The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909, June 01, 1906, Image 2

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    Nemaha Advertiser
W. W. SAND'CRS. PuuLisMcf.
Nemaha, . . Nebraska
If the spelling reformers wnnt n
renlly hnrd Job let tliein tackle Hun
garian or Polish.
Tim difference between n speculation
nml nn Invostnmnt In Unit It Is n spocu
latloii when yon lone.
The pen Ih mightier (linn Urn sword,
especially the one Andrew Carnegie
uses to write cheques.
Automobiles lire to ho cheaper and
Mm expect nt Ion of the niannfacturorH
Ih thnt tills will iniike them go still
faster.
It has been fouiiil that horses .some
times have nervous prostration. Do
they, too. piny bridge nml buy things
on margins?
At t ho ago of ninety, Husscll Sage
Ih to retire from business. In li Ih time
ho has compelled others to retire, but
not on iieeount of age.
An exchange remarks thut Lincoln's
great-great-grandfather was an Iron
master. Tim truth In this statement Is
that without doubt Lincoln had a
great-great-grandfather.
Now somebody prooscfl to make the
Public Printer u Cnbinot ollleor. If
they keep adding to the collection,
(Jnblnct officers will bo ns common In
Washington as colonels are In Ken
tucky. Magnato on the witness stand : "Now,
I'll tell you a secret. Tim Standard
Oil Company Is run solely to make
money for college endowments; us for
John D. Rockefeller, wo hardly know
Slim by sight."
The mass of peoplo are morbid
enough about their food. It Is not
advisable to seek to add to their ter
rors by exaggeration. If all could
reach the comfortable frame of mind
of the man who declnrod thut bo could
stand It If the microbe could people
would be less finicky and perhaps there
would bo less stomach trouble.
To read In bed or not to road Tri bed?
"-such Is the question that agitates
Borne of tho New York papers Just now.
No doubt tho custom has Its disad
vantages and ILh bad effecls-but has
not every other pleasant custom, too.
Since the day that Adam sunk his In
claora Into tho apple pleasure has al
ways been tho precursor of pain, hap
piness of misery, Joy of sorrow, peace
of, war, health of pills.
.Many people are more shocked and
enraged by the exposure of crime than
they are by the crime Itself. As long
ns things uro kept quiet they are quiet
too. Hut when the explosion comes
they learn all of a midden how atro
cious the business Is. Wo believe that
thero aro many business men who saw
nothing wrong in tho Insurance busi
ness till the public, being fully Inform
ed, decided it was wrong. Probably
they woro greatly surprised at that de
cision. It Is .so In the mutter of cam
paign contributions.
Time wus when the question of deal
ng with alien Illiteracy dumped upon
our shores was not pressing. Most of
tho immigrants then came of stock
sympathetic with our Ideas. They were
largely literate or they took kindly to
common school education. Of late all
this has changed. We are receiving
the bulk of Immigration from countries
In which illiteracy abounds and it Is
only candid to say that wo have In res
ident. Illiteracy a problem far greater
than Is generally supiosed. Tim cen
sus of 11)00 showed thut out of 57,0-1!).-821
persons In the United .States ten
years of age and over, (5,lS0,0d! were
olussllled as Illiterates.
Vhat someone has culled "the lit
erature of e.Hsiire" has grown so vol
uminous of late that we are In danger
of laying down tho maxim that all our
fellow citizens are scoundrels. Never
theless, this overdose of exposure, while
:ostly to Innocent Individuals, Is doing
jo permanent harm. Tho worst thing
that can befall a nation Is for It to
develop an active and acute conscious
ness of virtue. Thut Is what wiped
out ancient Israel and that Is what
handicaps Russia In her struggle with
Japan today. So long as we recognl.e
the fact that our Institutions are not
perfect and our peoplo not Impeccable
wo shall bo snfe. It Is mly .when we
shut our eyes to graft that graft will
badly damage us.
livery mhn who bus evqr tried to
juoss one of those conundrums known
ns Insurance policies, or who has over
attempted to translate Into Intelligent
Hngllsh any legal document, with all
Its whereases and Its herobj'8 and Its
aforeaulds, will appreciate tho sentl
tnenta or beacon Elphonzo Youngs of
Washington, who, when making his
will, barkened to tho lawyer's open
ing paragraph and then exclaimed:
"Rat.sl all there is about this Is that
at my death I want my ever faithful
and devoted wife. Amelia, to have and
control everything I jKsses.s." If that
will would not hold in law there be
ing no possible room for doubt as t
the Intent thereof -the fault Is wltb
liie law, not the will.
Comes now Professor Jacob Gould
Sehurmanii and says that wo Ameri
cans have not reached the lofty stuta
of civilization attained by the ancient
Athenians. He alludes to our lack ol
development In art and ethics and phil
osophy, admitting that In material
things, railways, telegraph, telephones
and cash, we are fpremost. Hut ho
holds that these things do not consti
tute civilisation, since they do not de
velop our loftlcrtquullflrs of mind,
soul and body. Regretfully, we admit
that much of what lm says Is true.
Our civilization Is u failure In that our
condition Is far from Ideal. Still, when
all comparisons with other times are
made and tho balanco cant, It Is found
to bo Immeasurably In our favor for
one reason. The undents nre dead and
wo are nllve.
It Is n source of gravo concern among
naval oflleers that foreign nations have
no dllllciilty In securing Information
about American warships under con
struction, and the attention of tlm sec
retary of the navy has been directed to
the fact that so-called contldentlal
plans, which have been guarded with
utmost caution, aro accessible practical
ly to anyone who may choose to con
sult them. Under the law copies o
nil contracts with full designs, plans'
and specifications must be placed on
die. This Is done In nil cases, no mat
ter what the contract may call for,
and regardless of tho wishes or policy
of the naval administration. This old
luw Is only an Incumbrance on the stat
ute books. It Is certainly rather ludi
crous for the navy department to Insist
on secrecy regarding tho building of
battleships nnd submarines when any
one can examlno the designs for the
troublo of asking.
All the great Inventors of the ages,
counted together, aro not to bo com
pared, for the good done for humanity,
with the mnn, unknown to fume, who
put n glass globe around a kerosenu
llame nnd thus produced a cheap,
steady light for night work. This is
the rather startling notion developed
by Dr. David T. Day, of the United
States geological Rurvey, In nn article
In tho American Illustrated Magazine.
And a mighty plausible notion he makes
of It. It Is refreshing to be Informed
by nn eminent authority that Watt,
Stephenson, Fulton and Edison really
pale Into Insignificance beside that
greater luminary who Invented the
lamp chimney, and thus made reading
general and education common. This
modern Aladdin, who has turned tlm
world from Ignorance to enlightenment,
was Samuel M. Kler, n Pittsburg drug
gist It was lu 1817 he presented to
the human eye the first steady, bright
light, except tho sun, that ever had
been known. All previous lights lire,
tho torch, tho candle, the oimn lamp,
the gas Hume without Its modern ad
junct, the Jot had been flickering nnd
unsteady, exhausting to Urn eye and
weak. Mark, now, the Instantaneous
am marvelous result! With the advent
of a bright and steady light, for the
first tlmo In human history people be
gan to read at night. Darkness iMjgan
to lift from tho mind of man. Up to
.1850, virtually up to lS7r, society was
divided into two great classes the pro
fessional scholars and the unread. The
scholars read by day; It wus part of
their work. The common man hud
other work by day, and, with no good
light at night, ho did not rend at nil.
The Franklins nnd Llncolns were ruro
Indeed. Within a half century the
bright light bus made reading a uni
versal habit We are assured and tho
evldonco offered seems plausible thnt
intellectual nnd Industrial progress in
all parts of tho world In tlm last fifty
years may be measured by tho keroseno
consumed. America lends, not because
we have better brains, but because wo
have more oil and have made the most
of It. The French make their streets
glare with electricity, but they do not
light the Inside of their homes; tho
city dwellers tleo at night to the bright
lMHilevurds, and tho peasant Is still
"the man with the hoe." Italy nnd
Spain, with less oil still, are still fur
ther behind. Light of day was the
first thing In the creation of tho world.
Light of night was the first thing In
tne. creation of tho new world ot uni
versal Intelligence.
Kriueillitl,
"I am greatly troubled with klepto
lunula," oxclulnied tho fashionably
dressed woman ns sho buntled Into tho
drug department "Now, what would
you advise me to tnko for it?"
"Your departure, madam, by all
means," replied tho floorwalker, nnd
bowed her to the elevator. Puck.
It seems to us thnt nine-tenths of
the "atorlea" are old.
NO MAN IS STRONGER THAN
HIS STOMACH.
ami his muscles would soon fall. Physi
cal strength is derived from food. 1 n.
man hns Insufficient food ho lose strength.
If Im has no food he dips, Food fs con
verted Into nutrition through tlm stom
ach aud lweis. It depends on the
strength of tho .tom.v:h to what extent
food eaten I? digested and nitslmllated.
Peoplo can cile of starvation who havo
ahtindsmt food U ml, when tlm stomach
and It associate organs of digestion and
nutrition do not iwrform their duty.
Thus tlm stomach is really the vital or
gan of t ho bod j. If the stomach Is " weak"
the body will Ik weak also, because It Is
upon tho stomach the body relics for Its
strength. And ns the I tody, considered aa
a whole. Is made up of Its several rrmm-Ix-rs
and organs, so the weakness of tho
body h a consequence of "weak" stom
ach will bo dl.ntr.htited among the or
gans which compose tlm bodr. If tlm
body Is weak Imt.imso It, Is Ill-nourished
that physical weakness will be found in
all the organ heart, liver, kidneys, etc.
The liver will U torpid and inactive,
giving rise to biliousness, loss of appetite,
weak nerve, freblo or Irreculnr action of
heart, palpitation, dizziness headache,
backache and kindred disturbances and
weakness.
Mr fxuls Pre, of Quelle, writes: Tor
yeM after my henlih tx-unn to fall, my bend
crew filw.y, eye puttied me, nnri my stomnch
w ns sore nil tin time, while every tlilntr f
would rat would Meni to He heavy like lead
oil my stomneli, 'rim doctors claimed thnt
It was yniDatbntlr trouble due to dyspepsia,
nnd prrsrrllKd for rw and Itlioui.'h I took
their powders rrculnrly yet I fell no hotter.
My wife advised me to try Dr. Pierre's Golden
MedleM DiM-overy and stop taklnir the doc
tor' medicine. She Uitirhi. me a lottle and
we on found that, I betran to Improve so I
kept up the treatment. I t(xk on llesh. my
stomach became normal. thcdifreMlve organs
worked perfectly nnd I .oon becan to look
1iVi a dltlerent person. 1 cr.n norer cease to
he cratefnl for wh.V your medicine ha. dono
for mo and I certainly trtve It hlehest praise."
Don t bo wheedled by a penny-grabbing
denier into taklinr Inferior substitutes for
Dr. Pierce's medicines, recommended to
be. "Just as good."
To gain knowledge of vour own body
In !ektuvss and health send for tlm Peo
ple's Common Sen e Medical Adviser. A
book of 100S pages. Send 21 one -cent
stamps for paper-coverd. or 31 stamps
for c loth-bound copy. Address Dr. R. V.
Pierce, (C3 Main btrcet. Huflalo, N. Y.
Castor oil Henna make an effective
background for a bed of Mowers or a
line plant for the side of the yard
where the clump plants are put in.
IIowr Thiol
Wo nrfer One Hundred Dollars Howard fot
ny caw of Catarrh thnt cannot be cured by
IlallS ('Htnrrh cure.
K. .(. CHUNKY & CO.. Propi.. Toledo. ).
We the iinilerslenod lmve known V. .1. Cheney
for Hie last If. war, and bellete him perfectly
honorable lu all fmstnoss trail-action and finan
cially able to carry out any obligation made by
their firm.
Vet fcTnuAx. Wholesale DrusnUts, Toledo. O.
Wamiino. Ki.v.va.v & Marvin. Wholesale
Druggists. Toledo. ().
Mall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, actlnz
directly upou the blood and mucous surfaces of
the systnin. Price 7Sc. per bottle. Sold by all
DriiKKlsu. Testimonial free.
Hall's Family rills are the best.
There nre about thirty vegetarian
restaurants in Berlin, which are
much frequented in tho last week or
two of each month by ptudents whose
monthly Allowance is nearly ex
hausted. Most of the world's supply of
eiderdown is produced by Iceland,
the annual sale amounting to a little
over 7,000 pounds, which is shipped
to Copenhagen and sold for about.
$2.50 per pound.
CORDIAL INVITATION
ADDRESSEDTO WORKING GIRLS
MIsa Barrows Tells How Mrs. Pmlc
barn's Advlco HelpB Working GlrlB.
Girls who work
nre particularly
susceptible to fe
rn a 1 e disorders,
especially those
who aro obliged
to stand on their
feet frQm morn
ing until night in
stores or facto
ries. Day in and day
out the pirl toils,
nnd she is often the bread-winner of
the family. Whether she is sick or
well, whether it rains or shines, she
must get to her pluee of employment,
perform the dutios exacted of her
smile and be agreeable.
Among this class the symptoms of
female diseases are early manifest liy
weak and aching bucks, pain in tho
lower limbs and lower part of tho
Htomuch. In consequence of frequent
wetting of tho foet, periods become
painful and irrepular, and frequently
there are faint and dizz- spells, with
loss of appetite, until life is a burden.
All these symptoms point to a de
rangement of the female organism
which can be easily and promptly
cured by Lydia 12. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound.
Miss Abby F. Harrows, Nelson ville.
Athens Co., Ohio, tells what this great
medicine did for her. She writes :
Dear Mr. Pinkham :
"I feel it my duty to toll you the god
Lydia E. Piukknm's Vegetable Compound
and lilooil Purifier Unv dono forme. Be torn
I took them I was very nervous, had dull
'jeudnehes, pains in back, nnd periods wero
irregular, I had been to several doctors, nnd
they did me. no pood.
"Vour niedleiuo hns mndo mo well nnd
tfrong. I enn do most any kind of work
ivithout complaint, nnd my criods are all
rmlit.
ftl nm in bettor health than I ever was,
and I know it hall due to your remedies I
recommend your advice and medicine to all
who suffer."
It is to such girls that JJrs. Pink
hum holds out a helping hand and ex
tends a cordial invitation to correspond
with her. She is daughter-in-law of
Lydia 13. Pinkham nnd for twenty.five
ronrs has been advising sick women
free of chnrge. Her long record of
success in treating woman's ills makes
acr letters of advice of untold value to
jvery ailing working girl. Address,
Urn. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass,
WHERE VICE IS NOT KNOWN.
It act of Sllierlnri Nntlve Who Are
Friendly, Happy nnd 'on fen ted.
"A people who drive out any person
convicted of I.vIiik and who kill him if
he returns, a people among whom thiev
ing and Infidelity to the marriage vow
are unknown, you would doubtless clns-f
among the highly educated nnd cul
tured, If you would admit thnt such n
rni-c or tribe existed," said II. lit
t;e of .SVrnnli at the 51obe hotel. "Such
a race does exist. They are the nu
ll ves of northern Siberia. x
"In company with John K. Hurtou of
(his city 1 crossed over from Nome.
Alnska. In the steamship owned by tho
American company which bus secured
the right to explore several hundred
thousand syuaic miles of Siberia for
mineral and do a trading business. This
boat Is used to carry supplies to their
station. I spent several weeks with
the natives and studied them closely.
The virtues to which I alluded they
ertnlnly mssoss, although they have
no written language, literature or ed
ucation as tlm term is generally used.
"A more virtuous, happy nnd con
tented race of people there Is not on
the rtice of the earth nnd this In spite
of their many privations and hard
ships. They live almost exclusively
upon meats and P4O1, for In that section
there Is hardly a trace of vegetation.
The only vegetable product produced
thero is a blue berry, which grows on
a vine, Is about twice as large as those
we have, and Is gathered and dried by
the natives. They live In 'eglos,' cir
cular shaped huts, made of walrus
nklns. They are about twenty-live feet
in diameter and In the center contain
1 sleeping apartment made of reindeer
d;ius. So warm Is this Inner npurt-
nent kept that to be comfortable In
't. even In the coldest weather, one
mist strip .to the wrilst These eglos
ire heated with stone lamps. In which
whale or seal oil Is placed and burned
with wicks made of grass, for there is
no timber in that country. Frequently
wo or three families Inhabit one of
:hosp eglos.
"These people have a great love for
(heir children. If given a piece of can
ly or any delicacy they never think of
.listing it, but take It home to the lit
:le ones, who seem to always have first
place In (heir considerations. They
ire monogamists and believe in one sit
nreme spirit. When one of their mem
bers becomes old or crippled so that
he can not take care of himself he has
the privilege of electing to die and the
ploasant duty of stabbing or strangling
him. whichever lie chooses, falls to hi-s
nearest of kin. The victim smilingly
twalfs the day of death arrayed In till
lis finery. 1'pon bis corpse, which" U
'.lid upon the snow. Is placed a plub
)f food and when this is gone he is
nipposed to have reached the spirit
'and. The wolves generally dispose of
'he food as well as of tlm corpse.
"These Eskimos are a friendly, hos
pitable people, willing lo help the des
'itule or sick and will do anything In
-eason for the white mnn. As n return
t Is the unwritten but observed law
flint they nre welcome fo eat at the
'amps of the white men or ride 011 tlm
steamboats or trains without paying
for it. Like all savages, if such wc
night term people who have so many
virtues and so few vices, they have a
natural taste for alcoholic drinks and
)f late years have learned from whal
rs to make an alcoholic drink from
nnlussos and sugar, using a kerosene
'in ns a still." .Milwaukee Sentinel.
AVn 11 ted Only ! Uc-M.
The yellow and red poster which
ndorned a big board fence in Macon,
"leorgln, announced that the circus was
soon to pitch tents In that city. He
ton th the counterfeit presentment of a
.nan on ti bicycle turning somersaults
In the air. says tho New York Times,
i group of darkles wero gazing open
mouthed at this announcement in let
tors of green : "Wait ! Walt! Wait ! The
:! rent est Show on Earth, Sept. 1." "Ah
ain't n-goin' to dat show," remarked
.mo mulatto to Ills companion, "Whnh
fob you ain't goiu'V" sho replied, in a
disappointed tone. "All's gwan to wait
fob tie othah show wot's better." he
suld. "They ain't, no bettnh show,"
said she. "Yes. they Is," was his re
joinder. "It says so on dat bill, t 'ain't
you readV '(Jrcatesh show on eu'tb
'cept one.'"
The II1-11L 'I'M low:.
Express Clerk Value of this pack
age, please?
Fair Damsel $2.-i,000.
Express Clerk Huh?
Fair Damsel You heard what 1
suld. Those are love letters from old
Hagsocoyne, and I'm sending 'em to
my lawyer. Cleveland Leader.
An Ky'-Op;mT.
Theorist 1 don't believe in tho man
peeking the ollice. 1 believe that tin
ollico should seek the man.
Old Politician 1 ld you ever try to
get a job on those lines? Detroit Free
Press.
A wise man doesn't attempt to pull
ilmself out of troublo with a cork
icrew. lie who has no faith in himself Is
leatlncd to become a successful failure
After cleaning nnd polishing brass
or copper articles brush them over
with the beaten white of nn egg to
keep them bright for some time.
The first chalnpagne wa3 produced
in the province of Champagne,
I'Vance. but its production has since
extended to the Moselle and other
districts. Pale blue grapes are used,
and much pressure avoided, in order
that the juicy interior may be kept
clear ot any flavor rrom the skin.
The effervescence is secured by a
second fermentation, brought about
by adding sugar to the wine, in a
closed bottle. Spurious cliampngno
is made by simply adding sugar and
some flavoring matter to cheap wine
or ordinary cider, and then charging
the Iluul with carbon-dioxid gas. .
ma
Dr. G N. ttrinck, deputy superin
tendent general of education of the
Philippines says that the Islands have
800 American teachers, 5,000 nativo
teachers and more than 50,000 native
pupils, like Japanese in intellectual
readiness and keenness.
IT. IL Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga.,
are the only succefwful Dropsy Specialists
in the world. Seo their liberal offer in
advertisement in. another column of this
paper.
The salary paid the head of one life
insurance company is greater than
the combined salaries of the presi
dents of the fourteen lending uni
versities in tho Untied States.
Oklahoma Public Landn Half million acrci
most fertile lands In Oklahoma, near Lawton
opened to settlement this summer under
Homestead Laws; last opening: CJood Oorern
ment land cheap: rtve rears to pay. Maps and
full Information retfardlm: openinc 50o. Cat
ron & Co.. Lawton, Oklahoma.
The founder of the kindergarten
system or schools as Fredrich Froe
bel. In 1S37 he established the first
school of this kind at." Hlankeuburg.
Thuringia, and soon it became the
model for similar institutions
throughout Germany for the educa-fcyl
tion of children. The object of the
kindergarten, was expressed by the
founder, is " to give the pupils em
ployinent suited to their nature,
strengthen their bodies, exercise their
senses, employ the waking mind,
make them acquainted judiciously
with nature and society, and culti
vate especially the heart and
temper." Many persons denounced
Froebol's system, because of tin
great freedom allowed the children,
and asserted that his schools were
nurseries of socialism and atheism.
Kroebel was born at Oberweisshaeh
in 17S2, and died in MarientliHl in
1S.VJ.
HE WENT Off CRUTCHES
All Medicines Failed Until Dr. Wil
liams' Pink Pills Cured Hi3
Rheumatism.
"Somo years ago. "says Mr. W. II.
Clark, a printer, living at (5 IS Buchanan
street, Topeka, Knus., "I hud n bad at
tack of rheumatism and could not seem
to get over it. All sorts of medicines
failed to do 1110 auy good and my tumble,
kept getting worse. My feet wero so
swollen that I. could not wear shoes and
I hud to go ou crutches. The pain was
terrible.
" One day I was sotting tho typo of nn
article for the paper telling what Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills had dono for a man
aillicled as I wus and 1 was so impressed
with it that 1 determined to givo tho
medicine a trial. For a year my rheu
nmtihin had been growing worse, but
after taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I
begun to improve. The pain und swi !!
iug till disappeared and I can truthfully
say that I haven't felt better in the past
twenty years than I do right now. I
could name, off hand, a hnlf-doze.it pen.
plo who have used Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills nt my suggestion and who have re
coived good results from thorn."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills aro guaran
teed to bo safe and harmless to the most
delicate constitution. Thoy contain no
morphine, opiate, narcotic, nor any-
uung 10 causo a urug name, xney no ii"m
act on tho bowels but thoy actually make
now blood and strengthen the nerves.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills euro rheuma
tism becauso they make rioh, red blood
and no mnn or woman can havo healthy
blood and rheumatism at the same time.
They havo also cured many cases ol
miaeinia, neuralgia, sciatica, partial pa
ralysis, locomotor ataxia and other dis
eases that have not yielded to ordinary
treatment.
All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills or they will ho sent by mail, post,
paid, on receipt of price, CO cents pei
box, six boxes for $2.60. by the Dr. Wib
limns Modiciuo Co., Schenectady, N.Y