Nemaha Advertiser W. W SANDERS. Publish Nemaha, Nebraska A Chicago physician of proruln once says that In families where cnn Humptlon is common the diet .should consist a3 largely us possible of fats, wich as milk, cream, butter, fat beef iind mutton, but that no pork or veil should be used except the fat Jt bacon, which is snld to be as rich In nutrition us cod liver oil. Good red beef may bo eaten, tut over cooked meats of an7 kind should be avoided. Pears, ripe apples, cooKod ripe fruits and whole wheat bread are rocommondd, Drink new milk until two Quarts a day can be con sumed. Ouro to Stay Curort. Wnpollo, lown. Sept. J 1. (Special.) One of the most remarkable cures over recorded In Louisa county Is that of Mrs. Mlnnii! Hart of this place. Mt'H. Hirt wns In bed for eight months and when nhe wuh able to alt up Hhe wns ill drawn tip on one side and could not walk Heron the room. Jioild's Kid ney I'IIIh cured her. HpenUIng of her cure, Mrn. Hart Hays: "Vea, Dodd'H Kidney Pills cured me afler I wuh In bed for eight montliH, uml I know the cure was complete for that was three year ngo, and I have not been down since. In four weeks from the time I started taking them I was able to make my garden. Nobody can know how thankful I am to be cured or how much t feel I owe to Dodd's Kidney Pills." This case again points out how much tho general health depends on the kid neys. Cure the kidneys with Dodd's Kidney Pills and nine-tenths of tho nuttcrlng the human family Is heir to. ivlll dlsupyeur. SCRAPS. The city of Toklo Is one hundred years older than St. Petersburg. Over '$8(5,000 cattle wore destroyed by wild beasts in India last year. Truo happiness Is an excellent complexion powder. Tho Japjneso pootically term rlnkles "Che waves of old ago." Praise arx.ong women, Jiko gold and ipreclous stones, owes it valuo chiefly to its scarcity. You can tell that most artists are bichelnrs by the "dreams" of women they paint. Woman's wits arc something lllo lior opera cloak to be worn only on state occasions. Many a young girl who seems bower vrttb grlev' Is moral? carrying ' the secret of hor test girl friend's Move afalr. ' Wotting tho finger In cologne and (drawing It over tho eyebrows is ar.uless and agrecablo, besldo hav ing a most soothing effect. ""TTiicTglrl who notes tholpopulnrlty o her foolish sister ith tho op posite sex doubtless finds llttlo in conblvo for b'oiug wlio. Tho avorago girl believes that sno bus expressed undying loyalty and eternal friendship fur hor best girl friend when she admits thai she Is .pretty. A lady In St Louis withhold $3 from hor sorvant because the. latter bad damaged a piece of furniture. Tho girl then maliciously smashed crockery valued at $12. Sho was ar rested, and tho Judge finod hor $25. STRONGER THAN MEAT. JV Jmlgo'a Opinion of Gt nnc-Nntn. A gentleman who has acquired a Ju dicial turn of mind from experience on the bench out in the Sunflower State writes a carefully considered opinion ab to the value of Grape-Nuts as food. Ho says: "For the past five years Grape-Nuts 'has been a prominent feature In our bill of fare. "The crisp food with the delicious, nutty ilavor has become an Indlspens iiblo necessity in my family's every' day life. "It has proved to bo most healthful mid beneficial, n..d has enabled us to practically abolish- pastry ami plea fr-om our tablet for tho children prefer Grape-Nuts and do not crave rich am unwholesome food. "G rape-Nuts keeps us all in perfect physical condition as a preventive of disease It Is beyond value. I nave neon particularly Impressed by the bone flclnl effects of Grapo-Nuts when used by hullea who are troubled with face blomlshos, skin eruptions, etc. It clears up tho complexion wonderfully. "Ah to its nutritive qualities, my ex perlence Is that one small dish of Grape-Nuts la superior to a pound of meat for breakfast, which ja an itn portant consideration for anyone. It Btttlsfles the appetite and strengthens the power of resisting fatigue, while Its use Involves none of tho disagree able consequences that sometimes fol rtow a meat breakfast." Name given . by Postura Co., Battle Creak, Mich. There's a reason. DENTISTRY IN THE NAVY. If tide Hum Ilun HIjc Dentin! to Do the NcccHHiiry Work. Comparatively little Is known of the mporlance that attaches to ilentlNtry n the I'nlted States navy mil f"V icrsoiis realize how import. ir.t Uu eclh of an applicant are as goi i.mg liliti Im!h to Uncle Sam's sen sc, , iays the New York World. 'I her jrobably are more aspirants for the auvy rejected for having hid ti.'t'i '.ban for any other cause. Until three years ago there were no lentlsls attached to the navy. ,V .here are six in the service nul Cicse ire stationed at the prlii'tial nmy ranis throughout the country I he Host Important of these dental stn .tons Is at the Brooklyn navy yard, rt'bere the olllee Is In charge of .1 I, McCarthy, D. D. S. There Is another it ISoslon, one at Newport, U. 1 ; one it Norfolk, Vn.i one at. Mare Island 3nl.: one at Ooat Island, Cat., and still mother at the navy yard at CuUte. The dentists are under the surgton reneral of the United States navy and ire supposed to look after the teeth of ill the men In the navy from tint high st officers down to the tipprcntlt'c L'eeth are extracted free of charge, as well as treated and filled with amal ,'iim anil cement fillings. Dr. Mc Carthy Is a regular salaried ollhial of :he yard. The only work charged for is the gold linings, gold crowns anl bridge work, which the dentist fur ilshes himself. To receive the free treatment all a nan In the navy has lo do Is to report it sick call and receive n slip from he surgeon in charge, giving pennls iton to visit a dentist. The number )f men treated dally is getting beyond :he ability of the post dentists. An il'fort Is being made by the surgeon general and the secretary of the navy 'jo Increase tho force to thirty dentists, jr as near one to each thousand men 'n the service as possible. Every time a warship arrives in port Dr. McCarthy has a busy time of it mil since he was appointed to the local ,'iird he has attended I'.OO men, who tvere given alloy fillings. A great num ber of other patients have received treatment of teeth and had teeth ex tracted. As each man Is treated a chart it his mouth Is taken and placed on record. These charts show exactly which tooth was filled, which was treated, and the records are of great valuo to tho navy department, as they icrvo for identification. Dr. McCarthy is a gruduate of the University of Lexington, Ky., and also f the University of Knoxvllle, Tenn., mil took u post graduate course in a wllogo at Cincinnati, Ohio, lie Is un uliiote, ana was capiain or. uio rooi ball team at Mare Islaml navy yard bforo he was transferred to the Brook lyn yard. ISnRlihli Tongue in Ioiul. The United States are by far the largest of the civilized nations except tussla, which has l.'iO.OOO.OOO Inhabl cants. The German empire has (, )00,000; Austria-Hungary, -17,000,000 npan, -17,000,000; the United King loin, -lii.OOO.OOO; France, 113,000,000, Italy, :V2,000,000, and Spain, 18,000,000 China has 1150,000,000, but she does not mint In a calculation of this sort. Owing to the rapid growth of the United States the English language h now spoken by more persons than use ny other civilized tongue. Charles said ho spoke German to his horse. Vronch to men, Italian to his women friends and Spanish to God. In his lays, three and a half centuries ago Spain was a land on which the sun never set. England, was only a small spot on the map and the English la n- ciuage hold only a minor place in the :lvillzed tongues. To-day 1IJ0.O0O.OOC Df people speak English, 100.000.00C speak German, 70,000,000 employ Span sh, Including tho Inhabitants of the f.atln American countries, and 10,000, )00 speak French. Moreover, tho load for English Is apldly lengthening. Nearly two-thirds Df all tho people who speak the Eng llsh tongue are In tho United States Out of tho Ark. Mr. Bonos Why Is an exhausted stick of carbon like a dove? Mr. Tanibo I gives It up, sah. Mr. Bones Becauso they both camu jut of tho arc. Mr. Tambo Ladies and gentlemen with your kind permission, we wil low sing: "I wish I Was a Senatoi In a Nice Oool Jail." Pittsburg Post MoIClnloy Memorial Church. A momorlnl church for William Mo Klnloy, dedicated at Portland, Ohio, tils boyhood home, is erected on the spot on which stood tho church Mc Klnloy Joined when ho was 14 years aid. Mrs. McKlnley contributed to ward Its building, and Andrew Oar aoglo gave tho organ. Proof Positive "I was not drunk last night" "You woro." "What makes you think so " "I saw you trying to sot your watch by tho faro register on a trolloy car! Olovoland Leader. Every time a man's neighbors klc it makoa him sore. LIEUT. I S. DAVIDSON PE11 SIR m 881 F. S. Duvi.laon, Ex-Llcut. U. S. Army, Washington, D. C, care U. S. PoiimIou OlIW, writes: "To my mind there Is no remedy tor catarrh comparable to Pcruna. It not only strikes at the root of the malady, but It tones and strengthens the system In a truly wonderful way. That has been Its history In my case. I cheerfully and unhesi tatingly recommend it to those alllicted us I have been." F. S, Davidson. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Pcruna, write at once to Dr. Ilartinun, giving u lull statement ot your case, and he will e pleased to cive you his vnhmble ad vice gratis. ddress Dr. b. u. Iwirtmnn. President of the Llurtmuu Sanitarium. Colum bus, Ohio. ! A lotion o' rosowater and glycer ine, two ounces of each, and half the quantity of citric acid, Is good foi sunburn. Apply when washing the hands. NOISES jNJER HEAD Mrs. Reagan was a Norvous Wreck But Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Brought Sound Health. " Boforo I began to tako Dr. Williams' Philc Pills," said Mrs. Mary Reagan, of No. 80 Rilburn street, Fall River, Mass., recoutly, "I was in and out ol bed all the time, but now I stay up all day and do all my own work. "I was badly run down from over work. Ono day noises began in my head and almost made me crazy. My head felt as if a tight baud had been put around it, and tho pressure and tlu sounds made me so uneasy that I often had to walk tho floor nil night. " My stomach was in bad shapo, nnd 1 had smothering sensations. At sucli times my body seemed bloodless, mj hands woro like ehalk and my fact turned yellow. The doctor said I had dyspepsia in tho worst form. Then mj uorves gavo way and I was completely prostrated. I frequently suffered from smothering Eousntious. " Tho first, box of Dr. Williams Pink Pills that I used quieted my nerves so that I could got a good night's sloop which was a now experience for mo. Before I began to use them I was a norvous wreck ami trembled nt the slightest sound. I was so weak that I had to sit down nnd rest every few steps when I wont up stairs. Now I can run up a whole flight at onco. Tho smother, iug sensations have gono and tho noises in my head have stopped entirely. My nppearanco has greatly improved, for friends who woro alarmed on my ac count before, now say: 'How well you are looking 1' My husband spent over a hundred dollars ou treatment for mo thnt was worthless, but a few boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills brought me sound hoalth." Sold by all druggists, or sent, post paid, ou receipt of prico, 60 cents per box, six boxes for $2 60 by the Dr. Wil liams Alodioiuo Co., Schenectady, N. Y. The World's Standard DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS 600.000 In Use. Tn Ttmi Ml Others Combined. Ht 910.- pr tar (rtry Tiir ef Um our ill mltj littlof Inti iM $5.- tr tow ew tM laHitUf tatntm. THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR 00. Canal A Randolph H i 74 CortluMt IMrmt, OHIOAOO I NCW YORK otm ifcm Men, utmam. A TAMOUS ENGINE. Not long ago n little old-fashioned awiteh engine was hauled down the main line of a Western railroad to be thrown Into the scrap pile. Dingy, rusty, worn out, not worth repnlring further, it was yet of sulllclent im portanee to attract to station plat forms hundreds of men and women who had not forgotten the record of "Kngine P7, of the Alton," and wanted a last look at the old machine. Just a third of a century ago "!7" was the most famous locomotive in the world. To tho bounds of civiliza tion, wherever the telegraph and the dally news rouehedrlt was talked about, praised, spoken of with tho pride which all the world feels In one man's creation which has done a wonderful thing. And a wonderful thing "07" had done, for, stopping only for water, It had run for three consecutive hours at a speed approximating a mile a min ute, and had even run long stretches of the way at the thou undreamed of sliced of a mile In fifty-seven seconds. That was In October. 1871. Tho en gine was In the roundhouse at Bloom lngton, 111. On the previous nigh; word had reached itloomlngtou that a groat lire was In progress In Chicago, liarly In the morning a telegram came to the Itloomlngtou fire department from the mayor of the burning city, asking 'for aid. 'Jhe fire department called up a railway official and asked for a special train. Ho "1)7" was fired up. rolled out lo the main line, coupled to a coach and a fiat car, and sent to u team track. There all the fire fighting apparatus that could be spared was run on the fiat car and fastened securely, the fire men found places In the conch, and "!)7," with n full head of steam, slipped easily away on what was to bo the most famous run of Its life. A clear track hud been provided for tho whole distance. Every opposing train was sidetracked, and men were stationed at all the switches to assure safety. Louis Hawks was at the throt tle of the little engine llttlo as en gines go today, but n big fellow then. He gave "1)7" notch after notch of the throttle till the train Hew at a wonder ful speed. From Chenoa to Pontine, ten miles, the train passed in ten min utes. From Dwight to Gardner, nine miles, was covered in nine minutes. Then in a burst of speed that ninde the wondering officials in the dispatcher's olllee gape in aniaxement, "5)7" wheeled off tin seven miles from Wil mington to HI wood In barely over six minutes. At the throttle Hawks sat, bent for ward, his eyes Intent on the track, strained, nervous over this never-before-equaled speed, coaxing ills engine with a magician's hand. And nt last, In almost an even three hours, he closed the throttle and brought the train to a stop in the smoke-enshoud-cd city after a record making run of one hundred and twenty-seven miles. The story of that ride went every where as ono of the great feats in con nection with the big fire. .Sermons were preached about the engine, nnd maga zines spread pictures of it broadcast. Like the "John Bull" of the Camden nnd Amboy lino, or the "General" which once pulled Andrews nnd his rnldors, "!)7" was set down for Im mortal fame. But no such easy berth awaited It as those others found level sidings in showy expositions. It pulled special trains till It was out of date, and then was put Into the shops and made Into a switch engine, In which guise It woro Itself out. Louis Hawk, too, grew old In serv ice nnd died a llttlo before his engine, on January " VMTt, after nearly fifty yenrs of continuous service. YoutfKs Companion. Sho A as "Worried. "Charles asked mo the all-Important question Inst night," said Clara. "What a proposal?" 'Oh, heavens, no. Ho wanted to know If I would like the use of his auto while ho was away this sum mer." "And wlmt about the other ques tion?" "Oh, that will come; but I felt un certain about tho auto.' Commercial Tribune. Mado HiniHoir So. Neerbye I called to see Brassy last evening, but ho wasn't at homo. Subbubs Oil! yes ho was. Neerbye I tell you ho wasn't. Subbubs But I tell you ho wns very much at home. Ho monopolized tho hnmmock on our porch all even ing. Philadelphia Press. Steel Trust I'rosldont'H Routine. W. E. Cory, president of the United States Steel Corporation, Is nt the head of a concern that employs 105,000 men. no Is at his office overy morning at 0:510, and thero ho remains whllo thero i . ... is worK to uo sometimes until 7 or 8 o'clock In tho evening. Twenty-threo years ago he was earning $15 a month. French Woman lu Tobacco Factories Tho French government employs 17, 148 people In Its state tobacco fac tories. Tho great majority are women EARLY ELECTRIC ROADS. Line in Baltimore Perhaps First Rcsru Inrly Operutcd In Thin Country. Daft began work on tho Hampden branch of tho Baltimore Union Passen ger Hallway Company in August, 1S83, at first with two, and a year later with two more dummies, which pulled regular street cars. A central and tho running rails were used for the normal operation, but at crossings an over head conductor was installed, and con nection was made with it by a trans versely hinged nrm carried on the car and pressed upward against It by a spring. Tho driving was by a pinion operaJJnir on an internal gear on c of tho axles. This was, I think, the first regularly operated electric road In this country, nnd tho conditions under which tho contract was taken, including waiting a year for payment conditioned on sat isfactory operation and finally, even on these onerous terms, secured only in the face of an opinion by a well known scientist thnt no one but "a knave or a fool" would undertake It were anything but encouraging. For tunately for Daft, however, T. C. Bob bins, the general manager of tho rail road company, was strong In tho faith. Tills equipment wns followed by a more nmbltlous one thnt of a section of tho Ninth Avenue Elevated Rail road for a distance of two miles, where a series of experiments woro carried on during the latter part of tho year 1885, with a locomotive called the "Benjamin Franklin." The motor waa mounted on a platform pivoted at ono end, and motion was communicated from tho armature to tho driving wheel through grooved friction gears held In close contact partly by tho weight of tho machine and partly by an adjustable screw device. This loco motive, pulling a train of cars, mado several trips; but tho experiments were soon suspended, and they woro not resumed till three years later, when, during several weeks, a rebuilt and improved "Benjamin Franklin' wns frequently run between the steam trains on the section between Four teenth nnd Fiftieth streets, attaining at times a speed of twenty-five miles an hour, nnd on one occasion pulling on eight-car train up the maximum grade of nearly 2 per cent at a seven mile rate. Century. Not Loaded. Mnybelle Clarence and Jack quai reled about me! Estc-lle now excitlngl What did they do? Maybelle Oh, It was awful! I cams (nto the room and they were waving pistols at each other. Estelle Pistols? Mercyl Were thex, loaded. W ' Maybelle Not a bit they were ii tober as could be! Cleveland Lender. Bacon I saw a friend of your family sitting on your stoop yester day when I went by. Egbert Oh, that wasn't any friend of my family; that was my wife's mother. Yonkors Statesman. How vain and fleeting is epitaphy. In a Pbiladephia cemetery founded 80 years ago scarcely a lino of the glowing words graven on tho head stone remain for the edification ol visitors. Time's ruthless paw plays trioks with fiction. W. L. Douglas 3-j & S3.00 SHOES L. Douglas $4.00 Cllt Edge Lin cannot bo oquaiiod at any price. Establlihed s09 111 Jajt,Wt. w.r nnitm as makes AHn SELLS Mnnp mfn'S 8M.RO SHOES THAU ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $10,000 TP?oDvi, unions who ua this statement. W. L. Douorlas S3. SO iIiom have by their es- cellent style, easy fitting, and luperlorwenrlnff qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.80 a hoe In the world. They are Just as pood at those that cost you $5.0(5 to $7.00 the only difference Is the price. If I could take you Int my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest la shoos c73-5f all iSJl1 IN f. 5, ine world under one root matcing tneirs una line. Hnil linn vm, the ear with which evfr W. .1 n-..i L. 1 - ..... ....... I A ...IIva t' why W. L. DoukIos $3,50 shoes are the best hoes produced In the world. If I could show you the difference between the hoes made In my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why DougUa $3. SO shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit bettar, wear longer, and are at greater Intrinsic value than any other $3. St hoe on the market to-day. W. L. Doufflmm Strong Mm dm Mhttmm torn Man. $2. SO, $2.00. Boym' Softool M Ormom Shmmm,$2.BO, $2, $1.73,01.00 CAUTION. I"1 upon hating "W.Ii.Doo las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine Without his name and prloe stamped on bottom. WANTED, A shoe dealer In erery town whera W. !. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of samples sent free for Inspection upon request, , Fait Ooler Eytltti urf thty will not unor brt$. rite for Illustrated Catalog of WmlX Stylafc W.bUUUUUU, rtS)KlSMS