The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909, June 15, 1906, Image 2

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    Nemaha Advertiser
W. W. SAND'RS, PunusHHn
Nemaha, - Nebraska
IIIII'm Ciiimc.
Gold Prick Sum--Sy, Hill, nre you
going imtly? 1 nct lf you don't mid
anything thwe days 1ml lynching In
tlio riinil districts.
Green Goods Kill Oh, that's ine
scheme. You always find Hie neeoimls
headed with 11 list of the 'loading citi
zens' mid tlicn I send 'lrruli to
lltotn.
II In 1,1111c (Tin I in.
Sirs. A. Don't jou know, I really
have an attachment for I his phuto.
Tlio Slald Yosiuin, and the gentle
tm i it who wits here while you wore out
Hald he had nn attachment for It also.
Sirs. A. Indeed ! Who Is he?
Tlio Maid--Tli Sheriff, inuiii.
,Siii' Tim, lilmlli'il,
"I heard you had a cow for Hale," he
gan Subbubs, "mid iih I'm thinking of
buying one for our little place "
"Waal, sir," InloiTuptod tlio farmer,
eagerly, "that's thot JnrHey yonder.
Now, thur'H one good p'lnt In her thet
you oiin depend on "
"Oh, gnu-Ious ! that would never do.
I'd need a (piart at least." Catholic
Standard and Times.
111m I'niiiloNt .Memniic.
A hard-headed old Pittsburg niunu
fuclver, who made his fortune, as ho
expresses It, "with his coat off," was
Induced hy his daughters to accompany
them to a Wagner concert, the first
ho had ever attended. The next day
ho happened to meet an acquaintance
who hud seen him the night heforo, who
asked :
"I suppose you enjoyed tho concert
last night, Sir. PrownoV"
"Yes; It took nie hack to (ho days of
my youth," the old man said, with a
reminiscent sigh.
"Ah, Bummer days In the country,
girl In u lawn dress,-hlrds singing, and
all that?"
"No, tho days when I worked In a
holler shop In Seruntoii." Success
Slaguzluc.
Modern Voufli.
"Why are you not at school?" stern
ly Inquired the parent meeting his son
In tho street.
Tho lad was not much einharrassed.
"Fact Is, dad," he responded, "there's
something tho matter with tho teacher's)
temper, and I'm giving It ahsent treat
ment." Philadelphia Puhlle Ledger. '
JnM .llt it Woman,
Sirs. Stubb -.John, 1 am going to
write to our Congressman to send us
some seed.
Sir. Stuhh Why, Maria, we live In
the city. There Isn't, any place to plant
seeds.
Sirs. StuhhThen 1 will write and
tell him to send us s6tne seed 'or our
parrot. We must get all that Is coming
to us.
Love Voiiiiu' Dri'itin.
They sat on the old porch and watch'
cd the red moon cllmhlng ahovo the
trees.
"Love," whispered the sentimental
girl, "makes the world go round."
"Yes, darling," whispered the ardent
suitor, v'imt. host of all, It makes the
arm go round."
And oven tho frogs croaked their ap
proval from the chilly swamps.
Optional.
Harbor How will yon have your lmli
cut, sir?
Farmer Green Wn-nl, of ye haln'i
got a lawn mower, scythe or mowing
machine handy, yo might use scissors'
IIiin Up mill Dimviin,
Gunner That elevator hoy appears
to ho a very plain-spoken chap.
Guyer Yes; ho talks right up and
down.
(JlMMlI Dill.
"Yes, there was u wonderful mob
scene In tho opera."
"Mob scene? And was there mucL
noise?"
"I should say so. There was halt
us much as there was In the boxes."
Terrllile Tin-cut.
City Suitor Was your father alarm
ed when you told him I would Jump
down tho well If you refused mo?
Rural Slald I should say so.
said your cigarettes would plzon
water so It wouldn't bo lit to drink
nix months after. Chicago News.
IK
t lie
foi
Time to (Jut IIiin)-,
Her Husband I thought you wora
going to visit your mother?
Ills Wife And so 1 am.
Her Husband Well, you had bettei
becln to nack your trunk at once. Tlu
train leaves In forty-eight hours. Chi
ifflSPT 1
l tf-:Mgg
Returns of Railway Clearing House
show that 1,000 parcels a day are lost
on the railways of tho United King
dom. J'Mftoeu thousand eight hundred and
forty -iovon pol ice constable aro re
quired to protect London, unci for this
protection the citizona pay 1,300,000
pounds a year.
Nearly half tho foreigners in Great
Mritaln reside in London. There aro
212,000 in Scotland, 11,000 in Slunohos
lr, ,000 in Liverpool, and 8,000 in
Leeds.
The largest cab rank in the world
is situated in London, viz; at Water
loo .Station, tho terminus of tho Lon
don and the Smith Western Railway.
t. isa quarter of a mile in length
More than 1,000 cabs are called in
(lis cotirso of twenty -four hours.
Lima beans may bo made to grow
a second crop by spading in between
the hills after Hrstcropis oIL This
lnosons up tlio eartli and lots in air
and moisture.
See that tlio grapo vines aro on tho
trellis in good shape. Tf tho young
shoots aro started in tlio right direc
tion and tied in place until tho ten
drils catch they will require little at
tention during tlio summer.
Tho growtli of melon, tomato and
other plants can bo forced by the use
pf nitrate of soda. A tablcspoonful
scattered about each tomato plant
and lightly raked it w ill produce good
results. It should not bo used after
tho fruit begins to ripen.
riioso who aro good judges of cows
may possibly be able to go into thp
market or to tho neighbors and buy
satisfactory cows. But usually it is
not tho good cow time is for sale
unless she has somo objectionable
features. The surest way to get cows
that aro entirely' satistact'jry is to
raise them. it does not take long for
a calf to become a cow.
From twenty thousand to thirty
thousand travelers annually visit
Shakespeare's birthplace, Statford-on-
Avon. They come rroin all parts oi
tho world, and it is estimated that in
tho aggregate tho town gains fifty
thousand dollars by these visits.
Wood ashes aro good for trees,
especially peach trees. They somo-
,inios give now lifo to an old orchard.
BUILDING FOOD.
To llrliiK die IluliIt'M Around.
When a little human machine (or a
arge one) goes wrong, nothing is so
uiportant as the selection of food to
ning U around again.
"Sly little baby boy llfteeu months
old had pneumonia, then came brain
fever, and no soone ud he got over
these than he began to cut teeth and,
being so weak; he was frequently
thrown into convulsions," says a Color
ado mother.
"I decided a change might help, so
took him to Ivansas City for a visit.
When w e got .there he was so very weal:
when he would cry h; would sink away
and seemed like he would die.
"When I readied my sister's home
she said immediately that we must feed
him Grape-Nuts, and, although 1 had
never uod the food, we got somo and
for a few days
gave him just tho juice
of Grape-Nuts and milk. lie got
stronger so quickly we were soon feed- ,
lug him the Grape-Nuts ltMif, and In
a wonderfully short time he fattened
right up and became strong and well.
'That showed me something worth
knowing ami. when biter on my girl
came, I raised her on Grape-Nuts and
she Is a strong, healthy baby and has
been. You will see from the little pho
tograph I send you what a strong,
chubby youngster the hoy Is now, but
he didn't look anything like that before
wo found this nourishing food. Grape
Nuts nourished him hack to strength
when he was so weak he couldn't keep
any other food on his stomach." Name
given by Postuui Co., Rattle Creek,
Mich.
All children can bo built up to a moro
t,,,..i,. ..,1,1 twin Hit- ,iui
niiuuj n. it .. ... .j iwiiiiitiwii ijljuil
n .v..- n.i ,, r.M. '
uiuiifnuw ..w "v iuuu ww
tains the elements nature demands,
from which to make the soft gray fill-
lug In the nerve centers and brain. A
w ell-fed brain and strong, sturdy nerves
.....o.utely insure . ,.
Look lu pkgs. for the famous
littl
book. "The Koad to Wollvlllo."-
Hinco tho compiling of reliable
records, beginning in tlio year 1147,
1,0!)5,000 persons have periehcl by
ourthquakos. Prior to this time,
however wo have tho facts of terrible
earthquake disasters. In 7-12 A. 1).,
Syria, Palestine, and cities of tlio
region wore wrecked by a scries of
earthquakes which destroyed more
than f)00 towns and hundreds of
thousands of human beings. In 1137
an earthquake In ('icily took the Jives
of about 15,000 persons. Of much
later dates wo have tho horrfying
records of the great Jupan earth
quake in 1703, when 200,000 lives
were lost 'at Yeddo. Another hor
rible disaster of tho samo kind
visited Japan in 1891, when 10,000
persons perished on tlio island of
Hondo. At Pekin China, and vicinity
100,000 souls perished by earthquakes
in 1701. In Canton, in tho year 1830,
00,000 persons were killed by earth
quake which nlmost totally de
stroyed the city.
A Salvation Army preaoher, in ono
of iiis talks, exclaimed to his hearers:
,..! : i .. i wt. !,.., .... t......
lilVlllltJ MJIJT, WWII 1 JUU JMIUW
tlio mooning of that word? Nor I
either, hardly. It Is for ever and
ever, and Hvo or six everlastings
a-top of that. You might place a
row of figures from here to sunset,
and cipher them all up, and it
wouldn't begin to tell how many ages
Ion jr. eternity is. Why, my friends,
after millions and trillions of years
had rolled away in eternity, it would
bo a hundred thousand years to
breakfast time."
A very vain preaoher having de
livered a sermon in tlio hearing of
the Rev. Robert Hall, pressed him,
with a mixture of self-complacency
and indelicacy, to state what ho
thought of the sermon. Sir. Hall
remained silent for some time, hop
ing that his silence would be rightly
interpreted; but this only caused the
question to bo pressed with greater
earnestness. At length Sir. Hall
admitted, "There was ono very fine
passage." "I am rejoiced to heat
you say so. Pray, sir, which was it?"
"Why, sir, it was the passage fron:
tlio pulpit to the vestry."
Climbing a telegraph-polo is child's
play to Sllss Rrenneincn, of Lindsey,
Ohio, she is a lineman, and can
splice a line, put on a now insulator,
reihi"o a new fuse or repair a dropped
switchboard. She is just twenty
years old.
A pint of linseed meal is reoom
monded as a euro for cows wlioso
milk tastes bitter or weedy.
The cows that aro run from the
pasture by a boy or dog will give
less milk and of poorer quality time
if brought in in tho right way.
A GB8TiOALPER80i
INTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPARE
Dangors and Pain of ThlB Critical Poriod
Avoided by the Uso of Lydla E. Plnlc.
nam's Vogotablo Compound.
How many wo
men realize that
the most critical
period in a wo
man's existence
is tho change of
life, and that tho
anxiety felt by
women as this
time draws near
is not without
reason ?
If her system is in a deranged condi
tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy
or congestion of any organ, it is at this
time likely to become active and, wttn
a host of nervous irritations, make life
a burden.
i At this time, also, cancersand tumors
nre more liable to begin their destruc-
' tivo work. Such warning symptoms as
a sense of suffocation, hot Hashes, diz
ziness, headache, dread of impending
evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal
pitation of the heart, sparks before the
ivis ii-rnfriilnriMim. (nriNl inu t.ion. varln..
lippt,tltc, weakness and Inquietude
are promptly needed iy intelligent
women who are approaching1 the period
of lifo when woman's great change
may bo expected.
Wo believe Lydia 13. Piukham's Veg
etable Compound is the world's great
est remedy for women at this trying
period.
Lydia 13. Piukham's Vegetable Com
pound invigorates and strengthens the
female organism, and builds up the
t weakened nervous system as no other
medicine can.
Sirs. A. 13. G. Hyland, of Chester
town, Md., in a letter to Sirs. Pink-
ham, says:
Dear Sirs. Pinkluun:
" I hud boon sutrorint: with n dlsnlaceuiont
for years nml was pausing through the change
of life. 1 had a good doul of soronoss, dlzxy
spells, headaches, and was very nervous. I
wrote von for ailvico and commenced treat-
' inont with Lvdla K. Pinkhuni's Voirctaliki
Uomr'iid as you directed, aud 1 am happy
io nav iiiui a i inoso iiisvrossiiiK svmnioms n
en
"... j .V.. i i ii
ine, and 1 have pafcwd .nh y through the
ciiungo or uro a well woman,-'
' i-'0r special advice regarding this im
port tint period women aro invited to
write to Sirs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass
hc, s daughter-in-law of Lydla 13.
lJSt'SS
oeen advtsinir slctc women ireo o
plun-fT... llnr tul v I n la ire nnd nlvvavi
. . " . . "V..
, tieiptm to tilling1 women
T0PIC80F TOE TIMEkS.
A CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER
ESTING ITEMS.
Continents und Crl t IcIhiiii HmhciI Upon
flic IfupneiiliiKH of the liny 11 In tori
en I and Nciv Notcn.
Dowio apparently has Joined the long
procession of discredited emotionalists.
Vesuvius merely emphasizes the fact
thot It Is never a good thing to slop
over.
It will keep George ,7. Gould hustling
to buy princes and dukes for all of lib
girls.
Pretty soon tho trust magnates may
bo asking If they haven't any rights
fhe Supremo Court Is bound to ob
serve. The Czar has just returned unopened
another resignation by Wltte. Perhaps
the old man is binding for a raise of
salary.
it should be some comfort to Dowio
to reflect that In any event nobody can
get thoso magnificent whiskers away
from him.
Incidentally it is pertinent to inquire
why tho Zlonltes didn't lire Dowio long
ago If they know all thoso Iniquitous
things against him.
Legislatures arc getting more care
ful about giving to unknown companies
clfaTters to do everything on earth and
In the waters beneath.
A. Cincinnati man has named his
baby Ananias. Perhaps he Intends to
make It necessary for tho child to bo
truthful lu self-dofense.
A New Jersey minister wants to know
f hoaven will "bo crowded." Not by
the men folks, unless it differs a good
deal from tho average church.
A Pennsylvania!! named Weeks, with
a chronic habit of purloining watches,
has been given the time of his life by
tho judge, who sent him up for ten
years.
John 1). Rockefeller Is going to build
a 91,000,000 palace for his grandson,
hut an extra bottlo or two would prob
ably give John D. III. greater satlsfae-
lon Just now.
The secret of wealth, according to
ono of the comic weeklies, lies In mak
ing a quarter look like thirty cents.
That Is a good Illustration of tho ex
pressive compactness of modern slang.
.Members of the English Parliament,
we are told, don't get any salary and
can't even send their mall free. To
think of tho difference makes an Amer
ican Congressman proud of his country-
George Gould says ho put $1,000,000
nto tho Western Slarylaud syudlcate
merely os a favor to a friend. George
should not be surprised now to hoar
that some of the rest of his friends are
starting up syndicates.
Tho man with tho boo has not been
much In evidence for several years, al
though ho onco created as much dis
cussion as tho man with tho muck rake
Is arousing now. How soon wo pass
from ono form of excitement to an
other. It Is a curious fact that the average
ago of Senators Is far In excess of the
constitutional requirement Tho young
est man In tho Senate Is 80 years old,
and hence Is nine j-ears older than the
minimum ago required by the Constitu
tion, while tho two oldest members of
the Senate have exceeded tho minimum
age limit hy more than llfty years,
being above SO years old.
Charles 13. Hughes, speaking before
tho Kthlcal Culture Society recently,
found an admirably torso expression
for the causes of corporate malfeas
ance. He said: "When we say a cor
poration has or has not done a certain
thing wo mean that tho directors have
attended to or neglected a duty." In
other words, tho responsibility Is al
ways personal. To attack the corpora
tion as such is so much sword play
wnsted. The ofllcers and directors con
stitute the soul under the ribs of death.
Since they aro subject to tho usual
moral and Judlclol penalties, they alone
aro really worthy of a reformer's
effort.
A loafoi; on tho street, whose wife
was probably at homo getting out a
neighbor's washing to mako money to
buy the children shoes, asked a busy
man the other day If ho over saw a
bald-headed woman. "No, I never did,"
replied the busy man. "And I never
saw a woman waiting around town in
her shirt sleeves with a cigar In her
teeth and running Into every saloon
sho Baw. Neither did I ever seo1 a
woman sitting all day nt tho fitreet
corner on a dry goods box telling peo
ple how the Secretary of tho Treasury
should run tho national Mnonces. I
havo novor seen a woman go fishing
with a bottlo In her pocket, sit on tho
bank all day and go homo drunk at
night, Nor hao I over soon n woman
yank off her coat and say she could
lick any man in town."
What are said lu lie tho first mural
paintings ever ordered for a free pub
lie school in America havo recently been
completed. They were painted for the
Do Witt Clinton high school In New
York, and are to be placed on the walla
In the same way as the decorations aro
i nfllxed in the (Congressional Library,
the .Minnesota State Capitol, and other
j puhlle buildings noted for their adorn
' ment. They represent tho opening of
i the I'tie canal In October, ISL'H, and
the meeting of tho waters of tho hikes
with the ocean, a ceremony which con
cluded tho opening celebration. A small
barrel of the water of Lake I3rlo was
taken from the canal and carried down
the Hudson and out Into the harbor,
where It was emptied Into the ocean by
DeWItt Clinton, Governor of the State,
to whose efforts the construction of the
canal was largely due. Pottles of water
from the Thames, the lthlne, the Seine
and other noted rivers wore also pour
ed into the ocean at the same time.
The convention oi' chiefs of police at
Hot Springs expressed the wish that
the law would establish the death pen-;
alty for burglars who carry deadlyj
weapons with them and that it wouh?,
restore tlio whipping post for wife beat-!
ers and minor offenders against ehll-s
dren. Chief Collins of Chicago heartily
Indorses both these suggestions, and
from tho policeman's point of view he
makes a good argument for them. Put
he does not state the whole case by
any means. Take burglary with deadly
weapons. That the burglar has murder
in his heart, or, more properly, that he
reckons with possible murder as one of
the details In his business, Is perfectly
clear. That he might le properly pun
ished as a murderer Is also manifest.
That such punishment, strictly enforc
ed, would make life much safer for city
residents yo may well believe. Hut
against all this there is a practical
certainty that the death penalty will
not lie established for such a crime. Tho
tendency Is away from hanging, not
toward it. Only a riot of crime, duo
to some great loosening of the social
bonds, will restore It. And there is no
reason to expect that tho case will be
come so bad as that. Instead of rec
ommending greater severity of punish
ments, the police would do well to urge
greater discrimination. They would do
well to emphasize professional crime oh
needing special treatment for the pro
tection of society. Our laws make prac
tically no distinction at all between tho
professional criminal and the chanco
criminal or first offender. Tho board
of pardons will turn a professional
loose under the Indeterminate .sentence
law us readily as any other convict.
It should not have such power. If pen
alties were mild for first offenses and
pardons ready; If every criminal on
his second conviction should be sub
jected to an Investigation as to whoth"r
or not he had adopted crime as Ids llf-
business, and If all those found to bo
professionals should bo so treated as to
keep them permanently from their
trade, with an ultimate possibility of
segregation for life, our criminal sys
tem would bo not nearly so Ineffective
as It Is at present. As for tho whip
ping post for wife boaters, there Is good
psychological basis for believing that
It is the kind of penalty that llts tho
crime. Put recent attempts to Intro
duce It have shown that it is certain
to be cried down as a species of barbar
ism which canuot be seriously consid
ered In this age. Tho police chiefs
must seek some other cure for this of
fense. All 5ono.
Tho society editor of a paper In
Richmond, Va., was prevented by sick
ness from attending the wedding of tho
daughter of a well-known citizen, and
so was obliged to mako tho best sho
could of a second-hand account of tlio
festivities.
13atiy in the morning' after tho wed
ding tho young woman repaired to tho
home of the bride's parents. To tho
darky who opened the door she said:
"I havo called to get somo of tho de
tails of the wedding."
An expression of intense regret caino
to the dusky countenance of tho ser
vant. "I'so awful sorry, miss," she exclaim
ed, "but doy Is all gone. You oughter
come last night. Do company eat up
every scrap'."
The MniiiiHri'r' Donultlon.
"The legitimate drama!" said tho
playwright as Slauagor Fiasco handed
him back his rejected manuscript "I
hear nothing but 'legitimate drama!'
What Is tho legitimate drama, any
way?" "The legitimate drama," said .Mana
ger Fiasco coldly, "comprises all thoso
plays which, their authors being dead,
mny bo produced without tho payment
of royalties!" Modern Society.
The IfniileiiNunt Sort.
"Nice house, old man," eald Naggot's
old friend, who was visiting him, "but
haven't you any household pets?"
"Only those my wife gets into occa
sionally," replied Nagget Philadelphia)
Press. ' .
cago News.
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