is death itself the excitable ones and the toughs and Our forefathers were used by the | tugs who don’t work except with their Infinite God to establish our freedom | mouths, but have secured control of in 1776, and our fathers gave freely | too many unions. I don’t even of thelr blood and treasuse to estab- | tempt to specify the criminal act lsh the freedom of the black. Now | these persons have assisted or winked again It seenfs we are called upon to at in thelr plan for destroying free protect our brothers :and ourselves workingmen and forcing men to stay from that cl time spirit of tyranny ' in “the union” and hence under thelr which comes up’from time to time to! control. The newspapers for the past farce people to obey tyranmous rules 7 years contain almost daily acconn mad bend the knee of the slave, of the criminal, lawless and tyrannf. i ; The bound and gagged union slave is fined from $5.00 $25.00 if he buys any article Tot bearing the “union label.” Nevertheless, he, time and again, risks the penalty and help the fellow workingman who is bragxe enough to work whore he pleases without asking permission on bended knees from the bulldozing leaders who seek by every known method of oppression and hate to hi our people and extract from each a monthly fee There are bables, children, women and honest, hard-working and skill ful fathers who rely upon the protee- to sell their labor where they choose, when they choose, and for a sum they believe it to be worth. Every citizen having the rights, privileges and protection of a citizen The Labor Trust leaders may suavely “request” (or order those they can) to buy only "union label” articles, and you can of course obey if you are under orders Depend upon it, the creatures of the Labor Trust will, upon reading this, visit stores and threaten dire re- sults unless all the things bear “the label.” They go so far as to have their women pretend to buy things, order yards of silk or cloth torn off and va- rious articles wrapped up and then discover "no label,” and refuse them. That's been done hundreds of times and Is but one of the petty acts of hatred and tyranny. Let no one who reads this article understand that he or she is asked to boycott any product whether it bears a “union label” or not. One has a constitutional right to examine the article and see whether its makers are Labor Trust contributors and slaves or are free and independent Ameri- cans, I have tried to tell you something about those who are oppressed, vill- fled, hated, and when opportunity of. fers are attacked because they prefer to retain thelr own independent Amer. fean manhood. These men are in the vast majority and include the most skillful artisans in the known world. They have wives and babes dependent on them, These men are frequently pp and have no way to make thels wrongs known. They are worthy of defense. That's the reason for the expenditure of a few thousands of dol. lars to send this message to the American people. Remember, | didn’t say my “excuse” for sending. it. The cause needs no “excuse.” C. W. POST, x ~ Battle Creek, Mich. . n. Some "parlor socialist” who knows nothing of the Russian Czarism of the. every one must be jealous of 1} of individual liberty and alwavs | ever resent the attempts made to | power for personal aggrand Only the poor fool allows | erty to be wrested from him. Some one asks “how about you own workmen? I didn’t intend to speak of my own affairs, but so long as the question is | almost sure to be asked I don't mind | telling yom. The Postum workers are about a | thousand strong, men and women, ' and don’t belong to labor unions. The Labor Trust has, time without num- bers, sent “organizers” with money to give “smokers.” ete., and had thelr “orators” declalm the “brotherhood | of man” business, and ery salty tears describing the fearful conditions of the “slaves of capital” and all that But the “confidence game” never | worked, for the decent and high | grade Postum workers receive 10 per icent., over the regular wage scale | They are the highest paid, richest and | best grade of working people in the | State of Michigan and I believe in the | United States They mostly own thelr own homes, and good ones. Thelr wages come 52 weeks in a Year {and are never stopped on the order of some paid agent of the Labor Trust | They have savings accounts in the | banks, houses of thelr own and steady | work at high wages. { They like their daily occupation in the works (com# and ask them) and are not slaves, and yet the Labor Trust leaders have done their best to ruin the sale of their products and | force them into idleness and poverty. It would cost the workingmen of Battle Creek (our people and about 3000 others) from $1000.00 to $2000.00 a month in fees to send out to the leaders of the Labor Trust, if they would allow themselves to be- come “organized” and join the Trust. Not for them, they keep the money, echool the children and live “free.” That's some comfort for white people. Once In a while one of the little books “The Road to Wellville,” we put th the pkgs. of Postum, Ghape- Nuts and Post Toastles, is sent back to us with a sticker pasted across it saying "Returned because It don't bear the union label.” Then we join hands and sing a hymn of praise for the discovering by some one that onr souls are not seared with the guilt of being con- gpirators to help bind the chains of siavery upon fellow Americans by placing added power In the hands of the largest, most oppressive and harmful trust the world has ever seen. When you seek to buy something look for the “union label” and speak your sentiments. That's an
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers