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About The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1905)
Nemaha Advertiser W. W. SANDERS. Published Nemaha, - Nebraska A houicwlfo in Flnltnd buyaa now iroora every morning. L'nla Is a nao ssary extravagance, since .she weeps bor whole house every div, pd the broom alio uses Is jint a undlo ol fresh, ureen birch leavos, fliose natural dampness licks up the lust. P'or CJrowinjr OtrlR. Went Pembroke, Me., April 24. lira. A. L. Smith, of this place, says Ihnt Dodd's Kidney Pills are the bist remedy for growing girls. Mrs, Smith tmphuslKeu her recommendation by tho following experience: "My daughter was thirteen years old taBt November and It Ih now two yoarH lince sbo wan llrst tnken with Crazy BpoU that would hiBt a week and would then pass off. In a month she would have the spells again. At these times ahe would eat very little and was vory yellow; even the whites of her eyes would he yellow. "Tho doctors gave us no encourage ment; they all said they could not help her. After taking one box of Dodd'H Kidney PIIIb, sho has not had one bad poll. Of course, we continued the treatment until she hnd used In all about a dozen boxes, nnd -wo still give them to her occasionally, when sho Is oot feeling woll. Dodd's Kidney Pllld re certainly tho best medicine for growing girls." Mothers should heed the advice of Mrs. Smith, for by so doing, they may lave their daughters much pain ami ilckness and insure a health', happy futuro for them. Borno girls waato a lot of time looking for tho ideal man when there ire a lot of real onos lying around loose. DIVORCE Who entitled.; how to got It; missmated, unhappy; send stamp; tree information. iioxJ22, York, Neb. A woll seasoned old darky named Bon Oaso, age'.' ninet7-olgbt, died recently in Richmond. Va. This worthy, although born aftor Genrgo Washington had passod from curth was prono to boast that he had seen fcbo first President inaugurated, fre quently went lishlrjg with him, and often attendod him as a bodyguard nnd coachman. Most of Ben's friends, on account of his loudness for romancing, considered him a hard case. GUARANTEED INVESTMENT hlh ffrde 6 Jtl Hnt dividend participating sold bond for tale. Uondl lharolarsopront.il ars POSITIVELY 0UAHANTEED y Banking and Twit Company AOA1NHT LOSS. Ad trosi, Little, 113 J liroadwajr.New York. Wisconsin railroads cancel orders for improvements amounting to $10, 100,000 becausa of attitudo of Gov ernor La Follette and the public gainst corporations. "Dr, .David JCtmnedy'i rave rite Heratdr cured rut 4 Bright'! Dlieaie and Gravel. Able phynlcluni (ailed. Mm, E. 1. M liner, llurg lilll, O., 11.00 a bottle Tho Japanese Held marshal, Oyuma, onco said: "My idea of hap piness is to dispense with every thing I possess that belongs to the practice of arms, and go far lute tbe country with big boxes of books to read for tbo rest of my days; books that tell of happiness and pro gress, and not of tho terrible deeds of war." Alabastine Your Walls There is a "nciu thought" in wall decorations as in everything else,, and the new thought being inter preted means Alabastine. The most beautiful arts and crnfts effects, tbe most artistic di'slMi. I lie most beautiful colorings this year arc In ALABAB'f JNB. ALABASTINK being made from Ala baster rock cements and becomes a pm-t of your wall. Some wall covering lire made from whiting or chalk with a little cluo mixed in, and they rub off. Al.A BA8T1NH Is rock finish. If yon are nut satisfied with the appearance of your walls, you need ALABASTINE. We supply color schemes free for the asking. Just mention the size of your room, the use you put It to, and whether It li north, south or west light. We will supply you with a scheme for your walls. Don't foret your church or school rooruH. Do they not need Alabasttng? Bold everywhere by the best dealers. If not by yours write the ALABASTINE COMPANY Grand Av.. Grand Rapids, Mich. New York City BEGGS' BLOOD PURIFIER CURES catarrh oC the stomach. 33? lltuk'ISS 411 tti( HlfS. Couirh Sn, w. TmW Oood. U i la Ums. Sold by Urngj rmu iiilTTrwHs! TOHCrf OF THE TIMES. K CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER ESTING ITEIV18. Co in tti c n t n ittul Criticisms Itaacd Upon the HappciilnsH of the Ily Histori cal and Ncwh Notes. Tho weather man is all the time busy thinking of mean things. ".Student" Is Informed that Warsaw is pronounced with a heavy accent on the first syllable. Thouctor Is never hungry enough to enjoy the hot roast served to him by the dramatic critic. If a man wiintu to dispose of his property no that his heirs will not go to law over It he can always do so iy giving It away during his lifetime It is surprising how many men there are who can go blindfolded and put their finger on "tho causo of the ieo ple." Senator Dolliver says civilization and mud go together. No, the Sena tor did not havo politics In mind par ticularly. "Tho public schools must bo kept out of politics, and politics must be kept out of the public schools."' That has the right ring. Tbo name of Jay Cooke's father was Hleuthcros Cooke. The simple and easily polled name given to tho eon was merely the natural reaction. TJio Emperor of Japan has written another poem, which consists of six fines. Ho gets .fll.OOO.OOO a year, and to undoubtedly the hlghesc salaried poet on earth. Twenty thousand people have ap plied for medals and pensions under tho provisions governing the Carnegie hero fund. Little General Joe Wheeler isn't among them, cither. The curious public is waiting eager ly for the promised publication of "IjOVO Letters of a United States Sen ator." All tho world loves to read somebody else's love letters. A hnlf-sliot man went home late and his angry wife shot him. It is just such harsh treatment as tills that drives men to stay away from home altogether and sleep In a cemetery. There are four times as many "words In tho English language as in the French, but young writers always fool that it is necessary to work In a French phrase here and there In order to make their meaning clear. One of the college presidents thinks the higher education will eventually cause the obliteration of the human nice. Are -we to understand from tills that the time is coming when the man who confesses that lie Is a father -will at onco he listed with the Illiterate? The study of the Infinitesimal is pro grossing. W. A. Sherstono declares in the Cornhlll Magazine that there "are no atoms now; they have all been cut up Into electrons and corpuscles." Tho chemical atoms that go to make up a single cubic centimeter of water, -which would ulcely 111 I the shell of a small filbert, number 00,000,000,000,000,000, 000 (ninety thousand million billion), and It Is thought that their individual weight may ho determined. Churches in the United States pros pered during 190-i. The Lutheran shows the largest ratio of growth, a Rain of more than r pee cent over :he membership In IDOtf; the Protectant (episcopal comes next, and tho Dls jlples of Christ follow. Hardly any Senonilnatlon lost In members or con rrlbutlons, and "there are to-day," on the authority of the Church Economist, "more Christian believers, more stu dents of the Bible, nioro churches and more money raised for Christian en terprises than ever before since the olrth of Christ." Still there are "waste places," but In (he foregoing facts there Is Inspiration and sustalnment Cor all who are laboring to comfort tnd rebuild. A publication devoted to suggestive therapeutics, telepathy and kindred in terests maintains that thousands of people actually think themselves to death every year by allowing their minds to dwell on morbid subjects, it Would be more accurate to say that these persons worry themselves to death, it Is not thinking. To think would be in fortify the mind against morbidity. There seoms to be no doubt that unreasoning and unreasonable worry has tt distinct and pernicious effect on mind and body. That It is practicable to overcome this cause of trouble is alllrnied by special students of psychology, but there Is an attrac tion to some minds in morbid melan choly and a disposition to shun what ever Is cheerful and wholesome. In the army no small proportion of the olllcers, especially since the Span ish war, have come from the ranks, In the navy, and lu spite of recent legis lation, tbf-re 1 practically hupawahlo barrier between forecastle and quar ter-deck", and the few men who havo succeeded in overcoming it havo been enabled to do so chiefly through tho urgent need of officers, a demand which "will soon be supplied by tho graduates of tho greatly enlarged naval academy at Annapolis, when tho "door of hope," for tho moment ajar, will be closed again. The na tural consequences of drawing this hard and fast caste line is that ho best and most promising young men in the service leave It just as they be gin to be valuable to it. As In every other career, the knowledge that it s impossible to rise above a certain and wholly subordinate position has a deadening or demoralizing effect upon any man worth having. The remarkable religious revival in WftJes cznl the awakening In London has turned attrition sharply to simi lar poiTsibilltles iu other parts of the world. Tho distinguished English edi tor, W. T. Stead, and tho eminent American clergyman, Newell D wight mills, unite in the prediction that the movement is to become Vorld-wide. Certainly, the time is ripe. Mankind has been moving at a rapid pace. It Is a hard, materialistic age. 1o rich have become more and more lavish and oppressive of the poor, and the poor have given themselves up very Targely to the thought of how to keep up with the procession. It might seem to the unthinking that this Is the hardest of conditions for religious en thusiasm to break in upon. But the truth Is that human nature swings, like the pendulum, from the extreme of Idealism to that of materialism and from the materialism back to idealism. Its attitude to-day Is no indication that It -will bo the same to-morrow. World wide materialism works its own cure. The whole thing eventually breaks down of Its own weight. Men's minds become surfeited and susceptible to other and very different considerations. It is then remembered and proclaimed that man does not live by bread alone. Wo mn;r havo so much of the now and hero as to sicken of It, and turn to thought of the beyond for rest and inspiration. At tbe meeting of the Religious Edu cational Association In Boston Bishop Lawrence made some excellent re marks on the power and value of wealth. Other spwkers had referred to the age as materialistic and had deplored the fact that It was devoted to commercialism. Without refuting anything that had been said the bishop of Massachusetts spoke on the Import ance of money and especially its value In connection -with spiritual and in tellectual matters. "Why is it," said Bishop Lawrence, "that we are some times afraid of the enormous increase of -wealth? Increase of wealth is one of the greatest opportunities of this country and we ought to glory In it and rejoice in it just as any man ought to rejoice in the increase of his phy sical strength, provided ho has the mind and heart and the character to handle his physique." The tone of Bishop Lawrence Is Uig more remark able because it seems to bo the part or tho clergy and of tho college pro fessor In these days to decry wealth and the amount of attention given to the acquisition of It. Not that tho clergy and the college professor do not want money, for they are always beg ging from men of -wealth, but they berate tho spirit that prompts the pur suit of it and do not appreciate the fact that the business man must give himself unwearledly to tho acquisition of a fortune exactly as the scholar must give ids days and nights to the pursuit of knowledge. Bishop Lawrence placed tho stress -where it should he placed, lie accented tho necessity of spiritual and moral development along with acquisition of riches. He lias no fear for the increase of material wealth either by tho individual man or by the nation if along with it there is growth in mind, heart and char acter. There Is an insincerity in con stantly begging for money and then formally denouncing those -who make a business of earning It. Bishop Law rence's position Is consistent "not to fear the increase of wealth, but to fear tho loss of the inspiration of religion and of the intelligence which ought to go with It." Ijuimlis Too Muuli. One Kansas City policeman cannot go to the theaters because he laughs so long and loud at every Joke that lio stops the performance. He was put on a beat where his duty took him Inside a theater for a few minutes ovory evening, and ho asked to bo changed, becauso ho said tho theater peoplo wouldn't lot him stay inside, even when ho bought a ticket. Before he was married ho took his sweetheart to a show once, but at tho end of tho second act tho manager touched him on tho back and Bald he would havo to got out. Ho had all tho actors laughing. "But I paid to see tills show," pro tested tho policeman. "If you put mo out I shall Insist on your giving my money back." "We'll be glad to do that, all right," wild the manager. And thoy did. CUBAN MINISTER ; U.S. Recommends Pe-ru-na Senor Quesada, Cuban Minister to the United States. Senor Quesada. Cuban Minister to the United States, is nn orator born. Iw an article in Tho Outlook for July, 181)9, by (Jeorge Kcuuan, who heard Quesada peak at the Estcban Theater, Mntanzas, Culm, he said: "I have seen ninny au diences under the spell of eloquent speech and hi the grip of strong emotional ex citement; but 1 have rarely witnessed such a scene as at the close of Queanda's eulogy upon the dead patriot, Marti." In a letter to The Peruna Medicine Com pany, written from Washington, D. C. Senor Quesada says: " Peruna J can recommend as a very good medi cine. It is an excellent strengthening tonic, and it is also an efficacious cure for the almost universal complaint of catarrh. "--Qonzalo De Quesada. Congressman J. II. Baukliead, of Aln- laina, one of the most influential mem ers of the House of Ilcpreseutatives, In letter written from Washington. I). U.. ive his endorsement to the great ca- nrrh remedy. Peruna, in the following onls "Your Peruna is one of the best nedlclncs I ever tried, nnd no family ho u Id be without your remarkable emedy. As a tonic and catarrh cure know of nothing better." J. tl. iankhcid. iu reiium wooa tor an purposes must bo imported, as there are no xtensivc forests or timber lands. Mrs.-Wlnslom SOOTHING SYROP for chll iren teething, eoftnis the furns. reduces lufls nation, allays pnlu. curcb colic. Price 25o bottle Blessed is ne who puts a line of w Isdoin in a line of type. We ars asvsr without a bottle of PJso's Ours for Consumption in our house Mrs. E. M. Swayze, Wakita, Okla., April 17, 1001. Who lives nobly learns the ait of flying well. Mother "Oray'B Swot Powders for (Jnlluron. Successfully used bv Mother Gray. Bursa iti the Children's Home in Now York, cure Oo. itlpntion. Feverishnes.i, Had Stomach, Testis Inc Disorders, move and reeulute the Dowels sea uestroy worms. Over 80,000 testimonials. At all Droits, 25c. Sample FREE. A tnss A. S. UUfsmu). LcRoy. K. Y. Andrew D, Wbito, in lecture, ad vocate the appointment of half our ambassadors and ministers abroad Sbroiif-b promotion from tbe lower tanlr of tho diplomatic, service. LECTURES! HOSES H. SYDENHAM, the very first ploneersettler of the onco "GREAT AMERICAN DESERT" tnd oldest inhabitant of Central and Vestern Nehraska, btill lives 1 lie vlll lecture for you, or your "society" n "Fifty Years of My Pioneer Lifo mon Nebraska Indians, Wild Vhite Men, Etc."; "Tho Past and ruture of Nehraska Educationally, industrially and Socially Considered" ; ' Nebrask" ns, the Croain of Mipposed ost Ten Tribes of Israel" and other jrogressive, uplifting subjects. Terms ow. Address, KEAItNEY, NEHRASKA. iVrlto hint at once. Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year, 0pmm TUB FAMILY'S FAVMITst HEINMIIB CANDY CATHARTIC SScKK. BEST FOR THR There is but n. single medicine which is a radical specitic for catarrh. It i Peruna, which has stood a half century test and cured thousands of eases. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at onco to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your ease, and he will he pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President ol The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. All correspondence- held strictly confi-dentiai. xnero are enougn ireignc enginet. and cars engaged In tbe traffic o) this country to make a string nint thousnd miles long. Colored bishops head a dolegatiot of members of tho soclolcgcial con gres3 who urge tbe President to favo a congressional commission to piomul Kate a plan for settling the rac question. JPletrn Ale'androvlth, a chemlstt of Mi tew, has devlpd a moans ot preserving u., bj jies by encasing them in glass. The uody is first covered wtlh a thin coating of liquid glass. It is then placed in a mold and melted glass poured round it. The boly thus hecomes inclosed in an airtight, solid and transparent mass of glass, and may bo preserved Indeiintely. An old resident of Brookllne, Mass., rccontly addressed a class of young womon at an educational in stitution, and advised them to go Id for the aotivo life. "Go out and do something, bo something," bo ex claimed; "become fishers of men." and ho wondered why tbe audience tittered. WILD WITH ECZEMA And Other Itching, Huming, Bcaly Ernptions, with I-obs of Hair-Speedily Cured hy Ciitlcuru. itathe the affected parts with hot water and Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the surface of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle; dry, with out hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment freely, to allay itching, irri tation and inflammation, and soothe anu ueai; aim, lastly, take Cuticura Resolvent Pills to cool mid cleanse the blood. A single set, coating but $1.00, is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, dlsdgurlng skin, scalp and blood humors, with loss of hair, when all else falls. Al Dictrti BOWELS i f 4 8 'i 1 v,